Michael Brauner is a Senior Sports Analyst and Contributing Writer for Yellowhammer News. You can follow him on Twitter @MBraunerWNSP and hear him every weekday morning from 6 to 9 a.m. on “The Opening Kickoff” on WNSP-FM 105.5, available free online.
NIL
Ranking college football’s 10 open coaching jobs: As SEC hires abound, all eyes on Penn State
This could be the most active coaching carousel college football has seen in many years. Before the end of September, five Power 4 programs were searching for new head coaches for 2026.
The 2024-25 hiring cycle was historically slow at the Power 4 level, as schools waited to see the impact of budgeting more than $20 million for athletes in the House v. NCAA settlement, but with that revenue sharing system now set, the focus has turned back to coaching changes.
Here is our ranking of college football’s open head-coaching jobs. The ranking leans heavily on the chances for a coach to succeed there. That might mean more stock put in a program’s upside than its recent success, but it’s not just coach pay or quality of life. Coaches want to take jobs where they believe they can win, and this is how most coaches would view these jobs. This list will be updated as jobs open and close.
1. Penn State
Record over the last five years: 44-17
The Athletic’s estimated valuation: $1.2 billion (11th among Power 4 programs)
Job grade: A
This place has it all: tradition, money, facilities, support and recent success. It’s a top-15 job in college football. Penn State is paying around $45 million to get rid of James Franklin coming off a CFP semifinal appearance. That signals how serious the Nittany Lions are about getting over the hump.
Franklin deserves a lot of credit for getting Penn State back near the top of the sport. He won a lot of games, just not the big ones. He also forced the program to modernize, demanding more in facilities and money.
A few sitting head coaches elsewhere in the Big Ten would fit here, but the school also may take even bigger swings. Jobs as good as this one, coming off such a successful run, do not come open like this often. If Penn State is fully aligned and committed on the revenue share/NIL front, anything could happen during the search.
2. Tulane
Record over the last five years: 44-17
Job Grade: B-
Tulane has reached four consecutive American Conference championship games across two different head coaches and multiple roster overhauls. It’s one of just 10 teams to reach the CFP rankings in each of the last four years. The Green Wave have a culture of winning here now, an indoor practice bubble under construction, and they were near the top of the Group of 6 with a $5 million roster budget. The high academic standards can impact roster construction a little but, but the location in New Orleans and the pattern of success with upward mobility make this a very attractive job.
3. South Florida
Record over the last five years: 26-36
Job Grade: B-
USF has dramatically changed its outlook in recent years. The Bulls were at the top of the Group of 6 in roster funding with what some sources say is a budget over $8 million in 2025. A new on-campus stadium is being built. Then last week, the school’s board finance committee approved funding for athletics to reach the full $20.5 million in revenue sharing, which would be a first in the G6. This comes amid a 9-3 football season and third consecutive bowl appearance this year. The finances available here and the clear upward coaching path will make this an appealing job.
4. James Madison
Record over the last five years: 52-7
Job grade: B-
All JMU knows is winning. The program is only 53 years old, but every head coach in the team’s history has left with a winning record, and the last four coaches have all won at least 70 percent of their games before leaving for a bigger job. The Dukes’ FCS-to-FBS transition was maybe the best we’ve ever seen, and that’s because they have a culture of winning, complete alignment from the university, good resources and a knack for finding successful coaches. The school offered to give Bob Chesney the highest staff salary pool and roster revenue-sharing allotment in the Sun Belt before he went to UCLA, though that also means the Dukes weren’t there already. Their resources don’t match the top schools in the American, but JMU has a lot of the intangibles a winning program needs.
5. Cal
Five-year record: 28-34Estimated valuation: $158 million (65th out of Power 4 teams)Job grade: C+
The Golden Bears are going to a third consecutive bowl game, but they’ve won more than seven games just once in the last decade, and the program has only three 10-win seasons since 1950. Roster spending has improved recently, with an administration that actually supports football, led by general manager Ron Rivera. (Does the next coach have any shot at keeping talented freshman QB Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele?) But the athletic department is saddled with a ton of debt and getting just a small share of ACC TV revenue after scrambling at the end of the last conference realignment. Even in an open ACC, the ceiling here has always been relatively low.
