CBS Sports: 10 college football coaches under the most pressure in 2026

Bigred2467

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Jul 4, 2025
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No mention of Rhule, as expected.

These 10 coaches face mounting pressure this offseason.

1. Mike Norvell, Florida State​

Buyout after 2026 season: $48.5 million (estimated)

Mike Norvell took control of his fate following offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn's retirement, opting to call plays himself next season.

Florida State reportedly closed fiscal year 2025 with $437 million in athletics-related debt, the highest total among publicly reported FBS athletic departments. Much of that burden is tied to football, including renovations to Doak Campbell Stadium and construction of a new facility.

After a five-win campaign, Norvell can help stabilize the program by restoring momentum. The Seminoles have dropped 17 games over the past two seasons since being left out of the College Football Playoff as ACC champions in 2023, a downturn that has intensified scrutiny entering 2026.

2. Luke Fickell, Wisconsin​

Buyout after 2026 season: $19.2 million

Is it too little, too late for Fickell? Like others facing pressure in 2026, he received public backing from his athletic director toward the tail end of last season after Wisconsin chose not to absorb a sizable buyout and move on from the third-year coach after his second consecutive lackluster campaign. Since taking over at Wisconsin, Fickell is 10-17 against Big Ten opponents, has struggled against ranked competition (2-11) and failed to move the needle in recruiting.

3. Shane Beamer, South Carolina​

Buyout after 2026 season: $19 million (estimated)

Last January, South Carolina awarded Shane Beamer a contract extension through 2030, but the Gamecocks regressed to a 4-8 in 2025 -- the program's worst record since 2020.

After narrowly missing the College Football Playoff in 2024, South Carolina struggled offensively, prompting multiple assistant coach changes and placing Beamer squarely on the hot seat entering 2026. He has all but guaranteed a CFP appearance in 2026, and with the program retaining LaNoriss Sellers and Dylan Stewart, expectations are elevated.

If that prediction falls short, athletic director Jeremiah Donati may face a significant decision.

4. Bill O'Brien, Boston College​

Buyout after 2026 season: $18 million (estimated)

Marginal improvement is essential for Bill O'Brien entering Year 3 after a 2-10 season that included several lopsided losses. He signed 35 players in the 2026 cycle, including 27 transfers, in an effort to accelerate the rebuild. O'Brien said last month that Boston College is "participating in revenue sharing" at a higher level than in the past, though he deferred detailed questions about roster construction and talent acquisition to the athletic director. Frustration surfaced at times last fall, an understandable reaction given the results. The challenge intensifies in 2026, when the Eagles face one of the ACC's most difficult schedules, highlighted by a road trip to Notre Dame.

5. Mike Locksley, Maryland​

Buyout after 2026 season: $7 million (estimated)

Maryland pledged increased fundraising support and a renewed commitment to football in November amid last season's downturn, but a signing class that ranked outside the national top 50 and a modest transfer haul create roster concerns entering 2026. The Terrapins closed the 2025 season with eight consecutive losses and finished 4-8 the year prior, erasing momentum built from three straight bowl victories. Entering its eighth season, Mike Locksley's Maryland tenure has grown stagnant. Maryland has won just two of its past 18 games against Big Ten opponents.

6. Dave Aranda, Baylor​

Buyout after 2026 season: $9 million (estimated)

There's a new sheriff coming to Waco in the form of athletic director Doug McNamee, who has spent the first couple months on the job assessing what needs to change within the football program. Aranda led the Bears to a Big 12 title in 2021, but three losing records in the last four years has him on the league's hottest seat. With important early matchups against Auburn (in Atlanta), Colorado and Arizona State, getting off to a positive start is vital.

7. Dabo Swinney, Clemson​

Buyout after 2026 season: $57 million (estimated)

Swinney dismissed offensive coordinator Garrett Riley and replaced him with former protégé Chad Morris in an effort to revive a stagnant offense. Swinney has remained committed to his long-standing approach, but in the NIL and transfer portal era, that model has produced uneven results. Clemson has not won a College Football Playoff game since the 2019 season, one year after Trevor Lawrence led the program to a national championship -- a drought that has intensified scrutiny entering 2026. Still, it would be a bold -- and costly -- move for Clemson to part ways with the man who led the program to two national titles.

