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Posts Tagged ‘Houston Nutt’

The Mississippi Coach Being The Mississippi Coach

Posted by Adam Butler on November 15, 2010

This is must-see TV. Call The Mississippi Coach what you will (chances are I already have) but you cannot say he varies from his playbook.

This excuse-filled, delusional rant is right up his alley. All that has changed is the color of the pullover–oh, and the on-field mascot.

The highlights? He said he turned OL Michael Oher (of Blindside fame) from a 6th-round NFL pick to a 1st round pick, turned Michael Wallace into an NFL player in a year and is preparing his team to face LSU–a team with the best defense he has ever seen.

It’s just vintage stuff from The Mississippi Coach.

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , , | 5 Comments »

Late Night Fodder

Posted by Brett Kincaid on October 30, 2010

It’s late.  I’m up because my allergies are relentless right now, which means I’m in an extra-surly mood.  Nothing can cheer me up, though, like a great quote from the Mississippi head football coach.  After getting run over by Cam Newton and embarrassed at home, Hootie couldn’t help but pat himself on the back.  In fact, one would think he is responsible for Auburn’s offensive success.  His postgame press conference made me forget about sneezing, coughing, etc.

 Talk about their offense some more, how quickly they churn out stuff and call the next play. 

Nutt: When you get positive yardage on first down, it’s awesome. When you roll like that with an experienced offensive line, you can do that. One thing Gus Malzahn learned from our time together was how to run the ball with guys like McFadden and Jones, and those are the same plays – powers and counters with very good backs. There’s nothing like hanging your hat on a play when you know it’s going to get six or seven yards. Get to the line of scrimmage, and it’s easy to call a game when it’s second and three or second and two. Makes it real, real nice. 

Now… Where’s my NyQuil?

Posted in Commentary | Tagged: , , , | 7 Comments »

The Mississippi Coach

Posted by Brett Kincaid on October 20, 2010

Has the anti-Nutt fervor died down in the past two years?  A reasonable question for a Mississippi beat writer (and former Hogs beat writer) to ask.  The coach’s answer is, predictably, circuitous.

“You know, I don’t know. I think it’s probably died down a little bit,” said Nutt, who is 2-0 against Arkansas as the Ole Miss coach. “But I don’t know. I’m sure that there’s a few people that naturally want to see that, but you know, again, the thing about the SEC that I’m more concerned with is because our league is so tough and so good, you better be focused on the task at hand.”

It is, after all, a two-chin strap league.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , | 2 Comments »

Golden Opportunity

Posted by Brett Kincaid on October 18, 2010

 

Minnesota is special.

 

If we did not predict this in the preseason, it’s only because it was so obvious that we glossed over it.  Minnesota has fired Tim Brewster after 7 games, of which the Golden Gophers lost six.  That includes a loss to FCS South Dakota and MAC also-ran Northern Illinois.  Those two losses aren’t the only reason, though.  Minnesota has had lots of problems on the field under Brewster.

Brewster went 15-30 at Minnesota, including 6-21 in the Big Ten, and the Gophers’ 28-17 loss to the Boilermakers was their sixth straight defeat.

He was 0-10 in trophy games and never beat chief rivals Wisconsin or Iowa.

How long before Houston Nutt’s name is connected to this vacancy?  Markuson applied for the job when Brewster was hired.  After struggling so badly in the bast 3 seasons, though, it’s hard to imagine Minnesota would hire anyone without head coaching experience.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , | 16 Comments »

Alabama Judge Says Arkansas Dropped the Dime on the Crimson Tide

Posted by Adam Butler on September 21, 2010

"Where's my cell phone? Gotta text Donna."

per this article out of Tuscaloosa, detailing the fallout from the Albert Means NCAA investigation that landed the Tide on probation. He also suggests that former Tennessee Coach Phil Fullmer has been wrongly villified by the Bama faithful and that is participation in the investigation has been exaggerated by shoddy media work.

I am sure the piece was coincidentally posted this week. Ironically, it would have been the current Mississippi Coach who ratted out Alabama. So, maybe he isn’t so bad after all. What a minute–did I just post something which was semi-favorable about Fullmer AND the Mississippi coach? I may want to up my life insurance. I must be getting sick.

