Mississippi Today
Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame announces Class of 2025
The Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame Tuesday announced its 2025 induction class, and it is star-studded with championship coaches and athletes from football, baseball, basketball and golf.
In alphabetical order, the 2025 inductees are:
- Scott Berry, baseball coach, at first Meridian Community College and more famously at Southern Miss, where his teams won 10 conference championships. Combined record as a head coach: 500 victories. At Southern Miss his teams won 528 games, lost 276 and tied one. They won 10 conference championships and he was five times a conference coach of the year.
- Steve Freeman, Mississippi State and NFL football star and longtime NFL official, who is among the career pass interception leaders at both State and for the Buffalo Bills. He was one of the key cogs of State’s 1974 Sun Bowl team that won nine games and was one of the leaders of a Bills’ defense that was the NFL’s best in 1980.
- Mike Justice, high school football coach. His teams won 297 games and lost only 98 over 35 seasons. He won championships at virtually every level of high school football. His 1999 Madison Central team is generally considered one of the best — if not the best — in Mississippi history.
- Dexter McCluster, Ole Miss and NFL running back/kick returner who made All-SEC and All American for the Rebels and then played eight seasons in the NFL.
- Derrick Nix, Southern Miss running back. Nix, who also coached collegiately at Southern Miss and Ole Miss and is currently the offensive coordinator at Auburn, was one of the all-time greats at Southern Miss, despite playing much of his career with a life-threatening kidney disease.
- Steve Rives, high school and Delta State basketball coach, whose teams won more than 700 games. At Jackson Prep, his teams won 260 games while losing only 23. At Delta State, Rives’ coaching record was 388-188.
- Robbie Webb, golfer and golf teacher, who will be inducted posthumously. After at outstanding college career at Southern Miss, Webb became the longtime pro at Canton and Deerfield country clubs. Webb taught and coached many future college golfers and amateur and professional champions.
- Mo Williams, basketball standout in high school, college and NBA, now the head basketball coach at Jackson State. Williams was a McDonald’s All-American at Murrah before playing two years at Alabama and then 13 years in the NBA. Williams averaged 13 points and five assists a game for his 13-year pro career.
Clearly, it’s an outstanding class, which includes several sports heroes. I have had the good fortune to cover all as a journalist and have fond memories of each. What follow are some stories you may not know:
As a junior golfer growing up in Gulfport, Webb played often with Mississippi Sports Hall of Famer Mary Mills, who would go on to win nine LPGA golf championships, including three majors. Later on, Mills played No. 1 on the Millsaps men’s golf team when Webb was playing No. 1 at Southern Miss. In a dual match once at the old Millsaps golf course, Mills led Webb one-up at the nine-hole turn. Southern Miss coach B.O. Van Hook chided Webb: “Hell, Webb, you gonna let a girl beat you.” Webb promptly took his golf bag off his shoulders and handed his clubs to his coach, saying, “Here, Hook, you try her…”
Mo Williams will be remembered as one of Mississippi’s most accomplished basketball players in history, but probably could have played professionally in baseball or football as well. Says John Richardson, the former Ole Miss football player who coached Williams at Chasten Middle School and now works as a jack-of-all-trades at the MSHOF museum, “Mo could have been a great quarterback in the SEC or probably a Major League shortstop. He was just so gifted and worked so hard at anything he tried. He was my quarterback at Chastain and we were undefeated. He could throw it or run it and nobody could stop him. I was a little disappointed when he chose to concentrate on basketball, but I’d say it worked out OK for him.”
I covered state championship victories for Justice both at Louisville and Madison Central. In a quick interview after his undefeated 1999 Madison Central team ransacked Provine in a state championship game, I asked, already knowing the answer: “Mike, do you know how many passes y’all threw tonight?” He thought for a couple seconds and then answered: “Well, I know if we threw one it was a damned audible.” They threw none.
McCluster originally committed to play football at South Florida before a late recruiting visit from then-Ole Miss coach Ed Oregon. Said McCluster: “I’ll never forget it. We were playing football, using a couch pillow for the ball, in my living room. Coach O would fake a handoff to me and throw a pass across the room to my mother. He sold me, sold my whole family. He told me I could be Reggie Bush at Ole Miss. That man could recruit.” And Dexter McCluster surely could run.