8. Kalen DeBoer, Alabama​

Buyout after 2026 season: $50 million (estimated)

Alabama players love Kalen DeBoer. The administration wants greater buy-in. Fans remain divided. Next season will be pivotal for the Tide's third-year coach, who has yet to generate the momentum many anticipated after succeeding one of the sport's all-time greats. Nick Saban lost eight games combined over his final five seasons in Tuscaloosa -- the same total DeBoer has accumulated in two years. Lopsided losses to Georgia in the SEC Championship Game and to Indiana in the CFP at the Rose Bowl served as measuring-stick moments, and the Crimson Tide fell short in both. DeBoer's finesse-oriented offense thrived at previous stops, but Alabama's identity has long been rooted in physicality. How the Crimson Tide perform at the line of scrimmage and in the run game next season will significantly influence the national perception of his tenure.

9. Bill Belichick, North Carolina​

Buyout after 2026 season: $10 million

The Tar Heels were 4-5 after an early November win over Stanford. Then they collapsed down the stretch, losing to in-state opponents Wake Forest, Duke and NC State. The late-season slide was one of several blemishes during a turbulent first year for Bill Belichick, whose portal-assembled roster never gained traction. Only the first three years of Belichick's five-year, $50 million contract are fully guaranteed. If North Carolina struggles again in 2026, the university would owe roughly $10 million to move on. On the other side, if an NFL opportunity arises next cycle, Belichick would owe the Tar Heels $1 million to depart early.

10. Deion Sanders, Colorado​

Buyout after 2026 season: $26.6 million

Coach Prime has instituted new team-wide rules ahead of the 2026 season in hopes of cleaning up his program a bit. His first year without Shedeur Sanders and Travis Hunter was ugly and many of his best players jumped into the transfer portal after the season, including former five-star offensive tackle signee Jordan Seaton. Colorado faces a budget deficit and new athletic director Fernando Lovo aims to fix it over the next several years. Sanders could do his part by putting together a competitive team.

10 college football coaches under the most pressure in 2026
 
Last edited:
Sep 7, 2018
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Rhule's buyout dwarfs all on that list. He's got around $70 million reason$ why there isn't much pressure. Along with endorsements like the following.

Matt Rhule has been building something special at Nebraska — a program rooted in toughness, accountability, and a culture of doing things the right way,” University of Nebraska President Dr. Jeffrey P. Gold said. “I’m grateful that his leadership will continue, and I’m confident the momentum he’s generating will carry our program — and the pride of Husker Nation — to even greater heights.”
 

mgbreeze

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I say this in all seriousness, Fickell probably can't believe his bad luck of not having Nebraska on the schedule in '25 or '26. Fleck, for example, has secured his family for generations and somehow convinced everyone he's a good coach by dominating a terrible Nebraska program.
 
Oct 6, 2012
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I think someone has mis read the tea leaves.

Even hat guy knows he is on very thin ice right now. Ice is not likely to get any thicker by time Ohio comes to town.
 

HuskerO58

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Man, to be in Alabama's position again. Have your coach be on the hot seat after a season where you won a playoff game.
 

Pennsyhuskers

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Rhule is a joke and will be gone after next year. But he should not be on this list yet. All the coaches on here are definitely in hotter water than Rhule is. Rhule has taken us to two straight bowl games after all!! What a streak! Very sad that his record in that regard is considered good enough improvement to warrant keeping him around. I remember the year Solich went 7-7. You would have thought he was the second coming of Starkweather based on what fans and boosters were screaming. Now we celebrate that kind of record as a great achievement!
 

Redscarlet

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Rhule is a joke and will be gone after next year. But he should not be on this list yet. All the coaches on here are definitely in hotter water than Rhule is. Rhule has taken us to two straight bowl games after all!! What a streak!
More likely he will be on the hot seat in 27 if he ends up finishing 6-6 season.
 
