• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Kansas City Sports Today

Kansas City Sports Today

KC Sports News Continuously Updated

  • Chiefs
  • Royals
  • Sporting Kansas City
  • Colleges
    • Kansas State
    • Missouri State
    • University of Kansas
    • University of Missouri
    • Wichita State

BOOM!! Football Hits Scholarship Limit

January 25, 2023 by Rock Chalk Talk

NCAA BASKETBALL: NOV 28 Orlando Classic - Tennessee v Kansas
Photo by Mark LoMoglio/Icon Sportswire/Corbis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Remember the name Jacoby Davis

What seemed like a pipe dream a few short years ago, maybe even a few short months ago, has become reality. The KU football team has hit the scholarship limit according to my count for 2023. With the most recent portal entry window closed as of January 18th and Jacoby Davis’s commitment to the Jayhawks on Sunday, my scholarship roster count for KU is at 85. How did the Jayhawks get here so “quickly”? Hope. Hope got KU to where they are today. Hope, embodied by Lance Leipold and his staff, has brought winning and the prospect of continued winning to Lawrence, Kansas.

Hope and with it opportunity for players that have not fit in at other colleges and universities. Hope and opportunity for high school players not necessarily ready to play right away, but who see they can develop and grow into a player that can be major contributors to a winning team if they put their trust and faith in a coaching staff that has brought hope and success to Whitewater, WI, Buffalo, NY and now Lawrence, KS.

More specifically, Coach Leipold and his staff have supplemented their current 13-man high school class with 11 transfers coming in while limiting the transfers out to 7 so far. The 7 players leaving did not include one player I thought it would, Jason Bean. He gave every indication he would leave. The coaching staff gave every indication he was leaving, but he has declared he is back for his super senior season. Will he be playing quarterback? That is a question for a future post. One player not captured in the transfer numbers is Lonnie Phelps, Jr. He is not transferring, but leaving for the NFL draft. I should have seen that coming, but I didn’t. So to date, there are 24 incoming players. There are 17 outgoing players (9 players have exhausted their eligibility, 7 are transferring, and 1 has declared for the NFL draft). Do the math that is a net gain of 7 players.

The coaching staff has benefitted from rules changes their predecessors have had to fight. The big change of course is the removal of the annual scholarship limit. Now the only limit is the total count of 85. Besides the consistent losses on the field, the big reason KU struggled to get back to a full scholarship roster, was the annual limit. Couple the annual limit being removed with current transfer portal rules and hope (or said more explicitly, actually winning football games), and this coaching staff has been able to get KU in line with the vast majority of other football programs and field a full scholarship roster. Going forward the goal will be to improve the overall talent on that roster while remaining at the roster limit.

When the season begins September 2 against Missouri State, will the count still be at 85? As I wrote in my last update about the roaster count, I expect a few more players to leave when the transfer portal entry window opens again in the spring. Where will those losses come from? I suspect we may see an offensive lineman and a defensive back (either a cornerback or safety) move on. I also think the kickers’ room will not be as full as it is now. Right now there are two scholarship and four walk-on place-kickers. The coaching staff brought on two kickers this transfer cycle, one for immediate help and one for the future, yet no one has left that we know of. I guess one or two of those kickers will not be around for summer workouts. I believe there will be four openings by the end of the spring transfer entry window. This is good. I think those scholarships can be used better in other positions.

If I had those four scholarships where would I use them? Defense, defense, defense, and defense. Ideally, defensive tackles, defensive ends, and defensive safeties with two seasons of eligibility left. To me, and I assume for most of you, the defensive line is where KU needs the most help to improve on last season’s performance. All three of those positions: tackle, end, and safety are light on players with two years of eligibility remaining.

Where do you think KU should focus its efforts for any high schoolers and transfer portal players they may still be looking at?

Below is the scholarship distribution chart and count.

Filed Under: University of Kansas

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Turnovers and missed shots result in historic exhibition loss for Mizzou women’s basketball
  • Bill Self Thinks This Rebounding Aspect Will Be Important Heading Into This Season
  • Chiefs injury update: Hollywood Brown returns to practice
  • MLB insider adds fuel to Royals “probably” trading away starting pitching this winter
  • AFC Trade Rumors: Jakobi Meyers, Broncos, Chargers, Chiefs, Raiders

Categories

Archives

Our Partners

All Sports

  • Kansas City Star
  • KC Kingdom
  • 247 Sports
  • Bleacher Report
  • The Sports Fan Journal
  • The Spun
  • USA Today

Baseball

  • MLB.com
  • Kings Of Kauffman
  • Last Word On Baseball
  • MLB Trade Rumors
  • Royals Review

Football

  • Kansas City Chiefs
  • Arrowhead Addict
  • Arrowhead Pride
  • BBQ Sports
  • Chiefs Crowd
  • Chiefs Wire
  • Last Word On Pro Football
  • NFL Trade Rumors
  • Our Turf Football
  • Pro Football Rumors
  • Pro Football Talk
  • Total Chiefs

Soccer

  • Last Word on Soccer
  • MLS Multiplex
  • The Blue Testament

College

  • Bring On The Cats
  • Busting Brackets
  • College Football News
  • College Sports Madness
  • Rock Chalk Talk
  • Saturday Blitz
  • Through The Phog
  • Trumans Tales
  • Zags Blog

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in