Here is the full Mississippi high school football schedule for the week of Nov. 20 Postseason football resumes this week around Mississippi. For the MAIS, this is championship week. All scheduled games are subject to change due to the COVID-19 pandemic. There’s a clear winner in the 2020 Mississippi high school football championship playoffs: COVID-19. So far this week, six teams have forfeited Friday night playoff games due to coronavirus outbreaks, thus ending their seasons. Michael Fair holds the State Championship trophy during post-game interview in 2016. There will be no state championship for Fair or Lafayette in 2020. COVID-19 saw to that. “It’s not supposed to be this way,” said Lafayette County coach Michael Fair, whose team was set to play Neshoba Central in a Class 5A playoff game on Friday night. “In football, your season is supposed to end on the field.” Instead, Fair informed his team that their season had ended as the team gathered for a practice on Tuesday afternoon. The MHSAA follows Mississippi State Department of Health guidelines that deem three or more positive COVID-19 tests an outbreak requiring quarantining for 14 days. Fair had one player test positive on Saturday, another on Monday and a third on Tuesday. And that was that. OXFORD — Mississippi wide receivers share their attitude with the 1987 film Wall Street. Greed, for lack of a better word, is good. It's hard to be a great pass catcher without being a little greedy. The greatest receivers are the ones who think they deserve the ball every play. They're the ones who know they can snatch any ball out of the air. They're the ones who won't let anything — not a defender or a sideline or their own sense of well-being — stop them from getting to a ball and bringing that ball to the end zone. Greed is the trait that unifies all great receivers. And if you ask former Ole Miss and NFL receiver Shay Hodge, who now coaches prep athletes in Jackson, greed is a trait found in nearly every wide receiver who calls Mississippi home. "I feel like we're more greedy," Hodge said. "More greedy and motivated. The overall thing about Mississippi is you come from nothing. I think these kids coming from nothing, that's unique." This might be the greediest year in Mississippi history. Mississippi is home to 36 players ranked as three-star recruits or better in the 247 Sports Composite rankings for the Class of 2021. Twelve of the 36 players are wide receivers, meaning one-third of Mississippi's elite talent in this class plays the same position. It's not just a deep class. It's a loaded one, too. Jackson Academy's Deion Smith is committed to LSU. Southaven's Isaiah Brevard is committed to Oregon. Hartfield Academy's Brandon Buckhaulter is committed to Mississippi State. And Kosciusko's Antonio Harmon is deliberating between offers from schools like Texas, LSU, Georgia and Ole Miss. Harmon agrees with Hodge's assessment of what makes Mississippi receivers special. But Harmon doesn't fancy himself greedy in a Gordon Gekko from Wall Street type of way. He's more of a Jean Valjean from Les Miserables figure. "We've got something to prove in Mississippi," Harmon said. "We're just trying to get out and do things for our families. What I look at, I look at my mom every day. My job's not finished until she's done working. Forever how long she works, my job's not finished." "To be honest with you, I think that it’s a gift that we are not in school," says Felton. "Because our kids don’t get sidetracked by all the chatter. When you start winning, everybody wants to be a part of it, and rightfully so. This school prides itself on winning. Our baseball team, lacrosse team and soccer teams have all done well in recent years. I think, for us, not having the students around here keeps our focus on what we are trying to get accomplished. Winning a championship is very hard, especially when you are dealing with 14 to 18-year-olds." Thiem and Rublev have only met four times on the ATP circuit. Their H2H is split 2-2 between them. The last two encounters between the pair were won by Rublev, including the quarter-finals in Vienna this month. Thiem and Rublev have met twice on clay and twice on indoor hard courts and have once each on the two surfaces as well.