Favorite team:LSU 
Location:
Biography:
Interests:
Occupation:
Number of Posts:561
Registered on:8/27/2015
Online Status:Not Online

Recent Posts

Message
And first easiest place to squander top talent!
If this doesn't tell you where the state of the program is, congratulations, you're now officially a Sunshine Pumping positiger pussy of the Highest Order!

Looking like it's going to be one of these 3:

Independence
Belk
Music City

LSU just getting to a bowl -- any bowl -- is a major accomplishment now, so we should all be thrilled.

Keep up the great work, Les!
Les explains a winless November as "a flat tire".

Apparently it takes Les Miles three weeks to change a tire.
A&M 38
LSU 20

Miles shown the door within the week. Tiger Nation rejoices.
CFN says Independence Bowl
Jimmy Smith article at nola.com today says one faction of LSU brass wants Miles gone after A&M so they can get a new coach in place quickly to keep this years recruiting class from imploding, and the other faction wants to let him have one more year so he can go out gracefully.

Either way, Les is gone. Should it be now or after next year?
Pick one:

Numb
Angry
Disappointed
Excited
Surprised
Glad
quote:

Brian Hamilton: LSU

It's the team that just exited the top four. The Tigers have wins over two teams in the playoff committee’s top 25—Florida and Mississippi State—and their opponents have combined to win 57.4% of their games. Iowa has an unblemished record and nice wins—Northwestern and Wisconsin are in the top 25, and Pitt is solid if not spectacular—but those teams aren't at the level of the teams LSU has beaten. Florida, meanwhile, suffers as the value of that Ole Miss blowout drops by the week.

Lindsay Schnell: LSU

I'd like to preface this by saying I know they played REALLY bad against Alabama, but if we're talking résumé right now, on Nov. 11, as opposed to who could have the best résumé at the end of the month ... I have to go with the Tigers. I'm shocked they dropped so far considering whom they lost to. Alabama is a) really good b) playing really well. But LSU still has Leonard Fournette, and if anyone can put teammates on his back and deliver them to the postseason, it's this guy (provided he, you know, stays eligible). What happens if LSU goes out and smashes Ole Miss, which beat Alabama? Answer: Chaos, and the Tigers possibly back in the top four.

Zac Ellis: LSU

Yes, the Tigers have a loss. Yes, five undefeated teams rank ahead of them. But LSU's one defeat came on the road against the selection committee's current No. 2 team, Alabama. Meanwhile the Bayou Bengals boast two wins over top-20 teams in No. 11 Florida and No. 17 Mississippi State. With quality victories, a good loss and a strength of schedule that ranks 19th nationally, per the Sagarin Ratings, LSU still has a playoff-caliber résumé.

Joan Niesen: LSU

At this point, I have to go with the Tiers, even though they fell all the way to No. 9 after losing at Alabama. But when your only loss is to the second-ranked team (which is looking with each passing week like it might just be the best defense, and perhaps consequently the best team, in the country), that has to count for something. I also think LSU's strength of schedule trumps those of the rest of the teams just outside the top four. I'm still at the point where a one-loss SEC team trumps undefeated Big Ten and Big 12 teams who, due to their divisions, haven't played the best teams in their respective conferences.


The rest:

Iowa 2
Stanford 2
Baylor 1
Oklahoma St 1

LINK
quote:

“The player indicated they had been aware of Butler’s hunger strike for several days. However, some black players didn’t decide to take any action until Butler met with some players Saturday night.

Not everyone agrees with the decision (to stop all football activities),” the player said. “Most people are pissed, including the black guys (on the team).”

"If we were 9-0 this wouldn't be happening."


LINK
Alec Shirkey: Alabama

Leonard Fournette is on the fast-track to becoming a college football legend (his offensive line is pretty good, too), but even those talented men could have a tough time against a stout Alabama front seven in Bryant-Denny Stadium. The Tide will come out on top in the sort of classic low-scoring, grind-it-out game we’ve seen so often between these two schools.

Dave Hooker: Alabama

Both coaches had an extra week to prepare. That should have helped Saban more than Miles. Saban is one of the game’s top tacticians. ‘Bama looked tired against Tennessee in a close win. The Tide will be rejuvenated when they face the Tigers. Of course, the X-factor is Fournette. He’s a once-in-a-generation talent that could further his legacy with a dominating performance.

