LSU ranks top 10 in potential NFL draft prospects entering 2024 season

LSU could have quite a few top NFL draft prospects once again.

ESPN recently released a ranking of the top 10 teams in the country by how many 2025 NFL draft prospects they are going to have. LSU is one of the top 10 teams.

LSU once again has a super-talented roster, even with the loss of [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag], [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag] on the offensive side the Tigers still have [autotag]Garrett Nussmeier[/autotag], [autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag], and [autotag]CJ Daniels[/autotag] who look to make plays. Add to that the fact that LSU has two of the top offensive tackle prospects in the [autotag]2025 NFL Draft[/autotag] in [autotag]Will Campbell[/autotag] and [autotag]Emery Jones Jr.[/autotag] and the offense is in great shape.

On defense, the Tigers have a new defensive staff and [autotag]Harold Perkins Jr.[/autotag] is back and looks to increase his draft stock even more. Here is how LSU was ranked according to ESPN.

The talent for the Tigers starts in the trenches, where offensive lineman Will Campbell will have a chance to be the first at his position off the board. He’s not the only one, as Emery Jones also boasts a high draft grade heading into the 2024 season. Linebacker Harold Perkins has the potential to play his way into the first round if he can recover his freshman form. Then there are a handful of skill position players who could round out the later rounds of the draft.

Predicted first-rounders: 3
Predicted total draft picks: 8
Top projected prospect: OT Will Campbell

LSU will start the 2024 season against USC on Sept. 1.

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LSU tight end Mason Taylor named to Mackey Award preseason watch list

Mason Taylor could be poised to play an even bigger role for the Tigers in Year 3.

LSU’s run of players on preseason award watch lists continued on Friday as tight end [autotag]Mason Taylor[/autotag] was named to the watch list for the Mackey Award, given annually to the top tight end in the nation.

Taylor, who enters his junior season, has been a major contributor in his first two years with the Tigers. He already ranks fourth all-time among LSU tight ends with 74 catches, finishing third on the team in each of his first two campaigns, and has 762 career yards to go with four touchdowns.

With both [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag] moving on after this season, Taylor could shoulder an even bigger load in the passing game in 2024.

Taylor becomes the second LSU pass-catcher to be named to an award watch list, joining receiver transfer [autotag]CJ Daniels[/autotag], who is on the Biletnikoff watch list. [autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag] was notoriously absent from the list.

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Brian Kelly says Kyren Lacy has ’embraced’ role of No. 1 receiver

Kyren Lacy could be poised for a breakout season in 2024.

LSU has a great deal of questions to answer as it begins fall camp ahead of the 2024 season, but perhaps the biggest uncertainty on the entire roster is who will emerge to replace first-round receivers [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag]

The clear candidate is fifth-year wideout [autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag], who enters his third season in Baton Rouge after transferring from UL-Lafayette. Lacy has had solid production the last two years despite facing fierce competition for targets, and now, he could be poised for a breakout.

Coach [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] said that Lacy has “embraced” being the top option for this team and wants to follow in the lineage of elite LSU wideouts.

“I would say that he has embraced that,” Kelly said. “Some guys don’t embrace it, they just continue to be who they are. He’s embraced that and wants to be that next great wide receiver at LSU. We have such a great tradition, so he wants to live up to that standard.

“I’ve seen a great deal of growth… It’s been fun to watch that maturation.”

Lacy and [autotag]Chris Hilton Jr.[/autotag] are LSU’s top returning receivers, and transfer [autotag]CJ Daniels[/autotag] as well as redshirt freshman [autotag]Shelton Sampson Jr.[/autotag] are expected to make an impact as well, among others.

But on a team that featured Nabers, Thomas and Mason Taylor, Lacy still managed 558 yards and seven touchdowns on 30 catches. With him potentially becoming the top target in 2024, it’s easy to see how he could break 1,000 yards this fall.

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What Brian Kelly said as LSU kicked off fall camp on Thursday

Brian Kelly addressed the media following LSU’s first practice of fall camp on Thursday.

The complete 2024 LSU Tigers football team took the field for the first time on Thursday as it kicked off fall camp.

