Luke, MacIntyre add former coordinator Tyrone Nix to coaching staff

Posted on Feb 18 2019 - 5:11pm by Joshua Clayton

Ole Miss went with a familiar face to fill the vacancy on the defensive staff. 

Former Ole Miss defensive coordinator Tyrone Nix will return to Oxford and join his brother, Derrick, on the coaching staff according to multiple reports. 

Ole Miss has not officially announced the hire, but Virginia Tech confirmed the report on Monday morning with a tweet including a statement from head coach Justin Fuente. 

“We appreciate the contributions that Tyrone Nix has made to our program at Virginia Tech. Our staff wishes Coach Nix and his family the very best as he returns to the state of Mississippi, a place where his family owns very deep ties,” Fuente said in the statement. “I certainly understand his desire to return to a place he considers home, as well as the opportunity to once again coach with his brother at Ole Miss.”  

Nix worked one season in Blacksburg, serving as the safeties coach for the Hokies in 2018. Before that, he worked under Houston Nutt as Ole Miss’s assistant head coach, defensive coordinator and linebacker coach from 2008-2011. His other stops include his alma mater Southern Miss, South Carolina, Middle Tennessee and Texas A&M. 

In his first season as the Ole Miss defensive coordinator, Nix had the team ranked 20th in the points per game (19.0), 19th in yards per game (307.2), and 4th in rushing yards per game (85.5) behind standouts Peria Jerry and Greg Hardy. The team went on to defeat go 8-4 and beat Texas Tech in the Cotton Bowl. The next year after Nix was promoted to assistant head coach, the team was 15th in points per game and 20th in yards per game. 

He was dismissed along with Nutt in 2011 when Hugh Freeze took over. 

Nix’s brother, Derrick, has served as the running backs coach for the Rebels since 2009 who has coached some of the most productive rushers in Ole Miss history like Dexter McCluster, Brandon Bolden, and Jeff Scott. 

Tyrone will help out on the other side of the ball, as he’s likely to serve specifically as the outside linebacker coach. With the departure of Wesley McGriff and the hire of Mike MacIntyre as the new defensive coordinator, the Rebels will switch from the 4-3 defense to a scheme based around the 3-4.  

Ole Miss let go of co-defensive coordinator and safeties coach Jason Jones last week after six years to make room for Nix. Since their new coordinator, MacIntyre, has a background with coaching defensive backs, he’ll likely take over those duties while Nix helps linebacker coach Jon Sumrall convert some of the current backers and defensive ends to more of a stand-up pass-rushing role. 

The Ole Miss defense is just one of the many question marks in Oxford but it was the overwhelming weakness a season ago. The landshark defense went hungry last season, ranked No. 121 out of 129 in total defense in the FBS. The Rebels allowed 36.2 points, 261.7 passing yards, and 220.7 rushing yards in 2018. The Nix hire completes Matt Luke’s defensive staff that will try to repair the defense that was once so dominant.