Mississippi
Does Mississippi State play today? College football schedule for Bulldogs after Week 12 bye
Mississippi State football coach Jeff Lebby talks Tennessee loss
Watch part of Mississippi State football coach Jeff Lebby’s press conference following Saturday night’s loss to Tennessee.
The Mississippi State football team is already eliminated from reaching bowl eligibility, but it hopes its final bye week of the season can help it build momentum into the 2025 season.
The Bulldogs (2-8, 0-6 SEC) have yet to win an SEC game this season under first-year coach Jeff Lebby, who was hired away from Oklahoma in the offseason. MSU has also turned to true freshman quarterback Michael Van Buren down the stretch, who has played well in relief of the injured Blake Shapen.
Van Buren has at least provided some nice things to look forward to going ahead, as the Bowie, Maryland, native has passed for 1,415 yards with nine touchdowns to five interceptions, along with four rushing touchdowns, this season.
The rest of the schedule won’t be easy, as the Bulldogs face Missouri at home and Ole Miss on the road in the Egg Bowl to end the season.
Here’s everything to know about Mississippi State’s bye week, including the rest of its schedule in 2024:
Does Mississippi State play today?
Mississippi State doesn’t play in Week 12, as it’s the second of its two bye weeks this season.
The Bulldogs’ first bye week in 2024 came on Oct. 5, after their loss to Texas and before their loss to Georgia. Their Week 12 bye comes after falling to Tennessee and before they close their season against Missouri and Ole Miss in consecutive weeks.
Mississippi State football schedule 2024
Here’s a look at Mississippi State’s 2024 schedule:
All times Central
- Saturday, Aug. 31: vs. Eastern Kentucky (W, 56-7)
- Saturday, Sept. 7: at Arizona State (L, 30-23)
- Saturday, Sept. 14: vs. Toledo (L, 41-17)
- Saturday, Sept. 21: vs. Florida (L, 45-28)*
- Saturday, Sept. 28: at No. 1 Texas (L, 35-13)*
- Saturday, Oct. 5: BYE
- Saturday, Oct. 12: at No. 5 Georgia* (L, 41-31)
- Saturday, Oct. 19: vs. No. 14 Texas A&M* (L, 34-24)
- Saturday, Oct. 26: vs. Arkansas* (L, 58-25)
- Saturday, Nov. 2: vs. UMass (W, 45-20)
- Saturday, Nov. 9: at No. 7 Tennessee* (L, 33-14)
- Saturday, Nov. 16: BYE
- Saturday, Nov. 23: vs. No. 23 Missouri* | 3:15 p.m. | SEC Network (Fubo)
- Friday, Nov. 29: at No. 11 Ole Miss* | 2:30 p.m. | ABC (ESPN+ or Fubo)
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Mississippi
4-star C Tee Bartlett commits to Mississippi State
Tee Bartlett, a four-star center in the 2025 class, has committed to Mississippi State.
The 6-foot-10 senior out of Overtime Elite (GA) chose Chris Jans and the Bulldogs over offers from USC, Illinois, Miami, Washington, Xavier, and others.
Bartlett, a Los Angeles native, is the nation’s No. 61 overall prospect, No. 5 center and No. 7 recruit in Georgia in the 2025 cycle according to the On3 Industry Ranking — a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies.
Bartlett named one of the standouts at OTE Combine
Tee Barlett was recently named as one of the standouts at the Overtime Elite Combine, according to On3’s Jamie Shaw
“Tee Bartlett measured 6-foot-10.5 and is listed at 275 pounds. The center used his physical disposition well on the block. Showing comfort as a throw-back-type big, he put his two feet in the paint and finished consistently in traffic over both shoulders. Bartlett is a good area rebounder and a good passer out of the post. While most of his game was around the basket, during the drill portion he made pick and pop threes. Playing through a big has not left the college game, and Bartlett showed at the Overtime Elite Combine that he is able to create an offensive advantage with the ball in his hands.”
