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It’s not just that Scott Berry won, but how he won at Southern Miss

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Scott Berry, who has won and won with utmost class at Southern Miss, has announced his retirement at season’s end.

Back when 60-year-old Scott Berry was a younger coach at Southern Miss — and long before the grass baseball field was replaced with artificial turf — he would spend long hours making sure the field was immaculate. Every blade of grass, every speck of dirt had to be just right.

His daughter, Kathryn Grace, in college now, was a tiny girl. “Daddy,” Kathryn Grace asked her father one day on the field at Pete Taylor Park, “is this your garden?”

It surely has been. The winningest coach in Southern Miss history, Berry has grown ball players and he has grown winners. He did it all with class. When I wrote last week of Berry’s consistent winning ways at Southern Miss, I had no idea he would a week later announce his retirement, which will come at season’s end. I did know that he wasn’t going to coach for much longer because he has said so several times in recent years.

Rick Cleveland

Why now? I can guess. Number one, like any coach who has ever done it, he wants to go out a winner. Who wouldn’t? His current Golden Eagles hold a 13-game winning streak, the nation’s longest, heading into the last weekend of the regular season. They are 35-15, 20 games over .500, and have a good chance for a seventh consecutive 40-victory season. No other Division I school in the nation has more than five straight 40-win seasons currently. Ole Miss, Florida State and Southern Miss came into this season as the only D-I schools with 21 consecutive 30-win seasons. USM now has 22. Both the Ole Miss and FSU streaks will end at 21.

Number two and perhaps more importantly, Berry would never retire if he didn’t believe he was leaving his garden in capable hands. Berry strongly believes the right man is already in the program. USM’s official news release of Berry’s impending retirement says that search for Berry’s replacement is underway. Forget that. Associate head coach Christian Ostrander, who has been a whiz with the Golden Eagle pitching staff, will be the new Southern Miss baseball coach. You can book that.

When Corky Palmer retired in 2009, the transition to Berry was seamless. The same should be true going from Berry to Ostrander.

But that’s a story for another day. Today is about Berry, who has earned the lasting respect of his coaching peers. One is Mike Bianco, coach of defending national champion Ole Miss, who decisively swept Berry and Southern Miss in the Hattiesburg Super Regional last spring en route to Omaha. Bianco’s first year as head coach at Ole Miss coincided with Berry coming to Southern Miss as Palmer’s lead assistant. They have competed against one another on an annual basis since then — and on even terms before last year’s Super Regional. In a phone call Tuesday night, Bianco said news of Berry’s retirement caught him by surprise.

“But I’m happy for him, happy for his family,” Bianco said. “When you’re in this profession, you miss a lot stuff with your family. You don’t have a lot of spare time. I read Scott’s statement, and I am sure all that figured in.”

Asked about his relationship with Berry, Bianco responded, ”We’re not best friends or anything like that. We don’t go hunting and fishing together. But we’re baseball coaching friends for sure. When I think about the people I really respect in this game and the people in the game I call friends, Scott is definitely one of them at the top of the list.

“You’ve watched it, you know,” Bianco continued. “Corky did a great job down there. He really did. But Scott has taken it to a whole other level when you talk about the consistency of the program and what they’ve accomplished in terms of their facility and fan support. They’ve become a national program and that’s tough to do at a so-called mid-major, but Scott’s done it and it’s also how they’ve done it. They play the right way. His teams play hard, they really compete, and they are great kids. That’s a credit to him.”

Berry, as he has said so often in the past, has much the same respect for Bianco.

When Corky Palmer announced his retirement 22 years ago, his Southern Miss team suddenly got white-hot, earned an NCAA berth, won an NCAA Regional at Georgia Tech and then a Super Regional at Florida. Palmer’s career ended in Omaha.

Could something similar happen this season for Scott Berry?

And, if it did, wouldn’t that be fitting?

