USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Lane Kiffin finally gets signature win at Ole Miss in epic shootout

- Blake Toppmeyer

OXFORD, Miss. – A record crowd clad in red turned up the noise in the fourth quarter.

All night, LSU’s Jayden Daniels had gutted the Ole Miss defense and left it for bones, but in this high-scoring, highdrama affair, the Rebels needed one stop – just one third-down stop – to give themselves a chance for the biggest win in Lane Kiffin’s tenure.

The fans sensed the moment. They brought the decibels. Ashanti Cistrunk brought the heat. Cistrunk sacked the slippery Daniels to force possession to Ole Miss.

That’s all these Rebels needed. One big stop to put the ball back in Jaxson Dart’s hands. The quarterbac­k took care of the rest. His 13-yard touchdown to Tre Harris in the final minute lit ablaze all that preseason hype for LSU and got the monkey off Kiffin’s back. So good, Dart was.

So good, in fact, that he, Harris and Quinshon Judkins caulked the fissures in the Ole Miss defense to deliver a 55-49 upset of then-No. 12 LSU on Sept. 30 at

Vaught-Hemingway Stadium.

When Daniels’ final pass into the end zone fell incomplete, Rebels fans poured over the walls, pulled out their cellphones and recorded the celebratio­n.

What a win for No. 20 Ole Miss, which moved up to No. 15. What a blur of offense.

Thriller doesn’t even begin to describe this one.

Kiffin leaped with joy after a first-half touchdown. He pumped his fist after Ole Miss’ final trip across the goal line. And, I imagine, he felt some relief when the scoreboard clock finally hit zero.

No more can I write how Kiffin’s biggest win came nearly three years ago against Indiana. Landing a September knockout punch on rival LSU (3-2, 2-1 SEC), a once-trendy College Football Playoff dark horse? Yeah, this trumps beating the Hoosiers.

And this extinguish­es any heat on Kiffin, who had been 1-5 in his previous six SEC games.

These teams combined for 760 yards in the first half alone. By the end: 1,348 yards of combined offense.

Even after Ole Miss (4-1, 1-1) took the lead with 39 seconds left, Daniels fasttracke­d the Tigers to the Rebels’ 16-yard line. Time ran out on the Tigers, and the SEC West race just gained an extra helping of intrigue.

Dart and Daniels traded completion­s and touchdowns as if they were on a quest to ensure the Pac-12 doesn’t claim all of the representa­tion at the Heisman Trophy ceremony in New York.

These quarterbac­ks totaled 952 yards of offense. The Rebels needed every inch of what Dart supplied.

After Kiffin brought in two talented transfer quarterbac­ks in the offseason, Dart improved. This win is a testament to Dart standing tall amid the extra competitio­n.

He kept firing completion­s into gaping holes in LSU’s secondary. When that wouldn’t do, he’d take off on designed runs or quarterbac­k scrambles. He received an assist from Judkins. Ole Miss’ star running back had been silent for four weeks, but his talents reappeared against LSU’s infirm defense.

Ole Miss’ defense played like a liability for most of the night. The tightrope is a dangerous place to take up residence, and Kiffins’ Rebels shoved the Tigers off that high wire.

 ?? THOMAS GRANING/AP ?? Mississipp­i QB Jaxson Dart, center, celebrates with offensive lineman Caleb Warren, right, last Saturday.
THOMAS GRANING/AP Mississipp­i QB Jaxson Dart, center, celebrates with offensive lineman Caleb Warren, right, last Saturday.

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