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Ole Miss Rebels
UMRebels logo (script) Mississippi Football
First season 1890
Athletic director Pete Boone
Head coach Houston Nutt
Home stadium Vaught-Hemingway Stadium
Field Hollingsworth Field
Year built 1915
Stadium capacity 60,580
Largest Crowd: 62,663 (Oct. 10, 2009 vs. Alabama)
Stadium surface FieldTurf
Location Oxford, Mississippi
League NCAA Division I
Conference SEC (1932 - present)
Division Western Division (1992 - present)
Past conferences Independent (1890-1898)
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (1899-1920)
Southern Conference (1921-1932)
All-time record 614–464–35
Postseason bowl record 21–12–0
Claimed national titles 3[1][2]
1959, 1960, 1962
Conference titles 6
1947, 1954, 1955, 1960, 1962, 1963
Division titles 1
2003
Consensus All-Americans 54
Current uniform
SEC-Uniform-Ole Miss
Colors Yale Blue and Harvard Crimson            
Fight song Forward Rebels (Official)
Dixie (Unofficial)
Mascot Rebels
Rebel Black Bear
Marching band Pride of the South
Outfitter Nike
Rivals Mississippi State Bulldogs
Vanderbilt Commodores
LSU Tigers
Arkansas Razorbacks
Website OleMissSports.com

The football history of the University of Mississippi (also officially known as Ole Miss), includes the formation of the first football team in the state and is 26th on the list of college football's all-time winning programs.[3] The Ole Miss Rebels posted their 600th win on September 27, 2008 when they defeated the (then ranked #4 and future 2008 BCS National Champ) Florida Gators 31–30 at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville, Florida.[4]

Throughout the 115-year history of Ole Miss football, the Rebels have won six Southeastern Conference titles (1947, 1954, 1955, 1960, 1962, and 1963); they also have a claim to 3 national championships (1959, 1960, 1962).

Early history[]

In 1890, Dr. A.L. Bondurant, later the dean of the Ole Miss Graduate School, rallied Ole Miss students to help form an athletic department to encompass the sports of football, baseball and tennis. The students brought this initiative to reality and in 1893, with Bondurant as the coach, a football team came to fruition. The first team won four of five games during that inaugural football season. One of those wins was the very first football game ever played by an Ole Miss team, a 56-0 victory over Southwest Baptist University of Jackson, Tennessee (now known as Union University). This was on November 11, 1893.

The next year, 1894, Bondurant passed on his coaching duties. Ole Miss Football, a book published in 1980 by Sports Yearbook Company of Oxford, MS, says J.W.S. Rhea was the first coach at Ole Miss having been hired part-time by Bondurant and having led the 1894 team to a 6-1 record. The annual Ole Miss media guide lists C.D. Clark as the coach of the 1894 team and further says about him, "Although it has never been documented, it is thought that C.D. Clark of Tufts was the first paid football coach at Ole Miss. His name appears as manager of the team as shown in the Ole Miss Magazine dated November 1894."[5] The College Football Data Warehouse also lists Clark as the coach for the 1894 team.[6]

Twice in its history, Ole Miss did not field a football team. In 1897, a yellow fever epidemic cancelled the football season. In 1943, football was abolished at all Mississippi state-supported institutions by the state college Board of Trustees due to World War II.[7]

National Championships[]

While the NCAA's website states that "the NCAA does not conduct a national championship in Division I-A football and is not involved in the selection process," it goes on to say that "a number of polling organizations provide a final ranking of Division I-A football teams at the end of each season." Ole Miss claims three national championships based on other polls.

Year Coach Record Bowl Result Final AP Ranking Final UPI (Coaches) Ranking Polls Recognizing Mississippi As National Champion
1959 John Vaught 10-1 Sugar Bowl Ole Miss 21, LSU 0 #2 #2 Berryman, Dunkel, Sagarin
1960 John Vaught 10-0-1 Sugar Bowl Ole Miss 14, Rice 6 #2 #3 Billingsley, Football Writers, DeVold, Dunkel, Football Research, Williamson
1962 John Vaught 10-0 Sugar Bowl Ole Miss 17, Arkansas 13 #3 #3 Billingsley, Litkenhous and Sagarin
Claimed National Championships: 3

[8][9]

The major polls of the time (Associated Press & United Press) named Syracuse University the National Champion in 1959 (The University of Mississippi was #2 in both polls), the University of Minnesota in 1960 (Mississippi was #2 in AP and #3 in the UPI) and the University of Southern California in 1962 (Mississippi was #3 in both polls).[10][11]

In 1955, the Rebels were declared National Champions by the Massey Ratings, though they are not considered to be a major poll and it is not claimed by the University.

Milestones[]

The most points ever scored in a game by the Ole Miss Rebels was 114 when Ole Miss defeated Union College 114–0 on October 29, 1904.[12]

The Ole Miss football team was the first college team in the nation to fly to a game, having done so in 1937. The flight was from Memphis, Tennessee to Philadelphia.[13]

Ole Miss' first game to ever be broadcast on television was in 1948 against Memphis.[14]

Olemissspeedlimit

Speed limit sign on the Ole Miss campus.