6. Memphis
Record over the last five years: 42-21
Job grade: C+
Memphis is another one of the best resourced programs in the Group of 6, with a roster budget believed to be in the $5-6 million range, only behind USF in the American. It also has relatively new football facilities, and the Liberty Bowl stadium is undergoing renovations. The school and its corporate sponsors like FedEx and Lowe’s made a $200 million sponsorship pitch to get an invite to the Big 12. It didn’t work, but it showed the financial heft Memphis can have over other Group of 5 schools. That makes it a very appealing job in the G5. However, the Tigers haven’t played in the conference championship since 2019, and former coach Ryan Silverfield went 27-21 in conference play over six years. The fans have higher expectations than that.
7. North Texas
Record over the last five years: 34-29Job grade: C+
For years, North Texas was defined by unmet potential. Located in a rich recruiting area in Denton just north of Fort Worth with beautiful facilities, the Mean Green have everything a G5 contender could want. But this has mostly been a mediocre program with the occasional nine-win season. Not anymore, as Eric Morris led North Texas to its first 10-win season since 1947, with conference championship and College Football Playoff potential. The next coach will have real momentum to build off, though he will likely have to replace much of the star power on the roster, and North Texas’ $2 million roster budget is half of what the top American Conference programs have. But the upside has always been here. There is a path to winning.
8. UAB
Record over the last five years: 25-31
Job Grade: C
UAB was college football’s feel-good story. The Blazers were shut down in 2014 before the community brought the program back in 2017 and immediately won big under coach Bill Clark, with 43 wins in the first five seasons back on the field. But Clark stepped down due to health issues, and the school didn’t stick with interim head coach Bryant Vincent and instead hired Trent Dilfer. The ensuing tenure sent the program back into the ground with a 9-21 record, including 0-15 in road games. UAB has a new stadium, a nice football building and a good location. It’s behind its American Conference peers financially, but the upside remains.
9. Coastal Carolina
Record over the last five years: 40-24
Job Grade: C
The program has slid since Jamey Chadwell and Grayson McCall won 31 games from 2020 to ’22 and is now coming off consecutive six-win seasons. The Chanticleers under Chadwell were one of the lowest-resourced programs in the FBS, but their success spurned investment. Now-fired coach Tim Beck’s $1.1 million salary was the second-highest in the Sun Belt. An indoor practice facility opened this year. So three bowl games in three years under Beck apparently wasn’t good enough anymore. This year’s team closed with three consecutive losses, allowing at least 45 points in all three. This place has upside, with a good location and improving resources. And the expectation clearly will be to compete for Sun Belt championships.
10. UConn
Record over the last five years: 28-34Job grade: C-
Jim Mora worked wonders here, reaching three bowl games in four years, including two nine-win seasons, and helping the Huskies draw their largest crowds in a decade. But this is a program that had 10 consecutive losing seasons before that. The job can pay well for a non-Power 4 team, as Mora made more than $2 million, and some of its recent facility upgrades are nice, but the program is stuck in purgatory as the last non-Notre Dame independent. The Huskies play a schedule largely made up of Group of 6 programs in the east with a few Power 4 opponents mixed in, like Syracuse and Duke this year. That helps with fan travel, and the school has a CBS Sports Network TV deal.
But those factors also keep the program out of sight and out of mind. There are no conference races or weekly awards or reasons for non-UConn fans to pay attention. Perhaps that limited Mora’s coaching stock. The good news is we’re no longer debating whether the program should drop to the Football Championship Subdivision. Mora raised the floor and reminded people that it’s possible to win.
Previous jobs filled
UCLA
New coach: Bob Chesney
Five-year record: 30-24
The Athletic’s estimated program valuation: $343 million (T-43rd among Power 4 programs)
Job grade: B
The idea of UCLA has long seemed better than the reality of UCLA. The Bruins haven’t won a conference championship since 1998 and haven’t posted a 10-win season in more than a decade. Fan apathy is showing up in the attendance figures at the Rose Bowl, and the athletic department’s financial problems have been piling up — the Bruins have been operating at a cumulative deficit of over $200 million over the last five years.
