McIntosh throws 4 INTs in Southern Illinois loss

Southern Illinois did a lot of things right in its bid to pull the upset over Mississippi. The Salukis ran the ball well. They threw it well at times, too.
But four turnovers proved too much to overcome as Ole Miss beat Southern Illinois 42-24 on Saturday night.
''We know we let an opportunity slip away,'' Southern Illinois coach Dale Lennon said. ''We felt we were capable of doing more tonight.''
Steve Strother rushed for 116 yards for Southern Illinois (1-1), but the Salukis were hurt by quarterback Paul McIntosh's four interceptions. McIntosh completed 14 of 30 passes for 197 yards and two touchdowns.
The Salukis trailed 35-10 early in the third quarter but responded with two consecutive touchdowns, including a 31-yard pass from McIntosh to Cam Fuller to pull within 35-24. But SIU couldn't get any closer.
Ole Miss sophomore Jeff Scott rushed for three touchdowns and added another on a punt return, finishing with 116 yards on 18 carries.
''The coaches did a great job of preparing me to carry the load tonight and I just went out there and played the hardest I could,'' Scott said.
Scott scored three touchdowns in the first six minutes of the game with the third coming on a 67-yard punt return that ended with him tip-toeing down the right sideline and just inside the bright orange pylon. It gave Ole Miss a 21-0 lead and the rout appeared to be well underway.
But the rest of the game wasn't as easy. Ole Miss (1-1) had a 35-10 lead early in the third quarter before Southern Illinois responded with two touchdown drives in the second half to pull within 35-24.
Ole Miss was playing without its top two running backs - seniors Brandon Bolden and Enrique Davis - after the pair suffered injuries in last week's season opener against BYU. But Scott was stellar in their place, rushing for touchdowns of 37 and 4 yards in the opening minutes before the punt return for a touchdown pushed the Rebels' lead to 21-0 with 9:09 remaining in the first half.
''They set up a wall and I just bent the corner with my speed,'' Scott said. ''I had one guy to beat and that was the kicker. He put his hand out and I was trying my best to stay in bounds and I got in the end zone.''
He added a 7-yard touchdown run in the third quarter.
Scott's first touchdown was the most spectacular. He broke several tackles and juked one Southern Illinois defender before finding open space and eventually the end zone.
Nutt has said Scott is the fastest of the Rebel running backs, but sometimes struggles with blocking assignments and fumbles. He didn't appear to have any of those problems against the Salukis, though, and his performance gives the Rebels confidence heading into next week's Southeastern Conference opener against Vanderbilt.
Zack Stoudt was decent in his first start as the Ole Miss quarterback, completing 11 of 18 passes for 118 yards and a touchdown. Stoudt said Scott's success opened opportunities downfield.
''That was huge - running the ball this week,'' Stoudt said. ''We needed to prove that we could. Not just to other people, but also to ourselves,''
Quarterback Randall Mackey also played after he served a one-game suspension because of his arrest following a bar fight, leading the Rebels on two touchdown drives. He completed his only pass for 18 yards and also rushed six times for 36 yards.
Barry Brunetti, the starting quarterback against BYU, did not play.
Games against Football Championship Subdivision teams are usually considered sure wins, but the Rebels weren't in position to take any opponent lightly. Ole Miss is barely one year removed from a 49-48 double overtime loss to FCS opponent Jacksonville State that qualified as one of the most embarrassing moments in program history.
It wouldn't happen again, though the Salukis did keep things interesting for much of the night.
Jewel Hampton rushed for a 2-yard touchdown late in the first half to pull the Salukis within 28-10 at halftime. Southern Illinois outgained Ole Miss 420-315. But Ole Miss coach Houston Nutt didn't dwell on the less-than-stellar numbers.
''I like winning, and that was the whole goal,'' Nutt said. ''When you have that many new faces you don't know what is going to happen.''