Does Ole Miss Play Today? Rebels’ Playoff Path Amidst Unprecedented Turmoil
The question echoing across the Magnolia State and the college football landscape isn’t just “Does Ole Miss play today?” It’s “What happens next?” The Ole Miss Rebels, in the midst of a historic season, have been thrust into a vortex of chaos and opportunity unlike any team in recent memory. Their immediate schedule is clear, but the path beyond is shrouded in the fog of a stunning coaching departure and the high-stakes drama of the College Football Playoff. Here is everything you need to know about the Rebels’ next game, their shaken reality, and their fight for a national title.
Ole Miss Football Schedule: Next Game Details
As of this publication, the Ole Miss Rebels do not have a game scheduled for today. Their regular season concluded with a dramatic victory in the Egg Bowl, cementing one of the best records in program history.
The Rebels’ next—and most important—contest is set. They have earned a berth in the College Football Playoff, a testament to their remarkable 11-1 season. The team now enters a period of intense preparation before their season-defining matchup.
- Next Game: College Football Playoff Semifinal
- Date: Thursday, January 9, 2025
- Time: 6:45 p.m. CT / 7:45 p.m. ET
- TV Channel: ESPN
- Location: Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, GA
- Opponent: To be determined following conference championship weekend.
This playoff appearance is the culmination of years of building under now-departed coach Lane Kiffin. The focus now shifts from a weekly schedule to a single, monumental task under the brightest lights.
The Kiffin Exodus: A Crisis in the Midst of Glory
To understand the seismic shift in Oxford, one must rewind to the past week. The Rebels have been front and center in college football, but not for the on-field excellence that defined their fall. In a move that sent shockwaves through the sport, head coach Lane Kiffin accepted the head coaching position at LSU, a divisional rival, effectively immediately. This forced him to abandon the Rebels’ remarkable season just as they reached the playoff pinnacle.
The timing is unprecedented. Coaches often change jobs after seasons, but rarely between the end of the regular season and a team’s participation in the national championship tournament. The decision has drawn fierce criticism and sympathy for the Ole Miss players, who built a championship-caliber roster only to see their CEO depart at the most critical hour. The move has ignited debates about coaching contracts, player welfare, and the raw business underpinnings of college football.
The Florida State Parallel: A Justified Fear?
The immediate reaction from many analysts and fans was to draw a direct line from Oxford to Tallahassee. Many are comparing this Ole Miss team to the 2023 Florida State Seminoles, who finished 13-0 as ACC Champions but were controversially left out of the College Football Playoff after star quarterback Jordan Travis suffered a season-ending injury. The committee’s rationale was that the Seminoles were not the same team without their leader.
Is Ole Miss now “not the same team” without its head coach? The situations, while both dealing with acute loss, are fundamentally different in the eyes of many experts. The loss of a player, especially a quarterback, directly alters the on-field product and strategic capabilities. The loss of a head coach, while a massive emotional and logistical blow, does not directly remove a player from the lineup. The Rebels’ talent—star quarterback Jaxson Dart, a potent receiving corps, and a much-improved defense—remains entirely intact. The committee clearly agreed, placing Ole Miss in the field, signaling that the institutional knowledge and player execution hold more weight than the sideline general in this unique scenario.
The Pete Golding Era Begins: Stability in the Storm
Enter interim head coach Pete Golding. Promoted from his role as defensive coordinator, Golding is not a stranger to big games or this roster. He is the architect of the Rebels’ vastly improved defense, a unit that became the backbone of their 2024 success. His promotion provides a crucial layer of internal stability.
Golding’s immediate tasks are Herculean: stabilize the locker room’s emotions, maintain offensive and defensive game-planning continuity, and prepare a group of young men to play for a national championship amid a media firestorm. Reports from inside the program suggest players have rallied around Golding, a respected and detail-oriented coach. His focus will be on simplifying the message: the goals remain unchanged, and the work required is the same. The “next man up” philosophy has now been applied to the head coaching office.
Keys for Ole Miss Under Golding:
- Defensive Consistency: Lean on the identity Golding built. A disruptive, turnover-forcing defense can win playoff games.
- Offensive Continuity: With offensive coordinator Charlie Weis Jr. expected to remain, ensuring Jaxson Dart and the offense operate at peak efficiency is non-negotiable.
- Emotional Management: Channel the anger, betrayal, and disappointment into a unified, “us against the world” energy on the field.
Playoff Prediction and Path Forward
While there is inherent uncertainty, it seems more than likely the Rebels will be a dangerous, motivated, and uniquely focused team in the playoffs. To suggest they are now an easy out is a grave miscalculation.
Prediction: Ole Miss will compete ferociously in their semifinal matchup. The team has shown resilience all season, winning close games in multiple ways. The emotional toll of Kiffin’s departure could manifest in one of two ways: a flat, distracted performance, or a volcanic, emotionally charged effort. Given the leadership of veterans like Dart and the professional demeanor of Pete Golding, the latter seems more probable. They have the offensive firepower to score with anyone and a defense that can get critical stops. Expect a tight, hard-fought game where the Rebels’ collective will is on full display. Advancing to the national championship is a real possibility.
The narrative has irrevocably shifted. This is no longer just Lane Kiffin’s team. This is now the team that persevered. A championship win would be one of the most remarkable stories in college football history, a testament to the players in the locker room who chose to stay and fight for each other when the outside world focused on the one who left.
Conclusion: A Season Redefined
So, does Ole Miss play today? No. But they prepare. They prepare for a game that will define not just a season, but a program’s legacy. The story of the 2024 Ole Miss Rebels has been brutally complicated by a coach’s exit, but it remains unfinished. Their next game, on January 9th on ESPN, is not merely a playoff semifinal. It is a statement game. It is an opportunity to prove that the whole is greater than any one part—even the most visible one. The schedule, time, and channel are set. The only question left is how this resilient group of Rebels will respond when the entire sport watches to see if they fold or fight. Bet on the fight.
This article is based on reporting and analysis from multiple sources, including insights from The Sporting News. For continued coverage on the Ole Miss Rebels’ playoff journey and coaching search, make The Sporting News a preferred source.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
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