The speed limit on the Ole Miss campus is 18 miles per hour in honor of Archie Manning, who wore the same number during his playing days at Ole Miss.

Ole Miss plays a central role in Michael Lewis's book The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game and its 2009 film adaptation, The Blind Side.

Great Games[]

1952 Maryland The Rebels splashed onto the national scene by defeating the highly ranked Maryland Terrapins in Oxford on Nov. 15 1952 by the score of 21-14. This game is credited by many for being the catalyst to the great run the rebels had from 1952-1963.

1959 LSU On Halloween night, two of the top teams in the country squared of in Baton Rouge, LA. The game would be a defensive struggle with the Rebels clinging to a 3-0 lead in the fourth quarter. Future Heisman winner Billy Cannon changed the game off a fortuitous bounce on a punt return that went 89 yards into college football lore. The replay is still played whenever a reference to this rivalry is made. Ole Miss would have one last chance to pull off the win, but was stopped short on 4th and a yard at the goalline by Billy Cannon. LSU won 7-3

1960 LSU On Jan 1, 1960, one of the most anticipated rematches in college football history took place. This game, however, would not be the classic that transpired only weeks before. Ole Miss dominated the game from start to finish and came away with a decisive 21-0 win over the Tigers. The Rebels finished the season having only given up 21 points all year, declared national champions by several polls, and named the 3rd rated team in history (through 1995) by the sagarin ratings, behind only two great Nebraska teams.

1969 Tennessee More affectionately known as, "The Mule Game", the Rebels faced off against the Tennessee Volunteers in Jackson MS for a crisp mid-November affair. Prior to the game, Tennessee's Steve Kiner was interviewed by Sports Illustrated. When asked about the Rebels and all their horses in the backfield, Kiner replied, "...more like a bunch of mules." When asked specifically about Archie Manning, he responded, "Archie who?" This inspired the Johnny Rebs and propelled them to a 38-0 shellacking of the Vols. This win would push the Rebels into the 1970 Sugar bowl where they defeated the Arkansas Razorbacks to cap off the season.

1977 Notre Dame On a hot, humid day in the south, the Rebels took advantage of the weather to stun the Irish 20-13. It would be the only loss the Irish would suffer that season as they went on to claim the 1977 AP national championship. The Rebels were actually awarded the national championship by Reader's Digest at the end of the season due to being the only team to defeat Notre Dame that season.

1986 LSU The Rebels jumped out to an early lead in Baton Rouge and managed to hold on to a 21-19 win. It was the biggest win for the Rebels in a relatively dry decade that only saw the Rebels go to 3 bowl games.

1997 LSU Coming off 2 years of probation, it was anticipated it would be a couple of more years before the Rebels would fully recover. However, Ole Miss served the rest of the SEC notice that they were far from being dead by knocking off the 7th ranked Tigers 36-21 in Baton Rouge a week after LSU shocked the top-ranked Florida Gators. The Rebels would sustain several years of moderate success in the years following culminating with a top 15 finish in 2003 and winning 10 games in a season for the first time in 30 years.

2008 Florida After 3 years of SEC purgatory, the Rebels were in a desperately needed a spark. That spark came in the form of defeating the 4th ranked Florida Gators 31-30 in Gainesville. Ole Miss took a 31-24 lead with 5 minutes to go in the game on an 86-yard bomb thrown by Jevan Snead to Shay Hodge. Florida responded within two minutes to bring the game within one, only to have the PAT blocked by Kentrell Lockett. Florida would get the ball gain but would turn the ball over on downs after all-world Heisman winner Tim Tebow would be stopped on fourth and one. The win would catapult the Rebels to back-to-back Cotton Bowl Victories.

Modern era head coaches[]

John Vaught[]

1947 Ole Miss football media guide

1947 Ole Miss media guide featuring Charlie Conerly (left) and coach Johnny Vaught (right).

John Vaught, a line coach at Ole Miss in 1946 under Harold D. "Red" Drew and a former All-American at TCU, remained in Oxford as head coach in 1947 and led the Ole Miss program to national prominence over the next 24 years, posting 23 winning records.

In his first season at the helm in 1947, the Rebels posted a 9-2 record and won the first of six SEC crowns (1947, 1954, 1955, 1960, 1962, 1963). That 1947 season also saw Ole Miss great Charlie Conerly become the first Rebel player to be a contender for the Heisman Trophy, placing fourth in the voting for the prestigious honor.

Vaught's squads, however, didn't stop at just winning league titles, as the Rebels claimed three national championships in 1959, 1960 and 1962. Ole Miss won the 1959 Dunkel System national crown, the 1960 Football Writers Association of America, Dunkel System, and Williamson System national championships and the 1962 Litkenhous Ratings national title. Vaught's 1962 squad remains the only undefeated team in Ole Miss football history. Vaught's 1959 squad, which was honored as the “SEC Team of the Decade,” was ranked the third best collegiate football team from 1956 to 1995, according to the Jeff Sagarin Ratings released in January 1996.

