Lance Leipold has done enough at Kansas to make “11th-best coach in the Big 12” look out of place.
That’s the spot USA Today gave him in a recent ranking heading into 2026, and it’s a placement that doesn’t square very well with what Leipold has actually built in Lawrence. He was blunt about Kansas falling short of expectations over the last two seasons during Big 12 Media Days last week. But those expectations exist because he raised them in the first place.
That matters. Kansas fans being frustrated by 10 wins across two seasons says plenty about how far Leipold and his staff have moved the program. Add in the reality that Kansas will always live in the shadow of basketball, which can affect recruiting in theory, and Leipold starts to look like exactly what he is: a successful hire.
The Jayhawks have certainly had their issues. Over the last two seasons, they’ve struggled to finish fourth quarters, convert third downs and cash in on red-zone chances.
Those are real flaws, and they’re enough to keep Leipold out of the very top tier of a Big 12 coaching list. No one is seriously arguing he belongs in the conference’s top five.
But 11th? That’s where the ranking starts to feel off, especially when Leipold is placed behind Deion Sanders, Dave Aranda and Scott Satterfield.
Sanders has undeniably brought Colorado national attention, and he’s also delivered a Heisman winner plus the school’s first season with at least nine wins since 2019. Still, the bigger picture is uneven. Colorado has seven combined wins sandwiched between that 2024 run, and even if Sanders strings together another good year in 2026, the consistency just hasn’t been there.
Aranda’s case is similarly mixed. Baylor’s 12-2 season in 2021 had people dreaming big, and the preseason No. 10 ranking from the AP in 2022 suggested the Bears might keep climbing.
Instead, the results since then have been 6-7, 3-9, 8-5 and 5-7. That doesn’t make Aranda a bad coach, and three bowl games in six years is nothing to dismiss.
But for Baylor, it has still felt underwhelming, and a slow start to 2026 could make his seat much hotter.
Then there’s Satterfield, whose résumé has been a roller coaster. He looked like a coach on the rise after going 47-16 at Appalachian State, and his 8-5 start at Louisville in 2019 only added to that buzz.
But he never quite reached those heights again. Even setting aside the COVID season in 2020, Louisville finished 6-7 and 7-5 in his final two years before he moved on to Cincinnati.
At Cincinnati, Satterfield has posted year-to-year progress, moving from three wins to five to seven over three seasons. That’s notable.
But the way 2025 ended complicates the picture. The Bearcats were 7-1 before dropping their final five games to finish 7-6, and that makes it hard to argue he’s been more successful than Leipold.
Kansas may not have reached every goal under Leipold yet, but the idea that he belongs near the bottom half of the Big 12’s coaching hierarchy doesn’t hold up very well.
In Other News...
Kansas Football Just Made A Massive Statement About Its Future
Kansas is putting a major stamp on its football future with the ongoing renovation of David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium, a centerpiece of the Gateway District project that has quickly become one of the most ambitious facility pushes in the sport. The upgrades are designed to bring in improved seating, modern fan amenities and a more polished game-day atmosphere, all while signaling that the program under Travis Goff and Lance Leipold is serious about building something lasting.
The project also carries real weight beyond aesthetics, because it gives Kansas a chance to present itself more like a Power Four program when it comes to recruiting and the overall experience around the team. With completion expected by 2027 or 2028, the stadium work is still unfolding, but the message is already clear: Kansas is investing heavily in a future it expects to compete for at a much higher level. [Read more 🡒]
Former Jayhawk Lands In Shocking New Legal Trouble
A former Kansas basketball player is back in the news for all the wrong reasons, with Lagerald Montrell Vick arrested in Memphis and booked into Shelby County jail after a July 4 incident at a party. The case has already taken on serious weight because investigators say a shooting was involved, and Vick is now facing a separate firearm-related charge as the legal process begins to unfold.
For Kansas fans, the troubling part is that this is not an isolated off-court issue. Vick already had a pending case from an earlier arrest in April that involved aggravated burglary, theft and vandalism allegations, and now he is dealing with another court fight on top of that. His bond was set at $1.5 million, leaving a once-familiar Jayhawk name tied to a rapidly escalating legal situation with a lot still unresolved. [Read more 🡒]
Former Kansas Star Just Reopened A Frustrating Jayhawks Debate
The recruiting pitch around Kansas has never been more delicate, especially with the Jayhawks already looking ahead to the Class of 2027 and keeping tabs on prospects such as Javon Bardwell and Demarcus Henry. At the same time, the program and the Big 12 are leaning harder into new corporate sponsorships, with uniform patches tied to NIL support becoming part of the backdrop around the roster-building effort.
So when a former Kansas star and projected top pick says he did not enjoy his time in Lawrence because the ball was not in his hands often enough, it naturally reopens an old debate about role, usage and what elite talent expects from a blueblood program. For Kansas, it is the kind of comment that lingers because it touches both the past and the future, right as the Jayhawks try to sell the next wave of recruits on a place where the fit has to work for everyone. [Read more 🡒]
