Brian Kelly has long been one of college football’s most polarizing coaches, and Paul Finebaum just added another sharp line to the file.
At the 2026 Barrett Media Audio Summit, Finebaum revisited what it was like to interview Kelly for three straight years and made clear the experience was not exactly enjoyable. He said LSU reached out after Nick Saban began appearing weekly on Pat McAfee’s show, and Kelly wanted the same kind of regular spot.
“A couple years ago, Nick Saban started doing Pat McAfee every week, so we got a call from LSU and Brian Kelly saying he wanted to do our show every week,” Paul Finebaum said. “Now I don’t know if any of you know Brian Kelly, spending 20 minutes with Brian Kelly for three consecutive years every Monday?
I think I would rather have a colonoscopy on the stage right now without anesthesia. It’s that painful … So there’s always a trade-off, and we bought it and ended up dying with it,”
The quote fits the larger reputation Kelly has carried for years. He’s unquestionably won a lot of games and built competitive teams, but his personality and the way he handles business have often turned people off.
That tension has followed him from job to job. The source material points to a long list of frustrations around Kelly, including stories about how he treated graduate assistants and his overnight departure from Notre Dame.
He also tried to mirror Saban in some ways after arriving at Notre Dame, but the comparison never held up when the results mattered most. Finebaum’s comments only sharpen that picture: Kelly may have wanted the same media presence and polish, but he never really handled that side of the job the way Saban did.
For LSU, the end of the Kelly era came after he was fired. He never fully connected with the fan base, and eventually wore out his welcome with the administration.
Even so, another chance seems likely. Coaches don’t get close to 300 career wins by accident.
The lingering question is whether Kelly would do anything differently if that next opportunity comes.
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