Houston Chronicle

Scandal aftermath has common result

- By RALPH D. RUSSO

Mississipp­i coach Hugh Freeze resigned instead of being fired Thursday for what Ole Miss called a pattern of personal misconduct. • Preseason practice is set to open in Oxford, Miss., in weeks. The Rebels are a month and a half away from starting the season against South Alabama. • This is no time for a coaching change, but offensive line coach Matt Luke is being thrown into an interim position. He will try to save a season that already had been scarred by a selfimpose­d bowl ban for NCAA violations that Ole Miss said had nothing to do with Freeze being forced out. • These types of scandal-driven offseason coaching changes have become somewhat common in college football. History shows teams that endure unusual upheaval do not fare well. • Here are some notable offseason changes and how those seasons turned out:

ART BRILES BAYLOR

After an external investigat­ion found the school mishandled sexual assault claims, some against football players, Baylor’s board of trustees began the process to fire Briles on May 26, 2016. Temporary replacemen­t: Jim Grobe. Result: The Bears opened the season ranked No. 23 and started 6-0, and then lost six straight. They won their bowl game to finish 7-6.

JIM TRESSEL OHIO STATE

Resigned on May 30, 2011, after it was revealed he lied about NCAA violations, involving players trading equipment and memorabili­a for cash and tattoos. Temporary replacemen­t: Luke Fickell. Result: The Buckeyes went 6-6 and 3-5 in the Big Ten. The administra­tion did not self-impose a bowl ban when it had the opportunit­y, and the Buckeyes lost the Gator Bowl to Florida to finish with a losing record. The next year, Ohio State

had to serve an NCAAhanded-down postseason ban when Urban Meyer’s first team went 12-0. Arkansas tumbles

BOBBY PETRINO ARKANSAS

Fired on April 11, 2012, for lying to school officials about his relationsh­ip with a woman who was involved in a motorcycle accident with him. Temporary replacemen­t: John L. Smith. Result: The Razorbacks had high hopes coming off an 11-win season, but they tanked, going 4-8.

BUTCH DAVIS NORTH CAROLINA

Fired on July 27, 2011, amid an NCAA investigat­ion about players receiving improper benefits and academic misconduct. Temporary replacemen­t: Everett Withers. Result: The Tar Heels started 5-1 before losing four of six to finish the regular season. They completed a lackluster year by losing to Missouri in the Independen­ce Bowl and ended up 7-6.

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