Plumlee, Ealy working together in new roles for Ole Miss

Published 4:45 am Friday, August 13, 2021

By Jake Thompson
The Vicksburg Post

OXFORD — John Rhys Plumlee and Jerrion Ealy have been linked together since coming to Ole Miss, and this season is no different.

Whether because both are dual-sport athletes, balancing between football in the fall and baseball in the spring, or both are playmakers on the field, the Oak Grove and Jackson Prep standouts are never far apart in any conversation.

Email newsletter signup

Sign up for The Vicksburg Post's free newsletters

Check which newsletters you would like to receive
  • Vicksburg News: Sent daily at 5 am
  • Vicksburg Sports: Sent daily at 10 am
  • Vicksburg Living: Sent on 15th of each month

As preseason camp begins and the 2021 season slowly creeps closer, the two offensive stars are learning a new position together as the slot receiver. It was heavily discussed and publicized during the summer and offseason that Plumlee could see himself in a new role come August. That was proven true as he is officially a wide receiver despite being listed as a quarterback on the roster.

Plumlee worked all of Monday’s practice with the receiving corps, taking many reps with the starters and catching passes from quarterback Matt Corral, who took Plumlee’s spot as the Rebels’ starting quarterback last season.

Jerrion Ealy

Plumlee moved to receiver for the Rebels’ Outback Bowl game against Indiana and showed some of his potential by catching five passes for 73 yards. Three of his receptions, including a 44-yarder, came on a fourth quarter touchdown drive that gave Ole Miss the lead for good in its 26-20 victory.

The transition has been a smooth one thus far, according to head coach Lane Kiffin.

“The focus is John playing receiver, because I don’t think he could get really good at that while doing both, having never done it before,” Kiffin said. “He’s basically (at receiver) full time right now early in camp, seeing how he can develop from there. It’s really the only fair thing to do to him. If you go back and forth, it’s just too hard at this level to get really good at it.”

Entering their second season together, Kiffin and offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby are working to expand their playbook and offensive scheme. That includes using Ealy in different roles besides running back, such as slot receiver.

Ealy led the Rebels in rushing last season, with 745 yards and nine touchdowns on a team-high 147 carries. He also caught 15 passes for 155 yards and one touchdown, and returned kicks. Ealy had a 100-yard touchdown return against LSU in December.

In the first two days of camp, Ealy said he had not worked too much in the slot, taking only a handful of snaps out wide.

One thing that is helping Ealy is having the ability to lean on Plumlee, who he admitted is ahead in adapting to the new position due to using his quarterback skills in knowing the routes and where to be.

“It’s great to have (Plumlee). He’s a great person,” Ealy said. “If you know John Rhys, if you’re on the same team or even in the same room you’re blessed. Having him, he can teach me some things. He can teach me the position. It’s nice having him. He’s (further along). He played quarterback, so he kind of already (knew the position). He just had to move there.”