Vols Fall To No. 19 Mississippi State, 41-31

Sunday, October 14, 2012 - by special report to chattanoogan.com

STARKVILLE, Miss. For the first 30 minutes in Davis Wade Stadium, No. 19 Mississippi State was in control. For most of the second half, Tennessee moved into the driver's seat.

But the Vols were on the wrong end of a big turnover -- and an even bigger fourth-quarter drive -- in a 41-31 loss to Mississippi State on Saturday night in Starkville.

html">Recap | Final Stats | Quotes | Photo Gallery 1 | Photo Gallery 2

 The Bulldogs led by 13 points at halftime after out gaining the Vols by a nearly 3-to-1 margin in the first half. After the break, though, Tennessee's defense plugged some holes and its offense scored 10 quick points to pull within three points at 27-24 midway through the third quarter.

But starting with a huge play by star cornerback Johnthan Banks, the fourth quarter belonged to Mississippi State (6-0, 3-0 SEC).

Tailback Devrin Young, seeing lots of action in the second half after starter Rajion Neal left the game with an injury, broke free for a 10-yard run to the UT 30. But at the end of the play, Banks pried the ball loose and fell on it, just barely remaining in bounds in front of Tennessee's bench.

Three plays later LaDarius Perkins scored from a yard out to give Mississippi State a 10-point lead with 7:58 remaining.

The Vols (3-3, 0-3 SEC) countered immediately, needing just 2 minutes, 36 seconds to move the ball 65 yards for a touchdown. Ben Bartholomew grabbed a 10-yard pass from Tyler Bray for his first career touchdown, which closed the gap to the three points once more at 34-31 with a little more than 5 1/2 minutes to go.

But that's when Mississippi State dug in its heels and held on to the ball. The Bulldogs converted twice on third down and kept moving the chains, running out the final 5:22 and eventually scoring a 9-yard touchdown on an incredible catch by Malcolm Johnson on fourth-and-goal with 9 seconds left.

After that fourth-quarter fumble, the Vols never had another chance to tie or take the lead.

The loss leaves the Vols winless in conference heading into its biggest test of the season next week in Neyland Stadium against No. 1 Alabama, which defeated Missouri on Saturday.

A kickoff time will be announced Monday.

The Vols' loss also overshadowed a stellar night from junior receiver Cordarrelle Patterson, who became the first Tennessee player to score a touchdown on a kick return and a reception since Carl Pickens.

And Patterson's 98-yard kickoff return was one of very few highlights in a first half that saw Mississippi State out-gain the Vols 297-93.

What's more, the Bulldogs did a fine job of turning those yards into points.

Mississippi State scored on its first six possessions of the game, and three of those drives went for more than 65 yards.

After the Bulldogs kicked a field goal on the game's opening drive, the Vols took the lead with a 75-yard, 10-play drive that ended with a 6-yard touchdown run by Neal.

MSU scored touchdowns on back-to-back drives to take a 17-7 lead, but Patterson brought the Vols within three points when he returned a kickoff 98 yards for a touchdown with 14:02 left in the second quarter.

After another Mississippi State field goal made the score 20-14, the Bulldogs opted for a short kickoff to keep the ball out of Patterson's hands. The kick, though, went untouched and the Bulldogs recovered at the UT 33.

Four plays later, the Bulldogs took a 27-14 lead on a 7-yard touchdown pass from Tyler Russell to Marcus Green.

Mississippi State had a chance to pad its lead before the half, but Devon Bell missed a 38-yard field goal with a little more than 2 minutes to go before halftime.

(E-mail Stan Crawley at wscrawley@earthlink.net)


Beachy Forced Indoors, Starts Friday In AAA

With his scheduled rehab start for Gwinnett rained out, Braves right-hander Brandon Beachy had to settle for throwing a three-inning simulated game in the Gwinnett batting cage Monday. Beachy, whose return is taking on new urgency with every injury to the bullpen, will make his next scuduled start on Friday. The Braves hope to give him three or four starts before actvating him. ... (click for more)

Lookouts - Smokies Split Doubleheader Monday

A long, long inning in a short game can be disastrous in the minors, where seven-inning games are the norm when playing a makeup doubleheader. The Chattanooga Lookouts could not avoid one in a first-game loss to the Tennessee Smokes, 9-2, at AT&T Field Monday night -- but they avoided a second in a 1-0 nightcap walk-off win. The Smokies sent 10 men to the plate in a seven-run ... (click for more)

Lightning Strike Will Cost Collegedale City Hall Tens Of Thousands

An indirect lightning strike caused tens of thousands of dollars worth of damages to Collegedale City Hall during storms last weekend. City Manager Ted Rogers told commissioners during Monday night’s city commission meeting officials still don’t know the physical nor financial extent of the damage. Losses include a copier, four computers, the electric door lock system, more ... (click for more)

Atwood Gets 9-Year Prison Sentence In Traffic Death Of Friend

A man who police said was traveling 70 miles per hour on a side street in St. Elmo when he wrecked and killed one of his close friends was sentenced Monday to nine years in prison. Criminal Court Judge Rebecca Stern told Robert Allen "Bobby" Atwood, 22, "There is way too much of this going on. Young people need a wakeup call. Let the message go out." Atwood will be eligible ... (click for more)

Location Of The Delta Queen Is The Problem

The Delta Queen is a magnificent part of history and in many ways I'm pleased she is in town. Having the boat where she is is the problem. The boat blocks the view of and from the prettiest park in our town. The crew take many of the parking spots around the park leaving families to park across Frazier and schlep their kids, strollers and picnics to the park. You don't get fireworks ... (click for more)

Roy Exum: Please Send Me Funny Jokes

It has been about 25 years or so since I had the opportunity to visit every county in the state of Tennessee and, as a volunteer for the American Cancer Society at the time, I met cancer survivors and listened to their incredible stories. I remember one man in particular who had bone cancer and one night he said he rolled over in bed and literally broke his arm in a very simple ... (click for more)