We’re now exactly one month out from LSU’s season opener against USC in Las Vegas as it looks to take a step forward and compete for a college football playoff spot this season. There’s a lot of optimism surrounding this roster, but there are quite a few questions, as well.

[autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] led off training camp with a press conference addressing his squad entering Year 3 in Baton Rouge. Here are the highlights from what he had to say as the Tigers begin a crucial fall camp.

Sage Ryan playing cornerback

LSU’s reputation as DBU has lost some luster in recent years, but one of the more recent five-star defensive backs they’ve landed was [autotag]Sage Ryan[/autotag]. He emerged down the stretch in 2023, starting nine games at both corner and nickel.

He’s expected to play safety this year after spending all spring at the position, but Ryan was back at corner as camp began on Thursday. Kelly emphasized Ryan’s versatility and said they wanted to get him exposure as they feel he can play both positions.

“We’re cross-training him… We wanted the entire spring to be at safety,” Kelly said. “We feel like he’ll become that one player who could play both positions for us.”

TE Trey’Dez Green learning quickly

The four-star true freshman tight end was a late bloomer in football and will also play basketball for the Tigers. But Kelly said that physically, Green looks like he belongs on the field and has picked things up quickly on the mental side as well.

Kelly wouldn’t guarantee that Green will see the field in Year 1, but he thinks the young tight end could be on his way.

“He’s picked things up very well for a guy who has not played this game very long… It has not been a very difficult transition for him,” Kelly said. “That bodes well for players that are in their first year.”

WR Kyren Lacy stepping into No. 1 role nicely

Perhaps the biggest question surrounding the entire team will be whether the Tigers can replace a pair of first-round receivers in [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag]

There’s talent in the receiver room, however, and [autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag] in particular has been tabbed as a player who could step up in his third season with LSU and fifth season overall after he transferred from UL-Lafayette.

Kelly said Lacy has taken up the mantle of being the No. 1 option and the responsibility that comes with it.

“I would say that he has embraced that,” Kelly said. “Some guys don’t embrace it, they just continue to be who they are. He’s embraced that and wants to be that next great wide receiver at LSU. We have such a great tradition, so he wants to live up to that standard.

“I’ve seen a great deal of growth… It’s been fun to watch that maturation.”

CB PJ Woodland searching for more consistency

[autotag]PJ Woodland[/autotag] was just a three-star prospect coming out of high school, but the true freshman early enrollee turned heads during spring ball and entered fall camp expected to compete for a starting job on the outside.

Kelly cautioned some patience, however, and said that while the staff loves Woodland’s potential, he needs to be more consistent to earn regular playing time in Year 1.

“I think we’re at a point in Day 1 where it’s truly about the consistency of performance. We like PJ and we love his competitiveness. But if you remember, he made a great play, and then the next play, we threw the ball over his head.

“With young players, we’re looking for consistency, and he has got a huge upside. And he is going to be a really good player in the SEC. But in the SEC, you make one play, they’re coming right back at you, and they’re going to test you.”

Kelly added that the same is true for other young defensive backs competing for playing time, such as sophomore [autotag]Ashton Stamps[/autotag].

Javien Toviano reinstated

Sophomore cornerback [autotag]Javien Toviano[/autotag], who was expected to compete for a starting job, was suspended indefinitely last month after his arrest for video voyeurism.

Kelly said that Toviano was reinstated Thursday and will be a part of the team for fall camp as he works his way back into the fold.

“Javien’s been reinstated by the university,” Kelly said. “He’s back in football activities and we’ll kinda get him going again and back in the mix, and obviously he’ll be a competitive player for us.”

The legal situation with Toviano remains ongoing.

Zy Alexander is totally cleared

LSU doesn’t return many proven veterans in the secondary, but [autotag]Zy Alexander[/autotag] is one of them. The Southeastern Louisiana transfer impressed last season before suffering a season-ending torn ACL on an interception return.

After missing the spring, Alexander is back for the fall and has been cleared from a health perspective, but Kelly said he’s still slowly working his way back into football activities.

“He’s been cleared for everything,” Kelly said. “But when you have a knee, you need to experience some things like getting tripped up in the hole and cutting off of it and feeling the scar tissue and going ‘Oh my goodness, that’s what that feels like.’

