Expectations are sky-high for Lane Kiffin in Baton Rouge. With a reported $40 million spent in NIL to rebuild the roster, the belief among many fans is simple: the LSU Tigers football team should immediately return to the national spotlight.
But not everyone is fully buying into the hype just yet.
Lane Kiffin Faces High Expectations to Deliver Early at LSU
On “The Audible” podcast, Bruce Feldman of The Athletic urged caution while discussing the excitement surrounding Kiffin and LSU. Feldman pointed to a recurring trend in Kiffin’s career: teams falling short when expectations are at their highest.
“He has had this, and it’s happened more than once, where he has expectations his teams have underperformed,” Feldman said. “You go way back to when he was at USC, they were preseason No. 1 and had a lot of experience, and they don’t even end up finishing in the top 25.”
That observation stands out given how many analysts and fans are already fully aboard the “Lane Train” in Baton Rouge.
The assumption is that with a massive NIL investment and a transfer-heavy roster overhaul, the Tigers should quickly rise back into championship contention. On paper, the talent infusion alone suggests LSU should take a major step forward.
But Feldman’s comments highlight an uncomfortable truth: Kiffin has faced this scenario before.
To be clear, Feldman was not predicting failure in Baton Rouge. Instead, he was tempering the immediate hype and suggesting LSU’s rebuild might take longer than a single season.
LSU is coming off a disappointing 2025 season in which the team struggled, particularly on offense. The Tigers finished with a PFSN CFB Offensive Impact Score of 76.1, ranking No. 66 nationally. For a program accustomed to explosive offenses and elite athletes, that level of production was unacceptable.
That is where Kiffin’s reputation comes into play
Known as one of college football’s top offensive minds, Kiffin was hired specifically to revive LSU’s attack. Addressing last year’s offensive shortcomings will be his top priority if the Tigers are to meet their lofty expectations.
The defense already showed significant improvement last season under coordinator Blake Baker. LSU finished with a PFSN CFB Defensive Impact Grade of B, signaling real progress in 2025.
If Kiffin can elevate the offense while Baker’s defense remains steady, the formula for a quick turnaround exists. Still, as Feldman noted, expectations alone do not guarantee success.
With massive NIL spending, a roster full of transfers, and one of the sport’s most high-profile coaches, LSU appears to have the ingredients to return to the top of college football.
The question is whether the “Lane Train” can deliver when the spotlight and the expectations are this intense.
