Tuesday, October 25, 2011

LSU tramples on Auburn, 45-10






 Rueben Randle caught two bombs and Auburn looked like it was hit by them.


 No. 2 LSU rolled Saturday in a 45-10 trampling of the Auburn Tigers in Baton Rouge.


 Jordan Jefferson and  Jarrett Lee, both had superb games and displayed their long balls as the Tigers rolled to their eighth-straight victory by double digits.


"It just seems like no matter who goes down or who's out, we have guys who are ready to step in … and not just to fill a spot but to go in and dominate," said LSU center T-Bob Hebert.
"I almost feel like everybody else makes a bigger deal about it than we do," Hebert said of the periodic lineup upheaval, and the public scrutiny of the misbehavior that has caused it.
"It's not distracting to us. This team is so good about staying focused, one-track mind, not letting anything on the outside get to them because we don't want to have any regrets."
Somehow, some way Alabama has overtaken the Tigers for the No. 1 spot in college football. Nothing a little head to head comp can't settle.


NOW, WHAT SAY YOU, BAMA???

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Tigers demolish Vols @ Rocky Top, 38-7



It wasn't pretty. There were few style points, but  top-ranked LSU still mopped the floor with Tennessee, 38-7 in front of more than 101,000 at Rocky Top.
For the first time, perhaps, we saw a less-than-confident Jarrett Lee, who looked shaky at times. He finished with 115 yards and two touchdowns but they were both short passes that didn't require a lot of moxie.
Don't get me wrong, we'll take it.
The win was the Tigers' sixth straight SEC victory and their seventh consecutive win by double digits.
"I felt like we did what we needed to do," LSU coach Les Miles told reporters after the game. "It wasn't our best game, but we did what we had to do to ensure victory. Our defense gave us turnovers and the opportunities to take the opponent out. Our offense late in the game gave us the football and ate up the time of possession and scored."
Matt Simms, making his first start in place of the injured Tyler Bray, was 6 of 20 for 128 yards and two interceptions, one of them being the play of the game by LSU cornerback Morris Claiborne. His 89-yard return to the 5 yard line put the Tigers in the driver's seat with their first score.
"It wasn't a really complex game," Tennessee coach Derek Dooley said. "In the first half, I thought we competed our tails off and had a couple of real bad mistakes that was ultimately the difference in the first half. In the second half, we had a couple of third-down opportunities where we didn't execute and they pounded us. I don't know any other way to say it."
Next up for the Tigers: The always-tough Auburn Tigers.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Tennessee wary of Ware, LSU running game


Derek Dooley and the Tennessee Volunteers know they need to be concerned with LSU's stable of running backs, especially Spencer Ware.
Leading the No. 1-ranked Tigers with 432 yards rushing and five scores, Ware is looking to punish the Vols defenders, like he does other opponents.


“If you come as hard as you can, full throttle, with it in your mind that, ‘You can’t tackle me,’ then you will break a tackle,” Ware told the Washington Post recently. “Every time you have the ball you have to have the mentality that you want to score, not just, ‘Oh, it’s a defender in front of me and I might get tackled.’”
For the second week in a row, the Tigers face an SEC team without their starting quarterback. Last week, John Brantley was out for Florid as LSU cruised to a 41-11 win.
This week the Vols are without starter signal caller Tyler Bray, who has a hand injury. Tennessee coach Dooley says there won't be any excuses.

"I don't care how many guys we lose, we're still Tennessee," Dooley said, according to the Times Picayune newspaper. "We fought (LSU) good last year. I know this: If we don't come believing we can win and playing to our capacity, then it's going to look like what happened last week. They are going to embarrass you."

“We just don’t look good, and we’ve just got to go out there and hit people and stick our pads down and run,” Dooley was quoted as saying. “That’s what good running teams do, and we’re just going to keep working on it.”

But the Vols better beware of Ware.

“Spencer just wears people down,” LSU offensive guard Will Blackwell told the Post. “He might be 225 pounds, but I swear he runs like he’s about 260 and when you’ve got a guy coming at you full-speed 20 times a game you’re going to get tired.”

Sunday, October 09, 2011

LSU stomps Florida, 41-11



The LSU Tigers showed Saturday afternoon that it could blow a team out offensively and strangle it defensively in a 41-11 victory over the Florida Gators in Baton Rouge.

It's hard to stay focused.It's hard not to skip the next two games and talk about the Alabama game, but it's all coming to a head, folks.

We see Oklahoma. We see you Boise. But do you see us?


On the ground LSU relied on Spencer Ware, who bounced off and rolled over defenders to finish with 109 yards rushing and two touchdowns.

LSU (6-0, 3-0 SEC) struck first and never looked back as Jarrett Lee, on LSU's second play from scrimmage, riled back and launched a rainbow bomb that hit Rueben Randle in stride for a 46-yard touchdown.

