And he's still only 45.
Guy could coach another 30 years if he wants. I'm completely happy where I'm at, but if I got an interview request with a different organization for more prestige and money? Goddam right I'd take it, but odds are very high that I would pass.
Ok, but this isn't going from $50k/year to $100k/year, or even $100k to $200k - it'd be what, $4 million to $8 million? Keeping in mind you already have $20+ (likely way more) million in the bank. And you'd be moving to an objectively worse city to raise a family, have less time to raise that family, and will likely be fired within 3 years. I think chasing the bag to only chase the bag is short-sighted in this scenario, particularly when you have enough money for your family to thrive for the rest of time already.
Edit: Sorry, can't read - now I see that you say you likely would PASS on that opportunity. I agree, no harm in taking the interview!
So here's the thing. Chris Williams talked about this in the 2 Guys show and it applies. Colleges had a spending problem for years, and they have to correct it quickly. While total revenue is still growing alot of that is going to be shifted to the players in the next few years. Coaches are going to start making far less money and contracts will be a fraction of their current value. That will be nearly across the board as far more mouths will be at the money trough.
Pro football doesn't have that issue. Their business model is set and salaries should just continue to slowly climb for coaches. If coaches want to cash in or in some cases maintain their current income its going to be an attractive option.
NCAA coaches salaries aren't going down - they might not continue to increase at these rates, but no current successful coach is getting a salary decrease anytime soon (if ever). Not only that, but the job security here is 100x that of the job security at these **** NFL teams. Would you prefer 10 years making $5 million, or 2 years making $8 million?