In EVERY response to the NCAA from Ole Miss and public statement they've made (including at the press conference announcing his firing), they have expressed confidence in his compliance program and defended him against the allegations. They are trying to say that his firing was over moral turpitude issues only and has nothing to do it with the NCAA mess. Granted, it is seldom wise to change your defense strategy on the eve of a trial, but I think it makes Ole Miss look silly, proclaiming his moral failures while sitting beside him next month in front of the Committee on Infractions as they extol his integrity at the same time. Perhaps they will change strategy and try to nudge him under the bus at the COI hearing, but that doesn't appear to be the case.