LSU LSU and Mississippi State kicked off the
2007 college football season in a Thursday night
SEC contest broadcast live on
ESPN, the 101st meeting between the two teams. Through much of the first half it appeared as though Mississippi State was up to the daunting task of challenging the Tigers, then the
#2-ranked team in the country behind only
USC, as MSU clung to a 0–3 deficit through most of the first half, until LSU scored 14 points in the last six minutes of the second quarter, opening the door for the Tigers to cruise to the final 0–45 margin. LSU
K Colt David warmed up the scoreboard for the Tigers' offense with a 27-yard
field goal in the first quarter. Tigers'
RB Keiland Williams scored twice on one-yard
touchdown runs in the second quarter to push LSU's lead to 0–17 at the half. In the third quarter, the Tigers' distanced themselves with two eleven-yard touchdown passes from
QB Matt Flynn, one to
WR Early Doucet and the other to
RB Charles Scott, bringing the score to 0–31 to start the fourth quarter. LSU
backup QB Ryan Perriloux sealed the Tigers' victory in the fourth quarter with a three-yard touchdown scramble, followed by a 15-yard touchdown pass to
WR Brandon LaFell to put LSU up by the final 0–45 margin. LSU's dominance included earning 22 first downs to MSU's nine and yielding MSU just ten rushing yards on 26 carries. LSU
FB Jacob Hester led the Tigers with 14 carries for 72 yards (4.9 yards per carry), while
Early Doucet paced LSU's passing attack with 9 catches for 78 yards, including the 11-yard touchdown strike he caught in the third quarter; he was the only LSU receiver to catch more than one pass. For MSU,
RB Anthony Dixon led the Bulldogs on the ground with just 29 yards on 13 carries (2.2 average).
RB Arnil Stallworth led MSU with only 3 pass receptions for 33 yards. LSU starting
QB Matt Flynn paced his team's offense by completing 12 of 19 passes for 128 yards and two touchdowns and rushing 11 times for 42 yards.
Ryan Perriloux ran the Tigers' offense well in relief duty, completing 2 of 3 passes for 21 yards and a touchdown and running 3 times for 12 yards and another score. For MSU,
QB Michael Henig completed just 11 of 28 passes on his way to a school record-tying six
interception-performance. He was
sacked three times for a cumulative loss of 30 yards. Defensively, LSU
LB Ali Highsmith led the Tigers with eight total tackles. Tigers'
S Craig Steltz returned three of MSU's six
interceptions a total of 100 yards. MSU
LB Dominic Douglas, playing in his first career game with the Bulldogs, led all tacklers with nine total, earning "Outstanding Performer" recognition for Week 1.
LSU went on to finish the season 12–2 with a victory over
Ohio State in the
BCS title game and were ranked #1 in all final
major polls.
Tulane After being hammered 0–45 by
LSU to open the season, MSU sought its first win of
2007 when the Bulldogs traveled to
New Orleans to take on another team from the state of
Louisiana, the
Tulane Green Wave, in the second week of the season. As with all Tulane home games, the contest was played at the
Louisiana Superdome, also the home stadium of the
New Orleans Saints. The game was also a homecoming of sorts for MSU
RB Christian Ducré, a native of nearby
Mandeville who began his college career at Tulane before transferring to State. Coming into the game, Tulane's All-
C-USA RB Matt Forte was regarded as one of the nation's best
Running Backs. A
2008 NFL draft prospect, Forte finished the
2007 season by earning
AP All-America recognition. State started the scoring off early in the first quarter, when
LB Gabe O'Neal intercepted a pass on the first offensive series of the game and returned it 47 yards for a touchdown. Tulane responded on the next series, however, with a quick three-play, 61-yard drive resulting in a 39-yard touchdown run by Forte. Mississippi State added an 18-yard touchdown run by
QB Michael Henig and Tulane tacked on an eight-yard touchdown pass from
QB Scott Elliott to
FB Jeremy McKinney, all in the first quarter. The only other scoring in the first half came when MSU and Tulane traded field goals in the second quarter, a 23-yarder by Adam Carlson and a 26-yarder by Ross Thevenot, respectively, leaving the score tied 17–17 at halftime. After the competitive first half, Mississippi State regrouped and the Bulldogs took the game over in the second by scoring 21 unanswered points.
FB Jeremy Jones capped off a long drive to open the second half, catching an eight-yard touchdown pass from Michael Henig after MSU's offense covered 67 yards with 9 plays in 3:30. Later in the third quarter,
RB Anthony Dixon broke a 27-yard run to stretch the 'Dogs' lead to 14. Dixon sealed the victory for MSU with a seven-yard fourth quarter run that put the Bulldogs ahead by the final margin. Dixon bounced back from being shut down by LSU in the previous week by rushing for 131 yards on 27 carries (4.9 average) and two touchdowns, earning him "Outstanding Performer" recognition for Week 2.
QB Michael Henig posted an admirable performance as well, completing 21 of 30 pass attempts for 223 yards with a touchdown and an interception. Meanwhile, MSU's defense put up an impressive performance, allowing the Green Wave only eight first downs to MSU's 27 and limiting Forte to 63 yards on 14 carries (3.4 average), his lowest totals of the
2007 season in all three categories. He also lost two fumbles to the 'Dogs' defense.
