UNC’s Bold Gamble: Michael Malone’s Tar Heel Salary, and High Stakes

Daniel Adebanji
Daniel Adebanji - Sports Writer, Sports Journalist
3 Min Read

The Tar Heels have made another headline-grabbing move, and this one could reshape college basketball. Michael Malone, fresh off an NBA championship run, is now the man in charge in Chapel Hill. But is his reported salary worth the gamble? Yankee Scores reports.

 

A Contract That Turns Heads

According to Brian Murphy of WRAL-TV, North Carolina will pay Malone a staggering $50 million over six years—about $8.3 million annually through 2032. Brendan Marks of The Athletic added that his 2027 salary alone will hit $7.5 million, with revenue-sharing perks and assistant-coaching pools included. Even more striking, the university would owe him 80% of his remaining salary if he’s fired early.

That figure places Malone second only to Kansas’s Bill Self among the highest-paid men’s college basketball coaches. Self earns $8.8 million per year, while John Calipari at Arkansas and Dan Hurley at UConn trail just behind.

North Carolina is hiring Michael Malone. Credit: NBACentral via X

The Résumé Behind the Price Tag

Malone’s credentials are undeniable. He compiled a 510–394 NBA record, went 44–36 in the playoffs, and delivered Denver its first-ever championship in 2023. Perhaps most impressively, he helped transform Nikola Jokić from a second-round draft pick into a three-time MVP.

With European talent increasingly drawn to college programs, North Carolina may be betting that Malone’s NBA pedigree—and his work with Jokić—will attract recruits who dream of following a similar path.

The Risk Factor

Still, questions linger. Malone’s last college basketball job was as a Manhattan assistant in 2001. And Denver dismissed him in April 2025, moving on without missing a beat under David Adelman. For a program that traditionally hires from within the “Carolina family,” this is a bold departure.

Why UNC Made the Move

The ACC is under pressure. As Hurley noted earlier this year, “It’s no longer enough just to point toward a trophy case.” With the Big Ten and SEC exploding financially, North Carolina is signaling that it won’t settle for business as usual.

Hiring Malone is both a statement and a gamble. His NBA success suggests he can deliver, but his lack of recent college experience makes this one of the most fascinating experiments in modern college basketball.

 

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Daniel is a rising sports journalist with a sharp eye for detail and a passion for storytelling. At Yankee Scores, he covers the biggest headlines across soccer, basketball, and the NFL, bringing readers analysis that blends breaking news with tactical insight.
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