(25) Mississippi 47, (7) Texas Tech 34

1234T
#25MISS (9-4)71714947
#7TTU (11-2)14701334

Final

2:00 PM ET, January 2, 2009
Cotton Bowl
DALLAS, TX

Snead, Ole Miss down Texas Tech in Cotton Bowl

ESPNDallas.com 
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Bowl Overview
It was over when... Dexter McCluster scored from 4 yards out to put the Rebels up 47-28 with 4:34 left.
Gameball goes to... The Ole Miss running game. The Rebels rushed for 223 yards and two TDs -- and controlled the clock.
Stat of the game... 134. Graham Harrell threw four TDs, giving him an FBS record 134 TD passes in his career at Tech.
Team Stat Comparison
 
1st Downs2624
Total Yards515469
Passing292364
Rushing223105
Penalties2-158-62
3rd Down Conversions8-148-15
4th Down Conversions1-12-3
Turnovers32
Possession35:1424:46
Air/Ground Leaders
Mississippi Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Snead18/2929231
Texas Tech Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Harrell36/5836442
Mississippi Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Bolden11101144
McCluster1497134
Texas Tech Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Woods646026
Harrell643044
Mississippi Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
McCluster683032
Wallace480141
Texas Tech Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Morris1089117
Britton587235
Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTERMISSTTU
TD06:31Edward Britton 35 Yd Pass From Graham Harrell (Matt Williams Kick) 07
TD05:22Darcel McBath 45 Yd Interception Return (Matt Williams Kick) 014
TD01:49Gerald Harris 8 Yd Pass From Jevan Snead (Joshua Shene Kick) 714
SECOND QUARTERMISSTTU
TD11:57Mike Wallace 41 Yd Pass From Jevan Snead (Joshua Shene Kick) 1414
TD07:44Michael Crabtree 2 Yd Pass From Graham Harrell (Matt Williams Kick) 1421
TD04:09Gerald Harris 21 Yd Pass From Jevan Snead (Joshua Shene Kick) 2121
FG01:08Joshua Shene 27 Yd 2421
THIRD QUARTERMISSTTU
TD12:12Marshay Green 65 Yd Interception Return (Joshua Shene Kick) 3121
TD06:55Brandon Bolden 17 Yd Run (Joshua Shene Kick) 3821
FOURTH QUARTERMISSTTU
TD12:13Edward Britton 12 Yd Pass From Graham Harrell (Matt Williams Kick) 3828
SF10:02Graham Harrell Tackled By Patrick Trahan In End Zone 4028
TD04:34Dexter McCluster 4 Yd Run (Joshua Shene Kick) 4728
TD01:37Eric Morris 17 Yd Pass From Graham Harrell (Two-Point Conversion Failed) 4734
Associated Press

DALLAS -- There were backflips across midfield, 50-yard dashes carrying oversized flags and a team-wide sprint to the student section. Ole Miss waited five years to feel this good and the Rebels were going to enjoy every second of it.

A season of revival that already included an upset at the Swamp culminated Friday with a 47-34 victory over No. 7 Texas Tech in the Cotton Bowl, sending No. 25 Mississippi into the offseason with a six-game winning streak and the anticipation of how coach Houston Nutt will build on his terrific debut year.

Fast Facts

• Ole Miss improved to 5-0 vs. the Big 12 in bowl games and won for the seventh time in its last eight bowl games overall.

• Jevan Snead threw for a career-high 292 yards and three TDs in the highest-scoring Cotton Bowl ever.

• Texas Tech QB Graham Harrell completed 36 of 58 passes for 364 yards, four TDs, and two interceptions in the loss. Harrell finishes his career with an FBS-record 134 passing TDs, three more than Hawaii's Colt Brennan.

• After starting 10-0, the Red Raiders lost two of three to finish the season at 11-2, the third 11-win season in school history.

-- ESPN research

"I wish we could keep this team and bring it back," Nutt said.

Then, turning to some seniors next to him, he barked, "You can't leave!"

Seconds later, he was so giddy that he told Cotton Bowl officials, "We'll make the announcement we'll come back next year, right now. Let's go!"

To understand the excitement, appreciate how far this program has come: from 3-8 last season, winless in the SEC and bowl-less since 2003 (back when Eli Manning was a senior) to 9-4 and likely to grab a season-ending ranking in the teens.

It's also worth noting those four losses were by a combined 19 points.

