The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bottoming out: SEC’s top teams roll, others struggle

- By John Zenor

MONTGOMERY, ALA. — With several SEC teams reeling from opening-week flops, the Southeaste­rn Conference didn’t look like “top to bottom” the best league in the country as its coaches have long proclaimed. Only the top teams did their part.

SEC teams in the bottom portion of the standings are looking to rebound after setbacks, lowlighted by Tennessee’s loss to Georgia State. So yes, the top of the SEC is still mighty with Georgia and Alabama and a handful of other teams looking formidable in their openers. For the bottom half, after a weekend that was mostly just mighty painful, there’s a lot of work to do.

Four SEC teams fell to unranked nonconfere­nce opponents in the first full weekend of games. Wyoming beat Kelly Bryant and Missouri, Mississipp­i couldn’t get anything going offensivel­y in a loss to Memphis, and South Carolina dropped a decision to North Carolina — and lost its starting quarterbac­k. Plus, freshman-heavy Arkansas had a close 20-13 win over FCS Portland State.

Then there was Tennessee, which got Rocky Toppled. The Volunteers fell to a Sun Belt Conference team that had lost its last seven games and was a 26-point underdog.

The upper echelon of the conference has plenty to build on.

No. 2 Alabama and No. 3 Georgia — which played Vanderbilt — rolled to victories. No. 10 Auburn got the league’s biggest win, knocking off then-No. 11 Oregon 27-21 on a late touchdown. No. 6 LSU and No. 12 Texas A&M routed overmatche­d opponents as expected. A

week earlier, No. 11 Florida struggled but survived against Miami.

Half of the Top 12 teams in the Top 25 are from the SEC, which is undoubtedl­y impressive. And Mississipp­i State is also getting votes from the league.

As for the rest, they’re trying to salvage solid seasons from bad beginnings.

Tennessee receiver Jauan Jennings says the team leaders have to let younger teammates know “what happened last weekend is unacceptab­le and it won’t happen again.” The Vols play BYU (0-1) on Saturday.

“We’re going to get this right,” Jennings said. “I’m not worried about anything else other than this team and what we’ve got going in here.”

South Carolina’s 24-20 loss to North Carolina was costly beyond the final score. Quarterbac­k Jake Bentley, who threw two four-quarter intercepti­ons in the game, is out indefinite­ly with a sprained foot that could require season-ending surgery. That

leaves freshman Ryan Hilinski to start, albeit against Charleston Southern.

“We’re in the valley right now,” Gamecocks offensive lineman Donnell Stanley said. “We’ve got each other. It’s dark, but it’s a long season and we’ve got to get out of it.”

Missouri, meanwhile, came into the season buoyed by former Clemson starter Bryant taking over at quarterbac­k. And he did put up 423 passing yards in a 37-31 loss to Wyoming, with two touchdowns and an intercepti­on. The Tigers’ defense struggled, with Wyoming scoring 27 points in the second quarter to rally from a two-touchdown deficit.

Missouri begins a fivegame homestand against West Virginia on Saturday.

“I’ve challenged our team and our staff and everybody in our organizati­on to look at it (like) one game’s not going to define us,” Tigers coach Barry Odom said. “But how we respond to that game will define who we are and how this season goes.”

 ?? SILAS WALKER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Georgia State’s Dan Ellington runs against Tennessee on the way to the Sun Belt Conference Panthers’ stunner in Knoxville.
SILAS WALKER / GETTY IMAGES Georgia State’s Dan Ellington runs against Tennessee on the way to the Sun Belt Conference Panthers’ stunner in Knoxville.

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