On the other side of the ball, the18th-ranked Florida (4-2, 2-2) finished with 100 passing and 113 rushing behind third-string freshman quarterback Jacoby Brisset, who did what he could and no more.

Was it a dominating win? Of course. Did we enjoy it? Immensely, but let's be honest, folks. The Gators were without two-thirds of their offensive mojo: Speedster Jeffrey Demps and starting quarterback John Brantley or even Jeff Driskel. With them lining up, this game is still a Tiger victory, but it's worth another 10 points and buck-50 on the stat sheet. 


"We showed everybody that we are capable of some special things against a really good Florida team," said LSU defensive end Sam Montgomery.

LSU backup quarterback Jordan Jefferson added a touchdown toss on a jump pass ala' Tim Tebow in the fourth quarter.

"It was not necessarily the first time it was run in football," LSU coach Les Miles said at the press conference afterwards. "I really enjoyed it."

Miles, according to the Advocate, said the thing he appreciates most is the schedule that the Football Gods have given him.


“I like the idea that we’ve played quality opponents,” he told the newspaper, “and had the killer instinct to really gain the advantage and then withhold the opportunity of victory from them. That’s finishing the game, and we did that.”

Next week the Tigers travel to Rocky Top to face a Volunteers squad that got ravished by Georgia.





Saturday, October 08, 2011

Florida Gators concerned about Mathieu



LSU sophomore cornerback Tyrann Mathieu has the full attention of Florida coach Will Muschamp.

“Just an electric guy on the field,” Muschamp said of Mathieu. “[He] plays with great energy; tough, hard-nosed, great blitzer. Has just a knack for getting the ball off people as far as strips are concerned and interceptions. Just one of those guys that shows up in the right spots regardless of what’s being asked of him.”
The New Orleans native is being mentioned for Heisman consideration.

The Gators are right to be concerned, as Tampabay.com reports. Mathieu leads a deep Tiger defense with 35 tackles, four pass breakups, an interception, 1 1/2 sacks and four forced fumbles.
To put that last number in perspective, the whole Florida Gators defense has forced four fumbles or the year.

Mathieu has two fumble return TDs.

Les Miles explained the force that is Mathieu in a way that only we can, Tampabay.com reports:

"We saw it in camp, that aggressiveness and want to compete even in high school,'' Miles said. "That allowed us to be very comfortable and anticipate that he’d be that kind of player in college. What happens with guys that make those kind of plays routinely, they envision each play as an opportunity to make a great play and if it just happens they are put in that position, they saw that great play they were about to make even before it ever happened. And I think there are few of those. Patrick Peterson certainly was one. I think there are a number of guys on our team who see it that way. But I don’t know that anybody predicts that until you get them on our campus and see it routinely. Really in the first year he showed he was that kind of player.,' he was quoted as saying.

Still, Florida with the speedy Demps and Rainey, will find a way to produce. Look for punt returns and flea-flicker trickery to put 14 points on the board. After that, it'll be all smash mouth football, which Tigers coach Les Miles prefers anyway.
Prediction: LSU 24, Florida 17.

Sunday, October 02, 2011

LSU's Tyrann Mathieu: Heisman Caliber or Hype?



"College football needs to pay attention to No. 7 at LSU. He's one of the most dynamic playmakers in all of college football," said none other than Kirk Herbstreit during the LSU-West Virginia telecast earlier this season.

"I keep using the comparison: Ed Reed, because he has that sixth sense to make plays. I don't know how he does it but he's always there to make plays," he said.

LSU cornerback Tyrann Mathieu is gaining momentum as a Heisman candidate. The Bleacher Report says: "He's arguably the best player on arguably the nation's best team."

Not only that but "Honey Badger" plays with a swagger unparalleled in college football today. He simply has a nose for the ball. And people are starting to notice.

ESPN analyst Desmond Howard, who is perhaps best known as a player who exemplified the Heisman pose at Michigan (and a huge Les Miles fan) tweeted that Mathieu is the real deal.

"Tyrann Mathieu is most definitely on MY Heisman list. Talking about 'earning' a nomination. I love his game!"

Mathieu was personally willed the LSU Tigers to win at least two of their final three games, a 41-17 victory over Arkansas for the SEC West title, and the following week a 42-10 stomping of Georgia.


"I could hear my teammates in my ear saying, 'Man, we need you to go make a play,'" Mathieu said after the Razorbacks game in which he returned a punt 92 yards. "I was able to help the momentum really go in our favor."


"You have no idea how bad I just wanted to go out there and make a big play for our team. I was fortunate enough to be able to do that," the New Orleans native said.

