That’s about as entertaining as it gets.

We got 4 quarters of thrilling football in Oxford, all the way down to A&M’s tipped field goal attempt by Deantre Prince to end it. Ole Miss held on for a 38-35 win in a game that it needed to keep its division title and Playoff hopes alive.

Here are 3 takeaways:

1. That Ole Miss offense can dial it up with a healthy Tre Harris

It was brilliant. Harris, who dealt with injuries in the first part of the season after transferring from Louisiana Tech, couldn’t be stopped. His 213 yards — and an Odell Beckham Jr.-like grab — were the headline of an offensive attack that looked darn impressive against a battle-tested A&M defense.

Jaxson Dart felt pressure, but he didn’t throw an interception. He finished with 387 passing yards for an Ole Miss offense that averaged 7.8 yards per play. The complementary running game from Quinshon Judkins kept A&M on its heels. Judkins had 102 yards on the ground with 3 scores, including the game-winning score.

Ole Miss racked up 518 yards of offense on a day in which it needed every bit of that to fend off a gutsy A&M effort on the road.

2. A&M’s effort was great … but the road woes continue

On a day in which A&M was without star receiver Evan Stewart, Max Johnson deserved a chance to play for overtime. Shoot, he deserved to win with how well he played. Yes, he probably wished he could’ve had that interception in the end zone back, but the A&M signal-caller gave the Aggies a chance. He had 305 passing yards, but he couldn’t get that big conversion late to leave Oxford with a win.

The Aggies also watched Shemar Turner leave the game via an ejection for an unsportsmanlike penalty after he was the best player on the field in the first half. A&M could’ve used his play to slow down Dart and the Ole Miss offense, which also scored a 29-yard touchdown after the Aggies forgot to cover Jordan Watkins.

As it stands, A&M is now riding a 9-game losing streak in true road games. That was the 4th longest active streak in the country entering the day. With a trip to LSU remaining, it’s by no means a given that the Aggies will get to an 8-4 regular season mark.

3. Is next week the biggest game in Ole Miss history? Lane Kiffin hasn’t thought about it yet

ESPN sideline reporter Katie George asked that question to Kiffin afterward, and he said that he didn’t even know that the 2-time defending champs were next on the schedule. Whether the Ole Miss coach was telling the truth or not, the point remains.

Ole Miss has an opportunity to keep its Playoff hopes alive at Georgia, who hasn’t lost a regular-season game in 3 years.

The stage will be as big as it gets for Kiffin and Co.