But it’s a Big Ten job in Southern California. That doesn’t mean all Big Ten jobs are better than all ACC or Big 12 jobs. But it means the Bruins’ ceiling and the floor should be higher, and the path to success is easy to envision.
Kentucky
New coach: Will Stein
Record over the last five years: 33-30The Athletic’s estimated valuation: $400 million (37th among Power 4 programs)Job grade: B-
This has long been one of the toughest jobs in the SEC, and the SEC is now tougher than ever. Mark Stoops produced two of the four 10-win seasons in program history and regular bowl appearances, but the ceiling here is generally eight or nine wins, and you’re competing with the basketball program for resources and roster spending (a reported $22 million for this year’s hoops team). The good news is that winning six games regularly is enough to keep your job, and Stoops made $9 million annually for doing that, with a couple bigger seasons. But if the goal is to win big, the path is extremely difficult.
LSU
New coach: Lane Kiffin
Record over the last five years: 40-21
The Athletic’s estimated valuation: $1.23 billion (10th among Power 4 programs)
Job grade: A
LSU is a top-five job in college football, maybe top-three. How can it not be when Les Miles and Ed Orgeron recently won national championships here? It has titles, tradition and unique local support. It has a hold of its talent-rich state like very few schools — one of the few remaining places where kids really do commit to the school and not the coach. LSU will always get almost all of the best kids in Louisiana because that’s the culture. After a few years of LSU falling behind in player spending, that changed this year, with an $18 million roster and the nation’s top-ranked transfer class. There’s a reason LSU was able to pull an unprecedented move of hiring a winning Notre Dame head coach four years ago.
But with all that comes the highest of bars. You have to compete for and win national championships here. Brian Kelly, a very successful coach otherwise, couldn’t do it. Was that because of Kelly’s personality, or was it because the flattening of the sport’s competitive structure has made it harder for all the top schools to win big? The school leadership and involvement of politicians also make for a bit more for a coach to navigate.
Florida
Record over the last five years: 28-30
The Athletic’s estimated valuation: $1.08 billion (12th among Power 4)
Job grade: A-
Florida might have the highest ceiling in this cycle, with three national championships since 1996. The natural advantage of being in Florida helps. The school’s financial investment is catching up to its peers, including a nice new football training building that finally opened.
But Florida is also looking for its fifth coach since Urban Meyer left. It hasn’t clicked here in a while. Dan Mullen won but couldn’t recruit. Billy Napier could recruit but couldn’t win. In the new era of paying players, who’s to say those recent national titles contribute all that much to this job’s quality?
Auburn
Record over the last five years: 26-33
The Athletic’s estimated valuation: $1.03 billion (13th among Power 4)
Job grade: B+
The relatively recent history says you can win big at Auburn, with a national title and another BCS title game appearance in the 2010s. But consistent high-level success has been hard to come by, and the Tigers have been stuck in mediocre mud for more than half a decade now, having not won more than six games in a season since 2019.
There is good talent on the roster, if the next coach can keep it, and the fan support is very strong. The financials are pretty good, and a new football building opened a few years ago. There are things to like. But in a deep and difficult SEC surrounded by big spenders, it will always be a bit of an uphill battle. Annual bowl games with periodic SEC championship contention is a fair expectation. Auburn needs a coach who can get the most out of what is typically a fairly talented roster.
Arkansas
Record over the last five years: 29-27
The Athletic’s estimated valuation: $646 million (23rd among Power 4 programs)
Job grade: B
It’s one of the toughest jobs in the SEC, without much in-state high school talent and far away from major cities and recruiting areas, and Arkansas has underpaid coaches and players relative to its competition. The Razorbacks’ 2021 peak under Sam Pittman was their lone Top 25 finish since 2011; there have been more losing seasons than bowl appearances since then. Arkansas hasn’t won a conference championship since 1989 and hasn’t played in the SEC Championship Game since 2006.
But it’s still an SEC job, which will give it an advantage over many other open jobs in the eyes of coaching candidates, and it’s the only Power 4 program in the state. Everyone is behind the Razorbacks. Adding to the difficulty is the money invested in men’s basketball and baseball. Athletic director Hunter Yurachek recently admitted Arkansas is competing for national championships in those sports, but not football. The floor here is lower than that of jobs farther down this list, but the ceiling may be higher. The school needs a coach who can convince boosters to compete for better football players while, more importantly, maximizing the talent on the roster.
