Last month, I got to take a shameless victory lap and remind everyone that I gave Indiana an “A” in 2024 for hiring Curt Cignetti.

In general, though, I’ve had a much higher hit rate with my rare Ds and Fs — Charlie Weis (F) and Les Miles (D) at Kansas, Trent Dilfer at UAB (F), Trent Bray at Oregon State (D) — than with my A students. For every Cignetti, Matt Campbell (A) at Iowa State or Clark Lea (A-) at Vanderbilt, there’s a Tom Herman (A) at Texas, Billy Napier (A) at Florida or Jonathan Smith (A-) at Michigan State.

There’s an obvious explanation: I give out too many A’s. I know this because my editor, Jill Thaw, has been giving me grief about my easy grades for years.

Well, that changes this year.

The 2025-26 coaching carousel saw 17 Power 4 schools change coaches, including six in the SEC alone. There were 33 across the FBS, which included three College Football Playoff teams (Ole Miss, Tulane and James Madison). And realistically, only a small handful landed their eventual savior.

So this year, I’m going to start grading on a tougher curve. Even if it means there might be more fan bases than usual cursing me in the comments section. Grades are organized from highest to lowest.

Power 4

UCLA (A): James Madison coach Bob Chesney

The 48-year-old is the polar opposite of inexperienced predecessor DeShaun Foster, having been a head coach for 16 years. He’s won in Division III, Division II, FCS and most recently the Sun Belt, where he took JMU to the Playoff. No reason to think that ends in the Big Ten.

Michigan (A-): Utah coach Kyle Whittingham

Michigan got exactly the coach it needed to stabilize a program mired in scandal. The future Hall of Famer brings two decades of head-coaching experience and two accomplished coordinators with him in offensive coordinator Jason Beck and defensive coordinator Jay Hill. The lone concern: At 66, he’s unlikely to be a long-term hire.

Florida (A-): Tulane coach Jon Sumrall

I’m a fan of guys who’ve won big at more than one school. After going 23-4 with two Sun Belt titles at Troy, Sumrall moved up to the American and took the Green Wave to the CFP in his second season despite losing his biggest stars from the year before. The former SEC assistant is well prepared.

Virginia Tech (B+): Ex-Penn State coach James Franklin

While he never fully ascended to the top with the Nittany Lions, Franklin still averaged 10 wins a year in 10 full seasons. He found an ideal landing spot at Virginia Tech, which is fully capable of winning conference championships but without the suffocating pressure of Penn State.

Penn State (B+): Iowa State head coach Matt Campbell

Athletic director Pat Kraft’s clunky search process was cringeworthy, but it ended with a solid hire. Campbell led longtime loser Iowa State to the winningest run in school history, and he’ll have considerably more resources and recruiting cachet behind him in Happy Valley.

LSU (B+): Ole Miss head coach Lane Kiffin

The guy is great at calling plays, developing QBs and winning the portal, as he already did with his first class. But he also comes with the inevitable headaches. Kiffin is certain to win at a higher level than Brian Kelly did. Whether he can take a team all the way to a national championship remains to be seen.

Kansas State (B): Texas A&M OC Collin Klein

It’s no surprise K-State brought back its former Heisman finalist and offensive coordinator. He’s a protégé of both the legendary Bill Snyder and successor Chris Klieman. It’s impossible to say how Klein, 36, will fare as a head coach, but the fan base would have been bummed if it wasn’t him.

Utah (B): DC Morgan Scalley

I was tempted to go with “N/A” because Utah gave Scalley the job several years ago with a “Head Coach In Waiting” agreement. There’s no external candidate Utah could have hired who knows the place better than its former All-American defensive back, who had been Whittingham’s DC since 2016.

Kentucky (B): Oregon OC Will Stein

Dan Lanning’s previous young OC, Kenny Dillingham, became the head coach at his alma mater, Arizona State. Stein is a 36-year-old Louisville native returning to his home state after coaching Bo Nix, Dillon Gabriel and Dante Moore. Kentucky could benefit from having an offensive mind at the helm.

Oklahoma State (B): North Texas head coach Eric Morris

The Cowboys need a spark after spiraling into the abyss in Mike Gundy’s last two seasons. Enter Morris, a proven offensive coach who took Incarnate Word and North Texas to double-digit wins while mentoring star QBs Cam Ward and Drew Mestemaker. It feels like a good fit.

Cal (B-): Oregon DC Tosh Lupoi

The former Cal linebacker and Nick Saban assistant continues the recent trend of coaches returning to their alma mater. His West Coast recruiting experience will come in handy. But it’s surprising Cal is going with another defensive coach after nine years of inconsistent offenses under Justin Wilcox.

Iowa State (B-): Washington State coach Jimmy Rogers

He’s only been a head coach for three seasons, but Rogers won an FCS national title at South Dakota State and kept Wazzu afloat after it got pillaged when Jake Dickert left. He’s hardly a no-brainer, though, so it’s surprising that AD Jamie Pollard had eyes only for Rogers.

Ole Miss (B-): DC Pete Golding

AD Keith Carter made the best possible short-term move in promoting Golding, who emerged from the Kiffin soap opera to lead the Rebels to the CFP semifinals. But those two games with Kiffin’s holdover staff don’t tell us much as to how well the 41-year-old will run his own program going forward.

