NIL

Lane Kiffin Just Torched Ole Miss and High School Athletes Will Pay the Price

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Lane Kiffin didn’t just walk out on Ole Miss this week — in my opinion, he detonated his reputation, undermined his players, and reminded all of us why college football desperately needs leadership, accountability, and reform. And the most maddening part? His explanation insults the intelligence of anyone who follows this sport.

Kiffin claims he had to accept the LSU job immediately because the opening of the transfer portal left him “no choice.” He needed to be in place in Baton Rouge before players could officially jump schools.

To further insult Ole Miss fans, Kiffin tried to show that he cared for his current squad by asking to remain as the Rebels’ head coach through the conclusion of the 2025 season.

Why, exactly, did Lane Kiffin ask Ole Miss for permission to stay and coach the Rebels through the end of the season?

The answer is obvious, and it’s ugly.

Because he wanted time — and access — to recruit Ole Miss players to leave with him.

Ole Miss said no, as they should have. Imagine releasing your own coach to poach your locker room for a competitor. It would have been malpractice.

The mere fact tha Kiffin made the request tells you everything you need to know about how broken the college football ecosystem has become.

And players — especially high school players — are the ones paying the long-term price.

Let’s be clear: the transfer portal began as a good idea.

Athletes deserved mobility. They deserved opportunity. They deserved fairness.

But what we have now is not a system of fairness.

It’s free agency without rules, tampering without consequences, and coaching turnover without accountability — all wrapped in a 45-day frenzy that encourages everyone to act in their own self-interest at the expense of the sport.

Lane Kiffin jumping to LSU the second the portal opened isn’t an exception. It’s the blueprint. It’s what coaches now think they must do to keep up.

The transfer portal has become the tail wagging the dog:

No one is pacing themselves. No one is thinking long term. No one is thinking about student-athletes unless they can run a 4.4 or pick up a blitz.

The sport is chaotic because its leaders — Kiffin included — are modeling chaos.

The saddest part of all of this lands squarely in the world we cover: high school sports.

When a coach like Kiffin bails mid-season and tries to access his former roster for his new job, what message does that send down the pipeline?

Message No. 1: Loyalty is negotiable

High school coaches preach loyalty, accountability, and finishing what you start. Then kids turn on the TV and see a grown man walk out on a championship-caliber team because he wants a head start on transfer shopping.

Message No. 2: Development no longer matters — immediate production does

College coaches once recruited freshmen to develop them.
Now?

They recruit experienced 20- and 21-year-olds from the portal and leave high school seniors scrambling for whatever scholarships remain.

High school players — especially late bloomers — are the biggest losers in this new system.

Message No. 3: Winning the long game doesn’t matter if you can win the offseason

Kiffin spent months talking culture and connection. Then the portal opened, and suddenly culture was replaceable and connection was conditional.

Is that what we want young athletes learning?

Message No. 4: Trust your coach… but only until someone offers him more money

And remember: Kiffin’s players found out like everyone else.

High school athletes watch this. They internalize it. And they respond in kind — by entering their own portals:

Don’t blame the kids. They’re imitating the adults in charge.

The Ripple Effect: High School Recruits Are Being Boxed Out

Let’s talk hard data. Since the transfer portal era began:

Lane Kiffin didn’t invent this. He just demonstrated it at its most naked, cynical level:

And it’s not just coaching moves.

It’s NIL tampering. It’s boosters recruiting players under the table. It’s agents contacting athletes before they enter the portal. And, it’s roster management that treats kids like commodities.

The game is slipping away from the values that built it.

Here’s what real reform looks like:

If college football continues to act like the NFL without adopting the NFL’s structure, it will keep producing chaos without producing fairness.

And no one — especially high school athletes — can thrive in chaos.

Because if this is the model the adults are showing, the kids don’t stand a chance.



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