Taiwan's secret weapon

Behind the nondescript grey buildings that line the streets of Hsinchu lies one of the most important pieces of technology in the world.

Whirring away inside are rows of white machines that are so advanced – and so secretive – that a select few are allowed inside.

This is Taiwan's "Silicon Valley" and these facilitiesproduce the majority of the world's semiconductors– small chips that power virtually every electronic device in use today, from coffee machines to fighter jets.

Every country in the world relies on these chips, including China, which despite threatening to "reunify" Taiwan by force, imports nearly half of the island's semiconductors.

Economists warn that an invasion of Taiwan would cost the world's economy £7.5tn – far more than the cost of theRussian invasion of Ukraineor the Covid-19 pandemic.

Analysts argue that this very fact would act as a key deterrence against Beijing following through on its threats, as China knows if it does invade, its economy would take a direct hit from the fallout.

Known as the "silicon shield", the theory argues that Taiwan's semiconductor industry offers it a de facto security blanket, which would stop China from invading – both because of its own dependency on the chips and the US's, which could come to Taiwan's defence.

Tsai Ing-wen, Taiwan's former president, popularised the theory in 2021 when she wrote that the silicon shield "allows Taiwan to protect itself and others from aggressive attempts by authoritarian regimes to disrupt global supply chains".

However, leading Taiwan companies within the semiconductor industry have been moving production sites abroad to countries such as Chinaand the US.

Experts have warned that this is effectively disintegrating Taipei's valuable economic deterrence, making it more likely that Beijing would attack Taiwan.

A lab technician holds a semiconductor wafer, which is used in the manufacturing process

The monopoly

Taiwan produces approximately 60 to 70 per cent of all the world's semiconductors and more than 95 per cent of the advanced chips.

While thousands of companies are involved in semiconductor production, in Taiwan the industry is synonymous with one name –Taiwan's Semiconductor Manufacturing Company(TSMC).

Founded in 1987, the company has grown over the years to make up more than 60 per cent of the global market share and 9 per cent of Taiwan's GDP. It is the most important company to the country's economy and, in many ways, its national security.

It is one of more than 400 companies based in the Hsinchu Science Park, a concentrated industrial zone in central Taiwan often compared to Silicon Valley in the US.

The park's unique "ecosystem" is one of many reasons that Taiwan has become a global leader in the semiconductor industry, according to Alisa Huang, who has spent over 25 years working as a senior manager at TSMC.

Ms Huang, who now works as an independent consultant, told The Telegraph: "We call it a cluster effect because we have spare parts, equipment, material, design, software, [integrated circuit] manufacturing and assembly tests all in one place. We have a complete supply chain, a complete ecosystem."

TSMC's monopoly over the industry in Taiwan and around the world is often connected to its unprecedented structure as a foundry model. This means it manufactures chips for other companies but is not responsible for the designs. Instead, companies like Apple and Nvidia come to TSMC with orders for products they want to build.

"By choosing not to design, manufacture or market any semiconductor products under its own name, the company ensures that it never competes with its customers," TSMC claims on its website.

The wake-up call

While most of TSMC's production is based in Taiwan, the company has gradually been opening fabrication plants, factories where semiconductor chips are made, in China, the US and Japan.

There is one under construction in Germany, which is set to begin operations by the end of 2027. TSMC announced in March that it plans to invest an additional $100bn (£75bn) to grow its US manufacturing operations.

Some experts believe that TSMC and other companies involved in the supply chain are moving production out of Taiwan in response to thegrowing threat from China.

One of Taiwan's semiconductor factories in North Phoenix, Arizona

Beijing's increasingly hostile rhetoric towards Taiwanand its routine show of force towards the island has spooked foreign governments and semiconductor customers.

Kharis Templeman, a research fellow on Taiwan at the US-based Hoover Institution, explained that the Covid-19 pandemic served as a wake-up call for many companies who were reliant on chips from Taiwan and had to scramble overnight when their supply was interrupted.

It offered an insight into what could happen if China launched an attack against Taiwan, which could result in the supply of chips being permanently cut off.

Mr Templeman said: "Generally the idea of having over-concentration from one supplier located in one location is a big problem for your business model in this new world.

"They want at least some supply or some production that's closer to the ultimate customers."

Kowtowing to the US

Pressure from the US government and the Trump administration specifically has also been a factor in moving production out of Taiwan.

