Mississippi
PCS wins second title? Our 2026 Mississippi high school baseball predictions, top players
The 2026 Mississippi high school baseball season has arrived.
As MHSAA and MAIS hits the ground running for their first week of games, the Clarion Ledger has made three predictions and has looked at some top players around the state heading into the year.
Here are the Clarion Ledger’s predictions and top players to watch for the upcoming 2026 season.
Three predictions for MHSAA, MAIS baseball season
Presbyterian Christian wins MHSAA 3A title after move from MAIS
Presbyterian Christian won the MAIS 6A title last season against Hartfield Academy for the program’s first championship. The Bobcats have a chance at repeating, but in a whole new association, as they have moved to MHSAA 3A. Behind stars Bankston Walters, Jet Henderson and Tyner Flynt, PCS is one of the top teams in 3A.
Magnolia Heights starts … finishes 2026 season No. 1
It seems the dynasty isn’t stopping soon. After Magnolia Heights’ MAIS 5A title in 2025 and seven consecutive titles, the talent hasn’t slowed. The Chiefs have returners Cole Prosek, Christian Doty, Cayden Prestage and Devin Miller, all Division I commits. The clear preseason No. 1 team has the chance to remain in that top spot throughout the season and hunt for an eighth straight title.
Petal wins first title since 2011 in MHSAA 7A
The Panthers won consecutive MHSAA 6A titles in 2010-11, but have not reached a championship game since. Heading into the 2026 season, Petal could snap that streak. With returners Easton Gigr, Fisher Howell and transfer Tray Barnes will line up for the Panthers in the tough 7A class with Brandon, Lewsiburg, and Clinton.
30 top players to watch entering 2026 MHSAA, MAIS baseball season
Henry Abt, Hartfield Academy, Sr.: Abt, the Southern Miss signee, had a team-high .400 batting average with 44 hits and 14 stolen bases last season.
Trey Adcox, Brandon, Jr.: The New Orleans commit hit for .365 with 29 RBIs and 35 hits.
Crews Albritton, Tri-County Academy: Albritton hit for .367 with 33 hits, 32 RBIs and six home runs, helping Tri-County Academy to a MAIS 4A title.
Hayden Amis, Newton County, Sr.: The Pearl River College commit had a .422 batting average with 38 hits, 36 RBIs and four home runs.
Trey Barnes, Petal, Sr.: The Southern Miss signee transferred from Taylorsville and had a .421 batting average with 40 hits, 17 stolen bases and 29 RBIs.
Eric Booth Jr., Oak Grove, Sr.: The Vanderbilt signee hit for .467 with 53 runs, 42 hits, 25 RBIs, six home runs and 27 stolen bases.
Trent Buckley, Columbia Academy, Jr.: The Ole Miss commit had a .477 batting average with 51 RBIs and 15 home runs.
Logan Buckley, Columbia Academy, Sr.: The Southern Miss signee recorded a 1.34 ERA with an 8-3 record and 119 strikeouts.
Jax Coker, Tupelo Christian Prep, Sr.: Coker hit for .449 with four home runs, 27 RBIs and scored 34 runs. While on the mound had a 1.67 ERA.
Drew Davis, Sumrall, Jr.: The Alabama commit had a .410 batting average with 30 RBIs and 15 extra-base hits.
Ethan Dodson, Clinton, Sr.: The Memphis signee led Clinton with a .520 batting average, 51 hits and 42 RBIs.
Christian Doty, Magnolia Heights, Sr.: The Ole Miss signee helped Magnolia Heights to a 39-5 record and an MAIS 5A title.
Reed Duncan, Columbia Academy, Sr.: The Louisiana Tech signee had 15 RBIs with a 3.32 ERA.
Brayden Edmiston, New Hope, Sr.: The Northeast College signee was a preseason MaxPreps all-state team.
Tyner Flynt, Presbyterian Christian, Sr.: The Troy signee produced a 2.08 ERA with 93 strikeouts.
Reid Garrett, Caledonia, Sr.: The Liberty signee posted a 0.91 ERA with 102 strikeouts.
Deuce Jenkins, Jackson Academy, Jr.: The Mississippi State commit had 31 hits with 26 RBIs and five home runs.
Tanner Harris, Lafayette, Sr.: The East Central College signee had a .291 batting average with an .885 OPS, 30 hits and 29 RBIs, helping Lafayette win the MHSAA 5A state title.
Fischer Howell, Petal, Jr.: The Mississippi State commit had a .427 batting average with 31 hits and 16 extra-base hits.
Alex Lambert, Madison-Ridgeland Academy, Sr.: The Jones College signee had a .343 batting average with 18 RBIs and 37 hits.
