Ron Rivera’s move into college football’s general manager lane came with plenty of intrigue, but the contract behind it took its time to surface. The former NFL head coach, now back at his alma mater, has already made a major imprint at Cal - and the terms of his deal show just how much power the university handed him.
Rivera was announced in March 2025 and initially worked off a basic letter of intent while the school sorted out the formal agreement. That process dragged on until June 17, 2026, when Rivera and Chancellor Rich Lyons finally signed the contract. Even then, the deal was backdated to March 24, 2025, which means more than a third of the three-year term had already elapsed by the time it became official.
The scope of Rivera’s job is broad. According to the contract details obtained by Write For California, he oversees the head football coach and multiple other staff members, manages NIL and revenue-sharing agreements with players, and has a hand in non-conference scheduling.
He’s also involved in fundraising and alumni development. Just as notable, he reports directly to the Chancellor rather than the athletic director, a setup that underscores how elevated this role is within the university structure.
The financial package is built to reward both the work and the results. Rivera is guaranteed $800,000 per year, split between a $250,000 base salary and a $550,000 talent fee tied to media and booster responsibilities.
On top of that, he can collect as much as another $800,000 annually in performance bonuses. The win-based bonus structure reaches its peak at $800,000 for 10 or more regular-season victories.
There are also postseason incentives, including $50,000 for making the ACC Championship Game, $100,000 for reaching the College Football Playoff, and $100,000 for getting to the National Championship Game. Cal also covered up to $40,000 in relocation costs.
The deal also gives Rivera meaningful protection if the university chooses to end things early. A no-fault firing would trigger payment of his full remaining salary and talent fee for the rest of the contract, paid out monthly, though he would still be expected to make a good-faith effort to find other employment and any outside earnings would reduce what Cal owes. If Rivera decides to leave on his own, the buyout is $500,000 during the first contract year and $250,000 in the second year, with no buyout after that.
So the Bears are already roughly a year into a three-year run with Rivera, and the timing lines up with the next realignment cycle for Cal. That leaves the school with a short window to maximize what he can do behind the scenes. Rivera can help set the table, but the on-field results still have to follow.
In Other News...
Cal Just Lost A Target But This Class Feels Different
A recruiting miss always stings a little more when it comes in the middle of a class that looks as loaded as Cals 2027 group. The Bears already have eight ESPN top-300 commitments, a haul that would set a program record if it holds together through signing day, and the names attached to it suggest a level of talent accumulation that has not been common around Berkeley in recent years.
Cals history makes the moment even more interesting because the program has seen both sides of the rating equation. Some highly touted signees went on to become stars, while others never quite matched the billing, and several of the Bears best college players were never top-300 prospects at all. That is why this class feels different for Cal, even after losing a target this week, because the bigger question now is not just who they can still add, but whether this collection can become the kind of group that changes the baseline for what the program expects. [Read more 🡒]
Chad Hansen Still Stands Among Cals Best Transfer Success Stories
Chad Hansens time at Cal remains one of the cleaner transfer success stories in recent memory. After sitting out a year, the former Idaho State receiver quickly became a go-to target for the Bears, turning into a major part of the passing game and earning his place among the programs more productive wideouts. By the end of his redshirt junior season, he had gone from a relatively obscure arrival to a name that showed up near the top of the national receiver charts and on multiple All-Pac-12 lists.
The frustration for Cal is that Hansens rise did not translate into a bigger team payoff. The Bears finished 2016 at 5-7 and missed a bowl, a reminder of how isolated even standout individual seasons can be when the larger roster is still trying to catch up. Hansens production gave Cal something to hang onto, but it also left the Bears with the familiar what-if: what might that offense have looked like if more of the pieces around him had come together? [Read more 🡒]
