Hugh Freeze

Hugh Freeze
Sport(s) Football
Current position
Title Head coach
Team Ole Miss
Conference SEC
Record 39–25
Annual salary US $5.14 million[1]
Biographical details
Born (1969-09-27) September 27, 1969
Oxford, Mississippi
Alma mater Southern Mississippi
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1992–1994 Briarcrest (TN) HS (OC/DB)
1995–2004 Briarcrest (TN) HS
2006–2007 Ole Miss (TE/RC)
2008–2009 Lambuth
2010 Arkansas State (OC)
2011 Arkansas State
2012–present Ole Miss
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
2005 Ole Miss (assistant AD)
Head coaching record
Overall 69–32 (college)
Bowls 4–1
Tournaments 1–2 (NAIA playoffs)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 Sun Belt (2011)
1 Mid-South Conference West Division (2009)
2 Tennessee HS 8-AA (2002, 2004)
6 Tennessee HS 8-AA Regional (1995–1998, 2001, 2002)
Awards
AFCA Southeast Region COY (2009)
Mid-South Conference COY (2009)
AP HS COY
5× Region 8-AA COY

Danny Hugh Freeze, Jr.[2] (born September 27, 1969) is an American football coach. He is currently the head coach at the University of Mississippi, and is widely known for being portrayed as the head coach from the 2009 motion picture: The Blind Side starring Sandra Bullock. Freeze served as the head football coach at Lambuth University from 2008 to 2009 and at Arkansas State University in 2011. He was previously a successful high school football coach at Briarcrest Christian School in Memphis, Tennessee, where he coached Michael Oher and Greg Hardy. He would later follow both of them to the University of Mississippi.

Early life

Freeze attended Senatobia High School and the University of Southern Mississippi, from which he graduated in 1992 with a Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics and a minor in coaching and sports administration.[3]

Coaching career

Briarcrest Christian School

In 1992, Freeze joined the coaching staff at Briarcrest Christian School in Memphis, Tennessee, as the football team's offensive coordinator and defensive backs coach. In 1995, he was promoted to head coach. Freeze ran the no huddle spread offense and led his team to the state championship twice, in 2002 and 2004, and the regional championship each year from 1995 to 1998 and in 2001 and 2002. He received Region 8-AA Coach of the Year honors five times and Associated Press Coach of the Year honors six times.[3] In ten years at Briarcrest, Freeze was 94–30 as head coach (.785 winning percentage) and 126–37 overall.[4] Freeze was depicted in the book and motion picture The Blind Side, about one of his former players, current Carolina Panthers offensive tackle Michael Oher.[5]

While at Briarcrest, Freeze also coached the girls basketball team from 1992-2004, and actually had more success in this role, with an overall record of 305-63 (.829 winning percentage), seven straight championship appearances, and four titles.[6]

Ole Miss

In 2005, the University of Mississippi hired Freeze as an assistant athletic director for football external affairs. The following season, he became the tight ends coach and recruiting coordinator, positions he held through 2007.[3] After that season, he replaced head coach Ed Orgeron on an interim basis before the hiring of Houston Nutt.[3] Freeze interviewed for the offensive coordinator position with Nutt,[7] a position that eventually went to Kent Austin.

Lambuth

In January 2008, Lambuth University, a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), named Freeze its head coach.[8] In 2008, he led the Lambuth to an 8–4 record and a first round loss in the NAIA playoffs, marking their first appearance in the playoffs since 2004 under then head coach Vic Wallace. He was considered for the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga's head coaching position following the 2008 season, but remained at Lambuth University for another season and compiled a 20–5 overall record, and defeating opponents 41–17 on average. In 2009, he led the Eagles to their best regular season record in school history with an unblemished 11–0 mark. Lambuth advanced to the second round of the NAIA playoffs for first time in 11 years—having won one game before suffering elimination to finish 12–1 as the sixth-ranked team in the NAIA.[3]

