Dartmouth hired Brian McCorkle to complete its 2026 coaching staff this week, the third mid-tier FCS program to announce assistant-level hires in January. Springfield College confirmed multiple coaching changes the same day. The timing—six months before the 2026 season opener—marks an acceleration in what used to be February and March business.
The early commitments reflect a tighter labor market for assistant coaches. Programs are staffing ahead of the February transfer window, when on-field coaching capacity matters for recruitment calls and campus visits. Dartmouth's announcement framed McCorkle's hire as completing the roster; Springfield used identical language. Liberty University made similar moves in recent days. All three programs compete outside the Power Four but recruit from overlapping geography in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic.
The shift matters for two reasons. First, it pushes compensation decisions forward. Assistant salaries at this level run $75,000 to $140,000 depending on coordinator title and recruiting territory. Programs that wait risk bidding wars in February when larger schools poach down-market after their own coordinator losses. Second, it changes when athletic directors need cash committed. Most FCS budgets finalize in March; locking staff now means less flexibility if donor revenue disappoints or if conference media distributions shift.
The NIL shoe money story running parallel—basketball players are now walking billboards for sneaker brands, bypassing traditional team contracts—adds context. Coaches at the FCS level are adjusting to a world where *positional* value has fractured. A wide receivers coach who can navigate NIL collectives for offensive skill players is worth more than a defensive line coach with identical tenure, because the revenue attached to skill position athletes has diverged. Springfield's staff shakeup likely reflects this re-pricing. Programs that figure out how to monetize assistant coaching hires—pairing them with NIL fundraising roles or sponsor activation—gain an edge in January when everyone else is still writing job descriptions.
Dartmouth and Springfield are not chasing bowl revenue or playoff gates. They are staffing to keep alumni donors engaged and to protect recruiting classes that feed modest but stable ticket and merchandise revenue. Liberty, by contrast, is a different animal: a program with $60 million in athletic revenue that uses coaching announcements for branding in a crowded Virginia market. The fact that all three are moving in January suggests the market has decided waiting is expensive.
Watch for a second wave of announcements in the next 10 days as programs that missed early hires try to close before the Super Bowl, when offensive and defensive coordinators from playoff teams become available and reset salary expectations. Also watch for athletic directors to bundle coaching announcements with NIL collective fundraising campaigns; two programs have already done this quietly in the past month. Liberty's next move will signal whether larger FCS independents start poaching from power-conference support staff, which would pull another rung out of the ladder.
The hiring is done. The budget stress starts in March when the invoice comes due and ticket renewals are still four months out.