You literally said "head booster." That's what I quoted you on, so, no, I don't have a reading problem.
Jim is the UT booster. Jimmy is the Browns owner. Jimmy purchased the Browns with his own fortune, not Big Jim's. Yes, they are one family. No, they don't all pull money out of one big pool.
On Kiffin, he took slightly less money when he came here so we could play his assistants better. Tennessee's 2009 coaching staff made $5.3 million, which ranked 4th in the SEC that season (
Tennessee to spend $5.3M on coaching salaries). He was the 6th highest-paid head coach at $2 million.
Why could Kiffin not get a west coast job? Because there weren't many at major schools. (
2009 College Football Coaching Changes, College Football New Coaches) New Mexico, New Mexico State, Oregon, San Diego State, Utah State, and Washington were the only "West Coast" jobs that came open.
Only Oregon and Washington were power-five schools out of those. Oregon was a planned transition from Belotti to Kelly. Washington fired Willingham in late October and had extensive contact with Kiffin. Tennessee moved first and he had an agreement to coach the Friday before the Kentucky game and was announced on Monday. Washington didn't hire Sark until the next week. It was widely reported at the time that Tennessee and Washington were competing for Kiffin's services and that they hired Sark when they couldn't get Kiffin.
As for today, per USA Today's salary database (
Football | Assistant | Salaries | USA TODAY Sports) Shoop ($1,155,000) was the 5th highest paid assistant coach in the SEC this season behind Chavis ($1,558,000), Kiffin ($1,400,000), Aranda ($1,315,000), and Cameron ($1,200,000).