Final Sep 11
NCST 34 -7.0 o52.0
WAKE 24 7.0 u52.0
Final Sep 12
INST 0 47.5 o61.5
IU 73 -47.5 u61.5
Final Sep 12
COLG 24 36.5 o64.0
SYR 66 -36.5 u64.0
Final Sep 12
COLO 20 4.0 o45.0
HOU 36 -4.0 u45.0
Final Sep 12
KSU 17 -1.5 o56.0
ARIZ 23 1.5 u56.0
Final Sep 12
UNM 35 16.0 o52.0
UCLA 10 -16.0 u52.0
Final Sep 13
MEM 28 -4.0 o51.0
TROY 7 4.0 u51.0
Final Sep 13
TOWS 17 28.5 o52.5
MD 44 -28.5 u52.5
Final Sep 13
ORE 34
NW 14
Final Sep 13
SAM 7 52.0 o64.5
BAY 42 -52.0 u64.5
Final Sep 13
CWM 16 31.0 o53.5
UVA 55 -31.0 u53.5
Final Sep 13
HCU 7 48.5 o59.0
NEB 59 -48.5 u59.0
Final Sep 13
OKLA 42 -24.0 o51.0
TEM 3 24.0 u51.0
Final Sep 13
CMU 3
MICH 63
Final Sep 13
BUFF 31 -24.0 o48.5
KENT 28 24.0 u48.5
Final Sep 13
WIS 14 17.5 o45.0
ALA 38 -17.5 u45.0
Final Sep 13
CLEM 21 -3.0 o50.0
GT 24 3.0 u50.0
Final Sep 13
USA 15 25.5 o56.5
AUB 31 -25.5 u56.5
Final Sep 13
ULL 10 27.5 o47.0
MIZZ 52 -27.5 u47.0
Final Sep 13
UNH 29 3.0 o46.5
BALL 34 -3.0 u46.5
Final 4OT Sep 13
CONN 41 -8.5 o53.0
DEL 44 8.5 u53.0
Final 4OT Sep 13
UGA 44 -3.0 o50.5
TENN 41 3.0 u50.5
Final Sep 13
WSU 10 7.0 o57.5
UNT 59 -7.0 u57.5
Final Sep 13
NORF 10
RUTG 60
Final 4OT Sep 13
PITT 24
WVU 31
Final Sep 13
RICH 6 24.0 o47.5
UNC 41 -24.0 u47.5
Final Sep 13
VILL 6
PSU 52
Final Sep 13
NWST 0 48.5 o55.5
CIN 70 -48.5 u55.5
Final Sep 13
USC 33 -20.5 o59.5
PUR 17 20.5 u59.5
Final Sep 13
MORG 0 34.0 o54.5
TOL 60 -34.0 u54.5
Final Sep 13
SMU 28 -28.5 o61.0
MOSU 10 28.5 u61.0
Final Sep 13
YSU 24 24.0 o55.0
MSU 41 -24.0 u55.0
Final Sep 13
IW 20
UTSA 48
Final Sep 13
ORST 14 24.0 o61.5
TTU 45 -24.0 u61.5
Final Sep 13
ISU 24 -21.0 o56.0
ARST 16 21.0 u56.0
Final Sep 13
UTEP 10 39.5 o52.0
TEX 27 -39.5 u52.0
Final Sep 13
USF 12 17.5 o57.0
MIA 49 -17.5 u57.0
Final Sep 13
MTU 14 9.0 o50.0
NEV 13 -9.0 u50.0
Final Sep 13
LIB 13 -6.0 o51.5
BGSU 23 6.0 u51.5
Final Sep 13
FAU 28 1.5 o56.0
FIU 38 -1.5 u56.0
Final Sep 13
MONM 35 2.5 o65.5
CHAR 42 -2.5 u65.5
Final Sep 13
MERR 13 17.0 o44.0
KENN 27 -17.0 u44.0
Final Sep 13
EKY 7 14.5 o49.5
MRSH 38 -14.5 u49.5
Final Sep 13
ALCN 0 43.0 o56.5
MSST 63 -43.0 u56.5
Final Sep 13
PV 17 28.0 o48.0
RICE 38 -28.0 u48.0
Final Sep 13
JVST 34 3.5 o58.5
GASO 41 -3.5 u58.5
Final Sep 13
MURR 21 32.0 o63.5
GSU 37 -32.0 u63.5
Final Sep 13
APP 22 -3.0 o56.0
USM 38 3.0 u56.0
Final Sep 13
ODU 45 5.5 o51.0
VT 26 -5.5 u51.0
Final Sep 13
OHIO 9 28.0 o49.5
OSU 37 -28.0 u49.5
Final Sep 13
WMU 0 27.5 o51.0
ILL 38 -27.5 u51.0
Final Sep 13
ARK 35 4.0 o60.5
MISS 41 -4.0 u60.5
Final Sep 13
FLA 10 4.5 o47.5
LSU 20 -4.5 u47.5
Final Sep 13
EMU 23 26.5 o49.0
UK 48 -26.5 u49.0
Final Sep 13
TAM 41 6.5 o50.5
ND 40 -6.5 u50.5
Final Sep 13
ECU 38 -7.5 o57.5
CCU 0 7.5 u57.5
Final Sep 13
MASS 7 35.0 o44.0
IOWA 47 -35.0 u44.0
Final Sep 13
NMSU 14 10.0 o43.0
LT 49 -10.0 u43.0
Final Sep 13
VAN 31 3.0 o49.0
SOCAR 7 -3.0 u49.0
Final Sep 13
UTAH 31 -24.0 o47.5
WYO 6 24.0 u47.5
Final Sep 13
DUKE 27 1.0 o52.5
TULN 34 -1.0 u52.5
Final Sep 13
ACU 21 42.0 o60.5
TCU 42 -42.0 u60.5
Final Sep 13
NAVY 42 -14.0 o53.0
TLSA 23 14.0 u53.0
Final Sep 13
AKR 28 12.0 o58.5
UAB 31 -12.0 u58.5
Final Sep 13
AFA 30 -4.0 o51.5
USU 49 4.0 u51.5
Final Sep 13
SOU 7 37.5 o50.0
FRES 56 -37.5 u50.0
Final Sep 13
TXST 15 18.5 o61.5
ASU 34 -18.5 u61.5
Final Sep 13
MINN 14 -3.0 o40.5
CAL 27 3.0 u40.5
Final Sep 13
BC 20 -14.0 o45.0
STAN 30 14.0 u45.0
Final Sep 14
PRST 3 35.5 o54.0
HAW 23 -35.5 u54.0
Georgia Southern 3rd Sun Belt8-5
Mississippi 8th SEC10-3
SEC Network

