Bill Moos was already locked in to be Nebraska's athletic director before this past weekend even began.

Those were among the details to be learned when Moos' contract was released on Tuesday morning upon request to various media outlets across the state, including Nebraska 247Sports.

In a five-year deal that was signed on Friday, the 66-year-old Moos is set to make a base salary of $1 million this year, with that figure increasing by $50,000 each passing year.

As was stated upon his hiring, the contract does include incentives, which have a ceiling of around an additional $500,000. Football is the only specific sport attached to its own bonus for Moos.

Moos would earn an additional $100,000 if Nebraska won a Big Ten Championship in football and another $150,000 if a national championship came with it.

He also receives $125,000 if the Husker athletic department reaches a specific Academic Progress Rate number over the course of two-year period. The number to hit is 970. He gets even a little more if the number is 985 or greater.

He has another target bonus of $125,000 based off Nebraska's place in the Directors' Cup standings, which factors how schools perform in all sports. Moos receives 80 percent of that bonus if the school is ranked 30th or high, 90 percent if ranked 25th or higher, 100 percent if ranked 20th or higher, 110 percent if ranked 15th or higher.

His buyout figure begins at $2 million if he for some reason he departed before the end of 2018, with that number declining $500,000 with each passing year.

It's a healthy raise from what Moos was making at his previous position, a base figure of $500,000 according to the most recent amendment to his contract at Washington State, which was obtained by Nebraska 247Sports.

He also had incentives on that contract, though you'll notice the contrast in the job he had and the one he's taking based off those potential bonuses:

At Washington State, Moos received the equivalent of one month of his current salary if the team qualified for a bowl game, and also for each NCAA Tournament game the men's and women's basketball teams played in. He received half a month's salary if either the men's or women's hoops teams qualified for the NIT/WNIT.

Moos had another bonus opportunity that paid $10,000 if the school reached 10,000 season-ticket sales in football, with an additional $1,000 obtained for every 1,000 tickets sold beyond that.

He received an additional $15,000 there for fundraising efforts that exceeded $6 million to the university's foundation.

He gained an extra $5,000 if Washington State made the top 50 in the Directors' Cup standings.

He also had a bonus attached based on academic performance, where he'd receive $10,000 for every year the graduation rate of student-athletes exceeded the graduation rate of the general student population by five percent, or placed in the top four of the Pac-12 Conference.