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By Marc Lawrence
Monday, Dec 1

MLC

Aaron Rodgers is out with another injury.

The veteran Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback was crushed by Buffalo Bills defensive lineman Joey Bosa in the third quarter of Sunday’s game.

Rodgers, who is reportedly playing with multiple fractures in his wrist, was rocked to the ground by the Bills star on Sunday afternoon. He was promptly taken out of the game.

Rodgers, 41, did not look to be in OK shape following the injury. 

One fan noted that he has had the WORST luck since his departure from Green Bay.

It’s called karma, baby, and it happens largely to those of little humility.

ON TODAY'S SCORECARD
He Wanted His Cake and to Eat it, Too

MLC

Being an adult means making hard decisions, insists Nicole Auerbach of NBC Sports. It also means living with the fallout from those hard decisions.

Lane Kiffin didn’t want to do either. He didn’t want to be pressured into actually making the decision to leave Ole Miss — in the middle of its best season in program history — for LSU. He then didn’t want to lose the chance to coach his Ole Miss team through the College Football Playoff while working as the head coach at LSU. According to multiple reports, he threatened to take staffers with him to Baton Rouge immediately if the Ole Miss brass wouldn’t let him pull double-duty.

You know what would absolutely guarantee the opportunity to coach this Ole Miss team as it chases a national championship? Staying at Ole Miss.

If you choose to leave, you lose the right to do that. And Kiffin struggled to come to terms with that because he wanted to have his cake and eat it, too. He told reporters after the Egg Bowl on Friday that this decision was genuinely difficult and that he wasn’t enjoying being the center of the sport’s attention.

But the decision was only difficult because Kiffin knew he wanted to go to LSU. Lots of other coaches decided to recommit to their current schools in the middle of the season, some also ahead of potential CFP runs. It didn’t take Curt Cignetti a long time to decide to stay at Indiana or Rhett Lashlee at SMU — and those were coaches at nontraditional powers who could have easily defended decisions to seek blueblood destinations with historical success.

This was never a college football calendar issue for Kiffin, though some pundits liked to make that case to give him cover. Other SEC head coaches of CFP contenders would not consider abandoning them. The longer Kiffin dragged the whole thing out, the more obvious it was that he’d be leaving Ole Miss — and that he thought he could dictate the terms of his departure. And that he could take whichever players and coaches he wanted with him, too.

But of course Kiffin couldn’t coach Ole Miss through the postseason. This isn’t like Jon Sumrall coaching potentially two more games with Tulane before going to Florida — a big jump up that puts him in a new conference and new tax bracket. That’s apples to oranges with an SEC coach making an interconference move. It’s absurd that Kiffin even thought it possible.

He’s the LSU head coach now, and he’ll be acting in the best interest of LSU moving forward. He can take Ole Miss staffers and poach Ole Miss players if he wants, but he’ll be vilified for it. Decisions have repercussions. Actions have consequences.

And this didn’t have to get so messy. It didn’t need to be this ugly. I genuinely think Ole Miss fans would have understood Kiffin leaving for LSU if he did it differently. Not in the middle of the greatest season in program history.

Abandoning them now implies he didn’t really think they could win a national title. He thought he’d taken Ole Miss as far as it could go, and that he couldn’t actually win a championship there.

Now, instead of gearing up for the program’s first CFP appearance and the kind of special season you spend your whole life hoping to be part of, Kiffin is walking out the door. He’s pretending he’s been wronged by the school that gave him another shot in the SEC just because his bosses won’t let him coach one team while running a rival’s.

And it’s shown us that maybe Lane Kiffin hasn’t changed that much after all.


GRINDING OUT THE PROFITS
Over Loaded

From The Playbook Totals Tipsheet Newsletter

The NY Giants are:

• 5-1 OU 2nd of BB RG...

• 4-1 OU Mondays

New England Patriots are

• 4-0 OU L4 non-conf HG...

• 7-1 OU aft Cinccinnati...

• 3-1-1 OU Monday HG


STAT OF THE DAY
1

Tennessee QB Cam Ward – who wears No. 1 on his uniform – quarterbacks the Titans,
the only team in the league with
1 victory this season.

