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Bulldogs vs. Sun Devils: This is college football 2024 in a nutshell

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mississippitoday.org – Rick Cleveland – 2024-09-04 12:32:55

Bulldogs vs. Sun Devils: This is college football 2024 in a nutshell

If you want a good and telling look at the of college football in 2024, take an in-depth gander at this Saturday night’s that pits the Mississippi State Bulldogs against the Arizona State Sun Devils at Tempe, Arizona.

The effects of NIL, the transfer portal and conference movement will be fully on display.

The Sun Devils, who have spent the last 45 years playing in the Pacific 12 Conference, now play in the Big 12, which actually has 16 teams, such natural Arizona State rivals as West Virginia and Central Florida. The Big 12 now spans all four U.S. time zones, which makes as much sense as the new two-minute timeout in college football. (Side note: The NCAA prefers โ€œtwo-minute timeoutโ€ to the NFL’s โ€œtwo-minute warning.โ€ That’s interesting because two more timeouts of any kind are just what college football did not need. Teams already had three timeouts per half, plus 14 mandated โ€œmedia timeouts.โ€ So now, we have 28 timeouts total, not counting the stoppages for video replays of close officiating calls. And you wonder why sometimes last four hours and longer, which means that Saturday night’s game in Tempe could end well after 1 a.m. central time.)

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Rick Cleveland

Arizona State’s quarterback is Sam Leavitt, who hails from Oregon, but played last season at Michigan State. Transferring is nothing new for Leavitt, who played at three Oregon high schools before signing with Michigan State, where he played in four games as a freshman. Leavitt won the battle with Jaden Rashada to be the Sun Devils’ starter. As soon as Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham named Leavitt the starter, Rashada did what seemingly any college quarterback not named Arch Manning would do in that situation. That is, he put his name in the transfer portal. He now resides in Athens, Georgia, and will play โ€“ or ride the bench โ€“ for you know who.

Mississippi State starting quarterback Blake Shapen also directly from the transfer portal. Shapen, a senior, has played the last three years at Baylor, where he was consistently good and often outstanding. If State’s dismantling of overmatched Eastern Kentucky was any indication, Shapen fits nicely into new head coach Jeff Lebby’s high-speed offensive scheme.

It certainly would have helped Shapen if, on occasion, he could turn and hand the ball to Woody Marks, the Bulldogs’ leading rusher last year. But no, Marks now plays at Southern Cal, where he for two touchdowns, including the game-winner in the Trojans’ opening victory over LSU in Las Vegas. Will Rogers, State’s leading passer last season, now throws his touchdowns for Washington. Zavion , one of State’s leading receivers last year, now plays for LSU. Teammates last year, Marks and Thomas played against one another for different teams last week. Crazy, no? Fruit basket turnover doesn’t even begin to describe it.

As is the case all over college football,ย State and Arizona State fans will need to purchase a game program in these early season games. So many of the players on both sides are new, including eight of the Bulldogs’ 11 offensive starters. State’s defense features six new starters. State’s new players include transfers from all over the . One sample: Kevin Coleman Jr., who caught five passes for 88 yards and a touchdown last week, began his college career atย Jackson State where he was the SWAC freshman of the year in 2022, before to Louisville where he was an 11-game starter last year. Playing for his third team in three seasons, Coleman also returned five punts for 117 yards against Eastern Kentucky. He is one of only eight Division I players to record over 200 all-purpose yards last week.

State also will feature new starters from Memphis, Texas Tech, North Texas, LSU, North Carolina, Purdue, Hinds Community College, South Carolina and Alabama. No, I wasn’t kidding when I said you need a program. 

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Branden Jennings, a Bulldogs starter at outside linebacker, is as well-travelled as any. The Jacksonville, Florida, native was a part-time starter as a freshman at Maryland, then transferred from there to Central Florida and from there to Hinds. Presumably, Jennings has found a more permanent home in Starkville, although nothing is certain in college football these days. At his fourth college in four years, he still has a year of eligibility remaining after this one.

