Ole Miss vs. Alabama game time, TV channel: Can Rebels hang with Crimson Tide?
Published 4:35 pm Friday, September 29, 2017
Taking on the top-ranked team in the country is a tall enough task as it is.
Ole Miss doesn’t want to give Alabama any help.
The Rebels will simultaneously be trying not to cause as much self-inflicted damage as they have in recent weeks when they head to Bryant-Denny Stadium on Saturday to take on the top-ranked Crimson Tide (8 p.m., ESPN). The Rebels are the second-most penalized team in the Southeastern Conference, accumulating more than 73 penalty yards per game.
It got ugly the last time out for Ole Miss (2-1, 0-0 Southeastern Conference), which racked up a whopping 16 penalties in its 27-16 loss at Cal. Most of those came up front with holds and false starts along an offensive line that lost center Sean Rawlings to an ankle injury in the first half and may not have him against the Crimson Tide.
Coming off an open date, the Rebels have had an extra week to prepare for the 100,000-plus fans that will pack into Bryant-Denny Stadium. Ole Miss has piped crowd noise into its practices, which interim coach Matt Luke believes has helped.
“That’s obviously been an area of focus for us,” Luke said. “The open date gave us a chance to work on some of that. We think we got those things corrected, but when you get out there in front of 100,000 people, you’ve got to go execute and do it. But it has been better.”
The high number of flags pushed Ole Miss’ average to more than 10 penalties a game, a number that would make it virtually impossible for the Rebels to get out of Bryant-Denny Stadium with their second straight win if it’s reached. Ole Miss won 43-37 in 2015 for just its second win ever in Tuscaloosa.
Fresh off a 59-0 pasting of Vanderbilt, Alabama (4-0, 1-0) leads the SEC in scoring and is second in total offense and total defense. The Crimson Tide has once again proven to be stout against the run, holding teams to a league-low 70.2 yards per game, and is tops in rushing after racking up 496 yards on the ground against Vanderbilt, the most ever under head coach Nick Saban.
On the strength of the nation’s fourth-best passing offense, Ole Miss enters Saturday’s game with the top offense in the SEC. But Alabama will be by far the biggest test in the young season for the Rebels, who often stayed behind the chains against Cal because of the all the penalties and committed three turnovers, one of which resulted in a touchdown for the Bears.
Ole Miss may find the going just as tough Saturday if the Rebels aren’t able to stay out of their own way.
Things to know about 65th meeting overall between the Rebels and Tide according to The Associated Press:
PASSING PATTERSON: This Ole Miss team does something in common with the last one the won in Tuscaloosa: a talented quarterback. Shea Patterson has already had two 400-yard passing games. “Well, first of all, the guy has great arm talent,” Saban said. “He’s very instinctive. He’s a very good athlete. He can scramble and extend plays, and they’ve made a lot of big plays on that part of it.”
RUNNING MEN: Alabama for 496 yards against Vanderbilt and held the ball for 42:55 minutes. The Tide would probably like to repeat that against the Rebels, leaving Patterson and a talented group of receivers on the sideline. Quarterback Jalen Hurts is the Alabama’s leading rusher with 360 yards, and three talented tailbacks (Damien Harris, Bo Scarbrough and Najee Harris) have combined for 486 yards.
“We have to limit their direct runs, and we have to try to make them bounce the ball to where they can’t attack us straight downhill,” Luke said. The Rebels rank 11th in the SEC in rushing defense at 4.56 yards per carry.
INJURIES: Alabama got back linebackers Jennings and Rashaan Evans last week, helping boost the Tide’s pass rush. Luke said center Sean Rawlings (ankle) is a game-time decision, but receiver A.J. Brown (knee) is likely good to go. Brown leads the SEC with 389 yards receiving.