Stanford
New coach: Tavita Pritchard
Five-year record: 14-39
Estimated valuation: $202 million (60th among P4)
Job grade: C+
The Cardinal won at least 10 games five times from 2010 to 2016, but that was a different era of college football. They haven’t won more than four games since 2018, and the NIL/portal era has limited the program’s upside. General manager Andrew Luck has been tasked with running the football program, and he’s all-in. Luck loves the school, but he has never done this before. Will he let Pritchard run the program the way he wants?
Stanford is also now an ACC member, receiving less money in conference payouts after the Pac-12’s collapse. There is no identity around this program right now.
The school needs a coach who can do more with less, maximizing development. The expectation should be to regularly reach bowl games.
Oregon State
New coach: JaMarcus Shephard
Record over the last five years: 30-28
Job Grade: C
The Beavers won 10 games just three seasons ago but were left behind in conference realignment and have tried to pick up the pieces. The bad news is this has always been a difficult job located in an area that isn’t rich with talent. The good news is Oregon State has facilities and decent NIL support, and the reconstructed Pac-12 next year provides a path back to contention. The Beavers expect to compete in that new league, made up mostly of current Mountain West schools, and bowl games are a reasonable expectation.
Colorado State
New coach: Jim Mora
Record over the last five years: 21-35
Job grade: C
This job has been defined by unmet potential. People in the industry love the upside, with top-notch facilities for the Group of 6 (a new stadium opened in 2017), a good amount of money (previous coach Jay Norvell’s salary was $1.9 million) and solid fan support (40,000 fans came to the Homecoming game). But the Rams have posted seven losing seasons in eight years, they don’t have an ideal recruiting base and they’re heading into a new Pac-12 that will be a tougher league top to bottom. Can Mora tap into the potential?
Oklahoma State
New coach: Eric Morris
Five-year record: 33-24
Estimated valuation: $373 million (39th among P4)
Job grade: B
The bottom fell out from under Mike Gundy so quickly, but the Cowboys played for the Big 12 championship in 2021 and 2023, including a Fiesta Bowl win in 2021. They had made 18 consecutive bowl games until last season. The flip side is that the program had a sub-.500 all-time record before its native son Gundy took over.
The program has a pipeline to Texas for talent and sits in a winnable Big 12 conference. This should be a top-third job in that league, which means a fairly clear path to the College Football Playoff. The Cowboys’ financial investment must increase, however, and the school’s leadership has spent some of this year on somewhat shaky ground.
Virginia Tech
New coach: James Franklin
Five-year record: 23-31
Estimated valuation: $455 million (31st among P4)
Job grade: B
Under Frank Beamer, Virginia Tech played for a national championship to cap the 1999 season and won at least 10 games 13 times from 1995 to 2011. But those days are long gone, and it’s not clear whether they can come back. Dominating recruiting in the Hampton Roads region and consistently finding diamonds in the rough, as Beamer did, is a lot harder in today’s game.
The program has been underfunded and understaffed relative to the rest of the ACC for a long time. Athletic director Whit Babcock has proposed a sizable budget increase, though it’s not clear where all the money would come from. The location isn’t ideal for recruiting, either.
The school’s expectation should be to compete to reach the ACC Championship Game, which the Hokies haven’t played in since 2016.
Kent State
New coach: Mark Carney (promoted from interim)
Five-year record: 14-40
Job grade: F
On the field, this is the worst job in the country. The Golden Flashes were the only winless team in the FBS last season, then fired coach Kenni Burns in the offseason for issues around a loan from a booster and his use of a school credit card. In mid-October they beat an FBS opponent for the first time since 2022.
Going back to 1988, Kent State has just four winning seasons, one of which was the four-game season in 2020. Despite being the alma mater of Nick Saban, Lou Holtz and Gary Pinkel, Kent State has not been able to find much success. Former coach Sean Lewis turned the program into a respectable outfit from 2019 to ’22, going 6-2 in MAC play in 2021, but he left for an assistant job at Colorado, and the several notable players on the team transferred out. Playing in the MAC does provide room for upward mobility, competing against teams with similar resources, but it’s as uphill a climb as it gets in the FBS.
