The $10.5 million price tag that flipped Bryce Underwood to Michigan wasn’t just another recruiting loss for LSU. It was a wake-up call that sent Brian Kelly scrambling to rewrite the rules of how the Tigers compete in college football’s new reality. When the dust settled, Kelly had put his own money where his mouth was, launching a million-dollar challenge that would test just how serious LSU fans were about keeping pace.
How Did Brian Kelly Respond to LSU’s Biggest Recruiting Miss?
Following Underwood’s flip, Kelly and his wife, Paqui, moved quickly to address the program’s NIL shortcomings. Shortly afterward, they launched the “Kelly Family Million Dollar Match Fund,” a direct response to losing the nation’s top recruit.
The initiative, announced in December, pledged to match fan donations to LSU’s NIL collective dollar-for-dollar, up to $1 million. The Kellys directed their contribution to the Tiger Athletic Foundation’s AD’s Excellence Fund, putting their personal finances behind the program’s recruiting efforts.
LSU coach Brian Kelly and his wife donated $1 million to the school’s NIL efforts as part of a matching challenge that raised $3.6M.
“I’m not going to do a million every year,” Kelly joked this morning at SEC media days. pic.twitter.com/P3B5ozYkNs
— David Rumsey (@_DavidRumsey) July 14, 2025
The campaign ran from December 13, 2025, through February 5, 2025, designed to galvanize the LSU fan base around the Tigers’ evolving NIL structure. Despite signing the seventh-ranked recruiting class in the SEC, LSU lost four-star defensive back Kade Phillips to Texas late in the cycle, adding pressure to the program’s NIL operations.
What Does Kelly’s NIL Strategy Mean for LSU’s Future?
At SEC Media Days, Kelly explained how NIL fits into his broader vision for building a championship program. The coach emphasized using the transfer portal to address depth issues across the roster.
“We went into the transfer portal to really build depth, championship-level depth across the board,” he said, naming incoming players like Patrick Payton from Florida State, Barion Brown from Kentucky, and Mansoor Delane in the secondary.
Kelly positioned his personal NIL contribution as a catalyst for broader fan engagement. He understood that LSU’s passionate supporters needed to see leadership from the top before committing their own resources.
“My wife and I had a million-dollar gift to help support our NIL,” Kelly said. “That was a lead gift because I knew how passionate our fan base was. We had 1,600 supporters follow that up. That raised that number to about $3.5 million.”
The Tigers’ NIL efforts culminated in a $3.2 million fundraising result, building momentum as the program enters the 2025 season. However, Kelly was realistic about the sustainability of such personal investments.
“I’m not going to do a million every year,” he said with a smile, before adding, “NIL is still something that we have to navigate through.”
Despite the financial focus, Kelly connected LSU’s NIL efforts to the program’s core mission of developing players both on and off the field.
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“It comes back to the one goal that I started with, and that is we want to graduate our players and play for championships,” he said.
As LSU prepares to open the season against Clemson, Kelly’s leadership in NIL shows a program adapting to college football’s new landscape. The coach’s willingness to invest personally demonstrates how seriously LSU takes the challenge of competing for elite talent in an era where prestige alone no longer guarantees recruiting success.