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Huskers Athletics annual report is out

PonyBoy

Head Coach
Insider
Baseball
12,429
2022
38,838
Pretty shitty article by Sam McKewon....

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LINCOLN — Revenues and expenses for Nebraska athletics dipped slightly this past fiscal year, though NU’s surplus grew by a small amount.

Those are three key takeaways from the Huskers’ annual report to the NCAA for the fiscal year July 1, 2024-June 30, 2025. The report, submitted to the NCAA in December and available to media in January, looks back at the 2024 football and volleyball seasons and completes its fiscal period with the 2025 baseball and softball teams.

NU reported $215,089,007 in revenues and $207,743,888 in expenses for 2024-2025, keeping the athletic department in the $200 million club inhabited by schools like Michigan and Ohio State. Those numbers are down from school records for fiscal year 2023-2024, when Nebraska generated $220,165,405 in revenue and $213,456,031 in expenses.

The 2024-25 fiscal year surplus ($7,345,119) is greater than $6.7 million surplus in fiscal year 2023-2024.

Nebraska’s media rights deal — mostly paid through the Big Ten’s agreements with TV partners — delivered $75.9 million in 2024-25, an increase of more $11.5 million from the 2023-2024 fiscal year.

In part because of a new, lavish training table operation — which partners with Flik corporate hospitality group — NU athletics’ meal expenses increased by 65%, from $7,040,557 to $11,649,457. Meal expenses in multiple sports — baseball, track and field and tennis among them — more than doubled as student-athletes took advantage of the food service inside the Osborne Legacy Complex.

Husker football generated $124.2 million in revenue against nearly $73 million in expenses — both totals were drops from 2023-2024, but the surplus of $51.5 million — accounting for 84.1% of the media rights deal, 71% of parking and concessions revenues and 85.6% of ticket revenue — was greater than the $44.1 million in 2023-2024. The ticket share is a sharp increase from fiscal year 2023-2024 because Husker volleyball did not hold another match inside Memorial Stadium, which drew a record 92,003 in August 2023.

NU football’s recruiting expenditures took a sharp decline, from $2.19 million to $1.66 million, as Nebraska’s 2025 recruiting class was roughly half the size of the 2024 class. Like other schools, Nebraska added more transfers to the 2025, which cuts into recruiting expenses, since on-campus visits tend to be shorter and coaches don’t travel to visit prospects at their schools.

Starting with the 2025-2026 annual report — which will be available in January 2027 — there’s likely to be a budget line for revenue-sharing to student-athletes. This year, NU had $20.5 million to distribute; roughly 75% of that total, a source has told the World-Herald, was allocated to the football team.

Nebraska men’s basketball went up in both revenue ($18,654,340) and expenses ($13,427,513) in fiscal year 20242-25. Coach Fred Hoiberg made $4,377,017 in salary; his assistants made $1,317,251.

Husker women’s basketball increased its expenses ($6,299,266) and saw a slight drop in revenue from $2,234,685 in 2023-2024 to $2,186,767 in 2024-2025. Coach Amy Williams made $1,030,619 in salary; her assistants made $722,304.

NU volleyball switched head coaches halfway through the fiscal year from the retiring John Cook to his successor, Dani Busboom Kelly; together, they made $1,329,192 over the fiscal year.

Despite having a much stronger season in 2025 than in 2024, Husker softball revenues and expenses went down to $518,991 and $4,631,302 in the most recent fiscal year. With a stronger home slate in 2026 and the return of star Jordy Frahm, it’s likely Nebraska’s revenues go back up.

Husker baseball expenses went up by more than $1 million while revenues declined from $2.5 million to $2.12 million — $198,000 of the expense increase was related to an athletic facilities debt service, leases and rental fees at Haymarket Park.

 
I knew women's basketball didn't make money, but didn't realize they were that far in the hole with expenses triple their revenue.

I guess we're preparing them well for the WNBA.

Women's basketball is the biggest money loser at most athletic departments. Much of it due to the skyrocketing costs of coaches. Doesn't make much sense to spend a bunch on a HC just to lose more money on the team. Women's basketball coaches salaries are way out of line, compared to their revenue stream. I don't think there is a women's basketball team that is profitable.
 
Women's basketball is the biggest money loser at most athletic departments. Much of it due to the skyrocketing costs of coaches. Doesn't make much sense to spend a bunch on a HC just to lose more money on the team. Women's basketball coaches salaries are way out of line, compared to their revenue stream. I don't think there is a women's basketball team that is profitable.
UCONN maybe
 
Pretty shitty article by Sam McKewon....

-----------------

LINCOLN — Revenues and expenses for Nebraska athletics dipped slightly this past fiscal year, though NU’s surplus grew by a small amount.

Those are three key takeaways from the Huskers’ annual report to the NCAA for the fiscal year July 1, 2024-June 30, 2025. The report, submitted to the NCAA in December and available to media in January, looks back at the 2024 football and volleyball seasons and completes its fiscal period with the 2025 baseball and softball teams.

NU reported $215,089,007 in revenues and $207,743,888 in expenses for 2024-2025, keeping the athletic department in the $200 million club inhabited by schools like Michigan and Ohio State. Those numbers are down from school records for fiscal year 2023-2024, when Nebraska generated $220,165,405 in revenue and $213,456,031 in expenses.

The 2024-25 fiscal year surplus ($7,345,119) is greater than $6.7 million surplus in fiscal year 2023-2024.

Nebraska’s media rights deal — mostly paid through the Big Ten’s agreements with TV partners — delivered $75.9 million in 2024-25, an increase of more $11.5 million from the 2023-2024 fiscal year.

