Nutt agrees with Ole Miss hours after resigning from Arkansas

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JACKSON, Miss. -- Houston Nutt wasn't out of a job for long: He was hired as Southeastern Conference rival Mississippi's football coach just hours after resigning at Arkansas.

Nutt agreed to a contract late Monday night, and replaces Ed Orgeron, who was fired Saturday after the Rebels lost to rival Mississippi State to finish 3-9 and winless in the SEC.

The school announced the hiring through a three-paragraph e-mail Tuesday sent out by Athletic Director Pete Boone. The school said a news conference will be held at 1 p.m. ET on campus Wednesday in Oxford. No contract details were made available.

Ole Miss was searching for a proven winner after years of mediocrity. Nutt neatly fits the description.

He is 111-70 in 15 years as a head coach at Arkansas, Boise State and Murray State. And he's been a winner in the SEC. The Little Rock, Ark., native rebuilt the Arkansas program, going 75-48 since his hiring in 1997 to replace Danny Ford. He was 42-38 in conference with one of his biggest wins coming last week when the Razorbacks beat then-No. 1 LSU 50-48 triple-overtime win.

While Arkansas is likely headed to the Cotton Bowl, Nutt will be going to the homes of recruits attempting to hold together the promising class Orgeron was assembling.

Nutt, 50, said Monday he left Arkansas to help mend a split among fans after off-the-field problems were compounded by a difficult season. The Razorbacks started the year ranked and were expected to contend for the SEC West title against the Tigers.

A source told ESPN.com's Ivan Maisel that Nutt turned down a two-year extension from Arkansas worth $2.4 million annually after the Razorbacks upset No. 1 ranked LSU last week.

Arkansas lost its first three SEC games and dropped out of the poll in September, fueling fan discontent over last year's transfer of quarterback Mitch Mustain and the loss of offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn, who left for Tulsa.

A call to Nutt's agent, Jimmy Sexton, was not immediately returned.

Nutt takes over a program that has foundered since a 10-win season in 2003 under David Cutcliffe. The Rebels won a share of the SEC West that season with Eli Manning at quarterback.

Since then Ole Miss has had four or fewer wins in four seasons. Boone fired Cutcliffe in 2004 for a lack of effort in recruiting. He had hoped Orgeron, who helped build two national title teams at USC as Pete Carroll's recruiting coordinator, would bring the kind of energy needed to compete in the nation's best football conference.

Orgeron finished 10-25 and was routinely the target of fan discontent.

Boone and Chancellor Robert Khayat endorsed Orgeron midway through the season, but decided to go in a new direction after the Rebels lost five of six to end the year.

The Rebels have been looking for a coach who can produce championships since Johnny Vaught retired in 1970.

Vaught won three national titles and six SEC championships between 1947-63.

The school has fired six of the eight coaches who have come since and a seventh, Steve Sloan, likely would have been fired after five losing seasons had he not left for Duke.

The past four coaches have been assistants in their first job as leading man. Orgeron, Cutcliffe, Tommy Tuberville and Joe Lee Dunn were 77-76 in the 14 years.

Only Tuberville left on his own, taking the job at Auburn in 1998.

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3129559
 

Yeagermeister

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So much for Ole Miss contending anytime soon. He won't have McFadden to save his job this time.
 

BrAinPaiNt

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Yeagermeister;1792877 said:
So much for Ole Miss contending anytime soon. He won't have McFadden to save his job this time.

I think at this point they probably just hope to be competitive.
 

jterrell

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Yeagermeister;1792877 said:
So much for Ole Miss contending anytime soon. He won't have McFadden to save his job this time.

The past four coaches have been 1 game over .500.

111-70 in 15 years as a head coach at Arkansas...

I'd say Ole Miss would take that.

The surprise here is that Nutt didn't wait to see if he could snag that LSU job. That will be plum.
 

Mavs Man

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jterrell;1793268 said:
The past four coaches have been 1 game over .500.

111-70 in 15 years as a head coach at Arkansas...

I'd say Ole Miss would take that.

The surprise here is that Nutt didn't wait to see if he could snag that LSU job. That will be plum.

Technically he was only 75-48 at Arkansas (111-70 included prior coaching stints).

Regarding LSU, he would have to wait until after LSU's bowl game (possibly the BCS Championship) to even start the process, and by that time other options would be off the table - jobs that he may have had more of a chance at.

Add: Also, there would be much higher expectations at LSU than Ole Miss. If he wins 9 games next year and finishes in the top 25 he's a huge success. If he did that at LSU there'd be grumblings.
 

jterrell

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Mavs Man;1793293 said:
Technically he was only 75-48 at Arkansas (111-70 included prior coaching stints).

Regarding LSU, he would have to wait until after LSU's bowl game (possibly the BCS Championship) to even start the process, and by that time other options would be off the table - jobs that he may have had more of a chance at.

Add: Also, there would be much higher expectations at LSU than Ole Miss. If he wins 9 games next year and finishes in the top 25 he's a huge success. If he did that at LSU there'd be grumblings.
Very true but most coaches could win 9 games at LSU and the talent level is high in state as well as already on campus. Ole Miss right now is about 8th or 9th most talented in the SEC and that makes getting to even 7 wins a tough row to hoe.

I guess the question is do you leave Arkansas to take that level of relative success elsewhere that hungers for it or go somewhere where the recruiting is easier and budgets are fatter.

I am glad to see any LSU failure at this point honestly because like OSU fans they come out of the woodwork when they are winning as if they went back for every football game and bled the team's colors.

Mostly I just want to see Texas kids stay in Texas and not go lead Missouri, Kansas and Georgia all to top 10 ratings, the traitor bastages. hehehe.
 

Mavs Man

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jterrell;1793308 said:
Mostly I just want to see Texas kids stay in Texas and not go lead Missouri, Kansas and Georgia all to top 10 ratings, the traitor bastages. hehehe.

I hear you there.
 

Yeagermeister

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Mavs Man;1793293 said:
Technically he was only 75-48 at Arkansas (111-70 included prior coaching stints).

Regarding LSU, he would have to wait until after LSU's bowl game (possibly the BCS Championship) to even start the process, and by that time other options would be off the table - jobs that he may have had more of a chance at.

Add: Also, there would be much higher expectations at LSU than Ole Miss. If he wins 9 games next year and finishes in the top 25 he's a huge success. If he did that at LSU there'd be grumblings.


The def coord would probably be first in line to take over if Miles leaves.
 
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