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Bigred2467

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2. Luke Fickell, Wisconsin​

Buyout after 2026 season: $19.2 million

Is it too little, too late for Fickell? Like others facing pressure in 2026, he received public backing from his athletic director toward the tail end of last season after Wisconsin chose not to absorb a sizable buyout and move on from the third-year coach after his second consecutive lackluster campaign. Since taking over at Wisconsin, Fickell is 10-17 against Big Ten opponents, has struggled against ranked competition (2-11) and failed to move the needle in recruiting.

Rhule is also 10-17 against Big Ten opponents and also has failed to move the needle in recruiting. One difference between the two is that Fickell has beaten two ranked teams, while Rhule hasn't beaten one.
 
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RBigredMax1

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2. Luke Fickell, Wisconsin​

Buyout after 2026 season: $19.2 million

Is it too little, too late for Fickell? Like others facing pressure in 2026, he received public backing from his athletic director toward the tail end of last season after Wisconsin chose not to absorb a sizable buyout and move on from the third-year coach after his second consecutive lackluster campaign. Since taking over at Wisconsin, Fickell is 10-17 against Big Ten opponents, has struggled against ranked competition (2-11) and failed to move the needle in recruiting.

Rhule is also 10-17 against Big Ten opponents and also has failed to move the needle in recruiting. One difference between the two is that Fickell has beaten two ranked teams, while Rhule hasn't beaten one.
We have Wisconsin’s 2025 schedule this year and they have our 2025 schedule. Fickel will be off this list next year for sure
 

SuperBigFan69

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Fickell is horrible and was a horrible hire. He is done.

Rhule is gone after this season but more than likely during the season.
 
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king_kong__

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Jeez

hard to believe wisc and CU have higher expectations for their football programs than we do

each have returned a higher win total and countless ranked wins compared to Preacher Rhule (.500 vs each) in the same time frame, and each appear to not think that is good enough

we, however, are perfectly content for the time being
 
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cubsker15

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Imagine giving a quote saying our program is built on toughness. Maybe the steak at the training table is cooked well done?
 
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SuperBigFan69

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Nebraska would have been 4-8 last year with Wisconsin's schedule
Wolf fans are also obsessed with us, my god.

The fact that you not only know the badger schedule but then went and cross-referenced it with the Husker schedule, so that you could then come here, to a Husker site, to post about it?

Wolf fan, come on.
 
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WTFMatt

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Rhule's buyout dwarfs all on that list. He's got around $70 million reason$ why there isn't much pressure. Along with endorsements like the following.

Matt Rhule has been building something special at Nebraska — a program rooted in toughness, accountability, and a culture of doing things the right way,” University of Nebraska President Dr. Jeffrey P. Gold said. “I’m grateful that his leadership will continue, and I’m confident the momentum he’s generating will carry our program — and the pride of Husker Nation — to even greater heights.”

And, that's exactly why fans need to take a stand and not show up to games. Won't happen, though.

NU has officially become the Chicago Bulls of college football.
 
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SuperBigFan69

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And, that's exactly why fans need to take a stand and not show up to games. Won't happen, though.
I get that but being in Lincoln on a Saturday in the fall is special. At least it is for me and my friends. Walking around from bar to bar, telling stories, screwing around, waiting for the game to start.

It is just a special time and I don't want to give up on that part of it...but I do want a new head coach.
 
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Aug 18, 2016
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And, that's exactly why fans need to take a stand and not show up to games. Won't happen, though.

NU has officially become the Chicago Bulls of college football.
Shoot, we should protest message boards also. That way there is no fan interest here either. You start!
 

redwine65

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I'd give rhule a c grade...inherited a 5 alarm dumpster fire, with biological hazards.
and his hands were kinda tied with statue qb..but he wiffed on the lines
I figured 9 wins last year...rhule owes me 2 wins
(thats 2 wins in the hole)
 
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dinglefritz

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Man, to be in Alabama's position again. Have your coach be on the hot seat after a season where you won a playoff game.
He’ll be on the hot seat every year he loses more than 2 games. Just part of the Bama job. Remember how awful we thought Callahan was? IF Tom had let him replace Coz we might be commissioning statues of the guy. 🤔
 

dinglefritz

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And, that's exactly why fans need to take a stand and not show up to games. Won't happen, though.

NU has officially become the Chicago Bulls of college football.
IF we head in to November still needing a win to get bowl eligible, there will be plenty of empty seats.
 
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