Ole Miss QB shreds Louisiana-Lafayette for 4 TDs

Mississippi quarterback Bo Wallace (14) readies to pass against a Louisiana-Lafayette rush during the first quarter at an NCAA college football game at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss., Saturday, Sept. 13, 2014. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
Mississippi quarterback Bo Wallace (14) readies to pass against a Louisiana-Lafayette rush during the first quarter at an NCAA college football game at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss., Saturday, Sept. 13, 2014. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

OXFORD, Miss. -- Bo Wallace's first throw was perfect, a 25-yard strike that Vince Sanders caught in stride for a big gain.

Mississippi's senior quarterback was just getting started, completing pass after pass for big chunks of yards and two touchdowns. By early in the second quarter Saturday, he was well aware he was throwing football's version of a perfect game.

"I knew it," Wallace said. "I didn't want to throw an incompletion."

He finally did. His 15th attempt of the game down the middle of the field was just out of the reach of Derrick Jones, but the 14th-ranked Rebels were already well on their way to a 56-15 victory over Louisiana-Lafayette.

Wallace completed 23 of 28 passes for 316 yards and 4 touchdowns, including two to Sanders, as the Rebels rolled up 554 total yards and an easy victory.

"I'm really happy we went out and took control of the game and kept control of it," Ole Miss Coach Hugh Freeze said.

Ole Miss (3-0) has never lost to Louisiana-Lafayette (1-2), and this one wasn't in doubt for long. I'Tavius Mathers rushed for a 56-yard touchdown on the first drive and the Rebels jumped out to a 28-0 lead by midway through the second quarter.

Senquez Golson intercepted two passes, including one that was returned 59 yards for a touchdown.

Louisiana-Lafayette fell behind 49-6 by midway through the third quarter before scoring its only touchdown. Terrance Broadway completed 15 of 30 passes for 129 yards and 3 interceptions.

It was another effective performance for Wallace, who ranks second in Ole Miss history with 49 career passing touchdowns. He was flawless for much of the first half, completing 20 of 24 passes for 290 yards and 3 touchdowns as Ole Miss built a four-touchdown lead.

"I'm playing how I expect to play," Wallace said. "Now I just have to continue to execute each week."

The only real blemish came just before halftime when Wallace threw an interception. The Ragin' Cajuns were able to convert the turnover into a short field goal and pull within 28-6 by halftime.

Ole Miss quickly re-established momentum early in the third quarter when Mike Hilton intercepted a pass after it was tipped by Cody Prewitt. The Rebels drove downfield and made it 35-6 on Cody Core's acrobatic 14-yard touchdown catch.

Ole Miss had a solid defensive day with three interceptions. The Rebels have given up only two touchdowns over three games this season.

The only issue was another inconsistent performance for the running game.

Mathers' 56-yard run on the game's opening drive was a bright spot. So was Jaylen Walton's 71-yard touchdown when the game was already in hand during the second half. But in between the Rebels relied on Wallace because the running plays went nowhere.

They will have plenty of time to work on the issues, with a bye weekend before a home game against Memphis on Sept. 27. If everything goes as planned, Ole Miss will then host Alabama on Oct. 4 in an SEC Western Division showdown.

"There are some things we did not do particularly well today that we have to get cleaned up," Freeze said. "Even though you may be the better football team on a given day, you still have to execute and do the things that will make you one of the top tier teams in the country."

Louisiana-Lafayette was picked to win the Sun Belt Conference this year in a preseason poll by the league's coaches, but it's been a rough two weeks.

The Ragin' Cajuns lost 48-20 last week to Louisiana Tech on their home field and weren't competitive against the Rebels. They didn't score a touchdown until late in the third quarter when Alonzo Harris rushed for an 8-yard score.

Elijah McGuire led Louisiana-Lafayette with 66 rushing yards. Trae Johnson had a game-high 11 tackles.

That wasn't nearly enough to stop the Rebels.

"Our football team right now is not clicking on all cylinders, but that's part of football and a part of life," Louisiana-Lafayette Coach Mark Hudspeth said. "Our coaches have to figure that out."

MISSISSIPPI STATE 35,

SOUTH ALABAMA 3

MOBILE, Ala. -- Dak Prescott rushed, threw and caught a touchdown pass for the second time in his career as Mississippi State (3-0)beat South Alabama (1-1) in front of a sellout crowd of 38,129 at Ladd-Peebles Stadium.

Prescott completed 13 of 21 passes for 201 yards and 1 touchdown while carrying 14 times for 139 yards and another score. The junior also caught a 24-yard touchdown pass from Jameon Lewis in the second quarter.

Lewis caught six passes for 76 yards.

MSU eclipsed the 500-yard plateau for a school-record fourth consecutive time with 514 yards. The Bulldogs gained 288 yards on the ground, with Josh Robinson running for 77 yards and 2 touchdowns on 12 carries.

Mississippi State scored in the opening quarter when Prescott connected with Malcolm Johnson on a 15-yard touchdown strike.

The Bulldogs began to open things up in the second quarter when Josh Robinson scored on runs of 2 and 15 yards, giving them a 28-3 lead by halftime.

Prescott added a 40-yard touchdown run in the third quarter.

South Alabama finished with 345 yards. The Jaguars were limited to 57 yards rushing and committed four turnovers.

South Alabama scored its only points on a 26-yard field goal by Aleem Sunanon early in the second quarter. Brandon Bridge was 21 of 39 and threw for 203 yards and 1 interception. He was sacked six times.

Jereme Jones caught seven passes for 76 yards to lead the Jaguars' receivers.

VANDERBILT 34,

UMASS 31

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Ralph Webb scored on a 4-yard run with 1:08 remaining to give Vanderbilt (1-2) a come-from-behind victory over Massachusetts (0-3).

The winning score was set up on a 36-yard completion from Patton Robinette to C.J. Duncan.

Robinette, a sophomore, entered the game in the second quarter after true freshman Wade Freebeck started the game. Freebeck was the third different starting quarterback for Vanderbilt in its three games.

UMass drove to the Vanderbilt 4 only to have Blake Lucas miss a 22-yard field-goal attempt to the left with 2 seconds remaining.

Robinette scored on a 1-yard run at 10:02 of the second quarter to give Vanderbilt its first offensive touchdown of the season.

Vanderbilt trailed by as many as 11 in the second half and scored 14 unanswered points in the final quarter to earn the victory.

Freebeck played the entire first quarter and was 1 for 2 for 3 yards with 1 interception. He is the fourth quarterback to play for Vanderbilt this season.

Robinette started the first game of the season, a 37-7 loss home loss to Temple, and Stephen Rivers, a transfer from LSU and younger brother of San Diego Chargers quarterback Phillip Rivers, started the second game. Vanderbilt lost that game 41-3 to Ole Miss.

UMass, which raced out to a 14-0 lead, scored on five of its first seven drives, which included a kneel-down by quarterback Blake Frohnapfel to end the first half.

Sports on 09/14/2014

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