You can see the title, and Lance Leipold isn’t wrong. After dropping the season finale to Utah and watching Kansas finish with yet another 5-7 record, the Jayhawks’ head coach came out and said it plain: “I have to do a better job. I’ve fallen short of expectations as a head coach.”
It’s not spin. It’s not damage control. It’s just the truth.
Kansas was supposed to turn the corner this season. After flashes of progress and a program that looked like it was finally pulling itself out of the basement, the wheels fell off. This wasn’t some young team struggling to find its footing. This was a veteran roster, coached by a guy in Year Five, finishing with back-to-back losing seasons in a conference that has plenty of winnable games on the schedule.
You can point fingers at the offense disappearing in key moments or the defense collapsing late in games, but it all circles back to Leipold. This group looked unsure of itself way too often. From clock mismanagement to blown assignments, the Jayhawks didn’t look like a team that believed it could compete with anyone. That’s preparation, talent, mindset, and roster building, and that all starts at the top.
This is the same guy who got people believing Kansas football could matter again. Leipold brought structure, toughness, and actual recruiting traction to a program that’s been a punchline for over a decade. But after two straight seasons of looking like they were about to break through, Kansas flatlined. That makes his quote hit a little harder.
Leipold said he fell short. He did. But the bigger question is whether he can get Kansas back to where people thought they were heading. If he can’t, it won’t just be about falling short. It’ll be about another rebuild, and nobody in Lawrence wants to hear that again.




