Posted in News, Sports | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off on Alabama Judge Says Arkansas Dropped the Dime on the Crimson Tide

BREAKING: Masoli Eligible

Posted by Brett Kincaid on September 3, 2010

Word is beginning to leak this afternoon that University of Mississippi quarterback Jeremiah Masoli has been cleared to play.  This reverses a previous decision by the NCAA who initially ruled the Oregon transfer ineligible.  From the NCAA:

University of Mississippi football student-athlete Jeremiah Masoli may compete immediately, according to a decision today by the NCAA Division I Subcommittee for Legislative Relief. The subcommittee’s decision overturns the staff decision to grant the graduate student transfer waiver with the condition that Masoli could not compete until the 2011-12 academic year.

Houston Nutt’s deal with the devil just got extended.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , | 8 Comments »

Does the “D” stand for “Dirty”?

Posted by Brett Kincaid on August 2, 2010

The Mississippi football coach, often referred to as HDN on Internet message boards, can scratch Steward Mandel off his Christmas card list.  The SI writer just annihilated Nutt in his latest offering, calling the coach “dirty” after the Masoli transfer.  Needless to say, I smiled a lot while reading this.

The definition of “dirty” seems to vary based on one’s affiliation, but surely we can all agree on at least one designation: A dirty coach is willing to eschew his integrity if doing so might pay off in a couple more W’s. He’s not so much a winner as a survivalist. He’s not even necessarily a rule-breaker because he creates his own loopholes.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , | 6 Comments »

Arrested Development: 2010 Mississippi Rebels Preview

Posted by Adam Butler on July 28, 2010

(This is the third in a series in our annual SEC Preview leading up to the beginning of Fall Camp on August 5th.)

He has been called many things–a used car salesman, a master motivator, a Baptist preacher and a texting ace–to name a few–, but one thing Mississippi head coach Houston Nutt cannot be called is inconsistent.

A veritable elder statesman of SEC coaches as he enters his 13th consecutive season at the helm of an SEC West squad (Arkansas 1998-2007, Mississippi 2008-present) Nutt, more than most coaches in today’s “what have you done for me, NOW” society” has a track record–of survival.

He has shown that he is what he is–a skilled, yet flawed coach that can invigorate a moribund program and bring notable success–but one who cannot lead the pack and finish with a kick.

And, if the preceding paragraph looks familiar to avid readers of this space, it should.

Hotty Toddy

It’s a paragraph from our 2009 Mississippi Preview which, flying in the face of seemingly every national pundit who had Mississippi pegged as a program poised to make a leap in 2009, predicted the Rebels would bring their fans great highs and lows before finishing with 8 regular-season wins.

Ultimately they did just that–rising as high as the #5 ranked team in the national polls before finishing 8-4, losing the “Egg Bowl” to in-state rival Mississippi State by a score of 41-27, and for the second consecutive season reaching Nutt’s Cotton (Bowl) ceiling.

A year later, we at BlogHawgs might appear to be a bit too self-congratulatory. But in reality, we are merely decent Houston Nutt historians. We should be. We have lived it, one–head-scratching move after another.

Unfortunately, instead of being able to strut around with an undeserved sense of entitlement while calling ourselves “Doctor”, all we got out of our 10-year Houston Nutt Doctoral program was a repeatedly rejected dissertation (that he can take a program to the next level) and a  crummy pair of golden handcuffs.

But take heart, Mississippi fans. For every disappointing Houston Nutt-led season, eventually, somewhere, there is an unexpected (relative) rejuvenation. Thanks to an annual  rite of passage under Nutt–Mississippi’s soft early season schedule–and much lower expectations for this year’s Rebels’ squad, Nutt has everything in place to deliver a textbook 6-7 win Houston Nutt season.

In fact, he seems to welcome the “experts” having lower expectations for the Rebels than they did a year ago.

“Most of the time I’ve been picked towards the bottom,” Nutt told the assembled media at last week’s SEC Media Days in Birmingham.

“I don’t really worry about that. I never have. A lot of people say, You coach better when you’re not under such high expectations. I’ve always been under low expectations, so most of the time I don’t really worry about that. I tell our young men, Doesn’t matter. All the polls and Bowls, that’s decided on the field, so it doesn’t really matter. Doesn’t matter where you put us. I understand somebody told us y’all picked us last. Thank you. That’s all right. It’s good. It really doesn’t matter.”

