Four LSU Tigers land on ESPN’s top 50 all-time transfers list

Four LSU Tigers made the list. Two of them are playing now, and two of them are from previous teams.

ESPN’s Bill Connelly recently wrote an article on the top 50 transfers in the transfer portal era. Four LSU Tigers made the list. Two of them are playing now, and two of them are from previous teams.

[autotag]Mekhi Wingo[/autotag], [autotag]Cole Tracy[/autotag], [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] and [autotag]Joe Burrow[/autotag] all made the list as four of the top 50 transfer players. Burrow won the Heisman Trophy in 2019 and Daniels has the opportunity to win the Heisman Trophy in 2023.

Wingo transferred from Missouri and he became a leader in Baton Rouge. That earned him the coveted No. 18 uniform to wear this year. Tracy transferred to LSU from Division II Assumption College and became possibly the best kicker in school history.

COLUMN: When LSU meets Auburn, logic doesn’t apply

This rivalry has featured some wild finishes over the years.

October 8, 1988. Auburn traveled to Baton Rouge at 4-0 as one of the best teams in the country. LSU, led by [autotag]Tommy Hodson[/autotag] and [autotag]Tony Moss[/autotag], was 2-2 coming off two consecutive losses.

Down by six in the final minutes, Hodson found [autotag]Eddie Fuller[/autotag] in the back of the endzone to tie the game. As the story goes, Tiger Stadium lost its mind. The noise was so loud, that it registered on a nearby seismograph.

LSU won 7-6, and that has since become known as the “Earthquake Game.”

Almost a decade later in Jordan-Hare Stadium, there was “The Night The Barn Burned.” As a fire raged across the street, LSU beat No. 13 Auburn, 19-15.

Then there was 2005. LSU was ranked in the top 10 and hosting an Auburn team that was undefeated in conference play. Auburn took the lead late in the fourth, only for LSU to come back and tie it with a [autotag]Colt David[/autotag] field goal. The game went to overtime, and [autotag]JaMarcus Russell[/autotag] and LSU came out on top.

What about 2007? Much like 2005, Auburn took the lead late in Baton Rouge and LSU would once again need some last second heroics.

As the clock wound down, [autotag]Matt Flynn[/autotag] found [autotag]Demetrius Byrd[/autotag] in the corner of the endzone. It would go on to be one of the most important plays on LSU’s run to a national title.

We’ve had our fare share of stunners in recent years, too.

A trip to Jordan-Hare in 2016 would be the last one [autotag]Les Miles[/autotag] would make with LSU. A last second touchdown was called off, and Miles was fired the next day.

The following year, it was Ed Orgeron’s turn to take a stab at this rivalry. Auburn rolled into Tiger Stadium on a four game win streak.

LSU stumbled out of the gates, but a comeback highlighted by D.J. Chark’s punt return for a touchdown and Connor Culp’s go-ahead field goal gave Orgeron his first signature win.

The following year, now led by [autotag]Joe Burrow[/autotag], LSU went into Jordan-Hare and pulled off another comeback, capped off by [autotag]Cole Tracy[/autotag] putting one through the uprights as time expired.

When these teams get together, crazy things happen. The rules of logic don’t apply. The ground shakes, buildings burn, and coaches get fired.

No lead is ever safe, and the only certainty is chaos.

LSU isn’t Auburn’s biggest rival and Auburn isn’t LSU’s, but there’s been too many good games for this to not be one of the SEC’s best rivalries. It represents why we love this sport. Whether you’re at the stadium or watching on TV, you just might see something you’ve never seen before.

For better or worse, on and off the field, LSU and Auburn both never fail to entertain. The teams are slated to meet again this weekend. Bryan Harsin is fighting for his job on the plains as [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] is just getting started in Baton Rouge.

LSU looks like it’s heading in the right direction, and Auburn looks like its going all the wrong ways.

LSU should win this game. It’s almost a double-digit favorite and it’s hard to remember the last time Auburn was this bad. On Saturday, none of that matters, because nothing about this rivalry is normal.

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LSU’s best wins vs. Auburn: 2018

The 2018 season saw LSU travel to Auburn and defeat the Tigers 22-21 on a last second field goal for the second straight win in the series.

LSU entered its third game of the season on the road against the Auburn Tigers.

Both teams went into the game 2-0, and a win for either team would mark its first SEC win of the season.

Quarterback Joe Burrow finished the game 15-of-34 for 239 yards and one touchdown. Running back Nick Brossette had 19 carries for 69 yards to propel the Tigers offense to 370 total yards of offense.

Auburn quarterback Jarrett Stidham finished 16-of-28 for 198 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions. His two picks thrown were the only two turnovers of the game between the two teams.

LSU jumped out to a 7-0 lead in the first quarter and went up 10-0 in the second quarter before an Auburn touchdown trimmed the deficit to 10-7. Auburn then went up 14-10 before the half.

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In the third quarter, Auburn struck first to extend the lead to 21-10. LSU responded to trim the lead to 21-13 entering the fourth quarter.

LSU scored twice in the final quarter of play to get the 22-21 victory. Burrow hit receiving target Derrick Dillon on a 71-yard touchdown pass to put LSU down 21-19. Kicker Cole Tracy booted a 42-yard field goal as time expired to lift the Tigers to the win.

The victory moved LSU to 3-0 on the season and 1-0 in the SEC. The Tigers would go on to finish the season 10-3 after a Fiesta Bowl victory over UCF.

Defeating Auburn for the second straight season helped pave the way for the Tigers to finish the regular season with nine wins before earning the New Year’s Six Bowl against the Knights.

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