Lane Kiffin arrives at LSU with the kind of buzz that can swallow a program whole, but not everyone is buying the idea that his first season in Baton Rouge will be smooth. College football analyst Glenn Guilbeau thinks the Tigers may have to grind through some early turbulence before anything starts to click.
Speaking on “The Paul Finebaum Show,” Guilbeau pointed to the schedule and the adjustment period that comes with a new coach taking over a major SEC job.
“There’s going to be a while where he has to kind of figure the team out,” Guilbeau said. “They have five SEC road games for the first time ever.
Tennessee might be really good. Ole Miss is going to come.
I mean, he left a great team at Ole Miss, so that’s going to be a difficult game. And they have Texas at home, they have Clemson at home, so they could be really good, but have a few losses”
That warning lands at a moment when LSU fans are eager for a fast reset after the Brian Kelly era and are expecting Kiffin to deliver right away. But Guilbeau’s view is that a College Football Playoff berth in Year 1 is probably too much to ask.
The hire itself has already made Kiffin one of the most polarizing names in the latest college football coaching cycle. LSU went hard after him, pulling him away from SEC rival Ole Miss, and that alone has raised the temperature around the program.
There’s no question Kiffin’s track record at Ole Miss gives LSU reason for optimism. He proved he can build a winning operation in the SEC. Still, the spotlight will be brutal from the jump, especially after leaving Oxford for one of the sport’s biggest brands.
And Kiffin’s past will follow him. He has had issues at previous stops, and late Raiders owner Al Davis once called him a “professional liar” and a “con-man.”
That history means any stumble at LSU will be magnified fast. A strong start could quiet plenty of noise.
A rough one would bring the old questions roaring back. Either way, this is shaping up to be one of the most closely watched seasons in the sport.
In Other News...
Pete Golding Sees One Big Ole Miss Edge In NCAA Change
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For the Rebels, the biggest upside may be in how freely they can use gifted freshmen without feeling like every snap comes with a long-term cost. It also could help Ole Miss hold onto experienced players a little longer, since the extra eligibility gives coaches more room to think beyond the immediate season and into future roster planning. [Read more 🡒]
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Now comes the harder part: proving it was not a one-off. Ole Miss enters the 2026 season with a strong transfer portal position, but Goldings first full year also brings a demanding schedule and the kind of road tests that quickly reveal whether a breakthrough has real staying power. The Rebels have already shown they can reach places the program had not visited in decades, and the next step is finding out whether they can stay there. [Read more 🡒]
Ole Miss Has One Unit That Could Decide Everything This Season
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The Rebels did not stop there, either, bringing in two tackles through the transfer portal in Carius Curne and Terez Davis to help shore up the edges. For a team trying to build around physicality and balance, that combination of continuity and new blood gives this unit a chance to shape the whole season. The only real question now is how quickly the newcomers settle in, because the answer could determine just how far this offense can go. [Read more 🡒]
