"They're going to make sure the athletes are supported, that the coaches have the resources they need to win, and they've done that," Oats said. "We're in the middle of building a new practice facility. It's going to be as good as any in the country, in my opinion. New offices, training rooms, strength, all that stuff. They're supporting us with financial resources."
The arms race has never cost more in college hoops and blue chippers need plenty of green to sign these days. Consider, the program took a swing-and-miss at AJ Dybantsa, the nation's top recruit who made a splash this season when he signed an NIL deal with BYU reportedly worth between $5 million and $7 million.
The riches extend to Oats, who is signed through 2030, and topped $5 million in salary this season. Oats announced on Friday that prized recruiter and assistant coach Preston Murphy agreed to an extension through 2027 at $675,000 per year.
"We want to be in the discussion for a team that can make a Final Four every year.," Oats said. "We've been that for the last few years running now. The recruiting has got to stay at a high level. That's why it's a good thing we got Preston on a three-year contract that came out today because he's, in my opinion, one of the best if not the best recruiter in the country and we'll have the talent. We play a system that guys want to come to."
Second-seeded Alabama set March Madness records that would have made Stephen Curry and James Harden blush by attempting 51 3-pointers and making 25 in a 113-88 win over BYU.