Shih-Chang Hung, a professor of technology at Taiwan's National Tsing Hua University, said: "Trump's Maga – 'Make America Great Again' – they want to bring manufacturing back to the United States. That's the primary reason for why they want to build their own manufacturing infrastructure in the US."

But this means that Taiwan could lose an element of its deterrence. If the US is making its own semiconductor chips, rather than relying on Taipei's, it may be less likely to come to Taiwan's defence in a war.

TheUS is Taiwan's main defence supplier, responsible for equipping the island with virtually all of its military technology. The country also holds a trump card over Taiwan in its ability to make or break a future conflict with China.

War game simulations have shown that the US' decision to come to Taiwan's defence could be the difference between the country remaining autonomous and it falling under Chinese control.

One of Taipei's semiconductor factories in Arizona

However, TSMC has kept an insurance policy.

The company has made sure that only its mature chips will be manufactured overseas. The production of advanced chips will remain in Taiwan.

In fact, in October, Taiwanese officials criticised a proposal by Howard Lutnick, the US commerce secretary, who said that Washington was talking to Taipei about a "50-50" split in semiconductor manufacturing.

In response, Eric Chu, the then-chairman of Taiwan's opposition party, said: "No one can sell out Taiwan or TSMC, and no one can undermine Taiwan's silicon shield".

Diversification risk

While the diversification of TSMC's production and the semiconductor industry more generally offers a safety net for other countries, experts are torn on how this affects Taiwan.

Some, such as Ms Huang, believe that increasing the number of TSMC fabrication plants around the world strengthens Taiwan's ties with other nations.

"When we invest outside Taiwan, either in Europe, in America or in Japan, all these countries become bonded with TSMC," she explained.

Mr Templeman noted that by opening fabrication plants in other countries it "gives them a stronger incentive to care about what's happening in the Taiwan industries and the security threats potentially to this Taiwan company than what previously existed."

In theory, this could support the second branch of the silicon shield argument, which stipulates that the US and allies are more likely to come to Taiwan's defence in the event of a conflict, thereby deterring China.

However, other experts are concerned that if reliance on Taiwan's chip production decreases, and China is able to source its semiconductors outside the country, there will be less standing in Beijing's way.

Earlier this month, Mr Trump gave Nvidia permission to sell its second-most-powerful chip to China, which could signal a drop in Beijing's dependency on Taiwan.

A Taiwanese semiconductor engineer, who spoke to The Telegraph on the condition of anonymity, said: "If they have no need for Taiwan, there will be less reluctance to invade Taiwan because they won't hit their major league economy so their costs will be reduced."

Experts and those within the industry are also worried about Beijing's habit of stealing innovations from other countries.

"First, they welcome your business. Second, they look at your technology. Third, they build a competitor that can beat you. Then, fourth, they kick you out of the country," said the engineer.

This article is the second of four pieces that The Telegraph is publishing on Taiwan's plans to repel a Chinese invasion and Beijing's efforts to undermine the island's defences. The first story in the series can be readhere.

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Taiwan’s £7.5tn secret weapon is disintegrating

Behind the nondescript grey buildings that line the streets of Hsinchu lies one of the most important pieces of technology in the world. W...
Emanuele (second right) pictured with Rory McIlroy

The first victim of the fire that engulfed a bar in aSwiss ski resorthas been named as Emanuele Galeppini, an Italian teenage golfer.

Theblaze broke outduring New Year's Eve celebrations in Crans-Montana, killing at least 40 people and injuring 115 more.

There were around 200 partygoers, mostly aged between 16 and 25, inside the basement of Le Constellation bar when the fire broke out, according to witnesses.

Emanuele, 16, was named by the Italian Golf Federation, which said it mourned the passing of a "young athlete who embodied passion and authentic values".

"In this time of great sorrow, our thoughts go out to his family and all those who loved him," it added.

Other foreign tourists are among the dead, police confirmed, but their nationalities have not yet been released.

The rest of the victims' identities have not yet been released. Authorities warned on Friday that the process could take many days because of the severity of their burns.

Emanuele, who was of Genoese origin but lived in Dubai with his family, was reported missing by his father Edoardo on Thursday, according to Italian media.

Mr Galeppini previously appealed for help to find his son, saying: "Around 1.30am we learned of the explosion. We went up there in front of the restaurant but we haven't found him yet. He hasn't answered the phone since last night."

