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This story originally appeared in the Jackson Free Press. It was added to the Mississippi Free Press website in 2025.
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Update: The Jackson Free Press learned this morning that Orley Hood has died. Here is his friend Rick Cleveland tribute to him from last fall.

I went up to the University of Mississippi Medical Center last week to visit my old pal, golf partner, fellow Braves and Saints lover, and much-admired writer, Orley Hood. He was on his fifth day of chemo treatment, getting ready for a bone marrow transplant.

I hoped to cheer him up. Fat chance. Itโ€™s hard to cheer up somebody who treats every day like a gift from Santa Claus. Instead, he cheered me up. His attitude throughout his ordealโ€“since getting diagnosed with acute leukemia on 11/11/11โ€“has been nothing short of inspiring.

Orley has made best friends with the nurses and many other patients and keeps them laughing. When I saw him, he was just back from a 30-minute walk, pushing his chemo along with him, around and around the fifth floor.

Youโ€™ll love this part of our conversation:

โ€œSo I hear you are getting your bone marrow from a 21-year-old woman,โ€ I said.

โ€œYeah, when I get out of here, Iโ€™m going to go out for cheerleader,โ€ Orley replied.

Orley had his transplant a week ago today. His doctor says it was a rousing success. Heโ€™s weak from the chemo but โ€œahead of schedule,โ€ says his doctor.

One bit of bad news: The UMMC cable doesnโ€™t get the Atlanta Braves games, so Orley keeps up on his laptop. He missed Tim Hudsonโ€™s 200th win, and he missed banner night for rookie catcher Evan Gattis, who played last season in Pearl.

But back to Orleyโ€™s health: Heโ€™s optimistic. His doctor is optimistic. As a longtime friend, I couldnโ€™t be more proud of the way Orley has fought this dreadful disease.

If attitude has anything to do with it, OHood is going to knock leukemia out of the ballpark, a la Evan Gattis.

Mary Ann, Orleyโ€™s lovely wife (M.A., to long-time readers of Orleyโ€™s columns), put it best on Orleyโ€™s CaringBridge page:

โ€œI wish that all of you could spend a little time with Orley and see how amazing he his. He never feels sorry for himself or questions why this happened to him. In fact he just doesnโ€™t spend a lot of time dwelling on it at all. Says itโ€™s just a bad break and heโ€™s living life to the fullest each day. In fact, he does everything he can to make everyone around him more comfortableโ€“the nurses, housekeepers, doctorsโ€“making them laugh and telling stories. Itโ€™s just incredible how he has handled the last 16 months.โ€

You can keep up with Orley at Caring Bridge.

Rick Cleveland is executive director of the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. He can be reached at rcleveland@msfame.com and his columns and blogs can be found at msfame.com.

Previous Comments

Wonderful, Rick, thank you. I’m still amazed that The Clarion-Ledger and the Gannett corporation didn’t do everything in its power to squeeze every possible word out of you guys. They just didn’t know how they good they had it. Cheers to both of you.


At a time when the Clarion Ledger employed dozens of sharp, talented journalists, Orley Hood was a star among them. Even though he was known as a top drawer sports writer, I most admired his humor columns. Orley rose to be Features editor of the Clarion Ledger at a time when the Features section of the daily was bigger than the whole paper is today. He had a remarkable career and I am glad to have known him personally for a long, long time.


My sincere condolences to Orley’s family. I worked with his wife, Mary Ann, during the 80s. She was a very supportive colleague. I also enjoyed the humorous columns written by Orley. In many of his selections, he would use “MA” which are Mary Ann’s initials. Orley’s leaving the CL was like a death back then and I must add that the paper never recovered.