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The NCAA has officially thrown the book at the Ole Miss football program, launching an investigation into the highly anticipated transfer portal drama of Luke Ferrelli. The investigation officially began on Jan. 23, which was the same day Swinney publicly criticized Ole Miss during a press conference. Since the case seemingly went nowhere, the NCAA now wants the digital footprints of six Ole Miss staffers for “forensic imaging” to crack the case.

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According to documents obtained by ESPN through an open-records request, an NCAA enforcement official emailed Ole Miss senior associate athletic director Taylor Hall on Jan. 23.

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In the email, the NCAA explained that it was opening a formal investigation into the football program. Officials also reminded Ole Miss that the school must save all important records, messages, and documents connected to the case as required under NCAA rules.

It started with head coach Pete Golding’ phone. The NCAA’s preservation mandate hits General Manager Austin Thomas, Inside Linebackers Coach Jay Shoop, Outside Linebackers Coach Matt Kitchens, and Director of Player Personnel Jai Choudhary. They NCAA also demanded the phone of Matt McLaughlin, the Senior Associate Athletic Director for Strategy and Cap Management, the literal “money guy” who actually looks after the program’s player revenue-sharing and roster budget.

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Investigators also asked for Ferrelli’s phones and phone records from December 2025 through January 2026. This means tech experts are making bit-by-bit digital clones of both their personal and university-issued smartphones to dig up every single piece of hidden data to see any foul play or any improper communication in the place.

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However, according to ESPN, both Ole Miss and Clemson declined to comment publicly when ESPN contacted them. Sources close to the situation told ESPN that the NCAA investigation is still in the early stages, meaning no conclusions or punishments have been announced. Clemson also refused to release some records connected to the case, saying they wanted to protect Ferrelli’s privacy rights as a former student-athlete.

The whole thing blew up after Ferrelli left Clemson for Ole Miss just 6 days after signing a formal financial aid agreement. On January 14th, Ferrelli’s sports agent, Ryan Williams, called Clemson General Manager Jordan Sorrells with some shocking news: Ole Miss was suddenly “coming hard” after his client.

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Coach Swinney claims that Ole Miss Defensive Coordinator Pete Golding went so far as to text Ferrelli while the linebacker was literally sitting inside an 8:00 AM Clemson University classroom. The text allegedly asked, “I know you’re signed. What’s the buyout?” Reports also claimed that Golding showed Ferrelli a photo of a possible $1 million revenue-sharing contract offer from Ole Miss in an effort to convince him to leave Clemson and join the Rebels instead.

The situation became even bigger because of the timing. On Jan. 16, the final day of the winter transfer portal window, Ferrelli officially decided to leave Clemson and transfer to Ole Miss. Because the Tigers got low-balled so badly on the very last day of the portal and were left without a top linebacker, the NCAA now wants to closely examine all communication connected to this case.

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What happens if Ole Miss gets tagged?

Under the strict rules of NCAA Bylaw 19.2, schools and their employees have an “affirmative and automatic duty” to preserve and hand over all digital evidence.

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If any coach or staffer refuses to surrender their personal device, or if the digital forensics show that anyone intentionally deleted messages after the January 23 notice, Ole Miss will face immediate and severe “lack of cooperation” penalties that could honestly be worse than the tampering itself. As of right now, the NCAA case is still in its early, active stages, but it is being viewed across college sports as a historic benchmark case.

When cornered by reporters about Dabo Swinney’s furious public accusations, a calm Pete Golding simply smiled and responded that “there’s two sides to every story,” choosing to let the lawyers and compliance offices hash it out. If the NCAA finds cold, hard proof of a $1 million mid-semester bribe on those cell phones, it could trigger historic postseason bans, or perhaps scholarship losses, or maybe something more sinister caliber punishment.

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Ameek Abdullah Jamal

2,315 Articles

Ameek Abdullah Jamal is a College Football writer at EssentiallySports. An athlete-turned-writer, he brings on-field perspective to his coverage, highlighting the energy, rivalries, and culture that define campus football. His reporting emphasizes quick-turn updates and nuanced storytelling, connecting directly with engaged fans. Ameek believes the vibrant atmosphere at college football games fosters community and is central to the sport’s growth in America. He also serves as a reporter with the ES CFB Pro Writer Program, connecting directly with fan creators. Alongside his editorial work, Ameek has led business-focused projects, including a FIFA initiative that combined strategic planning with data-driven insights, demonstrating his ability to bridge sports and analysis. Among his notable works is an exclusive interview with Alabama running back Daniel Hill, who discussed the impact of Coach Nick Saban's retirement on his career aspirations. Ameek's coverage also explores the evolving landscape of college football, including the NCAA's challenges to the NIL ecosystem and their implications for the sport's future.

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