Brian Kelly on LSU firing: 'I didn’t win enough games, period.' What's next?

Injury preceded insult.

USA TODAY Sports

Brian Kelly was steamrolled not once but twice as he stalked the sidelines in 2025 asLSU footballcoach, colliding with an official in his team’s opening win at Clemson and again in a Game 3 win against Florida.

He would notch just two more wins as top Tiger.

By late October, the insult arrived:Kelly was fired Oct. 26, 2025— the only time in a coaching career that's spanned parts of five decades Kelly saw someone else dictate his coaching coordinates.

Since that time, the 64-year-old Kelly — Notre Dame’s all-time winningest coach before he bolted for the bayou after the 2021 regular season — largely has avoided public comment, or the spotlight.

For one thing, Kelly’s been rehabilitating the torn labrum he suffered Sept. 13 when 6-7, 317-pound tackle Weston Davis finished blocking his Florida defender all the way through his head coach on the LSU sideline.

“I didn’t have the surgery done, went with an alternative way of doing it with stem-cell (therapy) and peptides,” Kelly exclusively told USA TODAY Sports in a wide-ranging interview. “... The most conventional way was to get it done with surgery. But, after what happened at LSU and I was out of a job, the last thing you want to do is be stuck in a sling.”

Splitting his recovery between Louisiana and Florida, Kelly has absorbed his share of slings and arrows in the nearly six months since LSU fired him less than five years through a decade-long, almost-$100-million pact.

“I would say there’s an easy, simple answer,” Kelly said of what went wrong at LSU, “and I didn’t win enough games. There’s a longer answer to why that didn’t happen, I’ll probably have to write a book about that. There’s always cause and effect and the effect was I didn’t win enough games, period.

“I guess you do have to start with what is winning enough games? We were 34-14, 22-3 at home when I was fired. We had two 10-win seasons, won an SEC (West Division) championship, had the No. 1 offense in college football, a Heisman Trophy winner. When you look at what is winning and what keeps you employed, other people make those decisions. But it starts with what is defined as winning, and unfortunately it wasn’t defined as enough winning leading into being fired.”

Kelly has heard the chatter about all those alleged tee times, of which — in well-paid unemployment, courtesy the $54 million buyout owed to him by LSU — he’s only recently resumed fully swinging golf clubs from the left-shoulder labrum injury.

“If you believe some, I played 350 rounds of golf,” Kelly said. “Which, obviously, is ridiculous. I probably played 30 over the last three years."

LSU head coach Brian Kelly and Ole Miss head coach Lane Kiffin shake hands after a college football game between Ole Miss and LSU at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss., on Saturday, Sept. 27, 2025. Ole Miss defeated LSU 24-19.

Does Brian Kelly have any advice for Lane Kiffin?

He knows what he would tell his successor, Lane Kiffin, at LSU.

“Lane doesn’t need advice,” said Kelly, who’s faced off against Kiffin in the Notre Dame-USC and LSU-Ole Miss rivalries. “He’s seen it from the NFL to SC to building a program... I don’t think I’m telling him anything he doesn’t know.

“The world we live in today, Michigan just won a basketball championship with five transfers. You can do it, but there are so many moving pieces. I don’t think he needs any advice. I think you just continue to be who you are. I think that's all you can be. People are going to judge you based upon what they think, anyways. So, just be Lane Kiffin."

Will Brian Kelly coach again?

Kelly is out of coaching right now, except when he isn’t.

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There are multiple schools contracting his services as a consultant, Charles Huff’s Memphis program among them.

Kelly believes he is meant to be a coach. So, there’s the time he devotes, almost daily he says, to preparing to coach again.

Watching film “a couple hours a day” in his home office on Florida’s west coast.

Plotting staff assembly — and the priorities of that next supporting cast.

“I think you look at everything you’ve done throughout your career and you’ve got a great process and you know that process has been successful,” said Kelly, a winner of more than 300 college games who captured two NCAA Division II national titles and three times had Notre Dame vying to end that program’s now-38-year title drought. “I’ve had two losing seasons in 35 years, so you know your process is good.

