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ARLINGTON, Va. — Last season, Alex Ovechkin passed Wayne Gretzky to become the greatest goal scorer in NHL history. A few weeks ago during training camp, he reached another historic milestone: The Washington Capitals captain turned 40.

“Nothing’s changed. Just a different number,” Ovechkin said.

Someone asked Tom Wilson if his linemate had informed him about what 40 feels like.

“I told them that I didn’t need to ask, because I will not be playing hockey when I’m 40,” Wilson said with a laugh. “It’s so impressive. I’m 31 and it’s hard. [Hockey] takes a toll on the body. We all just play as long as we can. I don’t think anybody in that room will be talking about playing when they’re 40, let alone scoring 44 goals and having a broken leg and all that stuff last year. He’s a machine.”

Ovechkin entered the 2025-26 season with 897 career goals, having surpassed Gretzky’s mark of 894 goals. He scored 44 goals in 65 games last season, sitting out 16 games after breaking his left fibula in a Nov. 18 game against the Utah Hockey Club.

“He’s the GOAT. He’s still flying out there. It’s so pretty darn impressive,” Wilson said. “He can just keep playing and scoring. His mentality and his physical perseverance to just keep going and do what he’s doing is … I mean, there’s really no words to describe it.”

Here’s one word to possibly describe it: unexpected.

Ovechkin finished the 2023-24 season with a whimper that had many wondering if his tank had hit empty. He didn’t register a point when the Capitals were swept by the New York Rangers in the opening round of the playoffs, going without a shot on goal in two of the games.

But Ovechkin answered that uncertainty by expediting his record chase and passing Gretzky on April 6 at the New York Islanders. In the process, he fueled a 111-point Washington season — a 20-point improvement over 2023-24 — that saw the Capitals advance to the second round of the playoffs for the first time since winning the Stanley Cup in 2018.

“The goal chase last year energized our team. It helped us get through the dog days a bit. It was such a cool moment for the whole organization,” Capitals GM Chris Patrick said. “But I think Alex has always been team first. I think the way he’s handling this season just shows that he’s a team-first guy.”


FROM THE MOMENT Ovechkin arrived at Capitals training camp, there was speculation about this season being his last. He’s in the final year of a five-year contract extension he signed in July 2021. He broke Gretzky’s record. He hit the big 4-0. But Ovechkin was noncommittal about his future before the season.

“I don’t know if this is going to be the last. We’ll see,” he said at training camp.

Then, asked again on the eve of the Capitals’ first game: “I don’t know. I take it day by day, you know? You have to have fun. Enjoy yourself. Do the best that you can.”

Ovechkin hasn’t made up his mind. The Capitals say they don’t know which way he’s leaning. They’re happy to give him the time he needs to figure it out.

“I want him to have the space. To have this season go how he wants it to go,” Patrick said. “If he wants to talk, we’ll talk. If not, we’ll figure it out later.”

Ovechkin deferred to Patrick when asked if there was a deadline of sorts this season in which he’d have to inform the Capitals about his future. “I don’t know. You should talk to him, not me. This is the time of the year when you just have to get ready emotionally and get ready physically. We’ll see how it goes,” he said.

Undoubtedly, a preseason announcement about this being Ovechkin’s retirement tour would have put the focus on him rather than his teammates for a second straight season.

“Definitely. It would bring that element to arenas, especially in the Western Conference where it would be the last time he ever goes into those arenas,” coach Spencer Carbery said.

Ovechkin said he welcomes a season without something like the Gretzky goals record chase overshadowing everything else. “You just get tired to hear, ‘When it’s going to happen, how you’re going to do it?'” he said. “Right now, we just focusing on the different things.”

One reason Ovechkin might stick around beyond this season is the Capitals’ resurgence. When he re-signed with Washington in 2021, it was with the understanding that the team wouldn’t go into a rebuild with him on the roster. Surrounding him with talent would keep him happy and support his pursuit of Gretzky’s record.

The retool around Ovechkin has produced two straight trips to the Stanley Cup playoffs and a Metropolitan Division title last season. It has been a combination of solid prospect development and bold bets on trades and signings by management — hastened by the cap flexibility afforded the team as veterans Nicklas Backstrom and T.J. Oshie saw their NHL careers end — that were widely successful, such as the trades for forward Pierre-Luc Dubois, defenseman Jakob Chychrun and goalie Logan Thompson.

