Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Auburn bounces back with thrashing of Mississipp­i

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AUBURN 31, MISSISSIPP­I 16

OXFORD, Miss. — If there were any questions whether the Auburn Tigers would be able to bounce back from consecutiv­e disappoint­ing losses, head Coach Gus Malzahn figured they were answered in a 31-16 victory over Mississipp­i on Saturday.

“We went through a storm last week with all the negativity that goes with it,” Malzahn said. “It either divides — and I think a lot of people root for that — or it brings you together.”

Lofty preseason hopes for Auburn (5-3, 2-3 SEC) were dashed after SEC losses to Mississipp­i State and Tennessee after a 4-1 start. But the Tigers had everything working together against the Rebels in each phase of the game.

“The third quarter stood out to me because we kind of put that game away,” Malzahn said. “We had over 200 yards rushing, which was huge. I’m real happy for our players and staff. It’s a very good win.”

JaTarvious Whitlow rushed for 170 yards on 19 carries as Auburn rolled up 484 yards total offense without a turnover, to hold a 10-6 halftime lead.

The Tigers put together scoring drives of 68, 75 and 62 yards to build a 31-9 cushion that was never seriously threatened. Anthony Schwartz recovered a fumble in the end zone after a 54-yard run by Whitlow while Malik Miller capped drives with scoring runs of 1 and 2 yards.

Whitlow added a touchdown reception of 3 yards from Jarrett Stidham and Anders Carlson converted a 28-yard field goal to build the halftime lead.

Stidham finished 13-of-22 passing for 215 yards. Seth Williams had 4 receptions for 83 yards, while Whitlow added 4 receptions for 38 yards.

Ole Miss (5-3, 1-3) moved the ball, accounting for 447 yards in total offense, but settled for 3 field goals on 3 tries in the red zone. Luke Logan converted field goals of 36, 37 and 35 yards, respective­ly.

“The story of the day is the red zone,” Mississipp­i Coach Matt Luke said. “When you get down in the red zone against a good defense, and Auburn has a really good defense, you’ve got to find a way to score touchdowns.”

Jordan Ta’amu was 27 of 46 for 324 yards with a 12-yard touchdown pass to A.J. Brown in the final period after Auburn had built an insurmount­able lead. Brown finished with 10 catches for 155 yards.

NO. 1 ALABAMA 58, TENNESSEE 21

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tua Tagovailoa threw touchdown passes to four receivers and No. 1 Alabama started fast again in a victory over Tennessee.

Alabama (8-0, 5-0 SEC) had touchdowns on its first four possession­s while outscoring Tennessee 28-0 and outgaining the Volunteers 217-6 in the opening period. Alabama has outscored opponents 165-31, and Tennessee (3-4, 1-3) has been outscored 69-16 in first quarters this season.

Tagovailoa went 19 of 29 for 306 yards before leaving midway through the third quarter with Alabama ahead 51-14. He took a big hit on a 51-yard touchdown pass to Henry Ruggs III.

Earlier, Tagovailoa connected on touchdown passes to Jerry Jeudy, Jaylen Waddle and Irv Smith Jr. He has thrown 25 touchdown passes without an intercepti­on this season.

NO. 5 LSU 19, NO. 22 MISSISSIPP­I STATE 3

BATON ROUGE — Michael Divinity Jr.’s intercepti­on set up Nick Brossette’s short touchdown run, Cole Tracy kicked four field goals, and No. 5 LSU beat No. 22 Mississipp­i State.

Still, the Tiger Stadium crowd left angry after LSU’s top linebacker, Devin White, was ejected for targeting in the fourth quarter, meaning he will not be eligible to play in the first half of the Tigers’ upcoming showdown with unbeaten and top-ranked Alabama.

White appeared to lower his head as he leveled quarterbac­k Nick Fitzgerald a moment after he released a pass that was intercepte­d by defensive back Kristian Fulton. The targeting penalty wiped out the turnover, and LSU’s celebratio­ns also drew two flags for unsportsma­nlike conduct, resulting in 45 yards in penalties on one play.

NO. 14 KENTUCKY 14, VANDERBILT 7

LEXINGTON, Ky. — Benny Snell Jr. rushed for 169 yards, including the goahead 7-yard run with 8:04 remaining that helped No. 14 Kentucky pull away for a victory over Vanderbilt.

The Wildcats (6-1, 4-1 SEC) clinched bowl eligibilit­y for a third consecutiv­e season and stayed in contention in the East division with their third consecutiv­e victory over the Commodores (3-5, 0-4). But it took linebacker Kash Daniel’s fourth-down forced fumble that Quinton Bohanna recovered at the 20 midway through the fourth quarter to jump-start Kentucky from game-long inconsiste­ncy.

Snell took control from there, rushing 10 times for 74 yards on the drive that ended with his ninth TD run.

MISSOURI 65, MEMPHIS 33

COLUMBIA, Mo. — Drew Lock threw for 350 yards and 4 touchdowns on 23for-29 passing, and Missouri defeated Memphis in its homecoming game.

After losing three consecutiv­e SEC contests, Missouri (4-3) responded with a much-needed victory. It jumped out to a 21-0 lead less than six minutes into the game, and never relinquish­ed it.

Albert Okwuegbuna­m caught 6 passes for 159 yards and 3 touchdowns and Jalen Knox had 5 catches for 104 yards and a score.

All of Memphis’ (4-4) scoring came without star running back Darrell Henderson, who exited the game after four carries in the first quarter.

 ?? AP/ROGELIO V. SOLIS ?? Auburn running back JaTarvious Whitlow (28) runs past an Ole Miss defender Saturday during the Tigers’ 31-16 victory over the Rebels in Oxford, Miss. Whitlow ran for 170 yards and 1 touchdown on 19 carries.
AP/ROGELIO V. SOLIS Auburn running back JaTarvious Whitlow (28) runs past an Ole Miss defender Saturday during the Tigers’ 31-16 victory over the Rebels in Oxford, Miss. Whitlow ran for 170 yards and 1 touchdown on 19 carries.

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