The Rebels were also among the winningest programs in the country under Vaught during the 1950s and 1960s. From 1950-59, Ole Miss posted an 80-21-5 record (.778 winning percentage). The 77.8 winning percentage was third to only Oklahoma and Miami (OH) during that decade. In the 1960s, Vaught guided the Rebels to a 77-25-6 record and a 74.0 winning percentage, which was the ninth best during that decade. The Rebels 1962 season under Vaught is, to this day, the only undefeated season in Ole Miss history. The Rebels ended that season 10 and 0 and as national champions.[15]

In the 1950s and 1960s under Vaught, Ole Miss was a fixture in the national polls. The Rebels were ranked atop the Associated Press poll for three weeks during the 1960 season and one week during the 1961 campaign. In 1964, Ole Miss was ranked preseason No. 1 in the Associated Press poll.

Vaught also made going to postseason play the norm rather than the exception for the Rebel football program. Ole Miss played in 15 consecutive bowl games from 1957-71 which, at that time, was a national record. In all, Vaught led Ole Miss to 18 bowl game appearances, posting a 10-8 record in those contests. For his efforts, Vaught was named SEC Coach of the Year six times (1947, 1948, 1954, 1955, 1960, 1962). Unfortunately, after fighting integration with everything they could muster, black athletes became prominent in college football and the Ole Miss rebels were never able to regain an upper hand in the SEC or the NCAA.

During his time at the helm, Vaught coached some of the best players ever to wear the Red & Blue. In 24 seasons, Vaught produced 26 All-America first teamers. He also coached four players who finished in the top five in the Heisman Trophy voting. Along with Conerly in 1947, Charlie Flowers (5th in 1959), Jake Gibbs (3rd in 1960) and Archie Manning (4th in 1969, 3rd in 1970) were in the running for college football's top honor.

Failing health forced Vaught to resign his position in 1970 and the reins of the Ole Miss football program were turned over to Billy Kinard.

See also: 1959 Ole Miss Rebels football team

Billy R. Kinard[]

Billy Kinard became the first Ole Miss alumnus to head up the football program, while Frank “Bruiser” Kinard, an offensive line coach under Vaught since 1948, was named athletic director that same year.

The Rebels went 16-9 under Billy Kinard, including a 10-2 record and a 41-18 Peach Bowl victory over Georgia Tech in his first year in 1971. Kinard's 10 victories are tied for fourth most by a first-year head coach in NCAA Division I history.

Kinard coached the Rebels through the 1972 season and through the third game of the 1973 season. After the disappointing 5–5 season in 1972, there was some pressure among the alumni to have Kinard removed. The administration bowed to this pressure after the Rebels started the 1973 season 1–2, including a shutout loss to Missouri, 17–0, and was upset by Memphis State, 17–13. Both Billy Kinard and Frank Kinard were fired, and John Vaught was rehired as both the head coach and athletic director.

Following the 1973 football season, Vaught resigned once again as head coach, but remained on as athletic director. His final record with the Rebels was 190–61–12. The 190 victories still rank Vaught in the top 25 winningest coaches in NCAA Division I history, and he is the fourth-winningest coach in SEC history. In 1979, Vaught was inducted in the National College Football Hall of Fame.

Ken Cooper[]

Ken Cooper, an assistant under Kinard since 1971, was named head coach on Jan. 17, 1974, and took Ole Miss through the 1977 season. Cooper compiled a 21-23 record during his four years at the helm, and his tenure is probably best remembered for one hot and humid day in September 1977. In one of the most memorable games in Rebel football history, Ole Miss upset Notre Dame, 20–13 in Mississippi Memorial Stadium on Sept. 17, 1977, in Jackson. That loss was the Irish's lone setback of the 1977 campaign, as Notre Dame finished the season with an 11–1 record and claimed both the AP and UPI national titles.

Steve Sloan[]

Following the 1977 season, Steve Sloan, the former All-American quarterback at Alabama under Paul "Bear" Bryant, was hired as the new Rebel boss and began his five-year stint in 1978. Sloan posted a 20–34 record from 1978–82.

Billy Brewer[]

After stepping outside the Ole Miss family football tree the previous nine seasons, Ole Miss looked for a familiar face to lead the football program, and the Rebels found that person when Billy Brewer returned to Oxford to take over as head coach in December 1982.

In his first season in 1983, Brewer guided the Rebels to their first winning regular season since 1977 with a 6-5 record. The Rebels also went to their first bowl game since 1971 losing to Air Force 9-3 in the Independence Bowl.

Brewer remained in Oxford for another ten seasons, leading the Rebels to five winning seasons and four bowls, including Ole Miss' 1990 New Year's Day Gator Bowl appearance, which was the program's first January bowl game since 1969. He was named SEC Coach of the Year in 1986 (8–3–1 record) and 1990 (9–3 record), and in 1986, the Rebels return to the national rankings for the first time in over a decade.

Brewer coached 11 years (1983–93) and compiled a 67–56–3 record, making him (at the time) the second winningest Ole Miss football coach behind Vaught. Brewer also led Ole Miss to eight Egg Bowl victories over rival Mississippi State.

