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While most fans remember the "Henry Heave" play on fourth-and-25, that wasn't the only crazy aspect of Arkansas' dramatic overtime win over Ole Miss in 2015. With the Razorbacks set to travel to Oxford, Miss., for the first time since that game, Hawgs247 thought it'd be a good time to revisit one of the wildest games in Arkansas history...

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Arkansas and Ole Miss have had many memorable moments during their 63-game series that dates back to 1908. They range from the "Powder River Play" that gave the Razorbacks an upset victory in 1954 to the NCAA-record seven-overtime game in 2001 that Arkansas also won.

Those games pale in comparison to the one at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss., on Nov. 7, 2015.

Ole Miss was 7-2 and ranked No. 19 in the AP poll, while Arkansas was 4-4. The Rebels were in control of the SEC West because of an early-season win over Alabama and had College Football Playoff aspirations. Meanwhile, the Razorbacks were just two weeks removed from saving their season with a four-overtime win over Auburn and still fighting for bowl eligibility.

The year before, Arkansas upset then-No. 8 Ole Miss 30-0 in Fayetteville, so the Rebels were undoubtedly looking for revenge. Vegas expected them to get it, too, listing Ole Miss as a 7.5-point favorite.

At no point in the game, though, did the Rebels cover that spread.

It started slowly, with the teams exchanging punts on their first possessions, but then it started to heat up. Brandon Allen hit Drew Morgan for a 31-yard touchdown to give Arkansas the early lead. Three minutes later, Ole Miss tied it up at 7-7 with a three-yard touchdown run by Jaylen Walton.

They traded punches again in the second quarter, with Allen finding Dominique Reed for a 15-yard touchdown and Chad Kelly using his legs to score from 11 yards out. The Razorbacks tacked on a 45-yard field goal by Cole Hedlund with 43 seconds left until halftime, but that was enough time for the Rebels to get in range for a Gary Wunderlich 37-yard field goal.

Although Ole Miss took its first lead in the third quarter thanks to receiving the second-half kickoff, it didn't last long. When the dust settled, both teams scored a pair of touchdowns in the quarter.

Arkansas regained the lead when Allen threw his fifth touchdown pass of the game early in the fourth quarter, but Ole Miss scored, forced a punt and scored again to make it 45-38 Rebels with less than five minutes remaining.

Alex Collins and Allen helped the Razorbacks march back down the field to tie the game with 53 seconds left, making overtime almost a certainty. However, Ole Miss turned the ball over on downs near midfield with nine seconds on the clock and Allen hit Reed to put Arkansas in field goal range. Alas, Hedlund's 47-yard attempt was blocked, sending the game to overtime for sure.

It was an incredible game in regulation alone, as neither team led by more than seven points at any point and it was tied at the end of each quarter. The last time Arkansas played a game like that was the 1947 Cotton Bowl, when the Razorbacks battled LSU to a 0-0 tie.

The fun was just getting started, though.

Arkansas won the overtime coin toss and chose to play defense first. On the third play of overtime, Kelly scored on an 8-yard run to give Ole Miss the lead. It was his third rushing touchdown of the game and it gave him 110 yards on the ground. He also completed 24 of 34 passes for 368 yards and three more touchdowns.

The Razorbacks' overtime possession started in a disaster. Sandwiched between two incomplete passes by Allen were a five-yard delay of game penalty and a 10-yard sack. Needing a touchdown, Arkansas was facing a fourth-and-25 at the 40-yard line.

Fans remember what happened next, as Hunter Henry's lateral was picked up by Collins and run for a first down. The play is known as the "Henry Heave," but there were several unsung heroes that made it happen. Here's a breakdown of each step of the play, upon a closer review...

1. Instead of forcing a throw to a covered receiver down the field, Allen found Henry near the sideline after he ran a shallow crossing route.

2. Knowing he was well short of the first down line, Henry wildly threw the ball behind him as he was being spun around and tackled by an Ole Miss defender.

3. There were two Rebels and one Arkansas player in the general area of Henry's lateral. Luckily for the Razorbacks, their player was 6-foot-10 offensive lineman Dan Skipper. He stuck his hand in the air and deflected the ball.

4. Miraculously, the ball deflected off Skipper's hand, bounce off the ground and right into the hands of All-SEC running back Alex Collins.

5. Collins took off toward the sideline opposite of where Henry caught the original pass. As he did so, he had a wall of blockers. Morgan made a great effort to shield Collins from a potential tackler between the 25- and 30-yard lines. As Collins neared the first down line, he picked up another block from Jeremy Sprinkle.

6. Ole Miss finally took Collins down at the 11-yard line. Thinking Arkansas needed a touchdown, not just a first down, Collins tried lateraling it again. Trailing the play, Reed - who was criticized early in his career for not being able to pick up the playbook - saw the ball on the ground and fell on it because he knew the Razorbacks already had the first down.

Two plays later, Allen threw his school-record sixth touchdown pass of the game and, instead of playing for a second overtime, the Razorbacks chose to go for two and the win.

Ole Miss appeared to win the game with a sack on the two-point conversion attempt, but there was a face mask penalty. On the second attempt, Allen plowed into the end zone and got mobbed by his teammates - who eventually carried him off the field on their shoulders.

It was the defining moment of arguably the most adversity-filled career by a quarterback in UA history.

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Arkansas head coach Bret Bielema was asked about the play during Monday's weekly press conference. Here's what he said about it:

Maybe when I'm retired and sit back, I'll think about those things. But it was just one of those moments. Honestly, we do practice that scenario. The last play scenario where it's the last play of the game and we're in that situation where it's a fourth-and-forever and you've got to keep the ball alive, you don't go down. I can't say we practiced Hunter throwing it over his head and it gets tipped by Dan Skipper into the hands of Alex Collins who falls down and fumbles to Dominique Reed and falls forward. I mean, that would've been hard to simulate. But it was pretty neat how it happened.

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Bonus Throwback Thursday: Last year, we wrote about the 1914 Arkansas-Ole Miss game. That contest ended with an Arkansas coach being arrested after getting into a fight with a journalist. Click here to read all about it.

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