Ole Miss is changing the faces in the building, but not the identity of the offense.
That was the message from Trinidad Chambliss when he spoke about the Rebels’ new offensive coordinator, John David Baker, during his time at the Manning Passing Academy. The quarterback said the transition has been smoother than a full overhaul might suggest.
"Coach JDB and coach (Joe) Judge have done a great job. It's the same offense as last year, just new terminology, and adding those guys like Deuce (Knight) and Walker Howard, they just bring a lot of energy to the room," Chambliss said.
That matters for an Ole Miss program trying to keep rolling after a College Football Playoff semifinal appearance while entering a new chapter under head coach Pete Golding. Golding is set to coach his first regular season games this year, after being pushed into the job before the CFP last season following Lane Kiffin's departure.
The Rebels still have enough talent to chase another postseason run, and Chambliss remains the centerpiece after bursting onto the national scene last season. At the Manning Passing Academy, he fielded questions from the media, including Matt DeGregorio of WLOX, about what has changed around him.
The biggest additions are in the quarterback room. Deuce Knight, a redshirt freshman formerly of the Auburn Tigers, arrived with a chance to become the future of the offense. He did not see much action at Auburn last season, but a year of learning behind Chambliss and under this staff could put him in position to lead Ole Miss in 2027.
Walker Howard is another important piece in that room. The senior has already taken a winding path through college football, spending 2025 with the Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns and also having stints with LSU and Ole Miss in 2023 and 2024. His return gives the Rebels an experienced voice alongside a younger talent like Knight.
For Chambliss, though, the main point is simple: the system itself is staying familiar. The terminology may be different, but the structure remains intact, and that continuity gives Ole Miss a real chance to avoid starting from scratch on offense.
In other words, the Rebels may have new names calling the shots, but they are not tearing the thing down and rebuilding it from the ground up.
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DeWayne Brown, Terrence Hill Jr., Campbell Duncan and Tyler Lundblade have all stood out in that regard, giving Tennessee a few different personalities to lean on as the group continues to mesh before the break around the Fourth of July. Hill has looked comfortable in the system, Brown has taken on a bigger leadership role, and the early response from that core gives Barnes a first glimpse at how the Vols may organize themselves once the pace picks back up. [Read more 🡒]
