Andy Kotelnicki is back in charge of the Kansas offense, and the Jayhawks think that means the creativity - and the fireworks - are coming with him.
Kotelnicki, one of the co-creators of Lance Leipold’s offensive playbook, has returned to playcalling duties in Lawrence after two seasons at Penn State, where he worked mostly under James Franklin. His first stint with KU helped define the offense’s identity, and players at Big 12 Media Days made clear they expect that version of the attack to show up again.
The difference, in their view, is going to be obvious. Cam Pickett said the offense has already started building on what worked a year ago while adding fresh wrinkles from Kotelnicki.
"It's been a lot of fun," Cam Pickett said. "Feel like he's taking some things that we had good from last year, we built on that.
He's brought some new things in. He [will] find a lot of different ways to give us the best opportunity to win, get the playmakers the ball, and let us do what we do."
Pickett also pointed to the kind of production KU believes is on the way. He said the Jayhawks are "going to be a very explosive team." That’s the area where the offense has slipped over the last two seasons, along with most of the major team numbers - touchdowns, first downs, passing yards and rushing yards all down since Kotelnicki left.
That dip was especially noticeable in 2025, when KU no longer had Devin Neal in the backfield.
Still, the players around the program believe the old style is coming back: the odd-looking formations, the motion before the snap, the constant movement that made Kansas one of the more entertaining offenses in the Big 12 in 2022 and 2023. That approach didn’t just help the Jayhawks win games; it also made them stand out.
Pickett said the big-play element should be a major part of what comes next.
"There will be some similarities from last year… but we have a lot of big plays," Pickett said. "A lot of players who can make big plays, so just a lot of explosives."
For left tackle Calvin Clements, it starts with the run game. He praised Kotelnicki’s ability to build an offense that begins on the ground and then opens up the deeper shots off that foundation. KU has options there, with Dylan Edwards and Yasin Willis in the backfield.
"His ability to be explosive," Clements said. "How he puts the run first, and how that kind of sets up the over-the-top explosive plays, and some of the running backs we brought in as well. It's a pleasure blocking for them."
Defenders have gotten an early look at what’s ahead, too. Blake Herold, a defensive tackle, said the offense has already shown plenty of the movement and formation changes that come with Kotelnicki’s system.
"He's got one of the craziest offenses I've ever seen, with shifts and motions and stuff like that," Herold said. "We've been able to see the mother lode of formations and shifts in all those motions."
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Kansas May Have Found The Size It Desperately Needs Inside
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The catch is that the path to campus still comes with questions because of the new NCAA rules affecting international players with professional backgrounds. Kansas has not officially announced his status, and the uncertainty around how those guidelines will apply leaves his arrival in a holding pattern for now, even as the commitment itself gives the Jayhawks something concrete to build around. [Read more 🡒]