Under Carbery, who was hired two seasons ago, the Capitals haven’t just avoided a rebuild in Ovechkn’s twilight years. They’re a legitimate contender.

“We’ve created a standard now where we’re a team that’s expected to do well. We’ve got to make sure when teams come into our rink, we keep that expectation that it’s going to be hard playing the Capitals,” Wilson said.

Ovechkin says he appreciates that culture, and the fact that management brought back almost everyone from last season’s team.

“Yeah, I mean you go to locker room and you see the guy who was next to you from last year,” he said. “We have some additions, but they understand the culture. They understand where they’re at. I think it’s pretty good.”

Carbery says he believes it’s that joy Ovechkin feels with his teammates and playing the game that has kept him going.

“I think he loves the game. He loves to come to the rink, he loves to be around his buddies. He loves to go out and compete and try to win. I don’t think that’ll change one bit,” the coach said. “Even though he’s passed Wayne and now has the all-time goal record, I think he’ll be as hungry as ever to get to 900 and then 910 and try to help our team win games.”


CARBERY TALKS TO OVECHKIN every day.

“I won’t be, ‘Hey, do you feel good enough to play next year?’ I have a lot of conversations with him. Part of it is about him and part of it is that he’s the captain. I want to get a sense of what we need as a group. But I also check in on how he’s feeling as well,” he said. “A lot of [his decision] will have to do with how the year goes. At his age, coming back from an injury in training camp. He wants to see how he feels, mentally and physically, going through the grind. See where he’s at.”

Ovechkin’s primary motivation on the ice is bringing a second Stanley Cup championship to Washington. But as Carbery mentioned, Ovechkin still has personal milestones to hit too.

Ovechkin entered this season trailing Gretzky by 42 for the most goals scored between the regular season and Stanley Cup playoffs combined in NHL history. Gretzky has 1,016, and Ovechkin’s combined 49 goals last season gave him 974 for his career.

Ovechkin will also have a chance to set a record for most goals scored by a 40-year-old player. Gordie Howe holds that mark with 44 in the 1968-69 season. From a personal standpoint, Ovechkin is just a handful of games away from 1,500 in his career, a benchmark only 22 players in NHL history have reached.

“He’s got a couple milestones I think coming up right away and it’ll be fun to see him hit those,” Patrick said. “I’m just at a point where every time I see him play, I’m just appreciating it, because he’s 40 years old. We’re not going to have this forever. To get to witness it every night is a treat.”

Defenseman John Carlson, who also doesn’t have a contract beyond this season, said it’s been “a hell of a ride” with Ovechkin, whether or not this is his final season.

“I’m not going to get too nostalgic too early here. But, yeah, it’s been really cool to play with one of the game’s greats, and now the leading goal scorer of all time,” Carlson said. “Those are insane things that you can reflect on. Pretty special times.”

Carlson has been Ovechkin’s teammate since 2009-10. Wilson has played with him since 2013-14. Neither player has given much thought to this being their captain’s last season in the NHL.

“Not really, to be honest. I think he’s one of those guys where it doesn’t really matter. If he’s playing well and he wants to be scoring goals and he wants to stick around, I’m sure they’ll figure a way to keep him around,” Carlson said. “If he doesn’t want to play another year, then he won’t play another year.”

Perhaps Ovechkin will take inspiration with how Gretzky retired from the NHL. He also didn’t want a retirement tour. News about 1998-99 being his final season didn’t leak until very late in the season, creating hysteria around the Rangers’ April 15, 1999, game at the Ottawa Senators as Gretzky’s last stop in Canada. He would formally announce his retirement the next day in New York. Wilson understands that, in an instant, Ovechkin could also call it a career.

“No one will really think about him not being around here until it smacks us all in the face,” Wilson said. “He’s just a Capital. He comes to the rink every day and leads this group. He’s going to do that until he is done. We won’t really focus too much on that. It’s just so fun having him around.”

And so the Capitals wait as Ovechkin ponders whether this is the season that the Russian Machine powers down.

“We respect Alex so much and everything he’s done for this organization. So when the time comes for him to make his decision on his future, he will,” Carbery said. “We don’t know what the future holds. He’s left it open. Certainly as an organization, we’re like, ‘Heck yeah, as many more years as you possibly can play.'”

