New NFL mock draft has LSU’s Will Campbell going 1st overall

Will Campbell has the chance to be one of the first players selected in the 2025 NFL draft.

LSU left tackle [autotag]Will Campbell[/autotag] anchors one of the best college offensive lines in the country, and he’s sure to find himself playing on Sundays in 2025.

Campbell entered the year viewed as one of the top tackles in the draft and a likely top-10 pick, and nothing has changed on that front. In fact, some prognosticators have become even higher on him, and in the latest mock draft from Yahoo! Sports’ Charles McDonald and Nate Tice, they have the Jacksonville Jaguars taking Campbell with the first overall pick.

The Jaguars have struggled to protect young quarterback Trevor Lawrence early in his career, and that’s part of the reason the offense has sputtered this fall as Jacksonville is the only winless team in the NFL through four weeks.

Here’s Tice’s breakdown.

Campbell is a technician on the left side who constantly stays balanced and in a winning position. His upright stance looks funky, but he’s a good athlete with light feet who can move in space and has the core strength to bring pop in the run game. Campbell is a consistent and smart player for a franchise desperately needing some of that.

If this prediction ultimately held true, Campbell would be the fourth LSU player to be taken first overall and just the second non-quarterback after [autotag]Billy Cannon[/autotag] was taken with the first pick all the way back in 1960.

He’s one of four LSU players projected to go in the first round in this mock, joining [autotag]Garrett Nussmeier[/autotag] (10th overall, New York Giants), [autotag]Emery Jones Jr.[/autotag] (15th overall, Chicago Bears) and [autotag]Harold Perkins Jr.[/autotag] (30th overall, Tampa Bay Buccaneers)

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These 2 LSU teams made their mark on college football history

Two of LSU’s four national title teams were recognized among the most influential of all time.

We’ve seen a lot of good college football teams over the years. While success may come and go, we’ve had plenty of special individual seasons.

But not all of those teams made a mark on the sport. With that in mind, ESPN’s Bill Connelly ranked the most influential teams in the history of college football going back more than 100 years.

LSU is one of the programs represented on Connelly’s rankings, and unsurprisingly, the 2019 team made the cut. That group is considered one of the greatest college football teams of all time with Heisman-winner [autotag]Joe Burrow[/autotag] and future star NFL receivers [autotag]Justin Jefferson[/autotag] and [autotag]Ja’Marr Chase[/autotag].

Connelly ranked it at No. 9 all-time.

There was the actual innovation factor: With a wide variety of RPO and pass concepts derived both from passing game coordinator Joe Brady’s brain and the absurd array of receiving options available — Ja’Marr Chase, Justin Jefferson, Terrace Marshall Jr., tight end Thaddeus Moss, running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire out of the backfield — LSU was able to both create and exploit matchup advantages instantly. And while RPOs are designed mostly to exploit zone defenses, LSU could beat man and zone equally well.

There was the “finally, someone different!” factor: Clemson and Alabama had split the past four national titles and played each other in the College Football Playoff all four years. There was a hunger for something new, and LSU provided it.

Most importantly, there was just the plain old coolness factor: Chase and Jefferson did effortlessly cool things. Edwards-Helaire was an old-school hard worker in a new-school offense. Orgeron and his gravelly voice and redemption arc were incredible. The secondary, with ruthlessly physical stars like safety JaCoby Stevens and breakout freshman corner Derek Stingley Jr., brought the offense’s swagger to the defense. And Joe Burrow, with his “Burreaux” jersey on Senior Night and his post-title locker room cigar, exuded a captivating coolness and poise. This team captured imaginations in a way that few recent teams could.

The 2019 wasn’t the only one that made the cut, however. In a blast from the past, Connelly also included the Tigers’ undefeated, consensus national champion team from 1958 that featured [autotag]Billy Cannon[/autotag], who won LSU’s first Heisman Trophy a year later.

That team ranks No. 21.

In 1964, one-platoon football, with its limited substitutions that required players to play offense, defense and special teams, was removed from the college football rulebook. It opened the sport up for specialization in lots of aesthetically appealing ways, and it also allowed some of the sport’s most dominant powers to dominate even further with sheer, overwhelming depth. With platoons, depth mattered only so much.

Paul Dietzel, however, figured out a way to dominate with depth in the platoon era. Using three full teams of 11 — the White Team (his starters), the Go Team (primarily offensive specialists) and a set of young, fast and ruthless defenders. He would sub in either the Go Team or the defenders (or both) late in a given quarter depending on the game state.

