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Ole Miss’s Lane Kiffin Concerned About Transfer Portal, NIL Rules

Ole Miss head football coach Lane Kiffin didn’t bite his tongue when asked about the NCAA’s updated stance on student-athlete transfers and their name, image, and likeness compensation.

A day before the Rebels landed two of the most coveted transfers in football as well as a top-25 recruiting class on National Signing Day, Kiffin shared his concerns about the new rules and how they may favor the already resource-abundant programs.

kiffinWe don’t have the same funding resources as some of these schools do for these NIL deals,” Kiffin said during a news conference on Tuesday. “It’s basically dealing with different salary caps. Now we have a sport that has completely different salary caps and some of these schools have, whatever, five to 10 times more than everybody else in what they can pay the players. I know nobody uses those phrases, but that is what it is.”

According to a recent article on ESPN.com, Ole Miss has the 22nd ranked recruiting class in FBS, but ranks 11th in the SEC — well behind perennial powers like Alabama, Georgia, and Texas A&M.

“In free agency in the NFL, players usually go to the most money,” Kiffin said. “Every once in a while, they don’t because they already have a bunch of money. Well, these kids are 17 and 18 years old. They’re going to go where they’re paid the most. I’m not complaining, it just is what is. Wherever there’s things created, there’s a lot of times problems people didn’t think about. You just legalized paying players, like people used to cheat.”

In addition to landing former USC quarterback Jaxson Dart and TCU running back Zach Evans, Ole Miss welcomes 13 mid-year transfers. That, however, didn’t stop Kiffin from opining about the college transfer portal.

“Like everything, this transfer thing is not over,” Kiffin said. “Until they figure out how to do this better, you’re going to see a whole other group after spring ball that leaves places. This is an ongoing thing.”

Kiffin suggested college football needs to adopt some sort of transfer policy similar to the NFL, which limits when its teams can sign free agents.

“Obviously, look to the people who have done it a long time, they know what they’re doing,” he said. “The NFL knows what they’re doing. It’s not open free agency all year and for a reason, and you’ve got long-term contracts for a reason. Kids can’t leave at any point of any year all the time.

“Somehow they’re going to, I bet, try to control NIL because now you’ve got these salary caps at places, giving players millions of dollars before they ever play, and other places not being able to do that. What would the NFL look like if there were a couple of teams in the NFL where their salary cap was 10 times more than everybody else’s salary cap? That’s where we’re headed, so they’re going to have to do something.”