4-star OT Bryson Hurst Re-Commits to Ole Miss
OXFORD, Miss. — It’s always a great day to be an Ole Miss Rebel, but perhaps Saturday that was even more so.
Fans saw the football program program all but assured of a Sugar Bowl berth and celebrated as it was announced that Coach Lane Kiffin had agreed to a new contract.
And earlier in the day, Rebels also learned that talented 4-star Bryson Hurst had re-committed to Ole Miss.
110%🔴🔵 pic.twitter.com/nX1WVKxKrr
— 4 ⭐️ Bryson Hurst🧤 (@BrysonHurst78) December 4, 2021
Back on November 14th, things weren’t quite so cheerful as one of the Rebs’ top commits, Gautier, Miss. native Hurst, re-opened his recruitment and decommitted from Ole Miss.
Hurst is the No. 7 overall player in the ‘Sip and the No. 28 overall offensive tackle in the class of 2022 as ranked by 247Sports.
Hurst holds offers from: Arkansas, Auburn, Florida State, Kentucky, Louisiana, Louisiana Tech, Mississippi State, Missouri, Oregon, Southern Miss, Tennessee, UAB, and UCF.
It is no question the Rebels are looking to build depth in the front lines and the 6-foot-6, 320-pound Hurst would be perfect to bring power to the trenches.
Had a great time talking with my guy @27TBuck , See you soon ‼️ pic.twitter.com/dMHPio4oQr
— 4 ⭐️ Bryson Hurst🧤 (@BrysonHurst78) November 30, 2021
With a new contract for Coach Kiffin and a New Year’s Six Bowl game in the wings, Ole Miss fans have plenty to be excited about — including the recommitment of Bryson Hurst.
Herring-Olvedo sees college football the way championship programs do—from inside the personnel room. Every evaluation, every roster move, every recruiting battle tells a bigger story about identity, culture, and how a program is built to win in December, not just July.
With more than 15 years covering the SEC and the national recruiting landscape, Herring-Olvedo has built a reputation as one of the sport’s most respected personnel-driven voices—blending film evaluation, roster construction, and long-term program vision through a true front-office lens. Her coverage of powerhouse brands like Ole Miss Rebels and Kentucky Wildcatshas consistently gone beyond headlines, focusing instead on the blueprint behind winning programs: development, fit, culture, and recruiting strategy.
That foundation was formed early at Brown University, where she worked in player personnel and recruiting while competing as a student-athlete. Inside those recruiting operations rooms, she learned how elite organizations are truly built—through relentless evaluation, relationship building, projection, and trust in the board. Those experiences shaped the way she studies the game today: part scout, part storyteller, part architect.
Her analysis and reporting have appeared across major platforms including ESPN, NFL coverage spaces, USA Today Sports, and Saturday Down South. She also brought her personnel-minded approach to the airwaves as an on-air analyst for the Wake Up 502 College Football Show on Big X Sports Radio 96.1, where she became known for combining film-room detail with a wider understanding of roster identity and program trajectory.
In 2025, covering the rise of Houston Cougars football under Willie Fritz reignited the part of the sport that first drew her into football—the culture, the edge, the belief that a roster can reshape an entire city. That inspiration led to the launch of Coogs 365 Sports, a platform built to cover Houston athletics through a true scouting and recruiting lens while connecting the emotion of the game to the heartbeat of H-Town.
Now, Herring-Olvedo returns to The Rebel Walk where with an even deeper perspective shaped by years inside recruiting circles, national SEC coverage, and hands-on evaluation experience. Her return brings a familiar voice back to Ole Miss coverage—but with an evolved lens rooted in roster architecture, player development, and the modern realities of building championship-caliber football in the NIL and portal era.
For Herring-Olvedo, recruiting has never been about stars beside a name. It is about identifying competitors, projecting growth, and building a locker room capable of sustaining success. Her philosophy mirrors the best front offices in football: stack traits, trust culture, and never stop building.



