The U.S. Soccer Federation has released its latest tax filing for the 2019 fiscal year, revealing that the highest-paid coach in that period was deposed U.S. men's national team manager Jurgen Klinsmann.

The Form 990 covers the period from April 1 of 2018 to the end of March of 2019, though a USSF spokesperson stated that the salary figures cover the 2018 calendar year.

The figures show that the USSF paid three different individuals related to coaching the U.S. men during that time. Klinsmann earned $1.475 million, the final payout for the five-year contract he signed in December of 2013, even though he was fired in November of 2016. Dave Sarachan -- who coached the team on a caretaker basis through most of 2018 -- earned a base salary of just over $240,000. Gregg Berhalter, who took over the team in late 2018, made a total of just over $304,000. But $200,000 of that came in the form of a signing bonus, with the remaining $104,000 covering just a single month of work as well as moving expenses. Extrapolating that amount out reveals that Berhalter's annual salary is in excess of $1m per year.

U.S. women's national team manager Jill Ellis, who secured a spot in the 2019 Women's World Cup during 2018, earned a base salary of $389,409 in 2018. That amounted to a 33.8% raise over the previous period, but still stands in stark contrast to the amounts earned by Klinsmann and Berhalter. Ellis' compensation for 2019, when she led the U.S. women to their second consecutive World Cup title, will be included in next year's filing. Ellis did receive a raise ahead of the World Cup that was estimated to put her annual salary at $500,000.

The highest-paid players listed in the filing are U.S. women's national team players Alex Carrasco (née Morgan) and Carli Hollins (nee Lloyd) who each earned base salaries of $171,140 and bonuses of $142,250. No men's national team players were present in the filing's list of the top wage earners in the USSF.