The Commercial Appeal

Kiffin facing big challenge at Ole Miss

- Blake Toppmeyer

Lane Kiffin received a glimpse of the future on Saturday night in New Orleans – and the challenge it brings.

When Matt Corral went down with an apparent right ankle injury during the first quarter of the Sugar Bowl, it effectively ended this stage of the Kiffin era.

Kiffin said his “mind raced with a lot of thoughts” when he saw his star quarterbac­k on the turf in anguish.

One of my first thoughts: Well, this game is over.

I’m unconvince­d No. 8 Ole Miss would have defeated No. 6 Baylor with Corral. Without him, the Rebels had little chance. One of the nation’s best offenses became ill equipped to solve one of the nation’s best defenses. Baylor won 21-7.

After tying a program record with 10 victories this season, the Rebels head into a post-corral future marked by uncertaint­y. Namely, who will be the Rebels’ quarterbac­k in 2022?

This also marks a fork in the road of Kiffin’s tenure. He proved throughout his first two seasons at Ole Miss that he can cook when given ingredient­s. Now, Kiffin must show he also knows how to shop for them.

In other words, we know Kiffin can coach. But coaching a team and building and sustaining a program are different tasks, and Kiffin hasn’t proven he can do the latter – in part because he’s never remained at one place long enough to have the opportunit­y.

Sustaining success at Ole Miss will mark the tallest task of Kiffin’s career.

The Rebels aren’t strangers to good seasons. They capped the 2015 season in the Sugar Bowl after reaching the Peach Bowl the previous season. The 2003, 2008 and ’09 seasons ended in the Cotton Bowl. But prolonged success has escaped the Rebels’ grasp. Ole Miss last mounted back-to-back 10-win seasons in 1959-60.

Despite the Rebels’ success in Kiffin’s second season and a particular­ly active coaching carousel, the coach who has never been averse to changing jobs remains in Oxford. Ole Miss awarded Kiffin a raise and an extension, although Mississipp­i state law limits Kiffin’s contract to four years while several coaches at programs in other states reset the bar for contracts by inking 10-year deals in 2021.

Kiffin remaining in the Ole Miss saddle is good for the Rebels, and perhaps for Kiffin, as well. This is his chance to prove his staying power.

Doing so starts with Kiffin identifyin­g and developing his next quarterbac­k.

Freshman Luke Altmyer received his most extensive playing time of the season in relief of Corral.

Entering a high-stakes game against a menacing defense became Altmyer’s welcome-to-the-big-leagues moment. He flashed moments of promise, but his overall production – 15-of-28 passing with a touchdown and two intercepti­ons – suggested that handing him the reins might put Ole Miss in a flimsy position next season.

For now, Altmyer is the leading option.

You would think quarterbac­ks would see Corral’s two seasons of success – he’s a projected first-round NFL draft pick – in Ole Miss’ aggressive, up-tempo offense and line up to be his replacemen­t.

But the Rebels’ 2022 recruiting class does not include a single signature or commitment from a quarterbac­k. They’ve been quiet amid an active transfer market that includes the transfers of Spencer Rattler from Oklahoma to South Carolina; Quinn Ewers from Ohio State to Texas; Bo Nix from Auburn to Oregon; Kedon Slovis from Southern

Cal to Pittsburgh; and Dillon Gabriel from UCF to Oklahoma.

Ole Miss could have benefited from any of them.

The shelves aren’t empty. Oklahoma quarterbac­k Caleb Williams announced this week he’s entering the transfer portal.

While finding more quarterbac­k talent is Kiffin’s top offseason charge, a related task is ensuring this offensive system will remain potent following the exit of offensive coordinato­r Jeff Lebby, who left for the same role at Oklahoma.

Lebby, the son-in-law of former Baylor coach Art Briles, became an architect of Ole Miss’ Briles-like brand of offense.

The winds of change blow through Ole Miss, but its lead man remains. This is the intermissi­on before we learn whether Kiffin can supply a second act that is as good as the opening.

 ?? MATTHEW HINTON/AP ?? Mississipp­i coach Lane Kiffin argues a call during the Sugar Bowl against Baylor on Jan. 1 in New Orleans. Rebels quarterbac­k Matt Corral was injured in the first quarter of the game, which Baylor won 21-7.
MATTHEW HINTON/AP Mississipp­i coach Lane Kiffin argues a call during the Sugar Bowl against Baylor on Jan. 1 in New Orleans. Rebels quarterbac­k Matt Corral was injured in the first quarter of the game, which Baylor won 21-7.
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