Danny White is embracing the opportunity Tennessee is giving him to rebuild a Power 5 program, and not even the prospect of potential NCAA punishment deterred him from taking the athletic director job.
"I've never worked at the big-brand place until now, and I actually like the fact that the brand needs to be polished a little bit, needs to be elevated back to where it was just not too long ago," White said at his introductory news conference Friday.
Tennessee hired White, 41, Thursday as its fourth athletic director since Dave Hart took over in September 2011.
White signed a five-year contract that will automatically roll over each year so that the remaining term shall always be for five years. His average annual rollover salary will make him the highest-paid athletic director in the SEC.
White's first job is hiring a new football coach with the Volunteers in the midst of internal and NCAA investigations into recruiting issues that cost coach Jeremy Pruitt, two assistant coaches and seven others their jobs Monday.
Chancellor Donde Plowman did not have an estimate for when Tennessee's own investigation will be completed. White said he has a long-term view for his third program as athletic director.
"Nothing's insurmountable," White said. "We can get through this, and we'll get through it the right way and we'll get the program back to where it needs to be."
Tennessee is paying White a starting salary of $1.8 million a year and an annual pay hike of 5%, twice the $900,000 base pay for retiring AD Phillip Fulmer. White also will be eligible for up to $300,000 annually for team athletic performance, academic performance and operational goals in the five-year deal.
White signed a five-year contract at UCF in March 2020 that paid him more than $1 million a year, and Tennessee will pay the $2.5 million buyout for his leaving before May 11, 2021.
He said that everyone is a candidate and that he will be moving "quickly" to hire a new coach. White planned to meet with up to nine members of the football team and also had a meeting with acting head coach Kevin Steele later Friday.
White cited his own hiring as how quickly he might move; he was hired just three days after Tennessee announced Pruitt's firing and Fulmer's departure.
Plowman spent Monday night and Tuesday talking with people connected to Tennessee about what to look for in the next athletic director. She said that Peyton Manning asked Duke coach David Cutcliffe on advice he could give Plowman and that Cutcliffe recommended someone like Duke AD Kevin White, Danny White's father.
The Tennessee chancellor interviewed Danny White on Tuesday night via Zoom, then interviewed him again Wednesday with the university system president, Randy Boyd, and the chairman of the board of trustees, John Compton. They flew to Orlando, Florida, and met with White that night, then announced his hiring Thursday.
"It was clear who the top candidate was," Plowman said. "It was Danny White."
UCF hired White in November 2015, and his first job then was hiring a football coach. Scott Frost was so successful he left for Nebraska after going 13-0 in 2017, then White hired Josh Heupel. The UCF men's basketball team made the 2019 NCAA tournament and lost 77-76 to Duke in the second round.
As athletic director at Buffalo between May 2012 and December 2015, White hired Bobby Hurley, who took Buffalo to its first NCAA tournament, and then Nate Oats, now at Alabama, continued that success. In football, White hired Lance Leipold, who led Buffalo to its first ranking this season, and it finished No. 25.
White also has worked at Mississippi, Fresno State and Northern Illinois. His brother Mike is head coach of Florida's men's basketball team. His brother Brian is athletic director at Florida Atlantic, and his sister Mariah Chappell is assistant athletic director for administration at SMU.
He said Tennessee has to be aggressive to get its athletic department where it belongs.
"We can compete," White said. "This place has already shown, and is showing in many sports, we can compete for Southeastern Conference championships, which means we can compete for national championships. And in the future, we want to do a whole lot more of that."
-- ESPN's Chris Low contributed to this report.