Sources: Rich Rodriguez to return as West Virginia coach

Former West Virginia coach Rich Rodriguez is finalizing a deal to return to the road where he experienced his greatest success as a head coach, sources told ESPN on Wednesday.

Rodriguez, the current head coach at Jacksonville State, has emerged as the target to be the Mountaineers’ new coach, according to sources, and a deal is expected to be reached in the near future.

Rodriguez, 61, spent seven seasons at the school (2001 to ’07), which included three straight 10-win campaigns and a Sugar Bowl victory over Georgia in 2006. He had West Virginia on the verge of the Bowl Championship Series title game in his last year before an upset loss to Pittsburgh. After that loss, Rodriguez left for Michigan amid a tense split, including a legal battle over his buyout.

Rodriguez is a West Virginia native, which made the bitterness of his departure sting even worse, but makes his return powerful.

As West Virginia’s search for a replacement for the fired Neal Brown developed, Rodriguez emerged as the favorite. He led Jacksonville State to back-to-back 9-4 seasons and led that school to the Conference USA title this season with a resounding 52-12 win over Western Kentucky in the title game.

He would be taking over a school in a much different place than when he left nearly two decades ago, when Rodriguez dominated the Big East during his tenure at WVU. Since joining the Big 12 in 2012, West Virginia has had just one 10-win season. The school has not been nationally ranked since 2016.

Rodriguez’s return is expected to bring an increase in support, as West Virginia operated with one of the lower NIL budgets in the Big 12 during Brown’s tenure. While Rodriguez’s departure left some divisiveness, it will embolden a significant segment of fans and donors.

The homecoming will also give West Virginia an adrenaline rush of relevance, as Rodriguez’s return will be one of the busiest and most nostalgic stories in college football in 2025. His first marquee game will be against former nemesis Pitt on Sept. 13 in Morgantown .

Rodriguez struggled to find the same level of success after West Virginia. His three years at Michigan ended in disgrace, going 15-22. He was then hired by Arizona, but had mixed results in his six years, going 43-35. He led them to the Fiesta Bowl in 2014 and Arizona played in the Pac-12 title game that year, upsetting No. 2 Oregon in Eugene during the regular season.