NIL
New Arkansas coach Ryan Silverfield says it won’t take long to rebuild the program
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Ryan Silverfield had a second stop to make Thursday after his first press conference since being hired as Arkansas football coach.
He had to face the people he needs to win over, the ones the Razorbacks need to increase their spending so they can compete with the SEC’s power programs.
Silverfield signed a five-year, $33.5 million deal to take over in Arkansas earlier in the week. He had coached Memphis since the 2020 season, plus a single game with the Tigers as interim head coach in 2019. Memphis qualified for a bowl in every season with Silverfield at the helm and peaked in 2024 with an 11-2 record. The Tigers hold an 8-4 record ahead of a likely bowl game.
Those kinds of results at Arkansas would be a boon. The Razorbacks’ season concluded Saturday with a loss to Missouri. That ended a 2-10 season with an 0-8 record in the Southeastern Conference, the third season in the last seven Arkansas finished with those marks.
“This program is built on pride, resilience and toughness, and it’s time to bring it all back,” Silverfield said at the press conference. “Being all in together, we will rebuild it, we will earn it, and we will make this state proud.”
Finances were one of the biggest points in both the press conference and the public introduction a few hours later. Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek has made a point for the last year that the Razorbacks need more contributions for NIL funds in order to compete at a higher level in the SEC. The first audible announcement over the loudspeaker before Silverfield took the dais was one asking for money.
NIL war chests are tight-lipped secrets across college football. But Arkansas’ football attendance, which equates to revenue earned, ranks fifth from the bottom in the SEC. Both Silverfield and Yurachek said finances were a key topic during the interview and contract negotiations.

Arkansas’s new head football coach Ryan Silverfield speaks to reporters during an NCAA college football press conference, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in Fayetteville, Ark. Credit: AP/Hank Layton
“I think it’s our competitive advantage not to give details of what that is, other than to tell you that it is a significant investment in all aspects of our football program that will move us to the top half of spending in all of those categories I mentioned in the Southeastern Conference,” Yurachek said. “I don’t believe we need to be at the top of spending. We need to be somewhere where we’re really competitive and Ryan and I are on the same page with where we are.”
Quarterback KJ Jackson and defensive end Quincy Rhoads Jr. both joined the press conference and announced they would return to the team in 2026. Jackson, a rising sophomore, took over as Arkansas’ starting quarterback for the final game of the season and is largely considered the future of the position. Rhoads finished in a tie for fifth in the SEC in sacks (8) and second in the league in tackles for-loss (17 1/2).
Silverfield told fans he doesn’t think a rebuild will take long.
“It’s not one of those things where we’re sitting here saying, ‘Hey, you know, Hunter, I need three years to rebuild this,’” Silverfield said. “No. We can start rebuilding the culture the moment we step down.”
NIL
Arkansas football receives seven-figure NIL boost
Just days into his tenure as head coach, Ryan Silverfield has already made a major impression, on more than just the Razorbacks’ players and fans. According to Arkansas Athletics Director Hunter Yurachek, a donor committed to a seven-figure donation to the football program after spending just five minutes with Silverfield in a club box at the Hogs’ basketball game last night.
“This new commitment is the first step in the process of building a championship program at Arkansas,” Yurachek said.
A Sign of Confidence in Ryan Silverfield’s Rebuild
The donation is more than a symbolic gesture. For a football program that has struggled to compete financially with other SEC powerhouses, seven figures provides critical resources. From recruiting and coaching staff salaries to roster development and facility improvements, Silverfield now has tangible backing to begin implementing his vision immediately.
That such a commitment came in less than a week on the job highlights the clarity and passion Silverfield brings to the role. During his introductory press conference, he emphasized finances as a central pillar of his plan, noting that rebuilding Arkansas football will be a swift process.
““It’s not one of those things where we’re sitting here saying, ‘Hey, you know, Hunter, I need three years to rebuild this,’” Silverfield said. “No. We can start rebuilding the culture the moment we step down.””