Brewer was dismissed just prior to the 1994 season after the NCAA infractions committee found him guilty of "unethical conduct," and Ole Miss defensive coordinator Joe Lee Dunn took over as interim coach, directing the Rebels to a 4–7 record under difficult circumstances highlighted only by a 34-21 victory over rival LSU.

Tommy Tuberville[]

On Dec. 2, 1994, Tommy Tuberville was selected as the coach in charge of getting the Rebels on the right track.

After serving as an assistant coach on the collegiate level for nine seasons (eight at Miami and one at Texas A&M), Tuberville began creating excitement in his first season in 1995, finishing the campaign with a 6–5 record and an Egg Bowl victory over Mississippi State.

That excitement grew in 1997, when Ole Miss recorded its best season since 1992 with an 8–4 record, a thrilling 15–14 Egg Bowl victory over Mississippi State and a Motor City Bowl win over Marshall University. The bowl appearance was the program's first since 1992, and the Rebels earned a final national ranking of No. 22 in both polls.

The revitalized Ole Miss program continued in its success in 1998, but suffered a setback after the Egg Bowl when Tuberville, despite repeated assurances that he would not leave - even going so far as to say "They'll have to take me out of here in a pine box"[16][17][18] - , agreed 2 days later to become the head coach at SEC West rival Auburn University.

David Cutcliffe[]

David Cutcliffe took over as head coach on Dec. 2, 1998. Cutcliffe, who came to Ole Miss from his offensive coordinator post at Tennessee, took over the reins just 29 days before the Rebels' Sanford Independence Bowl date versus Texas Tech. Despite the short preparation time for the game, Cutcliffe led the Rebels to a 35–18 victory over the Red Raiders, quite arguably the biggest upset of the 1998 bowl season.

Cutcliffe brought with him to Oxford a high-powered offensive style that energized the Rebel fanbase.

In the time from 1997–2003, the Rebels played in six bowl games, tied with Arkansas for the most bowl appearances among SEC Western Division schools during that span.

Cutcliffe had four winning seasons in his first five seasons at Ole Miss, in 1999 (8–4), 2000 (7–5), 2001 (7–4) and 2002 (7–6), becoming the first Rebel mentor since Harry Mehre (1938–41) to post winning marks in his first five years. Cutcliffe also directed Ole Miss to four bowl appearances in his first five seasons, and is the only head coach in Ole Miss history to do so.

In 2003 Cutcliffe guided the Rebels to a 10–3 overall mark and a share of the SEC West title with eventual BCS National Champion LSU. Following their 31–28 victory over Oklahoma State in the Cotton Bowl Classic, the Rebels finished #13 in the final poll. It was Ole Miss' first New Year's bowl since the 1991 Gator Bowl against Michigan, in which they were thoroughly embarrassed by a clearly better program.

Despite his 44–29 record, five straight winning seasons, and guiding the team to its first 10 win season in over 30 years, Cutcliffe was fired by Ole Miss's Athletic Director Pete Boone in December 2004 after the team posted a disappointing 4–7 record and three consecutive losses to LSU.

Ed Orgeron[]

LSU OLE MISS 8

Ed Orgeron

Ed Orgeron, regarded as one of college football's premier defensive line coaches and recruiters, was named the 35th head football coach in the history of the University of Mississippi on December 16, 2004.[19] Orgeron, who took control of the Ole Miss program after serving the previous seven seasons as defensive line coach at the University of Southern California, and played a role in Pete Carroll's Trojan championship in 2004. He also served as USC's recruiting coordinator from 2001–2004 and was named assistant head coach in 2003. Orgeron was named the 2004 National Recruiter of the Year by The Sporting News and Rivals.com.

Orgeron's talent as a recruiter created a buzz among Rebel fans and drew national attention when Ole Miss' 2006 signing class ranked as high as fifteenth in the rankings. His 2007 recruiting class was also listed among the best in college football (#31 according to scout.com). However, his recruiting success did not translate to on the field performance. In 2007, Ole Miss was last in the SEC in scoring offense, turnover margin, rushing offense, rushing defense, punt returns, opponent first downs, red-zone offense, opponent third-down conversions, field goal percentage, time of possession and kickoff coverage.

In 2007, 20 Ole Miss football players were placed on indefinite probation by the University for having stolen pillows and clock radios from hotels in which the team had stayed in. All 20 players paid for the stolen items and therefore no NCAA rules were broken, according to the NCAA. Coach Orgeron stated that the incident would be dealt with internally and that no one would miss the season finale against arch-rival Mississippi State, because none of the 20 players had been a discipline problem before. For the same reason, that being no previous discipline issues, the school refused to release the names of the players.[20]

The 2007 season was a historic one for Ole Miss. The Rebels went winless in the SEC for the first time since 1982 – 25 years. The Rebels, under Orgeron, ended the season at 3–9 (0–8 in SEC play).

The 2007 season culminated with the firing of Orgeron on November 24, 2007. Three days later, Houston Nutt was hired as the next head football coach.

Houston Nutt[]

HoustonNutt

Houston Nutt

On November 27, 2007, Houston Nutt was hired as the new head football coach of the Ole Miss Rebels.[21] Nutt's hiring made him the 36th head football coach at Ole Miss.

