UCF head football coach Scott Frost filed a lawsuit against his alma mater and former employer, the University of Nebraska, on Dec 12.
UCF head football coach Scott Frost’s relationship with his former employer just got, well, frostier.
On Friday, Dec. 12, Frost filed a lawsuit against the University of Nebraska’s board of regents. The complaint, which went to the district court of Lancaster County, Nebraska, claims the coach was hit with a major tax bill for money he never received after the Cornhuskers fired him on Sept. 11, 2022.
Frost, a Lincoln native, won a national championship as Nebraska’s starting quarterback in 1997. He returned as head coach before the 2018 season, viewed as the program savior. Instead, he slumped to 16-31 across four-plus seasons. Frost was relieved of his duties following a midseason upset loss to Georgia Southern.
In December 2022, Frost alleges the school told him it would include the value of his 2025 and 2026 buyout payments on his W-2 form for that year.
The move was wrong, Frost says, and it created a $1.72 million income tax liability on money he never saw. The filing says an IRS audit supports Frost’s claims.
He also contends the payments were guaranteed and could not be reduced, offset or forfeited. But in the same email that the school informed Frost of its intentions to include the payments, it stated they could be adjusted without explanation, according to the filing.
Frost seeks at least $5 million in damages and wants the court to rule the offset provision in his contract expired Dec. 31, 2024, the same day he says his employment would have ended.
The filing states Frost previously sought to address the matter with the university.
“But the productive dialogue never occurred,” it says. “Overtures from Coach Frost to the University were ignored and meetings were delayed until they were cancelled. The University was uncooperative, dismissive and refused to acknowledge or correct the confusion and harm it had caused.”
The complaint adds: “Coach Frost seeks this relief as a last resort and after years of attempting to navigate (unsuccessfully) the problems created for him by the University, which began only months after he was terminated.”
The 50-year-old coach just finished the first season of his second stint with the Knights.
His team’s performance during his first go-around in Orlando — a 19-7 record in 2016 and 2017, including a 13-0 second season — helped him land the Nebraska job. Between his time with the Cornhuskers and his return to UCF, he spent the 2024 campaign in the NFL as an analyst with the Los Angeles Rams.
UCF went 5-7 in 2025.
This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: UCF Knights football coach Scott Frost files lawsuit vs. Nebraska
Category: General Sports