Lane Kiffin stands firm as SEC considers reprimand over Ole Miss racial comments
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MIRAMAR BEACH, FL — Officials at Ole Miss and the SEC have spoken about a potential reprimand for new LSU coach Lane Kiffin over comments he made in a recent Vanity Fair magazine interview, two people close to the situation tell USA TODAY Sports.
Kiffin, however, is standing firm he didn’t make racially insensitive comments about the differences in recruiting at Ole Miss — where he coached from 2020-2025 — and LSU.
“People don’t read the actual words I used in the article,” Kiffin told USA TODAY Sports. “I said, ‘A parent said.’ That’s not me saying it as my opinion.”
Any potential sanctions against Kiffin — a public reprimand, a fine or both — will likely be further discussed this week as the SEC kicks off the most contentious and future-critical spring meetings in conference history.
In the interview with Vanity Fair, Kiffin described the differences between recruiting at Ole Miss and LSU, and said recruits told him, “’We really like you, but my grandparents aren’t letting me move to Oxford, Mississippi.'”
Kiffin then added, “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.’”
But the Kiffin controversy is just the squeaky wheel this week for the SEC. While the focus outside the SEC is centered on the Big Ten/SEC public squabble over expansion of the College Football Playoff, the league is zeroed in on its place within the college sports structure.
Specifically, whether it should begin the process of making and enforcing its own rules.
Georgia president Jere Morehead, a critical player in the future of college sports and maybe the most prominent president within the SEC and Big Ten, said late last week the SEC isn’t considering a “breakaway” — but that it would be, “creating some rules that we could all live by in the Southeastern Conference.”
“If we don’t get federal legislation in my opinion, we’re going to have do this conference by conference because we can’t allow the Wild West to continue any longer,” Morehead said. “I’m prepared to be ready to vote on creating an SEC mechanism, SEC rules that we have to do if Congress isn’t going to be act as they should. We just cannot continue down this current path, We have waited months after months for congress to act and it hasn’t occurred yet.”
Those rules more than likely would include addressing the ever-expanding — and unchecked, for the most part — private NIL monster, which was intended to be policed by the College Sports Commission. The same commission whose foundation is “fair market” deals in a free market economy.
Translation: litigation. And lots of it.
“We all signed up to be part of the NCAA, and then we all allegedly make the rules,” Texas coach Steve Sarkisian told USA TODAY Sports in March. “Everyone knows the rules, right? Then we go to our attorney general and say we don’t like that rule, let’s just sue. Right now, no one is afraid of the consequences.”
Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Lane Kiffin defends comments as SEC weighs potential punishment
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