Dietzel mastered the art of the substitution as LSU won 21 of 22 games from 1957 to 1959. The Tigers won the national title in 1958 behind a defense that allowed more than seven points just once all season and shut out Clemson 7-0 in the Sugar Bowl. The next year, they expanded their winning streak to 19 — including a 7-3 win over the best Ole Miss team of all time thanks to Billy Cannon’s brilliance — before finally falling 14-13 to Tennessee.

LSU may not have the most historical success when compare to some other blue bloods in the sport, but the Tigers have had some of the most impressive, influential teams that college football has ever seen.

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LSU sets a new SEC record after Jayden Daniels won the Heisman

The Tigers set another record last night that you may not have even realized.

On Saturday night, the best player in college football earned the award that we all knew he would win. [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] became the third Heisman Trophy winner in LSU history. [autotag]Billy Cannon[/autotag] (1959) and [autotag]Joe Burrow[/autotag] (2019) were the other two Heisman winners from Baton Rouge.

The Tigers set another record last night that not many people even thought about. LSU became the first SEC school to have a player win the Golden Spikes Award (best player in college baseball) and the Heisman Trophy from the same school in the same year.

[autotag]Dylan Crews[/autotag] won the Golden Spikes Award after leading LSU baseball to a national championship with a win over Florida in the College World Series. Crews had a season batting average of .426 with 16 doubles, two triples, 18 homers, and 70 RBI.

Those stats led to him being selected as the No. 2 overall draft pick of the 2023 MLB draft by the Washington Nationals. Crews was picked one spot behind teammate [autotag]Paul Skenes[/autotag] who was drafted No. 1 overall by the Pirates.

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Reactions as Jayden Daniels becomes LSU’s third Heisman Trophy winner

Jayden Daniels etched his name into the college football history books Saturday night.

[autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] etched his name into the history books on Saturday night, becoming the third LSU player to win the Heisman Trophy. He joins [autotag]Joe Burrow[/autotag], who won it in 2019, and [autotag]Billy Cannon[/autotag], the school’s first recipient back in 1959.

Daniels had a special 2023 season, leading the nation in most statistical categories for quarterbacks, including total yards per game and total touchdowns. He beat out other finalists Michael Penix Jr., Bo Nix and Marvin Harrison Jr.

With Daniels cementing his legacy as one of the greatest college football players of all time, here’s how LSU fans, media and former players reacted to his Heisman win.

COLUMN: All Jayden Daniels needed was the right situation

Jayden Daniels’ career took some turns, but he ended up right where he needed to be.

On August 29, 2019, [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] started his first college football game. He was a true freshman at Arizona State and one of the top quarterback recruits in his class.

Head coach Herm Edwards was looking to usher in a new era of Sun Devil football and Daniels was at the center of that plan.

In that first start, facing Kent State, Daniels was under pressure behind a bad Arizona State offensive line. But he was steady. He totaled three touchdowns and nearly 300 yards, completing 62.4% of his passes and protecting the football.

Arizona State won 30-7 and the Daniels era offered ASU fans new promise.

There were some freshmen struggles, but overall, it was a good debut year for Daniels.

But then things got messy. The pandemic disrupted the sport and Daniels played just four games in 2020. The situation at ASU deteriorated as recruiting violations took center stage and the NCAA rolled into town, forcing several staff changes.

Daniels couldn’t settle down and in 2021, he posted the worst performance of his career, throwing 10 picks and averaging just 183.2 pass yards per game.

Following the 2021 season, Daniels hit the transfer portal. He ended up at LSU, a key piece of Brian Kelly’s rebuild.

2022 wasn’t perfect, but Daniels delivered in big moments, particularly in LSU’s home upset over Alabama.

It was finally starting to click for Daniels, and it led to higher expectations in 2023.

Could Daniels make that jump? Could he go from a good quarterback to one of the best in the country?

Short answer: He did just that.

Daniels was special. There aren’t many other ways to describe what he did this year. You watched it and you knew it was different. That’s it.

The way he threw the graceful deep balls, the way he effortlessly weaved his way through defenders when he took off to run. You couldn’t game plan for it. He took over games in ways no other player in America did.

Daniels took a gamble at LSU. He was coming to a program in the midst of a rebuild with a first-year coach. The QB room was crowded and the starting job wasn’t a given.

But he finally got that stability. The entire offensive staff stuck together. LSU returned its leading receiver and five starters on the offensive line. Under better circumstances, Daniels flourished.

And on Saturday night, he won the Heisman, joining LSU legends [autotag]Billy Cannon[/autotag] and [autotag]Joe Burrow[/autotag]. And like Cannon and Burrow, he’ll go down as one of the best to ever do it.

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BREAKING: Jayden Daniels wins the Heisman Trophy

Jayden Daniels becomes the third LSU Tiger to win the sport’s most prestigious award.

