Liberty University announced the hire of Peoples to complete its 2026 football coaching staff, closing out assistant positions under head coach Jamey Chadwell. The move finalizes a roster that has been in flux since Chadwell's arrival in December 2022, when Liberty made the jump from independent status to Conference USA membership.
The Peoples hire fills the last open assistant role on a staff that now numbers 10 on-field coaches, the NCAA maximum for FBS programs. Liberty has not disclosed Peoples' specific title or responsibilities, though the timing suggests coordination duties tied to spring practice preparations. The program opens spring ball in mid-March, giving the new hire roughly six weeks to install schemes and evaluate a roster that returns 54 lettermen from a 2025 squad that finished 8-4 in its second Conference USA season.
The staffing completion matters for three reasons. First, Liberty is operating inside a compressed recruiting window for its 2026 class, which currently ranks 67th nationally per 247Sports composite rankings. Programs that finalize staffs before the February signing period historically see a 15-20% uptick in late-cycle commitments, according to data from Rivals, as position coaches can dedicate full attention to prospect engagement rather than internal hiring negotiations. Liberty's February 5 signing day haul will serve as the clearest measure of staff cohesion.
Second, the Flames are navigating uncertainty around Conference USA's media rights renewal, set to expire after the 2026 season. The league's current deal pays member schools roughly $500,000 annually, a fraction of Power Four payouts but critical for mid-major operations. Stability at the coordinator level signals continuity to recruits whose families are weighing program trajectory against media exposure and revenue-sharing potential under the new NCAA settlement framework. A completed staff allows Liberty to pitch institutional commitment during February and March official visits.
Third, Liberty's athletic department budget sits near $115 million, among the largest outside Power Four conferences, funded primarily by university general funds rather than media revenue. The Peoples hire completes a staff whose aggregate salaries are estimated near $6.5 million, placing Liberty in the upper tier of Group of Five spending. That figure includes Chadwell's $4 million annual deal, which ranks second in Conference USA behind only UTEP's Dana Dimel. The investment reflects Liberty's long-term FBS ambitions but also raises questions about financial sustainability if Conference USA's next media deal comes in below current projections.
Liberty opens the 2026 season with a home game against an undisclosed FCS opponent, followed by road trips to Appalachian State and a Power Four program yet to be announced. Chadwell's staff will need to replace four senior starters on the offensive line and both starting safeties, positions where Peoples' role—whether offensive or defensive—will carry immediate impact. The program has not held a press conference for the hire, suggesting a lower-profile addition rather than a marquee coordinator poach.
Watch for Liberty's February signing day results, expected to include 18-22 prospects, and spring practice media availability in late March. Conference USA's media rights talks with potential partners including ESPN+ and CBS Sports Network will likely surface publicly by May, setting the revenue baseline that determines whether Liberty's current spending pace is sustainable or a short-term play for competitive separation.
The takeaway
Liberty's final 2026 staff hire closes a recruiting and stability gap before February signings, while Conference USA's media uncertainty looms over mid-major spending models.
liberty flamesconference usacoaching hiresfbs recruitingmedia rightsgroup of five
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