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Senators’ Tkachuk (hand) to miss at least month

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Senators' Tkachuk (hand) to miss at least month

Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk is expected to miss at least a month with an injury to his right hand, coach Travis Green said Tuesday.

Tkachuk injured the hand Monday when he was cross-checked by Nashville Predators defenseman Roman Josi early in the first period and went awkwardly into the boards. He finished out the 4-1 loss but didn’t always look comfortable.

Green told reporters Tuesday that surgery is an option for Tkachuk but that, at a minimum, he’ll miss four weeks.

“He’s going to miss a significant amount of time,” Green said. “We’ll know more in the next 24 hours. We don’t know exactly, but it’s four weeks plus. We don’t know exactly.”

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Confident Couturier helps Tocchet win home debut

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Confident Couturier helps Tocchet win home debut

PHILADELPHIA — Sean Couturier wrestled with a bad back and slogged through a strained relationship with his former coach in recent years, and — at times — it was too close to call which hurdle irked the Philadelphia Flyers‘ captain more.

Feeling healthy and starting the season with a clean slate under new coach Rick Tocchet, Couturier flashed a reminder of just how productive he can be for a Flyers team itching to move out of a rebuild and into the playoffs.

Couturier had two goals and two assists to make Tocchet a winner in his home coaching debut and lift the Flyers to a 5-2 win over the two-time defending Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers on Monday night.

“I think he trained hard this year. He came into camp in really good condition,” Tocchet said of Couturier. “When your captain comes in in good condition, it helps the coach out. It was nice of him to come in real good shape for us.”

The 32-year-old Couturier has been sidelined with back issues and was even a healthy scratch under former coach John Tortorella. Two seasons ago, Tortorella benched Couturier only 34 days after he was named team captain. Couturier was on the fourth line for the home opener last season — seemingly a lifetime ago and now anchored by a strong relationship with Tocchet.

“I’m starting to find my confidence back,” Couturier said.

Couturier, who was a rookie in the 2011-12 season, became the longest-tenured athlete in Philadelphia sports once Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham retired at the end of last season.

Tocchet easily received the loudest cheers from fans during pregame introductions ahead of the home opener. The Flyers hired the former fan favorite as coach in hopes his return would push them out of an extended rebuild and into playoff contention. Tocchet, who played more than a decade with Philadelphia in separate stints at the start and end of his career, is at the start of his fourth head-coaching job after time with Tampa Bay, Arizona and Vancouver.

Tocchet took over months after the Flyers fired Tortorella with nine games left in another losing season for a franchise that hasn’t reached the playoffs since 2020.

“Love the first win type of thing but I’m just happy the guys for the guys, the way they’ve been working on the concepts,” Tocchet said.

Philadelphia, once a model franchise in the league, has one of the longest championship droughts in the NHL.

The Flyers have failed to win the Stanley Cup since going back to back in 1974 and ’75. Those Broad Street Bullies teams have become a cherished part of the franchise’s past but also a reminder of how much time it has been since the Flyers won: They last played in the final in 2010.

The Flyers opened with a somber nod to those Bullies teams with a tribute for Bernie Parent. Parent, who died in September at 80, won Conn Smythe and Vezina trophies in back-to-back seasons for the Stanley Cup champions. The Flyers painted his retired uniform number “1” behind each net and chose to bypass a moment of silence for fans to instead “show the same passion he lived for with a standing ovation.” They will wear a “1” jersey patch this season.

“It was a great effort in his honor,” Couturier said. “He’ll definitely be missed around here. We used to always seem him around at the games. He always had that quality of just light, lighting everything up and putting a smile on everyone’s face.”

The Flyers gave the player of the game a goalie mask in the style of Parent’s version that he wore in the 1970s and netted the goaltender the cover of Time magazine. Dan Vladar had 24 saves on 26 shots to earn his first win with the Flyers and become the first player to wear the mask.

Vladar helped hand the Panthers their first loss in four games — which included a win in Florida over the Flyers last week.

“Every single guy had goosebumps during the ceremony,” Vladar said. “It was a sad thing but what a hell of a player and a hell of a person he was.”

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‘Trinidad Magic’: Meet the Ole Miss breakout QB even his teammates hadn’t heard of

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'Trinidad Magic': Meet the Ole Miss breakout QB even his teammates hadn't heard of

OXFORD, Miss. — The day the spring transfer portal opened for Division II football players in April, Ole Miss co-offensive coordinator Charlie Weis Jr. was glued to the computer screen in his office, watching highlights of then-Ferris State quarterback Trinidad Chambliss.