Arizona State’s roster is just as nomadic. The Sun Devils’ projected starters included eight players new to the roster. What’s more, 13 of the 22 back-ups are new players. These days in college football, it’s entirely possible to give it the โ€œold college tryโ€ at five different colleges.

After Arizona State’s 49-7 unexpected trouncing of Wyoming Saturday night, Dillingham was asked if he thought his team had been overlooked and underranked by preseason prognosticators. โ€œNope,โ€ he answered. “We’ve won three games the past two years and recruited a bunch of players nobody else wanted. We’re right where we should be.”

That could be. We’ll learn more late, late Saturday night. What we know for sure: In 2024, Mississippi State and Arizona State are college football in a nutshell. It reminds me of a game we played inside at Vacation Bible School when we would have rather been outside playing football. The game was called musical chairs. There were no two-minute warnings.

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi Today

A Mississippi town moves a Confederate monument that became a shrouded eyesore

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mississippitoday.org – Emily Wagster Pettus, Associated Press – 2024-09-18 14:17:57

A Mississippi town moves a Confederate monument that became a shrouded eyesore

GRENADA (AP) โ€” A Mississippi town has taken down a Confederate monument that stood on the courthouse square since 1910 โ€” a figure that was tightly wrapped in tarps the past four years, symbolizing the community’s enduring division over how to commemorate the past.

Grenada’s first Black mayor in two decades seems determined to follow through on the city’s plans to relocate the monument to other public land. A concrete slab has already been poured behind a fire station about 3.5 miles (5.6 kilometers) from the square.

But a new fight might be developing. A Republican lawmaker from another part of Mississippi wrote to Grenada officials saying she believes the is violating a law that restricts the relocation of war memorials or monuments.

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The Grenada City Council voted to move the monument in 2020, weeks after police killed George Floyd in Minneapolis. The vote seemed timely: Mississippi legislators had just retired the last state in the U.S. that prominently featured the Confederate battle emblem.

The tarps went up soon after the vote, shrouding the Confederate soldier and the pedestal he stood on. But even as people complained about the eyesore, the move was delayed by tight budgets, state bureaucracy or political foot-dragging. Explanations vary, depending on who’s asked.

A new mayor and city council took office in May, prepared to take action. On Sept. 11, with little advance notice, police blocked traffic and a work crew disassembled and removed the 20-foot (6.1-meter) stone structure.

“I’m glad to see it move to a different location,” said Robin Whitfield, an artist with a studio just off Grenada’s historic square. “This represents that something has changed.”

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Still, Whitfield, who is white, said she wishes Grenada had invited the community to engage in dialogue about the symbol, to bridge the gap between those who think moving it is erasing history and those who see it as a daily reminder of white supremacy. She was among the few people watching as a crane lifted parts of the monument onto a flatbed truck.

“No one ever talked about it, other than yelling on Facebook,” Whitfield said.

Mayor Charles Latham said the monument has been “quite a divisive figure” in the town of 12,300, where about 57% of are Black and 40% are white.

“I understand people had family and stuff to fight and die in that war, and they should be proud of their family,” Latham said. “But you’ve got to understand that there were those who were oppressed by this, by the Confederate flag on there. There’s been a lot of hate and violence perpetrated against people of color, under the color of that flag.”

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The city received permission from the Mississippi Department of Archives and History to move the Confederate monument, as required. But Rep. Stacey Hobgood-Wilkes of said the fire station site is inappropriate.

“We are prepared to pursue such avenues that may be necessary to ensure that the statue is relocated to a more suitable and appropriate location,” she wrote, suggesting a Confederate cemetery closer to the courthouse square as an alternative. She said the Ladies Cemetery Association is willing to deed a parcel to the city to make it happen.

The Confederate monument in Grenada is one of hundreds in the South, most of which were dedicated during the early 20th century when groups such as the United Daughters of the Confederacy sought to shape the historical narrative by valorizing the Lost Cause mythology of the Civil War.

The monuments, many of them outside courthouses, came under fresh scrutiny after an avowed white supremacist who had posed with Confederate flags in photos posted online killed nine Black people inside the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015.