Emanuele Galeppini was named by the Italian Golf Federation on Friday morning

Emanuele's two friends, who accompanied him to the nightclub, were reportedly tracked down by their parents in nearby hospitals but had no information about him. The bar is reportedly one of the few late-night venues in the ski resort that allows people as young as 16 to enter.

The World Amateur Golf Ranking website describes the teenager as a junior golfer who "loves to golf, compete and eat". His own Instagram page described him as a chef.

The fire tore through the bar's packed basement in the luxury Swiss resort at around 1.30am on New Year's Day.

Emanuele was first reported missing by his father Edoardo

According to witnesses, a barmaid carried on the shoulders of a colleague held a champagne bottle topped with a sparkler above her head which set fire to the ceiling.

Footage showed flames rapidly spreading along the ceiling above the bar as music continued to play before the fire then set off a series of explosions.

The blaze was believed to have triggered the release of combustible gases, which ignited and caused what firefighters called a flashover fire or backdraft.

However, authorities are still investigating the cause of the fire, which they have labelled an accident. No arrests have been made.

Credit: via X

Antonio Tajani, the Italian foreign minister, said on Friday that 12 to 15 Italian citizens were taken to hospital and a further 16 were missing.

France's foreign ministry said nine French citizens were assumed to be among the injured and eight others remained unaccounted for.

A trainee footballer in Germany was injured in the blaze, his team said. Tahirys Dos Santos was "badly burned" and sent to Germany for treatment after the incident, FC Metz added.

The amount of burn victims overwhelmed Swiss hospitals, meaning some were sent abroad for treatment. Fifty people are reported have been severely burned.

The alpine resort of Crans-Montana, situated 25 miles north of the Matterhorn, is popular with tourists from Britain, France and Italy.

Try full access to The Telegraph free today. Unlock their award-winning website and essential news app, plus useful tools and expert guides for your money, health and holidays.

First victim of Swiss resort fire named as teenage golfer

The first victim of the fire that engulfed a bar in aSwiss ski resorthas been named as Emanuele Galeppini, an Italian teenage golfer. Theb...
India approves electronic component projects worth $4.6 billion

Jan 2 (Reuters) - India has approved projects worth 418.63 billion rupees ($4.64 billion) from a ​host of companies to boost domestic manufacturing ‌of electronic components under an incentive scheme, the country's ‌IT ministry said on Friday.

Global majors Samsung Electronics, Tata Electronics and Foxconn were among the companies whose projects were approved to receive government subsidies ⁠under the Electronics ‌Component Manufacturing Scheme, which has an outlay of 229.19 billion rupees. The ‍projects include the manufacture of enclosures for mobile phones, camera sub-assemblies and other components.

India has been stepping up ​efforts to boost electronics manufacturing, launching a ‌series of incentive programs to attract global and domestic investors, expand local manufacturing capacity, reduce import dependence and strengthen supply chains across multiple sectors.

India's electronics manufacturing sector produced goods worth $125 billion ⁠in the year to March ​2025. The government hopes ​to increase this to $500 billion by fiscal 2031.

The projects approved on Friday are spread ‍across eight ⁠states and are expected to produce parts worth 2.58 trillion rupees ($28.62 billion), while employing ⁠about 34,000 individuals, according to the IT ministry..

($1 = 90.1440 ‌Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Nandan Mandayam in Bengaluru; ‌Editing by Harikrishnan Nair)

India approves electronic component projects worth $4.6 billion

Jan 2 (Reuters) - India has approved projects worth 418.63 billion rupees ($4.64 billion) from a ​host of companies to bo...
Durant leads Rockets past Nets for fourth straight victory

NEW YORK (AP) — Kevin Durant had 22 points and a season-high 11 assists, Amen Thompson scored 23 points and the Houston Rockets beat the Brooklyn Nets 120-96 on Thursday night for their fourth straight victory.

Alperen Sengun had 20 points, six rebounds and six assists after a two-game absence for the Rockets, who started fast in both halves to win in Brooklyn for the first time in seven years. Tari Eason finished with 15 points and nine rebounds, and Jabari Smith Jr. and Reed Sheppard each scored 14 points.

Sengun was 8 for 12 from the floor after sitting out two games with a left calf injury.

Cam Thomas scored 21 points for the Nets, who dropped their second straight after winning three in a row for the only time this season. Ziaire Williams added 14.

