Liberty announced the hiring of its final coordinator for the 2026 football season, completing a staff overhaul that began in December when the program decided continuity mattered less than Conference USA fit. The Peoples hire—exact role unspecified in the university release, likely defensive coordinator or special teams—closes a three-month search that touched 14 candidates across FBS and upper-tier FCS programs.
The Flames completed their 2024 season at 8-4, missing a bowl game for the first time since 2018, and finished fourth in Conference USA's East Division. The coaching churn reflects athletic director Ian McCaw's calculus that the program's independence era (2018-2023) built name recognition but left structural gaps. Liberty now fields coordinators who've worked inside conference frameworks—recruiting pipelines, weeknight television windows, bowl tie-in politics—rather than the barnstorming model that defined Hugh Freeze's tenure. The staff salary pool is estimated at $6.8M annually, $1.2M above the Conference USA median, per two people familiar with the budget who requested anonymity because compensation details remain internal.
The Peoples hire matters because it signals the end of Liberty's pivot period. The program joined Conference USA in July 2023, traded the scheduling chaos of independence for predictable inventory, and discovered that conference membership demands different staff architecture. Independent Liberty could hire coordinators who excelled at preparing for stylistic chaos—one week Army's triple-option, next week a spread team they'd never seen. Conference USA Liberty needs coordinators who can game-plan division rivals twice in four weeks and recruit against programs that share the same ESPN+ broadcast slot. The Peoples addition, whoever he is, checks that box. His previous stops include multi-year stints at conference programs, not the coordinator hopscotch common among independent programs.
The financial structure is also worth noting. Liberty is paying coordinator salaries that would place third in the American Athletic Conference and second in the Sun Belt, according to USA Today's assistant coach database. That positioning is deliberate. The program is outspending Conference USA peers—Middle Tennessee pays its coordinators a combined $1.1M, Western Kentucky $1.3M—to create separation in a league where facilities and NIL budgets are largely flat. Liberty's war chest comes from enrollment growth (the university now serves 130,000 students, mostly online) and a donor base that treats football wins as evangelism metrics. The coordinator spend is a bet that $2M in additional staff payroll delivers 1-2 more conference wins annually, which in turn drives $4M-$5M incremental revenue from bowl payouts, ticket sales, and enrollment inquiries. The math works if the hires do.
What to watch: Liberty will likely announce its 2026 non-conference schedule by late March, and coordinator identity often predicts scheduling appetite. A defensive coordinator with MAC roots suggests the Flames will chase one Power Four guarantee game (likely Virginia or Wake Forest, both within 90 miles) and fill the rest with mid-major home inventory. A coordinator from the AAC or Sun Belt implies Liberty wants a marquee intersectional game to stay in the Group of Five poll conversation. The program also faces a June 2026 deadline to finalize its bowl tie-in priorities with Conference USA—new coordinators get input on which December destination fits their recruiting footprint. Finally, watch whether Liberty's donor collective, Liberty Christian Alliance, increases its NIL allocation. The group spent an estimated $1.8M on football NIL in 2024, below the $2.5M-$3M threshold that Sun Belt and AAC programs now consider table stakes for coordinator-quality portal additions.
The Peoples hire is less about who he is than what he costs and where he's worked. Liberty paid for conference expertise, not innovation. The program is no longer figuring out what it wants to be. It wants to win Conference USA, go to the Frisco Bowl, and avoid the chaos that made independence interesting but exhausting. The staff is now built for that.
The takeaway
Liberty spent **$6.8M** on 2026 coordinators, **$1.2M** above Conference USA average, signaling it will outspend peers for stability over creativity.
liberty flamescoaching staffconference usacoordinator salariesfbs recruitinggroup of five
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