• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Coaches Hate the Transfer Portal. But Their Coaching Carousel Is Making the Problem Worse

  • Thirty head football coaches have left or were fired from their positions, according to at least one tally, contributing to extra transfer portal upheaval.
  • Coaches blame players and the portal for roster instability—but the coaching carousel itself is “arguably” the biggest factor.
Nov 25, 2023; Pasadena, California, USA; UCLA Bruins head coach Chip Kelly reacts after the game against the California Golden Bears at Rose Bowl.
Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Shortly after winning the national championship, Jim Harbaugh left Michigan for the NFL, taking the top job with the Chargers. Washington’s head coach, Kalen DeBoer, headed to Tuscaloosa after Alabama’s Nick Saban announced his retirement. Jedd Fisch left Arizona to take DeBoer’s spot. Last Friday, UCLA’s Chip Kelly took the offensive coordinator position at Ohio State. And on and on and on.

Coaches, unlike players, have no restrictions for their own “transfers”—and not even eight-figure buyout clauses have stopped them from leapfrogging at the last second. Thirty coaches have changed jobs this year, according to The Athletic—more than in any offseason in the past 12 years. 

The carousel has a ripple effect: Well over 2,000 Division I football players have entered the portal since Aug. 1, 2023, according to On3—just 400 or so fewer than last year. And there’s still another 15-day window to go. The NCAA shortened transfer windows this year to ease some of the chaos, but that doesn’t appear to have helped much. Football coaches across the country have lamented the difficulties that transfer restrictions pose on roster management. But in college football, the coaching carousel is as much to blame as any other factor that contributes to players seeking greener pastures.

“The coaching carousel has a profound impact on the transfer portal, as it creates a domino effect of player movement and roster changes,” says Kurt Roth, the founder of the New Mexico–based NIL company 505 Sports Venture Foundation, which helps New Mexico athletes navigate NIL. “While many spectators and pundits blame their [team’s] perceived problems with the transfer portal on NIL activities, the ability of coaches to move around is arguably the bigger contributor to player transfers.” (UNM players saw their own coaching change this December: Danny Gonzalez was fired and replaced by Bronco Mendenhall.)

The portal has been around since 2018, but it didn’t become controversial until ’21 when the NCAA changed its transfer rules to allow players to transfer at least once without consequence. Now players have two short windows throughout the year to enter: one 30-day window in December and January, and another 15-day window in April. (Players who have already transferred once don’t get an unrestricted opportunity to leave again, per NCAA rules, though a recent court decision has ended that restriction at least for the rest of the year.)

But those timing restrictions go out the window if a head coach is fired, retires, or leaves the program for another job. All the players on the team immediately become eligible to transfer for a period lasting 30 days.

Because of the 30 coaches who have switched jobs, 2,550 scholarship players are eligible—and that’s not including walk-ons. More than a dozen Alabama players and a dozen Washington players entered the portal in the days following the news that their coaches were leaving, despite the fact that both teams were national championship contenders last year. Those players ultimately can opt to stay, but in the meantime it’s likely that they also engage in a negotiation process with their coaching staff and NIL collective. Coaches like Georgia’s Kirby Smart have admitted that they’re spending just as much time and effort retaining their existing roster as they do adding to it.

The self-inflicted mayhem doesn’t stop when a new coach arrives on campus, however. Some coaches essentially force players into the portal with the intention of replacing them with new recruits or players from the coach’s previous program—straight from the portal. 

Perhaps the most drastic example: Deion Sanders’s Colorado Buffaloes. When Sanders arrived in Boulder in 2023, he quickly cut 40–50 players from the team—close to half the roster. Twenty additional players left of their own accord. Ultimately, the team he fielded in the fall had 84 new names. (Sanders himself has criticized the transfer portal process despite his own contribution to the upheaval.)

Between the current momentum of lawsuits attacking the NCAA’s transfer and NIL restrictions—and the NCAA’s unwillingness to follow the lead of professional leagues in finding legal ways to create restrictions, like collective bargaining—there seems to be no end in sight to the chaos. But coaches do have the power to ease the transfer portal chaos a little bit. All they have to do is slow down their own “coaching portal.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Dec 25, 2024; Dallas, Texas, USA; A view of the NBA Christmas Day logo during the second half of the game between the Dallas Mavericks and the Minnesota Timberwolves at the American Airlines Center.

