
The Trinidad Chambliss eligibility case took another turn this week after the NCAA appealed the Mississippi court ruling that cleared the Ole Miss quarterback to play in 2026.
The NCAA filed a 658 page document with the Mississippi Supreme Court on Thursday, asking the court to overrule the preliminary injunction granted to Chambliss and requesting an expedited ruling.
The appeal targets the injunction issued Feb. 13 by Judge Robert Whitwell in Lafayette County, Mississippi, which allowed Chambliss the possibility of returning for a sixth season. Whitwell’s ruling came after Chambliss sued the NCAA following the organization’s denial of his waiver request for an additional year of eligibility.
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The NCAA’s filing argues the organization has final authority over how its eligibility rules are interpreted and applied, and it warns that state court interventions would create inconsistent outcomes across the country. The filing included a passage that read: “If courts can intervene in NCAA eligibility decisions to provide special treatment to favored athletes, then the NCAA’s ability to ensure fair athletic competition in which all participants play by the same rules will depend upon the whims of trial courts throughout the country.”
Chambliss’ case has moved quickly and publicly since the end of Ole Miss’ season. The NCAA denied his waiver after the Rebels’ 2025 campaign concluded, prompting Chambliss to sue and seek relief in Mississippi court.
The underlying dispute centers on how the NCAA counted Chambliss’ seasons and whether he should receive a medical redshirt year stemming from his time at Division II Ferris State. In the February ruling, Whitwell found that the NCAA had mishandled elements of the process and that Chambliss met the criteria for relief that would preserve his eligibility for 2026.
Chambliss’ timeline, as detailed in reporting around the case, includes redshirting in 2021, playing in only two games due to injury in 2022, and having limited action in 2023 before helping lead Ferris State to a Division II national championship in 2024. He transferred to Ole Miss for the 2025 season, became the starter in Week 3, and finished the year as one of the SEC’s biggest impact newcomers while the Rebels went 13-2 and reached the College Football Playoff semifinals.
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The appeal arrives with the 2026 season clock already ticking. The NCAA asked the Mississippi Supreme Court to expedite the review, a request that would push the case toward a faster decision rather than letting it linger into the summer.
For Ole Miss, the stakes are obvious. Chambliss’ status affects the 2026 quarterback plan and the roster construction that follows it. For the NCAA, the appeal is framed as a precedent issue and whether individual state trial courts can effectively override the association’s eligibility determinations for specific athletes in season to season decisions.
The case has also become a high visibility example of how eligibility disputes now move through courtrooms, not just waiver portals. As the filing puts it, the NCAA is arguing the injunction would cause “irreparable harm” not only to the NCAA but to Division I programs and athletes competing under the same rules.
A Mississippi Supreme Court timeline for a ruling was not included in the initial reporting, but the NCAA’s request for expedited handling signals it wants a final answer well before the 2026 season gets close enough to force roster decisions in public.
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