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

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https://www.biloxinewsevents.com/?p=242525

Mississippi Today

‘Fragile and unequipped’: Disproportionate number of Mississippi mothers died preventable deaths during COVID

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mississippitoday.org – Sophia Paffenroth – 2025-01-08 13:19:00

Mississippi women died of pregnancy complications at nearly twice the national rate during the COVID-19 pandemic, new data shows. The vast majority of those deaths were preventable, according to the latest Mississippi Maternal Mortality Report

Between 2017 and 2021, 202 women who were either pregnant or up to one-year postpartum died. Seventy-seven of those deaths were directly related to pregnancy. 

Black women were five times more likely to die from a condition or circumstance related to pregnancy, the report found. 

“Unfortunately, COVID unmasked and exacerbated an already prevalent problem here in Mississippi,” said Lauren Jones, co-founder of Mom.ME and a member of the  Maternal Mortality Review Committee members who contributed to the report. 

The federally mandated committee, made up of physicians, advocates, social workers and others, is tasked with reviewing all pregnancy and postpartum-related deaths to determine the circumstances that caused them and whether they were preventable. The committee makes recommendations based on what members learn from reviewing the data. 

The committee’s first recommendation to reduce these deaths is for the state to expand Medicaid as 40 other states have done.

“The report sheds light on exactly how fragile and unequipped we are to handle what is considered routine maternal care without adding a national health crisis to an already fractured system,” Jones said.

Study authors found that had COVID-19 not happened, it’s “highly likely” that the five-year pregnancy-related mortality rate would have gone down. Instead, it averaged 42.4 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, peaking at 62.6 in 2021 – compared to a U.S. average of 33.2 the same year at the height of the pandemic. COVID-19 was a leading cause of these deaths, second to cardiovascular conditions. 

Nearly half of the women who died because of a pregnancy complication or cause in this time period never received a high school diploma. And nearly three-quarters of them were on Medicaid. 

The pregnancy-related mortality rate was highest in the Delta.

A vast majority – 83% – of pregnancy-related deaths were deemed preventable. Committee members made several recommendations, including expanding Medicaid, training all health care providers on blood pressure monitoring, cultural sensitivity and screening for mental health issues. 

“I want to acknowledge the Mississippi women who lost their lives in 2017-2021 while pregnant or within a year of pregnancy,” State Health Officer Dr. Daniel Edney said in a statement published in the report. “I extend my heartfelt condolences to their surviving loved ones, and am optimistic that once we know better, we will do better.”

This report comes at the heels of the 2022 Infant Mortality Report, which showed that Mississippi continues to lead the nation in the number of infants who die before their first birthday. However, the number of infant deaths attributed to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS, decreased by 64% between 2021 and 2022. 

Edney also commended the Maternal Mortality Review Committee members who he said “tirelessly leave no question unasked and no stone unturned in exploring what happened and how these deaths might have been prevented.”

In 2024, the committee met six times to review 54 maternal deaths from 2021. 

“No one wants to serve on a committee that is only established to review death. It’s mentally and emotionally hard, but as members we do it not only to lend our personal expertise in determinations but to be a voice for those lost in hopes of sparking necessary change for better outcomes,” Jones said. 

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: Putting a wrap on the Saints and Rebels, and lots more

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mississippitoday.org – Rick Cleveland and Tyler Cleveland – 2025-01-08 12:00:00

Following a holiday break, the Clevelands put a lid on the Ole Miss and New Orleans Saints football seasons. Also in the discussion are Southern Miss’s 25-player haul in the transfer portal, including 16 from Marshall. Rick also gives his memories of Magnolia State football heroes Jerald Baylis and Dontae Walker.

Stream all episodes here.


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

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Mississippi Today

Mississippi is ‘A Complete Unknown’ in Bob Dylan biopic

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2025-01-08 09:43:00

The new film, “A Complete Unknown,” tells the story of Bob Dylan’s rise to success in the early 1960s, but the movie leaves out two fascinating Mississippi stories.

On the evening of June 11, 1963, President John F. Kennedy delivered his first civil rights speech in which he declared that the grandchildren of enslaved Black Americans “are not fully free. They are not yet freed from the bonds of injustice. They are not yet freed from social and economic oppression. And this Nation, for all its hopes and all its boasts, will not be fully free until all its citizens are free.”

