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Magnolia Bowl

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Magnolia Bowl
First meetingDecember 3, 1894
Ole Miss, 26–6
Latest meetingOctober 12, 2024
LSU, 29–26OT
Next meeting2025
TrophyMagnolia Bowl Trophy (since 2008)
Statistics
Meetings total113
All-time seriesLSU leads, 64–42–4[1]
Largest victoryLSU, 52–3 (2011)
Longest win streakLSU, 8 (1928–1937)
Current win streakLSU, 1 (2024–present)
Locations of LSU and Ole Miss

The Magnolia Bowl is the name given to the LSU–Ole Miss football rivalry.[2][3][4] It is an American college football rivalry game played annually by the LSU Tigers football team of Louisiana State University (LSU) and the Ole Miss Rebels football team of the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss). The teams compete for the Magnolia Bowl Trophy.[5] The Tigers and the Rebels first met in 1894, and have been regular opponents in Southeastern Conference (SEC), meeting annually, without interruption, since 1945.[6]

The rivalry was at its height during the 1950s and 1960s, when both teams were highly ranked and during which time both teams claimed a national championship.[7] The rivalry died down from the 1970s to the 1990s, owing to Ole Miss not returning to conference or national prominence since the 1970s and because LSU has seen new rivalries emerge when the SEC split into two divisions in 1992, most notably Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, and Florida.[8] Even though the rivalry has not attracted the same national attention in recent years, it still stirs up passion in both Oxford and Baton Rouge.[9][10]

In 2008, the student bodies of both schools elected to christen the yearly contest the "Magnolia Bowl",[11] the magnolia flower being the state flower of both Louisiana and Mississippi, and award a trophy to the winner.[12] Ole Miss defeated LSU 31–13 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana to become the first winner of the new trophy.[2]

The 2007 Magnolia Bowl

It is the second most played rivalry for both teams.[13][14] The 2011 edition in Oxford was the 100th meeting between the two schools.[15] It was also the most lopsided game in series history, as top-ranked LSU defeated Ole Miss and coach Houston Nutt 52–3.[16] In many cases, wins have come in streaks with the longest being 8, (LSU: 1928–1937). The next longest win streak is 6, a total reached by both Ole Miss and LSU. The Tigers won from 2002 to 2007, while the Rebels were able to defeat LSU from 1952 to 1957. LSU leads the series 64–42–4, with Ole Miss having vacated one victory and LSU vacating two.[17][18]