TRENDING TODAY
Welcome to the Gatorhood

MLC

Welcome to The Swamp: population — one brand-new head coach.

Florida hired Jon Sumrall as its next head football coach. The Gators turned their attention from Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin to Tulane’s Sumrall in recent days.

Sumrall agreed to a six-year deal worth roughly $7.5 million annually and will step in to follow in Billy Napier’s footsteps. He is 19-7 in two seasons at Tulane. Sumrall is 10-2 on the season and 42–11 in four years as an FBS head coach.

The 43-year-old Alabama native won two conference titles at Troy and made the American conference title game in 2024 in Year Obe at Tulane. The Green Wave will be playing in another conference championship game this week with a College Football Playoff bid on the line.

Sumrall opted to sign a contract extension and return to Tulane this season. The Green Wave were unable to hold onto him this year with the allure of the SEC.

Word has it Sumrall will coach Tulane in the AAC title game this Saturday and in their game bowl as well.

Florida fired Billy Napier in October after following a 3-4 start to the season. He went 22-23 in four seasons at Florida, including 12-16 in SEC play. He was 5-17 against ranked opponents, including 0-14 away from home.

Between you and I, Florida ends up with a coach who wants to coach his players up as opposed to one the one headed to L$U who’s in in for for money ... read: the Lane Train.

Nice move, Florida. Nice move.

BETCHA DIDN’T KNOW
It’s Getting Crowded in Here

MLC

Every game matters at this point in the NFL season as teams fight for playoff position and chase division titles.

Here's how the NFC playoff picture looks at the moment...

NFC

1. Chicago Bears (9-3): Up next — At Green Bay Packers in Week 14
Notable odds: The Bears jumped into first in the NFC standings Sunday afternoon as a result of the Panthers' upset of the Rams. Friday's Bears win over the Eagles bumped Chicago's odds to win the NFC North to 30% in The Athletic's playoff simulator.

2. Los Angeles Rams (9-3): Up next — At Arizona Cardinals in Week 14
Notable odds: The Rams' odds of clinching the NFC's No. 1 seed plummeted to 42%, per the Athletic's simulator, after their loss to the Panthers on Sunday.

3. Philadelphia Eagles (8-4): Up next — At Los Angeles Chargers in Week 14
Notable odds: Philly still has an iron grip on the NFC East, but with two straight losses, the Eagles are down to 10% to earn the top NFC seed, per The Athletic.

4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (7-5): Up next — At New Orleans Saints in Week 14
Notable odds: The Buccaneers have a very clear lead in the NFC South race, and are sitting at 73% chance to make the playoffs.

5. Seattle Seahawks (9-3): Up next — At Atlanta Falcons in Week 14
Notable odds: Though almost a lock to make the playoffs (around 90% likely across the board) the Seahawks are in a very crowded NFC West.

6. Green Bay Packers (8-3-1): Up next — vs. Chicago Bears in Week 14
Notable odds: Favorites to win the NFC North at 66%, per The Athletic. Next week's game vs. Chicago looms large.

7. San Francisco 49ers (9-4): Up next — vs. Tennessee Titans in Week 15
Notable odds: Strong playoff favorites at 94%, per The Athletic.

Still in the NFC picture

8. Detroit Lions (7-5): Up next — vs. Dallas Cowboys in Week 14
Notable odds: 42% to make the playoffs, per NFL.com. They're down to 4% to win the division, per The Athletic.

9. Dallas Cowboys (6-5-1): Up next — At Detroit Lions in Week 14
Notable odds: 23% to make the playoffs, according to The Athletic, and 16% percent, per NFL.com.

10. Carolina Panthers (7-6): Up next — At New Orleans Saints in Week 15
Notable odds: 30% to make the playoffs, 28% to win the division, per The Athletic.

We’ll review the AFC Playoff Picture in tomorrow’s Coffee Club.


QUOTE OF THE DAY

"When a train goes through a tunnel
and it gets dark, you don't throw
away the ticket and jump off.
You sit still and trust the engineer.”

- Corrie Ten Boom

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Coffee In One Hand. Confidence In The Other. The Coffee Club Way.


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