Auburn on Thursday made public the full terms of the contracts for its two newest offensive coaches.

The university responded to a pair of public records requests made by AL.com last month with the signed contracts of offensive coordinator Chad Morris and offensive line coach Jack Bicknell Jr. Morris joined Gus Malzahn’s staff in December following the departure of Kenny Dillingham for Florida State, while Bicknell was hired in January to replace J.B. Grimes, who stepped down from his role after two seasons back on the Plains.

Morris agreed to a three-year contract worth $735,000 annually, including $250,000 in annual base salary, $242,500 each in endorsement rights and personal appearance payments. All three amounts will be paid in equal monthly installments through the duration of the contract, which runs through Jan. 1, 2023.

Bicknell will earn $500,00 annually as part of a two-year contract he signed last month that runs through Jan. 31, 2022. He will earn $250,000 in annual base salary, as well as $125,000 each in endorsement rights and personal appearance payments.

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Morris’ $735,000 would have made him the 63rd-highest paid assistant coach in the country last season, according to the USA Today assistant coaches salary database, and the 26th-highest paid assistant in the SEC. Of course, he is set to earn more than that in 2020, as he is still owed a substantial amount of buyout money from Arkansas, which fired him after less than two seasons as head coach.

According to the terms of Morris’ original contract with Arkansas, the Razorbacks owe the former head coach roughly $10 million -- or 70 percent of the money remaining on his contract -- over the next four years. That amount will be offset by the money he makes at Auburn, which should drop his annual payments from Arkansas to about $1.7 million over the course of Morris’ three-year deal on the Plains.

Should Auburn fire Morris without cause before his contract expires, the university will owe him the remaining money on his three-year deal. That amount would be mitigated by any income Morris earns in a subsequent coaching opportunity.

If Morris leaves Auburn on his own accord prior to Dec. 1, or the SEC Championship Game in the event Auburn wins the SEC West this season, he would owe the university the amount remaining on his contract within 90 days. Morris would not owe Auburn a buyout if he left for another head coaching opportunity.

Bicknell would also not owe Auburn a buyout if he were to leave for a head coaching opportunity before the end of his contract term, but if he leaves Auburn before Dec. 1 or the 2020 SEC Championship Game, he would owe the university the remaining amount on his contract.

Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.