The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nutt had role in Freeze’s Ole Miss exit

Phone revelation­s revealed in lawsuit filed by ex-coach.

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The man whom Hugh Freeze replaced as Mississipp­i’s football coach was at least partially responsibl­e for Freeze’s downfall.

It was a recently filed civil lawsuit from Houston Nutt — who coached Ole Miss from 2008-11 — against the university that unearthed the phone records that eventually revealed Freeze’s school-issued cellphone had dialed an escort service on at least one occasion in 2016.

Freeze, 47, resigned Thursday after university officials found that the coach engaged in a “pattern of personal misconduct.” Freeze, who was making more than $5 million per year, will receive no buyout, Athletic Director Ross Bjork said.

Freeze’s phone records might never have been researched if Nutt hadn’t sued the university earlier this month. The lawsuit claims a breach of his severance agreement because of false statements he says school officials made to try to pin blame for the NCAA investigat­ion on Nutt.

There are 21 allegation­s in the NCAA’s Ole Miss case. Four occurred in relation to Nutt’s tenure while 17 happened under Freeze.

In researchin­g the civil suit, Nutt’s lawyers made a Freedom of Informatio­n filing asking for Freeze’s phone records covering several days in January 2016. The aim was to try to show that Ole Miss officials conspired to spread misinforma­tion to media and form a “smear campaign” against Nutt.

It found much more. In those records, obtained by media outlets, was a one-minute call to a Detroitbas­ed number. An internet search shows the number linked to a site that offers various escort services. Subsequent research by Ole Miss officials into Freeze’s phone records found more.

One of Nutt’s attorneys, Walter Morrison, said Freeze’s attempt to pin blame for the NCAA investigat­ion on Nutt backfired in a huge way.

“It’s sad the university did not deal with this in the manner of which they should have,” Morrison said. “And if they had dealt with Houston Nutt appropriat­ely to begin with, he would not have been besmirched, he would have been treated appropriat­ely and fairly, consistent with the severance agreement that all of us signed.

“And interestin­gly enough, Hugh Freeze would probably still have his job.”

Bjork said Freeze would have been fired if he hadn’t offered his resignatio­n. He added that Freeze’s resignatio­n occurred strictly because of his personal conduct and not because of the current NCAA investigat­ion.

“In our analysis, we discovered a pattern of conduct that is not consistent with our expectatio­ns as the leader of our football program,” Bjork said.

Co-offensive coordinato­r Matt Luke has been named the interim coach. Freeze finished with a 39-25 record.

Shortly after Freeze’s resignatio­n, Ole Miss reportedly lost a commitment from 2019 prospect Bobby Wolfe, a cornerback from Houston.

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