Leading a team to a national championship can do a lot of things for you, and one of them is make you rich. Especially when you're an Oklahoma State grad and your alma mater is likely willing to throw a blank check at you.
Less than 24 hours after leading Kansas to its first men's basketball championship since 1988, head coach Bill Self is in high demand. Whether or not he leaves Lawrence for Stillwater will be a personal choice, but if money is part of the equation, the Cowboys could be in good shape.
A few years back, oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens dropped $165 million on Oklahoma State, and with that type of investment, money is spent on the things Pickens wants. Who wouldn't want a national championship coach to return to his alma mater?
I don't want to debate whether or not Self will stay or go, because in this discussion, it's relatively unimportant. What I want to know is whether boosters should have such significant influence over athletics department decisions.
ESPN devoted Sunday's Outside the Lines program to Nike CEO Phil Knight's influence at Oregon, especially with regard to the hiring of his good friend, Pat Kilkenny, as athletics director. Kilkenny, by the way, is not a college graduate.
Pickens' spokesperson said the billionaire has all the confidence that Director of Athletics Mike Holder will hire the right man for the vacant position. But it is clear that a $165 million gift makes you an integral part of the decision-making process on important hires.
Should it be that way? Should boosters be allowed to exert such influence on intercollegiate athletics?