
Photo by: Hannahally Photography
From a Chili Cookoff to Accountability, Kevin Cahill’s Culture Change Has Lehigh Football Back on Top
5/1/2025 2:03:00 PM | Football, Features
This story appeared in the Spring issue of the Lehigh Alumni Bulletin.
It was three days after what was arguably the worst loss of Lehigh football's season—a lopsided 38-23 defeat at the hands of Yale on Oct. 19.
"It was like we were sleepwalking," head coach Kevin Cahill said.
Players were finishing up their first fully padded practice since the loss in New Haven, Conn., and the team owned a 3-3 record, losing their only league game played. Defensive back Jordan Adderley approached quarterback Dante Perri and wide receiver Geoffrey Jamiel. He pitched the idea of a player-only meeting.
For nearly 45 minutes after the coaches officially ended practice, the players remained. Adderley and Perri addressed the squad first, refocusing thoughts from going home for Thanksgiving to the work that remained with five games—all Patriot League matchups—remaining on the regular season schedule.
Jamiel wrapped up the meeting with an emotional plea for everyone to do their job regardless of if they were getting the ball every play or had a spot on the scout team.
The meeting was exactly what Lehigh needed. It was also a direct result of one of Cahill's objectives since he arrived at Lehigh: creating a player-led program where the athletes hold each other accountable.
"That was the epitome of the program—being player-led and it starting with us," Jamiel said. "That, for me, along with every other player on the team, was a turning point."
"There was a different response after that, and it was good to see," Cahill said.
Not even a year removed from their second straight 2-9 season, the Mountain Hawks didn't lose again until Dec. 7 in the second round of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision playoffs. Not only did they win five straight to finish the regular season and clinch their first Patriot League title since 2017, they went on the road to beat Richmond in the first round for their first playoff win since 2011. It was the furthest a Lehigh team has gone in the playoffs since the 1977 national championship team.
Read the full story HERE.
It was three days after what was arguably the worst loss of Lehigh football's season—a lopsided 38-23 defeat at the hands of Yale on Oct. 19.
"It was like we were sleepwalking," head coach Kevin Cahill said.
Players were finishing up their first fully padded practice since the loss in New Haven, Conn., and the team owned a 3-3 record, losing their only league game played. Defensive back Jordan Adderley approached quarterback Dante Perri and wide receiver Geoffrey Jamiel. He pitched the idea of a player-only meeting.
For nearly 45 minutes after the coaches officially ended practice, the players remained. Adderley and Perri addressed the squad first, refocusing thoughts from going home for Thanksgiving to the work that remained with five games—all Patriot League matchups—remaining on the regular season schedule.
Jamiel wrapped up the meeting with an emotional plea for everyone to do their job regardless of if they were getting the ball every play or had a spot on the scout team.
The meeting was exactly what Lehigh needed. It was also a direct result of one of Cahill's objectives since he arrived at Lehigh: creating a player-led program where the athletes hold each other accountable.
"That was the epitome of the program—being player-led and it starting with us," Jamiel said. "That, for me, along with every other player on the team, was a turning point."
"There was a different response after that, and it was good to see," Cahill said.
Not even a year removed from their second straight 2-9 season, the Mountain Hawks didn't lose again until Dec. 7 in the second round of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision playoffs. Not only did they win five straight to finish the regular season and clinch their first Patriot League title since 2017, they went on the road to beat Richmond in the first round for their first playoff win since 2011. It was the furthest a Lehigh team has gone in the playoffs since the 1977 national championship team.
Read the full story HERE.
Players Mentioned
2025 Brown & Flight - Episode 1
Thursday, September 18
Lehigh Sports Central: Football
Wednesday, August 27
2025 Lehigh Football Season Preview: Special Teams
Thursday, August 21
2025 Lehigh Football Season Preview: Defense
Thursday, August 21