Coyle Receives Two-Year Contract Extension

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Per U of MN:
MINNEAPOLIS - The University of Minnesota Board of Regents approved a two-year contract extension for Thomas O. Moe Director of Athletics Mark Coyle on June 11, 2026. The agreement keeps Coyle under contract as the leader of Gopher Athletics through June 2032.

Coyle was named Director of Athletics on May 11, 2016. Under his direction, the Golden Gophers have excelled in the classroom, in competition and in the community.

Coyle manages an athletic department that sponsors 22 varsity sports and serves 600 student-athletes, while generating $473 million annually in economic impact in Minnesota and bringing more than 1.3 million people annually to a Gopher athletic facility.

Gopher student-athletes posted a school record cumulative GPA of 3.48 in the 2025-26 academic year, and Minnesota has produced 313 College Sports Communicators Academic All-District selections and 92 College Sports Communicators Academic All-Americans during Coyle's helm. Minnesota now has 218 all-time CSC Academic All-Americans, a total that ranks tenth all-time in Academic All-America honorees.

In the most recent results, Minnesota has a 93 percent Graduation Success Rate (GSR). Under Coyle's leadership, Minnesota has now recorded the eight highest GSR statistics in school history during the last eight years with a school-record 96 percent mark in 2021, 95 percent in 2023 and 2024, 94 percent in 2022, 2020 and 2019 and a 93 percent rate in 2018 and 2025.

In the most recent APR scores, seven Gopher programs recorded a perfect multi-year score, while 17 programs had perfect single-year APR scores.
Minnesota has won 26 conference championships (18 regular-season and eight postseason) and 21 individual NCAA national championships under Coyle's direction. Those titles were earned by 11 different programs, spanning from baseball and volleyball to hockey and soccer.

Coyle and head football coach P.J. Fleck, who enter their tenth season together in 2026, form the longest-tenured athletics director/head coach partnership in the Big Ten and the second longest-tenured partnership in the nation. The tandem has brought cultural stability to Minnesota, and the results have been significant. Since 2019, Minnesota has a 54-31 record in football and its .635 winning percentage ranks fifth among teams who competed in the Big Ten during that time.

This past season saw Minnesota's women's basketball team go 24-9 and advance to the Sweet 16, while Gopher gymnastics advanced to the Four on the Floor at the NCAA Championships. The wrestling team placed ninth at the NCAA Championships, while women's swimming and diving tied for 16th and women's indoor track and field finished 17th. The men's basketball team showed promise in its first year under the direction of first-year head coach Niko Medved, recording three victories against ranked opponents.

The Spirit Squad captured national titles in Dance (Pom) and Small Co-Ed Game Day Cheer, continuing its tradition of national excellence.

Minnesota currently ranks 18th out of 258 universities in the Learfield Directors' Cup race, which measures broad-based athletics success. That puts Minnesota in the top seven percent of all Division I athletics departments nationwide.

During Coyle's tenure, Minnesota opened the world-class Athletes Village in January 2018 that directly benefits every student-athlete on campus. The all-inclusive facility provides ample space for student-athletes to study, train and eat. Minnesota also opened new facilities for gymnastics, golf and wrestling and built an outdoor track stadium under Coyle.

Minnesota continues to emphasize holistic growth among its student-athletes and prioritizes their mental health and well-being. The department has expanded its mental health resources under Coyle and more than 60% of Gopher student-athletes have utilized those services.

Student-athletes continue to impact the community in positive ways. Several teams partner with Team Impact and Minnesota was honored as the Division I Fellowship Campus of the Year by the organization last year.

The football team hosts a turkey drive each November and a diaper drive once a year. In the last 10 years, the program has collected and donated more than 140,000 diapers to the Diaper Bank of Minnesota. Members of the soccer team meet once a week during the school year and help clean up and beautify Dinkytown and the men's basketball team launched Ski-U-Mah Strong last season, which is a program that paired each player with a cancer patient or survivor from Masonic Children's Hospital.

Gopher student-athletes give back to the community with school and hospital visits and spend time with more than a dozen organizations that uplift and have a positive impact on others.

Coyle was a member of the Division I Men's Basketball Committee from 2021-26 and is a former member of the Rose Bowl Management Committee.

Coyle returned to Minnesota in 2016 after overseeing the marketing department from 2001 to 2005. In between, Coyle was the athletics director at Boise State and Syracuse and was the deputy athletics director at Kentucky.
 


His handling of basketball for the majority of his career has been a career crippler. Dude barely survived his Ben Johnson boner.
 





The Whalen swing made sense and it’s not like she recruited poorly, it just didn’t work out.

Coyles hands were tied with BJ.
This is a completely fair assessment of Coyle regarding the hoops programs. I supported the Whalen hire 100% and it's painfully obvious his hands were tied by the U with the Johnson hire.

My concerns still linger over his failures as a fundraiser and the massive decline by our lower/non revenue programs like hockey, volleyball, softball, baseball and wrestling under his watch.
 

This is a completely fair assessment of Coyle regarding the hoops programs. I supported the Whalen hire 100% and it's painfully obvious his hands were tied by the U with the Johnson hire.

My concerns still linger over his failures as a fundraiser and the massive decline by our lower/non revenue programs like hockey, volleyball, softball, baseball and wrestling under his watch.
Don't need to rehash the entire Ben hiring conversation but was Coyme specifically ordered to hire Ben Johnson and only Ben Johnson????
 





Don't need to rehash the entire Ben hiring conversation but was Coyme specifically ordered to hire Ben Johnson and only Ben Johnson????
It's an opinion board but you can't convince me otherwise. The overall social and political landscape at the U demanded it and the BOR/Administration happily went along for the ride with a forced endorsement.

I'm a fan of Coyle as a person but the current nature of college athletics demands that an AD can command a room with an engaging personality while convincing boosters to support our programs with their hard-earned cash. I attended a Coyle speaking engagement not that long ago and he couldn't sell hamburgers at McDonald's.
 


I don't mind the Coyle extension, just wish he would hire an AD position focused on fundraising, and football NIL. You know a past player that is really outgoing, good at butt kissing and getting people to part with money. A younger Lou Nanne that is a good talker. Doesn't have to be past player, but someone that is a good sales person.
 



I'm okay with Coyle. Not sure about the Hockey choices, but I guess we will see.
 

Will echo that Whalen was a good hire. It didn’t work out but she got some good players, fans showed up and she didn’t ruin the program.

Johnson was an abysmal hire.
 






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