The Palm Beach Post

MULLEN ANTICIPATE­S 'PASSION'

Coach who built Mississipp­i State’s program makes early return.

-

Dan Mullen will

GAINESVILL­E — forever be tied to Starkville, Mississipp­i.

It’s where he landed his first head coaching job. It’s where his two children were born. It’s the place he called home for nearly a decade.

It’s “StarkVegas” to Mullen, and he takes a lot of pride in everything he did to help get

the 23rd-ranked Bulldogs to where they are today. Packed stadiums. Legal cowbells. “Don’t Stop Believin’” played before the

fourth quarter of games. Mullen had a hand in all of it.

Now, he’s going to experience it from a di ff ff ff ff ff ff er entangle: The opposing sideline.

Mullen will return to Starkville on Saturday with Florida ( 3-1, 1-1 Southeaste­rn Conference), a rare occurrence where a head coach faces his former team on the road in his fifirst season. Tom O’Brien is believed to be the last to do it, taking North Carolina State back to Boston College in 2007 and losing 37-17.

Mullen expects “a lot of passion” from the Mississipp­i State faithful.

“When I think of the fans and I think of the former players and the people of the town of Starkville, I think for the most part they were appreciati­ve in what we were able to accomplish in the nine years that we were there,” Mullen said Monday. “I don’t know if that will show on Saturday night.”

Mullen went 69-46 in Starkville, leading the program to nine bowl appearance­s and the top spot in the Top 25 poll for five weeks in 2014.

He joked about the transition from Gainesvill­e to Starkville prompting his wife, Megan, to do “a lot of online shopping.” He praised the locals for welcoming them, saying “being a Yankee and all, they were very accepting of me right from the beginning. It helps when we won.”

He still has a home there, too, although it’s in the process of being sold.

“It’s closing one of these days,” he quipped.

But Mullen also made it clear he didn’t leave behind a lot of personal ties.

“If I had time offfffffff­fff, I’m going to go on vacation with my family,” he said. “There are probably very few days in nine years I was in Starkville that I didn’t go to the offiffice. If I was in town, I went to work. I don’t want to make it (sound) bad. ... When you had time to go out and be social, it was fantastic. But usually I was at work a lot.”

The majority of Mississipp­i State’ s roster consists of guys Mullen recruited, including star quarterbac­k Nick Fitzgerald and preseason All-American defensive linemen Jeffery Simmons and Montez Sweat.

It could be an advantage for the Gators, who will play in Starkville for the fifirst time since 2009.

“That’s defifinite­ly a part of it,” Bulldogs coach Joe Moorhead said. “Hopefully, we know as much about our personnel as they know about our personnel. Like anything, you’ve got to maximize strengths and minimize weaknesses.

“Obviously, them being around these guys for four years, three years, two years or one year, they’ll have a very specifific knowledge of what our players can do and can’t do.”

It also might favor the Bulldogs (3-1, 0-1), who should have an idea how to attack Mullen’ s off ff ff ff ff ff en se and Todd Grantham’s defense.

“We’ve tried to change a lot of terminolog­y, of signals, of all kinds of different stuffff because the players know a lot of the diffffffff­fffferent things that we do,” Mullen said. “But unfortunat­ely they’re going to have comfort against the scheme because that defense has gone against our off ff ff ff ff ff en se, their off ff ff ff ff ff en se has gone against our defense.

“So there’s going to be some comfort with them against the scheme in which we run.”

Mullen should be fairly comfortabl­e during the quick trip back, even though Florida is staying at ad if ff ff ff ff ff fe rent hotel than Mississipp­i State did during Mullen’s tenure.

Little, if anything, has changed in the nine months since Mullen left. And he even has one built- in advantage.

“I’ve heard they flflipped the locker rooms, so I’ll be in the same locker I was in for nine years,” he said. “That will be a comfortabl­e feeling for me. ... But it’ll be fun. I’m looking forward to it.”

 ?? DONALD PAGE / GETTY IMAGES ?? Offensive lineman Kavaris Harkless celebrates in Knoxville after Florida defeated Tennessee 4721 on Saturday.
DONALD PAGE / GETTY IMAGES Offensive lineman Kavaris Harkless celebrates in Knoxville after Florida defeated Tennessee 4721 on Saturday.
 ?? GREENWOOD / GETTY IMAGES SAM ?? Dan Mullen (left) coached Mississipp­i State for nine years before taking the job at Florida. The Gators (3-1) play the No. 23 Bulldogs (3-1) in Starkville on Saturday.
GREENWOOD / GETTY IMAGES SAM Dan Mullen (left) coached Mississipp­i State for nine years before taking the job at Florida. The Gators (3-1) play the No. 23 Bulldogs (3-1) in Starkville on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States