Mississippi State vs. Auburn RECAP, score, stats (9/30/17) | College football

Auburn quarterback Jarrett Stidham will lead his team against Mississippi State on Saturday. (AP Photo | L.G. Patterson)

The 24th ranked Mississippi State Bulldogs (3-1) meet the 13th ranked Auburn Tigers (3-1) in an SEC matchup in NCAA football on Saturday, September 30, 2017 (9/30/17) at Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn, Alabama.

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Here is the AP recap of the game:

AUBURN, Ala. (AP) -- Kerryon Johnson sprinted 59 yards on the game's third play, and Auburn kept dropping an avalanche of big gains on Mississippi State.

Jarrett Stidham passed for 264 yards and two touchdowns, and Johnson ran for three scores to lead the 13th-ranked Tigers to a 49-10 victory over 24th-ranked Mississippi State on Saturday night.

Tack on plays of 67, 57, 52, 49 and 47 yards, and Johnson's early run was just a table setter.

"That's what we've been working on, those big plays down the field," he said. "That's hard on defenses."

It certainly was on the Bulldogs.

The Tigers (4-1, 2-0 Southeastern Conference) established themselves as the most likely challenger to No. 1 Alabama in the Western Division with the explosive offensive performance. The Bulldogs (3-2, 1-2) have lost two straight lopsided games since blowing out LSU to start a string of three matchups with Top 15 teams.

Stidham launched a handful of deep balls for Auburn, including a 47-yard touchdown to a wide-open Will Hastings and a 57-yarder to Eli Stove from his own end zone. He wound up 13-of-16 passing and also had a 49-yard reverse pass to Darius Slayton after lining up at receiver.

"He's repped that 20 or 30 times, and it was wide open," Auburn coach Gus Malzahn said.

Johnson gained 116 yards in a strong follow-up to his five-touchdown effort in a 51-14 romp over Missouri. It's the first time since 1987 that Auburn has beaten back-to-back SEC opponents by 30-plus points.

"I think we're jelling at the right time," Stidham said.

Backup quarterback Malik Willis got into the act with a 67-yard run in the final minutes, thrilling the smattering of fans still remaining.

Mississippi State's Nick Fitzgerald passed for 157 yards and ran for 56 but was intercepted twice. The Bulldogs had seven false start penalties.

"We did everything you shouldn't do when you come on the road to win," Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen said.

The Bulldogs had two touchdowns overturned on replay in the first half, ultimately scoring after a ruling that Fitzgerald was tackled inside the 1. Earlier, Jeffery Simmons knocked the ball loose from Stidham and Montez Sweat picked it up and took it to the end zone.

The ball had been blown dead after the official called it an incomplete pass. Replay ruled it a fumble and gave it to Mississippi State at Auburn's 32, but the Bulldogs wound up only with a field goal.

"It was a momentum killer," Simmons said. "I guess the referee made a good call on it. But we've got to move on from it. Once it's called, it's called."

Auburn gained 511 yards on just 56 plays. Mississippi State had 351 yards on 84 plays.

THE TAKEAWAY

Mississippi State: Moved the ball at times but went 5 of 19 on third down and converted just two of six fourth-down attempts. That included a failed fake punt in the first half. Fitzgerald completed 13 of 33 passes and ran 13 times.

Auburn: The defense kept up its strong play while offensively Auburn had seven offensive plays of 30-plus yards. That doesn't even count Javaris Davis' 37-yard interception return for a touchdown in the fourth quarter. Stidham set up one score with the long ball to Slayton after Johnson took a direct snap and Stidham got the ball on a reverse.

FOURTH & GO

Auburn also had a fourth-down gamble, with good results. Johnson scored on a fourth-down run in the first quarter. Auburn initially lined up to kick before Malzahn called a timeout amid boos from the crowd, and decided to go for it.

UP NEXT

Mississippi State has an open date before hosting BYU on Oct. 14.

Auburn hosts Mississippi in another SEC West game.

Here's what you need to know:

Who: Mississippi State vs. Auburn

When: Saturday, Sept. 30, 2017

Where: Jordan-Hare Stadium, Auburn, Alabama

Time: 6 p.m. Eastern

TV: ESPN

Livestream: WatchESPN

Line: Auburn -9

The Auburn Tigers put it all together for one dominant performance against a struggling Southeastern Conference team.

Now, the Tigers are trying to build on that 51-14 win at Missouri when the offense finally exploded and the defense played pretty much like it had all season. The Tigers (3-1, 1-0 SEC) get to see if that was a turning point or just taking advantage of a mismatch Saturday when Mississippi State (3-1, 1-1) visits.

Auburn coach Gus Malzahn thinks the confidence boost "has to" carry over.

"My message to our team and to our coaches is, you look in our league, there's a lot of teams that'll be up high for one week or two weeks and then have a setback," Malzahn said on Tuesday. "The teams that have a chance to win championships in this league are the teams that can figure out a way to get a little bit better each week.

"Now, that's a hard challenge in this league. But that's the challenge that I've put on our coaches and our players, find a way as a team to improve, even if it's just a little bit, each week. And if we can do that, then we have a chance."

The good news for Auburn is that Malzahn said there's "a high likelihood" that tailback Kamryn Pettway will return after missing the Missouri game with plantar fasciitis. Pettway practiced on Sunday, Malzahn said.

It's a potentially big boost for an offense that has been without either Pettway or Kerryon Johnson in each of the first four games.

The offense had produced just 117 yards against No. 2 Clemson and committed five turnovers in an embarrassingly close win over FCS Mercer.

The Missouri game gave the Tigers something more to celebrate. Auburn rushed for 263 yards, with Johnson scoring five touchdowns. Jarrett Stidham was an efficient 16-of-21 passing for 219 yards.

It was definitely a pick-me-up, particularly for the offensive players.

"The locker room was great after the win, and it's probably the best it's been all year," Johnson said. "The bus ride back was shorter, practice on Sunday was easier. Everybody's just in a better mood. So I think with that leading into this stretch we're about to go into was a key moment."

There were other positives from the game. It also afforded Auburn a chance to get newly promoted backup quarterback Malik Willis his first college action. The freshman took over the No. 2 spot after Sean White's dismissal following a suspension and public intoxication arrest.

Developing players like tailback Kam Martin and wide receivers Nate Craig-Myers and Kyle Davis contributed big plays.

Stidham also had another solid game after passing for 364 yards against Mercer.

"I think he's gotten better in all phases," Malzahn said. "Decision-making, his comfort with the offense and everything that goes with it. I think he's getting to a point where he can react and not have to think about everything that goes with it but I thought he played a very high level last week."

(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

Ryan Dunleavy may be reached at rdunleavy@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter 

Todderick Hunt may be reached at thunt@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @TodderickHunt. Find NJ.com Rutgers Football on Facebook.

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