This offseason, and particularly in the spring, Ole Miss head coach Lane Kiffin made a notable effort to improve the teamās secondary. Now, with Fall Camp underway, it appears that those defensive backs have taken strides forward for Ole Miss.
Kiffin recently shared how those improvements have helped the Rebels. In particular, itās improved competition for both sides of the ball while adding depth and options for Ole Miss come the regular season.
āYeah, thatās been really big for us,ā Lane Kiffin said. āObviously, to get that group better, but that makes us better on the other side. In spring, I felt that was an issue. We were challenged a lot with secondary issues, and some guys were hurt. So, itās much better now, deeper, more competition, and itās in a really good spot.ā
In 2024, Ole Miss was just 86th nationally in passing defense, giving up 230.8 passing yards per game. Their 12 interceptions were tied for 44th nationally. That was also just 12th in the SEC in passing defense and tied for sixth in interceptions.
This offseason, one corner from last yearās team, Trey Amos, would be drafted by the Washington Commanders in the second round. Another five defensive backs would transfer out of the program, and thatās before counting the outgoing seniors.
Lane Kiffin would dip into the Transfer Portal this offseason. Ole Miss has theĀ third-ranked transfer classĀ in theĀ 2025 cycle, according to the On3 College Football Team Transfer Portal Rankings. That includes a total of 32 transfers into the program, six of whom are defensive backs. Three of those defensive backs came to the program in the spring transfer window, after Kiffin was able to see what they needed following spring ball.
Lane Kiffin unleashes on negative impact transfer rules have on team chemistry
Lane Kiffin is among the coaches who leans the most heavily on the Transfer Portal. New rules, however, seem to make developing chemistry more difficult to do with transfers.
āI think that unfortunately, the world weāre in, it is not good. And Iām not up here to gripe. I didnāt start with this or anything. Itās not a good system, and itās not good for college football. Professional sports donāt have this amount of turnover on a roster. Not even close. So to do it in college ā and youāre just on your third fourth school. You donāt really care about the school ā you didnāt pick it. You didnāt grow up wanting to play there. Thatās not really good. It is what it is,ā Kiffin said.
āAll coaches, Iām sure, are just trying to maximize the situation that theyāre in. But itās not good for college football, itās not good for locker rooms and itās obviously not very good for chemistry. I donāt think itās very good for the passion of college football. There are free agents two times a year and a number of guys just going wherever to get the most money and not having any care for where theyāre playing.ā