Mississippi
SEC Football Week 10 Storylines: Mississippi State Gets Break in League Play
A visit from 2-6 UMass could not possibly come at a better time for Mississippi State.
The Bulldogs are physically and mentally spent, riding a seven-game losing streak that hit a new low with last week’s 58-25 loss to Arkansas.
So, hosting the Minutemen in Starkville presents all kinds of opportunities for Jeff Lebby & Co., such as getting reps for the young kids, opening up more of the playbook for QB Michael Van Buren … and, yes, experiencing winning for the first time since the opener.
Either Mississippi State or UMass is grabbing its first FBS win of 2024 this weekend. Here are 5 other storylines to watch in Week 10 of the SEC.
The Tigers are coming off their best game, beating Kentucky behind the running of Jarquez Hunter. Now, they host Vanderbilt which could be subdued after losing a close one to Texas. With Louisiana-Monroe in the on-deck circle, Auburn can claw back to .500 if it first handles business Saturday.
Arkansas’ young QB is coming his most prolific game of the year, accounting for six TDs last weekend. But that was Mississippi State and this is Ole Miss, which allows just 11 points per game and is getting outstanding play from DT Walter Nolen and LB Chris Paul Jr.
The 6-1 Vols are positioned for a playoff berth, despite averaging just 21 points in four SEC games. Tennessee is winning with defense and the running of Dylan Sampson. Coming out of a bye, has Josh Heupel figured out how to unlock Nico Iamaleava’s potential in time for this week’s Kentucky game?
Florida, and head coach Billy Napier more specifically, has a massive opportunity to use the annual game with Georgia as a turning point of the season. An upset is not as far-fetched as it seems. DJ Lagway and the Gators have won three of their last four, only losing by six at Tennessee, and the Dawgs have had uncharacteristic bouts of vulnerability this fall.
One week after rallying to beat LSU in a home thriller, Texas A&M travels to South Carolina for a night game. Gamecocks coach Shane Beamer is developing a reputation for delivering in these spots. Subplot: Does Mike Elko start Conner Weigman or last week’s hero, Marcel Reed, for this road test?
ESPN Analyst Boldly Compares Mississippi State QB to Heisman Trophy Favorite
UMass Brings Bottom-10 Ranking to Starkville: 5 Key Stats About the Minutemen
Mississippi
Why Mississippi State football is examining these 5 drives to help struggling defense
STARKVILLE — The first five offensive and defensive drives from another loss have been a teaching point for Mississippi State football.
Defensively, Mississippi State, which allowed its most points of the season last week in a 58-25 home loss to Arkansas, conceded three touchdowns and a field goal on the first five possessions.
On offense, MSU (1-7, 0-5 SEC) lost a fumble, scored a touchdown, missed a field goal and had two turnovers on downs to trail 24-7 early in the second quarter.
The numbers don’t hide how poorly the defense has played all season, but first-year coach Jeff Lebby has made it clear that the defense isn’t all to blame for a seven-game losing streak. His offense can do a better job, too, helping set up the defense for success with a nonconference game against UMass (2-6) at Davis Wade Stadium on Saturday (3:15 p.m., SEC Network).
“We weren’t able to create any momentum,” Lebby said. “It’s both sides of the ball not finding a way to get momentum, create it and then keep it. As a group and as a team, looking at those five drives and seeing how we can change the game at that point is something that we’ve done a ton of and we’ve got to learn from.”
Mississippi State hasn’t been capturing momentum
Mississippi State tight end Justin Ball and defensive lineman Sulaiman Kpaka said the Bulldogs can feel momentum when it swings during games.
The problem is, momentum has been swinging away from the Bulldogs early and often.
Mississippi State has only scored 14 points on opening drives this season. It has scored two touchdowns, punted without a first down four times, turned the ball over on downs once and lost the fumble against Arkansas. And in first quarters, MSU is averaging just 3.4 points in seven games against FBS opponents, tied for 102nd in the country and tied for second to last in the SEC.
