ENROUTE FROM STARKVILLE TO OXFORD —
About this time two years ago eventual national champion Auburn
escaped Starkville with a narrow victory over Mississippi State.
The difference, I wrote then: Cam
Newton. Had State successfully recruited Newton, State would have won
that game going away. The difference was so obvious and it was the
man behind the center.
Today, at Scott Field, the tables
turned. State's Tyler Russell, poised, precise and so, so much better
than his Auburn counterpart, was, in a word, the difference.
Russell completed 20 of 29 throws for
222 yards and three touchdowns. He was not intercepted. He stood tall
in the pocket, took some monstrous hits and delivered time after time
after time. He looked like the Meridian High quarterback who knocked
off South Panola four years ago in the state championship game.
The final score — 28-10 — gives
little indication of the whipping State put on Auburn this day before
a bell-ringing crowd of more than 56,000. Auburn crossed the goalline
only once and that on a 100-yard return of the second half kickoff.
Otherwise, the Bulldogs limited Auburn to an anemic running game that
looked like a juggernaut compared to when the Tigers tried to pass.
Early on, State dared the Tigers to
pass, often crowding the box with eight defenders. Auburn ran
nonetheless showing absolutely no confidence in Kiehl Frazier's
throwing. Later, we saw why. Frazier completed more passes to State —
than Auburn — in the first half. At half, Auburn had -2 yards
passing and Frazier had a negative-45 passer's rating. For the game
Frazier completed 13 of 22 for 125 yards. He threw three
interceptions.
Give State's defense credit for much of
that. State's All-Everything corner Johnathan Banks got two of those
interceptions. State's aggressive pass rush was a factor, as well.
Then again, Frazier isn't going to
remind anyone of Newton — or Tyler Russell for that matter. Get
this: At halftime, Banks had caught more of Frazier's passes than
Frazier's teammates had.
Russell's passing was complemented by a
running game that boasted four backs at better than five yards a
carry.
But that's the deal. If Auburn played
pass, State ran. If Auburn stacked the box, Russell made them pay.
Auburn, one-dimensional if that, simply could not do the same.
And therein was the difference.
There's little overstating how much the
victory meant to State. Finally, the Bulldogs beat a Western Division
team besides Ole Miss. Finally, they beat Auburn. Finally, they
started the SEC season 1-0.
This was the game I had circled on
State's schedule as make-or-break. The Bulldogs made.
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