Brian Kelly breaks down LSU’s defensive line depth in 2023

Here’s how the depth is shaping up on the defensive line as spring comes to a close.

With [autotag]Dashawn Womack[/autotag] and [autotag]Maason Smith[/autotag] getting back to the practice field, LSU’s defensive line is looking healthier.

However, don’t expect to see them out there on Saturday.

“It’s just not something that is worth the risk,” Kelly said when discussing potentially playing Smith, who is coming off a torn ACL, in the spring game.

With LSU thin all spring on the defensive line, several players got more reps this spring. Kelly believes that’s helped LSU improves its depth. On four-star freshman [autotag]Jaxon Howard[/autotag], Kelly said he benefited from extra work that wouldn’t have been there if LSU was fully healthy.

On the interior, [autotag]Jacobian Guillory[/autotag] also impressed Kelly, getting plenty of reps at several spots up front. [autotag]Paris Shand[/autotag], the Arizona transfer with a chance to take over for [autotag]Ali Gaye[/autotag], has also made strides.

“You could see his progress and his grit kind of grow throughout the spring to the point where we were like, that was a really good spring for him,” Kelly said.

Kelly also cited [autotag]Tygee Hill[/autotag] and [autotag]Fitzgerald West[/autotag] as two guys who benefitted from the available work.

The main takeaway: Kelly likes the depth LSU has up front.

Smith and [autotag]Mekhi Wingo[/autotag] are surefire starters up the middle, but it’s wide open outside of that.

It’s also worth noting this group has been working under interim defensive line coach [autotag]Gerald Chatman[/autotag] as LSU looks to replace [autotag]Jamar Cain[/autotag].

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LSU defensive tackle Jaquelin Roy declares for 2023 NFL draft

Roy started 12 of 13 games this fall, totaling 49 tackles.

LSU’s turnover along the defensive line continued on Tuesday as defensive tackle [autotag]Jaquelin Roy[/autotag] declared for the 2023 NFL draft.

The junior and hometown kid from University Lab High School in Baton Rouge became a full-time starter alongside [autotag]Mekhi Wingo[/autotag] on the interior this season. He appeared in all 13 games (starting 12 of them), and he finished the year with 49 tackles (3.5 for loss).

LSU has seen some losses on the defensive line so far this offseason between [autotag]BJ Ojulari[/autotag] and [autotag]Ali Gaye[/autotag] joining Roy in the draft, along with the addition of [autotag]Desmond Little[/autotag] in the transfer portal.

To help recoup some of these losses, LSU landed a trio of defensive line transfers on Tuesday in [autotag]Paris Shand[/autotag] (Arizona), [autotag]Bradyn Swinson[/autotag] (Oregon) and [autotag]Jalen Lee[/autotag] (Florida).

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LSU lands three transfer defensive linemen in the portal

The Tigers had a need along the defensive line, and they’re aggressively addressing it.

LSU just landed a litany of major additions in the transfer portal in the form of three defensive linemen.

[autotag]Bradyn Swinson[/autotag] transferred from Oregon, [autotag]Paris Shand[/autotag] transferred from Arizona, and [autotag]Jalen Lee[/autotag] transferred from Florida.

The Tigers just filled some big needs depth-wise as all three of these guys are likely to see playing time on the defensive line next season. LSU just lost a couple of high school defensive line recruits last week so [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] came out swinging in the transfer portal just a day before the early signing period starts.

LSU now has four transfer commitments for the 2023 class with these three guys joining Aaron Anderson. Here’s the rundown on each.

Michigan assistant coach Shaun Nua to visit 2020 3-star DE Paris Shand

Windsor (Conn.) The Loomis Chaffee School 2020 3-star DE Paris Shand has a top list of Arizona, Vanderbilt, Tulane, Boston College, Rutgers.

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Michigan’s football staff isn’t done recruiting the 2020 class.

Windsor (Conn.) The Loomis Chaffee School three-star defensive end Paris Shand has officially heard from defensive line coach Shaun Nua.

“He only sent me one message,” Shand said, “that he was coming.”

The 6-foot-5, 240-pound Canadian prospect has offers from Arizona, Tulane, Rutgers, Vanderbilt, Akron, Central Michigan, Fordham, Holy Cross, Lehigh, UMass and Virginia.

Moving from Toronto to Connecticut to gain recruiting exposure earlier in his career has allowed for Shand to put together a top list of Arizona, Vanderbilt, Tulane, Boston College and Rutgers.

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Shand has taken an official visit to Vanderbilt (Dec. 13) and is also scheduled to check out Rutgers on a Jan. 31 official.

If the Wolverines were to offer Shand when Nua travels to The Loomis Chaffee School, they wouldn’t automatically become his No. 1 option.

“Just because it’s a dream school and big-name wouldn’t put them ahead,” Shand said. “I’d still look at them like any other school I’m interested in.”

But Shand recognizes the importance of a scholarship offer from Michigan.

“I think anyone would be interested in Michigan,” he said. “I’m interested because it’s one of the top academic and football programs in the nation.”

Shand wants to play for a college football program that “really wants and needs” him. He doesn’t want to feel like he’s only joining the team to fill a roster spot.

He’s also interested in a top-notch education that will set him up for success after his football career is completed.

Shand is ranked No. 1,492 in the country, No. 77 at defensive end and No. 13 in Connecticut, according to 247Sports.

“I’m special because, beyond talent, I’m coachable and work hard to et what I need to be successful,” he said.

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