The next day, November 28, 2007, just five weeks after having defeated Ole Miss as the head coach of the Arkansas Razorbacks, Nutt was officially introduced as the new Ole Miss head football coach at a press conference at the Gertrude Castellow Ford Center for Performing Arts on the Ole Miss campus.[22] During the press conference, Nutt stated, "One thing I love about Ole Miss is the tradition," naming past players such as Archie Manning, Jake Gibbs, Frank "Bruiser" Kinard, Deuce McAllister and Eli Manning. "It's about tradition. That's the reason I am here. I feel like this place can be successful. I feel like this place can win. I can't wait to tell our players this afternoon. That's how you spell fun. The way you spell fun is “W-I-N.” That's what it is all about."[23]

During Nutt's first season, he guided the Ole Miss Rebels to a 9-4 record with marquee victories over the eventual BCS National Champion Florida Gators squad, the reigning BCS National Champion LSU Tigers, and the Texas Tech Red Raiders in the 2009 Cotton Bowl Classic. At the end of this season, the Rebels were ranked in the Top-15 in both major polls.

It was announced on April 16, 2009 that Nutt and his wife Diana had committed to give a gift of $100,000 dollars to Ole Miss. Half of the contribution will create scholarships for student-athletes. The other half of the gift will be used toward the university’s Indoor Practice Facility, which opened in 2004 and cost $17 million to build.[24]

Current Coaching Staff[]

Name Position
Houston Nutt Head Coach
Gunter Brewer Associate Head Coach/Wide Receivers Coach
David Lee Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks Coach
Tyrone Nix Defensive Coordinator/Linebackers Coach
James Shibest Special Teams Coordinator/Tight Ends Coach
Chris Vaughn Recruiting Coordinator/Cornerbacks Coach
Keith Burns Secondary Coach
Mike Markuson Offensive Line Coach
Derrick Nix Running Backs Coach
Terry Price Defensive Line Coach

Recent history[]

2007 season[]

The 2007 season was a historic one for Ole Miss. The Rebels went winless in the SEC for the first time since 1982 – 25 years. The Rebels, under head coach Ed Orgeron, ended the season at 3–9 (0–8 in SEC play).

Orgeron's talent as a recruiter created a buzz among Rebel fans and drew national attention when Ole Miss' 2006 signing class ranked as high as fifteenth in the rankings. His 2007 recruiting class was also listed among the best in college football (#31 according to scout.com). However, his recruiting success did not translate to on the field performance. In 2007, Ole Miss was last in the SEC in scoring offense, turnover margin, rushing offense, rushing defense, punt returns, opponent first downs, red-zone offense, opponent third-down conversions, field goal percentage, time of possession and kickoff coverage.

The 2007 season culminated with defeats to LSU (27-41) and MSU (14-17) which resulted in the firing of Orgeron the following day. Three days later, Houston Nutt was hired as the next head football coach.

2008 season[]

The biggest change for the Rebels going into the 2008 football season was the head coach. Houston Nutt began his first season as head coach of the Rebels, replacing Ed Ogeron, who was fired after his 2007 team failed to win an SEC game.

With a new head coach also came new assistants, including Tight ends/special teams coach James Shibest, Running game coordinator Mike Markuson, Defensive line coach Tracy Rocker, Recruiting coordinator and Safeties coach Chris Vaughn and High School Relations director Clifton Ealy, all of whom were assistants at Arkansas under Nutt the previous season.[25] Tyrone Nix left his position as Defensive Coordinator of the South Carolina Gamecocks to join Nutt's staff at the same position. Before his time at South Carolina, Nix spent 10 years at Southern Mississippi.[26]

Former Arkansas offensive coordinator David Lee originally agreed to follow Nutt from Arkansas to Ole Miss, however, he later accepted an offer to become the Quarterbacks coach for the Miami Dolphins. Upon Lee's resignation, former Ole Miss quarterback star Kent Austin, who was coming off a 2007 Grey Cup win as head coach of the Saskatchewan Roughriders, was hired as offensive coordinator.

Projected to place 5th in the SEC Western Division in the pre-season, the Rebels finished 2nd in the West, knocked off the last 2 national champions on the road in No. 4 (at the time) Florida and No. 18 (at the time) LSU and ended the regular season on a five-game win streak. The 20th ranked Rebels then beat the 8th ranked Texas Tech Red Raiders in the Cotton Bowl Classic.

2009 season[]

The 2009 season was one of ups and downs for the Rebels, as the team entered the year with some of the highest expectations of any Ole Miss team in almost half a century. Ultimately, the Rebels failed to meet those lofty expectations. The Rebels finished with an 8-4 (4-4 SEC) record and an invitation to the Cotton Bowl Classic, a respectable showing but far short of the results that the team, its fans and the national media had anticipated before the season.

The Rebels began the 2009 season ranked no. 8 by the Associated Press Poll and no. 10 by the USA Today Coaches Poll. Ole Miss started the season with wins over Memphis and Southeastern Louisiana, and after some key early season losses by other top-10 schools, the AP poll put the Rebels at no. 4 in week 3—the team's highest ranking since 1970.

