There’s no such thing as long-term planning in college football anymore. Not for players, coaches or administrators. Today’s reality could be an ancient relic by next week; the rules and landscape of the sport are ever-shifting.
That it has impacted the coaching market. While patience has been wearing thin for a while, the advent of NIL and the transfer portal have exhausted it quicker. Coaches were once afforded three seasons to put their footprint on a program. Now, if you haven’t gotten things figured out by the end of Year 2, you’re in deep doo-doo. Heck, you may have been fired already.
Where do the members of the 2023 coaching cycle sit after their first two seasons in charge? There are some resounding success stories — though not as many as the 2022 class, which saw both TCU’s Sonny Dykes and Washington’s Kalen DeBoer coach in national title games in their first two seasons. There are failures, too. Multiple coaches from that cycle have already been fired, and a few others are in perilous situations heading into 2025.
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