Thursday, April 30, 2020

Relative Fan Base Sizes

Nice find from ACCFootballRX

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2015/04/relative-fan-base-sizes-from-reddit.html


Reddit fan bases, relative size of each (2015):

[click image to enlarge]
UP = more basketball fans; RIGHT = more football fans

According to this, DukeUNC and Syracuse have the most basketball fans in the ACC, followed by NC StateLouisville and Virginia. Comparable teams in other conferences: Kentucky, Kansas, Indiana and UConn.

The schools with the most football fans are FSUVTGTClemson and Miami. Comparable teams in other conferences: Texas A&M, Georgia, Oklahoma, Penn State, and California.



Monday, April 20, 2020

Dire scenarios (Clemson)



https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-04-20/collapse-of-sports-brings-dire-scenarios-to-schools-like-clemson?srnd=premium
For a snapshot of how U.S. universities are coping, look no further than Clemson -- the only school to participate in each of the past five College Football Playoffs -- where athletic officials are hoping for the best but also planning for the worst.
At its most optimistic, Clemson sees a revenue drop of about $7.5 million, a manageable hit on a sports budget that grew to $132 million last year. From there, administrators turn to more dire possibilities: a partially disrupted college football season or, in the worst case, one that doesn’t happen at all.
Clemson’s fiscal year starts in the summer, as is typical of universities, so budgeting for the 2020-21 school year is in full swing. And for everyone in higher education, the pandemic’s impact is top of mind.
Clemson has seen its athletic budget soar 60% in the past five years. The money comes from four main revenue sources: ticket sales, donations, media rights, and licensing and marketing.

Roaring Tigers

Football success has filled Clemson's coffers
Source: Clemson University

Clemson’s “control budget” is built for a world where the virus outlook improves so much that football games are allowed to proceed as planned this fall. Even then, Neff said that scenario anticipates a 10% drop each in donations, ticket sales and marketing revenue. All told, it would be a $7.5 million hit.
From there, the school moves toward more drastic scenarios. A “sensitivity budget,” Neff said, might assume a 20% reduction in those main revenue sources, so a drop of around $15 million. Further down the road, the school will look at the larger loss scenarios if football can’t happen.

Schools around the country are weighing the same factors. The University of Minnesota this month released its projections for its athletic department, which is roughly the same size as Clemson’s. Minnesota’s estimates were a $10 million hit in the “best case,” $30 million in the “moderate” scenario and $75 million in the “severe.”

The Revenue Pie

The Clemson Tigers make most of their revenue from four sources
Source: Clemson University

The athletic department also has about $70 million in reserve, which can help offset some damage but won’t be the sole line of defense. Insurance policies, covering losses such as game cancellations, are generally held at the conference level.

Most important team in ACC Football History

Don't have access to this article, but I agree with the premise.


CARES money news



https://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/2020/04/19/cares-act-brings-relief-fsu-famu-but-revenue-losses-mounting/5156874002/?fbclid=IwAR0Jtrkd2eYxH5Ne9mAM0FxFdzBnVLVTToZBkpJzI7b6a6lzSRVdhKeZGDI

Florida’s public universities will pull in nearly $252 million, with half of each university’s share specifically designated “to provide emergency financial aid grants to students for expenses related to disruption of campus operations due to coronavirus,” the U.S. Department of Education said in a release.
So far, the federal agency has announced funding for the first phase of payments, which covers the category for students. The initial estimates for universities and colleges nationally amounts to about $12.5 billion.
The allocations were based on several factors, primarily the percentage of students at each university or state college currently enrolled and receiving Pell Grants.
For instance, Kyle Clark, vice president for finance and administration at Florida State University, told Board of Trustees members meeting remotely Friday, preliminary estimates show the fiscal impact at FSU through August could reach $73.7 million.
He attributed that to:
  • Housing refunds issued this spring and housing revenue losses through this summer: $10.8 million. 
  • Meal plan refunds, credits and other food sales losses: $6.3 million. 
  • Losses in other auxiliary sales: $15.1 million. 
  • Losses in revenue for research, investments, cleaning costs: $15 million.
  • International programs refunds and lost revenue: $15 million.
  • Families First Coronavirus First Response Act Employer Paid Leave: $11 million.
FSU President John Thrasher said the university is in sound financial shape and there have been no furloughs or layoffs.
He said he remains optimistic, but everyone in the State University System is waiting to see what impact the statewide efforts will have on cuts in the 2020-21 state budget, which has yet to be delivered to Gov. Ron DeSantis.
“As far as Florida State University goes, with the federal assistance we’ll get, about $30 million, we’ll be in good shape.”