The Rebels didn't play up to the ranking, however, and a lethargic Ole Miss squad was defeated by the University of South Carolina in Columbia, 16-10, on a Thursday night before a national television audience. The Sept. 24 loss snapped an 8-game winning streak for the Rebels dating back to the 2008 season and sent them tumbling in the polls, never to rise higher than no. 20 for the rest of the year.

The Rebels bounced back to beat Vanderbilt on the road, but then fell to #3 Alabama at home the next week. Ole Miss recovered to win consecutive home games against UAB and Arkansas in impressive fashion before losing at Auburn in another uneven performance, establishing what would become a signature pattern for the Rebels in 2009: strong play at home but weak efforts on the road.

Following the Auburn loss, the Rebels won three straight home games, including quality wins over Tennessee and LSU. Entering the final week of the season, the team was back in the rankings (no. 20) and seemed set for another winning record in the SEC and a trip to the Capital One Bowl, the SEC's highest-paying bowl destination outside of the BCS. Those plans were dashed, however, when Rebels lost to Mississippi State in Starkville, 41-27, finishing the regular season at 8-4 overall and 4-4 in conference play.

One week later Ole Miss accepted an invitation to play in the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic, marking the team's second-consecutive trip to Dallas and the program's first back-to-back January bowl births in 40 years. Ole Miss defeated Oklahoma State 21-7.

Uniforms[]

The Ole Miss Rebels currently have four combinations of uniforms that they are known to sport. All combinations involve gray pants with stripes of red and blue. The Rebels use blue jerseys for their primary home uniforms and red jerseys as alternates; both have bold white numbers and white shoulder stripes. White jerseys with red numbers and stripes are used on the road.

On October 30, 2010, the Rebels wore all-gray uniforms for the first time in their annual bout with the Auburn Tigers. The gray jerseys are adorned with blue and red shoulder stripes and blue numbers outlined in red. Although worn at home, Mississippi's all-gray uniforms are considered white jerseys (rather than colored); consequently, visiting opponents will wear their home, colored jerseys while the Rebels wear all-gray.

Rivalries[]

Mississippi State[]

Ole Miss and Mississippi State Egg Bowl 1970s

Ole Miss and MSU meet during a 1970s Egg Bowl

The Battle of the Golden Egg (nicknamed the Egg Bowl) is an annual college football game between the Ole Miss Rebels and in-state fellow SEC team Mississippi State University (MSU) Bulldogs. While the 2 teams have played each other since 1901, with 2003 being the year in which the 2 teams had played each other 100 times and now having played each other a total of 106 times, the first game officially known as "The Battle of the Golden Egg" was in 1927.[27] While it is called a "Bowl", the game is not a postseason bowl game, but rather a regular season Southeastern Conference (SEC) game. Ole Miss leads the series with 60 wins to MSU's 41 wins. There have been 6 ties.

LSU[]

Ole Miss first played LSU on December 3, 1894 winning 26–6 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Throughout the fifties and sixties, games between the two schools featured highly ranked squads on both sides and seemingly every contest had conference, and at times national title implications - a tradition recently renewed, as the 2003 matchup decided the SEC Western Division Champion, and helped propel LSU to a national championship. A trophy has now been named for the LSU-Ole Miss rivalry known as the "Magnolia Bowl" which began in 2008 with a 31-13 victory by the Ole Miss Rebels. The 2009 game was also won by Ole Miss 25-23.[28] The latest edition was another classic, typical of the games between these two, with LSU scoring with under a minute left to prevail 43-36. LSU leads the overall series over Ole Miss 56-39-4. 2011 will mark the 100th edition of this great rivalry.

Vanderbilt[]

The Vanderbilt-Ole Miss rivalry is an annual college football rivalry between the Vanderbilt University Commodores and the University of Mississippi Rebels. The Rebels are the Commodores' second-longest, continuous football rivalry.[29] Both teams are founding members of the Southeastern Conference, and their universities have the smallest and second-smallest, respectively, student body populations among SEC schools. This similar size, the schools' proximity to one another (Nashville is less than 4 hours from Oxford), and the similar culture of Greek life (both schools' student bodies have high percentages of participation in fraternities and sororities) led them to choose to be one another's inter-divisional non-rotator when the SEC grew to 12 teams for the 1992 season. The schools have lately been rather evenly matched. In the last ten years, Ole Miss leads the series, 6-4, but Vanderbilt has won 3 of the last 5. The series has also been marked by close games, with the average margin between the teams since 1999 only 7 points. Ole Miss leads the series, 47-35-2 Although, since 1950, Ole Miss leads the series 42-13-2.

Arkansas[]

Ole Miss first played Arkansas in 1908, with Arkansas winning that game 33–0. They would play each other many times, though sporadically, over the next several decades, including two meetings in the Sugar Bowl in 1963 and 1970; Ole Miss won both Sugar Bowl matchups. The two teams have played annually since 1981.

