ATSWINS

Lane Kiffin paints bleak picture of how NIL has affected college football coaching

Updated Sept. 2, 2025, 1:17 p.m. by Matt De Lima 1 min read
NCAAB News

Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin did not mince words in a clip shared from comedian Theo Vons podcast last week.

In a conversation that was at times humorous but often sobering, Kiffin outlined how name, image and likeness deals have transformed the college football landscape .

The 50-year-old coach described a sport where traditional recruiting has been pushed aside by bidding wars, where booster collectives and agents play outsized roles, and where young athletes enter college with professional-level money but without the maturity to handle it.

For Kiffin, the consequences are felt not just by players, but also by coaches who now spend much of their time navigating finances instead of football.

Kiffin Says NIL Has Replaced Traditional Recruiting Relationships Kiffin pointed to the growing influence of booster collectives, saying that securing funds often matters more than developing relationships.

If you dont have the payroll, its hard to get players, he said.

Look at who just won in basketball or made the playoff in football.

Theyre major programs with big financial resources.

He explained that the old model of recruitingvisiting homes and building relationships years in advanceno longer matters in the same way.

Now its, What are you paying me? Whats the second-year number? Kiffin said.

Most of them have agents now.

Kiffin admitted that he rarely hears from parents about academics anymore.

I never hear, Whats your graduation rate? I never hear, Whats the academic plan? Its just, Whens our NIL meeting? He called it sad, noting that while the system benefits players financially, he questions the long-term impact on their maturity and development.

Ego, Entitlement And A Lack Of Incentive Kiffin said NIL money has changed the motivation structure for young athletes.

Were giving kids too much too early, he said.

They had this drive to get to the NFL because they wanted the money.

Well, Im getting the money already.

So Ive lost some drive.

He described ego as the single biggest challenge facing players.

Five-star recruits arrive with large NIL deals and immediate attention, often assuming success and wealth will last forever.

They just get in their own way, Kiffin said.

Its that one word, ego.

Kiffin also pointed out how the transfer portal adds to the problem.

They want more when they havent done anything new, he said.

Its like renegotiating your contract twice a year even if you didnt perform.

He argued that the sense of entitlement has removed the incentive to improve.

For Kiffin, these issues explain why some coaches, including former Alabama coach Nick Saban, have stepped away.

You spend so much time not coaching, Kiffin said.

These conversations and the greed for itit just changed.

Kiffin closed with a warning that money and contracts cannot solve deeper problems.

That new contract, that next car, that next girl, thats not going to fix it, he said.

Until you fix how you think, nothing will change.

The remarks underscore how dramatically NIL has reshaped college football, not just for athletes but also for the coaches tasked with leading them.

Read more on College Football HQ.

This article has been shared from the original article on si, here is the link to the original article.