“So he’s full-go, but he’s in that process of getting back into football activities and that sometimes takes some time before you feel real comfortable.”

When healthy, Alexander is expected to start for the Tigers on the outside.

WR Shelton Sampson Jr. making progress in Year 2

One of the more interesting potential breakout players in the receiver room is redshirt freshman Shelton Sampson Jr. With a 6-foot-4 frame, he has the potential to be a big play threat, and he made an impressive catch on Thursday while high-pointing the ball.

Kelly said Sampson has gotten a lot better in those 50/50 situations this offseason.

“I think that’s what we’re looking for from him, his ability to go up and get the football and compete for it,” Kelly said. “He was not a 50/50 guy last year, he was a 20/80 guy — he lost 80% of those. I believe he’s a 50/50 guy, he can go and get those balls.”

Kelly said that Sampson hit his head on the play in question, and that ended his practice out of an abundance of caution.

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Which of LSU’s young tight ends will emerge behind Mason Taylor?

Which tight end will emerge behind Mason Taylor as LSU’s No. 2?

Big things are expected from LSU tight end [autotag]Mason Taylor[/autotag] in 2024. He burst on the scene with a strong showing as a true freshman in 2022 and followed it up with 36 catches for 348 yards in 2023, despite the bulk of the targets going to [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag]

Taylor has proven himself as a blocker too. He’s the SEC’s only returning tight end to post a run block over 70 last year. His blend of skills at tight end is hard to find and it earned him preseason second-team All-SEC at media days earlier this month.

But LSU has a group of young tight ends behind Taylor. For this offense to go where it wants to go, at least one needs to emerge in 2024.

The safest pick is [autotag]Mac Markway[/autotag]. According to ESPN, Markway was the No. 3 tight end in the 2023 class. He played 160 snaps as a true freshman last year and got the start against Mississippi State. He was targeted just four times over the course of the season, catching three passes for 16 yards and a touchdown.

But according to PFF, Markway struggled when it came to blocking. Markway posted a run block grade of just 46.2, ranking 27th out of the 33 SEC TEs with 100 or more run block snaps.

Markway’s development was slowed late in his high school career after an injury ended his senior season. Now, with another year in LSU’s system and a new tight ends coach in Slade Nagle, Markway could turn a corner.

The first thing 247Sports mentioned in Markway’s original high school scouting report was his ability to block. I’d bet on Markway taking a step forward in that department this year. If so, Markway can be a valuable piece when LSU runs out of 22 personnel.

After Markway, you have [autotag]Ka’Morreun Pimpton[/autotag] and [autotag]Trey’Dez Green[/autotag]. Strictly speaking from a talent perspective, Pimpton and Green have the highest ceilings of the entire group.

Pimpton was a late addition to LSU’s 2023 class, flipping from Vanderbilt on signing day. 247Sports and On3 both ranked him as a top-six tight end in the class.

Like Markway, he didn’t factor into the receiving game last year and struggled as a blocker. If Pimpton is the athlete he was projected to be, there’s a chance he can emerge as LSU’s No. 2 TE.

This is an offense that wants to spread the field. A TE athletic enough to threaten defenses in all areas of the field will find their way into the rotation.

But Green might fit that billing better than anyone. Green was the top TE in the 2024 recruiting class. He’s young, but Kelly has shown a tendency to play young TEs while in Baton Rouge.

Green is nearly 6-7 and was a star on the basketball court too. He has the ability to win on the outside and fight for jump balls at the point of attack. Not many TEs can do that.

Again, the report here was the blocking needs to get to an SEC level. Green won’t be out there unless he can handle SEC defenders on a week-to-week basis.

Kelly’s programs have a history of producing tight ends. Michael Mayer, Tyler Eifert, Tommy Tremble, Kyle Rudolph and Troy Niklas all went to play NFL football after playing for Kelly at Notre Dame. At Cincinnati, Kelly had a player named Travis Kelce, who you may have heard of.

Taylor was banged up throughout the season last year and there’s no guarantee he’ll stay healthy throughout 2024. LSU has plenty of talented options behind him, but Kelly and tight ends coach [autotag]Slade Nagle[/autotag] would like to see that talent realized.

