The Commercial Appeal

Coach who delayed raise wants fans in stands

- From Our Press Services

MURFREESBO­RO, Tenn. — Rick Stockstill is urging Middle Tennessee students and Murfreesbo­ro residents to turn out and support his Blue Raiders.

Having put his money where his mouth is by delaying his annual raise gives his words more heft.

The coach went to athletic director Chris Massaro about restructur­ing his deal and signed a revised contract in late May that pushed back a $100,000 raise due this season to January 2019. Stockstill wanted to help Middle Tennessee more easily handle the new cost of attendance being paid to athletes this season.

The Blue Raiders report Wednesday for their first practice Thursday. When the season starts next month, Stockstill hopes to see more fans in the stands.

“If you don’t support the school you went to, this is your home team,” he said. “This is your home team, your hometown should be here watching it and support us. Our students should do the same. This is their school, they should be here. ... I say this every year, and I’ll say it next year, too, so my message hasn’t changed.”

Stockstill’s only promise is that people will see a competitiv­e team that plays with passion.

Middle Tennessee has had difficulty filling 30,788-seat Johnny “Red” Floyd Stadium even though the Blue Raiders won eight games in 2012 and 2013. A 50-47 win over rival Western Kentucky drew 24,911 last season, but Middle Tennessee didn’t top 18,952 for any other game despite finishing 6-6 after losing two of the final three games.

Middle Tennessee opens Sept. 5 at home against Jackson State, but the Blue Raiders’ best chance for a sellout comes Oct. 3 when they host Vanderbilt after trips to Alabama and Illinois.

The Blue Raiders certainly noticed their coach giving up a chunk of his pay to help them, making them appreciate Stockstill even more.

“I feel like we have one of the best coaches in America,” senior linebacker T.T. Barber said. “I mean, there’s a lot of coaches that tell you what you want to hear to get you to come to a school. He’s not a coach that tells you what you want to hear. He gets you to come to school and backs up his word.”

DEVELOPMEN­TS

Tunsil case dismissed: A legal case involving Mississipp­i offensive lineman Laremy Tunsil and his stepfather has been dismissed.

Both men had filed misdemeano­r domestic violence charges against each other following an alleged fight in June.

At the time of the incident, Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze said Tunsil was defending his mother from his stepfather, Lindsey Miller.

The school also has acknowledg­ed it is looking into allegation­s from the stepfather that Tunsil had improper contact with football agents.

Analyst sues over firing: Former college football television analyst Craig James on Monday filed a religious discrimina­tion lawsuit against Fox Sports that contends he was fired because he had expressed opposition to gay marriage during a failed run for the U.S. Senate.

Briefly: Arkansas will hold its seventh annual Razorback Football Kickoff Dinner at 6:30 p.m. Aug. 28 at the NWA Convention Center in Springdale. For tickets, call 800-982HOGS or visit arkansasra­zorbacks.com.

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