Lane Kiffin has intimate but limited experience with how his old boss Nick Saban handled regular-season losses.

Quite well back then, it turns out.

Saban’s 10th-ranked Crimson Tide (7-2, 4-2 Southeastern Conference, No. 9 CFP) will try to rebound from that relative rarity Saturday against Kiffin and No. 10 Mississippi (8-1, 4-1, No. 11 CFP) in Oxford.

As Alabama’s offensive coordinator, Kiffin only witnessed that response twice in three seasons, both coming at the hands of Hugh Freeze’s Rebels.

“I thought he was phenomenal, not how you would maybe expect it to be the other way, like he comes in and everything’s the end of the world like some coaches do,” Kiffin said. “He does a really good job of addressing exactly what it was” that went wrong.

The Tide hasn’t lost two straight regular season games since 2007,

It’s a particularly relevant topic this week. Alabama is coming off its second last-play loss of the season, a 32-21 overtime defeat by No. 7 LSU.

Coupled with another heartbreakingly close loss to No. 5 Tennessee, it’s left the Tide outside of the national title hunt — barring a dominant closing run combined with a calculus of helpful losses by other contenders. Playing better and finishing strong amid talk that Alabama’s dynasty has faded will be motivation enough for now.

“We haven’t been in this position for a while, but at the same time we’ve got a lot of pride in what we do and want everybody to do it really well,” Saban said.

The Tide won eight straight after losing to Ole Miss in 2014 and its final 12 en route to the 2015 national title.

GOAT FUEL

Kiffin defends his old boss amid speculation that maybe Alabama and Saban have lost their mojo, calling that “GOAT fuel.” As in greatest of all time.

The Ole Miss coach cited ESPN pundit Paul Finebaum’s comment that “the window on the Saban dynasty is closing.”

“You’re just giving the GOAT fuel, which for him that works and he goes and proves him wrong,” Kiffin said. “I really appreciate Paul saying that right after the game. I’m sure it was on (Saban’s) desk Sunday morning.”

ROAD TROUBLES

Alabama has barely beaten Texas and suffered both losses on the road, all coming down to the final seconds. The Tide also beat Arkansas away from the comforts of home but has had plenty of issues on the road.

However, a victory would be Saban’s 27th road win over a Top 25 team, moving him into a tie with Joe Paterno for second behind all-time leader Bobby Bowden (33).

MISSING OUT?

Quinshon Judkins starred at Pike Road High School just outside Montgomery, but didn’t get a scholarship offer from Alabama. The Tide signed more highly rated running backs who aren’t playing much behind Jahmyr Gibbs and other veterans. Judkins, meanwhile, is the nation’s top freshman runner with 1,036 yards and 13 touchdowns.

No SEC freshman has reached 1,000 yards this fast since Florida’s Emmitt Smith in 1987.

“We looked at him coming out last year and in hindsight, it’d be great if he was on our team,” Saban said.

FACING EX-ASSISTANTS

Kiffin will try to become the third former Saban assistant to beat him in the last 14 months. The Alabama coach started 24-0 against ex-underlings-turned-head coaches before losing last season to Jimbo Fisher and Texas A&M and Georgia’s Kirby Smart.

POINTS GALORE

Alabama’s offense may be hard-pressed to duplicate its recent success against Ole Miss defenses, given the way the Tide has been playing lately.

Alabama has won the last six meetings and averaged 56.7 points during that span, scoring at least 59 four times. That includes 62 and 63 on the last two visits to Vaught-Hemingway stadium in 2018 and 2020, plus 48 there in 2016.