Before Tuesday’s press conference, I knew Steve Rives won a whole bunch of basketball games both in high schools and at Delta State. I knew coaches around the state considered him a master strategist and motivator. What I did not know is this: At Delta State, Rives was 8-0 vs. Mississippi Sports Hall of Famer Davey Whitney, one of my favorite all-time coaches and people. I guarantee you this: Nobody else, anywhere, can say that.
Nix was recruited by virtually every football power in the country but chose Southern Miss because his brother Tyrone played and coached there and because Jeff Bower promised him he could play running back, whereas Alabama, Auburn, Florida and others were recruiting him primarily as a linebacker. He became surely one of the greatest backs in USM history and surely would have made millions in the NFL if not for the kidney disease that almost killed him. “Derrick Nix had it all,” Pittsburgh Steelers scout Dan Rooney once told Sports Illustrated. “He reminded me of Deuce McAllister. He had a gliding style, so strong and fast. He was a can’t-miss prospect, the kind any NFL team would love to have.”
Steve Freeman has retired as an NFL official, but his son, Brad, the former Mississippi State baseball star, still officiates in the league. Asked if he misses it, Steve replied, “Nah, man, I am too old for all that travel. At 67, I looked around and noticed most of the guys were 25 to 30 years old. I knew it was time for me to go to the house.” Both the Freemans have officiated Super Bowls.
Over the years, Scott Berry has reminded me of Mississippi baseball legend Boo Ferriss in so many ways, most of them involving character and integrity and how much he cared about his players. One other similarity was how the two men manicured their baseball fields, at least until Southern Miss switched to artificial turf. Like Ferriss, Berry tended to the baseball field, making sure every blade of grass and every speck of dirt was just so. Once, when his daughter Kathryn Grace went to work with him, and watched him tend the field so painstakingly, the little girl asked him, “Daddy, is this your garden?” It really was, and on it Berry grew winners. He retired in 2023 after his seventh straight 40-victory season at a time when no other Division I program in the country had more five.
The Class of 2025 will be inducted in ceremonies next August.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Crooked Letter Sports Podcast
Podcast: Ohio State won it all, but where would Ole Miss have been with Quinshon Jundkins?
Lots to talk about on the days after the national championship game, but in Mississippi, especially in Oxford, much of the talk is about what might have been had Judkins stayed at Ole Miss. Also, the Clevelands discuss Egg Bowl basketball, the grueling SEC schedule, the NFL playoffs, and John Wade’s saga at Southern Miss.
Stream all episodes here.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
With EPA support, the Corps is moving forward with the Yazoo Pumps
Barring any legal challenge, it appears the South Delta is finally getting its pumps.
The U.S Army Corps of Engineers announced last Friday it’s moving forward with an altered version of the Yazoo Pumps, a flood relief project that the agency has touted for decades. The project now also has the backing of the Environmental Protection Agency, whose veto killed a previous iteration in 2008 because of the pumps’ potential to harm 67,000 acres of valuable wetland habitat.
In a Jan. 8 letter, the EPA wrote that proposed mitigation components — such as cutting off the pumps at different points depending on the time of year, as well as maintaining certain water levels for aquatic species during low-flow periods — are “expected to reduce adverse effects to an acceptable level.”
South Delta residents have called for the project to be built for years, especially after the record-setting backwater flood in 2019. State lawmakers from the area rejoiced over last week’s news.
“It’s been a long time coming,” said Sen. Joseph Thomas, D-Yazoo City, explaining that most in his district support the pumps. “I’m sure there are some minuses and pluses (to the project), but by and large I think it needs to happen.”
Sen. Briggs Hopson, R-Vicksburg, recalled that almost half of his district was underwater in 2019.
“I’m very pleased that the Corps has issued this (decision),” Hopson told Mississippi Today on Tuesday.