"That was a huge turning point in the game," Arkansas coach Bobby Petrino said. "We were trying to get the ball punted to the sideline, but he miss-hit it a bit and punted it to the middle. ... (Mathieu) made a great cut and made us miss at the point of attack. He made a great play."

LSU trailed 14-7 when Mathieu fielded Dylan Breeding's end-over-end kick at his own 8, started left, made a hard cut straight up field, then angled left again to break into the clear.

"It made the statement that that lead was not going to stand up," LSU coach Les Miles said. "Our defense was going to continue to play well and our offense was coming."

Against Georgia, the Honey Badger was even more deadly. He took a punt at his own 38, found an opening, did and zig then a zag, and was gone — his second punt return for a touchdown in two weeks. Did he score? Yes and no. A replay shown repeatedly on CBS showed that Mathieu flipped the ball to an official just a mili-second before crossing the end zone. But the referee signaled touchdown.

Asked after the game if he knew he didn't score the Honey Badger fessed up. "Yeah, I kind of felt it," Mathieu said. "I looked at the referee. I'll have to remember not to do that next time."

Can he take what he wants at the Heisman ceremony?





Jefferson returns as LSU whips Kentucky, 35-7


It wasn't pretty. It wasn't overwhelming, but the Tigers simply took all four quarters to grind out four offensive touchdowns and one defensive to whip the hapless Kentucky Wildcats 35-7.
The big news of the game was the return of veteran quarterback Jordan Jefferson, who scored on a one-yard sneak to give the Tigers a 7-0 lead.
To be honest, many of the Tiger faithful booed him when he trotted on the field. It was a mixed emotion-type thing.

Will Jarrett Lee, who got LSU to No. 1, be relegated to a backup role now? Will Jefferson get equal snaps now? All we know is that opposing defenses have that much more to worry about now.

"When Jordan Jefferson scored that touchdown, and (starting quarterback) Jarrett Lee celebrated, that's when I knew right then, that the word 'team' means so much more," LSU defensive end Sam Montgomery said. "Jordan's been through a whole lot, so now he can tell the story of how, 'I went through this, bounced back, came back on the team, and now we're all a big family again.'"

After the game, LSU coach Les Miles said Jefferson's return simply opens up the playbook.

"We will use Jefferson in a variety of ways," said Miles, who did not allow Jefferson to speak with reporters after the game. "At different times in the season, we will need every skill and every collective attribute of our team."

On the stat sheet it will show that LSU had their average of 178 (give or take) yards rushing, but in reality the Kentucky front line stuffed the Tigers more times than they will be given credit for.


With Spencer Ware leading the way (until he was injured) LSU’s power running game gained only a paltry yards on its first 12 carries.

“It’s really tough, because we came out and we thought we had them,” linebacker Ronnie Sneed said. “It was like, ‘Hey, we’re here to fight.’ I felt like we were showing them. We played pretty tough. Then it just slipped away from us.”


Wildcats starter Morgan Newton had an abysmal game, misfiring on his first nine throws and being sacked three times. 
Kentucky coach Joker Phillips put true freshman quarterback Maxwell Smith in for the second half but he was even worse, going 1 for 5 before fumbling the ball on a sack.

"We just thought we needed a spark and wanted to give Morgan a chance to sit back and watch the game from a distance," Phillips said.
Phillips was piping-hot mad in the first quarter when LSU scored their first TD. Replay showed that the Tigers broke the huddle with 12 men, which should have been a flag. Instead, the referee touched his flag during the commotion but didn't throw it. If he had, the Tigers might have elected not to put Jefferson in and may have had to settle for a field goal.

Another controversial call was when Odell Beckham, who scored on a swerving 52-yard touchdown earlier, had a jump ball clearly taken from him in the second half. Replays showed that the defender had took possession from Beckham but the referees gave the ball to LSU at the Wildcat 5-yard line. It was a crucial play in the game if for nothing more it would have given Lee an interception.


The Wildcats were outgained 348 yards to 155, with more than half of that coming very late in the game. To put it another way, UK had 59 yards in the first three quarters.

After the game, Kentucky's coach indicted his players.

“We’ve got to find out if our kids are willing to continue to fight, scratch and claw,” Phillips said. “I think we’ve got a chance to turn this thing around … but we’ve got to start making plays, and we’ve got to start playing smarter.”

LSU wanted the shutout but couldn't keep it as Newton returned to the game and hit Matt Roark with a 4-yard pass with 6:09 on the clock.

LSU Tyrann Mathieu, who by now must be at least looked at for Heisman consideration, continued his strong play, scoring on a 23-yard fumble return that he forced on a sack. He set the school record for forced fumbles on the play. He had another in the fourth quarter.

"I was just sneaking up to the line and it was just getting to the quarterback," said Mathieu.

Next up for the Tigers, Florida.

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