Alex Martin Smith: Alabama

The Crimson Tide have played poorly at home all year. But they mopped the floor with UGA and Texas A&M in the season’s two most hyped games. Much like 2014, the Tide’s loss to Ole Miss looks more like an anomaly than a harbinger. LSU’s strongest aspect — its running game — will struggle to put up points against an elite ‘Bama “D.”

Jordan James: Alabama

It is hard to envision Alabama allowing LSU Heisman Trophy candidate Fournette to control the game. The Crimson Tide have the players on their defensive line to match up with the LSU offensive front. With two good defenses, this one will come down to quarterback play. It should be close, but at this point I trust Alabama quarterback Jake Coker’s ability to win the game more than LSU’s Brandon Harris. It also helps that Alabama is the home team.

Matt Barbato: Alabama

This game will be more of an aerial affair than many expect. The Tigers and Crimson Tide both rank in the top six nationally in stopping the run. Leonard Fournette and Derrick Henry will churn yardage because they’re that good. However, this game will come down to pass defense. The Tigers have suffered a handful of coverage lapses throughout the season and have surrendered 222.1 passing yards per game. Plus their top corner, Tre’Davious White, might not be 100 percent. Alabama wins the most physical game of the college football season by a slim margin.

Scott McDonald: LSU

Both teams are well coached and have freakish talent. Miles and Saban have gone to overtime three times against oneother and played to four points or fewer two other times. Miles has been known for pulling a rabbit out of his hat during games like these. Don’t be surprised to see LSU’s special teams win this one.

Sam Spiegelman: LSU

While I find it hard to believe Alabama will lose two games this season — both at home, by the way — I can’t help but consider LSU the superior team. Given a week off to refocus and get healthy, LSU can pound the rock with Fournette and come up with a game plan for this stout Alabama defense. Additionally, how many SEC games can we say LSU actually has an edge at the quarterback position? I believe that goes in the Tigers’ favor in this one.

Grace Raynor: Alabama

The Crimson Tide certainly have a tall order in trying to contain Fournette. There’s absolutely no doubt that Fournette is a force to be reckoned with. But Alabama is hungry to snap LSU’s undefeated streak and know it can’t afford to lose two games this season. With the home crowd going nuts in Tuscaloosa, Ala. the Tide win this one.

KJ Hiramoto: Alabama

It’s hard to picture Leonard Fournette getting slowed down by any defense, given the monster season he’s had. But Alabama’s front seven is loaded with future NFL talent, so it wouldn’t be a shock if ‘Bama “contains” Fournette to fewer than 150 rushing yards. And if quarterback Coker can limit turnovers for Alabama ? which may seem like a tall order, given his struggles at home ? the Crimson Tide should come away with a win.

Kaitlin Long: Alabama

The Crimson Tide have home-field advantage and their scoring defense ranks third in the country. Yes, Fournette is one of the most talented running backs in college football, but Alabama’s defense knows how to win games. Tailback Derrick Henry will take care of the rest on offense. Alabama has dominated this series, and with the position it’s in for the College Football Playoff, the Tide won’t be backed down.

Connor Smolensky: Alabama

All the talk this week surrounds Fournette and Henry. The two are arguably the top running backs in the nation, but this one could come down to quarterback play. LSU’s Harris and Alabama’s Coker have had up-and-down seasons, and neither have much big-game experience. I give Coker the slight edge. If this game comes down to a two-minute drill–and it very well could– I want Coker leading an offense down the field over Harris.

Jordan Burton: Alabama

Saban lives for games like this, so does Alabama. The Tide will be too much with an extra week to gameplan for Fournette and will figure out how to make Harris win the game with his arm. Alabama loves playing pro-style offenses and that highly-touted front seven, led by Lombardi and Butkus Award semifinalist Reggie Ragland will be up to the task of stopping Fournette. This will also be another huge game for Henry, which could shift the balance of the Heisman Trophy talk. Tide roll and it won’t be close.