LB Jamar Chaney led MSU with six total tackles. In addition to his interception return for a touchdown,
LB Gabe O'Neal recovered a fumble and recorded four total tackles and was named the
SEC's Defensive Player of the Week for Week 2. Tulane finished the season with an unimpressive 4-8 record, but did manage to finish in third place in the
C-USA West.
Auburn MSU traveled to
Auburn, Alabama for their Week 3 match-up against the favored
Auburn Tigers, played at
Jordan–Hare Stadium. The Tigers boasted a six-game win streak against the Bulldogs dating back to
2001. Since the 'Dogs defeated the Tigers 17–10 in Starkville in
2000, Auburn had dominated over the course of their six consecutive wins against MSU, outscoring State by an average margin of 25.5 points, including consecutive shutouts in
2005 and
2006. State (1–1, 0–1) entered the game coming off of an impressive second half rally to cruise by
Tulane after their opening week-beating at the hands of
LSU. Auburn (1–1, 0–0) had fallen from the
national polls by losing to then-unranked
South Florida in Week 2, after defeating the
Kansas State Wildcats with a 14-point fourth quarter rally in the opening week of the
season. The Bulldogs caught AU off guard, jumping out to a 13–0 lead early in the second quarter. MSU
K Adam Carlson scored State's first points with a 32-yard
field goal on the game's opening drive, marking the first time MSU had scored on Auburn since
2004. On the next drive, Auburn's first of the game, Tigers'
QB Brandon Cox threw an interception caught and returned by MSU
FS Derek Pegues for a touchdown less than a minute after Carlson's field goal to give MSU a quick 10–0 lead.
Cox again threw an interception on Auburn's ensuing possession, prompting the Tigers to insert true-Freshman backup
QB Kodi Burns into the game on their next series. However, he also turned the ball over on his first possession. MSU capitalized on AU's turnovers by adding another Carlson field goal on the ensuing drive to stretch their lead to 13–0. However, the Tigers mounted a comeback late in the second quarter, when
RB Ben Tate ran 28 yards to finally put Auburn on the board. On the ensuing kickoff, MSU
KR Derek Pegues fumbled the return, giving AU the ball on State's 30-yard line with 4:12 to play in the first half. After turning the ball over on so many previous possessions, Auburn stuck to their ground game, not attempting a single pass during the ensuing series.
Kodi Burns led the way for the Tigers, accounting for five of his team's seven carries and 21 of AU's 30 yards on the drive, capped by his one-yard dive into the endzone to tie the game, with
K Wes Byrum's successful
Extra point giving the Tigers a 13–14 lead, which they held for the remainder of the first half. Neither team's offense was able to successfully move the ball in the second half until MSU took possession on AU's 44-yard line with 10:42 left in the fourth quarter, after
S Demario Bobo intercepted a
Kodi Burns pass. The ensuing drive was the most important of the game for the Bulldogs, as they marched 44 yards in 10 plays and scored after using over five minutes off of the game clock. MSU
RB Christian Ducré, who gained 21 yards on three carries on the drive, punched the ball into the endzone from five yards out for the score. The Bulldogs unsuccessfully attempted a two-point conversion, which left them with a narrow 19–14 lead with over five minutes remaining in the game.
Brandon Cox returned to the game on the ensuing drive for Auburn.
Cox led his team 67 yards down the field, all the way to MSU 9-yard line, but was unable to score as his fourth down pass attempt fell incomplete, giving State the ball back with just :48 remaining, allowing the 'Dogs to run out the clock and earn their first victory over an
SEC opponent in
2007. Auburn ended the game with 16 first downs to State's 14 and 110 more yards of total offense than MSU, but turnovers proved to be the story of the game with just one for MSU compared to five for AU. As a team, MSU completed just five (of 18) pass attempts for 41 yards, but was able to rely on a powerful running game.
RB Anthony Dixon was State's workhorse, finishing with 29 carries for 103 yards, while Christian Ducré contributed 63 yards on ten carries in addition to the game-winning touchdown for the Bulldogs. Bulldogs'
P Blake McAdams quietly posted an impressive performance by punting 6 times for an average of 43.3 yards, including a booming career-best 73-yard kick. Five different Bulldog players recovered each of Auburn's turnovers:
DE Jimmie Holmes and
DT Kyle Love both recovered fumbles, while
CB Anthony Johnson,
SS Demario Bobo and
FS Derek Pegues each intercepted AU passes. MSU
LB Dominic Douglas again led all tacklers for the second time in his young (three-game) MSU career, with nine total. After their slow 1–2 start, Auburn won their next four games, finished the season 9–4 by defeating
Clemson in the
Chick-fil-A Bowl, and were ranked 14th in the country in the final
Coaches poll.
Gardner–Webb Last Meeting: First Meeting South Carolina UAB Tennessee West Virginia Kentucky Alabama Arkansas Ole Miss UCF—Liberty Bowl ==Personnel==