Taylor Latham, Hartfield Academy, Sr.: The Southern Miss signee had a 2.32 ERA with 75 strikeouts and 21 RBIs.
John Lindsey III, Petal, Sr.: The UAB signee hit for .368 with 17 RBIs.
Jackson Meeham, Northwst Rankin, Sr.: The Southern Miss signee recorded 66 strikeouts with a 3.04 ERA.
Jon Grey Morrisson, West Union, Sr.: The MHSAA 1A Mr. Baseball winner and Itawamba College signee, had a 1.95 ERA and 30 RBIs to lead West Union to a MHSAA 1A title.
Caden Nelson, Lewisburg, Sr.: Nelson, the Jones College signee, had a .479 batting average with 22 RBIs and 35 hits.
Cole Prosek, Magnolia Heights, Sr.: The Ole Miss signee had a .462 batting average with 54 hits, 16 home runs and 37 RBIs, helping Magnolia Heights win the MAIS 5A title.
Sullivan Reed, Lamar School, Jr.: The Mississippi State commit had a .616 batting average with 61 hits, 54 RBIs and nine home runs, and a 5-2 record on the mound.
Kevin Roberts Jr., Jackson Prep, Sr.: The Florida signee hit for .406 with a 1.066 OPS and 39 hits, 30 runs, 17 RBIs, 15 stolen bases and three home runs.
Justin San Miguel, Ocean Springs, Sr.: The Troy signee recorded 27 RBIs and a .304 batting average.
Hayden Wilson, Madison Central, Sr.: The Hinds College signee helped Madison Central to an MHSAA 7A title.
Bankston Walters, Presbyterian Christian, Sr.: The Southern Miss signee produced an 11-1 record with a 1.64 ERA and hit for .351 with 38 RBIs, while helping PCS win the MAIS 6A title.
Justin Word, Jackson Academy, Sr.: The Southern Miss signee hit for .349 with 25 RBIs and 31 stolen bases.
Michael Chavez covers high school sports, among others, for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at mchavez@gannett.com or reach out to him on X, formerly Twitter @MikeSChavez.
Mississippi
NCAA Asks State Supreme Court to End Chambliss’ Ole Miss Career
Ole Miss shouldn’t have starting quarterback Trinidad Chambliss on its roster this fall, the NCAA asserts in an appeal filed with the Supreme Court of Mississippi on Thursday.
In a petition authored by J. Douglas Minor, Jr. and other attorneys from Holland & Knight, the NCAA warns that unless the state Supreme Court intervenes, there could be a “flood of litigation” involving college athletes whose schools are denied medical waivers to let them keep playing. The NCAA also says the appeal needs to be adjudicated prior to April 23 so that Chambliss—if the NCAA can enforce its eligibility rules to render him ineligible—would “have the opportunity to participate in the upcoming NFL draft.”
The appeal faces hurdles. For starters, it is an interlocutory appeal, meaning an appeal before a final judgment in a case and one where the appellate court can decline. Interlocutory appeals are disfavored because appellate courts prefer to review cases only after a final judgment on the merits—i.e., after a trial verdict—because the record is complete by that point. An interlocutory appeal concerns only a preliminary or incomplete matter. Interlocutory appeals are ordinarily denied unless the petitioner can persuasively explain that an injustice would otherwise occur.
Last month Judge Robert Whitwell of the Lafayette County (Miss.) Chancery Court granted Chambliss—who will enter his sixth year of college this fall—a preliminary injunction to bar the NCAA from rendering Chambliss ineligible in the coming season. The NCAA limits eligibility to four seasons of intercollegiate competition, including junior college and Division II competition, within a five-year period. Chambliss exhausted his NCAA eligibility in 2025–26.
The center of the dispute concerns the 2022 season, when Chambliss, now 23, was on the roster of D-II Ferris State but didn’t accumulate passing or rushing statistics.
During that season, Chambliss suffered from post-COVID complications including chronic tonsillitis and adenoiditis. The NCAA maintains that a waiver application filed by Ole Miss on Chambliss’ behalf failed to include sufficient medical documentation establishing that Chambliss couldn’t play in 2022. The association insists it consistently applies a standard for waivers that requires contemporaneous medical records from health care professionals unambiguously establishing an athlete can’t play due to health reasons.
The NCAA says Ole Miss came up short on that front.
As the NCAA tells it, although the Ole Miss application “was voluminous,” it offered only limited contemporaneous medical documents. The NCAA says that the treatment notes of one doctor recommended that Chambliss not have surgery and that medication, including Flonase, “was prescribed to enable [Chambliss] to participate in football.” That narrative suggests that Chambliss was healthy enough to play.
To be clear, Chambliss’ legal team contests this account and argues the medical documentation was sufficient to show he was unable to play in 2022. The appeal, as the NCAA acknowledges, also doesn’t call for a review of the findings of fact, which Whitwell found persuasive enough to grant the injunction.