HEAT 118, PISTONS 112

DETROIT (AP) — Norman Powell scored 36 points and Bam Abdebayo added 15 points and 14 rebounds as Miami extended their winning streak to four games with a win over Detroit.

Cade Cunningham had 31 points, 11 assists and eight rebounds for Detroit and Marcus Sasser scored 18.

Detroit trailed by 22 in the second half and was still down 114-103 with two minutes left, but scored six straight points to make it a five-point game. Powell missed and Javonte Green hit a 3-pointer to get the Pistons within two with 46.4 seconds to play.

Jaime Jaquez Jr. hit a short jumper to make it a two-possession game, though, and Ausar Thompson's turnover forced the Pistons to start fouling. Powell hit a pair of free throws — his first points of the fourth quarter — to clinch it.

Jaquez scored 19 points for the Heat and Andrew Wiggins added 17.

76ERS 123, MAVERICKS 108

DALLAS (AP) — Tyrese Maxey had 34 points, 10 assists and eight rebounds, Joel Embiid scored 22 points and Philadelphia beat Dallas.

Rookie guard VJ Edgecombe, the one-and-done player from Baylor playing 100 miles from his college campus for the first time, scored 23 points two nights afterhitting a 3-pointer in the final seconds of a 139-136 overtime victoryat Memphis.

Oft-injured Anthony Davis returned for Dallas after missing two games with a sore adductor muscle. The 10-time All-Star finished with 13 points and eight rebounds as the Mavs matched their season worst with a fourth consecutive loss.

Rookie No. 1 overall pick Cooper Flagg scored 12 points for the Mavericks, who were led by Max Christie's 18 points.

CELTICS 120, KINGS 106

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Jaylen Brown had 29 points and 10 rebounds, and Boston pulled away down the stretch to beat the Sacramento.

Brown shot 11 of 25, including 1 for 9 from 3-point distance, but made six free throws and added four assists before fouling out late in the fourth quarter.

The four-time All-Star has been on a scoring tear lately, pouring in 20 or more points in 12 of his last 15 games.

Payton Pritchard had 16 points and six assists as Boston improved to 3-1 on its five-game trip. Sam Hauser hit five 3-pointers to finish with 15 points. Anfernee Simons also scored 15.

DeMar DeRozan led Sacramento with 25 points. Dennis Schroder scored 18 and Keon Ellis added 16. The Kings (8-26) have lost four of five and nine of 11.

CLIPPERS 118, JAZZ 101

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Kawhi Leonard scored 45 points, James Harden added 20 and Los Angeles recovered from blowing a 21-point lead to beat Utah, extending their winning streak to a season-best six games.

Leonard was the only Clippers starter on the floor for much of the fourth quarter. He singlehandedly matched Utah's points in the period (20), with blood on his nose from what appeared to be a scratch.

Los Angeles hit seven straight 3-pointers, with Leonard making four, to pull away. Nicolas Batum finished with 14 points and went 4 of 6 from 3-point range.

The Jazz rallied despite being without three starters. They were led by reserve Kyle Anderson with 22 points — his first 20-point game in nearly three years — and Brice Sensabaugh with 20. Anderson's eight rebounds were a season high. Cody Williams also had 18 points, while Isaiah Collier had 16 points and 10 assists.

Durant leads Rockets past Nets for fourth straight victory

NEW YORK (AP) — Kevin Durant had 22 points and a season-high 11 assists, Amen Thompson scored 23 points and the Houston R...
Last-minute field goal lifts Ole Miss past Georgia, into CFP semis

Since the regular season ended, Ole Miss dominated the college football news cycle with its off-field buzz regarding the Lane Kiffin saga.

Under new head coach Pete Golding, the No. 6 Rebels are thriving with an "us against the world" mentality.

Ole Miss earned the biggest win in school history on Thursday, as Lucas Carneiro drilled a tiebreaking 47-yard field goal with six seconds left, propelling the Rebels to a 39-34 victory over No. 3 Georgia in a College Football Playoff quarterfinal at the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans.

Golding, unlike Kiffin, wasn't a household name until recently, but now the former defensive coordinator has Ole Miss two wins away from a national championship.

"I think you've got to have the right guys," Golding said of his team. "I think they've got to be tough, they've got to be competitive. I think they've got to love football. I think you've got a lot of guys on other teams that don't love football. If there's one thing about this group, it's that they love football."

