Jacket Athletics Names Brett Morgan as New Head Football Coach
Starkville Oktibbeha Consolidated School District has named veteran high school coach, Brett Morgan as the new Head Coach for Yellow Jacket Football. Morgan currently serves as Head Football Coach at West Point High School, where he has coached for the last 17 years as Assistant Coach, Offensive Coordinator and, most recently, Head Coach for the last two seasons. The hire comes just a week after former Head Coach, John Carr, announced his move to the Cleveland Browns.
Brett Morgan is a 20-year Mississippi coaching veteran. He coached three years as a graduate assistant at Mississippi State University and 17 years at West Point High School prior to accepting the Head Coach position in Starkville. During his time with the Green Wave, West Point earned 11 district championships, eight 5A state titles, and played in 12 state championship title games. As head coach, he had an overall 24-4 record, and the 2025 team finished 13-1 with its only loss in the championship game.
"We are very excited to welcome Coach Morgan at the helm of our Jacket Football program," said Jay Hopson, SOCSD Director of Athletics. "We wanted to hire someone locally who really wanted to be in Starkville and part of the community, and Brett has consistently been one of the top coaches in Mississippi. He will be a great leader for our program and great for Starkville."
Hopson also spoke about how Morgan's track record and approach to coaching demonstrated at West Point would align with the Yellow Jackets' expectation of championship excellence.
"One thing that is evident when you look at his coaching style at West Point is that they are an extremely physical football team, an extremely well disciplined team," Hopson said. "They are a football team that never beats themselves and shows a lot of heart and determination, which all starts at the top. Brett is an outstanding leader and will demand a physical style of play that aligns with the tradition of Starkville football. If you go back for fifty years, this is the expectation set for Starkville High School, and we believe Brett can deliver."
"I've been in a wonderful place for 17 years," Morgan said, "and it's been a hard couple of days speaking with so many people about this news, but I am so excited about the opportunity at Starkville. I've been incredibly blessed to be around really good coaches and really good players, and I think the Golden Triangle area offers the best football in Mississippi. We're going to be about team first, about winning first, about loyalty to the team. We want to be about "we" and not "me" and what we can do to make Starkville High School a year-in and year-out championship program. That's the goal."
Morgan's approach to team building and developing players was one thing Hopson said attracted the district to seek him out for the Head Coach position.
"Brett is a class guy. Not only a great football coach who has won state championships, but is a man of extremely high character," Hopson shared. "He will be outstanding in developing the young men in our football program. He's a program builder, and that's what we're looking for. He played football himself in the SEC and understands those demands. Plus, he's coached a lot of great football players during his career who have gone on to play at community college, Division I and the NFL."
Morgan grew up in Vicksburg and signed to play defense and special teams at Mississippi State University from 2002 until 2005. He played high school ball for his father who was head coach at Warren Central High School, and his two brothers also played football at MSU and hold coaching positions across the state. Morgan feels fortunate to have grown up around football and a family steeped in coaching high school ball, but his focus is on moving forward as he begins his tenure with the Yellow Jackets.
"I'm focused on what's ahead," he said. "We have work to do. I learned so much from my dad as a coach, and I'm thankful for all the experiences my family has had to serve high school students on the field. I'm humbled and honored to be here and very thankful for this opportunity from Dr. [Tony] McGee and Coach Hopson. I'm extremely excited about getting in there and getting to work."
Hard work and a championship mindset is part of what Hopson says Morgan will bring to the Jacket program.
"He has the pedigree," Hopson said. "You're looking at a guy who will lead all aspects of the program. He's won state championships. He's been successful. That is the standard he has set for himself, and that's what our Yellow Jacket players have to look forward to."
Beyond that standard of winning, Morgan holds more far-reaching goals for his teams as he seeks to "take boys and turn them into men," as he says. The role faith plays in his efforts is something he's quick to share.
"The ultimate reason I'm here is I felt like it was the Lord's call on my life," he said. "I'm trying to be obedient, and I'm looking forward to seeing how he uses me here in this time in my life. I trust Coach Hopson. I trust Dr. McGee, and I trust the Lord."
"I'm very clear," he continued. "Our program is going to start with Christ. We're going to pray every day to start the team meeting and we'll be bold in our faith and see God move in it. That's first with me. Then, we want to take boys and turn them into men within our program. We want to get them as 7th graders and teach them how to be a man, be accountable to each other and how to work hard for a common goal with everybody pulling in the same direction – putting team above self. That, to me, is the key to winning, and I'm just excited and ready to meet everybody."
Morgan will have that opportunity soon, as administration is planning his introduction and first meetings with the coaching staff and players.
"I'm honored to welcome Coach Brett Morgan to the Jacket Family," said SOCSD Superintendent Tony McGee. "Coach Hopson has worked to attract a Head Football Coach who calls Starkville home, and I'm confident Brett will continue his championship approach here. I'm excited to see how our student athletes respond."
Morgan holds a Bachelors degree in Kinesiology and a Masters degree in Instructional Technology from Mississippi State University. He and his wife, Brandi, are the parents of Leigh Parker, Brett Daniel, Luke, Charlee Kate and Drake.