Georgia Southern @ Mississippi preview

Vaught-Hemingway Stadium

Last Meeting ( Nov 5, 2016 ) Georgia Southern 27, Mississippi 37

Ole Miss Heisman Trophy candidate Jaxson Dart and his 11 total touchdowns created many of the headlines during a 3-0 start, but the team's defensive showing has produced the Southeastern Conference school's best stat.

Off to an outstanding start in a less-than-challenging nonconference schedule, the No. 5-ranked Rebels will host the Georgia Southern Eagles in Oxford, Miss., on Saturday night in their final game before eight straight SEC matchups.

And when the opposition has had the ball against Ole Miss in 2024, it has been lights out play by the Rebels' defense.

In three victories and 180 minutes of football, defensive coordinator Pete Golding's unit has not allowed one opponent to cross the goal line as the squad has dominated the other side on the scoreboard by a 168-9 margin.

No TDs surrendered. No garbage score late in one of the three blowouts, no freak play like a tipped ball or player slipping, no broken coverage or backups wearing unfamiliar numbers showing why they are where they are down the depth chart.

It's the first time since 1961 that an Ole Miss squad has done that.

The Landshark defense is tied with Ohio State in scoring defense (3.0 points per game), leads in rushing defense (33.3 yards) and is tied for third in tackles for loss (10.0).

Linebacker TJ Dottery said the success stems from stopping the run.

"Our D line. Our backers and even our safeties have been coming down, hitting and being physical," said Dottery, a sophomore who played for Clemson in 2022. "We say it a lot, ‘On our road games, we pack our defense and our run game.' It's really hard to win without running the ball."

Coach Lane Kiffin said the current defensive front is a major upgrade.

"(This group) is completely different than any time we've been here. Since the Georgia game, that was a priority," the coach said, citing the Bulldogs' 52-17 home rout of the then-8-1 Rebels last Nov. 11.

Transfer linebacker Chris Paul Jr., who played for Arkansas last year, tops the team with 19 tackles and shares the lead for tackles for loss (4) with defensive tackle JJ Pegues. Safety Trey Washington has a unit-best three pass breakups.

After this Saturday, the Rebels' attention will turn to the conference opener at home against Kentucky.

First, the Sun Belt Conference's Eagles (2-1) have next in the Grove.

After losing a home-opening 56-45 shootout with Boise State, coach Clay Helton's group has rallied with wins over Nevada (20-17) and South Carolina State (42-14).

Against the latter, running back OJ Arnold ran for a score and caught a TD pass while fellow backfield mate Jalen White rushed for a pair.

A fifth-year senior from Daleville, Ala., White is a reliable workhorse for Helton, who is in his third season as head coach in Statesboro, Ga.

The 6-foot-1, 220-pound running back has carried the ball 31 times for a team-high 97 yards and five touchdowns.

Helton considers White his most reliable option in short-yardage situations.

"Just a warrior, and he's not 100 percent," the former Southern Cal coach said. "We need him, and you see what he brings to the table - not only in tough running but in goal-line runs where you're always one short.

"I'll bet my whole life on 25 (White) when it's one-on-one."

--Field Level Media

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