When Weis wanted to confirm that he was really seeing what he thought he was seeing, he called in quarterbacks coach Joe Judge.

Then, just to make sure they were both right about Chambliss’ ability, they brought in co-offensive coordinator/tight ends coach Joe Cox for further confirmation.

“We better get Coach Kiffin,” one of them said.

As Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin watched Chambliss scrambling and throwing deep balls, he saw the traits of someone familiar: former Miami quarterback Cam Ward, the No. 1 pick in April’s NFL draft. The Rebels had recruited Ward when he left FCS program Incarnate Word after the 2021 season and believed he was coming to Ole Miss. But Ward signed with Washington State after it hired Incarnate Word coach Eric Morris as its offensive coordinator. Ward spent two seasons with the Cougars before playing his final one at Miami, where he was an All-American.

“By the time we were done watching the whole thing, there’s about 12 people in there, like at a watch party,” Kiffin said.

Chambliss, who led Ferris State to a 14-1 record and its third Division II national championship in four seasons in 2024, was scheduled to visit Temple that week.

“Get him on the phone,” Kiffin told his assistants. “He’s flying here tonight.”

Chambliss arrived at Ole Miss soon thereafter, and Kiffin and the others sold him on a chance to compete with Austin Simmons for the starting quarterback job and playing against the best teams in the SEC. After receiving interest from about a dozen schools after entering the portal, Chambliss committed to play for the Rebels on April 15.

Six months later, Chambliss is one of the hottest quarterbacks in the FBS, leading the No. 5 Rebels to four straight victories since taking over for Simmons, who injured his ankle in a 30-23 victory at Kentucky on Sept. 6.

After stepping into the starting role in a 41-35 win against Arkansas on Sept. 13, Chambliss became the first SEC player with 300 passing yards and 50 rushing yards in three consecutive games over the past 30 years. He threw for 253 yards with two touchdowns and ran for another score in last week’s 24-21 win against Washington State.

Kiffin hasn’t yet announced which quarterback will start in Saturday’s showdown at No. 9 Georgia (3:30 p.m. ET, ABC), but it would be a surprise if he didn’t stick with Chambliss. Last week, Kiffin said Simmons wasn’t fully recovered (he aggravated the injury in a brief appearance against the Razorbacks) and would have a chance to win the job back once he’s healthy.

“He’s quick, he’s fast, he’s tough, he’s got great lower body, great instincts,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said of Chambliss. “There’s a difference [between] being a fast guy and being a runner. He’s patient behind blocks, quick when he needs to be. [Ole Miss] should get the greatest award there is for finding this guy. I don’t know who scouted him, who found him, but he is a really good football player that they went out and got and did a tremendous job.”

Chambliss’ unlikely underdog story has captured the imagination of Ole Miss fans, who are flying Trinidad and Tobago flags during games and around campus.

“It’s been amazing,” Chambliss said. “It has been a dream come true. I prayed for this. I’ve dreamed of this. You can ask my friends from back home; this was a goal of mine ever since I was little. And my dad and my mom and my brother, we’ve been working for this moment my entire life, really.”


NO, CHAMBLISS WASN’T named after the Caribbean dual-island nation of about 1.4 million people located off the Venezuelan coast. When Cheryl Chambliss was pregnant with her second child, she and her husband, Trent, came to an agreement: She would name the baby if it was a girl, and he would for a boy.

Trent Chambliss, an assistant principal at Wyoming High School in Michigan, wanted a name that would stand out and was strong. He was at a friend’s house watching a Félix Trinidad fight, and thought the Puerto Rican boxer’s last name was perfect.

Cheryl Chambliss, whose late father, Donald Griffioen, was a longtime pastor and helped open churches around the country, agreed to her husband’s idea with one condition: She would name a baby girl Trinity, after the Christian doctrine that says God exists as three separate persons — the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

“We are a faith-based family,” Cheryl Chambliss said. “Trinidad was just fine with me because it translates to Trinity, and so that’s very important. When people ask me, he is named after the Trinity.”

Trinidad Jay Chambliss was born Aug. 24, 2002, about 11 years after his older brother, Tyler. Almost immediately, Trent put a ball in Trinidad’s hands. Trent was an offensive lineman at Grand Rapids Junior College in Michigan and Central State University in Ohio for two seasons before he joined the Navy.