CARES Act allocations

Total allocations and how much allocated for emergency financial aid grants to students:
University of Central Florida: $51,071,250; $25,535,625
Florida International University: $38,301,957; $$19,150,979
University of South Florida: $34,839,748; $17,419, 874
University of Florida: $31,046,411; $`15,523,206
Florida State University: $29,339,828; $14,669,914
Florida Atlantic University: $22,429,874; $11,214,937
Florida A&M University: $13,051,325; $6,525,663
University of North Florida: $11,770,196; $5,885,098
Florida Gulf Coast University: $11,143,620; $$5,571,810
Florida Polytechnic University: $1,253,303; $626,652
New College of Florida: $837,170; $418,585
University of West Florida: $6,801,388; $3,400,694

Saturday, April 18, 2020

FSU DBU (UF & LSU comparisons)? (Updated)




Image





https://www.tomahawknation.com/2020/4/15/21222307/more-claim-to-dbu-fsu-or-uf

(here's my Twitter thread, if you want to see it there.)

Total Games Started in the NFL

FSU - 1,709
UF - 975


Total Tackles

FSU - 7,665
UF - 5,409

Total INTs

FSU - 369
UF - 182


Total Pro Bowl Selections

FSU - 25
UF - 8

Total ALL PRO 1st team Selections

FSU - 18
UF - 1. Note* UF has 3 second team selections.


Super Bowl Rings (Must have actually played in the game to count Ring)

FSU - 11
UF - Zero

Players selected in the Top 5 of draft

FSU - 3
UF - Zero

1st round Picks

FSU - 9
UF - 7


2nd round picks

FSU - 7
UF - 5


3rd round picks

FSU - 4
UF - 3

Notable Facts:

FSU - Two 90s All Decade Players (LeRoy Butler & Deion Sanders)
1 NFL DPY (Deion Sanders 94)
1 NFL All Time Team (Deion Sanders)
1 Neurosurgeon (Myron Rolle)
1 man with 14 kids (Antonio Cromartie)


UF - More All Rookie Selections

Oddly enough both teams had exactly 30 DBs drafted since 1989. I chose 1989 for stats because both teams had a 1st round DB that year and both turned out to have great careers.

Other Notables

Both teams have exactly 40 DBs drafted. FSU has more since the NFL merger in 1966 though present.

Most Notable Players Statistically:

FSU - Deion Sanders, LeRoy Butler, Terrell Buckley, Samari RolleDexter Jackson (SB MVP), Antonio Cromartie, and Jalen Ramsey

UF - Louis Oliver , Jimmy Spencer , Lito Shephard , Reggie Nelson , and Joe Haden


Image may contain: text




https://twitter.com/kodykpelham11/status/1251264129781948423



Total Games Started FSU - 1709 LSU - 1258 Total Tackles FSU - 7665 LSU - 6216 Total INTs FSU - 369 LSU - 215

Pro Bowl Selections FSU - 25 LSU - 14 AP 1st Team Selections FSU - 18 LSU - 7 SB Ring (Must have contributed in game to count) FSU - 11 LSU - 5

Players Selected in Top 5 of draft FSU - 3 LSU - 1 1st Rd Picks FSU - 9 LSU - 6 2nd Rd Picks FSU - 7 LSU- 6 3rd Rd Picks FSU - 4 LSU - 6

Notable Facts FSU - Two 90s All Decade Players (LeRoy Butler & Deion Sanders) 1 NFL DPY (Deion Sanders 94) 1 NFL All Time Team (Deion Sanders) 1 Neurosurgeon (Myron Rolle) 1 man with 14 kids (Antonio Cromartie) Green Bay HOF - LeRoy Butler

Notable Facts LSU - 2 NFL 2010 All Decade Team (Tyrann Mathieu & Patrick Peterson) NFL Int Co-Leader 2019 (TreDavious White)

