D leads No. 5 Mississippi to 52-6 win over SE La.

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OXFORD, Miss. (AP)—Houston Nutt’s reputation as an offensive coach may need some reworking.

Sure, fifth-ranked Mississippi keeps putting up big numbers when it starts with the ball. But those stats pale compared to what the Rebels are doing on defense, as they showed again Saturday night.

True freshman linebacker D.T. Shackelford scored on a 58-yard interception return and recovered two fumbles as Ole Miss forced five turnovers in a 52-6 win over Southeastern Louisiana.

An impressive performance going into the Rebels’ Southeastern Conference opener Thursday night against coach Steve Spurrier and South Carolina.

“Defensively you have to prove it every day,” free safety Kendrick Lewis said. “What we did tonight doesn’t mean anything at South Carolina.”

Turnovers led to 21 points for the Rebels (2-0). They’ve run back interceptions for TDs in the third straight games and have allowed just 11.2 points per game in their last five.

Like last week against Memphis, the defense bailed out a sloppy offense that again got off to a herky-jerky start. Jevan Snead, however, recovered to throw three touchdown passes.

An early interception by Cassius Vaughn ended one scoring opportunity for the Lions (2-1) and Shackelford came up with two fumble recoveries as well.

The group, playing without all-America candidate Greg Hardy because of a sprained ankle, propelled the Rebels to their eighth straight win, the longest streak since Ole Miss won 10 in a row in 1971-72. They held the Lions to 302 yards and didn’t allow a third-down conversion in 14 attempts.

“Except for the opening series of the second half, I feel really good about our defense,” defensive coordinator Tyrone Nix said. “Our effort was better. We’re still not as consistent as we need to be, but we’re getting there.”

Shackelford is one of a handful of young players blending in with a veteran group, but stood out Saturday night. He always seemed to be around the ball.

“He’s tough, he’s physical, he absorbs the playbook, he’s a winner,” Nutt said. “He brings energy to our team and he looked like a running back tonight.”

Shackelford’s most memorable play, his touchdown with 4:50 left that closed the scoring, was maybe the easiest of the night.

“The ball fluttered right to me,” he said. “I couldn’t miss it. The only thing that surprised me is I got a little winded on the way, but I was still able to stick it in there.”

The Rebels’ offense eventually got in gear. Brandon Bolden rushed for 105 yards in the first half alone and the unit had 500 total yards and a 24-0 lead at halftime against the FCS opponent.

Snead threw two of his three touchdowns in the first half, extending his school record to eight straight games with multiple scoring passes. But he was 11 of 22 through the first two quarters, missed badly on a handful of passes and had an interception wiped out by a questionable pass interference call.

He got little help from his receivers, who dropped several passes. Markeith Summers had a touchdown pass glance off his hands in the end zone, forcing the Rebels to settle for a field goal. And Lionel Breaux dropped a wide-open pass that would have gone for significant yardage.

About a third of Mississippi’s roster was sick with swine flu symptoms during its off week, explaining some of the problems.

The Rebels also struggled on special teams with Marshay Green fumbling two punt returns and Justin Sparks hitting back-to-back punts of 11 and 34 yards.

Still, Ole Miss simply had too much talent and speed for the Lions. The Rebels scored more than 40 points for the fourth straight game, a school record.

“Our timing was off, but we’re playing faster,” Nutt said. “We’re playing harder.”

Bolden was a beast in the first half. He broke tackles at the line of scrimmage and downfield and set up Ole Miss’ first touchdown with an athletic run that included a whiplash-inducing stiff-arm and a burst of speed at the corner. Overall, the Rebels rushed for 258 yards and Enrique Davis and Cordera Eason both scored touchdowns.

“We didn’t tackle very well,” Southeastern Louisiana coach Mike Lucas said. “A lot of that missed tackling was because those running backs ran hard and are big and physical.”

Updated Sep 20, 12:29 am EDT
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Head to Head - Week 3

Team Total Yds Pass Yds Rush Yds First Downs 3rdD% Pen./Yds Turnovers Time of Poss.
Southeastern Louisiana 302 216 86 12 0.0% 8/69 5 30:49
Mississippi 500 242 258 25 45.5% 4/50 2 29:11

6 Comments

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  1. Matt
    6. Posted by Matt Wed Sep 23 1:15pm EDT

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    The Rebels have played there heart out and it is finally starting to show! Come on TOP 5!!! I'm loving it! HOTTY TODDY!!!
  2. rebelfreak
    5. Posted by rebelfreak Tue Sep 22 12:08pm EDT

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    #4--Devon
    First of all no one at Ole Miss has been begging for high rankings, Lord knows they play a hell of alot better as the underdog. I don't see anything wrong with taking a tremendous amount of pride in what this team has achieved in just one season from where it was at in 2007. If memory serves me correct the Tide didn't just run off and leave the Rebels last year in the Tide's own back yard, as a matter of fact they by far outplayed Bama the second half, I just hope for ya'lls season sake we don't cripple Mount Cody AGAIN. I have always had heaps of respect for Bama and the athletes they put on the field but don't think for a second that they can look past the Rebels this year. I just hope that these high rankings don't keep our boys from being grounded and play ball like they did the second half of last season.
  3. devon
    4. Posted by devon Mon Sep 21 1:26pm EDT

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    I cannot wait for Alabama to play ole miss. Why do ole miss fans think that they have so much to be proud about? When was the last time you went to an SEC championship? When the Beatles were still touring? It's ok though, I want every sing rebel fan to soak up their overrated spotlight at number 4. Yes, you will probably win the next 2 games and possibly go up a spot in ranking. That's why I will love it so much when Alabama crushes your dreams of having a national championship showing. The higher up you are, the harder it hurts when you fall. One quick think to note is your savior Houston Nutt...while I agree he is a good coach, he's a coach that will bring your team to a mediocre level. (granted, thats better than what ole miss is known for and should be happy about it). But lets face it, he couldnt even bring arkansas to a winning SEC championship when they had all star Darren Mcfadden and Julious Jones.
    Enjoy your overrated spot and keep your dreams high ole miss. Im going to enjoy watching the "mighty" fall.
  4. Gil
    3. Posted by Gil Sun Sep 20 4:01pm EDT

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    it will be texas against ol miss. in a bowl game just watch.
  5. earl
    2. Posted by earl Sat Sep 19 5:44pm EDT

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    If you would read the article before you commented you might show a bit more intelligence. 28 of the players had the swine flu(13 starters) during this game as well and it showed. If you had been at the game you would have seen safety johnny brown throwing up right onto the field twice. We'll see who's over-rated when Bama comes to town. The only thing the Tide will be rolling on is a roll of toilet paper right back to dookieloosa.
  6. <i>tremone21</i>
    1. Posted by tremone21 Sat Sep 19 11:36am EDT

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    Overrated! overrated! ole miss looked like trash against memphis. they ran up the score against in the 4th quarter. also, memphis qb suck as well. so, that did help their cause. its not hard to blow out an opponent that has a qb that can't throw the ball.
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No upset!

99%
of College Pick’em users chose Mississippi to win the game

Did the Yahoo! Sports Experts make the right picks?

Top Performers

 Top Performers
 SE Louisiana
B. Babin B. Babin, QB
17-26, 188 yds, 1 INT
 Mississippi
J. Snead J. Snead, QB
16-28, 209 yds
3 TDs

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NCAAF - Week 3