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End of an Era: Oklahoma State Fires Mike Gundy After 21 Seasons — Buyout, Backlash and What Comes Next

Mike Gundy

Oklahoma State fires Mike Gundy after 21 seasons amid a brutal skid — $15M buyout, fan unrest and the search for a successor. Full recap, timeline & analysis.

Quick snapshot — Mike Gundy Fire

Oklahoma State University has fired longtime head coach Mike Gundy after 21 seasons leading the Cowboys, ending a run that made him the program’s winningest coach — the move follows a 1–2 start to 2025 and a brutal 11-game losing stretch dating back to last season; Gundy is reportedly owed a roughly $15 million buyout.

Why this matters

Mike Gundy isn’t just another FBS coach. He’s been the face of Oklahoma State football for more than two decades — a former OSU quarterback turned assistant and then a fixture atop the program who delivered 18 straight winning seasons and became an identifiable voice in college football culture. His firing is major for several reasons:

Those elements together make the move more than a coaching change — it’s a statement about the program’s trajectory and priorities.

The confirmed facts (what we know right now)

  1. Mike Gundy has been fired as Oklahoma State’s head football coach after 21 seasons. He departs as the school’s winningest coach with a 170-90 career record.
  2. Timing: The firing was reported on September 23, 2025, days after a home loss to Tulsa and amid a wider 11-game losing run dating back to 2024. (Reuters)
  3. Buyout / contract: Multiple outlets report Gundy is owed about $15 million under the terms of his recent contract, a figure that shaped debate about the school’s options and the fiscal impact of a split.
  4. Program record & legacy: Gundy oversaw 18 consecutive bowl appearances and eight 10-win seasons, key points the school included in statements praising his contributions.
  5. Next steps: Oklahoma State will begin a national search for a successor while handling immediate concerns (staff continuity, recruiting, upcoming Big 12 schedule).

(Those are the load-bearing facts — sources listed in the “Authoritative sources” section below.)

Timeline: how we got here

2013–2024: The heyday and sustained success
Gundy’s era included multiple seasons where OSU finished among the Big 12’s top teams and won marquee bowl games. From the mid-2000s through the 2010s, Gundy’s offense and aggressive recruiting kept the Cowboys relevant nationally.

2024: the slide begins
The turning point began last season when Oklahoma State went 3–9 in 2024 — a dramatic fall after years of consistency. That record snapped the team’s streak of winning seasons and bowl appearances, and it raised questions about roster construction, coaching staff effectiveness, and recruiting results.

2025: offseason churn and a brutal start
OSU entered 2025 with a heavily remodeled roster, including many transfer additions (more than 60 new players reported in some outlets). Expectations varied, but the season imploded early: a 69–3 blowout loss to Oregon and a shocking 19–12 home loss to Tulsa fueled fan unrest and national skepticism. Within weeks, chants for “Fire Gundy” echoed in Boone Pickens Stadium and pressure mounted at the administration level. Gundy publicly insisted he wanted to stay and fix the program, but the board and AD moved swiftly.

Sep 23, 2025: the firing
Reports on Sept. 23, 2025, confirmed the university and Gundy had parted ways. Local and national outlets ran the story within hours; OSU released a statement honoring Gundy’s contributions while announcing an immediate leadership change.

 

What Gundy leaves behind — wins, records and signature moments

But the final seasons — particularly the 3–9 2024 campaign — overshadowed prior accomplishments and created a sense that the program had plateaued under his leadership.

Financials: the buyout question

One of the most immediate practical concerns for OSU is the financial cost of firing a long-tenured coach. Reports indicate Gundy’s contract included a buyout in the neighborhood of $15 million if terminated before the end of the revised agreement (timing and exact terms vary by report). That figure matters for several reasons:

Expect the athletic department to release detailed financials (or at least a summary) in the coming days or months as part of transparency with donors and the public.

[Note: Images are collected from Instagram]

 

Reaction roundup — fans, media, players and pundits

Fans: Emotions were mixed. Some fans celebrated the end of a slide and demanded change; others mourned the loss of a coach who’d become the program’s identity for decades. Chants of “Fire Gundy” at recent games showed the depth of fan frustration before the decision. (New York Post)

Media: National outlets (ESPN, CBS Sports, Reuters) framed the firing as the end of a major era and highlighted both legacy wins and recent failures. Local sportswriters dissected the roster construction failures, coaching staff continuity issues, and recruiting misses that contributed to the collapse.

Players & staff: Early reports indicated shock among some players and staff, though transitions often have been planned in part behind closed doors. Recruiting commits and transfer portal targets will be watching the coaching search closely; staff retention (especially coordinators) will be a priority to minimize recruiting losses.

Pundits & former coaches: Commentators praised Gundy’s historical contributions but also questioned whether the program needed a fresh voice amid the Big 12’s rising competitiveness and the new financial landscape of college athletics.

What this means for recruiting and the portal

We’re in the thick of modern college football where roster turnover is high. The immediate recruiting impacts include:

The administration will likely prioritize a rapid but thoughtful search to minimize recruiting fallout.

The search: who’s in the mix for the job?

Right now the job is officially open and the athletic department has options hanging in the balance. Typical targets for a program in OSU’s place include:

Local reports hint the school has been preparing contingency plans and may favor a candidate with both recruiting chops and modern offensive/defensive schematics suitable for current Big 12 play. Budget constraints from the buyout may temper how much they spend.

 

Playoff & schedule context: immediate impact on the 2025 season

OSU faces a crucial Big 12 schedule, and the decision’s timing (right before conference play vs after) matters:

Practically, an interim coach will oversee the rest of 2025 while the AD conducts a national search.

Legal and contractual considerations

A balanced take: Gundy’s legacy vs the need for change

Gundy’s tenure is a study in duality:

Change isn’t inherently a repudiation of past accomplishments — it’s a strategic pivot intended to keep OSU competitive in an environment where investment, recruiting and adaptability dominate.

What to watch next (immediate checklist)

  1. Official OSU statement & press conference: Look for athletic director remarks and any explanation of the buyout and next steps. (ESPN.com)
  2. Interim coach announcement: Who will manage the team through the rest of 2025? Expect an assistant to step up temporarily. (heartlandcollegesports.com)
  3. Staff retention: Will coordinators and quality assistants remain or bolt for other opportunities?
  4. Recruiting effects: Any decommitments or portal exits will signal longer-term damage. (Saturday Blitz)
  5. Search timeline: Will OSU pursue an immediate high-profile hire, or opt for a methodical search? Watch AD communications and donor briefings.
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