Brad Gilbert, an ESPN analyst and renowned tennis coach who has worked with the likes of Coco Gauff, Andre Agassi, and Andy Roddick, has stepped outside his usual lane to call out the frenzy overtaking college football. In a pointed message shared with fans, Gilbert criticized the sport’s annual wave of early coaching departures and transfer portal activity.
He also argued that the postseason spotlight is being overshadowed by a cycle of job chasing and roster turnover.
The Growing Chaos Surrounding Coaching Moves and the Transfer Portal
For years, college football’s coaching carousel has kicked into high gear just as teams prepare for conference championships, bowl games, and College Football Playoff matchups. The timeline has become increasingly competitive, with programs racing to secure new hires before rivals can outdo them.
November and early December have become an unofficial free agency period, leaving players, staff, and postseason-bound teams in a state of limbo. The rise of the transfer portal has only amplified the chaos. When coaches make sudden exits, players often feel pressure to consider their futures immediately, leading to an early flood of portal entries.
Gilbert’s criticism landed at a moment when the carousel was spinning faster than usual. His comments came shortly after the unprecedented move by Lane Kiffin, who left Ole Miss to accept the head coaching job at LSU. This move is particularly controversial because Ole Miss is currently a top-ranked team bound for the College Football Playoff (CFP).
By taking a job with a conference rival immediately after the regular season, Kiffin effectively abandoned his team just days before the most important games of their season, leaving the program to navigate the playoffs with an interim staff (reportedly defensive coordinator Pete Golding).
Not long after, Florida accelerated its own transition by hiring Tulane’s Jon Sumrall on Nov. 30, 2025, well before bowl selections were locked in. Reports from multiple outlets highlighted additional searches at schools like UCLA, further fueling the perception of nonstop coaching volatility.
Beyond the Kiffin bombshell, Gilbert is referencing a massive wave of coaching turnover that has occurred over the last 48 hours, further disrupting the postseason landscape. Several major programs have either fired or hired coaches while preparations for their bowl games are underway.
Kentucky fired long-time coach Mark Stoops on Dec. 1, while Florida (hiring Jon Sumrall from Tulane) and Auburn (hiring Alex Golesh from USF) also made aggressive moves to secure new leaders immediately.
With each move, more players signaled their intent to hit the transfer portal as soon as the window opened, accelerating a cycle the NCAA has already acknowledged as problematic. By late 2025, the governing body was discussing potential adjustments to the transfer window for 2026 in an effort to mitigate the sudden changes that affected rosters overnight.
Why Brad Gilbert’s Message Highlights a Flaw in NCAA Transfer Rules?
Gilbert shared his thoughts on social media, posting on X, “just a thought about college football, don’t allow any coaching movement and especially portal stuff to after the national championship game. ridiculous already happening now.”
When Gilbert mentions “portal stuff,” he is specifically criticizing the NCAA rule that grants an immediate 30-day transfer window to players whose head coach has left. Even if the general transfer portal window were to open later, the departure of Kiffin triggers an immediate loophole for Ole Miss players.
This means that, weeks before they are set to play for a National Championship, Ole Miss stars can legally enter the transfer portal and be recruited by other schools (or follow Kiffin to LSU).
Gilbert’s “thought” is a call for a calendar freeze: he believes the NCAA should mandate that no coaching changes can be finalized. No players can enter the transfer portal until after the National Championship game, ensuring that the teams playing for the trophy remain intact and focused until the final whistle.