Perhaps one of the best jobs in college athletics is to lose your job. On Friday, ESPN published a report detailing just how much “dead money” is wrapped up in athletic departments paying coaches to no longer coach at their schools.

ESPN looked at the financial records of FBS athletic departments at public universities over an 11-year period from Jan. 1, 2010, to Jan. 31, 2021. According to the report, FBS programs spent more than $533.6 million in dead money on football as well as men’s and women’s basketball coaches who were fired without cause with time left on their contracts.

In football alone, FBS schools committed $107.6 million in severance pay before mitigation to fired coaches and their staffs in 2020. The SEC led all conferences in dead money, ESPN found, with $151 million owed to fired coaches over the time studied, $123.2 million of which came from football alone.

Auburn led all FBS programs with $31.2 million in dead money. Ole Miss spent $20.4 million, the 4th-most among FBS programs. South Carolina’s $18.6 million ranked 7th and Texas A&M’s $16.4 million ranked 9th.

Former South Carolina and Florida head coach Will Muschamp topped the list of coaches receiving severance money. The $12.9 million he was paid by South Carolina would have best the most among FBS coaches on its own, but he also received $6.3 million from Florida. Muschamp was fired by Florida on Nov. 15, 2014, and by South Carolina on the same day six years later—Nov. 15, 2020.

Joining Muschamp on the top 10 list of coaches who received severance money was Kevin Sumlin, who got $7 million from Texas A&M ($10.8 million total) and Gus Malzahn, who got $10.7 million from Auburn.