Since 1989, FSU has 30 DBs drafted. LSU has 28 DBs drafted. Most Notable Players FSU - Deion Sanders, LeRoy Butler, Terrell Buckley, Samari Rolle, Dexter Jackson (SB MVP), Antonio Cromartie, and Jalen Ramsey LSU - Tyrann Mathieu, Patrick Peterson, Greg Jackson, Tory James


Friday, April 17, 2020

FSU BOT meeting & shutdown update


https://trustees.fsu.edu/meetings/materials/20200417/Agenda-2020-04-17.pdf

Performing Based Funding statistics in PDF


https://floridastate.rivals.com/news/fsu-s-coburn-on-athletics-budgets-god-help-us-if-football-season-axed

From an overall university perspective, FSU President John Thrasher assured the trustees several times Friday that the university's financial footing is still solid despite the crisis.
"Right now, we're in sound shape," Thrasher said. "We have not had to furlough anybody. We have not had to lay off anybody."
He said he hopes that will remain the case moving forward, although the university has had a hiring freeze in place since March.
Thrasher said FSU is scheduled to receive $30 million in federal money as part of the government's economic recovery package.
"We will be OK going into the fall, I can assure you of that," Thrasher said, before acknowledging that the future could be cloudy if the campus is unable to open the campus to students in the fall.
Like virtually all universities, FSU students finished the spring semester online, and the school will continue to operate that way throughout the summer.
Thrasher said a decision doesn't have to be made about bringing students back this fall until July at the latest. But if students don't return in August, Thrasher said, it will have a "big impact on the budget for next year."

"without football and I would just say God help us "



https://theosceola.com/coburn-details-budget-complexities-scheduling-options-for-fsu-athletics/

Budget update: Coburn confirmed some prior published reports which indicated a $2.2 million-$2.5 million reduction in ACC distribution in the 2019-20 fiscal year due to the loss of the ACC men’s basketball tournament and NCAA Tournaments tournaments. FSU will realize some savings with no sports being played, specifically travel expenses. How the budget for the fiscal year wraps up remains to be seen. Between the hurricane that impacted the FSU-Boise State opener to the football coaching change and coronavirus, budgeting has “been an interesting year.” FSU athletics administrators are planning to develop budget scenarios for next year – “I don’t think any of them will be pretty,” Coburn said. “One of them will be a scenario without football. And I would just say God help us (if that happens).” Coburn said the ACC is looking at all scheduling options, including one where football moves to the spring. In that option they would also coordinate with the NFL, which annually holds an April draft.

Search for new boosters president: Seminole Boosters president and CEO Andy Miller has announced his plans to retire and stay on as a consultant for a year. Coburn said that the search for Miller’s replacement is continuing and they hope to have a replacement in place this fall.

https://www.tallahassee.com/story/sports/college/fsu/2020/04/17/florida-state-fsu-athletic-director-seminoles-david-coburn-financial-budget-no-2020-football-season/5151027002/

https://floridastate.rivals.com/news/fsu-s-coburn-on-athletics-budgets-god-help-us-if-football-season-axed

https://floridastate.rivals.com/news/schoffel-crisis-only-speeds-up-financial-concerns-facing-college-sports

According to an annual report filed by the school last summer, the Seminoles made more than $185 million in revenue during the 2018-19 academic year but racked up $198 million in expenses. A large reason for that shortfall, of course, was that football wasn't nearly as profitable as it had been in recent years. After producing about $37 million in profits in 2017-18 and $42 million the year before that, the football program netted just $24 million last year, according to FSU documents.
That's a problem when you consider the vast majority of sports programs on campus are losing money each year. In this particular year, men's basketball was the only other sport that generated more money than it spent -- to the tune of about $3.4 million. Baseball turns a profit in some seasons, but it actually lost $1.5 million that year.
The deficit for women's basketball was about $1.86 million; for soccer, it was $900,000; it was roughly $500,000 for men's golf and $400,000 for softball. Men's and women's track combined to lose about $2.5 million, while men's and women's swimming came out $1.5 million in the red, and men's and women's tennis were about $1 million in the hole.

FSU athletic endowment update


Spring 2020

FSU athletic endowment reaches $76.4 Million.

