Ole Miss QB Matt Corral exits Sugar Bowl loss vs. Baylor due to injury
NEW ORLEANS — The Sugar Bowl was a lot more bitter than sweet for the Ole Miss football team.
No. 8 Ole Miss lost 21-7 versus No. 6 Baylor to end the Rebels’ storybook season. Quarterback Matt Corral left the game with an apparent ankle injury in the first quarter and did not return, limiting what Ole Miss’ offense could do and squandering a dominant performance from the Rebels’ defense.
Freshman Luke Altmyer relieved Corral. Playing in his fifth career game, Altmyer completed 12 of 25 passes for 174 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions, one returned 96 yards for a Bears touchdown.
Ole Miss’ defense stepped up amid the offense’s struggles. The Rebels didn’t allow Baylor’s offense to score until the fourth quarter, holding the Bears to 7-for-17 on third and fourth downs and limiting Baylor to 40 passing yards.
Here are the Clarion Ledger’s takeaways from the Sugar Bowl:
One last hurrah for Matt Corral
Corral was injured when he was sacked with 2:13 left in the first quarter. He walked off the field under his own power but then was carted back to the locker room.
“It makes you sick to your stomach,” ESPN broadcaster Greg McElroy said during the broadcast as Corral was on the field in pain after the injury.
Before coming out of the game, Corral was 2-for-6 passing for 10 yards with one interception along with 17 rushing yards on seven carries.
ESPN reported in the second quarter that Corral was doubtful to return, a fact that was seemingly confirmed when he returned to the sideline later in the quarter on crutches. He received a rousing ovation from the fans in New Orleans when he came back out of the locker room.
Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin said after the game that Corral’s X-ray “was negative” but the quarterback “just wasn’t able to go.”
Corral’s choice to play in the Sugar Bowl instead of opting out and preparing for the NFL draft – where he has been projected by many to be a first-round pick – is one that will be dissected for months. But put that aside for the time being.
Corral finishes his Ole Miss career as one of the best and most revered quarterbacks in school history. In two seasons under Kiffin, he threw for 6,686 yards and 49 touchdowns and ran for 1,120 yards and 15 touchdowns. He gutted through injury to lead the Rebels to the first 10-win regular season in school history and, even with his Sugar Bowl injury, he’s still likely to be Ole Miss’ first quarterback picked in the first round of the NFL draft since Eli Manning went first overall in 2004.
“He’s been unbelievable and the things you don’t see besides the playing, just how he is. I had a cool moment this morning in the team meeting, just listening to him talk,” Kiffin said of Corral. “I told our own coaches and players: You can be a freshman and you’re supposed to listen to the leaders. You can be a 50-year-old coach and you should listen to this guy.
“I mean, what he said today to the team about after last season, after the Outback Bowl, and all he wanted to do was come back and impact players the way that Elijah Moore impacted him off the field as a person. He’s just real special, and he is going to make a great NFL player…
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