Season-Defining South Carolina Loss Turned Into a Season-Defining Win at Ole Miss
One week can make or break a college football season. Rather than letting one loss seal the season’s fate, Kentucky turned a demoralizing defeat into a win that defines the Mark Stoops era in Lexington.
Kentucky unraveled in the SEC opener against South Carolina, allowing mistakes to continuously compound until the Gamecocks left with a 31-6 victory at Kroger Field. Stoops was disappointed in his team’s lack of resolve.
Stoops’ most successful teams are able to grit and grind their way to a win, regardless of the circumstances. They find a way to find a way. Three weeks later, the team that lacked resolve never doubted they were going to leave Oxford with a win.
“The word that really comes to mind for me is just resiliency. Those dudes, the guys we got on our team, you’re never really out of the fight with these guys,” said quarterback Brock Vandagriff.
Kentucky Never Quit Fighting
There were multiple instances where the game looked over. On 4th and 8 near midfield, Kentucky brought the house and Jaxson Dart made ’em pay by delivering a dagger to Tre Harris for a 48-yard touchdown. Kentucky did not let that take the wind from their sails.
Harris was a man possessed. The nation’s most productive wide receiver tallied 176 yards, nearly half of Ole Miss’ total yards, against this Kentucky defense. On the second possession of the third quarter, he picked up 42 yards after JQ Hardaway fell to the turf. Two plays later, Hardaway stripped the ball from Harris’ hands to force a turnover, giving the Rebels only three points in consecutive red zone possessions.
“It’s the SEC, so we’re competing against some really talented guys. You’re going to lose some reps,” Hardaway said after the game. “But in my eyes, you got to win more than you lose. I lost that one and told myself I got to win one now. I got an opportunity on the next play and took advantage of it.”
Another Almost Fateful Fourth Down
Kentucky bounced back from a big fourth down let-down by making a fourth down play of their own. Barion Brown had not made a catch of more than 20 yards all season. He killed the previous drive with a dead-ball, unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. And yet in the biggest moment of the game, they did not turn away from their explosive playmaker who delivered a 63-yard gain.
“A year ago, maybe he wouldn’t have bounced back like he did…,” said Stoops,” “… he wanted to come back and make a play for his team, he did. I’m just proud of him for responding.”
“You talk about grit, and I think that’s the biggest thing,” said offensive coordinator Bush Hamdan. “We knew we’ve been battle-tested, right? These first four or five weeks haven’t felt exactly how you want it to feel. But you play the No. 1 team in the country, you play the No. 5 team the country, and when it’s all said and done that South Carolina defense is as talented as we’ve seen.
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“I think all those factors in the crazy world of college football, stay the course. Finish the game exactly how we intended and I think that was impressive for everybody.”
Kentucky Never Flinched
Kentucky had a chance to end the game early. Harris’ 11-yard reception on third down was overturned on replay. Facing a 4th and 11, Ole Miss got a chunk play of their own when Caden Preiskorn slipped behind the defense for a 42-yard gain.
The Rebels were only a few plays away from a comfortable game-tying field goal. The Kentucky defense was undeterred. Ole Miss only gained three more yards and was forced to kick a 48-yard field goal that went wide left.
“They never flinched… they didn’t flinch. They went back up there. They freaking played ball right there, right there in the field goal range,” said defensive coordinator Brad White.
Execution is Everything
The team that unraveled against South Carolina came together and delivered one counterpunch after another at No. 6 Ole Miss. Mark Stoops’ faith in his team never wavered. They put in the work and executed when it mattered most.
“It was all execution,” Stoops said of the South Carolina game. “Our players play hard. Everybody wants to win on Saturday, you have to get better (in practice). That’s not just coach-speak. That was just messy play. It was just messy and that was a direct reflection on me, and that hurt bad. I don’t want to be looked at that way. I don’t want our teams to look like that. We may win and we may lose, but we’re going to play the game the right way.”
They played the right way at Ole Miss by showing resolve time after time and it resulted in the program’s biggest win on an SEC campus in school history.
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