Kansas isn’t drawing much preseason buzz, but Lance Leipold thinks this group has a different feel to it.
At Big 12 Media Days on Wednesday, the Jayhawks’ coach addressed a 5-7 finish in 2025 and said the program has tried to answer one of its biggest issues by leaning into the transfer portal and adding depth across the roster.
“Obviously, standards have changed and expectations have changed in Lawrence, Kansas since we arrived, and we're proud of that,” Leipold said. “Obviously the last couple years have not gone the way we have. We haven't found a way to close out some close ball games.”
Leipold didn’t point fingers. He put the responsibility on himself.
“It falls on the head coach and I have to do a better job,” he said. “Our players embrace that.”
Kansas is bringing in more than 40 newcomers, so there are plenty of unknowns heading into fall camp. Even so, Leipold said he likes the way the roster has come together.
“I know that our guys believe that we put together a staff and a team this year that can be extremely competitive, can be surprising,” Leipold said. “I love the depth that we have in our program.”
He also used the rest of the Big 12 as a reminder that preseason projections don’t always hold up. Leipold pointed to Baylor, TCU and Arizona State as examples of teams that outperformed expectations on the way to championship or College Football Playoff runs.
“There's a lot of things that can happen,” Leipold said. “One of the things that we feel good about our team this year is from the first guy that steps on the field to the next guy... the gap there is the least it's ever been in our time.”
That depth will get a quick test, with Kansas set to break in a new quarterback and several transfers on both sides of the ball.
Several preseason outlets have placed the Jayhawks near the bottom of the conference, but Leipold made it clear he thinks this roster can beat those predictions. If Kansas gets back to bowl eligibility in 2026, he believes improved depth could be the difference.
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Leipold also tied that stability to the changing college football landscape, saying the new revenue-sharing model has helped Kansas allocate resources more effectively. He added that the single transfer portal window has made it easier to keep the roster together, and for a team that has been searching for a better way to finish tight games, that kind of continuity could be as important as any single player on the depth chart. [Read more 🡒]
