The incredible Ole Miss Rebels season continued in thrilling fashion on Friday, as they mounted a fourth-quarter comeback to stun the Georgia Bulldogs 39-34 in the Sugar Bowl on New Yearβs Day. That win secured Ole Miss a spot in the Fiesta Bowl to face the Miami Hurricanes with a chance to make the National Championship Game on January 19th.
Following their regular-season finale against the Mississippi State Bulldogs, itβs been nothing but chaos for Ole Miss with the Lane Kiffin saga that resulted in Pete Golding becoming the full-time head coach ahead of the playoffs. Golding had served as the teamβs defensive coordinator since 2023.
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But even with all the changes, the Rebels havenβt been bothered on the field, easily getting past the Tulane Green Wave in the first round. Despite being down at halftime against Georgia in the quarterfinals, Ole Miss had an amazing second-half showing to pull off the upset and keep their historic season alive.
Itβs clear that Golding, who has been thrust into an unprecedented scenario, has the locker room behind him, which we saw from the moment he was announced as Ole Missβs next head coach.
Down 21-12 at halftime, the Ole Miss head coach had a calm message for his players, which clearly resonated with the team.
βThe first half, we didnβt leverage the ball very well on defense and getting to the ball,β Golding acknowledged. βWe just had a lot of missed tackles, and this was an issue when we played them the first time. We had double-digit missed tackles and understanding angles and all that. So we werenβt really concerned from a scheme standpoint.
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βThere wasnβt anything at halftime where we were like, βAll right, we got to change a lot of things.β We just got to execute better and get the guy with the ball on the ground. And then offensively, they didnβt stop us in the first half. We turned one over and then did a poor job, obviously, with the clock at the end to not get three. So wasnβt concerned about that at all.Β I told them all, βtake a deep breath, right? Letβs go play one at a time. And we got good enough players, we got good enough players to beat anybody. And so when theyβre on the same page, we will beat anybody.ββ
Right out of the gate, Ole Missβs defense flipped a switch, forcing a punt and a missed field goal on its first two defensive drives, after which the offense got on board with a touchdown. Then, when Georgia finally got some momentum, the Rebels held them to a field goal on a ten-play drive, responding to that with another touchdown to take a 27-24 lead.
Then came the crucial strip-fumble, which allowed the Rebels to go up two scores. That was enough resistance, as Ole Miss got the game-winning field goal after Georgia mounted its own comeback, stamping its way to the Fiesta Bowl.
Golding, who never expected to get the job and wasnβt thinking about head coaching opportunities, has very quickly etched his name into Ole Miss history with two playoff wins.
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βI was not in a rush to become a head coach,β Golding said. βCAA and them will tell you, I told them donβt contact anybody, I donβt want a head coaching job. Once I left Alabama to come to Ole Miss, I wasnβt leaving Oxford. I didnβt want to be the head coach at Ole Miss. I wanted to be the defensive coordinator at Ole Miss, and thatβs the same thing that I told Kiff (Lane Kiffin)β¦When this opportunity presented itself, itβs nothing that Iβve been preparing for. You prepare for it every year because head coaches like Coach [Kirby] Smart, Coach [Nick Saban], Coach Kiffin, and all the guys that Iβve been under prepare you for these moments. And they involve you in meetings of why we do certain things, and youβre involved from a recruiting component and everything else.β
Itβs been a fast rise for the 41-year-old Louisiana native, who spent the first six years of his coaching career at the D-II level, starting at his alma mater, Delta State, as a graduate assistant after a four-year playing career.
It was there that he got his first defensive coordinator gig, just four years into his coaching career. From there, he rode defensive coordinator roles at D-II Delta State and D-II Southeastern Louisiana before moving up to the D-I ranks, coaching defensive backs at Southern Miss from 2014-15.
After a defensive coordinator gig at UTSA from 2016-17, it was then that Golding joined Alabama as the co-defensive coordinator underneath Tosh Lupoi, getting elevated to the playcaller in 2019 when Lupoi left.
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Golding did his time at Alabama, but joined Lane Kiffin at Ole Miss when he was hired in 2023, where heβs been since. So, itβs been quite the journey for the now-head coach, building his way up to one of the best jobs in college football.
Interestingly, Golding is also a Saban disciple, which means all four head coaches remaining in the College Football Playoff are from the Nick Saban tree.
Golding will face one of them next weekend when Ole Miss takes on the Miami Hurricanes in the Fiesta Bowl next weekend. However, that could be with a different coaching staff, as there are reportedly questions whether several offensive staffers will continue to be with the team or at LSU with the transfer portal opening Friday.
Athletic Director Keith Carter told Yahoo Sportsβs Ross Dellenger that Ole Miss doesnβt know if the six coaches who signed contracts at LSU will return for one more week. Itβs been reported that those staffers are expected in Baton Rouge on Friday morning with the transfer portal opening.
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So, it seems thereβs another week of uncertainty in Oxford ahead of one of the biggest games in program history. Still, taking a step back, itβs been impressive to see what Golding has done, navigating an impossible situation and extending Ole Missβs season at least one week longer.
Now, not only does the head coach have a couple of big wins to kickstart his career, but heβs also got a come-from-behind victory over one of the best coaches in the sport. Not a bad start for a guy who wasnβt looking to be a head coach.