Jimbo Fisher Calls Lane Kiffin “Stupid” Over Ole Miss Decision as Bitter Rival Keeps Silent
Despite maintaining strong ties with his former program, Lane Kiffinâs recent moves involving Ole Miss assistants ahead of the Rebelsâ semifinal run raised real concerns. And that prompted ACC Network analyst Jimbo Fisher to deliver a blunt take on Kiffinâs actions.
“It’s selfish. It’s stupid,” said the former Texas A&M head coach during Wednesday’s appearance. “Thatâs what it is. Itâs stupid. And because hereâs why I say that.
“He wanted to coach [Ole Miss] and thought he didnât get his way. ‘Everybody get on the plane with me, or you donât have a job.’ All right? And he makes them all go. Then he gets down there and takes a P.R. hit, because it looks bad that you really donât care about the kids. Then he says, ‘Okay, you can go back. But hereâs where he screwed up.'”
Before the CFP began, Kiffin allowed six Ole Miss assistants to follow him to LSU while still coaching the Rebels through their postseason run. At least, that was the plan. But after Ole Missâ win over Georgia, uncertainty crept in. The winter transfer portal opened, and roster-building duties intensified. With that, attention shifted to Baton Rouge.
âItâs selfish. Itâs stupid.â
Jimbo Fisher sounds off on Lane Kiffin not allowing some coaches to coach for Ole Miss in CFP semifinal
pic.twitter.com/6TodO50jbU
â ACC Network (@accnetwork) January 8, 2026
When the dust settled, offensive play-caller Charlie Weis Jr. and RBs coach Kevin Smith were cleared to stay on the sideline for the CFP semifinal. But WRs coach George McDonald and TEs coach Joe Cox will not be part of the Rebelsâ CFP run.
Thatâs where the former national titleâwinning coach went on to add that he believes Lane Kiffin is showing a disregard for his former players at Ole Miss.
“He thought they were gonna lose to Georgia. The portal thing was all over with, and it was going to be all over with. He said, âIâll look like a hero.â Now, heâs got egg on his face because the real Lane came back out. You know what Iâm saying? And if those guys were allowed to coach a first game, they should be allowed to coach, because those kids are doing something that you get one time in your life to do.”
Simply put, Fisherâs point was that players grow accustomed to playing under a specific coach, and when that coach suddenly isnât there for the biggest games, it creates real problems. A last-minute change doesnât just alter the game plan; it forces players to adapt to a different system, something that can be difficult for a team and potentially lead to losses.
As a coach who led FSU to a BCS national title in 2014, Fisher understands that reality better than most.
“Listen, I know, Iâve left a job, I get that,” said Fisher. “But if you took them on and said theyâre never coming back, thatâs fine. You set the rules of the game. You donât change the rules in the middle of the game. And as a coach, itâs hurting the kids, and it pisses me off.”
If Lane Kiffin had taken those six assistants to LSU without putting them through back-and-forth decisions, it would have been more manageable for the Rebels. But in the middle of a CFP run, prioritizing LSUâs future while creating uncertainty for a team that had once given him all its trust didnât sit well with Fisher.

And his take on Lane Kiffin becomes even more interesting when contrasted with former Alabama coach Nick Sabanâs silence.
When Saban spoke about Kiffinâs LSU move, he praised him as “one of the brightest minds and one of the best play callers Iâve ever been around” and said he had no doubt Kiffin would be a great fit at LSU.
Yet Sabanâs lack of comment on what many see as Kiffinâs selfish actions only serves to amplify Fisherâs criticism. While Saban confirmed that Kiffin called him for advice as a “senior professional” and that he tried to provide the best guidance without deciding for him, questions still arise.
More importantly, these questions gain weight considering Fisherâs complicated rivalry with Saban.
Lane Kiffin’s LSU is the place of the Fisher-Saban connection
The story begins in Baton Rouge. When Jimbo Fisher was Nick Sabanâs offensive coordinator at LSU from 2000 to 2004, together, they won a national championship in 2003. But their relationship shifted when Fisher became a head coach, first at FSU, then at Texas A&M.
In October 2021, Fisher made history by becoming the first former Saban assistant to beat him, as Texas A&M stunned Alabama. Still, the rivalry turned public in May 2022 over NIL.
Saban claimed Texas A&M “bought every player on their team” to secure the nationâs No. 1 recruiting class, while Fisher fired back the very next day, calling Saban a “narcissist” and suggesting people dig into Sabanâs own recruiting past.
Fisher even said, “We’re done,” and quipped that Saban “should have been slapped.”
Then the feud cooled but left a mark on CFB lore. While Saban apologized for singling out Texas A&M, he kept his NIL concerns. Fisher declared the feud “over,” and the two shared a handshake before their 2023 matchup.
After the season, Fisher was let go from Texas A&M, and Saban retired, closing a dramatic chapter in SEC history.
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