Texarkana Gazette

Ole Miss fights through bruises

- By David Brandt

OXFORD, Miss.— Mississipp­i has so many injuries on its defense that two running backs are now playing a significan­t role in the secondary.

On Monday, the school announced that wide receiver D.K. Metcalf would miss the rest of the season because of a neck injury and defensive end Markel Winters is out for about a month with an injured knee.

The bad news seems to be everywhere. Yet somehow, the Rebels still have a respectabl­e 5-2 record.

Ole Miss may not be the most talented—or the healthiest—team in the Southeaste­rn Conference, but demonstrat­ed some resiliency in last weekend’s 37-33 win over Arkansas . The Rebels trailed 27-10 late in the second quarter before rallying for their first league win.

“It’s in the rain, you’re on the road and you’re down 17 points,” Ole Miss coach Matt Luke said. “They just kept fighting and kept competing. Just proud of a gutsy win that will give us some momentum going forward.”

Ole Miss gets a chance to build on that win when it returns home to face a reeling Auburn (4-3, 1-3 SEC) program on Saturday. The Tigers have lost three of their past five games, including the last two against Mississipp­i State and Tennessee.

Despite its injury issues, Ole Miss has stayed competitiv­e thanks to one of the league’s most productive offenses. The Rebels are second in the SEC with 41.6 points per game and second in total offense with 550.9 yards per game.

Most of that damage has come against weaker foes in nonconfere­nce action, but the win against Arkansas proved the Rebels can put up big numbers against a conference opponent. Jordan Ta’amu threw for 387 yards and two touchdowns while also running for 141 yards and a touchdown.

Now Ole Miss must move forward without one of Ta’amu’s favorite targets. The 6-foot-4, 230-pound Metcalf currently ranks third in the SEC with 569 yards receiving and was part of an explosive trio that includes A.J. Brown and DaMarkus Lodge.

Younger receivers Braylon Sanders and Elijah Moore could see an expanded role in Metcalf’s absence.

“It’s just next man up,” Ole Miss offensive coordinato­r Phil Longo said. “You don’t replace D.K. We’re going to find the next best guy and line up our best 11 and keep playing football the way we do.”

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