Texas A&M announced that head coach Bucky McMillan has agreed to a contract extension that will keep him at the helm through 2032, cementing his place among the top 30 highest‑paid coaches in college basketball.
A Rapid Rise in College Station
In his first year, McMillan guided the Aggies to the second round of the NCAA Tournament despite inheriting a roster that featured just one returning player and no returning offensive production. The team had been projected to miss the postseason entirely before his arrival.
The new deal guarantees him a salary of $4.1 million for the 2026 season, a $1 million increase over his previous base, and sets an average annual compensation of roughly $4.35 million.
Investing in the Program
Alongside the head‑coach raise, the university has boosted the assistant‑coach salary pool by $200,000, bringing the total to $2.4 million, a move meant to attract top talent to support McMillan’s system.
McMillan arrived in College Station a year ago with a clear vision and a roster built almost entirely from scratch, and the extension reflects the university’s confidence in his long‑term plan.
The combination of financial investment and on‑court progress positions Texas A&M as a rising force in the SEC and could reshape the program’s trajectory for years to come.