Ole Miss Preseason Honors Just Added Another Twist To A Familiar Debate

As Ole Miss gears up for a promising season with a fresh coach and several standout players receiving preseason All-American honors, the conspicuous absence of Trinidad Chambliss raises questions.

Ole Miss entered its first season under head coach Pete Golding with a strong showing on the Phil Steele Preseason All-America Team, landing six players across four teams.

The Rebels placed two players on the first team, three on the third team, and one on the fourth. Phil Steele, the college football analyst behind the annual preseason preview that’s widely followed by experts and bettors, put together a list that gave Ole Miss plenty of representation - just not for Trinidad Chambliss.

Chambliss was not among the six Rebels honored, even though he appears on the cover of certain editions. The source says that absence could be tied to the ongoing trial while editing, or simply because Steele may not view the Rebel at that level yet.

The six Ole Miss players who did make the cut bring a wide range of production and resumes. One former Baylor Bear is now set for his Ole Miss role after posting 99 tackles as a junior at Baylor, including 62 solo stops. That same season also included seven tackles for loss, one sack, three pass breakups, one interception, and a fumble return for a touchdown.

Another Rebel is heading into his third season with 68 total tackles, five sacks for 15 lost yards, and five passes defended, and he has been showing up on lists all offseason. On the offensive side, Ole Miss has a lineman who started all 11 regular season games, earned SEC Offensive Lineman of the Week honors, and won the Kent Hull Trophy, which goes to the top collegiate offensive lineman in Mississippi.

The defense also features a player with 81 total tackles and four and a half sacks, plus five passes defended, one interception, three forced fumbles, and two fumble recoveries. In the kicking game, Ole Miss has the Sugar Bowl sweetheart, who did not miss an extra point and connected on only four field goals.

Then there’s the big-name back, the one everybody knows. He finished the 2025 season with 306 carries, 1,567 yards, and 24 rushing touchdowns, and his place atop the depth chart makes him one of the most important players on the roster.

Chambliss may have been on the cover, but he wasn’t on Steele’s list. That leaves him with another point to prove as he tries to show he belongs to the NCAA, Rebel Nation, the College Football Playoff, and now Steele.

In Other News...

Ole Miss Has An Early Camp Battle Fans Can't Ignore

Pete Golding is heading into his first full regular season with a secondary question that could shape Ole Miss long before September gets here. The Rebels brought in a 26th-ranked recruiting class nationally, and one of the more intriguing newcomers is a four-star freshman cornerback who has already created buzz as camp approaches. How quickly he adapts in summer work will determine whether he can force his way into the conversation for meaningful snaps.

Antonio Kite is the veteran name in the mix, and his experience gives Ole Miss a real baseline at the position. Still, fall camp has a way of changing those conversations fast, especially when a talented young defender starts flashing early. For Golding, the challenge is simple enough to say and hard enough to solve: figure out whether the upside of the freshman can make this one of the most interesting battles on the roster. [Read more 🡒]

Ole Miss Ranked Its Best Classes Since 2020 And Fans Will Debate No. 1

Ole Miss has spent the last few recruiting cycles trying to find the right balance between landing high school talent and patching holes with the transfer portal, and the review of its classes since 2020 shows why that mix has mattered so much. The 2025 group stands out for both size and upside, with a top-15 national finish, one five-star and 14 four-stars, and a cluster of names that should keep showing up around the program for a while, from Caleb Cunningham and Devin Harper to Corey Adams Jr., Maison Dunn, Shekai Mills-Knight and Trinidad Chambliss.

The bigger takeaway is how these classes have shaped the Rebels' rise in recent years, whether it was Quinshon Judkins giving immediate punch out of the backfield, Jaxson Dart stabilizing the offense after arriving from USC, or Pete Golding's first full cycle helping stock the defense with players expected to contribute quickly. The 2023 and 2024 hauls brought their own intrigue too, especially with Suntarine Perkins flashing early and the portal-heavy approach changing the look of the roster, which is why the debate over where this latest class belongs is likely to linger even after the rankings settle. [Read more 🡒]