Arkansas Football Coach Sam Pittman Agrees To New Contract Spiced With Stability

Arkansas football coach Sam Pittman is at his dream job, so he and his new agent, Jimmy Sexton, used that in contract negotiations that have ended with a new contract and a non-compete clause for Pittman.

The clause means he will not accept another job.

"It's going to have a non-compete clause in it, and that's about all I'll say about it until (it is released in full)," Pittman said Saturday. "I'm glad it does. It allows us to recruit. There are a lot of different things in recruiting, but one of them happens to be stability. They can fire me whenever they get good and ready to, but I can't leave. Don't want to anyways, so we're using that."

Pittman, 60, was Arkansas' associate head coach and offensive line coach from 2013-15. He also has a Razorback statue outside his lake home.

Details have not been released, but Pittman said other terms have been settled. Sexton, who became Pittman's agent last year, had asked Arkansas to give Pittman a seven-year contract worth approximately $50 million, or $7.14 million a year, last December.

For decades, Sexton has represented some of the highest paid college football coaches in the nation. Among his current clients are Alabama coach Nick Saban ($9.75 million a year), Texas A&M's Jimbo Fisher ($9 million), Ole Miss' Lane Kiffin ($7.25 million) and Georgia's Kirby Smart ($7.1 million).

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Pittman had a salary of $3 million last year in his second season as Arkansas' coach for 12th in the 14-team Southeastern Conference. After a 3-7 season in his first year in 2020, he led the Razorbacks to a 9-4 season in 2021 with a 4-4 finish in the SEC.

Arkansas beat Penn State, 24-10, in the Outback Bowl on Jan. 1 in the Razorbacks' first traditional New Year's Day bowl since the 2011 season when they beat Kansas State 29-16 in the Cotton Bowl. The nine wins last year were the most for Arkansas since it went 11-2 in that 2011 season under coach Bobby Petrino.

After the 2019 season, Pittman inherited a program that had three straight losing seasons and was 4-20 overall and 0-16 in its previous two seasons.

"I've agreed to what they've offered, and they agreed when I agreed," Pittman said after his team's open scrimmage was moved indoors because of rain Saturday and closed to the public. "So, I don't know what all that means. Do you? I agreed. They agreed. So, I guess that means we agreed."

Asked how he felt about it, Pittman said, "Awesome. Awesome."

Arkansas had three wins over ranked teams last season -- 40-21 over No. 15 Texas, 20-10 over No. 7 Texas A&M and 31-28 over No. 17 Mississippi State. The Hogs also lost a thriller at No. 2 Alabama, 42-34, and 52-51 at No. 17 Ole Miss.

Pittman was scheduled to make $3.25 million in 2022, according to his original contract.

Pittman said Arkansas is one of the rare programs in the country with the same head coach, offensive coordinator (Kendal Briles) and defensive coordinator (Barry Odom) headed into a third straight season.

"We're trying to sell this contract as stability," he said.

Written by
Guilbeau joined OutKick as an SEC columnist in September of 2021 after covering LSU and the Saints for 17 years at USA TODAY Louisiana. He has been a national columnist/feature writer since the summer of 2022, covering college football, basketball and baseball with some NFL, NBA, MLB, TV and Movies and general assignment, including hot dog taste tests. A New Orleans native and Mizzou graduate, he has consistently won Associated Press Sports Editors (APSE) and Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) awards since covering Alabama and Auburn at the Mobile Press-Register (1993-98) and LSU and the Saints at the Baton Rouge Advocate (1998-2004). In 2021, Guilbeau won an FWAA 1st for a game feature, placed in APSE Beat Writing, Breaking News and Explanatory, and won Beat Writer of the Year from the Louisiana Sports Writers Association (LSWA). He won an FWAA columnist 1st in 2017 and was FWAA's top overall winner in 2016 with 1st in game story, 2nd in columns, and features honorable mention. Guilbeau completed a book in 2022 about LSU's five-time national champion coach - "Everything Matters In Baseball: The Skip Bertman Story" - that is available at www.acadianhouse.com, Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble outlets. He lives in Baton Rouge with his wife, the former Michelle Millhollon of Thibodaux who previously covered politics for the Baton Rouge Advocate and is a communications director.