David Collier: Alabama

LSU has been impressive this season, but the Tigers leave a lot to be desired. Fournette will gain yards and make a big play or two, but to me, this one comes down to quarterback play and defense. Coker has proved he can be more of a threat than Harris, and the Crimson Tide’s defense is better. As long as Lane Kiffin keeps running the ball, Alabama will control the game throughout.

LINK

quote:

Why LSU Will Win

Take the Tennessee game with a grain of salt – Alabama looked tired and in desperate need of a week off – but the Vols got physical up front and did a fantastic job at collapsing the inside defensively and keeping Derrick Henry in check. It didn’t work late on a key drive, but with plenty of time to prepare, the nation’s No. 6 run defense should be able to load up and force Henry to become an East-West runner – that’s not going to work for the Tide offense.

Auburn ran for 160 yards on the LSU D – that’s the best day anyone has had so far running the ball. Florida’s power running game was stuffed for 55 yards, Mississippi State couldn’t go anywhere, and South Carolina was spinning its wheels. Far easier said than done, but take away Henry, make Jake Coker test out the dangerous LSU secondary, and take your chances. It almost worked last year – keeping Alabama to 106 yards on the ground – but Blake Sims came through.

Why Alabama Will Win

Leonard Fournette, meet the Alabama defensive front three.

Fournette might be the best player in college football, and he might be one of the ten best backs in the NFL right now – and that might be way low – but Alabama has had two weeks to figure out how to gang up on No. 7. Third in the nation against the run, the Crimson Tide allowed one big Nick Chubb run when Georgia was hopelessly out of the game, and that’s been about it. Wisconsin – 40 yards. Arkansas – 44 yards. Texas A&M – 25 carries for 32 yards. This is the best front three in the Nick Saban era, and the linebackers are benefiting with Reggie Ragland and company teeing off. If LSU is going to win this game, it’s going to have to do it through the air.

Brandon Harris has been terrific and the LSU passing game is vastly improved – coming up with 200 yards or more in each of the last three games with seven touchdown passes – but can it work on the road? Harris was excellent against Florida and its fabulous secondary, but Fournette also ran for 31 times. LSU can’t count on that this time around on the ground. And unlike Florida, Alabama isn’t going to fall for the banana in the tailpipe trick play.

What’s Going To Happen?

Alabama’s defense is better, and that’s it. That’s the difference. The front seven will contain Fournette – but not stop him cold – and while Harris won’t collapse, he won’t be the playmaker and passer he’s been over the last few games. The LSU placekicking has been better, and that might influence the offensive strategy just a bit. It’s not like Les Miles is ever conservative, but he’ll take points where he can get them on the road against this D, while Alabama might have to press just a little more in the red zone. Coker will hit one big throw on one big late drive, and the Crimson Tide will pull away in an impressive, statement-game performance.

Final Score: Alabama 27, LSU 17


LINK
Rich Cirminiello -- Henry on Saturday, Fournette on Sundays
Phil Harrison -- Henry on Saturday, Fournette on Sundays
Russ Mitchell -- Fournette on Saturday, wash

LINK

College Football News has LSU #2

Posted by Hodson2Fuller on 10/18/15 at 8:18 am
quote:

2. LSU (6-0)

Finally, LSU has an excellent win to go along with the okay victory over Mississippi State. Getting by Florida sets the tone for the showdown against Alabama in early November, but first, the Tigers have to watch out for a dangerous WKU team and its high-powered attack.


LINK
quote:

1. TCU QB Trevone Boykin: The Frogs' dual-threat dynamo has no choice but to keep rescuing his defensively challenged squad. This time, he broke a 69-yard touchdown run, completed an ensuing two-point conversion and threw a game-winning 55-yard strike to Josh Doctson over a five-minute span to complete a rally from 18 points down against Kansas State. No player in the country is more indispensible to his team right now.

2. LSU RB Leonard Fournette. You know you're having quite the season when you rush for 158 yards against South Carolina and its your lowest output of the season. The sophomore tied an FBS record in cracking the 1,000-yard mark in five games. He falls behind Boykin in part because he's been feasting on woeful competition (Syracuse, Eastern Michigan) for several weeks now.


LINK
Alabama
Michigan
Utah
Baylor

Just missed out: Florida, TCU, LSU, Clemson