Southern Miss Golden Eagles and Lady Eagles

Southern Miss Golden Eagles
Lady Eagles
University University of Southern Mississippi
Conference Conference USA
NCAA Division I FBS
Athletic director Bill McGillis
Location Hattiesburg, Mississippi
Varsity teams 14
Football stadium M.M. Roberts Stadium
Basketball arena Reed Green Coliseum
Baseball stadium Pete Taylor Park/Hill Denson Field
Other arenas Southern Miss Softball Complex
Track & Field and Soccer Complex
Mascot Seymour d'Campus
Nickname Golden Eagles
Fight song Southern to the Top
Colors Black and Gold[1]
         
Website www.southernmiss.com

The Southern Miss Golden Eagles and Lady Eagles represent the University of Southern Mississippi in NCAA Division I athletics. The teams compete in Conference USA. The school's earliest nickname was Tigers. Thereafter came such nicknames as Normalites (from Mississippi Normal College, the early name of the university), Yellow Jackets, Confederates, and Southerners. Golden Eagles was selected in a student/alumni vote in the early 1972. Seymour d'Campus is the name of the modern-day mascot eagle.

Southern Miss has a long history in the NCAA, and its intercollegiate sports teams operate under the auspices of the university's Department of Intercollegiate Athletics sponsors. Bowl games, conference championships, and All-American athletes have all been frequent occurrences at Southern Miss. Among notable alumni is former NFL quarterback Brett Favre and former NFL punter Ray Guy.

Teams

A member of Conference USA, Southern Miss sponsors teams in seven men's and nine women's NCAA sanctioned sports:[2]

Football

The Southern Miss Golden Eagles football team participates as a member of Conference USA and plays its home games in M.M. Roberts Stadium. In 2008, after 17 years at the helm of the USM Football program, Jeff Bower was replaced by Larry Fedora. The football team won two College Division national championships (as Mississippi Southern College, in 1958 and 1962),[3] and won three of the first four Conference USA titles. Through the 2011 season, Southern Miss has posted 16 consecutive winning seasons. The program has had three undefeated seasons overall, including a 9–0 season in 1958. Thirty All-Americans have played for Southern Miss, including 12 first-team selections, and a number of players have moved on to the National Football League, most notably Dawg Pound creator and three time consecutive Pro-bowler Hanford Dixon, NFL Team of the Century punter Ray Guy and three-time NFL MVP Brett Favre.

Rivalries

News and notes

Southern Miss' football history currently includes eight bowl appearances and four league championships[10] in the 12-year history of Conference USA. In 2007, the Golden Eagles and Coach Jeff Bower were selected as conference team and coach of the decade[11] respectively.

Seasons

2007

After 17 years as head football coach, 14 of those being consecutive winning seasons, Jeff Bower was forced to resign.[12] Former Oklahoma State University offensive coordinator, Larry Fedora, was named as his replacement.[13]

2008

Under first year head coach Larry Fedora, the Golden Eagles posted a 7–6 record after a dismal 2–6 start. The Golden Eagles won five straight games to finish the season, including wins over 2008 C-USA champion East Carolina and a New Orleans Bowl win over Sun Belt Conference champion Troy University. Also in 2008, the Golden Eagles football team boasted an 80% graduation rate[14] and the men's program was awarded the 2008 David M. Halbrook Award[14] for Academic Achievement Among Athletes having the best graduation rate of any of the eight public universities in the state of Mississippi.

Women's basketball

Kay James accepting the Jostens-Berenson Lifetime Achievement Award

The Lady Eagles also have a storied history. With 10 postseason appearances, the women's program is the most proficient at Southern Miss. In those 10 appearances, they have made the NCAA Tournament 8 times advancing to the Sweet 16 in 1994. The team has had two All-Americans including Janice Felder in 1994. In 2014–2015 season the Lady Eagles advanced to the 2015 WNIT Elite 8 vs Michigan, which was the best postseason run in history. An attendance record was set in lady eagle history on March 29, 2015 when 5,480 spectators watched Southern Miss vs Michigan.

