Mississippi
How Riley Kugel, RJ Melendez played OT heroes in Mississippi State basketball win vs Ole Miss
STARKVILLE — Josh Hubbard was at the free-throw line and just connected on his second of three free throws 3½ minutes into Saturday’s game. The whistle blew, and Riley Kugel stepped on to the court to applause from the Mississippi State basketball fans.
It was his first shift of the game and his first in a week after missing Tuesday’s loss at Auburn with an injury. But the applause was as loud as if he’d been out for a month. It was a moment of recognition from the fans of his importance to the Bulldogs.
And what ensued certainly solidified that.
Kugel, the Florida transfer, had 21 points in No. 18 MSU’s 84-81 overtime win versus No. 21 Ole Miss (15-3, 4-1 SEC) at Humphrey Coliseum. Not only was he the game-high scorer, but he hit a clutch 3-pointer in overtime to cap a highlight-reel play between him and RJ Melendez.
Mississippi State coach Chris Jans afterward called it “by far the play of the game.”
How Riley Kugel, RJ Melendez made the play of the game
Mississippi State (15-3, 3-2) never trailed in regulation. It led by as many as 14 points in the first half, and was leading 74-71 until Rebels guard Matthew Murrell drilled a contested straightaway 3-pointer with 8.3 seconds remaining.
Jans didn’t call a timeout, and Kugel missed a stepback 3, sending the game to overtime.
“I saw some droopy faces when it was time for me to sit down,” Jans said. “And certainly as the coach, that’s not what you’re looking for. So trying to kind of reset it. As best that I could, try to get them energized again and ready to go.”
And to make matters worse, Kugel came up limping from the shot attempt and went down the tunnel. He didn’t return until overtime, re-entering the game with 2:12 left. Ole Miss had a 77-76 lead.
“I just knew I had to get back out there,” he said. “I had twisted the same foot, but it was like I was going to do whatever I could to get back on there out on the floor.”
Forty-four seconds later, Kugel sank a 3-pointer to give MSU the lead it didn’t relinquish.
Hubbard missed a shot near the basket and the rebound ricocheted to near midcourt. Players from both teams hit the floor but Ole Miss came away with it. Murrell bolted ahead toward the MSU hoop. As he rose for the layup, Melendez came from behind and swatted the shot off the backboard.
The Bulldogs pushed the ball quickly the other direction. Hubbard threw a lob to Cameron Matthews, who in midair threw a pass to the corner for Kugel instead of shooting it. Kugel set his feet and scored another 3.
“I saw a 3-on-2 transition, so I knew we had to get a bucket,” Kugel said. “Mook (Matthews) could’ve scored. He could score, but he had that much trust in me.”
Kugel also poked a steal with 20 seconds remaining and connected on both of his free throws with 11 seconds to play.
“I was just anxious to get back out there,” Kugel said. “I missed the last game. I was just happy to be back out there with the guys.”
Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@gannett.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.
Mississippi
Lawmakers signal K-12 teachers will get $2,000 raise, first pay increase since 2022 – SuperTalk Mississippi
A back-and-forth affair over teacher pay raises inside the Mississippi capitol – a debate that technically died before being revived – is expected to end with K-12 educators statewide receiving a $2,000 bump to their salaries.
The Senate on Sunday unanimously voted to fund the pay increase for teachers in the state’s public school system while conversations in the House affirmed the chamber will follow suit. Special education teachers, assistant teachers, speech therapists, and school psychologists will receive the same pay increase.
Notably, lawmakers are also working to budget for a $5,000 raise for school attendance officers and funding to hire nine more. The plan would ensure one attendance officer for every 4,000 students statewide. Attendance officers are responsible for investigating unexcused absences, making home visits, and coordinating with families and courts to improve dropout rates.
The anticipated investment comes as Mississippi continues to grapple with chronic absenteeism. According to an October report from the Mississippi Department of Education, more than a quarter of public-school students missed over 10% of the 2024-25 school year.
The raises will be immediate if a conference report approved by both chambers goes into law. It is expected to be passed by both chambers as early as Monday with Republican Speaker Jason White telling the House he expects the session to end “no later than Thursday.”
The deal to give teachers a $2,000 raise follows months of different numbers bouncing around the capitol. The Senate initially proposed a $2,000 immediate raise, while the House pushed for a $5,000 immediate raise. After missing a key deadline earlier this month, both chambers found alternative routes to revive the measures. The House maintained its $5,000 proposal, while the Senate advanced a plan to phase in a $6,000 raise over three years.
Despite recent academic gains that have drawn national praise – including a No. 16 national ranking after decades at the bottom – Mississippi teachers remain among the lowest paid in the country. A 2025 report from the National Education Association found the state’s starting salary of $41,500 ranks near the bottom nationwide, even when accounting for cost of living.
