NCAAF: Report: Brian Kelly rebuffs LSU settlement offers

Date:

Share post:


Former LSU coach Brian Kelly rejected two settlement offers and is seeking the full $54 million buyout owed under the terms of his contract, the Baton Rouge Advocate reported.

Kelly’s attorneys have given the school a Monday deadline of 6 p.m. ET to confirm in writing that that they will pay him the full amount, or he will “pursue all available legal remedies,” per the report.

Kelly was fired on Oct. 26 after a 5-3 start to his fourth season with the Tigers. He signed a 10-year, $95 million deal in November 2021.

According to the report, Kelly turned down a lump-sum offer of $25 million from former LSU athletic director Scott Woodward on Oct. 30 — the day Woodward was fired — and later declined a $30 million offer in two payments from executive deputy athletic director Julie Cromer.

Kelly, 64, compiled a 34-14 record at LSU. His 200-76 career record (10-6 in bowl games) includes stops at Central Michigan (2004-06), Cincinnati (2007-09) and Notre Dame (2010-21).

Associate head coach/running backs coach Frank Wilson is serving as interim head coach for the rest of the season. The Tigers (5-4, 2-4 Southeastern Conference) fell 20-9 at No. 4 Alabama on Saturday in Wilson’s debut.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: Notre Dame, Iowa State, Kansas State decline bowl bids

Notre Dame, Iowa State and Kansas State qualified for bowl games but have turned down invitations to play. Notre...

NCAAF: Notre Dame first team out of CFP, will pass on bowl season

Because Notre Dame won't play in the College Football Playoff, the program decided it will not play in...

NCAAF: Ohio St. opens as slight CFP favorite ahead of Indiana

Even after falling in the Big Ten championship game, Ohio State was listed as the slight favorite to...

NCAAF: Oklahoma-Alabama rematch to kick off CFP slate of games

Multi-time national championship winners Oklahoma and Alabama will square off in the opening game of the College Football...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.