Michigan State (C+): Ex-Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald

Fitz led his alma mater to its best decade in history in the 2010s, which included three 10-win seasons. But he went 3-9 or worse in three of his last four seasons, including 1-11 in 2022. And he was out of coaching for three years while the sport turned upside down. Seems risky.

Auburn (C): USF coach Alex Golesh

Not sure about this one. The former Tennessee offensive coordinator did an admirable job turning around a downtrodden program. But he’s been a head coach for three seasons and peaked at 9-3. Perhaps he can hit the ground running, though, by bringing stud QB Byrum Brown with him.

Arkansas (C): Memphis coach Ryan Silverfield

After whiffing on two other coaches (Sumrall and Golesh) from the same conference, Arkansas turned to a guy who never finished higher than third in his six seasons in that conference. He did post double-digit wins in 2023 and ’24, but he could never quite land the plane.

Stanford (C): Washington Commanders QB coach Tavita Pritchard

General manager Andrew Luck’s eight-month search culminated in hiring his former Stanford teammate. It’s a curious move given Pritchard, 38, was the OC under David Shaw when the program began its backslide. But he knows the challenges of recruiting and coaching at Stanford.

How Pete Golding responds next year with his own Ole Miss team and staff will be a predominant storyline. (Norm Hall / Getty Images)

Group of 6

Colorado State (A-): UConn coach Jim Mora

The former UCLA boss seemed like an odd choice for UConn at the time, but he engineered a remarkable turnaround, notching back-to-back nine-win seasons. Now he’s back in the Pac-12.

UConn (A-): Toledo head coach Jason Candle

I thought the Mount Union alum would earn a bigger job a while ago, given he went 81-44 and won two conference titles over his decade-long tenure at Toledo. He’ll look to build on Mora’s success.

Memphis (A-): Southern Miss head coach Charles Huff

It’s been quite a two-year run for Huff, who led Marshall to 10 wins and a conference title in 2024, left for Southern Miss and engineered a turnaround from 1-11 to 7-6. Now he’s moving up.

Toledo (B+): Mercer head coach Mike Jacobs

In 10 seasons as a lower-level coach, the Ohio native took Notre Dame (Ohio) and Lenoir-Rhyne to the Division II semifinals and Mercer to the FCS quarterfinals. He’s well-prepared to move up to FBS.

Coastal Carolina (B+): Missouri State head coach Ryan Beard

Missouri State was expected to struggle in its first year in FBS, but third-year coach Beard led the Bears to seven wins and a bowl berth. The 36-year-old should succeed at Coastal.

USF (B+): Ohio State OC Brian Hartline

Someone needed to give the 39-year-old his shot after his prolific run of recruiting five-stars and coaching up first-round receivers for the Buckeyes. The one concern: He’s never coached anywhere outside of Columbus.

Kent State (B): OC Mark Carney

Promoting Carney was the only logical move after he took over as interim coach before last season, following Kenni Burns’ dismissal, and led a program that went 0-16 in the MAC the previous two years to 4-4.

Missouri State (B): SMU OC Casey Woods

The 42-year-old played a big part in SMU’s rise under Rhett Lashlee from the American to the ACC, where the Mustangs reached the CFP in 2024. Seems like a good spot for his head-coaching debut.

Ohio (B-): DC John Hauser. Hauser will be Ohio’s second first-time head coach in as many years after Brian Smith’s abrupt termination for cause. He was previously the Bobcats’ DC for Tim Albin’s 2024 MAC championship team.

North Texas (B-): Ex-West Virginia head coach Neal Brown

He won big at Troy from 2015 to 2018 before a mediocre six-year run in Morgantown. But he did take the Mountaineers to four bowl games, with a 9-4 season not that long ago, in 2023.

Washington State (C+): Missouri OC Kirby Moore

It’s obvious why Wazzu liked the Washington native and former Boise State receiver under Chris Petersen. But he has only three years’ experience as a P4 assistant and is taking on a tough job.

James Madison (C): Ex-Florida coach Billy Napier

Napier went 40-12 in his last stint in the Sun Belt, at Louisiana from 2018-21. But he bombed badly at Florida, and rather than taking time for an image rehab, he’s taking over a reigning Playoff program.

Southern Miss (C): OC/QB coach Blake Anderson

He has 10 years of head-coaching experience, going 51-37 at Arkansas State and 23-17 at Utah State. However, Anderson was fired for cause at Utah State in 2024 over allegations involving Title IX reporting.

Oregon State (C-): Alabama co-OC JaMarcus Shephard

AD Scott Barnes’ last hire, Trent Bray, proved to be a disaster. You would think he’d want a proven head coach this time, but no, he passed on Montana State national champ Brent Vigen for another first-timer.

Tulane (D+): Pass game coordinator Will Hall

Swing and a miss for Tulane. The school struck gold with Willie Fritz and Jon Sumrall, but now it’s turning to a guy who worked for both of them but went 14-30 as head coach at Southern Miss from 2021-24.

UAB (D): OC Alex Mortensen

It’s comical that UAB is following the disastrous Trent Dilfer hire by promoting one of Dilfer’s coordinators. Mortensen went 2-4 as interim coach last season, beating a Top 25 Memphis team but losing to UConn and Rice.

Note: NIU head coach Thomas Hammock was hired by the Seattle Seahawks last week. Huskies defensive coordinator Rob Harley will serve as the interim coach for the Huskies during the 2026 season. Because he is not the official hire, he is not graded on this list.