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Bama News
Michigan QB recalls 66-3 loss at Alabama before transferring from Ole Miss
Shea Patterson was the quarterback at Ole Miss before heading to Michigan two years ago. His one trip to Tuscaloosa didn't end well.
Shea Patterson didnāt have much to say when asked about his last experience with Alabama.
The Michigan quarterback started his career at Ole Miss and that included a 2017 visit to Bryant-Denny Stadium.
āIt didnāt exactly go my way,ā Patterson recalled Sunday.
True.
Alabama ended a three-year string of dramatic games with Ole Miss, handing the NCAA-sanctioned Rebels a 66-3 loss on an ugly night for the road team. It was the most a Crimson Tide team had scored since 1979 with Jalen Hurts as the opposing quarterback.
Pattersonās numbers didnāt shine, either.
The sophomore was 14 for 29 passing with 165 yards and two interceptions. The first of his picks was returned 35 yards by Levi Wallace to give Alabama a 14-0 lead less than six minutes into the game.
It took the Rebels four possessions to get their initial first down and never drove deeper than the Tide 9-yard line. A Gary Wunderlich 26-yard field goal late in the first half would be the Rebelsā only points on a night the Hugh Freeze-fueled era clearly died a few months after his firing.
Patterson would transfer to Michigan after that season and start the next two seasons in Ann Arbor.
Michigan tight end Sean McKeon sees a difference between Pattersonās first Alabama experience and the one coming Wednesday in the Citrus Bowl.
āObviously, they werenāt as good of a team as we are when they played Alabama,ā McKeon said. āBut he knows some of those guys and he knows how they play. Just got to focus and take everything really serious.ā
Patterson completed 57.3 percent of his 344 passes this season for 2,828 yards. He threw 22 touchdowns compared to six interceptions but is coming off a rough day against Ohio State. The Shreveport native was 18 of 43 for a season-low 41.9 completion percentage in a 56-27 loss to the then-No. 1 Buckeyes on Nov. 30.
Still, the soft-spoken Patterson said his game has evolved since his time at Ole Miss.
āI was watching film my freshman and sophomore year,ā he said Sunday, āand it's just āā I mean, it's completely different ā¦ā
Offensive coordinator Josh Gattis took it from there.
āI'll go to battle with this guy any day of the week,ā said Gattis, the Alabama receiversā coach in 2018. āThis is Sugar Shea Patterson right here. Just to see his confidence throughout the year continue to rise each and every week, his preparation, his performance.ā