Trinidad Chambliss threw a 40-yard pass to De'Zhaun Stribling on third-and-5 with 26 seconds left, leading to Carneiro's third field goal of the game.

A backwards pass on Georgia's ensuing kickoff return struck the end-zone pylon, resulting in a safety with one second left.

Chambliss threw for 362 yards and two touchdowns and Kewan Lacy rushed for 98 yards and two scores for Ole Miss (13-1), which will face No. 10 Miami in a semifinal game at the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 8 in Glendale, Ariz.

The Rebels' remarkable postseason run hasn't come without its fair share of obstacles, but Chambliss and company aren't thinking big-picture quite yet.

"We're not really focused on destiny or anything like that," said Chambliss, who was selected as the Sugar Bowl's offensive MVP. "We just want to play ball and have fun. A lot of people did doubt us before the season, and they still doubted us when our coach left. We just want to play ball and have fun, and I think that's showing right now."

Ole Miss' Harrison Wallace III made nine receptions for 156 yards and a touchdown, and Stribling hauled in seven catches for 122 yards.

Gunner Stockton threw for 203 yards and a touchdown for Georgia (12-2), which saw its second straight season end in the quarterfinals in New Orleans. A disappointing finish for the Bulldogs also marks their third consecutive campaign without a semifinal appearance.

Ole Miss outgained Georgia 473-343 and held coach Kirby Smart's team to a 3-for-13 mark on third downs.

"(The Rebels) made more plays than we did, and I've got to be honest, that's part of football," Smart said. "They outexecuted us, outcoached us, but I enjoyed that game and the atmosphere. I'm proud of our team. I'm sick that we lost."

After Georgia held a nine-point halftime lead, Bulldogs kicker Peyton Woodring had a 55-yard field-goal attempt come up short with 8:33 left in the third. From there, Lacy's 7-yard touchdown rush cut the Rebels' deficit to 21-19.

Facing a fourth-and-5 from its own 30-yard line, Georgia had Landon Roldan connect with Lawson Luckie for 16 yards on a fake punt. Woodring's 37-yarder then put the Bulldogs ahead by five.

Ole Miss took its first lead of the second half as Lacy's 5-yard touchdown rush was followed with Chambliss' two-point conversion pass to Wallace, giving the Rebels a 27-24 edge with 11:29 left in the fourth.

Georgia took another gamble on its next drive, going for it on fourth-and-2 from its own 33-yard line. Stockton was sacked, leading to Chambliss' 13-yard touchdown pass to Wallace, pushing Ole Miss' lead to 34-24 with 9:02 remaining.

The Bulldogs pulled within three as Stockton's 18-yard touchdown pass to Zachariah Branch stamped a 75-yard scoring drive that lasted just 1:59.

After forcing a punt, Georgia faced a fourth-and-9 on its 48, and Stockton connected with Branch for 16 yards. A pair of Ole Miss pass-interference penalties set Georgia up with a first-and-goal from the 8-yard line, but the Rebels held the Bulldogs to a game-tying 24-yard field goal from Woodring with 56 seconds left.

Carneiro made field goals from 55 and 56 yards in the first quarter, both setting the Sugar Bowl record. The first-year transfer from Western Kentucky is 5-for-5 on field goals in Ole Miss' two postseason wins, and Golding understands how important the redshirt junior is to the Rebels' present and future.

"A lot of people think Lucas is the best kicker in the country, so a lot of people want Lucas. So I've been meeting with Lucas a lot lately," Golding said of retaining Carneiro. "We felt he was the best kicker in the country coming out of Western Kentucky last year, and he's done an unbelievable job. ...

"We've got all the confidence in the world in him."

--Field Level Media

Last-minute field goal lifts Ole Miss past Georgia, into CFP semis

Since the regular season ended, Ole Miss dominated the college football news cycle with its off-field buzz regarding t...
Heave and hope: How Ole Miss pulled off one of the wildest College Football Playoff wins ever

NEW ORLEANS — The best stories are those unexpected.

The ones that defy logic, that go against every prediction or prognostication. This isn't only in sports, but in life as well. The moments we least expect are often the most bewildering, shocking and altogether fascinating of our fleeting time on this earth.

This year, in this college football season, in, of all states, Mississippi and of all teams, the Ole Miss Rebels, there is an unexpected story — improbable, unprecedented, incredible really.

