Mississippi keeps CFP run going with Sugar Bowl defeat of Georgia with Lane Kiffin nearby
- - Mississippi keeps CFP run going with Sugar Bowl defeat of Georgia with Lane Kiffin nearby
Blake Toppmeyer, USA TODAY January 1, 2026 at 8:56 PM
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NEW ORLEANS â Lane Kiffin held hands with Kim Mulkey at a womenâs basketball game while the football team he built for a rival school prepared to play its biggest game in program history.
Itâs all still a little surreal.
Ninety minutes before kickoff of a College Football Playoff quarterfinal against Georgia, Mississippi fans inside the Superdome roared in support of Pete Golding, Kiffinâs successor, as he headed toward the locker room.
Theyâve crowned their new king. He wins playoff games.
Eighty miles northwest of here on I-10, Mulkey grabbed Kiffinâs hand and thrust it into the air as if heâd won a magnificent prize â say, a $91 million contract from LSU. Kiffin's still never won a playoff game.
Too bad. Goldingâs won two.
As LSU fans feted Kiffin before a basketball game the Tigers would lose, the Ole Miss team he skipped town on prepared to receive the opening kickoff in a playoff game.
In the stands, some Rebels fans wore T-shirts with Kiffinâs name on it, and a four-letter word starting with âFâ in front of it.
Surreal, I tell you.
Nothing, though, could be more surreal than this: Ole Miss, the team Kiffin turned heel on, roared as fiercely as ever throughout a second-half rally against one of the best teams college football has to offer. The Rebels toppled Georgia with a last-minute field goal.
And surely none of the jubiliant Ole Miss fans among a crowd of 68,371 could wish for a turncoat holding a play sheet on the sideline and wearing his signature white hoodie.
Mississippi wide receiver Harrison Wallace III (2) tries to avoid the tackle of Georgia defensive back Kj Bolden (4) during the College Football Playoff quarterfinal at the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans,
So long to the renegade.
Golding is Mississippiâs hero now. He, and quarterback Trinidad Chambliss.
Who needs Kiffin, anyway? Not Ole Miss in this playoff.
Rebels 39, Georgia 34.
Improbable. Incredible. The stuff of fairytales.
Eat your heart out, Lane.
Golding sent Kirby Smart home a loser.
While Kiffin waited for the transfer portal to open, his former team heroically stormed to a stunning playoff upset.
The Rebels remain in hot pursuit of a national championship that seemed unfathomable after Kiffin vamoosed for the Oxford airport in November and boarded a flight bound for Baton Rouge.
The same fans that chanted Kiffinâs name two months ago sang a different tune after Ole Miss stole the lead from Georgia in the fourth quarter.
Letâs go Rebels! Letâs go Rebels! Letâs go Rebels!
A pro-Rebels crowd turned up the decibels inside the Superdome as Ole Miss slayed the SECâs champion.
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This teamâs got Kiffinâs fingerprints all over it, but Rebels fans who would rather not think about their former coach can choose to celebrate the quarterback at the joystick of this thrill ride.
Chambliss threw for 362 yards, including a few magical completions while on the run that made you think the Ole Miss offense would be dangerous no matter who stands on the sideline, so long as Chambliss could be its quarterback forever.
Georgia couldnât tackle what it couldnât catch. Time and again, Chambliss sprinted away from pass rushers and twirled out of trouble, extending plays until a receiver found open space and Chambliss tossed a completion to him.
Chamblissâ exploits allowed Ole Miss to recover from a two-score halftime deficit, and the Rebelsâ rally briefly sent Georgia into a fourth-quarter panic.
Trailing by three points with plenty of time remaining, Georgia went for fourth-and-2 from its own 33-yard line. Gunner Stockton got sacked. Chambliss returned to the field.
Minutes later, the Rebels were up by two scores. Ole Missâ replacement coach and its Division II transfer quarterback made Georgia freak out. Stranger than fiction, this Ole Miss season.
As the Rebelsâ lead swelled, Kiffin reshared a social media post about the transfer portal opening.
Simply surreal.
Of course, Georgia wouldnât go quietly. It used a two-score flurry to tie the game.
Time remained. Not much, but enough for Chambliss. His 47-yard strike put Ole Miss in range for a game-winning field goal off Lucas Carneiroâs right boot.
And you just had to wonder, as his winning kick sailed through the uprights, whether Kiffin was watching on TV in enemy territory. Probably. No matter.
The party was on inside the Superdome, where Chambliss and Golding celebrated a surreal triumph.
Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him at [email protected] and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Mississippi keeps CFP run going with Sugar Bowl defeat of Georgia
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