Plenty on line in addition to Golden Egg
Mississippi seeks 10th win; rival chases bowl bid
Mississippi is nearing 10 wins for the second time in three seasons and looking forward to another bowl game. Mississippi State seeks postseason eligibility, though the broader focus in Starkville is on who will be the Bulldogs’ next coach.
Those are the goals in play Thanksgiving night between the Magnolia State rivals, in addition to earning bragging rights in the annual Battle for the Golden Egg. A victory offers some revenge for the No. 12 Rebels (9-2, 5-2 Southeastern Conference), especially after falling a twopoint conversion attempt shy of tying last year’s soggy showdown the Bulldogs won 24-22 in Oxford.
“That game has ate at me ever since we walked off the field,” Rebels quarterback Jaxson Dart said. “It’s a game that I really want back. I know the other guys on the team feel the exact same way about it. We can’t wait for the opportunity to play in it.”
Ole Miss has won six of seven, including Saturday’s 35-3 non-conference rout of Louisiana-monroe. The Rebels are just a win away from just their second 10win regular season under Lane Kiffin and a possible New Year’s Six bowl appearance, some consolation for falling short of winning the SEC West title. Kiffin can join John Vaught as the only Rebels coaches with multiple 10-win seasons.
Most coaches don’t admit to looking ahead to the next week’s opponent. Kiffin said that’s just what he and his staff did before facing Louisiana-monroe, given the short turnaround.
“Right or wrong, we gameplanned last week, which is very unusual to do that in another opponent week,” he admitted. The Rebels went straight to MSU game film Sunday, normally a day off, after reviewing the ULM game.
Success on Thursday depends on clearing MSU (5-6, 2-5), which outscored Southern Miss 18-13 in the fourth quarter to win 41-20 in Greg Knox’s first game as interim coach after the school fired Zach Arnett on Nov. 13. Record-setting quarterback Will Rogers
(144 yards passing, two touchdowns) and dual-threat running back Jo’quavious Marks returned from missing multiple games with injuries, connecting for one score passing and restoring some flash to an offense that had scored only 33 points over the previous four contests.
The defense also regrouped to hold the Golden Eagles to 246 yards and seal the outcome with Marcus Banks’ 60-yard interception return for a score. MSU must provide even more resistance against Ole Miss’ potent offense to not only clinch a bowl berth, but maintain superiority over its archrival.
“A lot of guys, this is our, fourth, fifth or sixth Egg Bowl,” Rogers said. “We’re obviously really excited to play the game and you know they’re going to be excited to play. You don’t win nine games for nothing.
“We have to control our emotions, be ready to play and just execute the plan.”