The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

QB FROM GEORGIA LEADS MISS. STATE AGAINST TIDE

Led by scrambling QB, Mississipp­i State is one of SEC’s hottest teams.

- By David Brandt

STARKVILLE, MISS. — Mississipp­i State’s formula for offensive success is simple this season.

If Nick Fitzgerald is running, the Bulldogs are probably winning.

Mississipp­i State’s bruising 6-foot-5, 230-pound quarterbac­k, who’s from Richmond Hill, has run for at least 100 yards in each of the past four games — all wins. Now the 16th-ranked Bulldogs (7-2, 3-2 Southeaste­rn Conference) and Fitzgerald will take on No. 2 Alabama (9-0, 6-0), which has one of the nation’s top defenses.

Fitzgerald is well aware of the challenge. He had a miserable game in last year’s 51-3 loss to the Crimson Tide, but hopes a year of experience will lead to a different result on Saturday.

“There should never be a time when you line up across from

someone and think you can’t beat them,” Fitzgerald said. “I have full confidence in our team that we can win. They’re an extremely good football team, tops in the country. They have been for a while, and they play really well.

“You have to not worry about the name on their chest and just go out there and play your game.”

Mississipp­i State’s game — at least on offense — is at its best when Fitzgerald and running back Aeris Williams are gaining big chunks of yards on the ground. Fitzgerald leads the team with 801 yards rushing and 12 rushing touchdowns. The 6-foot-1, 217-pound Williams has 772 yards rushing and two touchdowns.

Fitzgerald said Williams’ role in the offense is hard to overstate.

“Even when he isn’t getting the ball, he’s always going 100 percent, no matter what,” Fitzgerald said. “That’s huge. It’s really selfless of him to play like that. It’s really big time for a guy to act that way.”

Mississipp­i State coach Dan Mullen said even with Fitzgerald’s success on the ground, very few plays are specifical­ly designed as quarterbac­k runs.

“A lot of it is option plays, the defense trying to take other people away allows him to run the ball,” Mullen said. “We have less quarterbac­k runs with him than any other quarterbac­k we’ve had.”

Mississipp­i State’s success as a run-based, option-style offense has been a constant during Mullen’s nine-year tenure with the Bulldogs. During the early years, the Chris Relf-Vick Ballard combo helped push the program to a higher profile in the SEC. A few years later, the Dak Prescott-Josh Robinson combo led the Bulldogs to 10 wins and the No. 1 ranking in the country for five weeks.

Now it’s Fitzgerald and Williams. This weekend, they’ll have the chance to do something Mississipp­i State has never done under Mullen: Beat Alabama.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS / AP ?? Mississipp­i State quarterbac­k Nick Fitzgerald (left), running past a UMass defender, has rushed for more than 100 yards in four consecutiv­e games, all victories for the No. 16 Bulldogs.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS / AP Mississipp­i State quarterbac­k Nick Fitzgerald (left), running past a UMass defender, has rushed for more than 100 yards in four consecutiv­e games, all victories for the No. 16 Bulldogs.

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