Brian Kelly buyout controversy, explained: Why former LSU football coach rejected settlement offers from university

Senior Editor
Brian Kelly buyout controversy, explained: Why former LSU football coach rejected settlement offers from university image

The drama just won't settle down in Baton Rouge. After LSU fired head coach Brian Kelly on Oct. 26, the two sides are still negotiating how to handle the remainder of his contract. 

When Kelly was hired in Nov. 2021, he signed a 10-year, $95 million contract with LSU. But Kelly was fired in the middle of just his fourth season in Baton Rouge, which means there is still a hefty chunk of change owed on his deal. 

Although Kelly initially appeared open to a settlement, he has reportedly rejected two settlement offers by LSU. LSU has undergone significant turnover in the athletic department in recent weeks. Former LSU athletic director Scott Woodward, who hired Kelly, parted ways with the school shortly after Louisiana's governor made public comments about Woodward not hiring Kelly's replacement. 

The school has since promoted interim athletic director Verge Ausberry as the new permanent AD, which wasn't without its own controversy

Here's everything you need to know about the buyout controversy between Kelly and LSU since his firing. 

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Brian Kelly buyout controversy

Per USA Today, Kelly's buyout for this season was $53,293,333, which puts LSU on the hook for quite a bit of cash. Initially, it appeared as though Kelly was open to accepting a settlement from the school. 

On Nov. 5, WAFB-9 in Baton Rouge obtained an email that Kelly wrote to Woodward and other LSU athletics administrators, including Ausberry, that he was "open to your desire to reach a settlement of what’s owed to me under the contract, although of course it would have to make sense financially."

But on Nov. 9, The Advocate reported that Kelly is now demanding that the school pay his contract out in full. Kelly and his attorneys sent a letter to Ausberry and LSU's Board of Supervisors member John Carmouche. The document asks for written confirmation by 5 p.m. On Monday, Nov. 10, that the school will "fulfill its contractual obligation" to pay the remainder of his contract in full. The letter adds that Kelly will "pursue all available legal remedies" if he does not receive confirmation.

The newspaper adds that the school offered Kelly lump-sum payments of $25 million and $30 million the day he was fired, but those were rejected by Kelly. The offer was made when Woodward was still LSU's AD. 

Per the terms of Kelly's contract, his buyout sum is required to be paid in equal monthly installments through 2031, which is the end of his contract. Kelly's attorneys claim that since LSU fired him without cause, he will be owed 90% of his remaining annual compensation under the terms of the deal.

Kelly would be open to any additional settlement offers, as long as confirmation is received that the school will abide by the contract in firing him without cause. 

The two sides are expected to meet on Monday, before the 5 p.m. Deadline. 

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Brian Kelly contract buyout

Kelly's buyout is nearly $54 million, which is one of the highest in the country. But we've seen hefty buyouts be paid in full before. Earlier this season, Penn State paid James Franklin nearly $50 million after firing him midseason, although the total sum could be offset by his future potential employer. 

In Nov. 2023, Texas A&M paid Jimbo Fisher $77 million after his firing. Fisher was hired by Woodward in 2017. While Woodward did hire Fisher initially, it was former Texas A&M athletic director Ross Bjork who signed off on Fisher's 2021 extension. That extension raised his annual salary to just over $9 million and extended him through 2030. That was a pay increase from his initial $7.5 million annual salary with the school. 

So while Woodward obviously gets blamed for hiring Fisher at A&M initially, you can't blame him entirely for how big his buyout was—even though Louisiana governor Jeff Landry did so last month.

According to The Advocate, the school initially offered to pay Kelly a lump-sum payment instead of his full buyout. Via the newspaper: 

During the Oct. 26 meeting, the letter said, Woodward said LSU wanted to enter negotiations to pay Kelly a lump-sum payment of $25 million instead of the full buyout. LSU offered “one or more accelerated payments,” documents said, plus the elimination of mitigation or offset language that would reduce the cost of the buyout if Kelly gets another job in football.

Later that day, documents said, Cromer raised the offer to $30 million over two installments with the removal of mitigation or offset clauses. Woodward said in a statement the night LSU fired Kelly they would "continue to negotiate his separation and will work toward a path that is better for both parties."

LSU has not put Kelly's termination in writing with negotiations ongoing, sources said, so it is continuing to pay his salary in monthly installments.

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Why did LSU fire Brian Kelly?

Kelly was fired by LSU after going 34-14 over four seasons. The firing came just hours after the Tigers' 49-25 blowout home loss to Texas A&M. He led the Tigers a pair of 10-win seasons in 2022 and 2023, including a win over Alabama and Nick Saban during his first season. 

But the Tigers made it to just one SEC Championship game in Kelly's four seasons, and never were all that close to making it into the College Football Playoff. In fact, Kelly was the first LSU coach to not win a national title or SEC Championship as a head coach within four years. His predecessors in Nick Saban, Les Miles and Ed Orgeron all did so in their first four seasons.  

As for what's next for Brian Kelly, he could find his next job at the likes of maybe Penn State, in the NFL, or retirement. 

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