Matt Campbell walked into the Lasch Building on December 2nd with a list of names and a narrow window. Penn State's athletic department confirmed his hire at $7 million annually through 2031, making him the Big Ten's sixth-highest-paid coach. The first forty-eight hours determined which assistants from James Franklin's staff would stay, which would enter the portal, and which Campbell loyalists from Ames would follow him east.
Penn State retained four position coaches through the weekend: offensive line coach Phil Trautwein, tight ends coach Ty Howle, defensive line coach Deion Barnes, and secondary coach Anthony Poindexter. Each signed one-year extensions in February under Franklin, contracts that Campbell honored but did not extend further. Seven assistants declined to renew and entered coaching free agency, including defensive coordinator Tom Allen and special teams coordinator Stacy Collins. Campbell brought two coordinators from Iowa State: offensive coordinator Nate Scheelhaase and defensive coordinator Jon Heacock, both on three-year deals at $1.3 million and $1.1 million respectively.
The velocity matters because December is college football's hiring bazaar. Coordinators move before bowl games. Position coaches follow their coordinator relationships, not school logos. Campbell's ability to close Scheelhaase and Heacock within seventy-two hours signals pre-existing alignment—these deals were shaped in November, finalized in cars between Iowa State's regular-season finale and Penn State's press conference. The four retained assistants are Campbell's bridge to recruiting relationships in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Maryland, regions where Iowa State has minimal infrastructure. Trautwein coached offensive line at Penn State since 2020 and owns relationships with six 2025 commits. Campbell kept him because firing him would cost $850,000 in buyout and surrender eighteen months of regional intel.
The coordinator hires reshape Penn State's identity on both sides. Scheelhaase ran Iowa State's offense for two seasons, averaging 32.4 points per game in 2024 with a run-first, play-action scheme that protected quarterback Rocco Becht behind an average offensive line. Penn State's 2024 offense under Kotelnicki averaged 34.1 points but relied on Drew Allar's arm and elite wide receiver talent. Scheelhaase inherits better skill players and worse quarterback depth—Allar declared for the NFL Draft on December 3rd. Heacock returns to Penn State after nine years; he was defensive coordinator from 2013 to 2015 under Bill O'Brien and Franklin, then followed Campbell to Iowa State. His hire is continuity masked as novelty. He runs a 3-3-5 scheme that Penn State used intermittently under Manny Diaz before Franklin switched to a 4-2-5 base in 2023. Heacock's salary is $200,000 below what Allen earned, a savings Penn State redirected toward two new analyst positions Campbell requested for film breakdown and transfer portal evaluation.
The staff assembly connects to Campbell's recruiting pitch. He sold Penn State's administration on "stability without stagnation," a phrase that appeared in three separate press releases. Translation: he would not pursue head coaching jobs at traditional powers like Michigan or USC, but he would modernize a program that finished 11-2 in 2024 and still lost its bowl game by fourteen points to Notre Dame. Campbell's Iowa State tenure included zero coordinator departures for lateral moves, unusual in modern college football. His coordinators left only for head coaching jobs or NFL positions, a retention rate that signals either loyalty or limited external interest. Penn State's athletic director Pat Kraft is betting on the former.
The financial structure is narrow. Penn State's assistant pool is capped at $8.5 million annually, twelfth in the Big Ten, behind Ohio State ($11.2 million), Michigan ($10.8 million), and Oregon ($9.6 million). Campbell's two coordinators consume $2.4 million, leaving $6.1 million for ten position coaches, three analysts, and two quality control assistants. Franklin's staff cost $8.3 million in 2024, so Campbell has $200,000 in new budget flexibility, which he allocated to the two analyst roles mentioned earlier. The salary compression will matter in Year Two, when assistant coaches at playoff programs negotiate raises and Penn State's coordinators field calls from programs with deeper pockets.
Campbell's next decision is on-field staff for the bowl game. Penn State faces Boise State in the Fiesta Bowl on December 31st. Campbell will coach the game with a hybrid staff—four Franklin holdovers, two new coordinators, and four interim assistants borrowed from Penn State's recruiting and operations departments. The offensive game plan will be Scheelhaase's, installed over three practices in mid-December. The game is an audition for the entire staff, filmed and circulated among agents who represent assistant coaches nationwide.
The position coach market remains open through January 15th, when the NCAA's second signing period closes. Campbell has three vacancies: running backs coach, linebackers coach, and safeties coach. He is targeting Nate Brock-Purdy from Iowa State for running backs and Lee Sterling from West Virginia for linebackers. Both are in final-stage conversations, expected to close by December 20th. The safeties role remains unresolved. Campbell interviewed four candidates, including one from the NFL, but has not extended an offer. Penn State's recruiting class ranks No. 8 nationally with twenty-two commits, but three decommitted after Franklin's departure. Campbell's staff must re-recruit those players before January's signing window closes, a seventeen-day sprint that will determine whether his first class holds or fractures.
The takeaway
Campbell secured coordinators in seventy-two hours, retained four assistants for regional recruiting continuity, and has three position vacancies to fill before January 15th.
penn statematt campbellcoaching staffbig tencoordinator marketrecruiting
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