|
By JOEDY McCREARY
AP Sports Writer
JACKSON, Miss.
(AP) For such a small school, Millsaps College has some pretty big
names on its coaching staff.
A former Southeastern
Conference coach of the year is the defensive coordinator. The older
brother of one-time NFL co-MVP Steve McNair is in charge of quarterbacks.
With ex-Alabama
head coach Mike DuBose taking over the defense this year and Fred
McNair back for a second season of schooling the quarterbacks, the
private Methodist college of about 1,200 students is trying to build
a competitive program.
"At every
opportunity that we've had to hire a coach, we went out there and
identified the best coach that would fit the needs that we had,"
head coach David Saunders said. "We've been fortunate to attract
those high-quality coaches."
DuBose, who
was hired in April and has yet to get up-close-and-personal with
the Majors on the practice field, said enthusiasm shown by his new
boss enticed him to return to the college game after a five-year
absence.
"It starts
at the top," DuBose said. "The guy at the top is excited,
and he's driven and he is committed, and you know good things are
about to happen. It doesn't start at the bottom, it starts the top
and goes down."
Saunders is
counting on his high-profile assistants to help him reverse the
program's fortunes. The Majors haven't appeared in the Division
III playoffs in 30 years, and they've had just one winning season
since winning the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference in 1996.
Millsaps was 1-9 in Saunders' first year in 2003. Last year, the
Majors lost their regular-season finale and finished 4-5.
It was a rough
coaching initiation for McNair, one of the most prolific passers
in Arena Football League history and one of kid brother Steve's
predecessors at Alcorn State. Fred McNair, 36, was hired weeks before
the 2004 season to replace ex-Mississippi quarterback Romaro Miller,
who quit in August to continue his playing career in the Canadian
Football League.
Millsaps averaged
a league-worst 113 yards passing last year. But Saunders said the
results will improve as the big-name staff attracts gifted athletes
despite not being able to offer athletic scholarships.
"That foundation,
No. 1, is the players, you have to have talented players that expect
to compete for, and win, championships," Saunders said. "To
get those players, you have to have a great coaching staff."
DuBose, 52, is returning to college football several years after
a rough exit from Alabama. He coached the Crimson Tide to the SEC
championship and an Orange Bowl berth in 1999 and was the league's
coach of the year. But in 2000, he was fired in the wake of a losing
record, an NCAA investigation and a sexual harassment complaint.
He was out of football in 2001, then coached high school ball in
Alabama from 2002-04 before coming to Millsaps. "We're just
excited that we have the opportunity to bring a coach of that caliber
to our staff," Saunders said.
The defensive
line coach for Alabama's national championship team in 1992, DuBose
hopes to bring that same philosophy to a Millsaps defense that last
year ranked second in the conference and allowed 325 yards per game.
"The same
things win, it doesn¹t matter where you coach them," DuBose
said. "The game's the same. It doesn¹t matter where you're
at."
|