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Wetzel: Kiffin will regret quitting on Ole Miss
Posted on 11/19/25 at 12:57 pm
Posted on 11/19/25 at 12:57 pm
Good view from Dan Wetzel ESPN Lane Kiffin will always regret it if he quits on his Ole Miss team.
He'll always have remorse if he decides to go take another job -- Florida or LSU -- right on the verge of leading a likely 11-1 Rebels team into the College Football Playoff. He'll never live down the fact he turned his back on a locker room ready to fight with him for a national title -- all for the perceived greener grass of Gainesville or Baton Rouge.
What kind of coach would do that?
This has nothing to do with what job offers more advantages or money or proximity to talent. It has nothing to do with the long term.
Timing is everything in life. Sometimes for the positive, sometimes not. That's how it works. Adults deal with it.
Kiffin may be free to walk from the Rebels, but everyone else is free to judge him if he does.
If he does, that judgment won't be positive.
Kiffin, 50, knows drama and setbacks. USC fired him at an airport. Nick Saban bounced him as an Alabama assistant just days before a national title game, convinced he was too focused on his next job as the coach at Florida Atlantic. Al Davis dumped him from the Oakland Raiders and declared he had been "conned" into hiring him in the first place.
Kiffin also knows he has rebuilt his reputation, especially of late in Oxford. A better coach. A better father. A better person. When not discussing football, he talks about how balanced, sober and happy his life has become.
"The whole good old days ... I'm in them right now," Kiffin said Saturday after defeating, coincidentally, Florida. "I just think people don't realize when they're in them. And then they get older and they say, 'Remember that it was great back then?' You know, I'm just fortunate to be in them."
Ole Miss is 10-1 heading into next week's season finale against Mississippi State. The Rebels are primed to host a first-round playoff game, which would arguably be the biggest sporting event in the history of the state. That alone is a seminal moment for a school that has granted its coach every wish it could.
His success has made him a coveted coaching candidate, with two big-time programs seemingly willing to do anything to get him -- including ignoring the fact that they are hiring a guy who would walk out on the eve of the postseason.
In a perfect world, this decision would take place after the Ole Miss season. That isn't how the calendar works, though. UF and LSU need a coach. Returning talent needs to be convinced to stay. Recruits need to be identified.
The high school signing period begins on Dec. 3. The transfer portal opens on Jan. 2.
Ole Miss' first-round playoff game would occur on Dec. 19 or 20. Win, as Ole Miss would be favored to do, and the quarterfinals are on New Year's Eve or New Year's Day.
For Kiffin, it's either stay or go. There is no time to do both. Pledge your allegiance to Ole Miss or walk out and start anew. The former might cost him an opportunity that he always wanted. The latter, however, would define him.
The coach who quit on a playoff team? It's unthinkable.
Kiffin isn't saying much, other than general comments about how happy he is at Ole Miss.
"We're having a blast," Kiffin said Tuesday on "The Pat McAfee Show." Adding, "I love it here."
That said, members of Kiffin's family -- including ex-wife Layla and son Knox, a high school sophomore -- visited Gainesville and Baton Rouge in recent days, ESPN and others reported. Kiffin says Ole Miss hasn't given him an ultimatum timeline, but there is no time like the present to make a decision.
Kiffin should stay and see the season out; attempt to win, try to reach the Final Four or beyond, make the memories, and forge the deep bonds that coaching is supposed to be about.
This has nothing to do with the quality of the opportunity at LSU or Florida. Both schools offer immense resources, commitment and potential. Both sit in talent-rich states. Both have advantages that Ole Miss can't match, although here in the NIL/portal/revenue share era, the gap has closed.
In different circumstances, he could go; maybe he even should go.
Not in these circumstances, though. Not at this time. Not with a team this good, at a school this supportive, in a season this magical.
Certainly not without causing everyone to wonder if Al Davis was right all along.
He'll always have remorse if he decides to go take another job -- Florida or LSU -- right on the verge of leading a likely 11-1 Rebels team into the College Football Playoff. He'll never live down the fact he turned his back on a locker room ready to fight with him for a national title -- all for the perceived greener grass of Gainesville or Baton Rouge.
What kind of coach would do that?
This has nothing to do with what job offers more advantages or money or proximity to talent. It has nothing to do with the long term.
Timing is everything in life. Sometimes for the positive, sometimes not. That's how it works. Adults deal with it.
Kiffin may be free to walk from the Rebels, but everyone else is free to judge him if he does.
If he does, that judgment won't be positive.
Kiffin, 50, knows drama and setbacks. USC fired him at an airport. Nick Saban bounced him as an Alabama assistant just days before a national title game, convinced he was too focused on his next job as the coach at Florida Atlantic. Al Davis dumped him from the Oakland Raiders and declared he had been "conned" into hiring him in the first place.
Kiffin also knows he has rebuilt his reputation, especially of late in Oxford. A better coach. A better father. A better person. When not discussing football, he talks about how balanced, sober and happy his life has become.
"The whole good old days ... I'm in them right now," Kiffin said Saturday after defeating, coincidentally, Florida. "I just think people don't realize when they're in them. And then they get older and they say, 'Remember that it was great back then?' You know, I'm just fortunate to be in them."
