Ole Miss added Patrick Kelly, son of LSU head coach Brian Kelly, to a support staff position, the program confirmed this week. The hire places the younger Kelly in an off-field analyst or quality control capacity under Lane Kiffin, though the exact title and salary band remain undisclosed. Patrick Kelly spent the 2023 season at LSU in a similar role before this lateral move 90 miles north to Oxford.
The transaction is unremarkable on paper—support staffers churn constantly, often invisible to anyone outside the building—but the surname matters. Brian Kelly has coached in the SEC since 2022. His son now works for a division rival that LSU faces annually, most recently in a 55-49 Ole Miss win last November. The hire reflects two trends: the growing use of family placements as coaching-tree currency, and the reality that support roles have become farm systems for coordinators who will earn $1.5-2.5 million by their mid-thirties.
Kiffin has built Ole Miss into a top-15 program by recruiting aggressively and running a staff structure borrowed from the NFL—large analyst pools, fluid roles, minimal public accountability. His support staff now exceeds 20 people, most hired on one-year deals that reset each February. Patrick Kelly joins a cohort that includes former Power Five position coaches, recent MBA graduates, and sons of SEC assistants. The model works because turnover is expected. Analysts who produce film breakdowns or scout opponents become position coaches; those who don't leave for Group of Five jobs or SEC rivals.
The broader pattern is notable. Nick Saban employed his daughter as an athletics department liaison. Jimbo Fisher hired his son as a tight ends analyst at Texas A&M. Kirby Smart's staff at Georgia has included relatives of four sitting SEC head coaches over the past three years. The practice serves two functions: it locks in loyalty from the parent coach, who now has personal equity in the rival program's success, and it creates informal recruiting channels. When a five-star quarterback's family wants intel on LSU's offense, Ole Miss now has someone whose father installed it.
The risk is minimal. Support staffers rarely face media availability. Their salaries—typically $50,000-90,000—are paid from budgets that SEC programs refresh annually via booster contributions. If Patrick Kelly underperforms, Ole Miss reassigns him or declines to renew. If he excels, Kiffin has an assistant with direct insight into LSU's personnel decisions, practice rhythms, and locker-room culture. That information has monetary value when the programs meet in November 2025, with College Football Playoff seeding likely on the line.
The hire also signals where Kiffin sees staff advantage. Ole Miss cannot outspend Georgia or Texas on coordinator salaries—those programs pay $2 million+ for defensive coordinators—but it can build depth in the analyst layer that produces game-plan edges. Patrick Kelly's role will likely involve opponent scouting, self-scout film review, or recruiting coordination. The work is invisible until it isn't: a third-down tendency spotted in August becomes a fourth-quarter interception in November.
What to watch: Whether Patrick Kelly appears on the sideline during Ole Miss-LSU in 2025, which would make the family optics unavoidable. Also, if Brian Kelly references the hire publicly, particularly during SEC spring meetings in May, where coaching ethics and staff-poaching norms are periodically debated. Finally, monitor whether other SEC programs accelerate family hires as the December 2025 early signing period approaches—staff continuity has become a recruiting pitch as the transfer portal expands.
The Kellys are now contractually opposed one Saturday per year. The rest of the time, they share scouting reports over dinner.
The takeaway
Ole Miss hired Brian Kelly's son as support staffer, adding family leverage in SEC staff wars while LSU plays Oxford annually.
ole misssec footballcoaching staffnepotismlane kiffinlsu
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