Talking season is almost here for Kansas, and the biggest offensive mystery is sitting right at quarterback.
Big 12 Media Days are scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday in Frisco, Texas, with the Jayhawks set to handle their media obligations on Wednesday. KU will bring four players with Lance Leipold as the program starts laying the groundwork for the 2026 season.
Some of the questions that come up this week will get answers later, once training camp is over and the season actually kicks off. That’s where the real shape of KU’s year six under Leipold will start to emerge. On offense, though, one issue towers over the rest: who takes the first snap?
It’s a two-man fight between Cole Ballard and Isaiah Marshall, with Chase Jenkins sitting behind them. The competition should be decided in the first couple of weeks of camp, give or take.
Right now, Ballard still has a slight edge over Marshall, but that can flip quickly if Marshall gets rolling early in camp and puts together a strong push. For now, though, the job is still open.
And the starter is only part of the story. What KU gets from that quarterback once the season begins will matter even more.
If the Week 1 starter keeps the job all year, that would likely mean the Jayhawks are getting steady play and avoiding unnecessary changes. If the staff has to keep rotating, that’s probably not a good sign.
Leipold and his staff have dealt with this kind of decision since arriving in Lawrence five years ago. This one feels especially important, though, because KU needs to get back to a bowl game, and quarterback play is going to drive everything.
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Kansas May Already Have Another Freshman With Massive NBA Stakes
Kansas already knows what one one-and-done star can mean for the program after Darryn Peterson went No. 2 overall in the 2026 NBA Draft following his lone season in Lawrence. Now the buzz is shifting to the next wave, with freshman guard Tyran Stokes arriving as the kind of prospect who can keep the Jayhawks in the center of the national draft conversation.
The early projections are still just that, early, but they are loud enough to matter for Kansas fans who have seen how quickly elite talent can reshape a season and a rosters long-term outlook. Stokes is expected to step into a major role in 2026-27, and if he lives up to the hype, the Jayhawks could be looking at another freshman with real stakes at the very top of the NBA draft. [Read more 🡒]
Allen Fieldhouse Just Earned The Ultimate College Basketball Respect
Allen Fieldhouse has spent generations building a reputation that goes well beyond the box score, and it just picked up another piece of validation. Basket Under Review put Kansas home court atop its list of the toughest places to play in college basketball, citing the atmosphere, the edge of home-court advantage, the buildings mystique and the quality of opponents the Jayhawks have knocked off there since moving in back in 1955.
The numbers behind that reputation are hard to ignore, too. Kansas has gone 86-9 at Allen Fieldhouse since the start of the 2020-21 season, with home wins last season over No. 2 Iowa State, No. 13 BYU, No. 1 Arizona and No. 5 Houston helping reinforce why visiting teams still treat the place like a problem before the opening tip. For a program that has long leaned on its home floor as a separator, this latest ranking feels less like a surprise than a formal acknowledgment of what opponents already know. [Read more 🡒]