In part because of a new, lavish training table operation — which partners with Flik corporate hospitality group — NU athletics’ meal expenses increased by 65%, from $7,040,557 to $11,649,457. Meal expenses in multiple sports — baseball, track and field and tennis among them — more than doubled as student-athletes took advantage of the food service inside the Osborne Legacy Complex.

Husker football generated $124.2 million in revenue against nearly $73 million in expenses — both totals were drops from 2023-2024, but the surplus of $51.5 million — accounting for 84.1% of the media rights deal, 71% of parking and concessions revenues and 85.6% of ticket revenue — was greater than the $44.1 million in 2023-2024. The ticket share is a sharp increase from fiscal year 2023-2024 because Husker volleyball did not hold another match inside Memorial Stadium, which drew a record 92,003 in August 2023.

NU football’s recruiting expenditures took a sharp decline, from $2.19 million to $1.66 million, as Nebraska’s 2025 recruiting class was roughly half the size of the 2024 class. Like other schools, Nebraska added more transfers to the 2025, which cuts into recruiting expenses, since on-campus visits tend to be shorter and coaches don’t travel to visit prospects at their schools.

Starting with the 2025-2026 annual report — which will be available in January 2027 — there’s likely to be a budget line for revenue-sharing to student-athletes. This year, NU had $20.5 million to distribute; roughly 75% of that total, a source has told the World-Herald, was allocated to the football team.

Nebraska men’s basketball went up in both revenue ($18,654,340) and expenses ($13,427,513) in fiscal year 20242-25. Coach Fred Hoiberg made $4,377,017 in salary; his assistants made $1,317,251.

Husker women’s basketball increased its expenses ($6,299,266) and saw a slight drop in revenue from $2,234,685 in 2023-2024 to $2,186,767 in 2024-2025. Coach Amy Williams made $1,030,619 in salary; her assistants made $722,304.

NU volleyball switched head coaches halfway through the fiscal year from the retiring John Cook to his successor, Dani Busboom Kelly; together, they made $1,329,192 over the fiscal year.

Despite having a much stronger season in 2025 than in 2024, Husker softball revenues and expenses went down to $518,991 and $4,631,302 in the most recent fiscal year. With a stronger home slate in 2026 and the return of star Jordy Frahm, it’s likely Nebraska’s revenues go back up.

Husker baseball expenses went up by more than $1 million while revenues declined from $2.5 million to $2.12 million — $198,000 of the expense increase was related to an athletic facilities debt service, leases and rental fees at Haymarket Park.

Why is the article shitty? It’s just facts and numbers.
 
Why is the article shitty? It’s just facts and numbers.

Detail the numbers. How much was spent per sport, compare it to the prior year or two.

He did it for FB, MBB & WBB then went the lazy route to finish. He has access to the numbers, so give full context.
 
Detail the numbers. How much was spent per sport, compare it to the prior year or two.

He did it for FB, MBB & WBB then went the lazy route to finish. He has access to the numbers, so give full context.
He did that for baseball and softball. Said revenue was down for both and expenses up from year prior. The only thing he didn’t mention was coaches salaries like he did for VB, MBB, WBB. At some point too the dollar amount is so small relative to the overall number that it’s not worth the ink.

Edit: it’d be nice to know how much baseball expenses were before. They went up by $1M, but there’s no context. I see your point there.
 
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Uconn people are weird.

Sad Kid GIF
 
I'm pro women's sports....but there is no way that a place like NU should be paying it's WBB HC $1.0m/yr. That is really insane.

WVB absolutely. That does a lot for our university. And our state.

WBB is not a big deal here though. We're not known for it. No history. No notoriety. And huge money loser.
I'm anti women's sports and I agree
 
I'm pro women's sports....but there is no way that a place like NU should be paying it's WBB HC $1.0m/yr. That is really insane.

WVB absolutely. That does a lot for our university. And our state.

WBB is not a big deal here though. We're not known for it. No history. No notoriety. And huge money loser.
College coaching salaries are generally out of control especially now that schools have to pay labor.
 
I'm anti women's sports and I agree

I’m anti-wasting and losing money guy, and it never ceases to amaze me how much money we spend, as a society in general, just to keep women happy. Whether you’re talking about a husband, boyfriend, girl dad, women’s sports, worthless business ventures for bored housewives etc… We spend an insane amount of money to just keep them from complaining and making everyone else miserable.
 
He did that for baseball and softball. Said revenue was down for both and expenses up from year prior. The only thing he didn’t mention was coaches salaries like he did for VB, MBB, WBB. At some point too the dollar amount is so small relative to the overall number that it’s not worth the ink.

Edit: it’d be nice to know how much baseball expenses were before. They went up by $1M, but there’s no context. I see your point there.

Ya, your edit is my point.

The $1M is lack of context horseshit anyways. 20% to Haymarket, 20-25% to coaches salaries, 12-15%(ish) to the west coast 10-day trip. That's 52-60% of the increase right there. But only mention of one item.

Lazy Sam.
 
I think the head coach salary trend is going to start to die off in college sports the next 5-10 years.

As we transition through nil and eventually all players are university employees the coaches become less important.
When you look at pro sports leagues the players are the the organization while coaches are background noise. Same will happen in college as teams have to prioritize paying players over coaches

Coaches will became less valuable. Even more so if there’s ever a salary cap
 
College coaching salaries are generally out of control especially now that schools have to pay labor.
Yeah I'm sure other shitty B1G and SEC WBB programs pay their HC $1.0m/yr too. Political. It looks bad if that's the market rate and you're only paying yours $350k/yr
 
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