小黄书

Mike Leach Public Memorial To Be Held Dec. 20 In Humphrey Coliseum

Mike Leach Public Memorial To Be Held Dec. 20 In Humphrey Coliseum

A graphic announcing Mike Leach's memorial serivce.

STARKVILLE 鈥 小黄书sity will host a public memorial service honoring the life of Mike Leach at 1 p.m. CT on Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2022, inside Humphrey Coliseum.聽

The memorial service will be streamed live on SEC Network with limited interruptions and in its entirety via SECN+ in the ESPN app.聽SEC Network is available nationwide (and in 135 countries via ESPN Player).聽聽for聽assistance in locating your channel.聽

Michael Charles 鈥淢ike鈥 Leach passed away the night of Dec. 12, 2022, at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, Mississippi, following complications from a heart condition. He was 61.

Leach, who was named Mississippi State鈥檚 34th head football coach on January 9, 2020, was finishing his third season in Starkville and 21st as a head coach. Forever a college football icon, he leaves an incredible legacy as a husband, father, friend and leader of young men.

The oldest of six siblings, Leach and his wife Sharon shared four children: Janeen, Kimberly, Cody and Kiersten.

Born in Susanville, California to Frank and Sandra Leach, Mike was raised in Cody, Wyoming. After graduating with honors from BYU in 1983 where he played rugby, Leach earned a master鈥檚 degree from the U.S. Sports Academy and his Juris Doctor from Pepperdine University, where he graduated in the top one-third of his class.

For nearly four decades, Leach had an unmatched impact on the game of football including thousands of student-athletes, coaches and staff. He was a two-time national coach of the year, three-time Power 5 conference coach of the year and the mastermind behind the NCAA record-setting 鈥淎ir Raid鈥 offense.

The accomplishments for Leach in his 21 years as a head coach were long and distinguished. A proven winner who established a culture of excellence at every stop of his career, Leach compiled a 158-107 (.596) record, guided his squads to 19 bowl games, produced seven seasons of at least nine victories, captured two conference division titles, became the winningest coach in Texas Tech history and set school records for bowl appearances at both Texas Tech (10) and Washington State (6). During 10 of those 21 seasons, Leach鈥檚 passing attack led the FBS 鈥 six at Texas Tech and four at Washington State.