Hours later, Mississippi NAACP leader and World War II veteran Medgar Evers was fatally shot in the back outside his home in Jackson.

Less than a month later, Dylan (portrayed in the movie by Timothée Chalamet) unveiled a new song in a cotton field several miles south of Greenwood, where Evers’ assassin, Byron De La Beckwith, lived.

That field happened to be owned by Laura McGhee, the sister of Gus Courts, who was forced to flee Mississippi after surviving an assassination attempt in 1955. Her three sons, Clarence, Silas and Jake, took part in protests that helped integrate the Leflore Theatre in Greenwood. Her house was shot into and firebombed, but she and her sons kept on fighting.

Dozens of Black Americans listened as they parked under umbrellas to block out the blazing sun while Dylan debuted the song, a scene that Danny Lyon captured in photos.

As he strummed chords, he told those gathered, “I just wanted to sing one song because I haven’t slept in two nights, and I’m a little shaky. But this is about Medgar Evers.”

His shakiness showed. He had to restart once before continuing.

Titled “Only a Pawn in Their Game,” Dylan’s song focused on how Evers’ assassin and other poor white Mississippians are nothing more than a pawn in the white politicians’ “game.”

A South politician preaches to the poor white man

“You got more than the blacks, don’t complain

You’re better than them, you been born with white skin,” they explain

And the Negro’s name

Is used, it is plain

For the politician’s gain

As he rises to fame

And the poor white remains

On the caboose of the train

But it ain’t him to blame

He’s only a pawn in their game

In the final verse, Dylan spoke about the civil rights leader.

Today, Medgar Evers was buried from the bullet he caught

They lowered him down as a king

But when the shadowy sun sets on the one

That fired the gun

He’ll see by his grave

On the stone that remains

Carved next to his name

His epitaph plain

Only a pawn in their game

Dylan also sang, “Blowing in the Wind,” which Peter, Paul and Mary had just turned into a top hit.

Dylan’s mentor, Pete Seeger (portrayed in the movie by Edward Norton) also performed at this music festival organized by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, which had been fighting to register Black Mississippians to vote.

Dylan returned to New York City. During the day, he would hang out at the SNCC office, recalled civil rights leader Joyce Ladner. “He would get on the typewriter and start writing.”

She and her sister, Dorie, were no strangers to the civil rights movement. They had been expelled from Jackson State University in 1961 for taking part in a silent protest in support of the Tougaloo College students arrested for integrating the downtown Jackson library.

Joyce and Dorie Ladner discuss their roles in the civil rights movement. Credit: Library of Congress

Now attending Tougaloo, the sisters helped with preparations for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. After working days at the SNCC office, they would spend nights at the apartment of Rachelle Horowitz, the march’s transportation coordinator.

Each night, they arrived at about 11 p.m., only for Dylan to sing his new songs to Dorie until well past midnight, Ladner said.

That annoyed her because she was trying to get some sleep. Each night when they arrived, “we could hear him from the elevator,” she said. “I thought, ‘Oh, God, not him again.’”

At the August 1963 march, Dylan performed the two same songs he sang in that Delta cotton field, as well as others, this time before a crowd of more than 250,000. Folk singer Joan Baez (portrayed in the movie by Monica Barbaro) harmonized.

Not long after that performance, Ladner said Dylan visited Dorie at Tougaloo and once again sang her some of his songs before he said that he and the others “had to be going. They were driving down Highway 61.”

That highway connects Dylan’s birthplace of Duluth, Minnesota, to the Mississippi Delta. In 1965, Dylan released “Highway 61 Revisited,” generally regarded as one of the best albums of all time.

Dylan moved on, but Ladner said Dylan never forgot her sister, Dorie, a major civil rights figure who passed away last year.

“Whenever he performed in Washington, D.C., she would hang out backstage with him and the guys,” Ladner recalled. “That went on for years.”

She said she believes Dylan penned “Outlaw Blues” about her sister.

I got a girl in Jackson, I ain’t gonna say her name

I got a girl in Jackson, I ain’t gonna say her name

She’s a brown-skin woman, but I love her just the same.

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

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