“This past transition for me gave me some time to think about the things I would have done differently or better. We were in a real new change in college football, where building a front office was crucial. Making sure that your hires were the right hires. I think most of the hindsight for me, would be based upon not the culture or process of building a championship program but probably the hiring process. And, making sure that you have the pieces in place to handle where college football is today. Building out a really good front office immediately. I think we may have been in a great place at the end, but we didn’t get there soon enough, maybe. I think continuity with your coordinators is very important.”

A former Broyles Award finalist under Kelly, Chip Long was stunningly fired by Kelly as Notre Dame offensive coordinator following the 2019 season. The two have mended their relationship since that time; Long reached out after Kelly was dismissed at LSU.

He thinks Kelly will coach again. Would work for him again, even.

“One of the special qualities I always thought about him, I just thought he had an amazing big-picture outlook,” Long told USA TODAY Sports on Monday, April 14. “And the way he adapted through the years, he had a good thumb in the wind, a good pulse where things were nationally in football.

“For his ability to adapt and be willing to go away from things that might’ve worked in the past, that’s something I thought made him an outstanding leader and CEO of the entire program. That’s why I think he can coach again.”

Until then, there’s going to be more Kelly on various media platforms, CBS college football studio work and some radio/podcasts spots expected among them.

All three of Kelly’s children with wife, Paqui, continue working in or adjacent to college football. Patrick Kelly works with Ole Miss football general manager Austin Thomas; Kenzel Kelly is in his first year as linebackers coach for NCAA D-III program John Carroll University and daughter, Grace, works in the name, image and likeness division of Athletes First.

What does Brian Kelly miss most about coaching?

Long regarded more NFL-CEO coach-type than collegial goodfellow, Kelly insists it’s the everyday football moments rather than penning his career epitaph that leaves him eager for another coaching opportunity.

“I think the motivator for me is what you miss,” Kelly said. “The decisions that were made (at LSU), those were other people. I didn’t have any control over that. What you lose is relationships with players, when I’ve been doing it my entire career. I miss that the most.

“I still want to make a difference. All the young men that have been under my charge over 35 years, I feel like I have a lot still to give. Even with all this money in college football, they still need mentorship, still need development. Money aside, I have a lot to give. And my motivation is to want to get back to building relationships and successful programs in college football.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Brian Kelly: What went wrong at LSU, advice for Lane Kiffin, what's next

Brian Kelly on LSU firing: 'I didn’t win enough games, period.' What's next?

Injury preceded insult. Brian Kelly was steamrolled not once but twice as he stalked the sidelines in 2025 asLSU footballcoach, co...
Nicole Kidman Reveals Surprising New Career Path: Becoming a 'Death Doula'

Nicole Kidman has shared that she's learning to become a death doula

People Nicole Kidman attends the 'Margo's Got Money Troubles' N.Y.C. premiere in April 2026Credit: Cindy Ord/WireImage

NEED TO KNOW

  • The actress explained during a talk on Saturday, April 11, that she had the idea after her mother died aged 84 in 2024

  • "As my mother was passing, she was lonely, and there was only so much the family could provide," she explained

Nicole Kidmanhas a new career in mind.

The actress, 58, shared that she's learning to become a death doula during a talk at the University of San Francisco's War Memorial Gym on Saturday, April 11,theSan Francisco Chroniclereported.

Speaking to investigative journalist and USF graduate Vicky Nguyen as part of the school's Silk Speaker Series, she explained that the idea "may sound a little weird," but that her plans first came about after her mother, Janelle Ann Kidman,died aged 84in September 2024.

"As my mother was passing, she was lonely, and there was only so much the family could provide," Kidman told attendees, via theChronicle. TheHollandactresshas four children, while her younger sisterAntonia Kidman, 55, has six.

Nicole Kidman at the 2026 Academy AwardsCredit: Arturo Holmes/Getty

She continued, "Between my sister and I, we have so many children and our careers and our work, and wanting to take care of her because my father wasn't in the world anymore, and that's when I went, ‘I wish there was these people in the world that were there to sit impartially and just provide solace and care.' "

"So that's part of my expansion and one of the things I will be learning."

