College football’s calendar is a mess, and coaches like Lane Kiffin are complaining loudly. The problem? They voted for the very system they now despise in a bid to control players, and their complaints reveal a stunning hypocrisy at the heart of the sport.
Listen closely to the chorus of complaints rising from the highest levels of college football, and you’ll hear a familiar refrain: the calendar is broken. It’s “unsustainable.” It’s chaos. And the latest voice to join the choir is Lane Kiffin, who, just hours after leaving Ole Miss for a blockbuster deal with LSU, lamented the logistical nightmare he faced.
“Obviously, the last 48 hours, in a lot of ways, sucked,” Kiffin said at his introductory press conference, a fact confirmed by reports from the event [Yahoo Sports]. “There was no way to possibly do it… any better than we did from a timing standpoint, because it’s a bad scheduling system of how it’s set up.”
It’s a compelling soundbite. A passionate coach, torn between his old team heading to the College Football Playoff and the new opportunity of a lifetime. The only villain in this story, according to Kiffin and his peers, is the calendar itself. But that narrative omits one crucial, damning fact: the coaches built this mess themselves. Every last piece of it.
The Architects of Their Own Chaos
This isn’t a case of administrators in a boardroom forcing illogical rules onto the sport. The current, chaotic system is the direct result of lobbying and voting by the coaches themselves, primarily through the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA). They are the architects of their own prison.
Let’s be perfectly clear about the two key changes they championed:
- An Early National Signing Day: Coaches pushed to move the primary signing period from February to December. The goal was to lock in their recruiting classes before the bowl season, preventing other schools from poaching their commitments late in the cycle. It was about control.
- A Condensed Winter Transfer Portal Window: They advocated for a tight, two-week portal window in January. The logic was to force players to make decisions quickly, giving coaches a clear picture of their roster before spring practice. Again, it was about control.
For years, this system worked exactly as intended. It gave coaches maximum leverage over player movement. It allowed them to manage their rosters with ruthless efficiency. The problem? It never accounted for when the coaches themselves wanted to move.
A Double Standard Exposed
The hypocrisy is stunning. The very coaches who demand unwavering loyalty from teenage athletes and construct rules to limit their freedom now cry foul when those same rules inconvenience their own multi-million dollar career moves. They want complete freedom of movement for themselves while simultaneously restricting it for the players whose unpaid labor builds their programs.
Kiffin wanted to have his cake and eat it, too. He wanted to coach Ole Miss in the Playoff while simultaneously securing the LSU job, recruiting for his new school, and navigating the transfer portal and early signing day for the Tigers. The system he and his colleagues voted for made that nearly impossible. That’s not a flaw in the system; it’s the system working as designed—it just happens to be catching coaches in the gears, not just players.
This isn’t an isolated incident. The entire coaching carousel has become a frantic scramble to beat the deadlines that coaches themselves instituted. A new hire has mere days to evaluate his new roster, salvage a recruiting class, and dive into the transfer portal before the windows slam shut.
There is a Solution, But Coaches Don’t Want It
Frustrated fans and analysts have pointed to a simple, logical solution for years: model the calendar after the NFL. It’s a framework that prioritizes finishing a season before the chaos of the offseason begins.
A more stable calendar could look like this:
- No Coaching Moves Until After the Postseason: All coaching searches and hires are prohibited until after the National Championship game is played. This protects competitive integrity.
- National Signing Day Moves Back to February: This provides new coaching staffs with adequate time to build relationships and assemble a recruiting class.
- A Single Transfer Portal Window in Late Spring: A two-week window opening on May 1, after spring evaluations, would give players and coaches time to make informed decisions.
- Restructured Spring Practice: Replace full-contact spring ball with helmets-only OTAs to evaluate talent without the injury risk, followed by a mini-camp in June.
This structure provides clarity and sanity. So why isn’t it happening? Because it shifts a degree of control back to the players. It gives them more time to assess their situations and prevents coaches from pressuring them into rushed decisions. Every time similar proposals have been floated, the AFCA has rejected them. They prefer the chaos they can control over a fair system they can’t.
The complaints from Kiffin and others aren’t a cry for help; they’re a lament that their carefully constructed system of control has backfired. They didn’t fix a problem; they just created a new one that now affects them personally. Until the coaches are willing to look in the mirror and dismantle the very system they built, the chaos will continue. This is the mess they wanted, and it’s on them, and only them, to fix it.
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