On New Year's Day night inside a rocking Louisiana Superdome, the latest chapter of this confounding tale played out in a football game that delivered some entirely unlikely Mardi Gras magic to this party place.

With a former Division II quarterback and a head coach in his first month on the job, the Ole Miss Rebels, a touchdown underdog playing against the country's latest perennial power, with a staff of a half-dozen coaches bound for their conference rival, that Ole Miss team, the one left in the dust by Lane Kiffin, the center of perhaps the most unprecedented coaching move in college football history, that one, these Rebels, they did it.

Ole Miss beat Georgia, 39-34, to advance to theCollege Football Playoff semifinalagainst 10th-seeded Miami (12-2) in the Fiesta Bowl next Thursday — one win away from an unthinkable scenario and something that hasn't happened in more than 60 years: the Rebels playing for a national championship.

How they did it — with their former head coach an hour away in Baton Rouge, a quarterback who few knew just a year ago and a big-legged transfer kicker from Western Kentucky — is one of the most stunning happenings in the history of the sport.

"It's incredibly hard to put it in words," says Glenn Boyce, the Ole Miss chancellor, nearly in tears amid the on-field celebration. "The way you hold something like this together is, sure, leadership and leadership matters, but here's the other way: these players."

Mississippi quarterback Trinidad Chambliss (6) celebrates after the Sugar Bowl NCAA college football playoff quarterfinal game against Georgia in New Orleans, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Mathew Hinton)

The players had been forgotten, victims of the giant shadow created by Kiffin's departure, resulting in one of the most bizarre staffing structures ever seen: Two former LSU staff members are now at Ole Miss and at least six future LSU staff members are still coaching the Rebels.

Caught in between the bickering adults is a group of players that helped sixth-seeded Ole Miss (13-1) storm back on Thursday from a nine-point second-half deficit against the third-seeded and SEC champion Georgia Bulldogs (12-2).

There's quarterback Trinidad Chambliss, a former Division II passer who tore through Georgia's defense for 362 yards and two touchdowns and, in his final heave, found receiver De'Zhaun Stribling for 40 yards to set up the game-winning 47-yard field goal from another unlikely star, transfer kicker Lucas Carneiro, who swung that leg of his to field goals of 57 and 55 yards as well.

How about receiver Harrison Wallace? He caught nine passes on this night for 156 yards. There was also running back Kewan Lacy, banged up enough that in the post-game locker room he reminded a reporter not to tap too hard on that injured shoulder of his. He didn't seem hurt between the lines, gouging UGA for 98 yards and two touchdowns on 22 carries.

Don't forget about the defense, too. Linebacker Suntarine Perkins' sack on a Georgia fourth down put Ole Miss in position to take a two-score lead. And defensive tackle Zxavian Harris led the team in tackles (10) and broke up a key pass.

In fact, within that celebratory locker room, Harris, barechested with a towel wrapped around his sweaty head and a silver chain around his thick neck, had a message for his former coach.

"He's been trying to steal our shine," Harris said. "All of our coaches could leave now and we'd still operate as a close team. We are our own team. Coaches can only do so much."

Later on, Harris quipped, "I heard [Kiffin] was trying to get [on TV] with the announcers [at the game]. We're not worried about Kiffin. Kiffin gone."

Gone but not forgotten. Afterward, Kiffin's departure still lingered across the post-game celebration. While he didn't appear at the game,Kiffin posted congratulatory messages to his former squadon social media. But on the field and in the locker room, during these mayhem moments, no one seemed particularly complimentary of the man who helped build the roster and then left it amid a playoff run.

"Eat s***!" one Ole Miss official said amid the postgame celebration. "He can eat s***!"

Kiffin's impact on the Ole Miss team isn't necessarily done. In fact, it remains unclear if the six Ole Miss assistant coaches who have signed to coach next season at LSU will remain with the team. Many around the program expect all or some of them to permanently join the LSU staff and end their run with the Rebels.

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - JANUARY 01: Trinidad Chambliss #6 and Kewan Lacy #5 of the Ole Miss Rebels hold up the trophy after defeating the Georgia Bulldogs during the 2025 College Football Playoff Quarterfinal at the Allstate Sugar Bowl at Caesars Superdome on January 01, 2026 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

Asked about the future of the LSU-bound assistant coaches, including offensive coordinator Charlie Weis Jr., Ole Miss athletic director Keith Carter told Yahoo Sports, "I don't know."