For the first time since 2019, an LSU quarterback has won the Heisman Trophy.

[autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] became the 87th Heisman winner on Saturday night, beating out Washington’s Michael Penix Jr., Oregon’s Bo Nix and Ohio State’s Marvin Harrison Jr. Daniels is the third LSU player to win the award, joining [autotag]Joe Burrow[/autotag] in 2019 and [autotag]Billy Cannon[/autotag] in 1959.

A transfer who began his career at Arizona State, Daniels has started every game for the last two seasons at LSU, but he delivered one of the most statistically impressive seasons in recent memory in 2023.

He led the nation in total touchdowns and yards per game while setting an FBS record for passer rating at 208. Not just a threat through the air, he rushed for more than 1,100 yards this season.

Penix won the Maxwell Award over Daniels and Nix, but Daniels’ Heisman win marked the first time those two awards have deviated since 2018 when they were won by Tua Tagovailoa and Kyler Murray, respectively.

It remains to be seen if Daniels has played his last game with the Tigers. He said he would decide if he’s going to play in the ReliaQuest Bowl on Jan. 1 against Wisconsin after the weekend’s festivities.

Regardless of whether Daniels ultimately plays in that game or moves on to the NFL, where he’s a projected first-round pick in next spring’s draft, his career will be forever remembered at LSU.

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SEC coaches tab Jayden Daniels as league’s Offensive Player of the Year

The awards continue to pile up for Jayden Daniels.

Jayden Daniels is likely going to hear his name announced as the next to join the fraternity of Heisman Trophy winners on Saturday, but in the meantime, he’s still picking up some hardware.

Daniels was tabbed on Wednesday by league coaches as the SEC Offensive Player of the Year.

Daniels has already been named the national and SEC Offensive Player of the Year by the AP in addition to winning the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award and being named a unanimous First Team All-SEC selection.

He becomes the second LSU player after Joe Burrow to be named the SEC Offensive Player of the Year after the award split into recognition for both sides of the ball in 2003. Prior to that, LSU had five SEC Player of the Year winners including [autotag]Billy Cannon[/autotag], who won it twice in 1959 and 1960.

Daniels’ special season has put him in rare territory for an LSU quarterback, and a Heisman win would just be the cherry on top.

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Ranking the 10 best offenses in LSU history

Let’s take a look at the best offenses in program history while doing our best to adjust for era.

Offense. Offense. Offense.

To many, it’s the most exciting part of the game. Quarterbacks are the stars, and wide receivers and running backs get all the highlight reels on YouTube. Here, we’ll be looking at the 10 best offenses in LSU history.

This was tricky. The game has changed, and so has the way offenses are evaluated. Prolific passers and scorers are much more common now than they were in the 20th century. Yards come a dime a dozen now.

Because of that, I’ve tried my best to adjust for era. I didn’t just use total yards and points, but I also looked at how the units performed in big games and the individual talent as well. If an offense was also good in back-to-back years and featured several of the same players, I used them once in the interest of variety.

Here’s how it all breaks down.

The top 10 LSU football players of all time

We conclude our countdown with the final 10, highlighted by some star QBs and championship-winning players.

It’s time.

Time for the final installment of a list I began last July counting down the best 101 football players in LSU history. If we’re getting technical, it’s 102, because we had a tie at No. 99.

We’ve looked at players from nearly every decade, from the early days of the program to what current players could be joining the list soon. Putting this together, I learned a lot about LSU’s history by looking at the individuals that have defined it.

[autotag]Eric Reid[/autotag] kicked us off at No. 101, and today we’ll see who came out on top, though I think you might already have a good idea who that is.

So, for one final time, let’s begin our countdown.

The eight players with more yards from scrimmage in a game than Josh Jacobs’ 303

On Sunday, Raiders RB Josh Jacobs had the ninth-most yards from scrimmage in pro football history. Who are the eight players with more?

In the history of professional football, only eight players have gained more yards from scrimmage than Las Vegas Raiders running back Josh Jacobs did against the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday. Jacobs capped his historic day with a game-winning 89-yard overtime run, and that allowed him to finish with 303 yards from scrimmage. A rather impressive total, which Jacobs split between his 229 rushing yards on 33 carries, and his 74 receiving yards on six catches.

If you guessed that Jacobs tied for ninth all-time in single-game scrimmage yards with Jim Benton of the 1945 Cleveland Rams, you are the superior football historian. Benton caught 10 passes for all of his yards from quarterback Bob Waterfield, and his yardage total annihilated the single-game record of the time, previously held by Green Bay Packers Hall of Famer Don Hutson with 237 yards in 1943.

If you’re interested to know which eight players in pro football history are the only ones to eclipse the marks of Jacobs and Benton, look below.