AUBURN, Ala. (AP) Visor-wearing innovators Steve Spurrier and Gus
Malzahn engaged in a chess match. South Carolina's Dylan Thompson and
No. 5 Auburn's Nick Marshall swapped big plays.
The two compelling
duels weren't settled until the final play in the Tigers' 42-35 victory
over Spurrier's gambling Gamecocks on Saturday night.
Marshall
ran for three touchdowns and passed for another score and Jonathan Jones
picked off two fourth-quarter passes in the end zone, including the
game-ender.
The Tigers (6-1, 3-1 Southeastern Conference) finally
stopped the onslaught of Spurrier, Thompson and their fourth-down magic
late in the game.
''They went for everything and they got just
about everything,'' said Auburn's Malzahn, who picked up the visor habit
watching Spurrier at Florida. ''They executed when they had to and they
did it time and time again.
''That's the reason it was a close game. That's the reason it went down to the end.''
Auburn
burned off four-plus minutes from the clock after the first
unsuccessful gamble before the Gamecocks (4-4, 2-4) made a stop at
midfield for one more shot.
Thompson, who threw five touchdown
passes and helped convert five straight fourth-down tries, took over at
his own 15 with no timeouts and 1:08 left. Jones, who also had two
interceptions in a loss to No. 1 Mississippi State two weeks ago, made
the clinching pick on Thompson's last-play heave to preserve the Tigers'
SEC and national title hopes
Spurrier said he would have gone for two points and the victory if the Gamecocks had scored instead of kicking for overtime.
''If
we catch the Hail Mary and we make a two-point conversion that might
have been the greatest win in my entire life,'' Spurrier said. ''If it
had worked out. It was just a close loss. I thought maybe something good
was going to happen, but they picked it off.''
The Gamecocks, 18-point underdogs, converted an onside kick and four fourth-down plays in their own territory.
Spurrier
finally busted on his last gamble. Thompson threw an incompletion on
fourth and 14 from Auburn's 19 that gave the Tigers the ball back with
5:28 left.
The Gamecocks got another chance, and moved into Auburn
territory with a completion and personal foul against Jonathon Mincy.
Then Thompson threw one final pass into a crowd of players from both
teams, and Jones came down with it.
Thompson also had a pick in the end zone early in the fourth when he was drilled by Gabe Wright as he threw.
Auburn
tied Florida State for the longest active streak with 14 straight home
wins. South Carolina has lost three consecutive SEC games for the first
time since the end of the 2009 season
Marshall ran for 89 yards and completed 12 of 14 passes for 139
yards. He scored on a 37-yard sprint and on runs of 4 and 9 yards and
said it was his best game of the season.
''Coming into the game,
we knew it was going to be a shootout,'' Marshall said. ''We knew we
were going to get South Carolina's best effort on the defensive and
offensive side.''
Cameron Artis-Payne gained 167 yards on 25
carries as Auburn's punishing running game countered South Carolina's
prolific passing. Receiver Ricardo Louis ran for 102 yards and raced to
a 75-yard touchdown midway through the third quarter.
Thompson
was 29-of-51 passing for 402 yards but was also intercepted three times
beyond or near the goal line. It was the most passing yards by a South
Carolina quarterback since Steve Taneyhill threw for 473 yards against
Mississippi State in 1995.
Pharoh Cooper caught two of his touchdown throws and had 127 yards on seven catches.
''We
almost did it,'' Spurrier said. ''We didn't quite make it but we messed
up in the red zone a couple of times. We got the onside kick.
''It gave us a fighting chance.''
It
was quite a match between Spurrier and Malzahn and their differing
styles. Both had their quarterbacks catch passes for first downs, and
both stuck to what they do best.
Auburn racked up 551 yards, 395 on the ground. South Carolina had 416 of its 535 yards through the air.
The
difference: Auburn scored four touchdowns on trips inside South
Carolina's 20-yard line. The Gamecocks were 2 of 5 with the three picks
keeping them out of the end zone.
''Their coach is one of the
better coaches to ever walk the sidelines,'' Malzahn said. ''I think
everybody saw that with the fourth-down calls and the onside kick. But
at the end of the day our guys found a way to win. Our defense didn't
play their best but at the very end they came through.''
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