Redemption week has arrived for the LSU Tigers

LSU and Mississippi State are almost too similar, it could make for an interesting game on Saturday.

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We all know the story, the LSU Tigers suffered an embarrassing loss last season as they opened the season. The defending national champions fell to the Mississippi State Bulldogs in a fashion that many want to forget.

For the team, it isn’t about redemption or getting revenge but going 1-0 in SEC play. The storylines are really for the media and the fans, the team wants to focus on winning the game and setting themselves up for a run at the SEC West title.

Both teams coming in with identical 2-1 records, although a mistake by the officiating crew might have cost them a game against Memphis. After escaping with a one-point victory over Louisiana Tech, the Bulldogs knocked off North Carolina State 24-10 before Saturday’s letdown.

These two teams are very similar in that they are the two worst rushing teams in the SEC through three weeks. LSU has accumulated 257 yards in that span, while Mississippi State has just 136 yards. The only two schools in the conference with less than 3.5 yards per attempt. They combine for five rushing touchdowns

They both have to win through the air. Mike Leach’s Air Raid attack leads the conference with 361 passing yards per game. LSU comes in at No. 4 with 303.3 yards passing per game. The Tigers lead the SEC with 11 touchdowns through the air. The passing defenses will be tested in this game, could be see another high-scoring affair?

It is likely with the Bulldogs ranked dead last in the conference as they have allowed 243.3  yards passing per game with five touchdowns through the air. LSU is dead last with six touchdowns allowed. Get your popcorn ready this week. these two teams could be lighting up the scoreboard.

LSU vs Mississippi State: Game time and TV network announced

We now know when the LSU vs Mississippi State game will kickoff and which network to tune into.

This week the LSU Tigers are preparing for their final tuneup game ahead of SEC play opening next week.

In that SEC opener, the Tigers will head to Starkville, Mississippi, for a chance at redemption against Mississippi State and Mike Leach. The Bulldogs came into Death Valley to open the 2020 season and stunned the defending national champions, 44-34.

That eye-opening result proved an omen for the defense. This time around the Tigers want to repay the favor and hand Mississippi State the loss at home to open conference play. Before that game, LSU needs to take care of business against Central Michigan.

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As for the Tigers’ visit to Starkville, we now know the game time and TV network information for the game.

Time: 11 a.m. CT

Network: ESPN

Where: Davis Wade Stadium (Starkville, Mississippi)

It was reported by the LSU Tigers football official Twitter account.

The first conference test will be a big one for the Tigers. After losing to UCLA to open the season and struggling on offense against McNeese, can this team get right against Central Michigan before next week?

Currently, Mike Leach’s team is 2-0 after victories over Louisiana Tech and North Carolina State. Their final tuneup game will be at Memphis before returning home to host LSU.

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Can the Tigers get revenge for an embarrassing loss in 2020? Or will Leach prove once again that the LSU defense can’t stop his air raid attack?

 

Where Lincoln Riley ranks among head coaches based on playing careers

A look at where Lincoln Riley ranks among his FBS peers based on his playing career.

We know where Oklahoma Sooners head coach Lincoln Riley ranks among his peers from a coaching perspective.

Based on most head coach ranking lists, Riley finds himself as the No. 3 head coach in the country behind Alabama’s Nick Saban and Clemson’s Dabo Swinney. It makes sense as these three coaches have the most College Football Playoff appearances since they went to this model and abolished the BCS system.

However, some head coaches were top players before making the jump to the coaching ranks. Running backs coach Demarco Murray was a five-star recruit that went on to play in the NFL, where he became the league’s leading rusher in 2014 with the Dallas Cowboys.

Some other coaches don’t have that same level of experience. Take Oklahoma Sooners head coach Lincoln Riley for example, he didn’t play at the collegiate level but is still viewed as a top coach in the country.

Adam Rittenberg of ESPN (subscription required) recently published his ranking of all FBS coaches with a twist. How do the head coaches rank based on their playing careers.

Lincoln Riley, Muleshoe High School

(AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

Prior to his coaching days, Lincoln Riley played quarterback in Muleshoe, Texas. Not far from Lubbock and Texas Tech University where he would ultimately walk on to the football program. He spent years as an assistant under former OU coordinator Mike Leach. Riley worked his way up to offensive coordinator at East Carolina before landing in Norman.

Riley’s Ranking: No. 119

What ESPN Says…

Riley played quarterback at Muleshoe High School in Texas, and helped the team to the state semifinals as a senior despite an injured shoulder. He walked on at quarterback for Texas Tech but became a student assistant there for Mike Leach.

At least Riley wasn’t dead last. The coach who gave him his first opportunity, Mike Leach came in at No. 129 overall.

Before mastering the pass-heavy Air Raid offense, Leach played a sport in which only backward passes are permitted. He played rugby at BYU after a high school football career in Wyoming as a backup.

