In case anyone needed a lower opinion of LSU head football coach Lane Kiffin than they already have, he just gave another reason to add to the list.
The controversial playcaller is in the news this week for comments he gave during a wide-ranging Vanity Fair interview about his life and career. The story notably included a focus on Kiffin’s decision to abandon his Ole Miss Rebels right before the 2025 playoffs to take the high-paying head coaching job at LSU.
The part of Kiffin’s comments that are generating outrage (and rightly so) is when he discussed some of the factors that pushed him toward LSU and away from Ole Miss. After citing a greater availability of financial resources for the football program at LSU, the longtime coach suggested that Ole Miss has a supposed racism problem — one which he claimed is making it harder for the Rebels to recruit talented players to the team.
“Kiffin also seems willing to indirectly invoke Ole Miss’s struggle to distance itself from symbols like the Confederate flag, Colonel Rebel, and the nickname ‘Ole Miss’ itself,” the article reads.
The piece’s author goes on to quote Kiffin, who detailed alleged feedback he got from prospective nonwhite recruits about the atmosphere in Oxford and contrasted it with the greater “diversity” at LSU.
“When he was coaching there, Kiffin says, top recruits would tell him, ‘”Hey, coach, we really like you. But my grandparents aren’t letting me move to Oxford, Mississippi.” That doesn’t come up when you say Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Parents were sitting here this weekend saying the campus’s diversity feels so great: “It feels like there’s no segregation. And we want that for our kid because that’s the real world.”‘”
The LSU coach later attempted to massage his comments after the fact by saying he “apologize[s] if anybody at Ole Miss or in Mississippi was offended by that.” He separately added in a statement to Vanity Fair, “I just hope [my comment] comes across respectful to Ole Miss … There are some things that I’m saying that are factual, they’re not shots.”
Kiffin’s commentary is dumb for several reasons.
For starters, it’s repulsive — for Kiffin or anyone else — to suggest that white Mississippians hold racist beliefs about nonwhite people simply by nature of being Mississippians. Contrary to popular leftist belief, that’s not how the world works.
Secondly, if Kiffin bothered to stick his head in a book instead of his own rear, he might learn that his little “cry racism” routine is totally nonsensical.
Both Mississippi and Louisiana were part of the Confederacy. What’s more is that the LSU Tigers — the team Kiffin now coaches — derives its nickname from a Confederate regiment that fought in the Civil War.
So, under Kiffin’s logic (if one could even call it that), black players aren’t comfortable playing at a Southern school like Ole Miss because of perceived ties to the Confederacy but are fine playing at LSU, which also resides in the South and whose moniker is inspired by a Confederate regiment. It’s no wonder Kiffin has been getting dragged on social media for such stupidity.
But the truth is that there is no number of smears or moronic remarks Kiffin can make that will distract from the main issue. That is, his willingness to abandon his Ole Miss team when they needed him the most. What he did was flat-out unethical and wrong, and his former players deserved better.
As I previously wrote in these pages, like many within his industry, Kiffin is a symptom of the moral rot that has come to plague college sports. His abandonment of the Rebels right before their playoff run was nothing short of classless and further proof of that reality.
Ole Miss and their fanbase shouldn’t fret, however. Based off Kiffin’s recent interview and conduct, it’s safe to say they’re better off without him.