Trent Chambliss grew up in South Bend, Indiana, and was an avid Notre Dame fan. A longtime high school football, basketball and bowling coach, he tossed a stuffed Fighting Irish football to his new son when he was only a few months old. Trinidad Chambliss went to a handful of football camps at Notre Dame and several Fighting Irish games.

“He was catching a ball before he could walk,” Trent Chambliss said. “I just threw everything at him — socks, keys, whatever. The kid caught everything.”

Trinidad Chambliss grew up playing baseball, basketball and football. In high school, he concentrated on the latter two sports, and believed he’d most likely play basketball in college. As a senior at Forest Hills Northern High in Grand Rapids, Michigan, he threw for 1,610 yards and 17 touchdowns in seven games at quarterback. He was named all-state in basketball after averaging 14.5 points and 4.5 assists.


CHAMBLISS’ SENIOR YEAR of high school in 2020-21 occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic, limiting his ability to attend camps and get exposure in front of college coaches. When it came time to pick a college, his options were limited to mostly junior colleges and Division III programs.

“No coach ever got to see him in person,” said Eddie Ostipow, who coached Chambliss in football in his final two seasons of high school. “And he was playing a lot of AAU basketball in the spring and summer. He loves football, but he really was focused on basketball. I think you put those two factors together and that’s really the explanation of why he didn’t get a ton of interest.”

Among the teams recruiting him in basketball: Calvin University, Aquinas College, University of Olivet and Kalamazoo Valley Community College, all of which are located in Michigan.

There were some familiar names involved in his football recruitment, but not the actual ones most college football fans know well: Notre Dame (the college in Ohio, not the university in Indiana), Michigan (Tech, not the powerhouse in Ann Arbor), Butler University (in football, not hoops), North Dakota (not FCS power North Dakota State) and Northwestern (the university in Lima, Ohio, not the one in Chicago that competes in the Big Ten).

“Honestly, I feel like I was just a late bloomer,” Chambliss said. “Growing up, I wasn’t the biggest guy. I wasn’t the strongest kid. Coming out of high school, going into my freshman year of college, I was probably 6 feet, like 175 pounds, so a little scrawny kid. I’m not the biggest guy. When coaches look at you out of high school, they say the eye test, and I didn’t fit the eye test.”

Tony Annese, a longtime high school coach in Michigan who took over the Ferris State program in 2012, was willing to give Chambliss a chance. He was given the equivalent of a 25% scholarship as a freshman in 2022, about $6,000 per year.

“He knew my family growing up, and he actually didn’t recruit me because of my football abilities,” Chambliss said. “He went to a basketball game and saw that I was a point guard and could facilitate the ball and get people open and find a way to score. I think he took a shot on me, and he knew that I was athletic. I’m grateful that he gave me a chance.”

Chambliss barely played as a freshman at Ferris State in 2022, as Kent State transfer Mylik Mitchell led the Bulldogs to their second straight Division II national championship. Annese prefers to play multiple quarterbacks, and Chambliss saw action in eight games the next season after gaining about 25 pounds.

Last season, Chambliss won the starting job and was set to share snaps with junior Carson Gulker. In the opener at Pittsburg State in Kansas, Chambliss threw two interceptions in a 19-3 loss.

“I’d be lying to you if I said that there were no doubts that I could be the quarterback at Ferris State because there were definitely doubts,” Chambliss said. “I prayed after that game. I actually thanked God that happened because I feel like it was a lesson and an experience that I needed to go through. I feel like that helped our team and helped me as a player to persevere through adversity.”

Gulker broke his right leg in a 56-3 win against Lake Erie the next week. Chambliss took the majority of snaps from there, and the Bulldogs won their last 14 games. He threw for three touchdowns and ran for two more in a 49-14 victory over top-seed Valdosta State in the Division II national championship game in McKinney, Texas.

Chambliss passed for 2,925 yards and ran for 1,019 more with 51 total touchdowns in 2024. He was named an All-American and was a finalist for the Harlon Hill Trophy, the Division II Heisman Trophy.

Mike Taylor co-founded AgDiago, an analytics firm that specializes in streamlining the evaluation of prospects and identifying behavioral traits. His company has worked with Ferris State the past five years, and AgDiago evaluated Chambliss when he was playing there. AgDiago also works with Notre Dame, LSU, Michigan and Kansas State, among other programs.