Meanwhile, the defense has enabled five opening-drive touchdowns, and its 9.3 points allowed per first quarter against FBS teams is last in the SEC and tied for 124th nationally.
“Those first five drives we talked about when we go out and handle our business every one of those drives, it puts the defense in a much better position,” Ball said Tuesday. “It helps with momentum as well. It gets them a little more motivated to go out there and get some stops and get the ball back to us so we can keep doing our thing.”
It’s forced Mississippi State to play from behind virtually all season. In the seven games against FBS opponents, MSU has only led twice for a combined 11 minutes, 49 seconds. None of those leads have gone past the first quarter, and MSU has only been ahead for 2.8% of game time against the FBS.
“I want us to be able to go create momentum early in the game and then keep momentum,” Lebby said. “We have to find ways to do that.”
Is the Mississippi State offense feeling more pressure to score?
While the Mississippi State offense hasn’t started games well, it’s still found ways to score plenty of points, even with freshman quarterback Michael Van Buren Jr.
In SEC play, MSU is averaging 24.2 points per game, 4.2 more than it did against Arizona State and Toledo in September. Three of the five conference games have been against teams currently ranked inside the US LBM Coaches Poll top 11, and the 31 points at Georgia are the most the Bulldogs have scored at an AP top five team since 1936.
So, yes, MSU is scoring. It just isn’t soon enough.
“I wouldn’t say it’s pressure, but at the same time I would say it’s pressure,” wide receiver Kevin Coleman Jr. said. “It is what it is. We got to do that. Our goal is to score a lot of points a game, and right now we haven’t been doing that. It’s pressure, but at the same time, it’s not pressure. We just got to go out there and do our job.”
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 State vs. UMass: Bulldogs Defense Faces Dual-Threat QB Test Again
STARKVILLE, Miss. – Mississippi State didn’t have much success stopping a dual-threat quarterback last week against Arkansas.
Razorbacks’ quarterback Taylen Green led his offense to a 58-25 win with nearly 400 yards of total offense (314 passing yards, 79 rushing yards), six total touchdowns (five passing, one rushing) and just one interception.
If the Bulldogs (1-7, 0-5 SEC) want to avoid another shocking upset, they’ll have to stop another dual-threat quarterback.
“We’ve got to get this guy on the ground when we have opportunities,” Mississippi State coach Jeff Lebby said this week. “It’s about us making sure that we know who’s got the QB, who’s got the back, and all of the quarterback run game. Then, from a scramble standpoint, the contain-rusher cannot get outside and understanding those things right there. When you’re playing QB-run guys, you’re playing guys that have the ability to go extend the play.”
Here are three UMass players to watch on offense, starting with the Minutemen’s dual-threat quarterback.
UMass Brings Bottom-10 Ranking to Starkville: 5 Key Stats About the Minutemen
Mississippi
Buses, notaries and strolls to the polls: How Mississippi college students are overcoming the nation’s toughest barriers to the ballot box
In 2016, Jarrius Adams’ absentee ballot never arrived at his apartment in Oxford, so the then-19-year-old at the University of Mississippi was left with one option to vote: Skip all his classes and drive four hours home to his polling place in Hattiesburg.
Faced with a similar situation, the reality is most college students would decide not to vote, said Adams, who now works with the nonprofit Mississippi Votes.
“For some students, it’s just as simple as eating three times a day now that you have no supervision,” he said. “To add voting for the first time?”
It can be hard to cast a ballot in Mississippi, where state voting laws consistently rank as among the strictest in the nation.
But for the state’s tens of thousands of college students — many of whom are voting for the first time while also trying to stay on top of homework, classes, chores and having a social life — the barriers to the ballot box faced by all Mississippi voters pose an even greater challenge.
Mississippi is one of just three states without early voting. This means college students who choose to vote in person most likely have just one day to get to the polls, which are not always on campus. According to a list provided by the Secretary of State’s office, three of the eight public universities in Mississippi lack an on-campus polling location for this election.