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Two LSU football players named to Maxwell Award preseason watch list

After having a Maxwell Award finalist last season, LSU has a couple of potential candidates this year, as well.

The [autotag]Maxwell Award[/autotag] is presented every year to the most outstanding player in college football. Last season, Michael Penix Jr. won the award after leading the Washington Huskies to the national championship Game.

On Monday, the Maxwell Award released its preseason watch list, and two Tigers have made it. LSU wide receiver [autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag] and quarterback [autotag]Garrett Nussmeier[/autotag] are on the watch list.

Lacy is a fifth-year senior who transferred to LSU from UL-Lafayette. In two seasons for the Tigers, he has played in 27 games and made 54 receptions for 826 yards and seven touchdowns. With [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag] heading to the NFL, this could be a legendary season for Lacy.

Nussmeier is a redshirt junior who made the first start of his career in the bowl game against Wisconsin last year. He led the Tigers to the win after throwing for 395 yards, three touchdowns and an interception. After sitting behind [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] for two seasons, Nussmeier is ready to lead the offense to the national championship game.

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What is LSU’s biggest question mark entering the 2024 season?

LSU is hopeful that it will have another elite offense, but that won’t matter if the pass defense doesn’t take a major step forward.

LSU had one of the most electric college football offenses in recent years in 2023.

Quarterback [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] won the Heisman Trophy leading an electric group that featured a pair of first-round receivers in [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag] But in spite of that group being able to score at will, a preseason top-five LSU team finished just 10-3 and failed to repeat as SEC West champions.

If you watched that team, the reason for that is no mystery. The defense was abysmal in 2023 and proved to be particularly vulnerable against the pass. That group could improve in 2024 with new defensive coordinator [autotag]Blake Baker[/autotag], but after adding just one key transfer in [autotag]Jardin Gilbert[/autotag], who is expected to start at safety, the Tigers are really banking on development in the secondary.

On a team with a lot of questions, the pass defense was deemed the biggest by ESPN’s Mark Schlabach.

The Tigers ranked 118th in the FBS last year in pass defense, allowing 255.6 yards per game, causing coach Brian Kelly to overhaul his defensive coaching staff heading into his third season at LSU. Kelly poached defensive coordinator Blake Baker from Missouri and brought back highly respected secondary coach Corey Raymond.

Seeing receivers run open in the spring game had to be concerning, but the Tigers feel like progress was made during the spring. LSU hopes Major Burns will be more comfortable at the hybrid star position, which will put him closer to the line of scrimmage, and Sage Ryan played better after moving from cornerback back to strong safety.

Only time will tell how much the offseason fixed the issues, but even with optimism surrounding LSU’s offense in 2024 with quarterback [autotag]Garrett Nussmeier[/autotag], the defense looks like it could be a limiting factor once again.

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What will be LSU football’s ‘X-factor’ in 2024?

Replacing two first-round picks at receiver won’t be easy, and it could determine how successful LSU’s season is.

LSU has a lot of questions that need to be answered in 2024 if this team is going to break through and make a College Football Playoff appearance.

The one most people are talking about is at quarterback, where [autotag]Garrett Nussmeier[/autotag] replaced [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag], the 2023 Heisman winner. But while Nussmeier has just one career start under his belt, he’s seen enough action for there to be quite a bit of optimism about the potential quarterback play.

The bigger question will be his targets in the passing game as the Tigers lost a pair of first-round receivers in [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag] There’s talent on the roster, but only time will tell if the unit can be that productive.

ESPN’s Mark Schlabach wrote that the receiving corps will be LSU’s biggest X-factor in 2024, and the success of that group could determine the success of the team as a whole.

Wide receivers. Few FBS teams have as much production to replace at wide receiver as the Tigers, who lost NFL first-round draft picks Malik Nabers and Brian Thomas Jr. The duo combined for 157 receptions for 2,746 yards with 31 touchdowns in 2023. Senior Kyren Lacy, who started his college career at Louisiana, seems next in line to become WR1. After that, the Tigers will be relying on newcomers CJ Daniels (Liberty) and Zavion Thomas (Mississippi State), as well as largely unproven returning receivers Chris Hilton Jr. and Aaron Anderson. Thomas, who will compete with Anderson for the slot receiver spot, has the potential to be one of the most explosive players in the FBS. He averaged 12.4 yards every time he touched the ball last season. He returned the opening kickoff 94 yards for a score in a 51-10 loss to Texas A&M. He has top-end speed to beat secondaries over the top. He should be even better in a much more efficient LSU offense.