Notable games

[edit]
Magnolia Bowl Trophy
  • 1959Cannon's Halloween Run – Late in the game between #1 LSU and #3 Ole Miss, LSU was trailing 3–0.[19] Then Billy Cannon returned a punt 89 yards for a TD, breaking seven tackles.[20] The Rebels then drove down the field but were stopped on the LSU 1-yard line as the game ended resulting in a 7–3 victory for LSU in Tiger Stadium.[19] The Rebels would get revenge however in the Sugar Bowl by defeating the Tigers 21–0, and were declared national champions by several polls.[21][22]
  • 1960 – LSU fought Ole Miss to a 6–6 tie which was the Rebels' only blemish (9–0–1) en route to a 1960 national title and were awarded the Grantland Rice Trophy by the Football Writers Association of America.[23][24]
  • 1971 – Ole Miss defeated LSU 24–22 at Jackson in the last major college football game between two all-white squads. The Rebels and Tigers each fielded their first black varsity players the next season.
  • 1972 – Jones to Davis;. "The Night The Clock Stopped" – #6 LSU survived an upset bid from unranked Ole Miss in Tiger Stadium by winning the game on a TD pass from QB Bert Jones to RB Brad Davis.[25] Ole Miss fans say the 1972 contest featured a few seconds of free football.[26] The Tigers trailed the Rebels 16–10 with four seconds to play and the ball on the Ole Miss ten-yard line.[27] After a short incompletion by Jones to Jimmy LeDoux at the goal line, the game clock still showed one second remaining.[27] The Tigers used the precious second to win the game on the "last play", 17–16.[25] The home-clock advantage inspired a sign at the Louisiana state line reading, "You are now entering Louisiana. Set your clocks back four seconds."[28][29][30]
  • 1989 – The 1989 contest in Oxford, the first visit by LSU to the Ole Miss campus since 1960, proved to have a much different flavor than most college football games.[31] One week earlier, Rebels safety Chucky Mullins suffered a career-ending (and ultimately, fatal) injury making a tackle vs. Vanderbilt.[32][31] The student body passed buckets around the stadium to a then record crowd of 42,700 at Vaught–Hemingway Stadium.[33] In excess of $150,000 was raised for the Mullins fund.[33] The Rebels nearly pulled off a comeback of 21 points against the 1–6 Tigers, only to have the ball intercepted in the end zone in the waning seconds, allowing LSU to hold on for a 35–30 victory.[34]
  • 1997 – The Rebels upset #7 LSU 36–21 one week after the Tigers shocked the then top-ranked Florida Gators.[35] It would spark a three-game winning streak against the Tigers, including a thrilling overtime victory in 1998 (37–31).[36][37]
  • 2003 – Ole Miss entered the game an undefeated 6–0 in SEC conference play while LSU entered the game with only a loss to Florida.[38] The winner of this game would represent the SEC West in the SEC Championship Game in Atlanta.[39] If Ole Miss won, they would be the outright SEC West champion and make the SEC Championship game for the first time.[38] If LSU won, both teams would be SEC West co-champions but LSU would go to Atlanta due to the head-to-head victory tiebreaker. LSU won the game 17–14,[39] which was played before the then all-time record crowd to ever watch an on-campus football game in Mississippi.[40] The Tigers then went on to win both the SEC championship in Atlanta and the BCS national championship.[41]
  • 2008 – Ole Miss beat #18 LSU 31–13 in Baton Rouge to snap a six-game losing streak to LSU and to win the first Magnolia Bowl trophy.[42][43]
  • 2009 – With nine seconds remaining, down by 2 (25–23) on 4th and 26, LSU completed a 40-yard pass to the Ole Miss six-yard line, leaving one second left on the clock.[44][45] In the culmination of a series of late-game miscues, LSU attempted to spike the ball, rather than try for a potential game-winning field goal.[44] However, with no timeouts, they did not have enough time to execute any sort of play as time expired before LSU could even get off a snap.[44][45] Ole Miss won the game by a score of 25–23, prevailing for their first win at home against LSU since 1998.[46]
  • 2013 – LSU came into Oxford ranked #6 facing an unranked Ole Miss team that had lost their last 3 games.[47] Buoyed by 3 Zach Mettenberger interceptions, however, Ole Miss took a 17–0 lead a third of the way into the third quarter.[47] LSU would then take advantage of numerous Ole Miss miscues and, following a blocked Andrew Ritter field goal and a 4th and long conversion, tied the game at 24 via a Mettenberger touchdown pass to wide receiver Jarvis Landry.[47] But Ole Miss quarterback Bo Wallace would lead a drive that brought the Rebels to the LSU 24 and was highlighted by two 3rd down conversions in Ole Miss territory.[48] Ritter redeemed himself with a 41-yard field goal with 2 seconds left, putting Ole Miss up 27–24 for good.[49] The upset win gave Ole Miss their first victory over LSU since 2009. Ole Miss would later vacate this win due to NCAA violations.[49][48]
