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LSU’s Lane Kiffin tells Vanity Fair his recruiting of some top recruits was hindered at Ole Miss

Football coach Lane Kiffin says some top recruits would tell him they were not interested in coming to Ole Miss while he was running the program there before his move to LSU.

Kiffin discussed the concerns in a recent article in Vanity Fair.

“(They would say), ‘Hey, coach, we really like you. But my grandparents aren’t letting me move to Oxford, Mississippi,’” Kiffin said, according to the magazine. “That doesn’t come up when you say Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Parents were sitting here this weekend saying the campus’ diversity feels so great: ‘It feels like there’s no segregation. And we want that for our kid because that’s the real world.'”

According to the article, Kiffin clarified his remark one day later: “I just hope (my comment) comes across respectful to Ole Miss…. There are some things that I’m saying that are factual, they’re not shots.”

The population of Baton Rouge, home to LSU’s campus, is 52% Black and 34% white, according to 2024 census data. Oxford, home to Ole Miss, is 66% white and 26% Black.

Kiffin led Ole Miss to a 50-19 record from 2020-25 before leaving for Southeastern Conference rival LSU, which offered him a seven-year contract worth about $13 million annually.

Kiffin accepted the LSU job after leading Ole Miss to an 11-1 regular-season record last fall. Kiffin said at the time that his request to continue coaching the Rebels throughout the College Football Playoff had been denied. Ole Miss athletic director Keith Carter has disagreed with some of Kiffin’s comments.

Pete Golding, who had been a defensive coordinator on Kiffin’s staff, took over at Ole Miss and led the Rebels to playoff victories over Tulane and Georgia before they lost to Miami in a Fiesta Bowl semifinal

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AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

ACC formally backs Big Ten’s push for the College Football Playoff to expand to 24 teams

AMELIA ISLAND, Fla. (AP) — The Atlantic Coast Conference is backing the Big Ten’s push for a 24-team playoff, commissioner Jim Phillips said Wednesday. Speaking at the end of three days of spring meetings in a posh resort in northeast Florida, Phillips said ACC coaches and athletic directors reached consensus on wanting to double the current College Football Playoff model. “When you’re leaving national championship-contending teams and schools out of the playoff, you don’t have the right number,” Phillips said. “We lived through it.” Phillips pointed to unbeaten Florida State getting snubbed from a four-team CFP field in 2023 and Notre Dame getting left out of last year’s 12-team model.
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