The Mississippi Offense
The look and feel of Mississippi’s offense will largely be defined in the coming days, as the final (collegiate) chapters of The Book of Jeremiah (Masoli) are written.
After a checkered juvenile past, (robberies) Oregon took a chance on Masoli, and he rewarded the school by leading it to 10-3 records each of the past two seasons and its first Rose Bowl appearance in 15 years in 2009. He was second-team Pacific-10 Conference last season after completing 177 of 305 passes for 15 touchdowns and six interceptions, and running for 668 yards and 13 scores.

Masoli

Masoli, a unique, versatile talent, has been so good on the field that he has appeared on some Heisman lists during his career and has his name sprinkled throughout Oregon’s football records. Unfortunately, though, he has been amassing an extensive criminal record, as well.

He is currently looking for a new school after first being suspended from the Oregon football team for the entire 2010 season for violation of team rules (burglary of a fraternity house, theft of laptops) and then being dismissed after getting into more trouble with the law. (marijuana arrest)

If the courtship of Masoli to Mississippi comes to fruition it will do so because only a coach the likes of Houston Nutt can make it happen. But, although Nutt, at this hour, is apparently desperate and willing to get on one knee,  it wasn’t love at first sight. Instead, the entire Nutt/Masoli affair has had more of a creepy Russian Mail Order bride feel.

Consider the following timeline:

  • July 7, 2010–4-star Mississippi Wide Receiver Pat Patterson is dismissed from the team by Nutt for violation of team rules;
  • July 20, 2010–Just before SEC Media Days, Nutt and Mississippi say “No” to Masoli;
  • July 22, 2010–Rumors surface that highly-regarded, but dissatisfied 2nd-team quarterback Raymond Cotton, a redshirt freshman, may transfer;
  • July 24, 2010–Masoli to Mississippi is “in-play”;
  • July 25, 2010–Cotton transfers before ever playing a down for the Rebels; and
  • July 25, 2010–Masoli to Mississippi is more likely, but Nutt texts the reporter to tell him it’s not a done deal.

One can only wonder what Patterson, Cotton, and Mississippi 1st-team quarterback (for now) Nathan Stanley must be thinking. Stanley (11-23, 163 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT for his career) has waited patiently behind the latest quarterback to have his career killed by Nutt–Jevan Snead–and was poised to pull off his best Casey Dick impersonation. Instead, Stanley must be steaming as he waits to find out if he will be the Mississippi signal-caller, after all.

If Masoli is at the helm, look for the Mississippi offense to be dangerous. He is a perfect fit for the Wild Cat/Hog/Dolphin/Rebel/Land Shark/Bear (hereinafter Wild Land Shark) offense that Nutt’s brother, Danny, didn’t invent.

Unlike most Wild Land Shark QB’s, Masoli has the ability to run, or pass, effectively.

And,  he would have an offensive line with a couple of talented tackles in Bobby Massie (6-6, 317) and Bradley Sowell (6-7, 305) and one of Nutt’s prototypical deep, and talented, running back corps featuring Brandon Bolden (5-11, 220), Enrique Davis and Rodney Scott. Throw in a potential game-changer in Jesse Grandy (Pine Bluff Dollarway) and the Mississippi offense would strike fear into the hearts of opposing defenses and computer lab proctors.

Brandon Bolden

If Mississippi says “No Mas” (pronounced “No Mass” in the 50th The Magnolia State) of the Nutt/Masoli dalliance, the job will remain with Stanley and he will be asked to do very little in terms of playmaking. His chief responsibility will be to display enough effectiveness that the Rebels do not have to rely on JUCO All-American transfer Randall Mackey (6-0, 190) who has talent, but has only been on campus for a short period of time and will have a steep learning curve. Without Masoli, Mississippi’s 3rd-string quarterback may have to come from the intramural fields, again.

To be effective, Stanley will have to  keep the offense out of bad plays and avoid turnovers–something with which Snead struggled mightily last year.  With Patterson out of the mix and Grandy anything but a conventional Wide Receiver at 5-10, 165,  the primary target for either Masoli or Stanley should be wide receiver Markieth Summers.

Look for Nutt to employ Grandy all over the field, including special teams and occasionally QB, as he did with Dexter McCluster, who almost single-handedly whippped Arkansas last season and was a threat to score every time he touched the ball.