In 1991, Arkansas joined the Southeastern Conference, and was placed in the same division as Ole Miss when the conference split into two divisions in 1992. Ole Miss won the first conference contest in Little Rock by a score of 17-3.

The 2001 Ole Miss-Arkansas game set a NCAA record for most overtime periods played (7). It has since been tied, but never broken. Arkansas won that game 58–56.

2007 saw the already intense rivalry heat up even more when after Houston Nutt resigned as the head coach for Arkansas, Ole Miss hired him as their new head coach days later.

2008 saw the first game between Ole Miss and Arkansas in which Nutt returned to Arkansas in his first game against his former team. Ole Miss, and Houston Nutt, won 23-21 though Arkansas disputes a late offensive pass interference penalty which would have given the Hogs the ball first & 10 near the 20 with less than a minute remaining. They would ultimately give up the ball on downs.This of course only made the rivalry that much more intense. The following season, 2009, Arkansas went to Oxford to take on Ole Miss. Ole Miss again won, 30-17, but this time off the shoulders of an explosive Dexter McCluster. The Hogs finally got the upperhand on the johnny rebs in 2010 with a decisive, weather delayed 38-24 decision in fayetteville.

"Team of the Century"[]

1893–1992

Offense
OE- Floyd Franks
OE- Barney Poole
OL- Jim Dunaway
OL- Gene Hickerson
OL- Stan Hindman
OL- Everett Lindsey
OL- Marvin Terrell
OC- Dawson Pruett
QB- Archie Manning
QB- Charlie Conerly
RB- John Dotley
RB- Charlie Flowers
PK- Robert Khayat

Defense
DL- Frank M. "Bruiser" Kinnard
DL- Kelvin Pritchett
DL- Ben Williams
DL- Freddie Joe Nunn
LB- Tony Bennett
LB- Kenny Dill
LB- Larry Grantham
LB- Jeff Herrod
DB- Billy Brewer
DB- Glenn Cannon
DB- Chris Mitchell
DB - Jimmy Patton
DB- Todd Sandroni
P- Jim Miller

Bowl history[]

Elimanning1

Eli Manning

Ole Miss has participated in 33 bowl games with a record of 21 wins and 12 losses. Notably, Ole Miss' win percentage of 0.636 ranks third all-time among football programs that have played in 25 or more bowl games (behind USC and Penn State). Twenty-one bowl wins also ranks 12th all-time.

January 1, 1936 Orange Catholic University 20 Ole Miss 19
January 1, 1948 Delta Ole Miss 13 TCU 9
January 1, 1953 Sugar Georgia Tech 24 Ole Miss 7
January 1, 1955 Sugar Navy 21 Ole Miss 0
January 2, 1956 Cotton Ole Miss 14 TCU 13
January 1, 1958 Sugar Ole Miss 39 Texas 7
December 27, 1958 Gator Ole Miss 7 Florida 3
January 1, 1960 Sugar Ole Miss 21 LSU 0
January 2, 1961 Sugar Ole Miss 14 Rice University 6
January 1, 1962 Cotton Texas 12 Ole Miss 7
January 1, 1963 Sugar Ole Miss 17 Arkansas 13
January 1, 1964 Sugar Alabama 12 Ole Miss 7
December 19, 1964 Bluebonnet Tulsa 14 Ole Miss 7
December 28, 1965 Liberty Ole Miss 13 Auburn 7
December 17, 1966 Bluebonnet Texas 19 Ole Miss 0
December 30, 1967 Sun U. Texas-El Paso 14 Ole Miss 7
December 14, 1968 Liberty Ole Miss 34 Virginia Tech 17
January 1, 1970 Sugar Ole Miss 27 Arkansas 22
January 2, 1971 Gator Auburn 35 Ole Miss 28
December 30, 1971 Peach Ole Miss 41 Georgia Tech 18
December 10, 1983 Independence Air Force 9 Ole Miss 3
December 20, 1986 Independence Ole Miss 20 Texas Tech 17
December 28, 1989 Liberty Ole Miss 42 Air Force 29
January 1, 1991 Gator Michigan 35 Ole Miss 3
December 31, 1992 Liberty Ole Miss 13 Air Force 0
December 26, 1997 Motor City Ole Miss 34 Marshall 31
December 31, 1998 Independence Ole Miss 35 Texas Tech 18
December 31, 1999 Independence Ole Miss 27 Oklahoma 25
December 28, 2000 Music City West Virginia 49 Ole Miss 38
December 27, 2002 Independence Ole Miss 27 Nebraska 23
January 2, 2004 Cotton Ole Miss 31 Oklahoma State 28
January 2, 2009 Cotton Ole Miss 47 Texas Tech 34
January 2, 2010 Cotton Ole Miss 21 Oklahoma St. 7

On December 31, 1921, Ole Miss lost 0-14 to University of Havana, of Cuba, in the Bacardi Bowl. The University of Mississippi Athletic Association does not recognize this game in the Rebels' official bowl record.

Hall of fame[]

Ole Miss has ten former players and coaches in the College Football Hall of Fame.

Ole Miss has two former players in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Ole Miss has three former players in the Helms Athletic Foundation Hall of Fame.

