HOOVER, Ala. —
Mississippi coach Hugh Freeze says he’s a realist.
That’s a good thing considering his difficult situation at Ole Miss, a program with lots of work to do before becoming a consistent threat in the Southeastern Conference. “Our program is in a spot that none of us are happy with,” Freeze said on Thursday at SEC media days. “I get that. I’m very, very anxious about starting the process and the journey to get us out of being where we are to back where we’ve been in the past.”
It doesn’t look like a quick fix, but the first-year coach has guided fast turnarounds before. He took a strange road to his first SEC head coaching job, working as a high school coach for more than a decade before rebuilding programs at NAIA-level Lambuth (Tenn.) and Arkansas State. Now he’s in a conference that has won the last six national championships. Ole Miss has lost 15 of its last 16 SEC games and had a 2-10 overall record last season.
The depressing season took quite a toll on the Rebels. Not only did former coach Houston Nutt lose his job, but several players fell behind with academics. Cornerback Nickolas Brassell has already left the team because of academic issues, and Freeze said there are four more players who have work to do this summer before they are assured eligibility this fall — though he didn’t name specific individuals.
“I really don’t know exactly all the reasons for the situations we inherited,” Freeze said. “But it’s well-documented that we did inherit a significant challenge there academically ... I really think it comes back to personal accountability and that was lost for whatever reason within the program.”
Ole Miss junior cornerback Charles Sawyer said change in the program since Freeze has arrived is significant. Freeze estimated that about “60 percent” of the team was working at a level he deemed appropriate and the others would hopefully follow their lead.
“Attitudes have changed a lot on the team,” Sawyer said. “We have guys actually ready to practice. They are ready to go to weights, ready to go to 7 on 7. That changes a lot. This team has come together. It takes effort every morning to get up and go to workouts.”
Freeze isn’t totally void of SEC experience. He was an on-field assistant for two seasons under former Ole Miss coach Ed Orgeron in 2006 and ’07, coaching receivers and serving as recruiting coordinator. Though the Rebels didn’t have much on-field success during those years, they did amass multiple NFL-caliber players that helped the program win back-to-back Cotton Bowls in 2008 and ’09.
He has employed a recruiting approach similar to his days with Orgeron, and expects to build talent quickly. But that won’t help for the upcoming season, and the Rebels aren’t helped by a schedule that appears to be one of the hardest in the nation. Not only must they navigate a conference schedule that includes Alabama, Arkansas and LSU, but they also host Texas in a non-conference game. Considering wins might be hard to find this fall, Freeze has other goals in mind during his first season.
“I think the reasonable expectation from our fans and our administration ... is that we compete passionately for our university for 60 minutes. Whatever the scoreboard says at the end — we’ll have to live with that.”
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Freeze has daunting rebuilding task
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Season ends for Maroon Tide
Picayune’s magical playoff run came up just short of a spot in the state finals.
Homestanding Pascagoula, the defending Class 5A state champs, took a hard-fought 5-3 win over the Maroon Tidee in game three of the best of three South State finals here Saturday before a capacity crowd at Ingalls Field. -
Season ends for Maroon Tide
The season came to an end for the Picayune baseball team Saturday afternoon with a 5-3 loss to homestanding Pascagoula here at Ingalls Field in the third and deciding game of the Class 5A South State championship series.
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Tide stays alive
And it all comes down to this.
Picayune and Pascagoula will face off in a one game, winner take all
showdown today at 2 p.m., at Ingalls Field for the Class A South State
prep baseball championship and the right to play for the state title. -
Wildcats tring to win Region 23 title
Host Pearl River opened Region 23 Tournament play in dominating fashion here Thursday in Wildcat Stadium, demolishing top-seeded East Central 12-1 in eight innings and now faces second-seeded LSU-Eunice (La.) in Friday’s second round at 7 p.m.
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Panther pitcher shuts out Maroon Tide
Pascagoula’s Andrew Crane continued his dominance of Picayune Thursday night.
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Season ends for Lady Hornets
Poplarville's season came to and end in the Class 4A South state finals Tuesday night.
The visiting Lady Hornets fell to Newton County 10-2 in game two of the best-of-three series. -
Lady Hornets face Newton County
Two more wins, and Poplarville will be playing for the Class 4A state championship in fast-pitch softball.
The Lady Hornets have a chance at getting that first victory today. -
Polderman’s, Mitchell win titles
The Picayune Maroon Tide and the Pearl River Central Blue Devils both competed in the Class 5A South State track and field championships this past Saturday at Long Beach High School.
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Tide sweeps; Devils swept
Picayune finished the regular season nine games under the break even mark.
But, four games into the Class 5A South State playoffs. the Maroon Tide is unbeaten. -
Lady Hornets beat North Pike
Poplarville is moving on to the Class 4A South State finals.
The Lady Hornets swept the best-of-three semifinal series with North Pike, completing the affair with a 2-0 road win Monday night. - More Sports Headlines
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Season ends for Maroon Tide




