Michael C. Johnson / USA Today Sports

STARKVILLE, Miss. — The Mississippi State Bulldogs are opening spring football under first-year head coach Jeff Lebby. The former Oklahoma offensive coordinator will bring a plethora of new stuff to Starkville, but the most noticeable is his high-tempo offense.

Since 2020, the Bulldog offense has been under Mike Leach and Kevin Barbay, and both schemes were played at a slow tempo. Both offenses were also primarily run or pass, and Lebby will do a 180 this season as they will run a high-paced, balanced scheme.

The position group that must adjust to the speed most is the offensive line. Albert Reese worked at left tackle today and thought the first day of practice went well.

“It went smoothly as far as the first days go,” Reese said. “We just learned all these plays… people knew what they were doing.”

Along with adjusting to a new playbook, Reese has a handful of new teammates via the transfer portal. The Bulldogs will rely heavily on Jacoby Jackson, Makylan Pounders, and Ethan Miner to immediately produce on the offensive line after losing six major contributors off last year's group.

“They have been settling really well, and coaches have done a good job making sure everyone is on the same page,” Reese said.

Due to the attrition on the offensive line, Reese, who is just a junior, is now the veteran in the offensive line room. The 6-7 320-pound offensive tackle will be leaned on heavily in the Lebby downhill running scheme.

“That makes me feel really old being one of the upper-class men,” Reese said. “I like it (run blocking) a lot.”

Lebby and new offensive line coach Cody Kennedy heavily emphasized the offensive line in the transfer portal, which paid off. The Bulldogs needed to replace several pieces, and they did; they perhaps even upgraded at several positions.

Lebby’s offense flashes off the screen and is often confused with being a heavy pass scheme, but at its best, they are running more than passing. A more balanced up-tempo attack will keep the defense line on their toes and out of breath.

The new-look offensive line will determine how effective the offense is.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Lakers want Anthony Davis' opinion in search for next head coach
Patriots exec explains why team drafted two QBs in 2024 NFL Draft
Borussia Dortmund legend 'considering' move to MLS
NHL announces Ted Lindsay Award finalists
Mavericks' Luka Doncic lists Thunder swingman among best perimeter defenders in NBA
Cowboys reportedly meeting with recently released veteran WR
Joe Burrow shares 'support' for Bengals who requested trades
Dodgers star latest victim of announcers jinx
Mike Conley discusses what makes Anthony Edwards so special
J.J. Watt and others destroy Austin Rivers over NBA/NFL take
Celtics dominate short-handed Cavaliers in blowout Game 1 win
Rangers special teams, goaltending help them take control against Hurricanes
Knicks share brutal injury news on Mitchell Robinson
Titans put Treylon Burks on notice with latest free-agent addition
Rudy Gobert's Defensive Player of the Year award redeems reputation of darkness retreats
LIV Golf scores major win ahead of PGA Championship
Astros GM makes revealing comments about team's trade-deadline strategy amid poor start
Watch: Overtime goal completes Avalanche's comeback in 4-3 win over Stars
Thunder’s three-point barrage takes down Mavericks in Game 1
Legendary Broncos DC Joe Collier dead at 91

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.