Mark Stoops officially out after 13 seasons at Kentucky

Kentucky parted ways on Monday with Mark Stoops, the winningest football coach in school history who “transformed the program and reset expectations” in Lexington.

Stoops, 58, compiled an 82-80 record of 13 seasons with the Wildcats. He guided them to 10-win seasons and Citrus Bowl victories in both the 2018 and 2021 seasons.

But Kentucky went 4-8 in 2024 and 5-7 in 2025, most recently taking a 41-0 drubbing at the hands of rival Louisville on Saturday.

Athletic director Mitch Barnhart said on Monday the school decided to “go in a new direction.” Kentucky owes Stoops a buyout of about $37.7 million, or 75% percent of the salary remaining on his contract.

“I want to thank Mark for his dedication and leadership over the past 13 years, and as importantly, the friendship that is marked by walking these journeys together,” Barnhart said in a news release. “His tenure transformed the program and reset expectations. His time here was filled with memorable victories, a historic run of consecutive bowl appearances, and a commitment to developing young men both on and off the field.”

Stoops was asked after Saturday’s loss if there was any chance he might step down.

“I don’t mean to be disrespectful to you,” Stoops said. “I mean, like I’m going to walk away? Are you kidding me? No, zero means zero.”

“Zero percent chance I walk away,” Stoops continued. “I’m going to be here as far as I’m concerned. Now, I can’t control what decisions that are made. If you’re asking me, I’ve said zero. Zero means zero. Zero percent chance I walk away.”

Kentucky is the fifth SEC team to fire its coach this year, and the move only comes after the other four — LSU, Arkansas, Auburn and Florida — already hired their replacements.

The Wildcats will be working in a thinner coaching market, with South Florida’s Alex Golesh, Tulane’s Jon Sumrall and Memphis’ Ryan Silverfield already in line to join Auburn, Florida and Arkansas, respectively. LSU also hired Lane Kiffin away from Ole Miss.

“Kentucky Football is positioned for success,” Barnhart said. “”We will continue to make the necessary investments to recruit an elite head coach, players, and support staff. That includes fully funding revenue-sharing and NIL opportunities, providing state-of-the-art facilities, and ensuring our student-athletes have every resource to thrive.

“Our mission is clear: to build a championship program for the people of Kentucky. We embrace this moment with optimism and determination, confident that the next chapter will see Kentucky Football reach new heights and achieve great success.”

School president Eli Capilouto released a statement supporting Barnhart’s decision to terminate Stoops.

“I want to thank Coach Stoops for his 13 years of service and leadership at the University of Kentucky,” Capilouto said. “He helped lead the revival of this program and achieved historic results. We are deeply appreciative of what he accomplished with this program and with the support of a committed staff throughout UK Athletics, outstanding young men and an incredible fan base.

“It is critically important that we are competitive and successful in football. That is our goal. It is our focus. We intend to be successful.”

Stoops led the Wildcats to eight consecutive bowl games from 2016-23, winning four of them. He was named the SEC Coach of the Year in 2018. Kentucky peaked at No. 7 in the Associated Press during his tenure in 2022.

–Field Level Media

Reports: Kentucky plans to fire coach Mark Stoops

Kentucky is set to fire coach Mark Stoops on Monday, per multiple reports.

Stoops, 58, has spent the past 13 seasons at Kentucky and is the program’s winningest coach at 82-80. He guided the Wildcats to 10-win seasons and Citrus Bowl victories in both the 2018 and 2021 seasons.

But Kentucky went 4-8 in 2024 and 5-7 in 2025, most recently taking a 41-0 drubbing at the hands of rival Louisville on Saturday.

Stoops was asked after that game if there was any possibility he would step down from his post.

“I don’t mean to be disrespectful to you,” Stoops said. “I mean, like I’m going to walk away? Are you kidding me? No, zero means zero.”

Stoops didn’t budge when a follow-up question was tossed his way.

“Zero percent chance I walk away,” Stoops said. “I’m going to be here as far as I’m concerned. Now, I can’t control what decisions that are made. If you’re asking me, I’ve said zero. Zero means zero. Zero percent chance I walk away.”

Stoops’ buyout is about $37.7 million, 75% of the salary remaining on his contract.

There is a team meeting scheduled for Monday to address the team’s coaching situation, according to multiple reports.

Kentucky is the fifth SEC team to fire its coach this year, and the move only comes after the other four — LSU, Arkansas, Auburn and Florida — already hired their replacements.