This is BEFORE the pandemic, so it likely has fallen


http://unconqueredmagazine.com/our-publication/

Antonio Cromartie longest play in NFL history




Swofford salary history


http://www.theterritory.org/phorum/read.php?5,700151,700532

2006 - 2007 "John Swofford Atlantic Coast $759,971...Mike Slive Southeastern Conference $545,129

2008 - 2009 "Jim Delany was the highest paid, receiving total compensation valued at $1.6 million, followed by Atlantic Coast Conference commissioner John Swofford ($1.1 million), Southeastern Conference commissioner Mike Slive ($1 million)"

2012 - 2013 "Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner John Swofford had compensation totaling nearly $2.2 million during the 2012 calendar year...and the SEC's Mike Slive with $1.173 million

2013- 2014 ("Slive’s base salary rose to $2,051,659 in 2013-14"..."CC’s John Swofford was slightly above $2.1 million."

2016 - 2017 "ACC commissioner John Swofford credited with $3.3 million in total compensation for 2016 calendar year ($3.15 million in base salary). -- "SEC’s new return also provided the first comprehensive look at Greg Sankey’s annual compensation as the conference’s commissioner. Sankey was credited with nearly $1.9 million in total compensation for the 2016 calendar year"

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

ranked teams BCS era to present

Nice find by ACC Football RX

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2020/04/ranked-at-end-1998-2019.html

https://csnbbs.com/thread-897859-post-16774832.html#pid16774832

Teams ranked by final AP poll points (25 for 1st down to 1 for 25th) since the beginning of the BCS era (1998 to present).
Notable is that the 9 undisputed bluebloods are 1, 2, 3, 7, 10, 14, 18, 22, 31 (Nebraska). TCU, who entered the era as a non BCS team, was 15th. Boise was 16th. Louisville and Utah, two other move-ups, were 27 and 28. Other current non-P5 schools-UCF 37, Cincinnati 43, BYU 46, Nevada 52, Houston 54, Marshall 59, Southern Miss and Tulane tied for 61, Air Force 65 and Miami (O.) and Navy tied for 66. 92 total teams were ranked.

Associated Press

A user who goes by "bullet" on CSNBBS compiled and posted this list of "ranked teams BCS era to present". Here's how he explained his post:
Teams are ranked by final AP poll points (25 for 1st down to 1 for 25th) since the beginning of the BCS era (1998 to present).

Notable is that the 9 undisputed bluebloods are 1, 2, 3, 7, 10, 14, 18, 22, 31 (Nebraska). TCU, who entered the era as a non BCS team, was 15th. Boise was 16th. Louisville and Utah, two other move-ups, were 27 and 28. Other current non-P5 schools-UCF 37, Cincinnati 43, BYU 46, Nevada 52, Houston 54, Marshall 59, Southern Miss and Tulane tied for 61, Air Force 65 and Miami (O.) and Navy tied for 66. 92 total teams were ranked. [italics added - Hokie Mark]
Sounds like a reasonable system of analysis... so, without further ado, here's the list:

RankTeamPoints
1Ohio State395
2Alabama335
3Oklahoma332
4LSU290
5Georgia252.5
6Oregon239
7USC238
8Florida228.5
9Wisconsin220
10Texas217
11Florida State206
12Auburn184
13Clemson184
14Michigan182
15TCU181
16Boise State173
17Virginia Tech166
18Penn State157
19Stanford150
20Miami (FL)137
21Michigan State135
22Notre Dame132
23Tennessee111
24Iowa108
25Oklahoma St101
26Kansas State100
27Louisville87
28Utah86
29W Virginia85
30Missouri84
31Nebraska84
32Arkansas79
33S Carolina78
34Baylor71
35Texas AM70
36Washington St65
37UCF63
38Georgia Tech60
39Ole Miss60
40Mississippi St57
41UCLA54
42Washington53
43Cincinnati44
44Maryland43
45Boston College40
46Brigham Young38
47Texas Tech37
48Arizona State36
49Colorado32
50California30
51Minnesota30
52Nevada30
53Arizona29
54Houston26
55N Carolina26
56Northwestern26
57Syracuse24
58Illinois22
59Marshall21
60Oregon St20
61Kansas19
62Pitt19
63Southern Miss19
64Tulane19
65Air Force17
66Miami (OH)16
67Navy16
68Fresno15
69Virginia15
70Kentucky14
71Rutgers14
72Utah State14
73S Florida12
74Memphis11
75Purdue11
76W Michigan11
77Wake Forest8
78Appalachian St7
79Army7
80Hawaii7
81San Jose State5
82Vanderbilt5
83NC State4
84N Illinois4
85Tulsa4
86Bowling Green3
87C Michigan3
88Duke3
89Toledo3
90W Kentucky2
91Iowa State1
92San Diego St1