  • 2014 – Undefeated #3 Ole Miss came into Death Valley facing the 6–2 #24 LSU Tigers.[50] Early in the game, LSU had multiple chances to put points on the board, but failed to do so, missing a 29-yard field goal and fumbling the ball on the goal line.[50] Ole Miss struck first with a late first-quarter touchdown, but LSU's young defense did not allow Ole Miss to score another point.[51] LSU's offense shot themselves in the foot against one of the best defenses in the country, fumbling twice and throwing two interceptions.[51] At halftime, Ole Miss led 7–3; midway through the fourth quarter LSU was given the ball at their own 5-yard line.[51] LSU ran the ball 12 straight times on the backs of Leonard Fournette and Kenny Hilliard, but it would be Anthony Jennings who threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to TE Logan Stokes, his first catch of his career, to take the lead 10–7.[52] Ole Miss was given another chance to win the game. Bo Wallace converted multiple times on third and fourth down to drive Ole Miss down the field.[52] With 9 seconds left Ole Miss had the ball on LSU's 25, and prepared to send out the kicker for a 42-yard field goal; however, due to a delay of game penalty the ball was moved to the 30.[52] Ole Miss kept their freshman kicker on the field, but when LSU head coach Les Miles called a timeout Ole Miss sent Bo Wallace and the offense back onto the field.[52] Instead of attempting a short pass to the sidelines, Bo Wallace threw an under-thrown ball to the end zone where it was intercepted by senior safety Ronald Martin.[52] LSU won the game 10–7 and ended Ole Miss's undefeated season and possible shot to go to the first annual College Football Playoffs.[53]
  • 2015 – Ole Miss quarterback Chad Kelly threw for 280 yards and two touchdowns as Ole Miss won the 2015 Magnolia Bowl over LSU by a commanding margin of 38–17.[54] Having entered the game with losses to rivals Alabama and Arkansas over the previous two games, the loss marked LSU's first three-game losing streak in a season since 1999.[55] The loss also increased chatter and rumors about LSU head coach Les Miles' job security,[56][57] and Miles would be fired as LSU head coach in September 2016.[58]
  • 2017 – When asked about what he remembered most about his time at Ole Miss in a press conference the week before the 2017 Magnolia Bowl, LSU head coach Ed Orgeron (who had previously been Ole Miss' head coach from 2005 to 2007) replied, "You know, I used to stop at the Exxon and get chicken on a stick, and it was fantastic."[59][60] The comment was seen as an insult and infuriated many Ole Miss fans.[61][62] In Orgeron's first time back in Oxford as LSU head coach, #24 LSU defeated Ole Miss by a score of 40–24.[63]
  • 2021 – The 2021 edition of the Magnolia Bowl was of particular importance for Ole Miss due to the game featuring the jersey retirement ceremony of the Number 10, worn by Rebel legend Eli Manning at halftime.[64] As such, the end zones featured Manning's last name painted white with the Rebels’ signature red background.[65] Despite the Tigers’ promising start—which included a 90-yard scoring drive on the opening possession—the twelfth-ranked Rebels’ high-scoring offense overpowered the LSU defense and jumped out to a 17–7 halftime lead thanks to a 43-yard field goal from kicker Caden Costa and both a passing and rushing touchdown from quarterback Matt Corral.[66] The Rebels stretched the lead to 24 by the end of the third quarter due to a pair of rushing scores courtesy of running backs Henry Parrish Jr. and Jerrion Ealy, which effectively put the game out of reach for the Tigers.[67] Ole Miss went on to defeat LSU 31–17, ending the Tigers’ five game winning streak in the rivalry.[68] This was Ole Miss' only victory over LSU during former Rebels head coach Ed Orgeron's time leading the LSU football program.[69]
  • 2023 – The 2023 edition was the first matchup since 2016 where both teams were ranked in the Top 25.[70] LSU was ranked #13 with just a 45–24 loss to #5 Florida State on their resume,[71] while #20 Ole Miss had lost 24–10 to Alabama in Tuscaloosa the week before.[72] Ole Miss' high-scoring offense got to work quickly, holding a 21–7 lead to start the second quarter.[73] The Rebels ultimately found themselves leading LSU 31–28 after the Tigers missed a field goal right before halftime.[74] The second half turned into a scoring frenzy, and LSU went up 42-34 right before the 4th quarter.[75] Ole Miss then scored a few plays later, but missed the 2-point conversion, which put the score at 42-40 LSU.[76] Later, a controversial touchdown call put LSU in front 49–40, but Ole Miss was able to respond with another touchdown of their own, which made the score 49–47.[77] With 39 seconds left to play, Ole Miss took a 55–49 lead after a successful touchdown and 2-point conversion, but LSU still had plenty of opportunities to win.[78] LSU's Jayden Daniels threw 2 incomplete passes, however Ole Miss' Jeremiah Jean-Baptiste committed a horse collar penalty against Daniels, which resulted in an LSU first down.[79] Daniels threw another incomplete pass, however, and there were 5 seconds left to play.[80] Ole Miss head coach Lane Kiffin called a timeout and told his players to avoid getting a pass interference penalty, as the Rebels had already gotten way more penalties than LSU that night.[81][82] Jayden Daniels threw one last pass to the endzone on 2nd down, but it was broken up, and Ole Miss won 55–49.[83] Fans rushed the field in celebration,[84] resulting in a $100,000 fine levied by the Southeastern Conference,[85] and this win not only put Ole Miss' record at 4–1, but also essentially eliminated LSU from the College Football Playoff race as the Tigers fell to 3–2.[86] The 2023 Magnolia Bowl is the highest-scoring game in the history of the rivalry.[87]
  • 2024 - Despite never taking the lead in regulation, #13 LSU managed to win in overtime 29-26 upsetting #9 Ole Miss. LSU would move up to #8 in the polls while Ole Miss fell to #18. This was also the first time in the rivalry that the game went into overtime.