In its petition to the state Supreme Court, the NCAA argues that Chambliss—who is represented by attorneys Tom Mars, William Liston III and W. Lawrence Deas—tried to “circumvent” case precedent in Mississippi. That precedent, the NCAA maintains, holds that judicial review of athletic association decisions is highly deferential to the association. Chambliss allegedly “circumvented” this precedent by insisting he is a third-party beneficiary of the contractual relationship between the NCAA and Ole Miss as a member institution.
A third-party beneficiary enjoys enforceable legal interest in the contract being performed, and Chambliss asserts the NCAA harmed him by how it reviewed the “total circumstances” of Ole Miss’ application. He used that theory to claim the NCAA breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, which collectively require parties to treat other contracting parties’ situations in a fair and honest way.
The NCAA maintains that the applicable standard of review under Mississippi law for review of an athletic association’s eligibility decision is arbitrary and capricious. This standard, which was established in the state Supreme Court case Mississippi High School Activities Association v. Hattiesburg High School (2015), is extremely favorable to the association. Per this precedent, an athletic association’s eligibility decision can be upheld even if it is unreasonable and arguably wrong so long as it is not arbitrary and capricious. As the NCAA tells it, Whitwell—a University of Mississippi School of Law graduate and an elected official—failed to apply the standard as it was intended.
Mindful that interlocutory appeals are disfavored since the record is incomplete, the NCAA insists that the Supreme Court ought to review the matter because of the case’s broader implications and the timing of the situation.
The NCAA explains that, as a membership organization, it has a contractual duty to “ensure a level playing field among” all competing schools. The NCAA suggests it must seek appeals to block courts from “intervening in NCAA eligibility decisions to provide special treatment to favored athletes.” If trial judges meddle with the NCAA’s administration of eligibility rules, the NCAA’s petition argues, that meddling poses an “existential threat to the NCAA’s administration of collegiate sports.”
To corroborate that point, the NCAA warns that unless Chambliss is deemed ineligible, there will be a “flood of litigation” involving athletes whose schools are denied medical waivers. The NCAA points out that UVA quarterback Chandler Morris recently sued the NCAA in Virginia in hopes of obtaining a seventh year of eligibility, and the basis of his case is the denial of a medical waiver.
The NCAA also advises the state Supreme Court that the risk of “spillover effect” has been borne out through the aftermath of former Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia’s eligibility litigation against the NCAA to play a sixth season of college football.
“Since Pavia,” the NCAA writes, “over 60 lawsuits by over 100 student-athletes have raised similar challenges.” This litigation, the NCAA maintains, has caused “uncertainty” as to NCAA eligibility.
The NCAA knows that if Whitwell’s injunction isn’t lifted, the case is effectively over: The injunction will let Chambliss play for Ole Miss in 2026 and then he’ll move on to the NFL or other pursuits. Whether Chambliss would prevail in a trial, which might not be scheduled until 2027 or beyond, could be rendered irrelevant if Chambliss decides to drop the case after the 2026 season.
Chambliss v. NCAA is a reminder of the unique features of the post-House settlement world. It now pays to stay in school, given that athletes can receive full athletic scholarships, NIL deals and direct payments from their schools through revenue shares. According to ESPN, Chambliss could earn about $6 million at Ole Miss if he plays there this fall.
Mississippi
Leaders throughout Mississippi remember JSU’s Elayne Hayes-Anthony
Jackson State football coach TC Taylor addresses fans at signing day event
Jackson State football coach T.C. Taylor addresses fans at JSU’s recruit reveal event on Feb. 4.
Mississippi leaders and educators are remembering Dr. Elayne Hayes-Anthony as a trailblazing journalist, educator and public servant following news of her death Thursday, March 5.
Hayes-Anthony, a longtime professor and chair of the Department of Journalism and Media Studies at Jackson State University and former acting president of the university, spent decades mentoring students and shaping communications education throughout Mississippi.
Jackson State University officials announced her passing in a statement Thursday morning. She was 72. A cause of death was not provided.
Hayes-Anthony served as interim president for eight months in 2023, between former President Thomas Hudson and Marcus Thompson. She became the first Black woman to work as an anchor, producer and reporter at WJTV in Jackson and later spent 17 years as chair of the communications department at Belhaven University. Hayes-Anthony also served as assistant superintendent of communications for Jackson Public Schools and served as the first Black woman and journalism educator to become president of the Mississippi Association of Broadcasters.
Jackson Mayor John Horhn praised Hayes-Anthony in a statement as a “proud daughter of Jackson and a distinguished graduate of Jackson State University who returned home to pour her knowledge back into this community.” Horhn also extended condolences to Hayes-Anthony’s husband, family, colleagues and former students.
