COLUMN: Lane Kiffin Called His Shot; Now Pete Golding and Ole Miss Get the Final Laugh

OXFORD, Miss. —
Lane Kiffin has always loved calling his shot. Sometimes it’s on fourth-and-forever. Sometimes it’s on social media. And sometimes it’s by packing his bags the moment things start to feel a little too comfortable.

This time, though, the shot he called didn’t land the way he planned.

Because when Kiffin walked out of Oxford, it wasn’t Ole Miss that flinched. It was Ole Miss that swung back — and connected.

The Rebels didn’t fold. They didn’t spiral. They didn’t spend December doom-scrolling message boards or rewriting the narrative. Instead, they rallied, locked arms and promptly went on a postseason run that made one thing abundantly clear: this program was never as fragile as the outside world assumed.

Lane left. Ole Miss stayed standing. And somehow, that’s when things really took off.


Enter Pete Golding, Stage Left

If this feels like a plot twist, that’s because college football rarely gives you one this satisfying.

Pete Golding, long viewed nationally through the narrow lens of his Alabama tenure as a recruiting guru and third-down apologist, stepped into the head coaching role and immediately did the one thing Ole Miss fans cared about most: he won. Not quietly. Not nervously. He won with conviction.

Two games in, two postseason wins, and a locker room that looked anything but lost.

Golding didn’t need a honeymoon period. He didn’t need time to “install culture.” He already had it. For years, he was Ole Miss’ primary recruiter, the connective tissue between the staff and the roster. When the moment came, the players didn’t need convincing — they needed direction.

They got it.

Ole Miss played fast, physical and fearless, executing a game plan that felt more calculated than chaotic. According to tracking metrics, the Rebels consistently won early downs, controlled time of possession and limited explosive mistakes — hallmarks of a team that knows exactly who it is.

That doesn’t happen when a program is in disarray. That happens when it’s unified.


Trinidad Chambliss and Kewan Lacy: Island Time, SEC Speed

If Golding provided the backbone, quarterback Trinidad Chambliss and running back Kewan Lacy supplied the electricity.

Chambliss was calm when it mattered most, delivering throws with touch and timing while avoiding the back-breaking mistake. Advanced stats show Ole Miss finishing its postseason run among the leaders in third-down efficiency and red-zone scoring, a direct reflection of quarterback poise.

And then there was Lacy — violent between the tackles, decisive in space and relentless late in games. When Ole Miss needed to bleed a clock or flip field position, Lacy obliged. Defensive fronts wore down. Tackles got sloppy. Ole Miss pulled away.

Both players announced they’re coming back next season, doing so with a message that resonated far beyond the stat sheet: they love Ole Miss. They believe in this place. And they’re not done.

Play the damn tune. Trinidad, Trinidad, throw another dime. Life is good in Oxford, without Lane Kiffin’s shine.

Oh, and then there’s that Lacy guy.

LSWho?


Don’t Forget the Kicker (Seriously)

Every great run needs a kicker who doesn’t blink.

Lucas Carneiro was perfect when it mattered most, drilling kicks in pressure moments and turning drives into points. Ole Miss left no points on the field in the postseason — a detail that rarely gets headlines but often decides outcomes.

Championship-caliber teams don’t just score touchdowns. They take the free points. Carneiro made sure they did.


Coaching Matters (Ask Baton Rouge)

This wasn’t just players playing free. This was a staff cooking.

Charlie Weis Jr. deserves his flowers. The offensive game plans were sharp, varied and ruthless, blending tempo with balance and forcing defenses to declare early. Ole Miss consistently exploited matchups, and it showed.

Half the offensive booth reportedly heading to Baton Rouge only adds to the irony. LSU may have thought it was shopping. Ole Miss already knew it had talent in-house.


About That Guy Who Left

Now for the uncomfortable part.

Lane Kiffin was finally loved somewhere. Fully embraced. Meme’d, defended, excused and celebrated. And the moment it felt like home, he left again — this time watching from afar as the program he departed immediately found its footing.

Ole Miss didn’t burn his jerseys. It just moved on.

And LSU? Well, LSU caught a few strays in the process — deservedly so. While Baton Rouge chased splash and spectacle, Oxford doubled down on cohesion and execution.

One program looks settled. The other looks like it’s still refreshing its mentions.


The Last Laugh

Maybe Ole Miss is the second-best story of the postseason, behind Curt Cignetti dragging an 8% blue-chip roster to national relevance. Or maybe — depending on your sense of humor — it’s the best story of all.

Because this one came with a twist.

The Rebels lost their head coach. Won anyway. Avenged their lone setback. Kept their stars. Found their voice. And proved that what Lane Kiffin helped build was sturdier than his exit suggested.

You called your shot, Lane.

Ole Miss just hit the walk-off.

Life is good in Oxford. Island time, SEC style. And Pete Golding’s players? They’re not going anywhere.

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Jackson Fryburger