Ole Miss-Tennessee football 2021 live stream (10/16) How to watch online, TV info, time

Mississippi head coach Lane Kiffin, right, congratulates quarterback Matt Corral (2) after leading his team to a second half touchdown against Arkansas at an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Oct. 9, 2021, in Oxford, Miss. Mississippi won 52-51. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

The Tennessee Volunteers host the Ole Miss Rebels in college football 2021 action Saturday, Oct. 16, at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, Tenn. The game will be live streamed via fubo TV.

No. 13 Ole Miss is 4-1 overall, 1-1 in the SEC, while Tennessee is 4-2, 2-1. The teams last met in 2014, with the Rebels beating the Volunteers 34-3 in Oxford.

The Ole Miss-Tennessee game starts at 6:30 p.m. Central (7:30 p.m. Eastern) and will be live streamed on fubo TV, which offers a 7-day free trial. SEC Network will broadcast the game.

Preview

Tennessee is throwing quite a party for Lane Kiffin’s first game back in Knoxville as a head coach.

Neyland Stadium is sold out for the first time since September 2017, and fans will be organized in orange and white sections for a Vols’ checkerboard effect also for the first time since 2017 to greet Kiffin and his 13th-ranked Mississippi Rebels.

“Obviously that means there’s a lot of energy and excitement around there,” Kiffin said.

Once the ball kicks off Saturday night, that’s when the real fireworks start in a showdown between two of the nation’s most prolific offenses. Ole Miss is second both in running 2.89 offensive plays a minute and scoring 1.75 points a minute. Tennessee is third with 2.87 plays a minute and 1.58 points a minute.

Ole Miss (4-1, 1-1) also leads the Southeastern Conference in total offense with 561.6 yards a game with the Volunteers are third with 474 yards.

Both coaches had an up-close view of the other when Heupel was at Central Florida with Kiffin was leading Florida Atlantic. Kiffin’s offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby was Heupel’s quarterbacks coach in 2018 and offensive coordinator in 2019 at UCF.

Kiffin has been impressed by what the Vols (4-2, 2-1) have done in coach Josh Heupel’s first season, especially coming off two straight wins including a 45-20 rout of South Carolina.

“We moved a little bit from where they’re at with different plays just like they have with us, but the base system, not necessarily the routes, but the base system of how it’s practiced, run and efficient during a game is the same, which is the same as what we just played last week,” Kiffin said.

His Rebels held off Arkansas 52-51. Tennessee is starting to deliver the fast-paced football Heupel promised when hired. Now he has his first packed stadium, Heupel wants them to do their part.

“We need to make it tough for those guys to communicate,” Heupel said. “Our fans understand that they’re playing with tempo in their communication. We need to make it loud and make it uncomfortable for them.”

RUN HEAVY

Kiffin knows the perception of what Ole Miss and Tennessee run on offense probably doesn’t meet reality. They run the ball well, not just pass it around all the time. The Rebels are fifth nationally in rush offense, averaging 259.6 yards. Tennessee is seventh, producing 253.7 on average on the ground.

“I like to live in reality, not perception,” Kiffin said. “The point is the second week in a row we’re getting ready to play a great rushing team and the facts show you that, even though a lot of people say, ‘Oh, here’s another spread team that throws the ball all over.’ That ain’t the case.”

Ole Miss hopes to get back running back Jerrion Ealy, who missed the Arkansas game under the concussion protocol.

OFFENSIVE MILESTONES

The Vols already have scored 249 points, eclipsing the 215 scored in 10 games last season. They also have put together back-to-back games where they scored 28 points in the first quarter and 107 points alone in the past two games.

Heupel is the first Tennessee coach to have his team score more than 40 points in three of his first six games.

QB NUMBERS

Ole Miss quarterback Matt Corral has thrown a touchdown pass in 17 straight games, the second-longest streak in school history. He also ranks top 10 nationally in total offense with 350.4 yards per game.

Hendon Hooker comes in 3 -1 as Tennessee’s starting quarterback. The graduate transfer from Virginia Tech is averaging 224.2 yards per game, and Hooker has thrown 13 touchdowns with only one interception.

STEPPING UP

When defensive back Theo Jackson, Tennessee’s leading tackler, missed the South Carolina game with an injury, Brandon Turnage got the call. After spending his first two seasons at Alabama, the transfer responded with 14 tackles and two tackles for loss to earn SEC Defensive Player of the Week.

LOST SEASON

Another Tennessee transfer, Juwan Mitchell, appeared in three games before his season was cut short by a shoulder injury. Mitchell, a senior linebacker, was Texas’ leading tackler last season and had eight tackles this season before being sidelined.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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