Mississippi
Mississippi State Football Countdown: Three Games that Could Define the Bulldogs’ Season
Mississippi State is gearing up for an additional school soccer season stuffed with difficult matchups.
The Bulldogs will face off in opposition to six groups which are at the moment ranked within the AP Preseason Prime 25 ballot all year long. This system is trying to take an enormous step after ending the 2021 season with a 7-6 total file and a loss to Texas Tech within the AutoZone Liberty Bowl. Though each recreation that MSU performs is vital, there are a number of that stand out as that means just a bit bit extra in the long term.
Listed here are three key video games that might play massive roles in figuring out how Mississippi State fares this season.
1. Mississippi State at LSU
It seems probably that State will be capable of win its non-conference video games in September, however the staff’s matchup in opposition to LSU on Sept. 17 might be a bit harder. The Tigers return some spectacular expertise, however no one is kind of certain how they are going to do of their first 12 months below head coach Brian Kelly. The Bulldogs might want to choose up as many wins as they’ll earlier than constant convention play really begins, and heading into October with a possible 4-0 file might be large for MSU.
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2. Mississippi State vs. Texas A&M
October is shaping as much as be an especially grueling month for the Bulldogs. Moreover going through the Aggies within the first recreation of the month, the staff is about to face Arkansas, Kentucky and Alabama. Mississippi State picked up the 26-22 victory over Texas A&M in Faculty Station final season, however the Aggies have since introduced within the high recruiting class within the nation and wish to lastly have a breakthrough 12 months. Nonetheless, TAMU’s excessive rankings haven’t stopped MSU from rolling to victory prior to now. Beginning the hardest month of the season off with a victory may assist the Bulldogs carry some momentum right into a tough stretch in opposition to massive SEC foes.
3. Mississippi State at Ole Miss
The Egg Bowl is at all times an vital matchup for each Mississippi State and Ole Miss. Satisfaction is a driving pressure for the 2 rival groups, however there’s often way more on the road than bragging rights. Given how stiff competitors is shaping as much as be within the SEC this 12 months, the Egg Bowl may decide postseason eligibility and shake convention standings. The Bulldogs haven’t received the Golden Egg since 2019 and will probably be itching to shake the hunch, however it will not be straightforward in Vaught-Hemingway Stadium on Thanksgiving night time. The sport is bound to be extremely entertaining to followers and detached spectators alike.
Mississippi
Where Mississippi State women’s basketball stands in updated March Madness bracket predictions
Mississippi State women’s basketball suffered a heartbreaking loss at the buzzer to Missouri on Tuesday night. Yet, it didn’t negatively impact its NCAA tournament projection.
The Bulldogs (16-6, 3-5 SEC) also won 96-56 against Auburn on Thursday, their largest SEC margin of victory in coach Sam Purcell’s three seasons.
MSU only has one game this week at LSU (21-1, 6-1) on Sunday (1 p.m., SEC Network).
Here’s where Mississippi State stands in the latest NCAA tournament predictions.
Mississippi State women’s basketball NCAA tournament projection
ESPN’s Charlie Creme kept Mississippi State as a No. 8 seed this week. He has the Bulldogs matched up against No. 9 Oregon. The winner would play either No. 1 UCLA or No. 16 seeds Texas Southern or North Carolina A&T.
Mississippi State women’s basketball NCAA tournament resume
Mississippi State’s NCAA NET ranking fell three spots to No. 34 after the Missouri loss. Missouri’s NET ranking is No. 74, becoming MSU’s worse loss of the season. MSU is now 14-1 in Quads 2-4.
The Bulldogs’ best wins are at home versus Oklahoma and against Utah on a neutral court.
The Sunday game at LSU will be Quad 1.
Mississippi State women’s basketball NCAA tournament history under Sam Purcell
MSU has reached the NCAA tournament once in coach Sam Purcell’s two completed seasons. In 2022-23, MSU won in the First Four and the first round before losing to Notre Dame in the second round.
The Bulldogs have made NCAA tournament appearances 12 times and have won at least one game 11 straight times.
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
What Sam Purcell said of Mississippi State women’s basketball’s last-second loss at Missouri
Mississippi State women’s basketball had the ball in the hands of its 40-point scorer with 25.8 seconds remaining in Tuesday’s game.
The Bulldogs led by one point, but the shot clock showed 16 seconds. One more bucket to add to Jerkaila Jordan’s career high in points could seal the win against Missouri.
Mizzou forward Laniah Randle poked the ball away from Jordan with 13 seconds remaining and another Tigers player grabbed it and raced down the floor. Missouri didn’t call a timeout before Grace Slaughter hit a midrange baseline jump shot at the buzzer.
It dealt Mississippi State (16-6, 3-5 SEC) a 78-77 loss to the Tigers (12-10, 1-6) at Mizzou Arena.
“This one stings,” MSU coach Sam Purcell said in his postgame radio interview. “The kids are heartbroken in that locker room. They wanted this bad. I’m proud of the effort they gave, but at the end of the day, our defense was not good enough to get enough stops tonight.”
What Sam Purcell said went wrong on final play
Purcell called a timeout before Jordan’s turnover. As she began penetrating toward the hoop, center Madina Okot set a screen to the left, but Jordan drove right instead. Jordan then tried to cross back to her left when she began to lose control of the ball.