Ryan Silverfield
Back in September, after the dismissal of former head coach Sam Pittman following six seasons, Yurachek acknowledged that Arkansas didn’t have the funding necessary to compete with the majority of SEC programs. Attendance revenue ranked near the bottom of the conference, and NIL war chests remained limited, hindering recruiting and player development.
Yurachek, however, was optimistic that a new hire could change that. Silverfield’s arrival, and the immediate donor confidence, has confirmed that progress is underway.
““Finances were a key part of both the interview and contract negotiations,” Yurachek said. “It’s clear Ryan has a vision for how to rebuild this program, and he’s already inspiring donors to step up.””
Hunter Yurachek
For players, it signals that the program has momentum and ambition, which can be a powerful motivator on and off the field. Additionally, immediate financial support allows Silverfield to act quickly without waiting years to implement changes, a rare advantage in college football.
A New Era in Fayetteville
Silverfield’s first week has sent a clear message: Arkansas football is ready to change. With donor confidence, administrative support, and a clear vision, the Razorbacks are positioning themselves for a rapid turnaround after years of struggles.
““We’re not going to wait to start this rebuild,” Silverfield said. “The culture begins today, and we have the resources and the plan to make it happen.””
Ryan Silverfield
For fans and recruits alike, the combination of strong leadership and newfound financial backing signals that Arkansas football is entering a new era, one aimed at competing at the very top of the SEC and soon.
NIL
Hunter Yurachek dishes on ‘new financial commitments’ for Arkansas football
Arkansas vice chancellor and director of athletics Hunter Yurachek formally introduced Ryan Silverfield as the 35th coach in the football program’s history on Thursday afternoon to assembled media in the Broyles Center. As part of the hour-long introductory press conference, Yurachek answered a plethora of questions regarding the financial support surrounding the football program.
Back in September, following the Sam Pittman’s dismissal after six seasons as coach, Yurachek admitted that the football program didn’t have the necessary funding to compete with the majority of SEC programs in football. At the time, he seemed optimistic that would change in lock-step with a new coaching hire.
As part of his opening statement on Thursday, Yurachek revealed the funding has indeed improved. The goal is to build a championship program at Arkansas and, as Yurachek put it, this new commitment was the first step in the process of accomplishing that goal.
“The top-down alignment of a new financial commitment from our Board of Trustees, the University, the department of athletics and so many generous donors that have taken place over the last several weeks was the first step to us being all in on this goal,” Yurachek said. “This financial commitment will push us to the top half in key SEC items such as our assistant coaches pool, our strength and conditioning staff, our support staff pool and our talent acquisition through revenue sharing and legitimate NIL.”
Yurachek was peppered with questions regarding this ‘new financial commitment’ but wouldn’t divulge any specifics on the budget or amount of newly committed funds, citing a competitive advantage as the reason not to. He did, however, say the investment was “significant.”
“I think it’s our competitive advantage not to give details of what that is other than to tell you that it is a significant investment in all aspects of our football program,” Yurachek said. “That will move us to the top half of spending in all of those categories I mentioned in the Southeastern Conference.
“I don’t believe we need to be at the top of spending, we need to be somewhere where we’re really competitive and Ryan and I are on the same page with where we are. It allows him to go out and hire the assistant coaches that he believes he needs to hire to build a championship program and to invest in our revenue sharing and legitimate NIL to make sure that we acquire the best talent for our roster.
“I want to make sure that we have a competitive advantage. I think once you put your financials out there and tell other schools what you’re doing, that allows them the opportunity to come meet you where you are or exceed where you’re at.”
While the financial commitment is improved according to Yurachek, he also revealed they’re still not to the level they want to be from a fundraising standpoint. He explained that the program is off to a good start with the last few months, but they still haven’t accomplished their goal.
“We’re not to the finish line, but I will tell you from a fundraising standpoint, we’re off to a great start,” Yurachek said. “With the athletic department is going to commit is significant and that’s how we’re going to reallocate some of the dollars that we have. The board is going to make a commitment to our football program as well, and all of that is significant. I don’t want to tie down a specific dollar amount to any of that, because I don’t want to limit what we can do
a couple of different revenue sources that we’re looking through, both through our foundation and through the athletic department, and then just how we reallocate money that we’re currently spending within our department, whether that’s from a salary standpoint, an operational standpoint, but we feel like we can do some things differently to be more efficient, that we can reallocate more dollars to our football program.
