The Commercial Appeal

5 observatio­ns from Ole Miss Outback Bowl win

- Nick Suss

TAMPA, Fla. — Lane Kiffin ended his first season as Ole Miss coach with an exclamatio­n point.

Ole Miss held off a late Indiana comeback to win the Outback Bowl, 26-20 on Saturday. The Rebels led by as many as 14 points before No. 11 Indiana (6-2) came back to tie the score, but quarterbac­k Matt Corral led the Rebels on a quick scoring drive with under five minutes left to regain the lead. The defense forced a late turnover on downs to end the Hoosiers’ late rally try.

Ole Miss finishes the season 5-5. Here are five takeaways from the Rebels’ win.

Where’s this defense been?

Ole Miss entered the game allowing more yards per game than any FBS team. This wasn’t a defense that looked comfortabl­e slowing down winless Vanderbilt, let alone a top-25 opponent. But the Rebels did just that Saturday, holding Indiana to 20 points and 4.3 yards per play.

Sure, Indiana started a backup quarterbac­k. But that same backup quarterbac­k scored 14 points against Wisconsin, which owned the nation’s No. 1 total defense.

Ole Miss held Indiana to a paltry 141 yards and three points in the first half and intercepte­d one pass in the red zone to end a Hoosiers scoring threat. Though the tackle-for-loss and sack numbers weren’t high, the Rebels supplied consistent pressure off the edge, especially from senior Sam Williams.

Oh, that defense

Ole Miss allowed more than 100 points across nine fourth quarters this season. Naturally, Indiana started scoring in bundles in the fourth quarter of this one. Ole Miss led by 14 points when the third quarter ended. By the time there were six minutes left in the game, the score was tied.

The Ole Miss defense still deserves some credit for playing the best three quarters it had all season to start the game. But for a team that has struggled to finish games all season, this was the worst possible scenario for a game to end.

No weapons, no problem

Corral played Saturday without most of his favorite targets. Wide receivers Elijah Moore and Braylon Sanders, tight end Kenny Yeboah and running back Jerrion Ealy all missed Saturday for various reasons. But Corral still managed to spread the ball well, picking apart the Indiana drop-eight zone and completing passes to eight different receivers.

Corral struggled against drop-eight zone early in the season, particular­ly against Arkansas when he threw six intercepti­ons. But Saturday, Corral used his check down options and short, timing throws to navigate the zone properly and slice without mistakes through an Indiana defense that led college football in intercepti­ons this season.

Getting creative

Everyone notices when backup quarterbac­k John Rhys Plumlee plays slot receiver. Plumlee caught five passes for 73 yards, ran once for four yards and completed a 4-yard pass.

But Ole Miss used a number of other converted or less-heralded players in creative ways Saturday, and all season. Converted running back Tylan Knight forced a third-quarter fumble and tight ends Casey Kelly and Chase Rogers caught nine passes after catching two combined in the first nine games.

Fix the kicking

Kicker Luke Logan had one of his better games on the year, hitting two firsthalf field goals. But those field goals were from 26 and 24 yards out. He got another try from 37 yards to put Ole Miss up two scores in the fourth quarter but he couldn’t connect. Logan didn’t make a kick longer than 40 yards in either of the last two seasons despite being Ole Miss’ primary kicker.

Logan is a senior who can come back because of the NCAA’S eligibilit­y rules for 2020-21. But Ole Miss needs an upgrade at that position if it wants to feel comfortabl­e with leads.

 ?? CHRIS O'MEARA/AP ?? Mississipp­i tight end Casey Kelly pulls in a touchdown pass against Indiana during the first half of the Outback Bowl Saturday in Tampa, Fla. The Rebels held off a late Hoosiers comeback to win the Outback Bowl 26-20.
CHRIS O'MEARA/AP Mississipp­i tight end Casey Kelly pulls in a touchdown pass against Indiana during the first half of the Outback Bowl Saturday in Tampa, Fla. The Rebels held off a late Hoosiers comeback to win the Outback Bowl 26-20.
 ?? KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Mississipp­i Rebels quarterbac­k Matt Corral throws the ball against the Indiana Hoosiers during the first half at Raymond James Stadium.
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS Mississipp­i Rebels quarterbac­k Matt Corral throws the ball against the Indiana Hoosiers during the first half at Raymond James Stadium.

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