Lance Leipold is already on board with college football’s new five-for-five eligibility model, and his reasoning is pretty straightforward: the sport needs less chaos, not more.
The Big 12 coach said at Big 12 Media Days that his view shifted once he dug into the details of the new system, which was officially approved earlier this summer. Under the model, athletes will have five years of eligibility to play five collegiate seasons, with that five-year clock starting when they enroll in college or at the start of the first academic year after their 19th birthday, whichever comes first. Redshirts and waivers are being phased out with it.
At first, Leipold said he was neutral. That changed once he looked at how the current setup has evolved.
"I was kind of impartial at first, but the more I start looking at all those other things, we got to get out of the waiver business," Leipold said. "That thing has gotten so far out of hand, of what some people are trying to get done.
If we can get to 'All right, you can play everybody, you can do this, you got five years.' That it was it is and you move on from that."
The transition won’t happen all at once. Players already in the middle of their college careers can choose between the old system and the new one, whichever gives them more eligibility.
Freshmen in the 2026-27 academic year will also have that choice. Beginning with freshmen in the 2027-28 academic year, the new system becomes mandatory.
That shift matters because the old setup had stretched in some cases far beyond the standard path. Hardship waivers have become increasingly common, and some players have been able to stay eligible for seven years.
Oklahoma State quarterback Alan Bowman is one example, having received a seventh year and played in the 2024 season. With waivers going away, those kinds of cases are expected to disappear.
There is still one wrinkle. A judge in Ohio granted a preliminary injunction for a group of athletes who finished their eligibility in 2025-26 and did not qualify under the new five-for-five rule, allowing them to compete next season. On Thursday, the NCAA said it will pursue ways to overturn that ruling.
Even with that legal fight still hanging out there, Leipold is looking at the bigger picture. He believes the new setup could help bring some order to a sport that has been pulled in too many directions.
"At the same time, hopefully, what this is going to help do is continue to stabilize rosters," Leipold said. "If they modify anything that has to do with how many times you can transfer, and all those. Nobody wants to take away the opportunity to have the freedom to transfer at least one time, nobody's against how much money [one can make], but once we get this regulated, I think stability and consistency within college football and college football programs will take place."
For Kansas, the new rule helps a handful of players. Would-be seniors Alex Bray and Nahzae Cox both get an extra year because neither redshirted early in their careers and are entering their fourth season of eligibility.
That means both can play in 2026 and 2027. Defensive end Leroy Harris III and defensive backs Jalen Todd and Christian Pritchett also gain three more years of eligibility, running through the 2028 season instead of two.
Still, Leipold said KU won’t have a huge number of players affected, largely because of how the program has handled true freshmen under his watch.
"We don't have a ton that'll fit into that mold," Leipold said. "I know Rob Ianello has worked hard on that to kind of see where we're at with the guys, and and hopefully I think it'll get us back to higher high school numbers as we go along in recruiting."
In Other News...
Cam Pickett Just Sent A Strong Message About Kansas Footballs Future
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Pickett also made clear that last seasons close losses still linger, which is part of why he sounds so invested in what comes next. He singled out Dylan Edwards as a versatile threat and suggested Tate Nagy could become more than just a special teams piece, while also sounding genuinely fired up about the trip to Wembley Stadium for Kansas game in London. For a program trying to turn promise into something sturdier, that kind of buy-in from an experienced receiver matters. [Read more 🡒]
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Ballard and Marshall each bring a different look to the race, which is part of what makes this one worth watching through camp. Marshall showed more as a runner, while Ballards cameo included a touchdown pass and some mobility of his own, but neither has separated from the other yet. With Kansas trying to settle the position before the season turns serious, the next few weeks will be about whether one of them can turn those scattered reps into something more convincing. [Read more 🡒]
Former Jayhawks Shared A Summer League Stage And One Stole It
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Dickinson paced New Orleans with 21 points and knocked down three shots from deep, the kind of outing that stood out even on a night when the Pelicans had to dig out of an early hole. Kansas presence in Summer League stretched beyond that matchup, too, with Tre White and Zeko Mayo also getting their own run with different teams, keeping the Jayhawks well represented on the July circuit. [Read more 🡒]