Sunday’s budgeting work is part of a broader education appropriation expected to round out at approximately $3.3 billion. If the numbers stand, it will make way for the first teacher pay raise since 2022.
Sen. Dennis DeBar, a Republican from Leakesville and chair of the Senate Education Committee, said lawmakers settled on the $2,000 figure due to competing budget demands, including Medicaid and the Public Employees’ Retirement System. The state’s total budget for Fiscal Year 2027 is expected to be around $7.4 billion.
“There’s nothing that says we can’t do a (teacher) pay raise again next year,” DeBar said. “However, we didn’t want to lock ourselves in somewhere we couldn’t pay.”
Mississippi
How Mississippi State’s Tomas Valincius dominated third straight SEC team vs Ole Miss
OXFORD — Tomas Valincius struck out top Ole Miss baseball batter Tristan Bissetta looking on his last pitch of the game.
There was no emotion from the Mississippi State starting pitcher as he walked back to the dugout after Bissetta was the fourth straight Ole Miss batter to strike out.
It was another instance of Valincius, the left-handed Virginia transfer, showing a trait that’s made him such a dominant pitcher for the No. 4 Bulldogs. The longer Valincius pitches, the better he gets.
The sophomore pitched another five shutout innings as MSU (23-4, 5-2 SEC) took down No. 18 Ole Miss, 6-1, at Swayze Field on March 28 to win the series.
“It’s all mental,” Valincius said. “Just going out there and just kind of trusting yourself and all the work you put in throughout the week. And even when you don’t have your stuff, it’s still a war between every battle in every inning. It’s kind of like finding a way to do what you can do with what you got.”
The win clinched the Bulldogs’ ninth series against the Rebels (19-9, 3-5) in the last 10 meetings. Another win March 29 (3 p.m., SEC Network) would make Brian O’Connor the third straight first-year MSU coach to sweep Ole Miss.
Valincius (6-0) hasn’t allowed an earned run in 19 SEC innings and his season ERA dropped to 0.91.
Against the Rebels, one game after striking out a career-high 14 batters against Vanderbilt, Valincius recorded nine strikeouts with three hits, two walks and one hit by pitch in 90 pitches.
“He buckled down when runners were in scoring position,” O’Connor said. “He’s always best in his middle innings. You see him just rise his game up.”
Why Tomas Valincius could’ve done even better against Ole Miss
While the Ole Miss game was Valincius’ third SEC start without allowing an earned run, it was his shortest outing of the three. The other two against Arkansas and Vanderbilt both lasted seven innings.
Valincius stranded six Ole Miss batters on base in his five innings.
“Early on, I didn’t really feel like I had anything going,” Valincius said. “I was kind of just finding a way to win. That was kind of my whole approach throughout the whole game. I couldn’t really figure out the slider and fastball command. It wasn’t working a lot. I just found a way to win.”
Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for The Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@usatodayco.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.
Mississippi
Mother, her 2 daughters among 5 killed in collision between train and van
STONE COUNTY, Miss. (WLOX/Gray News) — Multiple people were killed in a crash between a train and a van on Friday afternoon in Mississippi.
Stone County Sheriff Todd Stewart said the crash happened around 1 p.m. on Pump Branch Road. First responders had to cut through the woods to get to the wreckage.
There were six people in the van at the time of the crash, Stewart said. Stone County Coroner Wayne Flurry confirmed five of them died in the crash.
The sixth person was airlifted to New Orleans.
The five victims were identified as 26-year-old Ryan C. Peterson, who was a corrections officer with the Harrison County Sheriff’s Department, 23-year-old Demarcus Perkins, 45-year-old Kristina Carver, and Carver’s two daughters, 22-year-old Emley Chamblee and 20-year-old Sarabeth Chamblee.
Nearby resident Pam Olson has been sounding the alarm on the Pump Branch Road railroad crossing for some time. She was tending to her garden with her husband when the sound of screeching brakes made them jolt.
“We heard it,” explained Olson. “My husband and I were in the yard working on our flowerbeds. I told my husband a train hit another vehicle. My husband ran up there and said, ‘Pam, it’s bad.’”
A recent report from the Stone County Enterprise outlines another wreck in the same spot, which resulted in the driver of a pickup truck being airlifted. Stewart also pointed out a fatal train accident in Stone County happened at the location in 2023, claiming the life of a Wiggins woman.
“This’d be the second incident in the last four to five weeks involving fatalities and the third incident in the last year, all involving fatalities,” explained Stewart. “To date, we’ve lost seven folks within the last year.”
The crossing does not have crossing arms or lights. Stone County District 1 Supervisor Jimmy Springs said he previously reached out to Mississippi Department of Transportation railroad engineers and was told crossing arms are on the way for two crossings, including the one at Pump Branch Road. However, it could take a year for them to be installed.
Copyright 2026 WLOX via Gray Local Media, Inc. All rights reserved.
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