Mississippi Today
At Southern Miss, the Huff hire looks good from every angle
Charles Huff will be the first Black head football coach at Southern Miss, but there’s another “first” for Huff that’s more impressive, if not more meaningful.
Believe it or not, Huff is the first sitting head coach ever hired as the head coach at Southern Miss. That’s amazing when you consider that Reed Green, Thad “Pie” Vann, P.W. Underwood, Bobby Collins, Jim Carmody and Jeff Bower are all former Southern Miss coaches successful enough to have been inducted into the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame. And all were assistant coaches when they were hired at USM.
That’s just one reason why Jeremy McClain, the athletic director, and Joe Paul, the president, might be found taking a victory lap around the Hattiesburg campus this week. The Golden Eagles not only hired a proven head coach, but they hired the coach who just won the championship of the Sun Belt Conference, the league in which Southern Miss resides and where the Eagles finished the 2024 season in last place.
Huff, in his fourth year as the Marshall head coach, led the Thundering Herd to a 10-3 record and a 31-3 championship victory over Louisiana this past Saturday night. Huff brought his Thundering Herd to Hattiesburg a month ago and left town with a 37-3 victory.
There are more reasons why this looks like a slam-dunk hire. Among those:
- Huff, at 41, has worked for both James Franklin at Penn State and Nick Saban at Alabama, where he was the associate head coach as well as running backs coach.
- In between those two stops, he worked a year (2018 season) as assistant head coach and running backs coach for Joe Moorhead at Mississippi State. So he is familiar with the Magnolia State’s football landscape and has recruited extensively here (both at State and Alabama). At State, Huff was the run game coordinator, and State finished second in the SEC in rushing with 223 yards per game. Moorhead sings Huff’s praises, and we’ll get to that.
- Huff’s reputation is that of a relentless and successful recruiter. At Penn State, he recruited and helped develop Saquon Barkley, a consensus All American and now an NFL standout. He recruited several four- and five-star athletes at both Penn State and Bama, but also has shown the ability to evaluate and develop lesser recruited players at Marshall – and before that Central Michigan.
Moorhead, now the coach at Akron, and Huff first worked together on Franklin’s Penn State staff. Moorhead was the offensive coordinator, Huff the running backs coach and special teams coordinator. Moorhead knew then that when he got a head coach’s job, he would try to hire Huff. And he did at State.
“He checked all the boxes,” Moorhead said. “He’s extremely intelligent and organized. He’s a hard worker with great people skills. He understands the game of football in all its phases.
Moorhead was not asked about the following, but volunteered it. “Charles’s short time with us at State will help him at Southern Miss,” Moorhead said. “He understands the landscape there. He knows how important high school football is in Mississippi. He also knows that while there are many highly recruited players in that state, there are many really good players that fly under the radar who can be developed and become outstanding Division I football players. Southern Miss has a lot of tradition of getting those kinds of players and winning with them. I am sure that’s part of what attracted Charles to the job.”
For the record, State finished 8-5 and played in the Jan. 1 Outback Bowl in Huff’s one season (2018) there. Running backs Kylin Hill and Aeris Nelson both averaged more than six yards per carry. Bracky Brett was the associate athletic director at State at the time and remembers being highly impressed with Huff. “It wasn’t a matter of if Charles was going to ba head football coach and a successful one at some point; it was a matter of when,” Brett said. “You could just tell.”
Saban hired Huff away from State, and Greg Byrne, formerly State’s athletic director, was the Alabama athletic director during Huff’s two seasons there. The Crimson Tide won 24 games, lost two and won the 2020 national championship., finishing undefeated. Said Byrne of Huff, “He is hard working, very driven and cares about his kids. He’s organized and he has a plan.”
Huff’s four Marshall teams all went to bowl games. His 2022 team knocked off Notre Dame 26-21 at South Bend. His 2023 team defeated Virginia Tech 24-17. His first Southern Miss team will play host to Mississippi State on Aug. 30, 2025. All indications are that the Golden Eagles’ coaching staff and roster will undergo an unprecedented overhaul between now and then.
Huff has all the credentials. He has done it before, but, clearly, he has never faced a reclamation project like the one he faces now. He has a lot of impressive lines on his coaching resume. If he succeeds in turning around Southern Miss, it would be his most impressive coaching feat yet.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
How good is No. 14 State? We will find out really, really soon
How good is this Mississippi State men’s basketball team?
The Bulldogs, 14-1, are ranked No. 14 in the country and, in my opinion, are under-rated at that. They are balanced. They are deep. Defensively, they are special.
But don’t take it from me. Let’s listen to Richard Williams, the coach who guided the 1996 Bulldogs to an SEC Tournament Championship and the Final Four, and who is the radio commentator who watches and analyzes these Bulldogs every night out. So, Richard, how good is this State team?
“This team is really, really good, especially on defense,” Williams said. “They are really deep. And they are so well-coached, always thoroughly prepared. Chris Jans demands perfection He coaches them hard. He’s old school.”
Yes, State is really good, really deep. Are they elite? We are about to find out, beginning Saturday night. For the Bulldogs, the next 11 days and four games are going to be basketball’s equivalent to dribbling through land mines.