Game results

[edit]
LSU victoriesOle Miss victoriesTiesVacated wins
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1 December 3, 1894 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 26–6
2 November 13, 1896 Vicksburg, Mississippi LSU 12–4
3 November 3, 1899 Meridian, Mississippi Ole Miss 11–0
4 November 7, 1901 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 46–0
5 November 8, 1902 New Orleans, Louisiana LSU 6–0
6 November 21, 1903 New Orleans, Louisiana Ole Miss 11–0
7 November 5, 1904 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 5–0
8 October 20, 1906 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 9–0
9 November 16, 1907 Jackson, Mississippi LSU 23–0
10 October 9, 1909 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 10–0
11 October 19, 1912 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 10–7
12 October 17, 1914 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 21–0
13 October 15, 1915 Oxford, Mississippi LSU 28–0
14 November 18, 1916 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 41–0
15 October 13, 1917 Oxford, Mississippi LSU 52–7
16 October 18, 1919 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 13–0
17 November 12, 1921 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 24–0
18 November 13, 1926 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 3–0
19 November 5, 1927 Oxford, Mississippi Ole Miss 12–7
20 November 10, 1928 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 19–6
21 November 16, 1929 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 13–6
22 November 8, 1930 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 6–0
23 November 13, 1931 Jackson, Mississippi LSU 26–3
24 November 18, 1933 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 31–0
25 November 17, 1934 Jackson, Mississippi LSU 14–0
26 October 17, 1936 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 13–0
27 October 16, 1937 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 13–7
28 September 24, 1938 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 20–7
29 September 30, 1939 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 14–7
30 September 28, 1940 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 19–6
31 November 8, 1941 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #16 Ole Miss 13–12
32 October 17, 1942 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 21–7
33 November 3, 1945 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #17 LSU 32–13
34 November 2, 1946 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 34–21
35 November 1, 1947 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 20–18
36 October 30, 1948 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 49–19
37 October 29, 1949 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #17 LSU 34–7
38 November 4, 1950 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 40–14
39 November 3, 1951 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Tie6–6
40 November 1, 1952 Oxford, Mississippi Ole Miss 28–0
41 October 31, 1953 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #18 Ole Miss 27–16
42 October 30, 1954 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #12 Ole Miss 21–6
43 October 29, 1955 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 29–26
44 November 3, 1956 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 46–17
45 November 9, 1957 Oxford, Mississippi #14 Ole Miss 14–12
46 November 1, 1958 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #1 LSU 14–0
47 October 31, 1959 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #1 LSU 7–3
48 January 1, 1960 New Orleans, Louisiana #2 Ole Miss 21–0
49 October 29, 1960 Oxford, Mississippi Tie6–6
50 November 4, 1961 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #6 LSU 10–7
51 November 3, 1962 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #6 Ole Miss 15–7
52 November 2, 1963 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #3 Ole Miss 37–3
53 October 31, 1964 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #9 LSU 11–10
54 October 30, 1965 Jackson, Mississippi Ole Miss 23–0
55 October 29, 1966 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 17–0
56 November 29, 1967 Jackson, Mississippi Tie13–13
57 November 2, 1968 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 27–24
58 November 1, 1969 Jackson, Mississippi Ole Miss 26–23
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
59 December 5, 1970 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #8 LSU 61–17
60 October 30, 1971 Jackson, Mississippi Ole Miss 24–22
61 November 4, 1972 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #6 LSU 17–16
62 November 3, 1973 Jackson, Mississippi #7 LSU 51–14