Sunday, April 12, 2020

Friday, April 3, 2020

FSU athletic financials odd? (update)

Again great investigation by HokieMark.  Even during these times when NOTHING is going on, FSU's own media doesn't look into these topics.  Really is a head scatcher here.

https://footballscoop.com/news/the-highest-grossing-football-programs-in-college-football-are/

Power 5 — Top 15
1. Texas — $156 million
2. Georgia — $123 million
3. Michigan — $122 million
4. Notre Dame — $116 million
5. Ohio State — $115 million
6. Penn State — $100 million
7. Auburn — $95 million
8. Oklahoma — $94.8 million
9. Alabama — $94.6 million
10. Nebraska — $94.3 million
11. LSU — $92 million
12. Tennessee — $91 million
13. Wisconsin — $90 million
14. Florida — $85 million
15. Washington — $84 million

ACC
1. Florida State — $69 million
2. Clemson — $61 million
3. Miami — $56 million
4. NC State — $46 million
5. Syracuse — $44 million

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2020/03/weird-fsu-financials-and-more.html

Something weird's going on in Tallahassee. Florida State reported EADA revenue for the 2018-19 athletic year of nearly $200 million - enough to rank 3rd among all college athletic departments in revenue for that year. Yet Seminole fans will tell you their school is strapped for cash. What gives? Let's see if we can figure it out...

Equity in Athletics Data (EADA)

Here's the EADA data for the last 2 years, which is broken out by sport:

Year2017-182018-19
Baseball Revenue$6,076,428$7,466,680
Basketball Revenue$23,550,761$24,453,445
Beach Volleyball Revenue$930,014$1,060,193
All Track Combined Revenue$5,181,616$5,619,389
Football Revenue$87,510,028$68,893,857
Golf Revenue$3,940,685$3,340,678
Soccer (W) Revenue$2,590,332$3,192,377
Softball Revenue$2,444,750$2,860,820
Swimming Revenue$2,977,495$3,576,912
Tennis Revenue$2,379,907$2,637,520
Volleyball (W) Revenue$1,593,290$1,983,171
Total Men's Teams Revenue$117,887,541$100,569,860
Total Women's Teams Revenue $21,287,765 $24,515,182
Not Allocated by Gender/Sport Revenue $38,337,644 $73,322,159
Grand Total Revenue$177,512,950$198,407,201

In other words, despite a drop in football revenue, the total revenue for the athletic department increased by about $21 million. Also, while there were small increases in revenue for baseball (+$1.4M), basketball (+$1M), track, soccer, softball and swimming (each about +$0.5M), the vast majority of the increase came from "non-allocated" revenue.

What is "Revenues Not Allocated by Gender/Sport"? From the 2019 EADA user's Guide, it includes "any revenue which cannot be tied to a particular sport", such as:
  • alumni contributions to the athletic department (not targeted to a particular sport)
  • investment interest income
  • athletic conference money
  • radio and advertising sales
  • royalties
  • signage or other sponsorships
  • fundraising activities
  • institutional, state or other government support
Were these revenues one-time, or recurring? We just don't have enough information to know.

USA Today College Finances

Here's the USA-Today data, which is broken out by category, not by sport:

