Brian Kelly thinks official reviews have become too common in college football

Have replays in college football become too excessive?

There have been attempts to shorten college football game times in 2024, with clock rule changes to be more in line with how the NFL — which plays at a much faster pace by comparison — does things.

However, there’s been a hangup that has prevented those changes from meaningfully increasing the pace of play, and that’s a high number of video reviews from officials that many believe have become excessive.

[autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] is seemingly among that crowd. Asked about his views on the number of replays, he said on Thursday that he thinks official reviews should be limited to scoring plays and plays that result in a change of possession. Kelly said that everything else should require a coach’s challenge.

“I’ve gone on record… I believe that you should replay scoring plays and change of possession, and I think the coaches should have a challenge,” he said. “They keep the challenge if it’s successful, they lose the challenge if it’s not. I think that streamlines the game. I think it then goes to critical decisions in the game. Other than that, I think we’re wasting time with all the replays.”

The pace of the game is certainly a major concern right now, but it has to be balanced with getting the calls right on the field. It seems we’re still trying to figure out how best to strike that balance.

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5 things to know about Arkansas prior to Week 8 match with LSU

Here are five things to know about Arkansas prior to LSU’s meeting with the Razorbacks.

LSU is back on the road this week as it travels to face Arkansas. LSU is riding high after upsetting Ole Miss, but the Tigers are favored by just a field goal against an unranked Arkansas team.

These games have a knack for being close. The last four meetings were decided by exactly three points. LSU won three of those contests with Arkansas’ victory coming in 2021.

LSU has won seven of the last eight against the Razorbacks and hasn’t lost in Fayetteville since getting shut out in 2014.

Tiger fans should expect another close one. LSU is good, but this 2024 team struggled to assert control against South Carolina and Ole Miss. Both games were wins, but LSU had to work hard for it.

At 4-2, Arkansas is one win away from exceeding its preseason win total of 4.5. LSU bought some room for error with the Ole Miss win, but with tough games against Texas A&M and Alabama on the horizon, the Tigers can’t afford a loss here.

Here are five things to know about the Arkansas Razorbacks prior to their Week 8 meeting with LSU.

How Arkansas got here

Both Razorback losses were by one possession. The first one came in week two at Oklahoma State. Arkansas jumped out to a lead, but an Oklahoma State comeback forced overtime.

Arkansas had several chances to put the game away, but Oklahoma State won 39-31.

The second loss was by four points to A&M in week five. That same Texas A&M team blew out Missouri the next week so that loss doesn’t look all that bad for the Razorbacks.

Arkansas is coming off a bye, but it picked up a massive win its last time out — a win over top ten ranked Tennessee.

Head coach Sam Pittman began the year on the hot seat, but Arkansas has momentum now.

Taylen Green is dangerous at QB

At SEC media days, Pittman offered a glowing report of Boise State transfer QB Taylen Green. Pittman said the Razorbacks “hit” landing Green.

So far, so good. Green isn’t afraid to let it fly and has 12 completions with 20+ air yards. Green’s overall passing numbers could be better, but when he’s in rhythm, he’s an SEC-level passer.

Green has been pressured on 95 dropbacks, the most in the SEC. LSU’s pass rush will look to take advantage of that and make Green uncomfortable.

But it’s with his legs that Green stands out. His 17 carries for 10+ yards lead all SEC QBs and rank fourth overall among SEC rushers. LSU’s had a tendency to allow explosive plays on the ground this year, so its critical the Tigers contain Green.

Petrino will lean on the run game

With Green being the threat he is on the ground, Arkansas OC Bobby Petrino wants to lean on the run game.

Green is joined in the backfield by RB Ja’Quinden Jackson, a Utah transfer. Jackson is tough to bring down. He leads the SEC in forced missed tackles and averages 3.76 yards after contact per carry.

Petrino can spread it and out and run it or he can put Green under center and get Jackson going downhill. The diversity of this rushing attack makes it tough to stop.

