Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SEC report

Hill over his career at MSU

- Compiled by Bob Holt

Mike Leach and Kylin Hill couldn’t make it work between them.

Mississipp­i State’s firstyear coach known for his passing offense and the Bulldogs’ All-SEC senior running back have parted ways.

AL.com was the first outlet to break the news that Hill was opting out of the rest of the season after four games to get ready for the NFL Draft.

Leach confirmed the news — in his own odd way — Wednesday on the SEC coaches teleconfer­ence.

Instead of clearly stating Hill no longer is on the team, Leach made it sound like he gets his news about a star player from reading it on the internet.

“I haven’t talked to Kylin,” Leach said. “From what I’ve heard, he’s opted out to prepare for the NFL. We wish him the best. We’re going to focus on the guys that are on the team.”

With Leach, the former Texas Tech and Washington State coach, taking over at Mississipp­i State, it figured that Hill wasn’t going to rush 242 times for 1,350 yards as he did last season.

But when Hill caught 8 passes for 158 yards — including a 75-yard touchdown play — and rushed 7 times for 34 yards in the Bulldogs’ 4434 victory over defending national champion LSU to open the season, it looked like he would still be highly productive in a passorient­ed offense.

Hill got just one touch the next game — a carry for 7 yards — before suffering an injury in Arkansas’ 21-14 victory at Mississipp­i State.

When Kentucky beat the Bulldogs 24-2 — marking the first time a Leachcoach­ed team had failed to score on offense — Hill was held to 17 yards on 7 carries, but he had 15 catches for 79 yards.

Hill then didn’t play in Mississipp­i State’s 28-14 loss to Texas A&M. Sports Illustrate­d reported he was suspended for “an outburst” after the Kentucky game, citing sources.

Leach said Wednesday that wide receiver Tyrell Shavers and defensive ends Tre Lawson and Jamari Stewart also have left the program, raising the total to eight players who have decided to quit this season.

“Every time I’ve been involved with a new program, there’s been a certain amount of turnover,” Leach said. “I mean, you need guys to buy into what you’re doing and you need guys to want to work really hard and play really hard and do it the right way.

“I’d be surprised if we don’t lose more. If you’re stunned or nervous, I mean, you better brace yourself because we might lose more.”

Back to camp

Tennessee has an open date this week before playing at Arkansas on Nov. 7.

“We’ve had two really good practices this week, which has been really good for us,” Vols Coach Jeremy

Pruitt said Wednesday. “An opportunit­y to kind of go back to a fall camp mode.

Get lots of reps with lots of guys.

“I feel like our guys have really had good attitudes and worked hard in practice, and we’ve got to continue to do that throughout the course of the year.”

Pruitt said the Vols are doing some work on

Arkansas this week.

“Each day we’ll add in a couple of periods of working on Arkansas and prepare that way,” he said.

In August, Tennessee had more than 40 players unavailabl­e for practice because they had either tested positive for covid-19 or were in contact tracing, but Pruitt said that hasn’t been a major issue since the season started.

“We’ve been very fortunate — knocking on my desk here — since the games have actually started,” he said. “We’ve done a very nice job with covid. I think we probably learned some lessons back during the summertime when they had a break.”

Fine stuns Kiffin

The SEC fined Ole Miss Coach Lane Kiffin $25,000 not for what he said about officiatin­g, but for what he retweeted.

Kiffin said he didn’t realize he could be fined for retweeting a fan who was critical of SEC officials for not reviewing a kickoff by the Rebels that appeared to be an Auburn fumble that was recovered in the end zone for a touchdown by an Ole Miss player.

Auburn came back to win the game 35-28.

“I was very surprised,” Kiffin said Wednesday on the SEC coaches teleconfer­ence when asked about the fine. “It was for the retweet, where a fan said something about the officials and I retweeted it. I did not think that was fineable. I think it would be one thing if I tweeted something and wrote stuff on it, so I was surprised when the commission­er [Greg Sankey] called and told me that.

“I did say to him when he was fining me, ‘Well, that’s not real exciting that I didn’t even get to say anything or make a joke.’ I just got fined for a retweet. That’s not really worth it.”

According to an SEC news release, Kiffin was fined for violation of conference bylaw 10.5, which states: “Criticism of officials or the officiatin­g program by institutio­nal personnel is absolutely prohibited.”

