Alabama bashes Bulldogs
Published 11:14 pm Saturday, November 14, 2015
STARKVILLE (AP) — Mississippi State’s Dak Prescott has played a huge role in beating every team in the Southeastern Conference Western Division during his fantastic career.
Except Alabama. And after a nightmare final game against the Tide, he’ll stay winless against them.
No. 3 Alabama used a dominant defense — including a season-high nine sacks — to beat No. 20 Mississippi State 31-6 on Saturday. Prescott completed 22 of 43 passes for 300 yards but never found the end zone and spent a good chunk of the game picking himself up off the turf.
“I don’t know that they did anything special,” Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen. “They just beat some guys up there and we didn’t do a great job protecting the quarterback.”
Alabama (9-1, 6-1, No. 2 CFP) survived its last real test before the Iron Bowl in two weeks, overcoming a slow start by scoring three long touchdowns in the second quarter to beat the Bulldogs (7-3, 3-3, No. 17 CFP) for an eighth straight season.
Alabama’s Derrick Henry ran for 204 yards and two touchdowns. The Tide won easily despite being outgained 393 yards to 379.
“It was kind of a weird game,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said. “Every touchdown was a big play.”
Alabama struggled on offense during the first quarter and had just 40 total yards early in the second. But Cyrus Jones’ 69-yard touchdown on a punt return — when he reversed field and broke a few Mississippi State arm tackles — broke a scoreless tie and jolted the Tide awake for two more big plays before halftime.
The first was when Jake Coker found Calvin Ridley on a short pass. The 6-foot-1, 188-pound freshman used a nifty move at midfield to shake a Mississippi State defender and then sprinted for a 60-yard touchdown, pushing the Tide ahead 14-0.
There was nothing fancy about the second one. Henry found a seam in the middle of the field and once his 242-pound body hit full speed, nobody was going to catch him before a 74-yard dash to the end zone.
Henry added a 65-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter.
Alabama’s nine sacks were the most for the program since 1998 against Vanderbilt. Coker completed 15 of 25 passes for 144 yards, one touchdown and one interception.
Mullen said his team played “fantastic” defense for most of the night, but was undone by Alabama’s ability to make big plays.
“You’re looking at 69-, 60-, 74- and 65-yard touchdowns,” Mullen said. “You’re not going to win doing that.”
Mississippi State did a lot of things well on offense during the first half — except for get into the end zone. The Bulldogs outgained the Tide 254-180 before halftime but squandered a few scoring opportunities.
“We did what we had to do as far as getting the ball in the red zone,” Mississippi State receiver Fred Ross said. “Once we got there it just kind of stalled. Playing against a great team like Alabama, that can’t happen.”
A fourth-and-goal at the 1 was stuffed when Prescott ran into Alabama’s defensive line and a 50-yard field goal try fell several yards short. Near the end of the first half, the Bulldogs’ offense was on the move again but Alabama picked up its fifth and sixth sacks to push Mississippi State out of scoring range.
Alabama’s Jonathan Allen had a team-high three sacks while A’Shawn Robinson added 2 1/2 sacks and Ryan Anderson had two.
“We thought the one thing that might be in our favor in this game was our defensive line against their offensive line,” Saban said.