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SEC: Ole Miss Keeping LSU Close At Half, Trail 17-15

Has the Internet ever grabbed you by the collar and screamed at you? No? Well, there's a first time for everything. Ole Miss fans and LSU fans alike are talking it up right now at SB Nation's Rebels blog, Red Cup Rebellion, and our Tigers blog, And The Valley Shook.

Oxford, MS (Sports Network) - Dexter McCluster ran all over a stout LSU defense and also threw a go-ahead touchdown pass to Shay Hodge early in the fourth quarter, as Ole Miss thwarted a late rally to upend the 10th-ranked Tigers, 25-23, in a wild finish at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium.

The Rebels went ahead, 25-17, on Joshua Shene's fourth field goal of the game with 3:42 remaining. Jordan Jefferson quickly led the Tigers down the field and hit an open Rueben Randle with a 25-yard scoring strike with 1:17 left.

Following a defensive pass interference penalty on the first two-point try, a jump ball to Terrance Toliver fell incomplete. LSU, however, recovered the ensuing onside kick to stay alive.

Brandon LaFell caught a 26-yard screen pass to move the ball to the Ole Miss 32-yard line, but a sack and a seven-yard loss on another screen on second and third down, respectively, moved the ball back to the 48 and wasted LSU's final two timeouts, the last coming with nine seconds showing.

A long delay in getting the final timeout called proved costly, as Toliver caught a 43-yard bomb at the Ole Miss five. Toliver came down with the ball with one second on the clock, but an unorganized Tigers offense failed to get a final snap off.

McCluster finished with 148 yards on 24 carries, Jevan Snead was an efficient 14-of-21 for 206 yards, and Hodge had seven catches for 117 yards for the Rebels (8-3, 4-3 SEC), who outgained the Tigers, 426-290, for their third straight win.

Jefferson, who missed last week's win over Louisiana Tech due to a right ankle sprain, connected on 19-of-37 tosses for 250 yards with two touchdowns and an interception for LSU (8-3, 4-3), which lost for the second time in three weeks.

Ole Miss won the field-position battle in a scoreless third frame and started its go-ahead drive from the LSU 44 early in the fourth. After Hodge caught an 11-yard pass and McCluster ran for six more, the latter found the former behind the secondary for a 27-yard score via a halfback toss for a 22-17 lead.

The Tigers quickly went three-and-out, and the Rebels held the ball for nearly 8 1/2 minutes before settling for a 23-yard Shene field goal that led to the final dramatics.

Shene booted a 45-yard field goal 2:13 into the game and set up for another 45-yard try midway through the opening frame. However, the kick was blocked, and Patrick Peterson returned the loose ball 53 yards for a score.

A Shene 25-yard field goal came roughly four minutes later, and Jefferson ended an exciting opening frame by hitting Randle for a 17-yard TD for a 14-6 LSU lead.

The teams traded field goals in the second frame, as Shene was true from 33 yards out and Josh Jasper got enough behind a 50-yard boot with 6:23 left before the half.

Consecutive completions to Hodge of 13 and 26 yards moved Ole Miss inside the Tigers' 10-yard line, and Jesse Grandy ran around the right end on a sweep for a three-yard score to cut Ole Miss' deficit to 17-15 at halftime after an unsuccessful two-point conversion.

It was a punt-filled third quarter, with only the Rebels penetrating enemy territory. They did so late in the frame, but ended up punting from the LSU 42.

LSU finishes up its regular season schedule against Arkansas next week, while the Rebels still have rival Mississippi State on the docket...Snead joined Eli Manning as the only quarterbacks in Ole Miss history to throw for 2,000 yards in consecutive seasons...Keiland Williams led LSU running game with 40 yards on 11 carries before leaving with an ankle injury in the second half...Toliver finished with 107 yards on five catches, while LaFell added five grabs for 75 yards...The Tigers still have a 55-38-4 advantage in the all-time series.

- Via Sports Network.

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Well . . .

LSU could have been 10-2 easily. Of course, they could have been about 6-6 as well the wya they have played.

It seems you never know what LSU team will show up. Sure, they’re great on paper and sometimes they look fierce, but they’re one dimensional to a fault.

Alabama and Florida are so clearly superior to everyone else in that conference.

I don’t see it with Texas this year either, their conference is weak and inconsistent, they haven’t been stretched much.

They’ll back into the NC game, I wonder how they will fare against the SEC champ.

by Aardvark on Nov 21, 2009 8:36 PM EST reply actions  

I went to the Game

The story line is: Ole Miss Hits LSU In The Mouth" Check the stats. Ole Miss had 450 in total yardage, gave up a TD on a blocked punt and pushed the ball into the end zone once in 6 trips into the red zone. An onside kick, Hail mary and LSU “lost the game”?…. not from where I was sitting The better team won the game.

by Jeff8282 on Nov 22, 2009 12:28 PM EST reply actions  

450 yds. total yards..

.. that netted 4 FGs and two TD’s, one on a trick play. How many times has a team won every stat but the one on the scoreboard? Lots. The better team ALWAYS wins, but not because they put up more yards. LSU’s players played their hearts out and if they’d won, they would have deserved it, just like every team that wins deserves it. That’s because NO team wins against a tough opponent by not playing hard.

The better team DID win, and the Rebs deserve it, too. They played hard, too. So, forget your biased crap about who deserved what. Two great teams left it all out on the field. One coach screwed up and the other didn’t. THAT is the difference in this game and THAT is the reason the Rebs won it. NOT because they were the better team.

The only thing worse than losing is not winning.

by Tigernut on Nov 23, 2009 1:25 AM EST up reply actions  

The point being, WINNING means 'better', not yards.

The only thing worse than losing is not winning.

by Tigernut on Nov 23, 2009 1:27 AM EST up reply actions  

LSU deserved to lose that way.

It’s poetic justice I say. They win far too many games on wacky fourth quarters. It’s about damn time they lose because of one.

by The Ghost of Jay Cutler on Nov 22, 2009 3:05 PM EST reply actions  

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