In the meantime, on Friday, the transfer portal opened, potentially setting off whatone Ole Miss staff member described as a multitude of potential "player swaps" between the two programs.

It's one of the most bizarre situations to ever happen in the sport.

But, alas, don't let it take away from the unexpected, from the unpredictable, from the unprecedented that unfolded here at the Superdome, where an Ole Miss Powder Blue Party carried on deep into the night — their athletic director and new head coach, Pete Golding, at the center of it all.

"I think we all lost a few years off our lives tonight. But, man, it was worth it," Carter said. "It's one of the most mature groups I've ever been around in that locker room. For us to come back and win that game, it shows character."

Carter pulled aside Golding after the game and whispered to him, "What you've done the last few weeks is unbelievable."

On Thursday night, the Rebels trailed 21-12 before their comeback. They amassed two long touchdown drives to take the lead and then their defense stuffed the Bulldogs on fourth down at the UGA 30-yard line when Perkins mauled quarterback Gunner Stockton, popping the ball free and setting up Chambliss' touchdown to Wallace for a 10-point lead with nine minutes left.

But Georgia tied the score late on wild drives of its own. All that did was set up more Chambliss magic. On third-and-5 and with 32 seconds left, he hit in stride a streaking Stribling for that big gain and Carneiro booted his field goal.

"This is awesome," the kicker said afterward. "Something I dreamed about. Once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."

But before the party could really begin, drama unfolded in the final seconds. In fact, Ole Miss players and fans celebrated the win three different times. The Rebels were even awarded a safety in the final seconds as a backward throw on a kickoff bounded into the end zone and an official review also put one second back on the clock.

In a wild scene, Ole Miss players were twice ushered off the field and the stage, wheeled onto the playing surface for the trophy presentation, needed to be shoved back onto the sideline.

Finally, after Georgia's last-gasp — a play of nearly a dozen laterals — the party could begin.

The crowd boomed Golding's name, "Peeeete! Peeeete!" Players carried around the giant Sugar Bowl trophy. The band played. And people cried.

Do players realize the story in which they are a part of?

"They'll realize it when it's all said and done but right now, they're playing football in the backyard," said Eric Wood, the school's deputy athletic director. "They're playing backyard football. I don't know if they realize it, but I do know that they are fighting like crazy to not have it stop."

It's all so unexpected.

Heave and hope: How Ole Miss pulled off one of the wildest College Football Playoff wins ever

NEW ORLEANS — The best stories are those unexpected. The ones that defy logic, that go against every prediction ...
Overlooking a snow covered Rocky Mountain National Park. - Kyle Kempf/iStock/Getty Images

A woman was found dead Thursday on a hiking trail in northern Colorado, in what authorities believe to be a rare fatal mountain lion attack.

Hikers on the Crosier Mountain trail in Larimer County spotted a mountain lion near a person lying on the ground around 12:15 p.m., according toColorado Parks and Wildlife.

The hikers drove the animal away by throwing rocks before finding the victim had no pulse.

"Mountain lion attacks in Colorado are considered to be very rare," CPW spokesperson Kara Van Hoose said at a news conference. While 28 previous attacks have been reported to CPW since 1990, the last fatal attack was in 1999, the agency said.

The Larimer County coroner is expected to release the victim's identity and cause of death, Van Noose said.

CPW, which is leading the investigation, said officers shot at a lion on the scene, and later tracked and euthanized it. Another lion in the area was also euthanized by officers.

Wildlife involved in attacks on humans must be euthanized for public safety, CPW said. The animals will be tested for human DNA to determine whether they were responsible for the attack and will also be examined for any abnormalities or neurological diseases like rabies and avian influenza.

Colorado is home to an estimated 3,800 to 4,000 mountain lions with populations growing since they were classified as a big game species in 1965, according toCPW's website.

Living mostly in brushy areas and woodlands in low elevation, the animals largely prey on deer and elk.

CPW advises anyone who encounters a mountain lion to make noise, hold objects overhead to appear bigger and slowly back away.

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Suspected mountain lion attack in Colorado leaves woman dead

A woman was found dead Thursday on a hiking trail in northern Colorado, in what authorities believe to be a rare fatal mountain lion attack...

 

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