Read in Browser [[link removed]]
Saturday Edition
November 1, 2025
POWERED BY
Now that we’re into Week 10 of the college football season, you might reasonably wonder: Which head coach will get fired this week? The firings have come fast and furious this season—headlined by Penn State, Florida, and LSU—and with them come reports of enormous buyouts in the $50 million range. But the buyouts aren’t as simple as they look; in many cases, the school will have to pay the fired coach only a fraction of that headline number. Today, FOS reporters answer all your big CFB coach buyout questions.
— Dan Roberts [[link removed]], Amanda Christovich [[link removed]], and Alex Schiffer [[link removed]]
College Football’s Coach Buyout Bonanza: All Your Questions Answered [[link removed]]
Matthew O'Haren-Imagn Images
At the conclusion of Week 3, Virginia Tech decided to fire head coach Brent Pry. UCLA canned DeShaun Foster. They were the first of more than a half-dozen power-conference football coaches to lose their jobs so far this season.
Since then, college football has seen another spin of the coaching carousel, which included Penn State’s James Franklin and LSU’s Brian Kelly. Top programs are firing coaches left and right—and paying tens of millions in coaching buyouts to do so.
Through Week 9, schools owe their former coaches nearly $170 million in buyouts.
The Contracts
A “buyout” as we know it in colloquial terms usually refers to the liquidated damages stipulated in a coach’s contract if they are fired “without cause”—or, in other words, because they’re losing.
Buyouts vary broadly. UCLA coach Foster was owed only about $6 million for being fired earlier this season, for example. Former Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher, on the other hand, was owed more than $75 million. It’s the biggest buyout in college football history.
Especially with larger buyouts, a coach will usually be owed a portion of their future contract earnings, including their base salary and guaranteed supplementary income.
Penn State’s Franklin, for example, has a buyout somewhere between $48 million and $50 million [[link removed]]. It includes his annual base salary of $500,000 per year, additional compensation of $6.5 million per year, and life insurance policy coverage of $1 million per year between now and the end of the 2031 season, when his deal would have expired, according to the contract. That amounts to about $48 million. He’s also owed the rest of that money for this year, bringing the total number to somewhere between $48 million and $50 million.
The Loopholes
The gargantuan numbers aren’t always what they seem [[link removed]]. There are several clauses that can save schools millions, especially if coaches get new jobs.
In many cases, coaching contracts include “duty to mitigate” and “offset” clauses, meaning that coaches are required to look for a new job in high-profile coaching or media; once they receive that new job, the school will only owe them the difference between their new salary and their buyout. The contracts for Franklin and LSU’s Kelly included these clauses, for example, while Fisher’s and Florida’s Billy Napier did not.
The timing of the payouts could also determine how much a coach actually makes. Sometimes, coaches are owed a lump sum of a large portion of the buyout within a short period of time. But in other cases, the buyout is paid out in shorter, longer installments. So, even though Kelly is owed about $53 million, his contract says he’ll be paid in equal monthly installments, meaning he can expect only about $800,000 per month going forward.
As a result of these clauses, schools and coaches will often negotiate a smaller total buyout paid out over a shorter period of time. LSU has said, for example, that it is having conversations with Kelly about a separation agreement.
The Decision-Makers
Athletic directors are tasked with making the final decision for a coaching firing, but they aren’t the only ones. University presidents, board members, donors, and boosters—especially those who might be tasked with funding some of the buyout money—may all have a say depending on the school.
In LSU’s case, for example, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry confirmed he had direct involvement in the decision, holding a meeting at the governor’s mansion to discuss issues related to the firing. Landry has appointed six of the fourteen members of LSU’s Board of Supervisors and will appoint four more next year. But his influence is even bigger now, given LSU currently doesn’t have a permanent university president—so he’s taken on a larger role in making university decisions. As for the next football coach, Landry told reporters [[link removed]] this week the Board of Supervisors will make that decision.
The Funders
Buyout funds don’t come directly from the university side. Schools often solicit donors and boosters to cover the costs of buyouts, especially when a large chunk of the payout is due in a short period. Usually, buyouts are funded by a combination of athletic department revenues and donations.
