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Inside College Football Posted: Tuesday October 08, 2002 2:22 PMAny of seven teams could win the SEC title as Georgia and Mississippi staked their claims in a wide-open race By Ivan Maisel
Now the Rebels have another Manning running the offense -- Archie's son Eli, a junior -- though against the Gators he didn't throw a touchdown pass for the first time in his 16 starts. It didn't matter. Ole Miss beat Florida with defense, which may be more startling than the upset itself. The Rebels had given up at least 17 points in each of their last 15 SEC games. After last season Cutcliffe replaced defensive coordinator Don Lindsey with Chuck Driesbach, who installed a 4-2-5 scheme that he had used successfully at Western Michigan and TCU. When effective, the defense can show an eight-man front that was popular a generation ago against the run or drop into nickel coverage without a substitution. Against the Gators the Rebels rattled normally unflappable quarterback Rex Grossman, who threw four interceptions and completed 19 of 44 passes for 205 yards. Ole Miss sacked Grossman only once but hit him 23 times in 74 plays. "The only way to slow down a good quarterback is to get him off his timing, make him seem as if he's not safe," Driesbach said afterward. Four of the Rebels' remaining six league games are on the road, including a visit to Georgia on Nov. 9. The sixth-ranked Bulldogs may be the lone unbeaten team in the league, but they have won three games by six points or fewer. "One thing that's good is, we've been able to stay undefeated as we're getting better," Georgia's second-year coach Mark Richt said last Saturday. "I know we're not hitting on all cylinders on offense." The Bulldogs' biggest problem had been what sophomore quarterback David Greene called not "hitting the home run ball." In the first four games he had thrown only three completions of 25 yards or longer to a wide receiver, none for a touchdown. Against Alabama, though, Greene threw scoring passes of 42 yards to sophomore Fred Gibson and 37 to senior Terrence Edwards. Richt was happy to be atop the SEC East, but with No. 10 Tennessee coming to Athens on Saturday and No. 16 Florida looming on Nov. 2 in Jacksonville -- to say nothing of that meeting with Mississippi -- he knows that most weeks he'll be in for a fight. "It's a long season," he said. Issue date: October 14, 2002
For more Inside College Football see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, October 9. Click here to subscribe to SI.
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