Ole Miss is 10-1 heading into next week's season finale against Mississippi State. The Rebels are primed to host a first-round playoff game, which would arguably be the biggest sporting event in the history of the state. That alone is a seminal moment for a school that has granted its coach every wish it could.
His success has made him a coveted coaching candidate, with two big-time programs seemingly willing to do anything to get him -- including ignoring the fact that they are hiring a guy who would walk out on the eve of the postseason.
In a perfect world, this decision would take place after the Ole Miss season. That isn't how the calendar works, though. UF and LSU need a coach. Returning talent needs to be convinced to stay. Recruits need to be identified.
The high school signing period begins on Dec. 3. The transfer portal opens on Jan. 2.
Ole Miss' first-round playoff game would occur on Dec. 19 or 20. Win, as Ole Miss would be favored to do, and the quarterfinals are on New Year's Eve or New Year's Day.
For Kiffin, it's either stay or go. There is no time to do both. Pledge your allegiance to Ole Miss or walk out and start anew. The former might cost him an opportunity that he always wanted. The latter, however, would define him.
The coach who quit on a playoff team? It's unthinkable.
Kiffin isn't saying much, other than general comments about how happy he is at Ole Miss.
"We're having a blast," Kiffin said Tuesday on "The Pat McAfee Show." Adding, "I love it here."
That said, members of Kiffin's family -- including ex-wife Layla and son Knox, a high school sophomore -- visited Gainesville and Baton Rouge in recent days, ESPN and others reported. Kiffin says Ole Miss hasn't given him an ultimatum timeline, but there is no time like the present to make a decision.
Kiffin should stay and see the season out; attempt to win, try to reach the Final Four or beyond, make the memories, and forge the deep bonds that coaching is supposed to be about.
This has nothing to do with the quality of the opportunity at LSU or Florida. Both schools offer immense resources, commitment and potential. Both sit in talent-rich states. Both have advantages that Ole Miss can't match, although here in the NIL/portal/revenue share era, the gap has closed.
In different circumstances, he could go; maybe he even should go.
Not in these circumstances, though. Not at this time. Not with a team this good, at a school this supportive, in a season this magical.
Certainly not without causing everyone to wonder if Al Davis was right all along.
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:00 pm to tiger375
OM will always be 2003 SEC West Co-Champs
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:02 pm to tiger375
Ole Miss has to retain Kiffin no matter the cost. It’s twofold. They need a good coach, and they can’t risk the optics of losing him. It would be an absolute disaster.
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:02 pm to tiger375
Ole Miss is to Kiffin what LSU is to Saban
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:04 pm to tiger375
Wetzel or Wolken who cries more daily?
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:07 pm to Wabbit7
I get what he is saying but this is a different era. In an age where players don't have the same commitment to the school and program and can jump from school to school to try and better their situation then why can't the coach jump and opt out rest of season for what he feels is a better career opportunity.
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:14 pm to tiger375
Why he needs to quit? He can sign a contract stating he will leave after he is done with playoffs.
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:14 pm to tiger375
Media really does not want Kiffin at LSU.
That makes me want Kiffin at LSU even more.
That makes me want Kiffin at LSU even more.
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:14 pm to tiger375
He’d regret not taking LSU too.
He wouldn’t regret anything if he won a championship at LSU.
The previous coach left a team competing for a Natty that realistically had no chance.
He wouldn’t regret anything if he won a championship at LSU.
The previous coach left a team competing for a Natty that realistically had no chance.
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:19 pm to tiger375
The guy is a nomad, and I’m not sure championships motivate him as much as a new adventure. He wouldn’t even stick around an extra couple weeks to collect a NC ring with Bama before taking over FAU.
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:20 pm to lsuconnman
quote:
He wouldn’t even stick around an extra couple weeks to collect a NC ring with Bama before taking over FAU.
don't think that was by choice was it?
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:22 pm to 777Tiger
Just look at Brian Kelly. I bet he regrets leaving Notre Dame right about now.
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:23 pm to tiger375
Everyone knows Kiffin wants to finish the season with this team and go from there. If Ole Miss is not willing to wait it’s their fault.
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:24 pm to IrishDave
quote:
I bet he regrets leaving Notre Dame right about now.
I really doubt it, turns out he's just a lazy old con man and our PTB should feel embarrassed to have been duped by him
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:25 pm to tiger375
quote:
Certainly not without causing everyone to wonder if Al Davis was right all along.
Are you on drugs?
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:26 pm to tiger375
Lane K has NOT left Oxford to visit anyone! This is moronic. He has done nothing. The only people doing anything are these reporters who have nothing to od other than stir shite.
They need readers. So they write fake arse stories to get morons like you to read, believe, and forward......for more readers.
Quit being a bitch
They need readers. So they write fake arse stories to get morons like you to read, believe, and forward......for more readers.
Quit being a bitch
Posted on 11/19/25 at 1:26 pm to tiger375
You can tell Wetzel that premier jobs in the SEC, i.e.LSU, UF, UGA, Gump don’t come open but every once in a while. If he passes on the opportunity now, next time one comes open, he may be looked at for it.
Also, nobody is going after someone with a losing record, so to bring up the “going to the playoffs” is ridiculous.
Also, nobody is going after someone with a losing record, so to bring up the “going to the playoffs” is ridiculous.
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