The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Baylor defeats Ole Miss as QB Corral is hurt

- By Brett Martel

NEW ORLEANS — Al Walcott set a Sugar Bowl record with a 96-yard intercepti­on return, Monaray Baldwin raced 48 yards for the go-ahead score on an end around, and seventh-ranked Baylor beat No. 8 Mississipp­i 21-7 in the Sugar Bowl on Saturday night as injured Rebels quarterbac­k Matt Corral watched from the sideline on crutches.

Abram Smith ran for 172 yards to finish with a single-season record 1,601 yards rushing for Big 12 champion Baylor (12-2), which won 12 games in a season for the first time. The defense did the rest, finishing with 10 sacks — two by game MVP Terrel Bernard — and three intercepti­ons.

Corral, a dual-threat star QB and projected high-round NFL draft choice, became one of the big stories of the Sugar Bowl because of his decision to play, rather than opt out and minimize injury risks in advance of turning pro.

Corral had accounted for 3,936 total yards and 31 touchdowns during the regular season. But his hopes of going out with a flourish in a New Year’s Day bowl faded on Ole Miss’ third series, when he was sacked from behind by Cole Maxwell amid a cluster of players. When he was helped up and off the field, Corral didn’t put weight on his right foot.

He was carted to the locker room for X-rays before returning to the sideline wearing his red undershirt and using two black crutches.

Mississipp­i coach Lane Kiffin then put his offense in the hands of freshman Luke Altmyer, who led Ole Miss to the Baylor 12-yard line on his first series, only to have his pass to the left flat tipped and then intercepte­d by Walcott, who raced down the right sideline for the only points of the first half. The intercepti­on return was the longest in the Sugar Bowl’s 88-game history.

But the Rebels’ defense managed to hold Baylor’s offense scoreless through three quarters, allowing Ole Miss to tie it on Altmyer’s 37-yard timing pass down the right sideline to Braylon Sanders.

Ole Miss was poised to take the lead when Cole Nation lined up for a 35-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter, but his kick sailed just wide right.

Baylor responded with Baldwin’s first collegiate touchdown on a season-long run for the seldom-used freshman, who entered the game with five rushes and one catch.

Altmyer’s second intercepti­on, picked off by safety J.T. Woods on a pass over the middle, set up Gerry Bohanon’s 2-yard scoring pass to Tyquan Thornton for the game’s final score.

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