NBA Has Superior Slate Entering Christmas Face-Off With NFL

The NFL has scheduled Christmas games for six consecutive seasons.
Dec 25, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Netflix Christmas GameDay cake seen after the Kansas City Chiefs defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers at Acrisure Stadium.

Netflix Christmas Day Encore Will Test NFL’s Holiday Staying Power

This year’s doubleheader is lacking pivotal matchups.
Martha Stewart hosts a VIP tree-lighting event at Bedford Post Inn in Bedford on Friday, December 6, 2024.

Martha Stewart Joins Celebrity Soccer Party With Swansea Investment

She joins Snoop Dogg as minority owners in the EFL Championship club.
Sep 27, 2025; San Jose, California, USA; Bay FC forward Racheal Kundananji (9) takes a shot on goal against the Utah Royals in the second half at PayPal Park.

Some Women’s Soccer Stars Wouldn’t Qualify Under NWSL’s New ‘Rodman Rule’

Players oppose the policy and the union is planning to take action.

Featured Today

Heated Rivalry (L to R) - Connor Storrie as Ilya Rozanov and Hudson Williams as Shane Hollander in Episode 104 of Heated Rivalry. Cr. Sabrina Lantos © 2025

Hockey Needed Some Virality. Then Came ‘Heated Rivalry’

No one was prepared for the Canadian show’s smash success.
Rob Manfred
exclusive
December 23, 2025

MLB Teams Fear League Will Pick Winners and Losers in Tech

One company under consideration was founded by a top MLB exec’s uncle.
December 23, 2025

What It Takes to Pull Off Florida’s First Outdoor NHL Game

The Rangers will face the Panthers in Miami’s first NHL Winter Classic.
December 14, 2025

How Pickleball Became One Massive Private-Equity Rollup

Pickleball roads lead back to billionaire Tom Dundon.
Dec 20, 2025; Oxford, MS, USA; Mississippi Rebels linebacker Tahj Chambers (26), defensive end Kam Franklin (5) and linebacker Jaden Yates (30) reacts after a fumble recovery against the Tulane Green Wave during the second half of a game at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium.

CFP First-Round Viewership Falls 7% Amid Stiff NFL Competition

Last weekend’s CFP games averaged 9.9 million viewers.
December 23, 2025

Darryn Peterson’s Family Is Making Injury Decisions, Self Says

Peterson is the projected top pick in June’s NBA Draft.
Oct 11, 2025; Columbia, Missouri, USA; Missouri Tigers defensive end Damon Wilson II (8) celebrates after recovering a fumble during the second half against the Alabama Crimson Tide at Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images
December 23, 2025

Georgia, Ex-Football Player Suing Each Other in NIL Dispute

Star DE Damon Wilson transferred to Missouri after two years at Georgia.
Sponsored

The Hidden Tech Behind Every Touchdown

Nearly two-thirds of NFL stadiums already rely on Cisco networks, and the Super Bowl will showcase the full scale of the partnership.
Dec 20, 2025; Eugene, OR, USA; Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning celebrates during the third quarter against the James Madison Dukes at Autzen Stadium.
December 23, 2025

Oregon’s Dan Lanning Criticizes CFP’s Neutral Sites and Scheduling

The Ducks are traveling to the Orange Bowl to play Texas Tech.
Nov 29, 2025; Stanford, California, USA; Notre Dame Fighting Irish quarterback Kenny Minchey (8) runs with the football during the fourth quarter against the Stanford Cardinal at Stanford Stadium.
December 23, 2025

Notre Dame’s Future Even Cloudier After Cancelling USC Series

The historic rivalry game won’t be played in 2026 or 2027.
Dec 6, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; Georgia defensive back Jacorey Thomas (20) makes a tackle on Alabama wide receiver Germie Bernard (5) at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
December 23, 2025

The Year Schools Paid Their Players

Players earned millions more than ever before.
December 21, 2025

LSU Coach Lane Kiffin Earns $250K Bonus After Ole Miss’s CFP Win

LSU agreed to pay Kiffin’s performance bonus terms at Ole Miss.