At Texas A&M, Fisher’s buyout was paid [[link removed]] through a combination of money the athletic department sourced and money from The 12th Man Foundation, the university’s fundraising arm. In the case of LSU, one donor will be paying the majority of Kelly’s buyout, according to a report from New Orleans local outlet WDSU. (An athletic department official declined to confirm or deny the report when reached by Front Office Sports.)
Sometimes, schools fire coaches without knowing how they’ll cover these payments. When Penn State fired Franklin, the school hadn’t quite figured out the funding breakdown, a source previously told FOS, although AD Pat Kraft confirmed all of Franklin’s buyout would be paid by the athletics side of the university.
The Detractors
Not everyone is a fan of athletic departments paying tens of millions of dollars to fund these buyouts.
Earlier this week, Gov. Landry lambasted the concept—issuing criticisms so sharp that they ended with the exit [[link removed]] of Woodward.
Also, Rep. Michael Baumgartner (R., Wash.) introduced a bill attempting to curb buyouts called the “COACH Act.” The proposed bill would give a limited antitrust exemption to public schools to limit coaching compensation, including buyouts. A previous court decision striking down caps on assistant coaching salaries deemed coaching salary maximums illegal, but this bill attempts to maneuver around that.
“College sports are highly subsidized public goods,” Baumgartner said, “not a professional enterprise.”
SPONSORED BY DIRECTV
The Come Up: Buckeyes Receivers Stay Winning
In this week’s episode [[link removed]] of The Come Up presented by DIRECTV, host Demetria Obilor dives into the phenomenon that is Ohio State’s wide receiver pipeline—where elite talent seems to grow on trees. At the center of it all: Jeremiah Smith, a freshman phenom already drawing comparisons to Buckeyes greats turned NFL stars.
From five-star recruit to instant impact, Smith’s rise is a glimpse into how Ohio State continues to set the gold standard for wide receiver development. It’s not just a program—it’s a factory for the future of football.
👉 Watch now. [[link removed]]
College Football Firings Tracker
Stephen Lew-Imagn Images
Some of the game’s biggest jobs are open—but firing a coach tends to come with a cost.
Week 3
Virginia Tech: $6 million to Brent Pry UCLA: $6.43 million to DeShaun Foster
Week 4
Oklahoma State: $15 million to Mike Gundy
Week 5
Arkansas: $8.7 million to Sam Pittman
Week 7
Penn State: $50 million to James Franklin
Week 8
Florida: $21.2 million to Billy Napier Colorado State: $1.5 million to Jay Norvell
Week 9
LSU: $53 million to Brian Kelly
FOS’s Alex Schiffer has more on the details of each buyout [[link removed]] so far this season.
Behind the Buyouts
Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images
Other coaches are big beneficiaries of college football’s coaching carousel. The effects are a boon for coaches who might be next in line to fill these vacancies—especially ones at programs not traditionally known for football who have made a remarkable turnaround. These coaches now have the opportunity to receive major mid-year raises so that they don’t get poached [[link removed]].
LSU officials vow stability after Kelly firing and Woodward exit. During a press conference to introduce new athletic director Verge Ausberry, LSU officials did what they could to wrap up the circus that began with the firing of Brian Kelly. They had corrected inaccuracies spouted by their governor, outlined their plan to find a new coach [[link removed]], and promised a better football future. SEC coaches are questioning LSU’s firing of Kelly. LSU’s $53 million firing of Kelly means three of the SEC’s sixteen teams have fired their football coaches since the beginning of the season, along with Florida and Arkansas. This week, fellow coaches across the conference—including Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin and Georgia’s Kirby Smart—are lamenting college football’s new reality [[link removed]].
Advertise [[link removed]] Awards [[link removed]] Learning [[link removed]] Events [[link removed]] Video [[link removed]] Show [[link removed]] Written by Amanda Christovich [[link removed]], Alex Schiffer [[link removed]], David Rumsey [[link removed]] Edited by Meredith Turits [[link removed]], Dennis Young [[link removed]], Catherine Chen [[link removed]]
If this email was forwarded to you, you can subscribe here [[link removed]].
Update your preferences [link removed] / Unsubscribe [link removed]
Copyright © 2025 Front Office Sports. All rights reserved.
460 Park Avenue South, 7th Floor, New York NY, 10016