Yurachek explained that some of the financial commitment from the athletic department will come from reallocation of what they’re currently spending. He mentioned salaries, operations and that there are other ways they can be more efficient which helps push more money toward football.
When asked how fans will be able to notice the new financial commitment behind the football program, Yurachek pointed to Silverfield’s recruiting and staff additions among other things.
“It will come when he announces some of the people on his staff, that will be the first piece,” Yurachek said. “Then when you see how our roster comes together after the transfer portal officially opens in January, you see we’ve got a couple of young men in here (Quincy Rhodes and KJ Jackson) that are coming back. That’s a part of the financial commitment that we’ve made into our football program, to be able to retain those high-caliber, very talented young men.”
It’s not just Yurachek and his staff helping get Arkansas football in better financial shape. Silverfield himself has hit the ground running in that department and has made a difference in just a matter of days. Yurachek shared a story of the new Razorbacks head coach leaving quite the impression on one donor at Thursday’s basketball game.
“Let me touch on his fundraising prowess,” Yurachek said of Silverfield. “He doesn’t even know this yet. He was in the courtside club last night, and he was doing what he does in building relationships with donors. Right off the bat, he walked away from one donor, the donor came up to me and committed to a seven figure gift to a football program, just with a brief five minute encounter.”
NIL
New Arkansas coach Ryan Silverfield says it won’t take long to rebuild the program
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) — Ryan Silverfield had a second stop to make Thursday after his first press conference since being hired as Arkansas football coach.
He had to face the people he needs to win over, the ones the Razorbacks need to increase their spending so they can compete with the SEC’s power programs.
Silverfield signed a five-year, $33.5 million deal to take over in Arkansas earlier in the week. He had coached Memphis since the 2020 season, plus a single game with the Tigers as interim head coach in 2019. Memphis qualified for a bowl in every season with Silverfield at the helm and peaked in 2024 with an 11-2 record. The Tigers hold an 8-4 record ahead of a likely bowl game.
Those kinds of results at Arkansas would be a boon. The Razorbacks’ season concluded Saturday with a loss to Missouri. That ended a 2-10 season with an 0-8 record in the Southeastern Conference, the third season in the last seven Arkansas finished with those marks.
“This program is built on pride, resilience and toughness, and it’s time to bring it all back,” Silverfield said at the press conference. “Being all in together, we will rebuild it, we will earn it, and we will make this state proud.”
Finances were one of the biggest points in both the press conference and the public introduction a few hours later. Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek has made a point for the last year that the Razorbacks need more contributions for NIL funds in order to compete at a higher level in the SEC. The first audible announcement over the loudspeaker before Silverfield took the dais was one asking for money.
NIL war chests are tight-lipped secrets across college football. But Arkansas’ football attendance, which equates to revenue earned, ranks fifth from the bottom in the SEC. Both Silverfield and Yurachek said finances were a key topic during the interview and contract negotiations.
“I think it’s our competitive advantage not to give details of what that is, other than to tell you that it is a significant investment in all aspects of our football program that will move us to the top half of spending in all of those categories I mentioned in the Southeastern Conference,” Yurachek said. “I don’t believe we need to be at the top of spending. We need to be somewhere where we’re really competitive and Ryan and I are on the same page with where we are.”
Quarterback KJ Jackson and defensive end Quincy Rhoads Jr. both joined the press conference and announced they would return to the team in 2026. Jackson, a rising sophomore, took over as Arkansas’ starting quarterback for the final game of the season and is largely considered the future of the position. Rhoads finished in a tie for fifth in the SEC in sacks (8) and second in the league in tackles for-loss (17 1/2).
Silverfield told fans he doesn’t think a rebuild will take long.
“It’s not one of those things where we’re sitting here saying, ‘Hey, you know, Hunter, I need three years to rebuild this,’” Silverfield said. “No. We can start rebuilding the culture the moment we step down.”