LSU’s best bet will be getting aggressive and forcing negative plays, even if that comes with the trade off of some explosive plays allowed.

Defense is a strong unit

Travis Williams is in his second year coordinating the Arkansas defense and the unit has taken another step forward.

Up front, DT Eric Gregory Jr. is having a strong year leading the Razorbacks sturdy rushing attack that ranks 17th nationally in EPA/rush allowed.

There’s some bend but don’t break elements with Arkansas ranking 62nd in yards per play allowed but top 20 in points per scoring opportunity allowed. When offenses are threatening, this defense buckles down.

Players to know

Outside of Green and Jackson, these are the Razorbacks to watch on Saturday.

  • DE Landon Jackson: After beginning his career at LSU, Jackson transferred to Arkansas. He’s emerged as one of the SEC’s best defensive ends over the last two years and is putting another good campaign together in 2024.
  • WR Andrew Armstrong: LSU faced one of the SEC’s best receiver in Tre Harris last week. The Tigers will see another one this week in Armstrong. With 552 yards, Armstrong is third in the SEC.
  • CB Marquise Robinson: According to PFF, Robinson is the 11th best graded CB in the SEC. The Razorbacks struggle against the pass at times, but Robinson isn’t to blame.

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LSU to don all-white uniforms vs. Arkansas in Week 8

LSU to showcase the all-white combo at Arkansas this weekend.

LSU will be showcasing a different look when it travels to play Arkansas in this weekend. The Tigers will don the all-white uniform combo that fans are accustomed to seeing about once a year.

On Wednesday, LSU posted an image of the white helmet, white jersey, and white pants on social media. There weren’t any specifics about when LSU would wear the uniform, but there aren’t many other conclusions to jump to.

The last time LSU wore the all-whites was the 2023 regular-season finale when it beat Texas A&M on senior day. That was Jayden Daniels’ final game as a Tiger.

In 2022, LSU wore the combo when facing Tennessee at home. That one didn’t go the Tigers’ way, but [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] hasn’t lost in Tiger Stadium since.

This won’t be LSU’s first time in the white pants this year. Against South Alabama, the Tigers went with a gold helmet, white jersey, and white pants combination.

LSU wore the gold-purple-gold combo against UCLA, making the all-white LSU’s fourth jersey combination of the year.

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Staff predictions ahead of LSU’s Week 8 road trip against Arkansas

Can the Tigers avoid a letdown on the road against the Razorbacks?

LSU captured one of the most impactful wins of the [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] era on Saturday night, upsetting a top-10 Ole Miss team in overtime to move to 5-1 on the season and put itself back in the College Football Playoff picture.

But the road doesn’t get much easier from here, and now, the Tigers are tasked with avoiding a letdown on the road against an Arkansas team that’s having a stronger start to the year than many expected.

The Razorbacks are 4-2 and fresh off a bye week that followed their upset win over then-No. 4 Tennessee. They’re looking to take down their second top-10 opponent in a row on Saturday night in Fayetteville.

Here’s how our staff sees that game playing out.

Tyler Nettuno, Managing Editor

The Hogs have managed to give LSU fits in each of the last two years, but they’re searching for their first win in the series since 2021. I think the health of quarterback Taylen Green plays a major factor here, but he’s a big-time weapon on offense if he’s ready to go. I still have a lot more confidence in LSU’s defense after the way it played last week, however, and while Arkansas’ defense slowed down a Tennessee group that may have some issues, I don’t think it will have quite as much success against the Tigers.

Prediction: LSU 28, Arkansas 21

Will Rosenblatt, Staff Writer

LSU is back on the road this week, traveling to Arkansas after upsetting Ole Miss. Arkansas is coming off a bye, but the Razorbacks’ last time out, they pulled a top 10 upset off their own over Tennessee. Arkansas’ preseason win total was 4.5, but the Razorbacks already have four wins and Sam Pittman is coaching his way off the hot seat. Arkansas has the type of offense that can hurt LSU. The Hogs are explosive on the ground with a rushing threat at QB. WR Andrew Armstong will test LSU’s secondary too.  Arkansas will score some points, but so will LSU. Arkansas will keep it close early, but LSU will take advantage of a questionable secondary late.

