With a net worth estimated at $9 million, McCarthy has built a successful career that spans decades, highlighted by his victory with the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl 45 in 2011.
This achievement places him among the elite group of active NFL coaches who have claimed a championship title.
McCarthy’s coaching career kicked off in the late ’80s, where he quickly climbed the ranks from a graduate assistant to quarterback coach at various colleges and then to the NFL.
Notably, he was the offensive coordinator for both the New Orleans Saints and the San Francisco 49ers before taking the helm in Green Bay, where he cemented his legacy by leading the team to victory in Super Bowl XLV.
Since joining the Cowboys on January 7, 2020, following a rigorous 12-hour interview process, McCarthy has faced scrutiny regarding his performance.
As for McCarthy’s salary, while exact figures can be elusive, estimates suggest he earned between $4 million and $7 million annually.
Such earnings place him as one of the lower-paid head coaches in the league, especially when compared to other Super Bowl-winning coaches like Andy Reid of the Kansas City Chiefs, who makes around $18 million, and Sean McVay of the Los Angeles Rams at $14 million. Comparatively, McCarthy’s pay seems disproportionately low given his track record and experience.
After five seasons and 49 regular-season wins, Mike McCarthy is leaving the Dallas Cowboys with his mission unfulfilled. McCarthy, hired to bring his championship culture-building skills to Dallas, could not lead the Cowboys to a Super Bowl during his half-decade tenure — and after he could not reach agreement on a new contract.
In a statement posted to social media on Monday afternoon, Cowboys owner Jerry Jones praised McCarthy’s efforts in forging “team unity and culture” since the coach’s 2020 appointment and called him a “tremendous human being” who has led the Cowboys through difficult times.