Who Is Kade Vaughn? The Swaggering Architect Coastal Carolina Hopes Can Spark a New Era
Conway, S.C. — If you’re looking for polish, Coach Kade Vaughn can give you just enough. Just don’t expect him to sugarcoat anything.
The newly named interim head coach at Coastal Carolina brings the kind of edge that doesn’t always show up on a résumé — the kind of chip-on-your-shoulder confidence that fits perfectly with the teal turf and rogue identity of Chanticleer football. But behind the sunglasses and the soundbites is a coach who’s earned every inch of this moment.
So who is Kade Vaughn?
Born in the Cold, Forged in the Fire
A native of Fairbanks, Alaska, Vaughn’s football journey was never supposed to follow a straight line. A 3-star wide receiver recruit out of high school, he surprised many by signing with Appalachian State in 2008, where he spent five seasons grinding through the depth chart and earning a reputation not for flashy highlights — but for preparation, precision, and poise.
Vaughn never became a full-time starter under head coach Jerry Moore, but carved out a critical role as a third-down and red zone specialist. Coaches credited him with knowing every detail of the playbook and mentoring younger receivers in the film room.
“He wasn’t the fastest or the strongest,” said one former teammate. “But he was always two steps ahead — and he made damn sure you were too.”
After graduating in 2013, Vaughn spent three seasons with the Portland Steel of the Arena Football League, mostly in a reserve role. He caught 15 touchdowns in his first season but was out of the league by 2016 when the team folded.
After his stint in the Arena League, Vaughn briefly considered returning to Alaska to start the next chapter of his life. But something about the Carolinas kept pulling him back. It had become a second home — and in his mind, there was unfinished business still waiting to be settled. That’s when the phone rang with the call that would change everything.
The Coach Behind the Curtain
That call came from his old coach Scott Satterfield, who was promoted from offensive coordinator after Jerry Moore departed in 2013, inviting Vaughn back to Appalachian State as a graduate assistant and later wide receivers coach. For a kid from Alaska who had to fight for every rep, it was validation. Vaughn was back in Boone — and rising.
But when Satterfield left for Louisville after the 2018 season, Vaughn’s time at App State abruptly ended. He wasn’t retained by the new regime, a decision that didn’t sit well then — and still doesn’t now.
“There’s no bad blood,” Vaughn once said in an interview. “Just a reminder that not everyone sees what you bring to the table. That’s fine. But I’ll make sure they feel it on Saturdays.”
And that’s where the Coastal connection gets spicy. Appalachian State and Coastal Carolina are Sun Belt rivals, and Vaughn’s return to the Carolinas — now leading App’s rival — gives this hire a little more bite.
The Mack Brown Years: A Sharp Mind in Chapel Hill
In 2019, Vaughn joined Mack Brown’s staff at North Carolina as a wide receivers coach, where he quietly helped develop NFL talents like Josh Downs and Devontez Walker, and played a crucial role in the rise of quarterback Drake Maye.
By 2022, Vaughn had been promoted to co-offensive coordinator, helping pilot one of the ACC’s most dangerous passing attacks. Known for his blend of Air Raid principles and spread-option tempo, Vaughn’s system stressed mismatches, precision, and space — and demanded execution from every position group.
“Once Coach Vaughn took over as OC, my whole approach to the game changed,” Maye said at the time. “He challenged me to see the field differently, to anticipate everything before the snap. I thought I was prepared before, but he took it to another level.”
“We knew when we played UNC, it was going to be a track meet — but it was also going to be clean,” said one former ACC defensive coordinator.
“That offense was always two steps ahead pre-snap. We’d prep all week and still get caught flat-footed. I’d put a lot of that on Vaughn — his attention to detail was borderline obsessive.”
His detail-oriented style and locker room presence made him popular with players, while his brash media persona kept things interesting.
