Mauldin Gift Aims to Bolster Baseball

Alumnus and wife donate to benefit university's sports facilities

Thousands of Ole Miss fans gather at Swayze Field in September 2022 to honor the baseball Rebels for winning the 2022 NCAA championship. A gift from UM alumnus Mick Mauldin and his wife, Patty, will fund facility improvements to help the team continue to compete at the highest level. Photo by Kevin Bain/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services

OXFORD, Miss. – The donors of a major gift to the University of Mississippi hope to help the Ole Miss baseball team continue to swing for the fences.

UM alumnus Mick Mauldin and his wife, Patty, made a $125,000 gift to Champions. Now., the Ole Miss Athletics Foundation‘s fundraising campaign focused on improving facilities for student-athletes.

“Patty and I love Ole Miss baseball,” Mick Mauldin said. “We went to Omaha this past year for a couple of the College World Series games and, like most Rebel fans, were incredibly excited when Ole Miss won the NCAA national championship. 

“This inspired us to want to do something to honor Coach Mike Bianco’s baseball program.”

Besides honoring the baseball team, making a tax-deductible donation appealed to the Baton Rouge, Louisiana, couple who said they enjoy knowing their gift will be used to support such improvements as the construction of a baseball performance center that will enable student-athletes to practice during inclement weather.

“This will help the Ole Miss baseball program keep pace with other schools when Coach Bianco goes recruiting,” said Mauldin, a Laurel native who earned bachelor’s and law degrees from UM in 1970 and 1973, respectively.

Matt McLaughlin, chief development officer for OMAF, expressed gratitude for the Mauldins’ gift.

“I can imagine the pride Mick and Patty will feel when they see our baseball players perform at the top of their game, knowing that their gift helped build a highly competitive team,” McLaughlin said. “Their gift will be appreciated by generations of student-athletes, and we are extremely grateful for their support.”

Mauldin credits Chancellor Emeritus Robert Khayat for setting him on a path toward career success.

Mick (left) and Patty Mauldin hope their gift to Ole Miss athletics will help the baseball Rebels remain competitive. Photo courtesy Mick Mauldin

“Since taking then-professor Khayat’s Marriage and Family Law class in law school, I have remained friends with him and it is a distinct honor to call him my friend,” he said. “He was responsible for placing me in my first job as a lawyer with then-Congressman Trent Lott.

“Additionally, his guidance was invaluable to Patty and me in connection with our gift dedicated to the Ole Miss baseball program.”

After law school, Mauldin was hired as Lott’s legislative assistant. When the representative was appointed to the House Rules Committee, Mauldin served as counsel on the committee staff while also attending Georgetown University Law Center.

In 1980, he earned a Master of Laws in Taxation degree and began a private law practice in Baton Rouge, specializing in taxation, estate planning and general business law. He retired in 2018 as a senior partner in the Baton Rouge office of Jones Walker LLP.

Patty Mauldin graduated from Louisiana Tech University and managed The Muffin Tin, a gift and gourmet business in Monroe, Louisiana, before the couple was married. She then moved to Baton Rouge and worked part-time in sales for Robert Roth Jewelers.

At Ole Miss, Mauldin served as president of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and spent the first two years of law school attending advanced Army ROTC classes. He was commissioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Reserve in 1972 and was honorably discharged as a captain in 1980.

“Having attended Ole Miss at the time I did, my favorite Ole Miss sports memories are of watching Archie Manning quarterback the Rebels and win football games,” he said. “I will never forget watching Ole Miss crush Tennessee in Jackson after one of their players, Steve Kiner, referred to the Rebels as mules.”

In Baton Rouge, Mauldin served on the board of directors and as vice chair of the Mary Bird Perkins Cancer Center Foundation. Additionally, he provided leadership on the board and as president of the Rotary Club of Baton Rouge, which was then the fourth-largest Rotary Club chapter in the world.

To make a gift in support of Ole Miss athletics, visit CHAMPIONS. NOW. or contact Matt McLaughlin, chief development officer, at mlmclaug@olemiss.edu or 662-915-7894.