BYU HC Kalani Sitake Reveals Reason for Turning Down Penn State

Kalani Sitake
Getty
Kalani Sitake Reveals Reason for Turning Down Penn State

The BYU Cougars head coach, Kalani Sitake, did not frame Penn State Nittany Lions as a rejection so much as a choice. In early December, after Penn State pursued him for its vacancy, BYU announced Sitake would stay in Provo on a long-term extension.

He said he was “humbled and full of gratitude” for the support from BYU fans and university leadership. He called the move “good for the stability and future of BYU football.” That decision kept a coach who has gone 84-45 in 10 seasons at his alma mater and has delivered four 10-win seasons in the past six years.

“The decision-making process had to happen almost overnight,” Sitake revealed to On3. Looking at what Penn State was doing and what they were trying to offer, I had to decide what I wanted and what I considered compensation for me, and what I was chasing.”

Sitake’s reasoning was rooted in fit. Penn State offered a high-profile opening and the lure of the Big Ten. But BYU offered continuity, institutional support and a program he has spent a decade shaping from the ground up.

“I just don’t know much about the area and recruiting there,” he added.

In the wake of James Franklin’s firing, Penn State made Sitake one of its top targets before the search eventually landed on Matt Campbell. In the meantime, BYU moved quickly to secure its coach with new financial backing for the program.

Matt Campbell

GettyMatt Campbell took over the head coaching duties at Penn State.

Sitake’s public comments since then have remained consistent. He values the people around him, the structure at BYU and the chance to keep building where he already has traction.

“It was really hard for me to leave, especially knowing how much the fans appreciate me here,” Sitake said. “Sometimes when you get caught up in business, you overlook the things that matter most.”


BYU’s Roster Stability Made the Case Stronger

Sitake’s decision also landed at a time when BYU’s roster was already taking shape for 2026. The Cougars finished spring ball on April 2 after 15 practices, with the staff using the camp to integrate new arrivals and sharpen a group that looks unusually intact for modern college football.

Sitake said after spring camp that there’s never been a tougher depth chart to crack at BYU and the Deseret News reported that the roster is as deep and talented as any in his tenure because of recruiting, retention and development.

Sitake is not trying to run a churn-and-burn roster model. After spring camp, he said the Cougars were “not actively searching for more players” and summed up the returning core with, “We really like what we have.”


The Playoff Chase Now Belongs in Provo

Kalani Sitake

GettyHead coach Kalani Sitake reacts to a play.

BYU has a real postseason path. The Cougars moved into the Big 12 in 2023 and have already turned that leap into consecutive double-digit-win seasons. They have turned into a legitimate contender.

Sitake recently pushed back on the idea that BYU should model itself on another program’s sudden surge.

“Hope is a good motivator, but it is not a good strategy.” That is the clearest version of his current philosophy. BYU should build something durable, not temporary.

He has also made clear that the standard in Provo will not be built on pure portal volume or financial brinkmanship. BYU’s coach has said the program will not be “the highest bidder,” and that the team-first culture matters more than constantly turning over the roster.

That stance may narrow the transfer market, but it also explains why Sitake fits BYU so well. And why Penn State, for all of its brand value, was not the better long-term answer.

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BYU HC Kalani Sitake Reveals Reason for Turning Down Penn State

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