Softball

The Southern Miss Lady Eagles softball team made it to the Women's College World Series in 1999 and 2000 behind the arm of Courtney Blades.[15]

Baseball

Southern Miss 2B James Ewing and SS B.A. Vollmuth play in a 2009 College World Series game.

The Southern Miss Golden Eagles baseball team made its first ever appearance in the College World Series in 2009.

Traditions

Eagle Fever, Anyone. Anywhere. Anytime. and Go Gold! are the rallying cries that Golden Eagle students and fans have used to help create such traditions as Homecoming and EagleFest, tailgating in The District, Friday Night at the Fountain pep rallies, the Eagle Walk at The Rock, the game-day Eagle Walk parade, the Painting of the Eagle Walk, the Junior Eagle Club Tunnel, the band's Fifth Quarter Concert, featuring a hallmark rendition of Amazing Grace.

Mascot

The first athletic teams were called Tigers or Normalites. In 1924, the mascot was changed to the Yellow Jackets. In April 1940, the student body of the newly renamed Mississippi Southern College voted to name the teams Confederates; the name was changed to the Southerners in 1941. General Nat (named for Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest) became the Southerners' mascot in 1953; his horse was named Son of Dixie.

In 1972, an ad hoc committee appointed by the Alumni Association voted on submissions from alumni, faculty, students, and staff for a new name, and the name "Golden Eagles" was chosen. The mascot was an individual in a golden eagle costume. The mascot was later named Seymour d'Campus (a pun on "see more [of] the campus"). The name was inspired by the 1984 World's Fair mascot, Seymore D. Fair (a pun on "see more [of] the Fair"), who was played by former Southern Miss mascot Jeff Davis '83.[16][17]

Seymour d'Campus has competed in a number of Universal Cheerleaders Association (UCA) mascot competitions, ranking 21st in 2000, 11th in 2001, 7th in 2002, and 15th in 2003. In 2008 he ranked 10th and was also chosen to be one of the 12 members of the Capital One All American Mascot Team.

References

  1. "Southern Miss Official Athletic Site - Licensing". Southernmiss.com. Retrieved 2016-03-25.
  2. "Southern Miss Eagles". CBS Interactive. Retrieved June 13, 2015.
  3. "1958 National Championship Team Set for Book Signing Next Saturday – SOUTHERNMISS.COM – The Southern Miss Golden Eagles Official Athletic Site". cstv.com.
  4. Smock, Doug (October 18, 2013). "C-USA notebook: End of rivalry for ECU, Southern Miss". The Charleston Gazette. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  5. "Southern Mississippi vs East Carolina". College Football Data Warehouse. 2015-07-23.
  6. "Southern Mississippi vs Tulane". College Football Data Warehouse. November 10, 2007. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  7. "Southern Mississippi vs Memphis". College Football Data Warehouse. November 10, 2007. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  8. "Southern Mississippi vs Tulane". College Football Data Warehouse. November 10, 2007. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  9. "Southern Mississippi vs Tulane". College Football Data Warehouse. November 10, 2007. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  10. "2008 Southern Miss Football Preview". cstv.com.
  11. "Southern Miss Football tickets – 2015 schedule – TicketCity". ticketcity.com.
  12. Jones, Al (December 22, 2007). ""It's going to be emotional" – Golden Eagles coach bows out with bowl game". Biloxi Sun Herald. Archived from the original on 2007-12-27. Retrieved 2008-01-06.
  13. Talbott, Chris (December 12, 2007). "Southern Miss Hires Fedora As New Coach". AP. Retrieved 2008-01-06.
  14. 1 2 "NCAA Announces Graduation Rates For Southern Miss Student-Athletes – SOUTHERNMISS.COM – The Southern Miss Golden Eagles Official Athletic Site". cstv.com.
  15. Women's College World Series
  16. "Golden Eagle wasn't always USM's mascot", Hattiesburg American, October 9, 2007 (pay site).
  17. "Traditions of The University of Southern Mississippi", The University of Southern Mississippi Alumni Association (accessed 28-02-2012).
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