In a sweeping legislative push to restore order to college football, Sen. Ted Cruz has introduced the Protect College Sports Act (PCSA). Along with Senate Commerce Committee Ranking Member Maria Cantwell, the bipartisan bill targets a wide array of structural issues, but none have captured public attention quite like the unofficial “Lane Kiffin Rule.”
Why Ted Cruz Is Taking a Direct Shot at Lane Kiffin
The provision is a direct legislative response to the dramatic coaching carousel that shook the sport last season. While the Ole Miss Rebels were actively preparing for their high-stakes run in the College Football Playoff, head coach Lane Kiffin abruptly departed Oxford to accept the head coaching vacancy at rival LSU.
For Cruz, the incident exposed a massive double standard and a profound lack of competitive integrity.
“It’s not fair or right to poach a coach in the middle of the season while the team is still competing,” Cruz said emphatically to the AP. “There’s a reason the NFL has a rule that you can’t do that. Obviously, NFL teams hire coaches away from each other, but they don’t do so in the middle of the season.”
Under the strict terms of the newly proposed 111-page bill, midseason coaching changes would be completely prohibited.
To give the law teeth, any head coach who violates the rule and jumps ship before their team’s season is officially over would be legally barred from coaching the following season.
It stems from the rationale that players face strict penalty structures for moving, while multi-millionaire coaches have enjoyed total freedom to abandon their rosters mid-campaign.
Meanwhile, in Baton Rouge, after being hired, Kiffin immediately went to work rebuilding a roster that experienced massive turnover, losing key talent like quarterback Garrett Nussmeier to the NFL Draft. LSU became a primary destination in the transfer portal, landing high-profile quarterback Sam Leavitt.
To solve 2025’s glaring deficiency, an offensive line that ranked among the worst in the SEC, the Tigers added elite line pieces like Jordan Seaton.
Kiffin also completely retooled the wide receiver room, securing explosive targets like Eugene “Tre” Wilson III and Winston Watkins Jr. to weaponize the passing game.
However, the primary hurdle standing between LSU and a playoff berth is a historically daunting schedule. The Tigers do not get the luxury of easing into the season, navigating a brutal second-half gauntlet that features November matchups against Alabama, Texas, and a road trip to Tennessee in consecutive weeks.
So, the consensus around Baton Rouge is clear: LSU is the ultimate boom-or-bust team of 2026. If Kiffin’s explosive scheme clicks early with Leavitt at the helm, the Tigers possess the raw talent to fight for an SEC Championship and a College Football Playoff spot.
Currently, PFSN’s CFB Playoff Meter gives the Tigers a 39.2% chance to make the College Football Playoff.
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