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Grenada’s monument includes images of Confederate president Jefferson Davis and a Confederate battle flag. It was engraved with praise for “the noble men who marched neath the flag of the and Bars” and “the noble women of the South,” who “gave their loved ones to our country to conquer or to die for truth and right.”

A half-century after it was dedicated, the monument’s symbolism figured in a rights march. When the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders held a mass rally in downtown Grenada in June 1966, Robert Green of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference scrambled up the pedestal and planted a U.S. flag above the image of Davis.

The cemetery is a spot Latham himself had previously advocated as a new site for the monument, but he said it’s too late to change now, after the city already budgeted $60,000 for the move.

“So, who’s going to pay the city back for the $30,000 we’ve already expended to relocate this?” he said. “You should’ve showed up a year and a half ago, two years ago, before the city gets to this point.”

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A few other Confederate monuments in Mississippi have been relocated. In July 2020, a Confederate soldier statue was moved from a prominent spot at the of Mississippi to a Civil War cemetery in a secluded part of the Oxford campus. In May 2021, a Confederate monument featuring three soldiers was moved from outside the Lowndes County Courthouse in Columbus to another cemetery with Confederate soldiers.

Lori Chavis, a Grenada City Council member, said that since the monument was covered by tarps, “it’s caused nothing but more divide in our city.”

She said she supports relocating the monument but worries about a . She acknowledged that people probably didn’t know until recently exactly where it would reappear.

“It’s tucked back in the woods, and it’s not visible from even pulling behind the fire station,” Chavis said. “And I think that’s what got some of the citizens upset.”

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Crooked Letter Sports Podcast

Podcast: New Orleans sports columnist and author Jeff Duncan joins the podcast to talk about his new Steve Gleason book and the new-look New Orleans Saints.

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mississippitoday.org – Rick Cleveland and Tyler Cleveland – 2024-09-18 10:00:00

Jeff Duncan went from the Mississippi Book in on Saturday to Jerry World in Dallas on Sunday where he watched and wrote about the Saints’ total dismantling of the Dallas Cowboys. We about both and also about what happened in high school and college football last and what’s coming up this weekend.

Stream all episodes here.

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1899

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-09-18 07:00:00

Sept. 18, 1899

Credit: Wikipedia

Scott Joplin, known as โ€œthe King of Ragtime,โ€ copyrighted the โ€œMaple Leaf Rag,โ€ which became the first song to sell more than 1 million copies of sheet music. The popularity launched a sensation surrounding ragtime, which has been called America’s โ€œfirst classical music.โ€ย 

Born near Texarkana, , Joplin grew up in a musical . He worked on the railroad with other family members until he was able to earn money as a musician, traveling across the South. He wound up playing at the World’s Fair in Chicago in 1893, where he met fellow musician Otis Saunders, who encouraged him to write down the songs he had been making up to entertain audiences. In all, Joplin wrote dozens of ragtime songs. 

After some , he moved to New York , hoping he could make a living while stretching the boundaries of music. He wrote a ragtime ballet and two operas, but success in these new forms eluded him. He was buried in a pauper’s grave in New York City in 1917. 

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More than six decades later, his music was rediscovered, initially by Joshua Rifkin, who recorded Joplin’s songs on a record, and then Gunther Schuller of the New England Conservatory, who performed four of the ragtime songs in concert: โ€œMy faculty, many of whom had never even heard of Joplin, were saying things like, โ€˜My gosh, he writes melodies like Schubert!’โ€ 

Joplin’s music won over even more admirers through the 1973 , โ€œThe Sting,โ€ which won an Oscar for the music. His song, โ€œThe Entertainer,โ€ reached No. 3 on Billboard and was ranked No. 10 among โ€œSongs of the Centuryโ€ list by the Recording Industry Association of America. His opera โ€œTreemonishaโ€ was produced to wide acclaim, and he won a Pulitzer Prize in 1976 for his special contribution to American music.ย 

โ€œThe ragtime craze, the faddish thing, will obviously die down, but Joplin will have his position secure in American music history,โ€ Rifkin said. โ€œHe is a treasurable composer.โ€

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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