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Johnson helps Auburn run over No. 19 Mississippi

Sept. 9, 2000
SportsLine.com wire reports

OXFORD, Miss. -- A record crowd of 52,368 packed into Vaught-Hemingway Stadium, most hoping to see Mississippi give a rude welcome to former Rebels coach Tommy Tuberville.

Rudi Johnson made sure it didn't happen.

Johnson rushed for 165 yards on 29 carries and two touchdowns as Auburn beat No. 19 Mississippi 35-27 on Saturday night to give Tuberville a victory over his former team.

Auburn tailback Rudi Johnson takes off on a 7-yard touchdown run. 
Auburn tailback Rudi Johnson takes off on a 7-yard touchdown run.(AP) 

``It's big that it's over with,'' said Tuberville, who left Ole Miss for Auburn two days after the end of the 1998 season. ``I'm glad that it's close to the first game of the year, so we can get the hype out of the way.''

As the game ended, the Auburn players raised Tuberville onto their shoulders as the crowd loudly booed.

``It's nice to come out of here with a victory for Coach Tuberville and his staff,'' Auburn quarterback Ben Leard said. ``We knew it was going to be hostile.''

Auburn was last in the country in rushing last season, but Johnson, the junior college transfer, has rushed for 339 yards in two games. The Tigers' leading rusher last season had 330 yards.

``This was the first time in a long time that we've run for more than we've passed,'' said Leard, who had two 1-yard touchdown runs.

The Tigers had 261 yards rushing, with fullback Heath Evans complementing Johnson with 56 yards and a touchdown.

``We decided to run the ball and fortunately our work in the running game paid off,'' Tuberville said.

Deuce McAllister had 257 all-purpose yards and scored three touchdowns, including an 87-yard punt return that gave Ole Miss (1-1, 0-1 Southeastern Conference) a 27-21 lead in the third quarter.

But Auburn (2-0, 1-0 SEC) answered McAllister's speed with Johnson's power in the fourth quarter.

On a fourth-and-2 play, Johnson broke through the left side of a tightly packed Ole Miss line and rumbled 42 yards for a touchdown that gave the Tigers a 28-27 with 13:59 to go.

After an interception by Courtney Rose with 8:02 left, Auburn put together a 37-yard drive that took 6:21 and ended with Leard touchdown.

Stanford Simmons' diving interception with 1:27 left to play sealed the victory. It was the third interception thrown by Romaro Miller.

Leard said that the team gave Tuberville a game ball.

Johnson became the first Auburn runner since Stephen Davis in 1995 to have back-to-back 100-yard games.

``Rudi Johnson gave us a lot of trouble,'' Ole Miss coach David Cutcliffe said. ``I have a feeling he is going to give a lot of teams fits.''

Auburn, led by Johnson and fullback Heath Evans, jumped out a 21-7 with 9:16 left in the second quarter.

McAllister ran for 104 yards on 19 carries and almost single-handedly brought Ole Miss back.

His first touchdown was a 26-yard burst up the middle at 7:39 of the second quarter that made it 21-14.

McAllister completed the Rebels' opening drive of the second half by leaping over the line from about a foot out on fourth-and-goal. But Les Binkley missed the extra point, the first missed PAT of his career in 46 attempts.

McAllister gave the Rebels the lead with his next touchdown.

He fielded Damon Duval's punt at the Rebels' 13, sidestepped a tackler, then raced through a seam in Auburn's coverage untouched, outrunning Duval for an 87-yard return. The score gave the Rebels a 27-21 lead at 4:53 of the third.

Ole Miss has lost eight straight Southeastern Conference openers.



   

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