The fact that Mississippi has a new (co)offensive coordinator, Dave Rader, should at least be mentioned, here. Nutt is–you guessed it–excited about the addition and said playcalling and game-planning will be a collaborative effort.

Houston Nutt and his next Offensive Coordinator

“Dave Rader, Mike Markuson, and myself, with the rest of the crew, we put together a game plan,” Nutt said.  “I’ve been calling plays for the last — since I got to Ole Miss. That doesn’t necessarily mean it’s just me. We really do a thorough study……Really, anybody could call the game. To me, it’s fun being in there, being part of it, getting in there with those young men. To me, it’s the funnest time there is. SEC Saturday competing, there’s nothing like it.”

Nutt’s comments notwithstanding, to think there is much room for the fingerprints of anyone other than Nutt or longtime Offensive Line Coach and frequent (as he is now) “Co” Offensive Coordinator, Markuson, on the gameplan is at this point in Nutt’s career,to ignore reality–just ask  Kent Austin, David Lee and Gus Malzahn, who are former offensive coordinators under Nutt.

The Mississippi Defense

The Mississippi defense should be one of the better units in the league, particularly if the Mississippi offense can be consistent and avoid putting new Defensive Coordinator Tyrone Nix’ crew in bad situations via excessive turnovers.

Nix is a proven winner for whom Nutt has pined for a while. Now, he has Nix, and a defensive line that should be the strength of the team, even after losing some key players from last year’s squad. Kentrell Lockett (6-5, 254) and Jerrell Powe (6-2, 330) look like excellent SEC defensive lineman and they play that way, too.

If they can continue to be disruptive at the point of attack, Mississippi may be able to protect the presumptive starters at cornerback coming out of spring practice–Marcus Temple (5-10, 188) and Jeremy McGee (5-10, 180)–and limit the damage from the loss of defensive backfield stalwarts Marshay Green and Cassius Vaughn on the edges.

Johnny Brown (6-0, 212) is is a head-knocking safety that will help ease some of the pressure on the new corners. Junior college transfer Damien Jackson (6-2, 195)  also made a push during spring practice and appears to have nabbed the starting free safety position.

Jeff's Snarky Comment From the Casual Fans' Peanut Gallery: Years until Ole Miss tires of HDN mediocrity: 4. Years until the run up to dismissal: 6. Cotton Bowl appearances during that time: Three. Times HDN calls it a “special” opportunity: Three. Unexplainable text messages to female Oxford News Anchor during that time: 293,843.

The linebacker spots are manned capably by Joel Kight, Jonathan Cornell and Allen Walker. Former Auburn Tiger transfer Patrick Trahan was one we told you to watch last season, and he did not disappoint. His production will need to be replaced.

Mississippi Special Teams

Placekicker Joshua Sheane, a 4-year starter is gone. Bryson Rose will be handed the thorny task of taking over for him. Sophomore Punter Tyler Campbell took over the job last season and was very good. Grandy, as previously mentioned,  has the potential to do big things in the kicking game.

The Mississippi  Schedule

The 1st-half of the Mississippi schedule is tailor-made for early success. The second half is tailor-made for early retirement. Nutt admitted early-season success at home is a key for his team.

(The) schedule is really in our favor early on,” Nutt said.  “We got to take advantage of it.

Then, Nutt disagreed with…… himself.

“Jacksonville State, though, you could say, Oh, Jacksonville State, but Jacksonville State had Florida State beat,” Nutt said. “They have real athletes. Jack Crowe does a tremendous job for them.  It’s not as easy as if — I want to make sure our players understand, Just don’t look at the schedule and look at it like maybe one of your relatives are looking at it, like, okay, one, two, three, four, five, six. You should win the first six. Hold on now. Let’s get these practices going, let’s get better, let’s get the snap from the center. We got a lot of work to do.”

Two Words: The Citadel

Mississippi will presumably have the Quarterback-Center exchange down before it opens with Jacksonville St. (which is, as Nutt mentioned, led by fellow former Arkansas Head Coach Jack Crowe of, “The Citadel” infamy) on September 4th, and follows with Tulane in New Orleans before hosting Vanderbilt.

