Commodores fall to Kentucky

Nov. 11, 2017

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NASHVILLE — Benny Snell rushed for 116 yards and three touchdowns and Sihiem King added two rushing TDs, leading Kentucky to a 44-21 win at Vanderbilt on Saturday.

Kentucky (7-3, 4-3 SEC) improved its bowl stock while keeping Vanderbilt (4-6, 0-6) winless in the conference standings.

Snell, who entered the game as the SEC’s leading rusher, became the ninth player in school history to reach 2,000 career yards. The 5-foot-11, 223-pound sophomore also became the first Kentucky player to rush for consecutive 1,000-yard seasons. Snell also set the school record for career rushing touchdowns (28).

“It’s one of my accomplishments that I write on my wall,” Snell said. “I’m very thankful, especially for my o-line and my tight ends. They do a great job and they don’t get enough credit.”

Kentucky’s Austin MacGinnis kicked three field goals and the Wildcats rambled for 428 yards in total offense.

“We played efficient on offense, defense and special teams and each group contributed to the victory,” Kentucky coach Mark Stoops said. “When our offense is like that and has that type of (smash mouth) mentality and we run the ball like that, it opens up a lot of things. That’s the best recipe to win games.”

Kyle Shurmur threw four interceptions and one TD, and was sacked five times. He is tied for second with Jay Cutler (21) for most single-season TD passes in Vanderbilt history.

Ralph Webb rushed for 70 yards and one TD for the Commodores. The senior passed Florida’s Emmitt Smith in career yards and moved into the top 10 in SEC rushing history.

Kentucky spotted Vanderbilt a 7-0 lead in the first quarter before rallying for 34 consecutive points to take control.

Vanderbilt struck first on Webb’s 37-yard run with 5:37 left. The Wildcats tied it at 7 on King’s 22-yard run to the right late in the quarter and went ahead 14-7 on Snell’s 22-yard TD run early in the second quarter.

Two Kyle Shurmur interceptions late in the first half set up a pair of Kentucky field goals by MacGinnis. Derrick Bailey’s interception and 44-yard return to the Vanderbilt 20 set up MacGinnis’ 42-yard field goal that increased the Wildcats’ lead to 17-7 with 2:09 left in the first half. Mike Edwards’ pick gave Kentucky the ball on the Vanderbilt 43 and MacGinnis capitalized with a 40-yard field goal that stretched Kentucky’s lead to 20-7 as time expired in the half.

The momentum remained in the Wildcats’ favor as Snell’s 2-yard TD run extended their lead to 27-7 early in the third quarter. The Wildcats struck again when King’s 7-yard run gave the visitors a 34-7 advantage with 8:29 left in the third quarter.

“We try to keep that one-two punch going on with my speed and his bigness,” King said. “Two-headed monster, that’s what we call each other. You really can’t keep up with the tempo if you’ve got power coming at you and then a little bit of speed.”

Vanderbilt finally struck back on Shurmur’s 14-yard TD run that narrowed the deficit to 34-14 with 8:29 left in the third quarter. But Lynn Bowden answered with a 93-yard kickoff return to the Commodores 6. On the next play, Snell’s 6-yard TD run extended the Wildcats’ lead to 41-14 with 3:53 left in the third quarter.

Shurmur’s 17-yard TD pass to Kalija Lipscomb narrowed the deficit to 41-21 with 13 seconds left in the third quarter.

MacGinnis’ third field goal, this one from 39 yards out, increased the Wildcats’ lead to 44-21 with 7:56 remaining.

Kentucky cornerback Kendall Randolph left the field with a minor shoulder injury with 3:01 left.

THE TAKEAWAY
Kentucky: The Wildcats are on track for their best regular season since going 8-3 in 1984. They’ll be underdogs next week at Georgia before finishing with a winnable home game against Louisville on Nov. 25.

Vanderbilt: The Commodores have allowed at least 34 points against all six of their SEC opponents and will probably have to win their last two games against Missouri and Tennessee to become bowl eligible.

UP NEXT
Kentucky visits second-ranked Georgia in its last road game on Saturday. The Wildcats haven’t defeated the Bulldogs since a 34-27 win in 2009.

Vanderbilt hosts Missouri in its final home game on Saturday. The Commodores have won three of their last five against the Tigers although Missouri won 26-17 last year.