ARKANSAS 53, NO. 18 MISSISSIPPI 52, OT

Riding high

Hogs thanking their lucky stars for miraculous finish

Arkansas quarterback Brandon Allen is carried off the field following the Razorbacks' 53-52 overtime win over Ole Miss on Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015, at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss.
Arkansas quarterback Brandon Allen is carried off the field following the Razorbacks' 53-52 overtime win over Ole Miss on Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015, at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss.

OXFORD, Miss. -- Twice the No. 18 Ole Miss Rebels thought they'd finished off Arkansas on Saturday. Twice the Rebels were wrong.

Helped by a bizarre lateral play in overtime on which Arkansas Coach Bret Bielema said divine intervention played a role, the Razorbacks tied Ole Miss in the extra period on Brandon Allen's sixth touchdown pass and won it on Allen's 1-yard dive for a two-point conversion and a madcap 53-52 victory.

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The Razorbacks (5-4, 3-2 SEC) beat Ole Miss (7-3, 4-2) for the second year in a row, knocked the Rebels off the inside track for their first solo SEC West title and scored 50-plus points in three consecutive games for the first time in 99 years.

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http://www.wholehog…">Jones: Hogs QB deserved this

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Arkansas rallied late in the fourth quarter to tie the game on Allen's 17-yard touchdown strike to Dominique Reed with 53 seconds remaining.

Then Arkansas stunned the crowd of 60,680 at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium with a fourth-and-25 conversion in overtime. Tight end Hunter Henry caught a pass at the 26, about 11 yards short of a first down, lateraled 15 yards over his head just as he was falling to the turf, and Alex Collins scooped the loose ball on a bounce and ran to the Ole Miss 11.

Two plays later, Allen connected with Drew Morgan on a 9-yard touchdown pass for Morgan's third touchdown and the Razorbacks were ready to decide the outcome with the gutsy two-point decision.

"During the long delay there, when they were sorting out what was going on, I told every player 'We score a touchdown, stay on the field because we're going to go for two.'" Bielema said.

The Razorbacks gained 605 total yards to Ole Miss' 590, and Bielema said his two-point choice was made because offensive coordinator Dan Enos was riding a hot streak.

"I thought our offense was really clicking to be quite honest and Dan knew right where to go," Bielema said.

"We kind of had fortune going on our side there late, so why not roll the dice," said Allen, who passed for a career-high 442 yards and a school-record six touchdowns.

Ole Miss thought it had won when Henry was inches from falling at the Rebels' 26, then they had victory in their grasp on Arkansas' first try at the two-point conversion.

Defensive end Marquis Haynes charged at Allen, who was rolling to his right, and brought him to the turf as the crowd roared with what looked to be the game-ending play. But referee Tom Ritter threw a penalty flag on Haynes for grabbing Allen's face mask and the Hogs had new life on the 1 to set up Allen's winning dive.

"I thought we rose up there at the end and were going to get it done," Ole Miss Coach Hugh Freeze said. "Then the craziness occurred."

Allen took a heavy shot from an Ole Miss defender on his two-point conversion dive. He stayed on his back for several seconds before being helped up, saying "I'm OK." Allen said he underwent concussion protocols later and passed the test, just as he had between the lines.

"I was a little dizzy at first and then it all just came back and I was fine," Allen said. "There was a lot of drama going on there, and to come out on top, it really [ranks] toward the top."

Allen out dueled Ole Miss quarterback Chad Kelly, who had a monster game of his own.

Kelly completed 24 of 34 passes for 368 yards and 3 touchdowns and rushed for 110 yards and 3 touchdowns. Kelly's 478 total yards were the second-most in school history.

"Stinks," Kelly said. "No words to describe it. The ball just didn't go our way."

Records and milestones marked the wild shootout.

The Razorbacks had a 300-yard passer, a 100-yard rusher in Collins, who finished with 108 yards, and two 100-yard receivers in Morgan (9 for 122 yards, 3 touchdowns) and Reed (7 for 105, 2 touchdowns) for the first time ever.

There might never be another play in Arkansas annals quite like the lateral, on which both Henry and Collins both mistakenly believed the Razorbacks had to score a touchdown rather than get 25 yards to the Ole Miss 15.

Arkansas was backed into the desperation fourth-and-25 play after an incomplete pass, a delay of game, a 10-yard sack and fumble, which Allen recovered, and another incomplete pass. Two Razorbacks ran go routes on the right side and Henry filled in with an under route. He caught Allen's pass 11 yards short of a first down with Tony Bridges bearing down on him quickly.

"I knew if I caught the ball I wasn't going to break eight tackles, so I knew I had to to try stay on my feet and make a play," Henry said. "I took a glance back and I knew everyone was back there and I just knew I had to chuck it in the air as far as I could.

"To be honest, I thought we had to score. ... When he went down I thought we'd lost at first."

Collins, who picked up the loose ball on a perfect bounce after it tipped off lineman Dan Skipper's hand, also thought the Razorbacks had to reach the end zone, so he lateraled back from about the 10-yard line and Reed fell on the loose ball.

"I was watching the play and I kind of put my head down because I saw him get wrapped up," Collins said. "I was thinking the play was over and we'd just lost the game. Next thing I know, I see the ball flying in the air and I'm trying to position myself to get it."

Center Mitch Smothers blocked a defender immediately after Collins recovered, Morgan screened off another player for several yards as Collins bolted left, then tight end Jeremy Sprinkle drove another Rebel back to assure Collins would make the first down.

Asked if the lateral play had a name, Bielema said, "Hunter Henry. Divine intervention. We knew if he got short of the chains, just keep the play alive."

The Razorbacks have gotten a series of bad bounces during Bielema's tenure, but the bounced lateral to Collins went on the other side of the luck ledger.

"I've been in many games where there were many smart plays, but that has been by far the smartest play I've been a part of, and I credit Hunter Henry for that, because no one said it in the huddle to toss the ball back if you're about to get tackled," Morgan said. "He just made a play on it, and it was awesome."

Several Ole Miss defenders started to celebrate as Henry was falling.

"I guess everybody thought the play was over," Ole Miss safety Trae Elston said. "A lot of people lolly-gagging around and not running to the ball. That's what created the play for 3, Collins, and he made a great play."

Sports on 11/08/2015

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