Arkansas State

In 2010, he joined the staff at Arkansas State as offensive coordinator after a brief stint as offensive coordinator at San Jose State University under Mike MacIntyre. The Red Wolves finished with a 4–8 record, but their offensive rankings jumped from 95th in total offense and 90th in scoring offense in the NCAA Division I FBS to 43rd and 46th, respectively. The Red Wolves' offense broke nine school records including total plays (856), first downs (262), pass attempts (438), pass completions (266), completion percentage (.607), passing yards (3,057), passing yards per game (254.8) and passing touchdowns (23). The Red Wolves' offense averaged 403.4 yards per game, eclipsing over 300 yards all 12 times it took the field for the first time in the history of the program. A-State posted at least 400 yards of total offense in seven games during the 2010 campaign, the most ever as an NCAA FBS member, all in his first year as offensive coordinator. After the season, Freeze was promoted to replace head coach Steve Roberts.[9]

In 2011, his only season as head coach at Arkansas State, he led the Red Wolves to a 10–2 record and their first Sun Belt Conference title since 2005. The Red Wolves' offense averaged 447.8 ypg (28th nationally, 1st in Sun Belt Conference) including 293.6 ypg passing and 154.2 ypg rushing.[10] Freeze left Arkansas State before the GoDaddy.com Bowl following the season.

Ole Miss

On December 5, 2011, Freeze was announced as the new head coach of the the University of Mississippi. He is the 37th head coach of the Ole Miss Rebels. During the press conference to introduce Freeze as the head coach, he stated that he wanted to "retire at Ole Miss." He was signed to a four-year contract with an annual salary of $1.5 million plus incentives up to $2.5 million.[11]

In his first season at Ole Miss, Freeze led the Rebels to a 6–6 record in the regular season, making Ole Miss bowl eligible for the first time since 2009 with a 41–24 victory over Mississippi State in the Egg Bowl. His Rebels accepted a bid to play in the BBVA Compass Bowl in Birmingham, Alabama, on January 5, 2013. They beat the University of Pittsburgh 38–17 to finish 7–6.

Freeze received national attention on National Signing Day 2013 as Ole Miss brought in the fifth ranked recruiting class in the country.[12]

Freeze won the 2014 Grant Teaff Coach of the Year award by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes.[13]

During Freeze's third season at Ole Miss, he led the Rebels to a 7-0 start, the program's best start since the Johnny Vaught era. By October, they had risen as high as third in the nation, their highest ranking at that late stage in the season in almost half a century. They ultimately finished 9-3, only the third time since Vaught's tenure that Ole Miss has won that many games in the regular season. That netted them an appearance in the 2014 Peach Bowl, the program's first major-bowl appearance since the 1970 Sugar Bowl.

On September 19, 2015, Freeze's Rebels beat Alabama, 43-37, in Tuscaloosa, making Freeze only the third head coach, along with Les Miles and Steve Spurrier, to defeat a Nick Saban-coached team in back-to-back years (Michigan's Lloyd Carr beat Saban's Michigan State Spartans in three consecutive years, '96-'98). The victory catapulted the Rebels to #3 in the AP rankings. They went on to tally their second straight nine-win season, and garnered a berth in the 2016 Sugar Bowl, where they won 48-20 over Oklahoma State—their first major-bowl win since the 1970 Sugar Bowl. They finished ninth in the AP Poll and 10th in the Coaches' Poll—their first top-10 finishes in a final poll since 1969.

Coaching tree

Assistant coaches under Hugh Freeze who became NCAA head coaches:

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Lambuth Eagles (Mid-South Conference) (2008–2009)
2008 Lambuth 8–4 4–1 T–1st (West)
2009 Lambuth 12–1 6–0 1st (West) L NAIA Quarterfinal
Lambuth: 20–5 10–1
Arkansas State Red Wolves (Sun Belt Conference) (2011)
2011 Arkansas State 10–2 8–0 1st GoDaddy.com*
Arkansas State: 10–2 8–0 * Departed Arkansas State for Ole Miss before bowl game
Ole Miss Rebels (Southeastern Conference) (2012–present)
2012 Ole Miss 7–6 3–5 5th (Western) W BBVA Compass
2013 Ole Miss 8–5 3–5 T–5th (Western) W Music City
2014 Ole Miss 9–4 5–3 3rd (Western) L Peach 19 17
2015 Ole Miss 10–3 6–2 2nd (Western) W Sugar 9 10
2016 Ole Miss 5–7 2–6 7th (Western)
Ole Miss: 39–25 19–21
Total: 69–32
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title
Indicates Bowl Coalition, Bowl Alliance, BCS, or CFP / New Years' Six bowl.
#Rankings from final Coaches Poll.
°Rankings from final AP Poll.

References

External links

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