“Our city mourns the loss of a trailblazer whose life’s work helped shape generations of communicators, educators, and leaders,” Horhn said in a statement. “As a pioneering journalist and the first African American woman to serve as anchor, producer, and reporter at WJTV-12, she broke barriers in Mississippi media and opened doors for countless Black journalists. Her leadership at Jackson State, from the classroom to the president’s office, reflected her commitment to excellence. Jackson is better because she chose to live, work, and lead here. We honor her legacy, celebrate her remarkable life, and pray for comfort and strength for all who are grieving this tremendous loss.”
Ward 4 Councilman and Jackson City Council President Brian Grizzell, a long time educator and alumnus of JSU, said he remembered Hayes-Anthony from several points in her life and career.
“I remember Dr. Elayne Hayes-Anthony from several stages of her remarkable journey,” Grizzell said. “I first knew her as a student in Jackson Public Schools, later as a student at Jackson State University, and we reconnected years later during her time serving as acting president of Jackson State University.”
Grizzell called Hayes-Anthony a pioneer in education whose work helped shape the lives of many students across the community.
Longtime Mississippi Congressman Bennie Thompson, also a JSU alum, honored Hayes-Anthony as a “a trailblazer in every sense of the word.”
See his post on Facebook below:
Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves also offered condolences Thursday via X, formerly known as Twitter.
U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker also shared the following statement on Hayes-Anthony passing:
“Mississippi has lost a leader and pioneer, my friend Dr. Elayne Anthony. Jackson State benefited from her steady hand during a time of transition. She was revered by its students. The Mississippi Association of Broadcasters recognized her leadership by electing her chair. Elayne’s legacy of kindness, servant-leadership, and community service will impact generations to come.”
Investigative journalist Jerry Mitchell reflected on Hayes-Anthony’s impact on journalism in Mississippi.
“What a loss. Dr. Anthony was truly a champion for journalism. Her work produced so many talented journalists we have today in Mississippi and beyond,” Mitchell said.
State Rep. Zakiya Summers and Sen. David Blount, both of whom represent parts of Jackson in the Mississippi Legislature, also paid tribute to Hayes-Anthony.
Officials with the Mississippi State Department of Health and the Mississippi State Board of Health also shared condolences, noting Hayes-Anthony served on the Board of Health for nearly two decades.
“I personally grieve the loss of a very important Mississippian who cared deeply about education at all levels, public health, and very importantly the need for the health of our population to improve,” said Dan Edney, state health officer and executive director of the Mississippi State Department of Health. “She was a strong supporter of MSDH and for my work as State Health Officer and was one of our greatest cheerleaders. Her passing is a loss to public health and higher education leadership, but her service has helped to make our state a better place.”
Lucius Lampton, chairman of the Board of Health, said Hayes-Anthony’s service on the board began in 2007.
“Dr. Elayne Anthony’s long service on the Board of Health, which began in 2007, was exceptional and benefited the public’s health in countless ways. She led always with intellect, creativity and integrity. The Board of Health and our agency will so miss her gracious presence. I also will miss her dear friendship.”
Charlie Drape is the Jackson beat reporter. You can contact him at cdrape@gannett.com.
Mississippi
Gas prices on Mississippi Gulf Coast jump nearly 60 cents in one day
BILOXI, Miss. (WLOX) — Gas prices along the Mississippi Gulf Coast have jumped to nearly $3 a gallon, up from $2.41 just two days ago, according to AAA.
AAA said the increase is driven by two factors: the U.S.-Iran conflict, which has shut down a key Middle East oil route and prompted attacks on refineries, and a seasonal fuel blend switch that adds up to 15 cents a gallon on its own.
Uber Eats driver James Adams said he noticed the increase immediately.
“It actually jumped like 50 to 60 cents in one day,” Adams said.
Adams said the higher cost to fill his tank cuts directly into his delivery earnings.
“We’re working basically for pennies on the dollar already — and once you factor that in with traffic and the mileage you have to go — the gas is outrageous,” Adams said.
DoorDash driver Daniel Yelle said the spike will strain his weekly budget.
“I fill up about twice a week going to and from work and DoorDash — and that’s going to hurt my budget,” Yelle said.
FedEx driver Cecil Banks said there is little that workers can do about the rise in prices.
“As long as there is wars — the price of gas is going to go up for everybody — so it’s just an unfortunate situation,” Banks said.
Banks noted that even though Mississippi’s prices remain below the national average, not driving is not an option for working families.
“What can you do? A lot of people have families — they have to go get their kids — they have to go back and forth to work,” Banks said.
Yelle echoed that sentiment.
“They don’t pay us enough for the higher gas prices,” Yelle said.
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