Prediction: LSU 37, Arkansas 31

Kyle Richardson, Staff Writer

The Tigers have got to be careful in this game against the Razorbacks. They can not suffer from a hangover after winning a hard fought game against Ole Miss in overtime. This is the SEC. You are going to be taken to your limit every week. With that being said, I think LSU will respond well and win this game.

Prediction: LSU 35, Arkansas 21

Composite Prediction

Prediction: LSU 33, Arkansas 24

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Brian Kelly a top-10 paid head coach in college football in 2024, per USA TODAY Sports

Brian Kelly is set to be one of the nation’s highest-paid coaches in 2024.

LSU athletics director [autotag]Scott Woodward[/autotag] is known for splashy coach hirings.

Perhaps the most notable move of his career came in 2021, when he convinced [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag], the winningest coach in Notre Dame history, to take over a Tigers program looking to get back to a national championship level.

Unsurprisingly, it took a lot of money to pull that off, and with his current contract, Kelly is one of the highest-paid coaches in the nation in 2024. According to USA TODAY Sports’ coaching salary database, Kelly is set to make $9.975 million this season, ranking eighth nationally and fourth in the SEC behind Kirby Smart, Steve Sarkisian and Kalen DeBoer.

He could earn more than a million more in bonuses this season, and he was paid $100,000 in bonuses in 2023-24.

Kelly is 25-8 at LSU, and while he’s yet to get the team to the College Football Playoff, it’s unlikely the program will look to move on any time soon. If it did, however, a buyout wouldn’t come cheap.

If Kelly were fired after Dec. 1, the school would owe him a buyout north of $61 million, the fourth highest of any coach from a public university in the nation.

The Tigers have clearly invested heavily in Kelly, and they hope that pays off with a trip to the CFP in Year 3.

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4 things we’ve learned about LSU in 2024

LSU is halfway through its regular season. Here’s four things we’ve learned about the Tigers.

We’re already halfway through the college football regular season. LSU has six games down with six more to go.

LSU’s first six games didn’t lack intrigue. LSU’s played four games against Power Four opponents and three came down to the wire. LSU came up short against USC in Week 1 but staged comebacks against South Carolina and Ole Miss to jump out to a 2-0 start in conference play.

After the Ole Miss upset, LSU is up to No. 8 in the AP Poll, five spots better than where it began the year at No. 13.

Given all that LSU lost after 2023, a 5-1 start is impressive. You can’t make the playoff in the first six games, but you can get knocked out of it. LSU did enough to stay alive and remain in the thick of the playoff race.

Here, we’ll look at five things we’ve learned about LSU in these last seven weeks. We had a lot of questions about this group entering the year and now with a good sample size to look at, many have been answered.

The receiver depth is even better than we thought

Receiver was somewhat of a question for LSU after losing [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag] That type of production is hard to replace in one offseason, but LSU is managing just fine with a plethora of talented options.

[autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag] leads the way with 30 catches for 463 yards. His five-catch, 111-yard performance vs. Ole Miss made it back-to-back 100-yard games for the fifth-year senior.

[autotag]Aaron Anderson[/autotag] is enjoying a breakout year with 30 catches for 452 yards. Both marks rank in the top 10 among SEC receivers.  Transfers [autotag]CJ Daniels[/autotag] and [autotag]Zavion Thomas[/autotag] are both making impacts too.

Along with the receivers, tight end [autotag]Mason Taylor[/autotag] leads all SEC tight ends with 33 receptions.

This group doesn’t have the same explosiveness element as last year’s, but it’s deep and dependable.

Defensive development is ahead of schedule

LSU brought in a new staff on the defensive side of the ball, hoping to accelerate the development and get the most out of its young talent. We’re seeing that so far.