Mississippi
How to watch and preview of Texas men's basketball against Mississippi Valley State
Mississippi
Three Takeaways from Mizzou’s 72-Point Victory Over Mississippi Valley State
It’s not often a college basketball team scores over 100 points, and it’s not often that they win by over 70 points.
The Missouri Tigers were able to accomplish both of those feats on Thursday night, defeating Mississippi Valley State 111-39. After a hot start in which it led 24-6 with 10:57 remaining in the first half, they never let up from there.
This is the largest margin of victory Missouri has gained since the hire of coach Dennis Gates, as well as a tie for the largest in program history. By limiting turnovers and shooting a high percentage on 3-point attempts, it quickly became a very simple win.
A total of seven Tigers finished in double digits with points. Marques Warrick led the pack with 16 points on 6-of-10 shooting and 4-of-5 shooting from behind the arc.
Here are three takeaways from the 72-point win:
Of the many stats that Missouri won by the end of the game, the turnover category might’ve been the most impressive.
The Tigers only turned the ball over five times throughout the night, consisting of two from Tamar Bates and one from both Marcus Allen and JV Brown, along with a team turnover. They managed to keep the ball tightly secured from the Delta Devils and total 19 assists.
On the flip side, that was a huge struggle point for Mississippi Valley State. They turned the ball over 23 times, and Missouri was able to capitalize by scoring 45 points off them. That’s 40% of its points, and if the Delta Devils were just able to cut it in half, the loss wouldn’t have looked near as historic.
By being able to make smart plays on offense and execute on the defensive end, the turnover battle was an easy win for the Tigers. Gates had been looking for an assist to turnover ratio to the level that it was last night, and the unselfishness and pressure on the basket that his players committed to helped that search come to an end.
Three members of Missouri’s freshman class — Annor Boateng, Marcus Allen, Peyton Marshall — saw increased opportunites given the circumstances of the final score.
Although Boateng had started in the previous two games, Thursday was different. Instead of the four minutes he received against Eastern Washington, the guard received 25. Through that, he recorded 10 points and two steals on 3-of-7 shooting
Marcus Allen also dropped 10 points, but on 3-of-3 shooting and in only 14 minutes. Playing time has been pretty consistent for him so far, but he had far more of a green light to attack and look to score.
The last of three, Peyton Marshall, made a strong defensive presence. Despite only scoring a single point, his three steals and two blocks in 14 minutes were noticeable. He was given more action than Josh Gray, who received 11 minutes as the starting center.
Even with Trent Burns nor T.O. Barrett suiting up for a game yet, it’s clear that the Tigers’ freshman class is talented. All three that did play against Mississippi Valley State made a distinct impact.
“These freshman just need to continue to get better. We got to make sure that they have no breaks in practice, so they can just get with what it takes to be a division one athlete,” Gates said. “It gives them a foundation of where they want to continue to build upon, and I just thought it was seamless based off practice.”
Before the game had even started, it was clear that this was a team Missouri should beat handedly. The Delta Devils had lost to Iowa State by nearly 40 points in their season opener, and moving to SEC play wasn’t going to get any better.
With the amount of talent the Tigers have at their disposal, this being a blowout should be the outcome. Of course a 72-point win is historic for the program and a much further margin of victory than what was expected, but a win by 30 less points wouldn’t have proved any less.
Missouri has taken care of business in its last three non-conference games since losing to Memphis in it season opener, which is a postive sign. Last year it took a loss to Jackson State early on, which spelled the ultimate doom that was its regular season finish.
It’s still tough to judge and evaluate how good the Tigers will be this season until it plays tougher competition, which doesn’t happen until California on Dec. 3. Until then, it’s just a matter of winning the games they should and experimenting with rotations to figure out the best way they can position themselves for a bounce back season in the SEC.
The win doesn’t really show much for Missouri, but getting the win in the fashion that it did at least proves it shouldn’t worry about dropping games its the obvious favorite in. It was a dominating display on both ends, and if it can continue to make strides in efficiency and lessening turnovers, the momentum will carry on.
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