When college students turn 18 in Mississippi, they are not automatically registered to vote if they have a driver’s license, a law on the books in 23 other states. There’s no same-day voter registration, which voting experts say can pose an issue for college students whose addresses, and therefore precincts, change more often than other voters. And Mississippi doesn’t have online voter registration for new applicants.
Mississippi “pretty much has all the things that make it hard to vote,” said Jennifer McAndrew, the senior director of strategic communications for Tisch College at Tufts University, which houses the National Study of Learning, Voting and Engagement.
Nevertheless, colleges and students who have been working all semester long to encourage their peers to vote say that young Mississippians pursuing higher education are motivated to turn out this Election Day.
“Our young Mississippians are the future of our state,” Secretary of State Michael Watson, who has visited colleges across the state to talk to students about voting, said in a statement. “It is important for them to educate themselves not just on the voting process, but also the policies and issues affecting the state and nation..”
At Ole Miss this semester, the Center for Community Engagement has registered more students to vote before the deadline in an election year than it ever has before: About 350 students, according to William Teer, the program director for student leadership programs and financial well-being.
Now, it’s just a matter of getting these students to the polls.
“Everyone hears about how young people and college students in particular don’t vote in huge numbers for whatever reason,” said Marshall Pendes, a senior math and economics major who serves as a voting ambassador at Ole Miss. “I get a chance as a student to try and change that.”
Pendes cited a study that Tufts’ National Study of Learning, Voting and Engagement conducted of student voting at Ole Miss, which found that about 15,000 students — more than 75% of campus — were registered to vote during the last presidential election.
That’s in part because of the efforts of voting ambassadors like Pendes. In his four years at the university, Pendes estimated he’s helped register more than 600 students. He’s helped students complete the Mississippi Secretary of State’s paper registration application all across campus, at fraternities and sororities, before and after class, during student government meetings, in the Circle and at meetings for all kinds of political clubs.
But not so much on in the Grove.
“During games, people aren’t really interested in doing paperwork,” Pendes said.
The goal is to educate students on how, where and why it’s important to vote, Pendes said, whether that’s in-person in the county where they attend school or at home through an absentee ballot.
“One of the great things about voting as a college student is you have so many choices,” he said. “Every person’s situation is different.”
Even though college students qualify for an absentee ballot in Mississippi, students say it’s far more common for their peers to register to vote in their college’s county.
“It’s more common for students to register on campus,” said Avantavis TyMon, an elementary education major at Alcorn State University who is also a Mississippi Votes’ Democracy in Action fellow. “It’s easier, and it’s more accessible … especially for the out-of-state students who don’t have cars.”
Alcorn State University is one of five public universities that will host on-campus precincts this year, along with Mississippi Valley State University, Mississippi State University, the University of Southern Mississippi and Jackson State University.
Though Delta State University does not have an on-campus voting location, there is a precinct across the street.
On Election Day, TyMon said he and other student leaders plan to canvass the dorms and ask students if they want to join a “stroll to the polls” event, which will involve a short walk to the on-campus precinct.
“It’s a little bit of a walk from where students live,” TyMon said, adding that in previous years, “we would meet up and all walk together.”
Mississippi’s absentee ballot process, which experts describe as onerous, may be another reason college students register to vote in-person in greater numbers.
“It is an unbelievable barrier for college students who don’t live in Mississippi or are voting absentee in Mississippi,” McAndrews said.
First, a voter must request an absentee ballot application from their circuit clerk’s office, according to a step-by-step guide from the Mississippi Secretary of State’s office. Once they receive the application in the mail, the voter must have it witnessed by a notary, unless they are disabled. When a voter gets a ballot, the next step is finding another notary to watch the voter fill it out.
“You can do your taxes in one day,” Adams said. In Mississippi, “you cannot vote by mail in one day.”
Even some notaries think Mississippi’s absentee ballot law could be eased.
Bill Anderson, the vice president of government affairs at the National Notary Association, said that, of the handful of states that involve notaries in the process, Mississippi’s law is the strictest.
