It didn't take long for Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh to get fiery over the NCAA's decision to ban off-campus satellite camps in which colleges could scout high school prospects.

Ole Miss head coach Hugh Freeze

On Tuesday he even aimed a shot across the bow of Ole Miss head coach Hugh Freeze, who said he was not disappointed over the decision. Harbaugh and his entire Michigan staff was scheduled to attend one such satellite camp in Pearl, Miss., on June 8.

“I’m selfish with my time,” Freeze said Saturday in a press conference following the conclusion of the Rebels' spring practice. “I’m away from my family enough, and I just did not want to go. I was ready to. We would’ve jumped in with the rest of them and gone to work. But I’m glad we can have a camp and I can sleep at home.”

Freeze revealed plans were in the works for Ole Miss to partner with Oklahoma State for satellite camps in Houston and Dallas and to work with Missouri at camps in Atlanta and on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. The NCAA's ruling last week mooted any such plans.

Harbaugh specifically addressed Freeze's remarks in an interview granted to Sports Illustrated on Monday.

“You’ve got a guy sitting in a big house, making $5 million a year, saying he does not want to sacrifice his time,” Harbaugh said. “That’s not a kindred spirit to me. What most of these coaches are saying is they don’t want to work harder.”

Harbaugh's verbal spur at Freeze came as unprovoked. When Freeze was asked a few weeks ago if he had any comments on Michigan coming to Mississippi to conduct one of its satellite camps, he politely responded, "Welcome to the 'Sip."

The SEC and ACC were the driving conferences behind the rule change.