63 November 2, 1974 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 24–0
64 November 1, 1975 Jackson, Mississippi Ole Miss 17–13
65 October 30, 1976 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 45–0
66 October 29, 1977 Jackson, Mississippi LSU 28–21
67 November 4, 1978 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #12 LSU 30–8
68 November 3, 1979 Jackson, Mississippi LSU 28–24
69 November 1, 1980 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 38–16
70 October 31, 1981 Jackson, Mississippi Tie27–27
71 October 30, 1982 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #13 LSU 45–8
72 October 29, 1983 Jackson, Mississippi Ole Miss 27–24
73 November 3, 1984 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 32–29
74 November 2, 1985 Jackson, Mississippi LSU 14–0
75 November 1, 1986 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 21–19
76 October 31, 1987 Jackson, Mississippi #5 LSU 42–13
77 October 29, 1988 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #13 LSU 31–20
78 November 4, 1989 Oxford, Mississippi LSU 35–30
79 November 3, 1990 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #17 Ole Miss 19–10
80 November 2, 1991 Jackson, Mississippi LSU 25–22
81 October 31, 1992 Jackson, Mississippi Ole Miss 32–0
82 October 30, 1993 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 19–17
83 October 29, 1994 Oxford, Mississippi Ole Miss 34–21
84 November 11, 1995 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 38–9
85 November 16, 1996 Oxford, Mississippi #17 LSU 39–7
86 November 26, 1997 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 36–21
87 October 31, 1998 Oxford, Mississippi Ole Miss 37–31
88 October 30, 1999 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #25 Ole Miss 42–23
89 November 11, 2000 Oxford, Mississippi LSU 20–9
90 October 27, 2001 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 35–24
91 November 23, 2002 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #21 LSU 14–13
92 November 22, 2003 Oxford, Mississippi #3 LSU 17–14
93 November 20, 2004 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #14 LSU 27–24
94 November 19, 2005 Oxford, Mississippi #4 LSU 40–7
95 November 18, 2006 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #9 LSU 23–20
96 November 17, 2007 Oxford, Mississippi #1 LSU 41–24
97 November 22, 2008 Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ole Miss 31–13
98 November 21, 2009 Oxford, Mississippi Ole Miss 25–23
99 November 20, 2010 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #5 LSU 43–36
100 November 19, 2011 Oxford, Mississippi #1 LSU 52–3
101 November 17, 2012 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #8 LSU *41–35
102 October 19, 2013 Oxford, Mississippi Ole Miss† 27–24
103 October 25, 2014 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #24 LSU *10–7
104 November 21, 2015 Oxford, Mississippi #22 Ole Miss 38–17
105 October 22, 2016 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #25 LSU 38–21
106 October 21, 2017 Oxford, Mississippi #24 LSU 40–24
107 September 29, 2018 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #5 LSU 45–16
108 November 16, 2019 Oxford, Mississippi #1 LSU 58–37
109 December 19, 2020 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 53–48
110 October 23, 2021 Oxford, Mississippi #12 Ole Miss 31–17
111 October 22, 2022 Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU 45–20
112 September 30, 2023 Oxford, Mississippi #20 Ole Miss 55–49
113 October 12, 2024 Baton Rouge, Louisiana #13 LSU 29–26 OT
Series: LSU leads 64–42–4[1]
* Vacated by LSU[88]
† Vacated by Ole Miss[89][a]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The 2013 game was won on the field 27–24 by Ole Miss. However, the win was vacated along with all others that season except for the Music City Bowl. According to the NCAA, a vacated win doesn't benefit the record of the opponent. The LSU media guide correctly accounts for its record even though it does not match the Ole Miss record. Vacated wins cause records of two teams to be out of balance with the total number of games played and different for each program.

References

[edit]
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  7. ^ "LSU-Ole Miss has deep-rooted history". ESPN. October 24, 2014. The meat of this rivalry came in the late 1950s and early 1960s. From 1958–63, five games were played in which both teams were ranked in the top six. Ole Miss was undefeated entering four of those games, LSU twice. Only once during that time did a team enter the game with more than one loss – 1960, when 1–4 LSU tied No. 2 Ole Miss 6–6 in Oxford.
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