“With Trinidad, the things that were quickly unveiled were that he was highly persistent and overcame adversity very quickly,” Taylor said. “He’s somebody that can flush a mistake quickly. It reminds me a lot when we looked at Jayden Daniels. There’s a lot of similarities under the hood, so to speak, between him and Jayden Daniels. He’s athletic, obviously, but he’s a team-first guy. He’s also very coachable, all while having a nice, strong work ethic.”

After Chambliss’ performance in the national title game, a few FBS schools, including UCF and Georgia State, reached out to Steve Calhoun, his private quarterbacks coach in California. They told Calhoun they’d be interested in signing him if he entered the transfer portal.

“I wasn’t ready to leave Ferris State at that time,” Chambliss said. “It didn’t feel right, honestly. I talked to my parents, and it just wasn’t the right time.”

That changed this past spring when more and more programs called. Chambliss and his father met with Annese in March and broke the news that he was leaving. They thanked Annese for giving him the chance that other coaches didn’t.


WHEN CHAMBLISS ARRIVED in Oxford, Mississippi, this summer, Kiffin and his coaches still weren’t sure what kind of quarterback they had. They only knew they had a player with a great work ethic who was truly grateful for a chance to play big-time football.

Kiffin joked that he sometimes has to remind Chambliss that the Gatorades in the football facility are free.

“I call it three-star syndrome versus five stars,” Kiffin said. “This is zero-star syndrome. This is the best of all times, you know? This is like buying a Christmas present for a rich kid versus a kid that has nothing, how they react and how they appreciate things. He never even went on an official visit in high school.”

Chambliss said his new teammates welcomed him with open arms, even if some of them might have Googled where he came from.

“A lot of guys are four-stars and five-stars that come to SEC schools,” Chambliss said. “They don’t really know what Ferris State is or anything about Division II programs. I bet they were like, ‘Ferris State? What is that?'”

It didn’t take Kiffin and his assistants long to realize they might have landed a special quarterback once the Rebels started scrimmaging at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium during preseason camp.

Ole Miss linebackers coach Chris Kiffin, the head coach’s brother, dropped another big comparison earlier this season. Chris Kiffin was the Cleveland Browns’ defensive line coach when Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield was the team’s quarterback in 2020 and 2021. Chris Kiffin said Chambliss walked like Mayfield, carried the same demeanor on the field, played loose with quick feet like Mayfield and wore the same jersey number (No. 6).

“It just would happen, especially in the red zone,” Kiffin said. “We’d be in scrimmages, and some of the offensive coaches would go, ‘There’s Trinidad Magic.’ He just would make something happen. It was like, ‘Oh, boy, what’s he doing now?’ He’d spin out, run all the way over there and make a play. I remember saying, ‘I think this guy’s one of those guys, one of those gamers.'”

At the very least, Lane Kiffin believed he had a capable backup if Simmons suffered an injury. Kiffin saw how losing a starting quarterback and not having another one to step in could affect a team​​ last season when the Rebels lost 24-17 at Florida. The Gators had been beaten badly by Georgia and Texas when starter DJ Lagway went down because of a hamstring injury. Florida won four straight games once Lagway returned.

“When we talk about salaries and [roster management], because obviously that’s part of it, the investment in the quarterback position besides just the one who’s supposed to be the starter is worth a lot of money,” Kiffin said. “All of that went into it — seeing how great [Chambliss] was and seeing what happened with other teams. It had nothing to do with not having confidence in Austin.”

Halfway through his first season at Ole Miss, Chambliss has won over his teammates and the school’s rabid fan base. He’s being mentioned as a sleeper Heisman candidate, especially if the Rebels keep winning.

“Heisman Trophy, the best player in college football, you dream of that,” Chambliss said. “It’s crazy to hear my name. You play the video games, NCAA Football 14, and that’s what you want to do. It’s been amazing, but I can’t really think about that right now.”

If nothing else, Kiffin says Chambliss’ story as a player who fell through the recruiting cracks to become an SEC starter might inspire kids at smaller schools around the country.

“This is such a good story for all the D-II and D-III players and all the high school kids not getting offers in small high schools,” Kiffin said. “This is such a good story for hope. Like, ‘Hey, man, someone might find you.’ Keep pushing, you know?”

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