The Wildcats will be working in a thinner coaching market, with South Florida’s Alex Golesh, Tulane’s Jon Sumrall and Memphis’ Ryan Silverfield already in line to join Auburn, Florida and Arkansas, respectively. LSU hired Lane Kiffin away from Ole Miss.

–Field Level Media

Oct 4, 2025; Athens, Georgia, USA; Kentucky Wildcats head coach Mark Stoops shown on the sidelines during the game against the Georgia Bulldogs during the first half at Sanford Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

Mark Stoops says ‘zero chance’ he steps down from Kentucky

Mark Stoops isn’t going anywhere.

The Kentucky head coach denied a report that he told athletic director Mitch Barnhart that he wanted to leave the program after a loss in November last season to Tennessee.

“There’s zero chance I’m walking away. Zero,” Stoops told reporters after Saturday’s 35-14 road loss to Georgia to fall to 2-3 overall and 0-3 in the Southeastern Conference.

He added: “That’s unequivocally 100 percent false, and anyone who says anything else is lying.”

Kentucky has been roughed up in SEC play of late, falling to 1-10 in its last 11 league games after the team’s blowout defeat to the Bulldogs. The Wildcats have been outscored 312-163 in that span.

They’re also 20-23 overall since a 10-3 campaign in 2021. Kentucky is 69-76 and made eight consecutive bowl appearances from 2016-23 under Stoops, who’s the SEC’s longest-tenured head coach after beginning his tenure with the program in 2013. The team went 4-8 last season, 1-7 in the SEC.

If the Wildcats were to fire Stoops, they’d owe him 75 percent of his remaining salary. He currently has a $38-million buyout.

Kentucky won’t catch a break after its bye, as it has back-to-back games against ranked Texas and Tennessee.

–Field Level Media

Nov 18, 2023; Columbia, South Carolina, USA; Kentucky Wildcats head coach Mark Stoops directs his team against the South Carolina Gamecocks in the first quarter at Williams-Brice Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Blake-USA TODAY Sports Kentucky

Mark Stoops staying at Kentucky amid Texas A&M rumors

Kentucky’s Mark Stoops said he is staying put despite multiple reports linking him to the head-coaching vacancy at Texas A&M.

Stoops, who is in his 11th season at Kentucky, took to social media early Sunday morning to make his intentions clear. His words came several hours after the Wildcats’ 38-31 victory over No. 10 Louisville.

“I know there’s been much speculation about me and my job situation the last couple of days,” Stoops posted. “It’s true I was contacted about a potential opportunity this weekend, but after celebrating a big win against our rivals with players I love like family, I knew in my heart I couldn’t leave the University of Kentucky right now. I have a great job at a place I love, and I get to work with the best administration and greatest fan base in college football right where I’m at. I’m excited to say I’m a Wildcat!”

Shortly after outlets reported Stoops could head toward Texas A&M, an uprising began among fans on social media and team-related websites.

Texas A&M, which fired head coach Jimbo Fisher on Nov. 12, played its final two games under interim head coach Elijah Robinson. The Aggies (7-5, 4-4 Southeastern Conference) posted a 38-10 win over Abilene Christian on Nov. 18 and dropped a 42-30 decision to LSU on Saturday.

Kentucky (7-5, 3-5) is headed to a bowl game for the eighth consecutive season under the 56-year-old Stoops, who is the winningest coach in the school’s history. He owns a 73-64 record with the Wildcats.

–Field Level Media

Nov 19, 2022; Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Kentucky Wildcats head coach Mark Stoops looks on during the first quarter against the Georgia Bulldogs at Kroger Field. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Prather-USA TODAY Sports

Kentucky signs Mark Stoops to massive extension

Kentucky has extended football coach Mark Stoops’ contract through the 2030 season.

The deal, signed on Nov. 11, extends his current contract by three seasons and runs through June 2031.

Stoops, 55, will earn $8.6 million per season beginning in February 2023, according to multiple reports Sunday.

That represents a jump from his $6.35 million salary in 2022.

The Wildcats (6-5, 3-5 SEC) lost 16-6 to No. 1 Georgia on Saturday in Lexington, Ky., but are bowl eligible for the seventh consecutive season under Stoops.

Stoops has compiled a 65-58 record, including 4-2 in bowl games, since taking over the program in 2013.

He was the SEC Coach of the Year in 2018 and he is the winningest coach in program history, passing Paul “Bear” Bryant (60-23-5 from 1946-53) earlier this season.

“We have been working on this for over a month and are glad to have it finalized,” Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart said in a news release. “Continuity has become more and more important in today’s landscape, and make no mistake about it, the job that Coach Stoops has done is well known and highly regarded throughout the college football world.

