
Hot Mic Re-Kindles Drama Between HC Kade Vaughn, Former DC Jeremiah Johnson
It could have slipped into history as just another coaching split. Instead, Jeremiah Johnson made sure everyone knew the wounds were still raw.
“If he stopped meddling, maybe they’d have more success,” Johnson sneered in a hot-mic clip that went viral last month. “Who dragged us through the Natty? ME. Then we have some struggles with guys he brought in, and suddenly he’s in the defensive meetings, telling me what to do in front of my players? He got too big for the damn room. All the ESPN features, ‘Pit Boss of the Palmetto’ BS — straight to the big head behind those stupid aviators. You have no idea how elated I am that they’re missing the playoffs this season.”
The clip, sharp enough to slice through the college football news cycle, reignited one of the sport’s most whispered-about storylines: the implosion of what once looked like an unshakable partnership. To Coastal Carolina fans, Johnson had been the architect of their defensive identity, the yin to Vaughn’s offensive yang. But to those inside the program, the hot mic didn’t reveal a secret — it simply confirmed what they’d been living for the past two seasons.
“This wasn’t new,” one former staffer said. “He’d been saying that stuff to anyone who would listen. The only difference is, this time, the mic was on.”
From Lifeline to Liability
When Kade Vaughn was elevated to head coach in 2025, he was all energy and ambition — a spread-option Air Raid with no brakes. But he didn’t have a quarterback, and the offense sputtered. Jeremiah Johnson, a holdover from Tim Beck’s staff, kept the ship steady. His defenses ranked in the top 20 in both 2025 and 2026, covering for Vaughn’s growing pains.
The arrival of Bryce Underwood in 2026 flipped the balance. Suddenly, Vaughn’s system had its centerpiece. Coastal surged, nearly running the table in 2027 before collapsing in the Fiesta Bowl. Johnson, who had fielded head-coaching offers that offseason, stayed put. “He thought the next year would get him the job of his choice,” another former staffer said.
And in 2028, Johnson’s gamble paid — sort of. When Underwood melted down with seven turnovers in the national title game, it was Johnson’s defense that held Clemson at bay long enough for Coastal to survive. He should have been the hottest coordinator in America. Instead, his phone went silent.
“He thought he’d made the leap,” said a former player. “But when no one called? He never got over it.”
The Fracture
By 2029, the defense that had once been Johnson’s calling card began to crack. Florida State’s Frank Powell threw for over 500 yards, and Vaughn, usually protective of his staff, turned sharp in public.
“When you give up that many yards, that’s a slip up. We can’t afford those.”
Behind the scenes, things were uglier. Vaughn began inserting himself into defensive meetings, questioning calls in front of players. “It was like he didn’t trust JJ anymore,” one staffer recalled. “And JJ hated that. Hated it.”
During a bye-week team meeting, Vaughn announced defensive adjustments. Johnson wasn’t there. “That was the moment,” another staff member said. “From then on, it was just damage control.”
Coastal still made the playoff, but the partnership was dead. Publicly, Johnson left for Kansas State. Privately, Vaughn had fired him. Vaughn’s explanation — that they “honored Johnson’s request not to announce it” — only added to the confusion.
Whispers and Blame
The hot-mic tirade may have been shocking to fans, but those close to the program say it was just the loudest of Johnson’s complaints. He believed Vaughn hogged credit for Coastal’s rise. He told staffers Vaughn was ruining his career. He mocked Vaughn’s ESPN profiles, rolling his eyes at the “Pit Boss of the Palmetto” nickname.
“This isn’t Madden,” Johnson reportedly told one assistant after Vaughn introduced new defensive packages without the personnel to run them. “You can’t just say, ‘I want this,’ push a button, and it works. That’s not how real football is played.”
Even after his departure, Johnson allegedly relished Coastal’s defensive stumbles under Tony White. “He felt vindicated,” said a source who spoke to Johnson after Coastal’s playoff miss. “Like he’d proven his point.”
Vaughn and White Push Back
Vaughn, to his credit, has refused to escalate. Asked about the hot mic, he sighed, then paused. “I’ve heard it,” he said. “At the end, the friction was real. That’s all I’ll say.”
Tony White, though, has been more pointed. “Kade has never given me an ultimatum on schemes, play-calling, personnel — nothing,” White said. “It’s always been collaborative. Maybe there’s more to the story than meets the eye. Maybe look at how Kansas State’s defense is doing right now.”
Indeed, the Wildcats under Johnson are no better than Coastal, and in fact are worse than last season's squad during an 1-11 season for the Wildcats.
Fallout
Coastal has rebounded defensively in recent weeks, but the scars remain. For the first time since 2027, the Chanticleers will miss the playoff, and questions linger over whether Vaughn’s partnership with White can avoid the same fate as his with Johnson.
Because in Conway, the hot-mic wasn’t just a rant. It was a reminder. Success had made the Chanticleers one of the most fascinating stories in college football. But behind the scenes, the cracks in that story were real — and they may never fully go away.