Kiffin said he doesn’t believe appealing the fine is an option.

“I think that was asked and the policy is pretty blanketed that basically the commission­er can do whatever he wants,” Kiffin said.

Kiffin did manage to get a joke in when he tweeted that he could pay the fine with 2.5 million pennies.

“So someone had sent me the penny thing,” he said. “I thought it was kind of funny. Maybe that makes the fine more worth it, I guess, if you can make some people laugh.”

Kiffin said carrying all those pennies from Oxford, Miss., to the SEC office in Birmingham, Ala., probably isn’t practical.

“Usually you just write a check to the league office,” he said.

Press reset

Florida and Vanderbilt, which both had to postpone games because of not having enough players available because of positive covid-19 tests, will play for the first time in three weeks when the No. 10 Gators face Missouri and the Commodores challenge Ole Miss on Saturday.

“It’s almost like two seasons,” Vanderbilt Coach Derek Mason said. “We just push the reset button.

“I think our guys are glad to get back to playing football. The reality is that nobody wanted to stop, but the availabili­ty of players just put us in a position where we had to look at where we were, slow down a little bit and work towards getting back to play.”

Florida shut down its program for two weeks before returning to practice Monday.

“I told everybody I didn’t expect Monday to be this unbelievab­ly sharp practice,” Gators Coach Dan Mullen said. “I just wanted us to have a great attitude and be excited to be out there, and you saw the energy.”

Mullen said the practices have gradually gotten better this week.

“It’s going to be a buildup all the way to Saturday for us,” he said.

Mason said his players have learned not to take anything for granted this season or look too far ahead.

“I think this group knows we’ve just got take it one day at a time, one week at a time,” he said. “We get a chance to go 1-0 this week, so let’s take advantage of that.”

Nice debut

LSU Coach Ed Orgeron said he expects true freshman TJ Finley to make his second consecutiv­e start in place of injured Myles Brennan when the Tigers play Auburn on Saturday.

Brennan, a junior, remains doubtful because of a hip injury he suffered at Missouri three weeks ago.

“Myles Brennan has not practiced yet this week,” Orgeron said Wednesday. “I don’t believe that he’s going to play, but things could change toward the end of the week. Right now we’re going with TJ as our firstteam quarterbac­k.”

Finley played in his first college game last week and completed 17 of 21 passes for 265 yards and 2 touchdowns with an intercepti­on in LSU’s 52-24 victory over South Carolina. Finley, 6-6 and 246 pounds, also rushed 8 times for 24 yards and a touchdown.

“The thing I was most impressed with was TJ’s poise,” Orgeron said. “He looked so calm and made some great decisions.

“TJ’s got a cannon for an arm. He escaped some pressure, which we thought he could because he lost some of the weight. He was 265 when he came here.”

Orgeron said Finley can improve on decisions of where to go with the ball and making calls at the line of scrimmage.

“But that’s going to come with maturity,” Orgeron said. “Now that [offensive coordinato­r] Steve [Ensminger] knows TJ can take it another step, I think you’ll see a couple of different wrinkles that we didn’t put in the first game just to make sure the game plan was simple for him.”

Halloween birthday

Alabama Coach Nick Saban will celebrate his 69th birthday Saturday when the No. 2 Crimson Tide play Mississipp­i State.

Yes, the scariest college coach in America — at least if you’re playing against him — was born on Halloween in 1951.

Saturday will be only the second time Saban has coached a Halloween game. His Michigan State Spartans beat Northweste­rn 29-5 on Oct. 31, 1998.

 ?? (AP/Bryan Woolston) ?? Mississipp­i State running back Kylin Hill (8) was an All-SEC selection last season after rushing for 1,350 yards. In first-year Coach Mike Leach’s pass-heavy offense, Hill’s production dropped considerab­ly. He has elected to opt out of the rest of the season to prepare for the NFL Draft.
(AP/Bryan Woolston) Mississipp­i State running back Kylin Hill (8) was an All-SEC selection last season after rushing for 1,350 yards. In first-year Coach Mike Leach’s pass-heavy offense, Hill’s production dropped considerab­ly. He has elected to opt out of the rest of the season to prepare for the NFL Draft.

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