“This extension also recognizes what Coach Stoops has done over the past decade, with unprecedented achievements in the history of Kentucky football, and reinforces his commitment to UK as we strive for continued success in the future.”

Stoops’ buyout was also raised from $1.75 million to $4.5 million. His deal includes significant bonuses if Kentucky makes a College Football Playoff appearance.

The Wildcats finish the regular season Saturday at home against rival Louisville.

–Field Level Media

UK head football coach Mark Stoops talked about his team's prospects for the upcoming season during a Media Day event at Kroger Field in Lexington, Ky. on Aug. 3, 2022.

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Kentucky coach Mark Stoops wants focus put back on his team

This time, it was football coach Mark Stoops behind the microphone in the brewing battle between Kentucky’s two most prominent coaches.

Stoops addressed reporters for the first time Saturday since basketball coach John Calipari said Kentucky was a “basketball school” and that his program deserved a replacement practice facility. The football program just had a $200 million facility built.

While he said he wanted to put the budding controversy to rest, Stoops had a few comments first in response to Calipari rattling off which schools in the SEC — Georgia, Alabama — were “football” schools.

“I don’t care about anyone’s program, I stay in my lane,” Stoops told reporters after football practice Saturday. “But when you start talking about mine, and the people I compete against, I’m going to defend my players. … Don’t demean and distract from what we’ve done to get to this point.”

The war of words began Thursday night, when Calipari made this comment to Kentucky Sports Radio:

“This is a basketball school; it’s always been that. … No disrespect. Our football team, I hope they win games, 10 games, and go to bowls,” he said. “At the end of the day, that makes my job easier and it makes the job of all of us easier. But this is a basketball school. And so, we need to keep moving in that direction and doing what we’re doing.”

Stoops said he appreciates Kentucky’s basketball history but wants people to look at the achievements of his program, which has won four straight bowl games.

“We understand history,” Stoops said. “That’s great. I embrace and love the history of our basketball program. I’m proud of it. I love it. I didn’t have that history. We understand we’re creating it. I also know people want to win now. I also know it’s my responsibility to get to the postseason and win it.”

Calipari and Stoops haven’t talked since the basketball coach made his comments. But Calipari tweeted Saturday afternoon that it’s time the two chat.

“I was told about comments Mark Stoops made in his press conference. I reached out to Mark Thursday & will try again,” Calipari wrote. “… I have supported Mark & the football team through good and bad. I will continue to support them & cheer them on”

And Calipari agreed with Stoops that it was time to put the focus back on his team.

“Now I’ll do what I’ve done for 30 years: Coach my team and block out the clutter,” Calipari wrote in a second tweet.

Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart waded into the controversy on Saturday, but his comments might not please Calipari. He said a practice facility for the basketball program isn’t in the works, and added this comment:

“We will be a grateful (athletic) department. We will not be entitled,” he said.

Stoops guided the Wildcats to a 10-3 season last year, his second 10-win campaign in the past four seasons. The football program is 33-17 during the stretch.

The bowl winning streak consists of wins over Penn State (Citrus), Virginia Tech (Belk), North Carolina State (Gator) and Iowa (Citrus) last season.

Calipari won the national championship in the 2011-12 season but the basketball program hasn’t won an NCAA Tournament game since 2019.

There was no tourney in 2020 due to COVID-19, the Wildcats missed with a shaky 9-16 record in 2021 and were ushered out of the first round by 15th-seeded Saint Peter’s last season.

Kentucky football will host Miami (Ohio) on Sept. 3 to open the season.

–Field Level Media

Kentucky Head Coach Mark Stoops speaks to officials during an SEC football game between the Tennessee Volunteers and the Kentucky Wildcats at Kroger Field in Lexington, Ky. on Saturday, Nov. 6, 2021.

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Kentucky, Mark Stoops agree on contract extension

Kentucky has reached an agreement in principle with Mark Stoops that will keep the head coach with the Wildcats through June 2028.

The extension comes with amended terms, per the school’s release.

Stoops is 58-53 in nine years, including a 9-3 mark this season heading into Kentucky’s bowl game.

“I’m excited to continue to build this program to national prominence,” Stoops said in a statement. “We’re on our way and I’m more confident in Kentucky football than I’ve ever been.”

The deal continues guaranteed extensions of one year for any season Stoops gets seven wins and two years for any season with 10.

Stoops has led the Wildcats to five consecutive bowl games, winning the past three.

–Field Level Media