“You’d expect us to be supportive of states that allow or create a role for notaries in absentee ballots,” Anderson said. “We think this is a good idea. … These states, including Mississippi, want there to be a layer of security that is absent for voters voting absentee.”
Nonetheless, Anderson said he is hoping to work with Mississippi lawmakers next year on some issues he sees with what he called the “non-notarial functions” required by the state’s law.
For instance, Mississippi’s law requires notaries to sign the back of the envelope containing the voters’ ballot, something Anderson said is not expressly permitted by the notary laws of his home state in California. And Mississippi doesn’t oblige notaries to affix their seal to the envelope, which Anderson said other states require notaries to do.
“You can just imagine the poor voter,” Anderson said. “They’re out here, and the California notary is trying to find their state law and doesn’t want to get in trouble with the Secretary of State of California and says look … I’d love to do this for you, but I can’t.”
For his part, Pendes said he thinks students who want to vote absentee are motivated to find notaries, which can be relatively easy to do on a college campus.
“In my experience, people usually aren’t defeated by the notarization part,” he said.
At Mississippi State, the student government association and the Division of Student Affairs held an event called “Notary Day” last week. More than 70 students had their absentee ballots notarized, said Carson McFatridge, the student association president.
“When I think of a notary, I think of someone at the bank,” she said. “That can be a challenge just not knowing who has the capability to do that … so it was really, really cool to be able to see people like our dean of students volunteer an hour of his time to sit out there and help people.”
McAndrew said it’s important for colleges to make voting as a student as simple as possible, because even the perception that voting is complicated is itself a barrier.
“There’s so much out there about strict voter ID laws, it becomes this ghost barrier on top of the actual barrier,” McAndrew said.
“Anything we can do not only to reduce the complexity but to reduce the intimidation and anxiety factor is really important,” she added.
To that end, many professors have canceled classes to give students the day off to vote, and universities across the state are offering rides to the polls. At Ole Miss, buses will leave from the Walk of Champions and behind Ole Miss Bike Shop from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Election Day.
This does more than help students without cars, Pendes said.
“The other thing to consider is that parking spaces on our campus are extremely hard to come by,” he said. “Do you want to move your car and lose your parking space to try to go vote? Because that isn’t necessarily something that’s always guaranteed to you, especially in commuter spaces.”
This semester, the Center for Community Engagement was also successful in finding a solution to an issue that has troubled student voters for years at Ole Miss, which is that residence halls and Greek Life houses are not considered acceptable mailing addresses at which to register.
Teer, the program director, said he worked with the Lafayette County Circuit Clerk’s office to establish the center as a mailing address for students who live on campus.
“We’ve had students coming in daily because they’ve received an email from us that their voter information cards had arrived,” Teer said.
Every Thursday, students at Alcorn State held a voter registration event at the campus chapel. TyMon also helped organize a voter registration block party that featured food trucks. These efforts resulted in more than 400 students registering to vote.
TyMon said he thinks student leaders have an important role to play in setting an example for their peers.
“When they see that we’re serious, they get serious,” he said.
That’s why A’Davion Bush, a sophomore political science major at Ole Miss, is going to drive home to Indianola not just to vote, but to volunteer at the polls. The Mississippi Votes’ Democracy in Action fellow said he’s going to post about his plan on social media so his friends who are still in high school will be inspired to vote when they turn 18.
“The older population is not doing anything to influence young people in my county,” he said.
McFatridge, the student body president at Mississippi State, said she recently registered a student to vote who had just become a U.S. citizen, which reminded her that while voting is a right, it’s also a privilege not had by everyone around the world.
Not voting in the U.S. is “kind of like looking a gift horse in the mouth,” McFatridge said.
“It’s a silly phrase,” she added, “but I truly believe that when given the opportunity to share your own thoughts and beliefs, I don’t know why you wouldn’t.”
An Arkansan, McFatridge had intended to vote early in her hometown of Searcy during fall break, but a family emergency prevented that.
It’s too late for her to order an absentee ballot, so now she’s driving home to vote before Election Day, 4.5 hours away.
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