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NIL
Mitch Barnhart emphatically affirms Kentucky football’s NIL status – Kentucky Kernel
A new era of Kentucky football was celebrated yesterday as Will Stein was introduced as head coach and spoke to fans along with media for the first time.
As expected, NIL came up in this conference as it is the talking point of college sports all around the country.
The new head coach was the first to confirm that Kentucky is where it needs to be to compete for the players it wants under the new leadership.
“Yeah, of course, of course,” Stein said. “Mitch [Barnhart], Mark [Hill] laid out a great plan. Feel like we’re right there to be successful right away.”
To help navigate this process, it is believed that Pat Biondo will be joining the staff as a general manager.
The role has started to become more integrated into the sport in this rising world of NIL in order to have experts at the forefront of this process for recruiting and roster-building purposes.
Barnhart spoke with media after the introductory press conference and doubled-down on Stein’s take about NIL for the program in a fired response.
“We’re confident in what we’re doing and people ask that question 19 different ways, from all the stuff that’s been going on, and it’s exhausting. You know, enough, enough about have we got enough? We’ve got enough, and we’re working at it just like everyone else is working at it We’re no different,” Barnhart exclaimed. “They’ve got Learfield, we’ve got JMI, they’ve got Learfield, they’ve got playflight. So this notion that we don’t have enough is ridiculous. We’ve got enough.”
Another avenue that has caused several debates on NIL is the salary cap that limited the amount schools could directly share to athletes at $20.5 million.
This was meant to limit the amount schools could give players and sounds good in principle, but like most things when it comes to NIL, did not work that way.
A lot of schools have used deals outside the school that has inflated the money within college football programs well above the limit.
Some schools have even incorporated and expanded athletic departments into agency to secure the deals for these players that bend the rules just a bit.
Another major issue is that schools are making NIL promises part of recruitment for high schools players and transfers.
Within the given timeframe, there is nothing wrong with this, but since NIL, teams have been known to reach out to players when they are not allowed to.
This tampering expedited the process for getting Stein to Lexington to become the Wildcats next head coach.
“Make no mistake about it, we can talk about tampering, we can talk about no doing this, no doing that, they’re flat calling players all over the place, and there’s player movement everywhere,” Barnhart said. “So let’s not kid ourselves, so, yeah, to protect our roster, to protect our program, to protect recruiting, we had to move fast.”
However, while others might be not playing the rules and finding workarounds, that is not going to happen at Kentucky.
“We’ve got to resource it the right way. We got to assess talent the right way. We got to acquire it the right way. We’ve got to make sure we’re within the boundaries and the rules,” Barnhart said. “We’re not going to break the rules. That’s flat out. We’re not doing that alright, we will do it the right way. We don’t need to, we don’t need to do that. We’re good enough at what we do. We’ve got good people.”
With National Signing Day over and the transfer portal opening in January, it will not take long to see just how well Stein and Kentucky can compete with the rest of the SEC to recruit talent in this NIL era.
NIL
Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia pleads to Trump for College Football Playoff executive order
College football has had incredible developments over the last several years, from NIL deals, to the expanded college football playoff and everything in between, so much so that it’s led to more government involvement in the sport than ever before.
Not to mention, the transfer portal process became such an issue that President Donald J. Trump tried several methods to help the greater good of the game, including signing executive orders and encouraging Congress to come up with solutions.
Though, the latest request of the President comes from one of college football’s biggest stars.
Upon the release of the latest College Football Playoff rankings just days before the final reveal of the field, the Vanderbilt Commodores — who are 10-2 with losses to Alabama and Texas — came in at No. 14 with no real path to move into the 12-team field.
Commodores’ quarterback Diego Pavia — who will likely be a Heisman Trophy finalist — has pleaded with Trump to sign an executive order that would expand the field to 16 teams, allowing four from the SEC to be guaranteed, along with four at-large bids.
Needless to say, Pavia’s request is not going to get approved, but it does reflect the current chaos college football finds itself in when star players are openly begging the President to do something about a flawed system.
Whether Pavia’s in the playoffs or not, he and Vanderbilt have been one of the best stories in the nation this year, and he has made huge contributions to college football.
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