Better still, the surge to this warm-fuzzy finish began when the Rebels were 3-4 and smarting from consecutive losses after their road upset of then-No. 4 Florida.

"It's ... togetherness. That's something we haven't had in the past couple of years," said Dexter McCluster, a 5-foot-8 bundle of moves and speed who ran 14 times for 97 yards and a touchdown, and caught six passes for 83 yards. "Coach Nutt came in ... and got us on the right track and got us to believe. 'One heartbeat' has been something we've been stressing all year. We never gave up on that."

Although two All-American linemen and a big-play receiver are headed for the NFL, the program seems to be in good hands. The stars of this game -- McCluster, quarterback Jevan Snead, and cornerback-punt returner Marshay Green -- are all coming back.

In the final Cotton Bowl played in the stadium of the same name, the Red Raiders (11-2) converted a pair of early turnovers into a 14-0 lead. A team that stumbled on its way to the Big 12 and national championship games, then got left out of the BCS entirely, appeared to be channeling the disappointment against the SEC's fourth-best team, according to the polls.

But Snead led the Rebels to touchdowns on their next three drives. A field goal on the following series put Ole Miss ahead for the first time, just before halftime. Once Green returned an interception 65 yards for a touchdown and a 10-point lead early in the third quarter, the Rebels wouldn't be denied. By game's end, fans were chanting "S-E-C! S-E-C!" a message that came across loud and clear as schools from these leagues -- No. 1 Florida and No. 2 Oklahoma -- meet next week for the national title.

Even with time running out, Tech remained hopeful because of huge comebacks in its last two bowls. But every time the Red Raiders started to rise, they fell -- failing on a fourth-down try after the Rebels missed a field goal, quarterback Graham Harrell getting thrown for a safety following a recovered fumble, then blowing a 2-point conversion and failing to recover an onside kick attempt after their final touchdown.

"They're an incredibly good football team," Tech coach Mike Leach said. "You have to fight very precisely in order to beat them."

The Red Raiders still had the most exciting season in their history, peaking at No. 2 in the poll in mid-November. That's little consolation now, after losing two of the last three games, this one keeping them from a school-record 12th win and dropping them to 0-4 in the Cotton Bowl.

"We would have liked to have finished on a better note," said Harrell, who was 36-of-58 for a Cotton Bowl-record 364 yards and four touchdowns, and became both the NCAA career leader in touchdown passes (134) and the first player with multiple 5,000-yard seasons.

"It was still a very fun season."

All-American receiver Michael Crabtree caught four passes for a career-low 30 yards in what might be his last college game. Slowed by an ankle injury sustained in the season finale, and having gotten poked in the eye, he caught a 2-yard pass for Harrell's record-breaking touchdown but also fell on the pass that turned into Green's game-breaking interception.

Snead, a Texas native who began his career with the Longhorns, was 18-of-29 for 292 yards and three touchdowns. After his interception that put Tech up 14-0, the Rebels didn't have another turnover on the way to 515 yards.

McCluster, who at 5-foot-8 is hard to find and even harder to tackle, gave the Red Raiders fits. So did 6-foot-5, 250-pound tight end Gerald Harris, who caught two passes for 29 yards, both touchdowns -- after having only five catches and two TDs all season. Mike Wallace made a terrific grab of a 41-yard pass between two defenders for another touchdown.

Green nearly stole the show by following his long interception return with what initially was called a 63-yard punt return for a touchdown. Upon review, however, he stepped out at the "nine and two-thirds yard line," as the official described it.

Next year, the Cotton Bowl will be played in the $1.1 billion stadium being built by the Dallas Cowboys. To say goodbye to the old place, the bowl founder's widow handled the pregame coin toss and the dates 1937 and 2009 were painted on the field between the words, "Celebrating 73 years."

This turned out to be the most points in the game's history and the biggest crowd, 88,175, thanks to a recent stadium expansion.

College Football Scores

Other Scores:

Monday, December 29th
21 Missouri 30 Final
23 Northwestern 23 OT
Tuesday, December 30th
13 Oklahoma State 31 Final
17 Oregon 42
Wednesday, December 31st
Kansas 42 Final
Minnesota 21
Thursday, January 1st
Nebraska 26 Final
Clemson 21
Friday, January 2nd
25 Mississippi 47 Final
7 Texas Tech 34
Monday, January 5th
10 Ohio State 21 Final
3 Texas 24
Thursday, January 8th
2 Florida 24 Final
1 Oklahoma 14