Start at defensive tackle, where [autotag]Bo Davis[/autotag] continues to get competent production from its interior defensive line despite losing [autotag]Jacobian Guillory[/autotag]. True freshmen [autotag]Ahmad Breaux[/autotag] and [autotag]Dominick McKinley[/autotag] are both in the rotation while veteran transfer [autotag]Gio Paez[/autotag] is on track to set career highs in stops and pressures.

At linebacker, Blake Baker has sophomore Whit Weeks playing like a star. Greg Penn has shown progress too.

LSU hired Corey Raymond to rebuild the secondary, and we’re already seeing the impact for LSU’s corners. The Tigers look much more comfortable in man coverage and playing balls in the air. Zy Alexander leads all SEC CBs in PFF coverage grade after week seven.

The OC transition could have been smoother

LSU’s offense is good, but it’s still experiencing some hiccups as it figures out its identity. Mike Denbrock took the OC job at Notre Dame after leading the best offense in the country at LSU in 2023.

Brian Kelly didn’t have to look far for Denbrock’s replacement, promoting QB coach Joe Sloan and WR coach Cortez Hankton.

Sloan called plays before in his time at Louisiana Tech, but this is his first time doing it at this level.

LSU has struggled to recreate last year’s success on the ground. Regression was expected without Jayden Daniels’ legs, but the fall is significant. After leading the country in EPA/rush last year, LSU ranks 94th this year.

Nussmeier isn’t a threat with his legs and LSU is yet to find an adjustment that makes up for that.

The drop-back game is one of the best in the FBS, but consistency is an issue. Nussmeier was uncomfortable early against Ole Miss but eventually settled in. Expect Sloan to get his QB in rhythm early against Arkansas.

LSU shows poise under pressure

All offseason, Brian Kelly spoke about the maturity of this team. He said it was the most “player-led” group he’s had since arriving in Baton Rouge. That’s starting to show up on the field.

LSU hasn’t played many comfortable games this year. Outside of South Alabama, virtually every game was close at one point. That said, LSU found a way to be 5-1.

The Tigers came up short at the end vs. USC, but LSU hung in there to get big conference wins against South Carolina and Ole Miss. Both wins required big plays late in the game.

Ideally, you’d like to see LSU controlling more games than it is, but remaining cool under pressure isn’t a skill every team has. It’ll come in handy with more close games in the coming weeks.

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Texas A&M’s Week 9 matchup vs. LSU has yet to receive a confirmed kickoff time

The kickoff time for Texas A&M’s critical Week 9 matchup against LSU is still up in the air

Texas A&M’s 2024 season is in an interesting spot. After the team’s Week 7 bye week, the Aggies are 5-1 and 3-0 in SEC play. They will resume play against Mississippi State (1-5, 0-3 SEC) in Starkville on Saturday afternoon.

However, while head coach Mike Elko and his team aren’t looking past a Bulldog team that could easily defend home turf despite their poor record, the critical Week 9 home matchup vs. LSU (5-1, 2-0 SEC) looms large.

The Tigers are on a similar trajectory to Texas A&M’s rebounding after their opening season loss to USC, similar to the Aggies’ opening loss to Notre Dame. Both programs have reeled off five consecutive wins, including LSU’s Saturday’s 29-26 OT win over visiting Ole Miss.

On paper, this game looks massive for both programs from a College Football Playoff perspective, but for LSU to reach 6-1 before heading to College Station, a victory on the road against a tough Arkansas team awaits this weekend.

If both teams enter the game at 6-1 and are undefeated in conference play, a primetime slot is guaranteed, right? According to the SEC schedule makers, three potential kickoff times are now an option, starting with 2:30, 3:15, and 6:30 CT. on ABC as of this week.

If both teams lose this weekend, I could see a situation where one of the two afternoon slots is guaranteed, but if this is a 6-1 showdown, 6:30 should be the kickoff time.