Lacy seems poised for a breakout while Daniels comes in with a ton of hype after a 1,000-yard season at Liberty. If someone already on the roster like Hilton can also emerge, there’s the potential for this group to not only be solid but also a strength.

But if the Tigers struggle to replace Nabers and Thomas, it’s hard to imagine the offense will be nearly as explosive as it was last fall.

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Brian Kelly explains how LSU will replace lost production at receiver in 2024

Brian Kelly explained how LSU will replace Malik Nabers and Brian Thomas Jr. this fall.

While much of the attention has been placed on LSU’s new starting quarterback in 2024, [autotag]Garrett Nussmeier[/autotag], perhaps the even bigger question revolves around who he’ll be throwing to.

The Tigers lost their top two pass-catchers from last year in [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag], and while there’s talent on the roster, replacing two of the nation’s most productive receivers isn’t going to be easy.

The obvious next-man-up is [autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag], who enters his fifth season of college football poised to be the top option after turning in a productive 2023 season despite not seeing as many targets as Nabers and Thomas.

“I don’t think you look towards one player,” coach [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] said Monday at SEC Media Days per On3. “I think when we look at our football team in its totality, there will be a number of players that we’ll count on. Kyren Lacey, he will be certainly a player that we lean on. But I think at the wide receiver position, there is probably six to eight players that will get the opportunity to contribute and make an impact.”

Kelly also mentioned [autotag]Chris Hilton Jr.[/autotag] as a returning player who could break out, while he’s optimistic about the transfer additions of [autotag]CJ Daniels[/autotag], a 1,000-yard receiver at Liberty last season, and [autotag]Zavion Thomas[/autotag], who also served as a return specialist at Mississippi State.

“I think that’s what I like about our receiving corps more than anything else, is the depth,” Kelly said. “I think we’ve got speed on the perimeter. Chris Hilton showed that in our bowl game against Wisconsin, his ability to track the ball down the field. I think we’ve got the ability to play inside out at the slot receiver position. I think we’ve got great depth there.

“We brought in CJ Daniels, I think he will help us. Zavion [Thomas] will help us, transfer from Mississippi State. I think we brought in the right mix of players to give us the depth necessary inside and out to make up for that lost production.”

The Tigers are optimistic about Nussmeier’s potential given his talent and the flashes of strong processing that he has shown when he’s seen game action. But that won’t matter if he doesn’t have playmakers in the passing game, which Kelly seems to be confident he does.

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Phil Steele ranks LSU’s Jelani Watkins as No. 21 freshman wide receiver

LSU wide receiver Jelani Watkins has the speed to make an impact as true freshman.

LSU’s receiver room is tasked with reloading after losing [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag] The Tigers have some talent in the pipeline already with fifth-year players [autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag] and [autotag]CJ Daniels[/autotag].

But staying on top at the receiver position requires elite recruiting year in and year out. One true freshman worth keeping an eye on this fall is J[autotag]elani Watkins[/autotag], who college football analyst Phil Steele ranked as 21st best first-year receiver in the country.

According to On3’s Industry Ranking, Watkins is a four-star and the No. 217 overall recruit in his class. Watkins rates highest at ESPN, where he’s the No. 5 wide receiver in the class. 247Sports puts Watkins at No. 23 among his fellow receivers, not far off Steele’s ranking at 21.

Watkins’ best trait is his speed. He’s expected to run track at LSU along with playing football and was recently named the Gatorade Player of The Year in Texas for his accomplishments on the track circuit.

It’s unclear if Watkins will make an immediate impact, but the opportunity will be there if he forces the envelope. LSU’s offensive staff values speed and Watkins has the wheels to create big plays.

Watkins was a member of LSU’s 2024 class that ranked No. 7 nationally.

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