Former tight end’s coach and now South Carolina head coach, Shane Beamer ranked No. 101.

Beamer turned down a partial scholarship at Charleston Southern to walk on at Virginia Tech, where his father Frank was a Hall of Fame coach. Shane played wide receiver and long snapper on five bowl teams and three Big East championship teams. He snapped for the 1999 Hokies team that played for the national title.

Finally, we have former Oklahoma quarterback and current Tennesee head coach Josh Heupel near the top of the rankings at No. 3 overall.

Despite earning South Dakota’s high school player of the year honors, Heupel’s college career began quietly at Weber State, before transferring to Snow College in Utah. His next move to Oklahoma set up a historic run, as he led the Sooners to a national title in 2000. Heupel won the Walter Camp Award, was named AP Player of the Year and finished second for the Heisman Trophy. He went 20-5 in two seasons as OU’s starter, passing for 7,456 yards and 53 touchdowns.

Bob Stoops chats Mike Leach hire

Bob Stoops chats on the hire of air raid pioneer, Mike Leach.

In a Thursday interview with Colin Cowherd, legendary Oklahoma head coach Bob Stoops took a  reminiscent look back at the hiring of air raid guru Mike Leach in 1999.

It all began with facing one another in the SEC. When Stoops was Florida’s defensive coordinator and Leach was the offensive coordinator for Kentucky, a chess match of wits between the two commenced on the turf. After getting the job with Oklahoma, Stoops sought out the man that consistently gave his Gators’ defense problems.

“I’m the defensive coordinator at Florida and the team that gave me the most problems and drove me crazy was Kentucky,” Stoops described to Cowherd. “They had the most first downs in the league, they had the most points on and on and on…So, I called Hal Mumme, because I knew I couldn’t hire him, he wasn’t going to leave his head coaching position. I said, ‘Hey, can Mike Leach run the offense and do the things you do at Kentucky? He said, ‘Absolutely.’ I just wanted to know could he be that kind of leader? And Mike is.”

The decision clearly became a return of investment. The year Mike Leach was hired, OU acquired Josh Heupel (Heisman Trophy runner-up), Jason White (brought Sooners to two National Championships), and Nate Hybl (guided team to Big 12 Championship). Leach brought in innovative coaching techniques that transformed college football and the foundation he set, still resides with the team under Lincoln Riley and throughout Division I football. Leach went on to coach at Texas Tech, Washington State, before taking over at Mississippi State.

He coined the term “air raid” and popularized the spread, pass-heavy attack along with Hal Mumme. Leach became a pioneer and his imprint at the University of Oklahoma is prevalent today with the Crimson and Cream.

Mike Leach reflects on recruiting Josh Heupel

Mike Leach reflects on recruiting Josh Heupel.

Mike Leach enters his second season as head coach at Mississippi State.

Mississippi State finished 4-7 (3-7 SEC) in Leach’s first season in 2020. His first season was one in which the coronavirus pandemic caused Leach not to have spring practices, making it difficult to install the Air Raid offense.

Leach now has a season under his belt at Mississippi State along with 43 lettermen and 16 starters (nine offense, seven defense) returning in 2021.

The Bulldogs are No. 8 in ESPN’s 2021 preseason college football FPI rankings.

Leach joined the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days” and discussed spring practices.

“We critically needed spring last year and didn’t get it,” Leach said.

Mississippi State concluded spring practices with its annual Maroon and White Game on April 17.

“The spring was very good for us,” Leach said. “We’re improving, I think at a good rate.”

In this Nov. 27, 1999 photo, Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops, center left, and offensive coordinator Mike Leach talk during the final moments of an NCAA college football game against Oklahoma State in Norman, Okla. (AP Photo/J. Pat Carter, File)
In this Jan. 3, 2001, photo, Oklahoma quarterback Josh Heupel is carried off the field by his teammates after defeating Florida State 13-2 in the Orange Bowl in Miami. Heupel, who was the Heisman Trophy runner-up for Oklahoma in 2000, and former North Carolina pass-rushing star Julius Peppers are among 12 players making their first appearance of the College Football Hall of Fame ballot this year. (Greg Lovett/Palm Beach Post via AP, File)

Leach’s time at Mississippi State is his second stint coaching in the Southeastern Conference. He served as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Kentucky from 1997-98.

Leach was then hired as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Oklahoma in 1999.

After being hired with the Sooners, Leach set out to find a quarterback who could come in and run his Air Raid offense.

He narrowed it down to a pair of JUCO signal-callers in Josh Heupel from Snow College and Sean Stein of Long Beach City College.

Leach settled on Heupel who would throw for 3,460 yards and 30 touchdowns in 1999. Leach left Oklahoma following the 1999 season to become Texas Tech’s head coach. Heupel would guide Oklahoma to the BCS national championship in 2000.