Texas A&M will face Mississippi State on the road on Saturday, Oct. 19, at 3:15 p.m. CT. The game will air on the SEC Network.

https://twitter.com/sec/status/1845872195597197564?s=61&t=IuIhAEZDdGPS_cYGGghGIw

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LSU to get 5-star freshman Trey’Dez Green more time at receiver

LSU will look to get five-star Trey’Dez Green on the field more, even if it means playing him at receiver.

LSU’s depth at wide receiver is being tested. [autotag]Chris Hilton Jr.[/autotag] is yet to return from injury and freshman [autotag]Kyle Parker[/autotag] is out for the year. On top of that, [autotag]CJ Daniels[/autotag] missed the Ole Miss game but is expected to be back this week.

LSU got another scare when [autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag] went down for a moment, holding his knee, but he was soon to return.

Still, LSU is looking at options to build out its pass-catching depth. LSU head coach [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] said five-star freshman tight end [autotag]Trey’Dez Green[/autotag] will see more time at receiver.

LSU wants Green on the field and Kelly said LSU can remove the complexities of the tight end position by putting Green out wide.

“He’s a talented player. We saw him on the touchdown, how easy it is for him to flash his hands and catch the football,” Kelly said, “He just gives us more versatility.”

Green is 6-7 and was a five-star recruit in the 2024 class. He played just three snaps in LSU’s win over Ole Miss but had a 12-yard touchdown to put LSU on the board. On the year, Green has three catches for 22 yards and a score.

The talent is undeniable and as LSU progresses further into the year, more depth is needed. Green can provide that on offense.

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On3 predicting LSU to land 5-star 2026 offensive lineman

LSU is making progress with one of the top recruits in the 2026 class.

LSU’s 2025 class is one of the nation’s best. It’s loaded with five stars at the top and LSU is hoping to do the same thing with its 2026 class.

The Tigers are on their way, with On3’s Steve Wiltfong listing LSU as the projected destination for five-star offensive lineman [autotag]Lamar Brown[/autotag].

“The local University Lab five-star has spent a lot of time on the nearby campus and it’s hard to imagine him playing elsewhere in college,” Wiltfong wrote. 

According to the On3 Industry Rankings, Brown is the No. 5 overall prospect in his class and the top interior offensive lineman. On3, 247Sports, and Rivals consider Brown Louisiana’s top 2026 prospect after defensive tackle Jahkeem Stewart reclassified to 2025.

Brown was visiting LSU when the Tigers took down No. 9 Ole Miss on Saturday. Brown said the atmosphere “stood out.”

LSU’s 2026 class already has four prospects on board. All Louisiana products and all from New Orleans. The top-ranked 2026 commit is safety [autotag]Aiden Hall[/autotag] out of Edna Karr High School.

LSU offensive line coach [autotag]Brad Davis[/autotag] is a strong recruiter and a Baton Rouge native. It would be surprising to see LSU miss on Brown with Davis leading the charge.

Brian Kelly’s programs have a history of developing offensive linemen and that trend is continuing at LSU.

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SEC announces potential kick times for LSU’s Week 9 game at Texas A&M

It could be another night game when the Tigers travel to College Station in Week 9.

The Tigers are fresh off one of the biggest wins of the [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] era on Saturday night, overcoming some inconsistent play to beat a top-10 Ole Miss team in overtime.

LSU now finds itself squarely back in the College Football Playoff race, but the path forward doesn’t get a lot easier in the new SEC. The Tigers hit the road for the next two weeks, taking on Arkansas in Fayetteville on Saturday night before facing Texas A&M in College Station in Week 9.

On Monday, the SEC announced potential kick times for the game against the Aggies. There’s still a lot of uncertainty as it could kick at 2:30 p.m. CT, 3:15 p.m. or 6:30 p.m. It is also yet to be determined whether the game will air on ABC — if it’s at 2:30 or in the primetime slot — or the SEC Network if it kicks at 3:15.

It could be yet another night game for the Tigers when they face Texas A&M in what could be a battle between unbeaten teams in league play.

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