And so, Mississippi should start 3-0 before hosting a Fresno St. team that, after taking on Pac-10 powers like Southern Cal in recent years, won’t be afraid of an SEC foe–particularly one that is expected to finish at the bottom of its division. Kentucky comes to Oxford on October 1. Then, Mississippi gets an off week to reflect on what should at least be a 4-1 record.

That is when the fun starts. Mississippi travels to face defending national champion Alabama on October 16th. Then, Nutt and the Rebels travel to Fayetteville on October 23rd for a tilt with a Bobby Petrino-led Razorback Nation that has been waiting to take its pound of flesh from Nutt for almost three years. Old Home month continues for Nutt when Gus Malzahn and Auburn come to Oxford on October 30th.

Finally, after what should be a glorified scrimmage with Louisiana-Lafayette on November 6th, the Rebels travel to Rocky Top on November 13th, march to Death Valley to take on LSU a week later and then wrap up the season by hosting Mississippi State for the “Egg Bowl”.

“What you really want to guard against is you want to embrace it, but at the same time, you got to be ready to help your team if the bubble pops, Nutt said. “The bubble bursted on us in South Carolina Thursday night. It was a very difficult schedule to go from Saturday to Thursday night, especially no matter where you play in the SEC, each stadium is the best in the country, the atmosphere. South Carolina is awesome on Thursday night.

“When that bubble popped, that’s where you better have some ‘Dr. Feel’ in ya. You better be ready to go, to help your team, because expectations are so high. Fans have this vision that you’re going straight to Atlanta. You got to be ready to adjust. We all want to go there.”

What Will Happen

With or without Masoli, Mississippi will start strong. A team of BlogHawgs All-Stars would fare well versus Mississippi’s early schedule. However, in the second half of the season, with or without Masoli, the Rebels will be beaten about the face and the head (figuratively, of course).

But, if Masoli is on board, and if he stays out of trouble (a big if), look for him to be worth one, and maybe two, unexpected wins.

Mississippi Offense

Returning Starters:  3

Key Players:  QB Nathan Stanley or QB Jeremiah Masoli, OL Bradley Sowell, OL Bobby Massie, ATH Jesse Grandy

Needs to Emerge: P.O. Masoli’s Probation Officer

Mississippi Defense

Returning Starters: 5

Key Players:  NG Jerrell Powe, DE Kentrell Lockett, CB Marcus Temple

Needs to Emerge: S Damien Jackson

Key Games:  at Arkansas, AU, at Tennessee

Schedule (7-5)

Sept. 4 Jacksonville St              W
Sept. 11 at Tulane                        W
Sept. 18 Vanderbilt                     W
Sept. 25 Fresno State                 W
Oct. 2 Kentucky                           W
Oct. 9 OPEN DATE
Oct. 16 at Alabama                     L
Oct. 23 at Arkansas                    L
Oct. 30 Auburn                           L
Nov. 6 La Lafayette                   W
Nov. 13 at Tennessee                L
Nov. 20 at LSU                            L
Nov. 27 Miss State                     W

Mississippi Offense

Posted in SEC Preview, Sports | Tagged: , , | 10 Comments »

Wrong Reverend Nutt

Posted by Brett Kincaid on July 27, 2010

This seems like a great precursor to Adam’s preview of the 2010 Mississippi Rebels tomorrow.

Stop me if you’ve heard this:  Good player gets in trouble with the law and receives a minimal punishment; average or less critical player gets in trouble and get the boot.

That, according to this piece, encapsulates Houston Nutt justice.  For Arkansas fans this will seem quite familiar.  Now that Jeremiah Masoli is all but wearing the Mississippi colors, the Mississippi football coach’s erratic code of criminal justice once again deserves a thorough review.  As Ben Dial notes in his column, the “Right Reverend” looks far less holy and much more like a snake oil salesman.

The Ole Miss Rebels are finding out what Houston Nutt justice is all about. The Rebel general may be known as the “Right Reverend,” but a closer look at history presents a different persona. The fact is that he resembles more that of a smarmy TV evangelist than a real holy man. Houston Nutt has a long history of preaching right and wrong, but that history is also blemished with actions based on self-preservation rather than moral fortitude. Ole Miss fans are following their newfound leader of glory, but Houston Nutt is still in first-class Robert Tilton form.

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , | 3 Comments »