CLEVELAND, MS - Pete Golding sees the NCAA’s new eligibility setup as more than a paperwork change. For Ole Miss, he thinks it could open the door for freshmen to get on the field sooner and give the Rebels a better shot at keeping veteran talent in the building.
The NCAA has scrapped the old redshirt model in favor of a five-year, age-based eligibility rule, and Golding said July 9 before speaking to fans during the Rebel Road Trip at Grammy Museum that he likes what it means for coaches and players.
"I think it does help the players," Golding said July 9 before speaking to fans as part of the Rebel Road Trip at Grammy Museum. "You aren't picking and choosing when it's game five and all those type of things. And it makes our job a little easier based on the injury component and all that."
Under the new system, redshirt seasons are gone, and hardship waivers are now rare. Players get five years to use five seasons of athletic eligibility, with the clock starting when they enroll or the year after their 19th birthday, whichever comes first.
The change does not apply to athletes who have already finished their fourth season of college eligibility. Current players can decide whether to stay under the old rules or move to the new ones, which means Ole Miss quarterback Trinidad Chambliss is unaffected.
For Golding, the biggest immediate benefit is simple: he can stop treating talented freshmen like they’re made of glass. Under the old rule, players could appear in four games and still preserve a redshirt, but the fifth game changed everything. That forced coaches to ration snaps for young players who might have been ready for more.
Now, Golding can use his roster more freely, and that matters with a strong incoming class. Ole Miss has the No. 22 incoming recruiting class in the 247Sports Composite rankings, and Golding has singled out four-star edge rusher Landon Barnes, the No. 1 recruit in the class, along with four-star cornerback Dorian Barney, as players who could make a real impact.
"Obviously our focus was on our entire team, but I think the biggest improvements come from those 18-, 19-year-old kids that haven't been in a real nutrition program," Golding said after spring practice. "Haven't been in a real strength and conditioning program. I think they take the biggest steps the fastest."
The new rules could also help Ole Miss keep some older players around longer. Veterans who were headed into their senior season and had not redshirted now have an extra year of eligibility, and Golding said that could matter in 2027.
He pointed to the kind of conversations that happen in December and January, when players weigh the NFL against another season in college.
"I think the December and January conversations are real now based on where am I going to go in the draft, versus what's it going to look like when I come back," Golding said. "I think we'll be able to retain some players that normally you would have lost based on eligibility to come back and increase the value of their first contract."
Linebacker Suntarine Perkins is one possible example of a player who could benefit.
Golding was also asked about the NCAA’s tampering investigation tied to Clemson coach Dabo Swinney’s claim that Ole Miss violated rules in its recruitment of linebacker Luke Ferrelli.
"No (news), our compliance is handling all that," Golding said. "Everything has been turned in, so we're just focused on our team."
Ole Miss athletic director Keith Carter gave a similar update.
"No, still just kind of working through the process," Carter said.
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