Death doulas, also known as end-of-life doulas, provide support to people and their loved ones toward the end of life. Per theInternational End-of-Life Doula Association, "An end-of-life doula advocates self-determination and imparts psychosocial, emotional, spiritual, and practical care to empower dignity throughout the dying process."

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Kidman, meanwhile, has often discussed the grief she felt after losing both her mom and her dad,Dr. Antony Kidman, who died in 2014.

A month after losing her mom, Kidmandescribed her as a "compass"and a "major guide" in her life, while she said shortly after that she would sometimeswake up "crying and gasping"amid the loss of both parents.

She learned of her mother's death while at theVenice Film Festivalahead of an appearance for her filmBabygirlandleft early to be with her family.

Janelle Ann Kidman and Nicole Kidman in 2018Credit: Lisa Maree Williams/Getty

At the time, the film's director, Halina Reijn, read a letter on Kidman's behalf during what would have been her acceptance speech for best actress.

In the letter, Kidman stated that she traveled to Venice to learn "shortly after that my beautiful, brave mother, Janelle Ann Kidman, has just passed."

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

In March 2025, shepaid tribute to her momon what would have been her 85th birthday. “Missing Mumma and Papa so much on what would have been her birthday today,” she wrote on Instagram alongside a photo of her parents smiling together, adding a red heart emoji. Shepaid tribute again a year later, writing, "Remembering my Mumma on her birthday. Always in my heart."

Read the original article onPeople

Nicole Kidman Reveals Surprising New Career Path: Becoming a 'Death Doula'

Nicole Kidman has shared that she's learning to become a death doula NEED TO KNOW The actress explained during...
John Donaldson, the father of Denmark's Australian-born Queen Mary, dies at 84

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — The father of Denmark'sAustralian-born Queen Mary, John Donaldson, has died in Tasmania, the royal house in Copenhagen said Sunday. He was 84.

Associated Press FILE - John Donaldson, center right, father of Mary Donaldson, the fiancĂ©e of Denmark’s Crown Prince Frederik, and his wife, Susan Moody, center left, speak to the crowd in front of the Danish Parliament in Copenhagen, May 13, 2004. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo, File) FILE - Denmark's Crown Prince Frederik and Crown Princess Mary, center, pose with parents Susan Moody, Prince Hendrik, Queen Margrethe and John Donaldson, from left, on the Amalienborg Palace balcony following the wedding ceremony in Copenhagen on May 14, 2004. (AP Photo/Heribert Proepper, File) FILE - Stepmother and father of the bride Susan Moody and John Donaldson pass press photographers on their way to the Royal Theater in Copenhagen on May 13, 2004. (AP Photo/Heribert Proepper, File)

Denmark Obit Queen's Father

Donaldson died in Hobart, a royal statement said, without giving further details. It said that his health had been declining over the past few years, and that the queen last visited him at the end of March.

John Dalgleish Donaldson, born in Scotland on Sept. 5, 1941, was a professor of applied mathematics.

Mary became Denmark's queen in January 2024 after two decades as crown princess when her husband became the Scandinavian country's monarch. Hewas proclaimedKing Frederik X following the abdication of his mother,Queen Margrethe II.

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Frederik and Mary met during the 2000 Olympics in Sydney. They married in 2004.

Sunday's statement quoted Mary as saying that “my heart is heavy.”

“But I know that when the grief settles, the memories will brighten my day, and what will remain strongest is love and gratitude for everything he gave me and taught me,” she added.

Mary's mother, Henrietta Clark Donaldson, died in 1997. Her father married Susan Moody in 2001.

The statement said the family will hold a private memorial service for Donaldson “at a later date.”

John Donaldson, the father of Denmark's Australian-born Queen Mary, dies at 84

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — The father of Denmark'sAustralian-born Queen Mary, John Donaldson, has died in Tasmania, the royal house...

 

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