NCAAF: Brent Venables gets new 6-year, $49.65M contract at Oklahoma

Date:

Share post:


Oklahoma football coach Brent Venables is receiving a new-six year contract worth nearly $50 million, as approved Friday by the Oklahoma Board of Regents.

CBS Sports reported the package totals $49.65 million with an average annual value of $8.275 million. The contract will run through the 2029 season.

His original deal, signed when he was hired prior to the 2022 season, was for six years and $43.5 million.

Over the past two seasons, the Sooners are 16-10 — 6-7 in 2022 and 10-3 last season. They qualified for a bowl game each season, losing both.

Oklahoma is the first head coaching job for Venables, 53.

He began his career as a graduate assistant at his alma mater Kansas State in 1993, then moved on to positions at Oklahoma and Clemson. He won the Broyles Award in 2016 as the nation’s top assistant under Dabo Swinney at Clemson, where he was the assistant head coach, defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at the time of his departure.

The Sooners are moving from the Big 12 to the Southeastern Conference this fall. They kick off their season Aug. 30 against Temple and will jump into SEC play on Sept. 21 as they host Tennessee.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: Bucknell sued in football player’s death last summer

The parents of a Bucknell freshman football player who died following a workout last summer have filed a...

NCAAF: Reports: Missouri QB Drew Pyne enters transfer portal

Missouri quarterback Drew Pyne is entering the transfer portal as a grad transfer, several reports said Tuesday. Pyne will...

NFL: Broncos add QB depth, sign Sam Ehlinger

The Denver Broncos signed free agent quarterback Sam Ehlinger on Wednesday. Terms were not disclosed by the Broncos....

NFL: Serena Williams, husband bid on NFL flag football venture

Retired tennis great Serena Williams and her husband, Alexis Ohanian, have submitted a bid as potential investors to...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.