  • 1955 Frank M. "Bruiser" Kinard
  • 1959 Charles "Charlie" Conerly
  • 1966 Barney Poole

Ole Miss has one former player in the National Quarterback Club Hall of Fame.

  • 2004 Archie Manning

Active in the NFL[]

First round draft picks[]

Ole Miss has had 19 players selected in the first round of professional football drafts.

National Football League[]

*see Manning-Rivers trade
**2009 marks the first time in school history Ole Miss has had two players taken in the first round of the same NFL draft.

American Football League[]

Songs and cheers[]

Songs[]

Official[]

The school's fight song is Forward Rebels, also known as Rebel March.[30]

Another official song is called Alma Mater.[30] The song's lyrics are as follows:[30]

Way down south in Mississippi,
There's a spot that ever calls,
Where amongst the hills enfolded,
Stand old Alma Mater's Halls.

Where the trees lift high their branches,
To the whispering Southern breeze,
There Ole Miss is calling, calling,
To our hearts fond memories.

Unofficial[]

"Dixie" The song dixie, written prior to the civil war by a Daniel Emmett, is traditionally played at Ole Miss football games, generally after a score proceeding the official fight song, or after a defensive turnover.

A modification of the Elvis Presley song An American Trilogy, now known as From Dixie with Love or Slow Dixie, was also played during football games, both home and away. The song was first played during the half-time performance at the Ole Miss/LSU game of 1984 in Tiger Stadium. Upon its completion, the band received a standing ovation from 70,000+ on hand that day. It soon became a staple of the band for many years. During Ole Miss's winning streak of 2003,[31] students and fans alike began chanting "The South will rise again" in place of "His truth is marching on" at the end of the song. The chant remained a staple for the next several years. In 2009, with Ole Miss in the national spotlight for football success, political pressure mounted to do away with the chant. The Student Body Government even proposed to call for the chant to be changed to "To Hell with LSU". When, unsurprisingly, that idea failed to get traction, the University asked the band to quit playing the song. [32]

Another unofficial song a rendition of the Gospel Hit I Saw the Light.[30]

Cheers[]

The school cheer is entitled Hotty Toddy[33]:

Are you ready?
Hell yes! Damn Right!
Hotty Toddy, Gosh almighty
Who the hell are we, Hey!
Flim Flam, Bim Bam
OLE MISS BY DAMN!

Tailgating[]

Retired numbers[]

The numbers 18 for Archie Manning and 38 for Chucky Mullins are the only two retired numbers in Ole Miss football history.

External links[]

References[]

  1. NCAA: Past Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (Division I FBS) National Champions (formerly called Division I-A)
  2. OleMissSports.com History
  3. College Football Data Warehouse: Mississippi Rankings
  4. The Clarion-Ledger: No. 4 Gators undone by myriad mistakes
  5. Ole Miss Sports: History of Rebel Football
  6. CFDW: Mississippi Yearly Results
  7. OleMissSports.com Ole Miss Rebel Football History
  8. [1]
  9. [2]
  10. College Football Data Warehouse, AP and Coaches Final Season Polls 1955-1959
  11. College Football Data Warehouse, AP and Coaches Final Season Polls 1960-1964
  12. [3]
  13. The University of Mississippi: A Pictorial History; Page 161; http://www.olemissbook.com/
  14. The University of Mississippi: A Pictorial History; Page 201; http://www.olemissbook.com/
  15. College Football Data Warehouse: Mississippi Undefeated and Untied Seasons
  16. http://www.sportingnews.com/yourturn/viewtopic.php?t=319866&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=22&sid=21319c681b5b3c86c6d974fb45ec7745
  17. http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/print?id=2720487&type=story
  18. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07004/751148-198.stm
  19. USA Today: Orgeron introduced as football coach at Ole Miss
  20. CBS Sports: Ole Miss gives details of 'embarrassing' thefts by 20 players
  21. ESPN:Nutt agrees with Ole Miss hours after resignation
  22. Ole Miss Athletics: Rebels Find New Leader in Houston Nutt
  23. Ole Miss Athletics: Houston Nutt Introductory Press Conference
  24. The Clarion-Ledger: UM’s Nutt giving $100,000 to university
  25. The Clarion-Ledger: UM football: Nutt to go it alone in recruiting
  26. The ClarionLedger: Nix new defensive coordinator at Ole Miss
  27. Ole Miss football 2007 Media guide
  28. The Daily Reveille: LSU, Ole Miss to student body: "Name that Rivalry"
  29. All statistical information and narrative accounts derived therefrom in this section regarding the Vanderbilt-Ole Miss rivalry come from the 2009 Vanderbilt Commodores Football Media Guide, pp. 156-66 (PDF available online at http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/vand/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/CommodoreRecords09.pdf).
  30. 30.0 30.1 30.2 30.3 OleMissSports.com: Ole Miss Traditions - School songs
  31. Associated Press: Ole Miss head wants song halted over South chant
  32. BREAKING: Chancellor asks band to stop playing 'From Dixie with Love'
  33. The New York Times: At Ole Miss, the Tailgaters Never Lose
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