YearTicket SalesContributionsRights / LicensingStudent FeesSchool
Funds
OtherTotal Revenues
2018$24,414,864$55,886,370$46,070,530$8,493,715$0$33,312,371$168,177,850
2017$25,046,047$41,504,734$36,709,768$8,446,443$0$32,807,421$144,514,413
2016$20,206,022$32,382,845$36,140,389$8,364,645$0$16,660,413$113,754,314
2015$26,169,018$25,265,420$49,576,951$8,287,769$0$11,523,364$120,822,522
2014$25,550,753$22,521,553$40,493,922$7,980,366$0$8,227,880$104,774,474
2013$20,302,766$18,894,097$36,775,949$7,859,734$0$7,549,895$91,382,441
2012$20,379,815$31,000,624$36,511,620$7,778,861$0$4,378,524$100,049,444
2011$17,980,170$19,302,120$27,432,139$7,528,006$0$6,333,353$78,575,788
2010$15,775,516$23,245,513$25,882,320$6,919,449$350,000$2,229,471$74,402,269
2009$18,260,626$25,572,654$25,722,130$6,772,105$700,000($2,610,191)$74,417,324
2008$13,393,780$25,190,569$24,348,076$6,590,629$0$3,935,440$73,458,494
2007$15,279,152$22,751,726$21,719,651$6,066,563$350,000$11,090,753$77,257,845
2006$13,260,770$16,053,230$19,523,617$6,011,806$350,000$11,813,369$67,012,792
2005$12,709,321$16,414,490$17,166,315$4,796,773$0$5,490,034$56,576,933
source: https://sports.usatoday.com/ncaa/finances

The 2018-19 season isn't posted yet, and the 2017-18 total revenue, while close, is not an exact match for the EADA number (differs by about $9 million). That said, there are some interesting trends we see in this table, such as:
  • ticket sales revenue remains strong compared to pre-2012 revenue
  • contributions are way up from previous years - more than double 2015, in fact!
  • FSU enjoyed a huge bump in rights and licensing last year (up $10 million)
Assuming these trends held for 2018-19, it's at least plausible that the $198 million revenue is real...

That said, throwing more money at a problem just makes it a more expensive problem. Or, would it have made Willie Taggart a better coach if FSU had paid him more? What's the missing piece?

https://csnbbs.com/thread-897219.html

Info From Equity in Athletics

Reporting Year: 07/01/2018 - 06/30/2019

Total Revenues by Team

001.) The University of Texas at Austin - $215,829,101
002.) Ohio State University-Main Campus - $209,102,666
003.) Florida State University - $198,407,201
004.) University of Michigan-Ann Arbor - $175,006,632
005.) University of Georgia - $174,042,482
006.) University of Notre Dame - $169,547,625
007.) The University of Alabama - $166,812,799
008.) Pennsylvania State University-Main Campus - $164,529,325
009.) Texas A & M University-College Station - $160,101,611
010.) University of Oklahoma-Norman Campus - $159,286,136

011.) Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College - $157,787,780
012.) Auburn University - $152,455,418
013.) University of Wisconsin-Madison - $151,369,153
014.) University of Louisville - $148,667,940
015.) University of Iowa - $144,070,825
016.) University of Florida - $143,627,997
017.) University of Kentucky - $143,481,480
018.) University of South Carolina-Columbia - $140,295,659
019.) University of Arkansas - $139,504,649
020.) Stanford University - $139,390,932

021.) The University of Tennessee-Knoxville - $135,818,717
022.) University of Nebraska-Lincoln - $130,313,578
023.) University of California-Los Angeles - $127,339,042
024.) University of Miami - $127,170,251
025.) Indiana University-Bloomington - $126,358,047
026.) Clemson University - $124,601,614
027.) University of Minnesota-Twin Cities - $122,667,963
028.) University of Kansas - $119,768,008
029.) University of Southern California - $118,687,120
030.) Texas Christian University - $118,496,653

031.) Michigan State University - $116,186,933
032.) University of Washington-Seattle Campus - $116,048,869
033.) Duke University - $116,021,513
034.) Northwestern University - $111,421,226
035.) Purdue University-Main Campus - $110,844,907
036.) University of Virginia-Main Campus - $108,854,006
037.) University of Maryland-College Park - $108,796,303
038.) University of Oregon - $108,500,370
039.) University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - $105,407,867
040.) University of Arizona - $102,275,918

041.) Arizona State University-Tempe - $101,836,361
042.) Mississippi State University - $101,454,439
043.) Baylor University - $101,243,920
044.) West Virginia University - $101,095,223
045.) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign - $100,156,079
046.) Syracuse University - $99,815,688
047.) University of Pittsburgh-Pittsburgh Campus - $98,866,362
048.) University of Colorado Boulder - $98,413,285
049.) University of Mississippi - $96,790,426
050.) University of California-Berkeley - $94,646,123