Trinidad Chambliss didn’t need long to get to the point about Lane Kiffin. After working through the questions about Kiffin’s Vanity Fair comments from last spring, the Ole Miss quarterback shifted to what he knows best: football, and the way Kiffin sees it.
At the Manning Passing Academy last week in Thibodaux, Chambliss made it clear that one season under Kiffin left a strong mark. Kiffin coached him only in 2025, his final year at Ole Miss before taking over at LSU, but Chambliss said that was enough to appreciate what separates him.
“He knows his X’s and O’s,” Chambliss said during interviews last Friday in Thibodaux. “Kiffin has been in the coaching game for a while. He sees things other coaches really can’t see, which I give him props for.”
Chambliss transferred from Division II Ferris State and ended up helping power one of the biggest seasons in Ole Miss history. He finished No. 3 in the nation in passing yards with 3,937, added 22 touchdown passes, and also ran for 527 yards on 133 carries with eight touchdowns as the Rebels went 13-2 overall and 7-1 in the Southeastern Conference and reached the College Football Playoff semifinals.
What stuck with Chambliss was the way Kiffin could dissect a play almost immediately, sometimes in a way that felt completely different from what the quarterback had just seen unfold.
“I’d be like, ‘Dang, how did you see that?'” Chambliss said.
“Or he’d say, ‘That’s a really good concept. Let’s draw it on the board.’
He’s really keen on that. He’s really good at coaching football.”
The two are set to cross paths again on the field when LSU visits Ole Miss in Oxford on Sept. 19 at 6:30 p.m. on ABC. Chambliss said he’s trying to keep the moment from becoming bigger than the game itself, even if everyone around him is making sure it doesn’t stay that way.
“You try to make it seem as regular as you can,” Chambliss said. “But seeing people talk about it on social media, and people stopping me in public and saying, ‘You looking forward to the LSU game?’
It’s the hot topic right now. It’s hard to make it something kind of regular.
Yeah, it’s going to be a really fun time in Oxford. That’s obviously one of our rivals to begin with.
Just trying to go 1-0 in that game.”
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LSU Awaits A Massive Recruiting Answer On Its Future Secondary
LSUs summer recruiting push is coming to a head with a cluster of defensive back decisions set to land on the same day, giving the Tigers a chance to clarify what their future secondary might look like. The group includes Louisiana safety Jayden Anding, North Carolina safety Davion Jones and Texas standout Karnell "Greedy" James, a trio that has been on LSUs radar as it tries to keep building out the back end with regional talent and a national reach.
Andings timetable has already shifted into July 2, while Jones has gone through official visits to multiple finalists and is still drawing LSU interest despite a lean toward South Carolina. James remains the biggest swing piece in the mix, with LSU continuing to press for one of its top defensive back targets as the Tigers wait for the answers that could shape the class and, eventually, the depth chart behind it. [Read more 🡒]