“I’m going to have to go back and watch it,” Purcell said. “Obviously I thought we had a great flat back screen. We called a timeout, even though we had the matchup earlier because we wanted to catch our breath. We still were able to get it back in our hands for the end of the game.
“You just got to tip your hat to Missouri. I think they got a deflection or a hand in there because she wasn’t able to be stopped. But for that possession, she was. And then they go down, and then obviously make a dagger there at the horn.”
Purcell pointed to two other aspects that went wrong in the game for Mississippi State, who played without backup point guard Destiney McPhaul because of illness.
One, he thought the Bulldogs allowed too many and-1 fouls. They also left points at the free-throw line, going just 14 of 24. Jordan, despite becoming the ninth player in program history to score at least 40 points in a game, was 9-for-17, with four misses in the fourth quarter.
MSU led for 22 minutes, 3 seconds of game time, including the entire third quarter, when it led by as many as nine points.
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
Mississippi has 12 ties to the Super Bowl between Chiefs and Eagles. Here’s the list
KC Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles celebrate path to Super Bowl
The Chiefs are facing off against the Eagles at Super Bowl LIX. The teams faced off at the 2023 championship, with the Chiefs taking home the trophy.
The matchup is set for Super Bowl 59 between the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles.
It’s a star-studded game featuring Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce, Jalen Hurts and probably singing star Taylor Swift, too. There are also a handful of Mississippi ties to the Super Bowl — 12 to be exact, including players and coaches.
Southern Miss has the most connections among the Mississippi colleges with four.
Here’s are the Mississippi ties to know for the Super Bowl.
Mississippi State’s Super Bowl connections
Chris Jones is back in the Super Bowl as Kansas City’s star defensive lineman. The six-time Pro Bowler and three-time All-Pro played at Mississippi State from 2013-15 and is a Houston, Mississippi, native. In 15 games this season, Jones has 37 tackles, five sacks and 20 quarterback hits. He’s played his entire career with the Chiefs and already won three Super Bowls.
Eagles cornerback Darius Slay played at Itawamba Community College from 2009-10 and Mississippi State from 2011-12. He was drafted by the Detroit Lions in the second round and was traded to Philadelphia in 2020. Slay is a six-time Pro Bowler and has 49 tackles, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery this season.
Ole Miss’ Super Bowl connections
Ole Miss’ connections are both on the Eagles.
AJ Brown, Philadelphia’s star wide receiver, played at Ole Miss from 2016-18. Brown was a second-round draft pick by the Tennessee Titans but was traded to the Eagles in 2022. He’s a three-time Pro Bowl selection and eclipsed 1,000 receiving yards for the fifth time out of six seasons. Brown is also a Starkville native.
Eagles assistant special teams coordinator Joe Pannunzio coached tight ends and special teams at Ole Miss from 1995-98.
Southern Miss’ Super Bowl connections
Linebacker Swayze Bozeman signed with the Chiefs as an undrafted free agent in the spring. He’s spent time on the practice squad and active roster this season, appearing in three games with three tackles. Bozeman is a Flora native, attended Tri-County Academy and played at Copiah-Lincoln Community College before Southern Miss from 2019-23.
Two other former Golden Eagles are on the Chiefs’ practice squad: cornerback Eric Scott Jr. and wide receiver Jason Brownlee.
Scott played at Southern Miss from 2020-22 and was a sixth-round draft pick by the Dallas Cowboys. He was cut by the Cowboys in August and signed by Kansas City on Sept. 3. Scott has not played in a game this season. Brownlee, a West Point native, played at East Mississippi Community College from 2018-19 and Southern Miss from 2020-22. He was signed as an undrafted free agent by the New York Jets and caught a touchdown as a rookie but was cut in January. The Chiefs signed him to the practice squad on Jan. 15.
Todd Pinkston is in his second season as the Chiefs running backs coach. The Forest native played wide receiver at Southern Miss from 1995-99 and was a second-round draft pick by the Eagles. Pinkston also coached at Petal High School.
Mississippi high school connections to the Super Bowl
There are four Mississippians who are participating in the Super Bowl but played college football out of the state:
- Nakobe Dean, the Eagles linebacker, is a Horn Lake native. He’s a former five-star in the 2019 recruiting class and the No. 1 player in Mississippi, according to the 247Sports Composite Rankings. Dean went to Georgia and was drafted by Philadelphia in the third round.
- Eagles running back Kenneth Gainwell is from Yazoo City. He played at Memphis and was a fifth-round draft pick in 2021. Gainwell, the backup to Saquon Barkley, suffered a concussion in the NFC Championship game and did not return.
- Eagles defensive tackle Byron Young is from Laurel and went to West Jones. He played at Alabama before being drafted in the third round by the Las Vegas Raiders in 2022. Young has been on injured reserve since Oct. 26.
- Defensive tackle Fabien Lovett Sr. signed with Chiefs as an undrafted free agent in the spring and has been on the practice squad. He’s an Olive Branch native, played at Mississippi State from 2018-19 before transferring to Florida State.
When is the Super Bowl?
- Date: Sunday, Feb. 9, 2025
- Location: New Orleans
- Time: 5:30 p.m. CT
How to watch the Super Bowl
The Super Bowl will broadcast on FOX. Streaming is available via FuboTV, which offers a free trial to new subscribers.
Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@gannett.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.
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