Leach discussed why he settled on Heupel to be his quarterback and run the Air Raid offense at Oklahoma.

“Josh had thrown a lot of balls,” Leach said. “Josh was really accurate. Really accurate and really smart. Really knows football, a coaches kid. I liked all of those things and we had to do it as fast as we could. Josh came and spent a couple of days with me and we didn’t have furniture yet because we were just moving into the Switzer Center there, they just built it. We sat on the floor watching film after film, that was when it was VHS still, and talked offense.

“I thought Josh always had a great command of the field, a great knowledge of the game. The other thing was he was really accurate. He did not have a strong arm, but he was real accurate.”

Heupel has since launched his head coaching career at UCF (2018-20) and being hired at Tennessee on Jan. 27.

Leach mentioned he had no question that Heupel would become a coach.

“No question in my mind,” Leach said of Heupel. “I absolutely knew he was going to be a coach.”

The entire show with Leach can be listened to here or below. Leach’s book “Swing Your Sword” can be purchased here.

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Around the SEC: Mike Leach says young Mississippi State team brings high level of enthusiasm, but must continue improving ‘everywhere’

The Air Raid offense has a chance to become a force in the SEC once more after a full spring practice.

The Air Raid offense re-entered the Southeastern Conference with a bang last year when LSU fell 44-34 at the hands of graduate transfer quarterback KJ Costello and his 623 passing yards.

LSU’s secondary had some major issues within it, also feeling the temporary loss of star cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. The playing field was pretty level with Mississippi State and LSU nearly tied for the youngest team in the conference.

Heading into the 2021 season, which is still months away, things will be much of the same — but different.

The Bulldogs and Tigers are very much still younger teams in the SEC, and both will gain the advantage of finally having a full offseason to work with.

Based on spring practices and the spring game itself, LSU looks much improved on defense and the secondary may be the unit that has made the most strides.

At the same token, the Air Raid is based on repetition and execution. We watched head coach Mike Leach’s team begin to find itself, ending the season with a win and coming up close on some tough opponents even in its losses down the stretch.

With a full spring and players returning from last year who were in the system, the offense based on doing things over and over again has the chance to make a statement in 2021.

Obviously, it’s only the spring and we’ll learn more in the fall, but Leach seemed confident in the talent level and overall preparedness of the team when I asked him about it Sunday.

“Definitely ahead of last year,” he said. “I think we’re still a work in progress. We didn’t get to have spring last year. We’re still a very young team, so we’re improving quickly, but we have a long ways to go, but we’ve got a lot of enthusiasm, I think.”

Going through practices this offseason, the results were satisfactory overall, but there’s still work to be done.

“As far as having top-to-bottom, pretty good practices, I thought we did,” Leach said. “I’ve never had a spring where I thought it was perfect, but I thought we definitely had nine really good practices. We had one that was probably average, maybe even a little above average. We had one that I would actually say was below-average.”

Spring is a good time for teams to spot their issues and get a solid evaluation of where they are moving forward, but at the end of the day, a spring game is just that — a spring game.

“Spring games, they’re kind of just distractions to the point where some guys just give up on what they’re doing and they’ll just go through the motions,” Leach said. “We haven’t given up on doing them, but it wasn’t as good of work as our other two scrimmages.

“A lot of teams, they give up and go out there and just have sort of a fake practice. They go for 45 minutes and sort of just lay around out there. We didn’t do that, but we split the teams in half and that may have made it sloppy. You know it’s going to make it sloppy when you do it but it makes it competitive at the same time. You have guys out there who aren’t used to playing alongside one another. I thought it was valued work, but I thought we could have gotten more out of it.”

There’s never really one guy who is a standout in his own right within the Air Raid because it’s not based around giving or throwing the ball to a single playmaker. Rather, it’s based on distributing the ball amongst targets.

There are many talented players within the team Leach believes are flying under the radar — though it’s still early to tell just how far they’ll go this year.

“I actually think a bunch of them are,” Leach said. “It’s difficult to say because we’re still kind of going in spurts as people develop their skills and prove what they can do. That’s the thing, a young guy one day can’t do something and the next day he gets better at it. But then there’s also another learning curve of being able to do it the majority of the time.”

As for the quarterback position, the Bulldogs have seven of them on campus and Sawyer Robertson hasn’t arrived yet. Leach describes the competition as “wide open” though Will Rogers and Jack Abraham are unsurprisingly leading the way at this point.

“I think Will (Rogers) and Jack (Abraham) are at the top, but I also think that Chance (Lovertich) and Daniel (Greek) really showed some good things,” Leach said.

Leach has described Mississippi State as a work in progress on several occasions, but things are coming along and there’s a high sense of optimism.

