New West Virginia Assistant Sydney Pickrem Has a Base $50,000 Per Year Salary

New West Virginia assistant swim coach Sydney Pickrem will receive a base salary of $50,000 per year in her new role. That is significantly higher than the entry-level salaries we’ve seen for elite athletes with limited coaching experience in prior years, likely driven at least in part by changes in federal law.

Pickrem’s contract includes a relocation stipend of $5,000, tickets to home sporting events, annual dues to relevant professional organizations, the potential to share in camp money, and annual performance incentives.

The term of the original contract is one season, which is common for assistant coaching contracts.

Bonus Potentials

  1. NCAA National Team Championship $ 2,500.00
  2. NCAA National Championship Top 10 Team Finish $ 1,000.00
  3. NCAA National Championship Top 20 Team Finish $ 500.00
  4. Conference Postseason Team Championship $ 1,000.00

West Virginia has finished in the top 20 at the NCAA Division I Championships once in program history, when the men tied for 20th in 2007. Sergio Lopez, current head coach at Virginia Tech, led the program at that time.

The Mountaineers have never won a Big 12 team title in swimming & diving, though the departure of the Texas Longhorns and the arrival of teams from Utah, Arizona, and Arizona State will reshape the conference going forward.

Pickrem’s Background

Pickrem was announced as a new assistant coach under the program’s new head coach Brent MacDonald in July, before competing at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. At the time, she told SwimSwam that she is still planning to continue training while coaching.

Pickrem, 27, also has seven World Aquatics Championship medals. Earlier this year, she won silver in the 200 IM; in 2019 she won bronze in the 200 IM; and in 2017 she won bronze in the 400 IM. Her other four World Championship medals were in relays.

She also has five World Championship medals in short course, including two gold medals.

Pickrem previously completed at the 2016 and 2020 Olympic Games, which included a bronze medal as the breaststroker on Canada’s women’s medley relay. She also placed 6th in the 200 IM in Tokyo and Rio individually.

In Paris, Pickrem placed 9th individually in the 200 breaststroke and 6th individually in the 200 IM.

New Overtime Exempt Rules

Beginning on July 1, 2024, the threshold for employees in most states to be exempt from overtime pay increased to $43,888. On January 1, 2025, that threshold will again increase to $58,656. Most college assistants at the NCAA D1 level are paid above that level because of the assumption that they will work more than 8 hours on some days and more than 40 hours weekly.

Pickrem is part of a wave of elite athletes jumping right into assistant coaching positions at Power 4 programs in recent years. Last season, Olympic medalist Annie Lazor was hired at the University of Florida with a starting salary of $45,000.

In This Story

9
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

9 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
SCoach
1 minute ago

$50k for no coaching experience? Sign me up!

Khachaturian
1 hour ago

That’s even less than the chef at my fraternity

Guy
Reply to  Khachaturian
31 minutes ago

If we’re being honest here, the chef probably deserves it more

Bobthebuilderrocks
2 hours ago

There’s just something I will always find strange about swimmers jumping into assistant roles of this stature following their swimming career.

DK99
2 hours ago

2.5k if they WIN ncaa’s? Lol

Rhubarb
3 hours ago

Let’s be realistic… How can she continue to train and also coach at the same programme? Especially when you are being paid $50,000 to do so.

Xman
Reply to  Rhubarb
1 hour ago

In between practices?

USA
Reply to  Rhubarb
1 hour ago

Maybe retiring after Paris. Did she state that she wanted to continue post-Olympics?

One who watches
Reply to  Rhubarb
13 seconds ago

Is this really that hard to figure out?

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

Read More »