Before the Corps’ latest proposal, the future of the pumps was in limbo for several years. Under President Trump’s first administration, the EPA in 2020 said the 2008 veto no longer applied to the proposal because of Corps research suggesting that the wetlands mainly relied on water during the winter months — a less critical period for the agriculture-dependent South Delta — to survive, and that using the pumps during the rest of the year would still allow the wetlands to exist.
The EPA then restored the veto under President Biden’s administration. But in 2023, the Corps agreed to work with the EPA on flood-control solutions which, as it turned out, still included the pumps.
While the public comment period is over and the project appears to be moving forward, the Corps has yet to provide a cost estimate for the pumps, which are likely to cost at least hundreds of millions of dollars. A 19,000 cubic-feet-per second, or cfs, pumping station in Louisiana cost roughly $1 billion to build over a decade ago, and the Corps is proposing a 25,000 cfs station for the South Delta.
Corps spokesperson Christi Kilroy told Mississippi Today that the project will move onto the engineering and design phase, during which the agency will come up with a price estimate. Mississippi Today asked multiple times if it’s unusual to wait until after the public has had a chance to comment to provide an estimate, but the agency did not respond.
Under the project’s new design, the pumps will turn on when backwater reaches the 90-foot elevation mark anytime during the designated “crop season” from March 25 to Oct. 15. During the rest of the year, the Corps will allow the backwater to reach 93 feet before pumping.
In last Friday’s decision, the Corps wrote that the project would have “less than significant effects (on wetlands) due to mitigation.” The project’s mitigation includes acquiring and reforesting 5,700 acres of “frequently flooded” farmland to compensate for wetland impacts.
In a statement sent to Mississippi Today, the EPA said that the “higher pumping elevations” — the Corps’ previous proposal started the pumps at 87 feet — and the “seasonal approach” to pumping will reduce the wetlands impact.
However conservationists, including a group of former EPA employees, are not convinced. The Environmental Protection Network, a nonprofit of over 650 former EPA employees, wrote in August that the latest proposed pumping station “has the potential to drain the same or similar wetlands identified in the 2008 (veto) and potentially more.”
“Similar to concerns EPA identified in the 2008 (veto)… EPN’s concerns with the potential adverse impacts of this version of the project remain,” the group wrote.
A coalition of other groups — including Audubon Delta, Earthjustice, Healthy Gulf and Mississippi Sierra Club — remain opposed to the project, arguing that hundreds of species rely on the wetlands during the “crop season” for migration, breeding and rearing.
“This action is a massive stain on the Biden Administration’s environmental legacy and undermines EPA’s own authority to protect our nation’s most important waters,” the coalition said in a statement last Friday.
When asked about potential legal challenges to the Corps’ decision, Audubon Delta’s policy director Jill Mastrototaro told Mississippi Today via email: “This project clearly violates the veto as we’ve documented in our comments. We’re carefully reviewing the details of the announcement and all options are on the table.”
In addition to the pumps, the project includes voluntary buyouts for those whose properties flood below the 93-foot mark, which includes 152 homes.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1906
Jan. 22, 1906
Pioneer aviator and civil rights activist Willa Beatrice Brown was born in Glasgow, Kentucky.
While working in Chicago, she learned how to fly and became the first Black female to earn a commercial pilot’s license. A journalist said that when she entered the newsroom, “she made such a stunning appearance that all the typewriters suddenly went silent. … She had a confident bearing and there was an undercurrent of determination in her husky voice as she announced, not asked, that she wanted to see me.”
In 1939, she married her former flight instructor, Cornelius Coffey, and they co-founded the Cornelius Coffey School of Aeronautics, the first Black-owned private flight training academy in the U.S.
She succeeded in convincing the U.S. Army Air Corps to let them train Black pilots. Hundreds of men and women trained under them, including nearly 200 future Tuskegee Airmen.
In 1942, she became the first Black officer in the U.S. Civil Air Patrol. After World War II ended, she became the first Black woman to run for Congress. Although she lost, she remained politically active and worked in Chicago, teaching business and aeronautics.
After she retired, she served on an advisory board to the Federal Aviation Administration. She died in 1992. A historical marker in her hometown now recognizes her as the first Black woman to earn a pilot’s license in the U.S., and Women in Aviation International named her one of the 100 most influential women in aviation and space.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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