First up: Sixth-ranked Kentucky comes to The Hump Saturday night. Three nights later, State visits No. 2 Auburn, a team many experts believe be the nation’s best. Next Saturday, arch-rival and No 23 ranked Ole Miss goes to Starkville. Then, on Jan. 21, State visits No. 1 Tennessee for another Tuesday night game.
So, yes, 11 days from now we will have an idea of whether State is simply really good – or possibly elite. State’s next four opponents have a combined record of 53-7. Put it this way: Even a really good team, could go 0-4 against that stretch if it does not play well.
This will be a very different Kentucky team that comes to The Hump. Not a single player on scholarship returned from the 2023-24 team that won 23 games and defeated Mississippi State twice. Not a single coach returns either. John Calipari has moved to Kentucky. Mark Pope, a mainstay of the Kentucky team that State defeated for the SEC Championship in 1996, now coaches the Wildcats.
Kentucky still plays fast. The Wildcats still wear blue and white, but the similarities pretty much end there. Under Calipari, Kentucky was often a young team made up of McDonald’s All Americans and five-star recruits, rich in future NBA talent but often adjusting to the college game and leaving for the NBA after one or two years. Pope’s Wildcats are mostly seasoned veterans, seniors and grad students – many of them transfers from mid-majors.
Point guard Lamont Butler, a 22-year-old grad student came to Kentucky from San Diego State. Shooting guard Ortega Owen, a 21-year-old junior, transferred in from Oklahoma. Small forward Jaxson Robinson, a 22-year-old grad student, played at Texas A & M, Arkansas and BYU before following Pope to Kentucky. Power Andrew Carr, who will turn 23 next month, is still another grad student who played at Delaware and Wake Forest before joining Kentucky. Sixth man Koby Brea, a 50 percent shooter from 3-point range, is another 22-year-old grad student, played four years at Dayton.
Kentucky, like State, is deep. The Wildcats have 10 players who average 4.4 points or more. They love to shoot the three-ball, averaging a whopping 27.4 treys a game and making nearly 36 percent of those. Guarding the perimeter will be crucial to success for State. State generally does that well.
In fact, as the record will attest, State has played well in almost every facet of the sport.
A weakness?
“Well, like a lot of teams, this team seems to play to the level of the competition,” Williams said.
For the next 11 days, that should not be a problem.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Sex discrimination lawsuit over Jackson State presidential search to proceed, court rules
A former Jackson State University administrator’s sex discrimination lawsuit against Mississippi’s public university governing board will proceed, a federal judge ruled in a lengthy order this week.
Though a majority of Debra Mays-Jackson’s claims against the Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees were dismissed, the Southern District of Mississippi allowed two to survive — one against the IHL and the other against the individual trustees.
For now, the lawsuit’s playing field is winnowed to the claim that IHL discriminated against Mays-Jackson, a former vice president at Jackson State, when trustees did not interview her after she applied to the university’s top post in 2023.
The recent order puts Mays-Jackson and her attorney, Lisa Ross, a JSU alumnus, one step closer to taking depositions and conducting discovery about the IHL’s presidential search process and decisionmaking.
Ross filed the lawsuit in November 2023, the same day the board hired from within, elevating Marcus Thompson from IHL deputy commissioner to the president of Mississippi’s largest historically Black university, even though Thompson was not one of the 79 applicants to the position.
“Without this sex discrimination lawsuit, the defendants would continue to falsely claim the males they have selected as President of JSU were clearly better qualified than the females who were rejected on account of their sex,” Ross said in a statement.
An IHL spokesperson said the board’s policy is not to comment on pending litigation.
The court dismissed one of Mays-Jackson’s claims over the board’s 2020 hiring of Thomas Hudson, largely because Mays-Jackson never applied for the job.
But Mays-Jackson argued she was not afforded the opportunity to apply because the board activated a policy that permitted trustees to suspend a presidential search and hire anyone known to the board, regardless of whether that person applied for the role.
Recently, the board had used that policy to hire President Tracy Cook at Alcorn State University, President Joe Paul at the University of Southern Mississippi and Chancellor Glenn Boyce at the University of Mississippi.
In her suit, Mays-Jackson alleged the IHL has never used this policy to elevate a woman to lead one of Mississippi’s eight public universities. IHL did not confirm or deny that allegation in response to a question from Mississippi Today.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1966
Jan. 10, 1966
Vernon Dahmer Sr. defended his family from a KKK attack at their home near Hattiesburg, Mississippi.
The farmer, businessman, entrepreneur and NAACP leader had dedicated his life to voting rights. Upset by his work on voting rights in the African-American community, Klansmen firebombed the family’s home while they were sleeping and began firing their guns into the home. Dahmer grabbed his shotgun and fired back at Klansmen, enabling his family to escape safely out a back window. Flames from the blaze seared his lungs, and he died a day later.
On his deathbed, a reporter pressed him on why he kept pushing for voting rights for Black Americans. Dahmer explained, “If you don’t vote, you don’t count.”
The case led to a few convictions, but the Klansmen didn’t stay behind bars long because governors pardoned them, commuted their sentences or released them early. Most of the killers walked free, including Imperial Wizard Sam Bowers, who ordered the attack.
Bowers was finally convicted in 1998 and sentenced to life in prison, where he died in 2006.
In 2020, county officials erected a statue in honor of Vernon Dahmer outside the same courthouse where Black residents once protested for the right to vote. Sculptor Ben Watts and artist Vixon Sullivan worked together on the statue.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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