James Franklin to Break Silence on ESPN’s College GameDay After Stunning Penn State Firing

For the first time in a decade, James Franklin won’t be coaching a game but fighting for the chance to tell his story.

Nick Wright College Football Writer
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Oct 11, 2025; University Park, Pennsylvania, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions head coach James Franklin answers questions from the media following the game against the Northwestern Wildcats at Beaver Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matthew O'Haren-Imagn Images
Matthew O'Haren-Imagn Images

For the first time since his dismissal, former Penn State head coach James Franklin will speak publicly about his abrupt exit from the program. ESPN announced that Franklin will appear live on College GameDay this Saturday, October 18, in Athens, Georgia — the site of the Ole Miss vs. Georgia showdown. It will be his first exclusive interview since being fired on October 12, and the timing couldn’t be more charged.

Just three weeks ago, Franklin stood on that same GameDay stage in State College, representing a top-five team with championship expectations. Now, he returns as one of the most expensive coaching casualties in college football history. All the biggest names in the sport will be watching closely.

From Contender to Collapse

Penn State’s season unraveled fast. The Nittany Lions opened the year ranked No. 2 in the AP Poll and started 3–0, powered by a defense that looked Playoff-ready and an offense finally finding its rhythm under sophomore quarterback Drew Allar. Then came the slide.

A double-overtime loss to Oregon. A shocking defeat to previously winless UCLA. And finally, a 22–21 home collapse to Northwestern (a loss that ended Franklin’s decade-long tenure).

By Sunday morning, the news broke: Franklin was out. Athletic director Pat Kraft called the decision “painful but necessary,” citing the program’s need to find “a leader who can help Penn State win a national championship.”

The Cost of Change

Franklin’s firing carries a staggering $50 million buyout, the second-largest in college football history. For Penn State, it’s both a statement of ambition and a financial gamble. The university is betting that a change at the top will reignite a team that had plateaued at the edge of greatness but could never quite break through.

Under Franklin, Penn State produced multiple 10-win seasons, top-tier recruiting classes, and a Rose Bowl victory, yet the program never reached the College Football Playoff. The losses this October were less about a single season than a decade of “almost.”

Still, the timing of his dismissal shocked many across the sport. Coaches, analysts, and even former players voiced surprise that a man once hailed as the program’s savior could be out before midseason.

Now, Franklin will step back into the national spotlight — not as a recruiter or play-caller, but as a man defending his legacy. ESPN has not released the exact time of his appearance, but the show airs from 9 a.m. to noon ET. What’s certain is that the interview will dominate the morning’s conversation.

And for the first time in a long time, James Franklin won’t be coaching a game but fighting for the chance to tell his story.