“He’s like a used car salesman that actually knows what he’s talking about,” said one UNC assistant with a laugh. “Coach Vaughn isn’t afraid to draw the spotlight — he’ll talk up his players, hype his scheme, and brush off the competition like it’s nothing. But here’s the thing: if it doesn’t work, he’s the first to own it. No excuses. He’ll take the heat, put his head down, and be in the film room all night figuring out how to fix it.”
“That’s why guys trusted him,” added Downs, now in the NFL. “As a WR coach he always had your back, even when you made mistakes. When he became OC, it was the same energy — just bigger. He’d hype you up in the media, then hold you accountable behind closed doors. You knew he’d fight for you, so you wanted to fight for him.”
When Bill Belichick took over in Chapel Hill in 2025, Vaughn was not retained. He turned down offers from Washington State and the CFL’s Winnipeg Blue Bombers, instead choosing to stay in the Carolinas — and wait for the right opportunity.
Now or Never in Conway
When Coastal Carolina unexpectedly parted ways with Tim Beck in April 2025, Athletic Director Chance Miller needed a spark. He didn’t just want a coach to stabilize things — he wanted someone bold enough to dream big.
Enter Vaughn.
“One thing that really drew me to Coastal is how young the program still is at the FBS level,” Vaughn said. “There’s a real opportunity here to build something from the ground up — to lay the foundation, set the standard, and leave behind a legacy that lasts.”
Vaughn’s brash confidence and his unapologetic “if you doubt me, we’ll just prove you wrong” swagger align perfectly with Coastal’s evolving identity. The Chanticleers aren’t here to play it safe. They thrive on being different — teal turf, mullets, and an underdog chip bigger than the Grand Strand. And with their rallying motto of “Ex Libertate Veritas” (From Freedom, Truth), there’s no mistaking the message from Conway: they’re giving Vaughn the freedom to run this program his way… as long as the results follow.
But not everyone is sold on the fit.
“This could be a boom-or-bust hire,” said one rival Sun Belt head coach. “Vaughn’s proven he can run an offense at the Power Five level, no question. But managing an entire program? That’s a different animal. His personality — that edge — it works great when you’re winning. But if they stumble out of the gate, that confidence could start sounding like noise to the players and the fans. If that happens? The Vaughn Era could be over before it gets off the ground.”
Miller isn’t flinching. Neither is Vaughn. For both, the stakes couldn’t be clearer: win now, or risk losing it all.
The Coastal Fit
Vaughn’s philosophy feels like it was tailor-made for Coastal’s brand: prepare like a machine, play with swagger, and never apologize for wanting to dominate.
“I don’t care what star rating you had in high school,” Vaughn told local media. “If you’re sharp, if you ball out in practice, and if you make plays when it matters — you’ll see the field. It’s that simple.”
Asked about the unique pressure of inheriting a team mid-spring without a multi-year deal, Vaughn smirked.
“You can’t wait around for the perfect opportunity,” he said. “Sometimes you get one shot, one opportunity to prove you belong — and if you don’t take it, it’s gone. As for pressure? Pressure either busts pipes or makes diamonds. And I don’t see any pipes.”
At Coastal, that kind of bravado isn’t just tolerated — it’s expected. The Chanticleers have built a reputation as college football’s lovable agitators, unafraid to ruffle feathers in the Sun Belt or beyond. And with Vaughn at the helm — a coach who’s already hinted at unfinished business with his alma mater in Boone — they’re not just embracing that identity. They’re doubling down on it.
Bottom Line
This hire isn’t safe. It isn’t conventional. But it’s Coastal Carolina through and through.
Kade Vaughn brings an unflinching belief in his process and his players — and isn’t afraid to let the college football world know about it. If it works, Coastal could become the Group of Five’s next powerhouse, a program built in Vaughn’s defiant image. If it doesn’t? The Chanticleers risk becoming the latest cautionary tale of a program betting too big on bravado.
For Vaughn and Coastal alike, there’s no middle ground. Boom or bust. Pressure or diamonds. Truth through freedom.