If you're in the home-buying market in Baton Rouge, La., former LSU coach Les Miles may have the pad for you.

According to The Advocate, Miles recently put his 4,375-square-foot mansion on the market for just under $1.5 million, a modern domain featuring four bedrooms, five bathrooms and a cabana courtyard.

After the recent move to Lawrence, Kansas, where he'll coach the Jayhawks next season, Miles is parting with the place he has called home since 2016.

Photos are courtesy of Trulia.com, which is handling the listing for Miles:

The home within "The Settlement at Willow Grove" community has been deemed magazine-worthy, according to The Advocate.

Miles in inheriting a Kansas program that has fallen on hard times since appearing in the Orange Bowl a decade ago. He'll recruit with fervor for the Jayhawks, a team that has been a few players away for several seasons.

"We're going to recruit with honesty and integrity. We're going to walk into a home and we're going to tell a young man, let's talk about your major," Miles said after being introduced in November. "What's your, what do you want to study? And then we're going to talk to him about an opportunity to play. What's your opportunity like? We want to show you that this guy's going to graduate and this guy's going to graduate and we're playing the style of ball that you would enjoy and have fun in and prosper and very possibly play in the NFL. But we're going to approach that aggressively and look forward to having a great recruiting class.

"This to me, this place is a recruiting class or two away from being a very special football team. So I watched that Oklahoma game and that Oklahoma game, in the first half, that Kansas team was wearing them out. And then after they got into the second half the Kansas team got tired, so we have to bolster some very quality backups."

Moving to the Big 12 could result in a philosophical switch offensively for Miles, who utilized a ground-and-pound physical approach at LSU. He hired Auburn's Chip Lindsey as his OC, but he left the Jayhawks for the head job at Troy on Jan 10.

A college football analyst since his time on the sideline, Miles has paid close attention to the Big 12's pass-happy schemes.

"I think the opportunity to have balance and the ability to run it when you need to run it and throw it when you need to throw it is paramount to success in that league," he said. "But what's happened is they have gone to stop the run in that league and everybody's just chucking the ball down the field. So, I think a little bit of ball security and a little bit of controlling the tempo and the game clock will certainly benefit us."