“I think we’ve improved across the offensive line, but I think we’ve got to get better,” Leach said.

I think our quarterbacks have got to get better. In a word, everywhere, we’ve got to get better. I think generally speaking, though, it’s instrumentally. I don’t think there’s a huge bust out there, I just think that we have to everywhere and I think it’s developing.

In terms of reaching an ideal within the offense as the whole, that doesn’t exist for Leach. There is always room for more improvement and always a chance to rep a play another time.

“I’ve never had an offense that’s where I want it to be,” Leach said. “Football is not really a ‘where you want it to be’ deal. There’s nothing more to do if it’s where you want it to be. After Jerry Rice won the Super Bowl and went to the Pro Bowl and all of that, he was out there working and running like crazy. So if he needs to work, I think everybody does.”

Saints met with Mississippi State QB prospect K.J. Costello

The New Orleans Saints are one of several NFL teams to contact Mississippi State QB K.J. Costello, a prospect in the 2021 NFL draft.

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Here’s another name for the list of 2021 draft prospects contacted by the Saints: Mississippi State quarterback K.J. Costello, who has been picking up steam after recent throwing sessions in front of NFL scouts. LSU Wire’s Crissy Froyd reports that Costello has also spoken with the Chargers, Eagles, and Patriots in addition to his meeting with New Orleans.

Costello transferred to Mississippi State after three years at Stanford, but an initially-impressive start against LSU in the season opener didn’t quite set the tone. Five of his six touchdown passes on the year came in that upset against the defending national champs, and he ended up missing four weeks between a concussion and COVID-19 exposure. He wasn’t allowed to do much within the constraints of Mike Leach’s limited Air Raid offense, which SEC defenses figured out in a hurry.

So where is he projected to be drafted? Costello has good size (6-foot-4 and 225 pounds) but poor athleticism, along with inconsistent college performance. While he has the profile of a late-round flyer like his predecessor Tommy Stevens — cut from the Saints practice squad after failing to convert to tight end — the priority teams feel to acquire quarterbacks and maybe some optimism that he can flourish in a better situation could see him go higher, maybe earlier on the draft’s third and final day.

Right now, the Saints have a vacancy at the end of their depth chart. Jameis Winston and Taysom Hill are slated for a training camp battle to start. Adding someone like Costello to compete with Trevor Siemian to back them up as the team’s third-string quarterback makes sense. Keep an eye out for him on draft day.

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Ultimate SEC Boxing Showdown! Pitting the 14 football coaches in winner-take-all fan vote

Putting all 14 SEC head football coaches against each other in a seeded boxing tournament. Who do you think will win each matchup? GO VOTE!

We are a month past the last college football game and a little more than a month until Spring Football begins so this is one of the deadest times for college football.

Yet it doesn’t have to be that way, right? That’s why I am introducing you to the ULTIMATE SEC SHOWDOWN! Yes, we are pitting the 14 head coaches against each other to see who is the biggest and baddest man we have in our great conference right now.

Seeding? Oh we have already done you the favor of putting the 14 coaches, in our opinion, in order with LSU’s Ed Orgeron being the top seed, new Tennessee head coach Josh Heupel being our lowest seed and Lane Kiffin as our dark horse.

It is the first round of the showdown and we have listed the age, height along with the pros and cons of each coach. It is now your turn to have fun as you get to vote for the ultimate champion of the SEC!

Let’s get ready to rumble!!!!

These fans watched the Auburn vs Mississippi State and lived to react to it

I’ve never been so underwhelmed and exhausted while watching an Auburn game before. The Auburn vs Memphis basketball game left very little in the emotional tank for football, it also didn’t help that the score at halftime was 6-3. But alas, Auburn …

I’ve never been so underwhelmed and exhausted while watching an Auburn game before. The Auburn vs Memphis basketball game left very little in the emotional tank for football, it also didn’t help that the score at halftime was 6-3.

But alas, Auburn was able to snap a two-game losing streak and the Tigers’ abysmal offense finally managed to find the end zone late in the second half. The final score was 24-10. Here’s what many had to say:

Auburn fans we can now relax, for it is now basketball season. Prayers up for Mississippi State DE Marquiss Spencer who was stretchered off the field in the fourth quarter.

3 keys to Auburn beating Mississippi State

Here are three things Auburn will need to do to beat Mississippi State Saturday night.

Auburn has made it to the end of the season and there are once again questions about the security of Gus Malzahn’s job.

The Tigers are coming off back-to-back disappointing losses and a strong performance against an unranked Mississippi State could be used to help quiet those conversations.

For that to happen, Auburn will need to play well against a State team that has showed some progress since a rough start to the season outside of the opener against LSU. The Bulldogs turned to freshman quarterback Will Rogers who has helped stabilize the offense.

Here are three things Auburn will need to do well to improve to 6-4 on the season.