5 takeaways from the first USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll

Five takeaways from the first USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll that was released on Monday.

Football is near. We are less than three weeks from the start of the season. Oklahoma’s final season in the Big 12 is on the horizon, and anticipation is building for the Sooners to take the field. Everyone wants to wipe the bad taste left by last season’s 6-7 performance.

With football back, it means the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll returns. Oklahoma came in at No. 19 to start the season.

With the poll out, we took the liberty of sharing five takeaways from the first iteration of the poll and what it could mean for this 2023 season.

Would Tulane moving up to the Power Five affect LSU?

How could Tulane moving to the Power Five affect LSU and football in the state of Louisiana?

This never-ending cycle of conference realignment has brought massive change to the sport.

It began two years ago when Oklahoma and Texas announced their intention to join the SEC, leaving the Big 12 behind. It continued with a flurry of moves at the Group of Five level before another blockbuster move in the summer of 2022, which saw UCLA and USC bolt to the Big 10.

Now, it’s continuing with Colorado leaving the Pac-12 following the 2023 season. The Buffs will head back to the Big 12, the conference they left just over a decade ago.

The Pac-12 now finds itself in a precarious position. With just nine programs and potentially more on their way out, the conference faces an existential threat. If it wants to survive, it’s going to need creativity.

This round of realignment has shown us nothing is out of the question. So, while it’s a long shot, could we see Tulane return to the Power Five?

For years, LSU has existed as the lone Power Five program in the state. That’s provided LSU with a recruiting advantage seldom seen in the sport. There are financial benefits too. College football is a billion-dollar industry, and LSU’s the biggest show in town.

That begs the question: What dynamics would change if Tulane joined LSU at the P5 level?

I don’t think it would cut into LSU’s fanbase. The foundation in Baton Rouge that reaches across the state and region is too great to be broken into. It would take a sustained downward turn and given LSU’s current situation and recent athletic success, that doesn’t appear likely.

The biggest changes could be seen in recruiting. Tulane sits right in New Orleans, one of the nation’s premier talent hotbeds. If the Green Wave were to recruit with Power Five muscle, a few more top recruits would go there.

It might not be significant, but it would make somewhat of a difference. Power Five schools bring in more money, so Tulane would see improved name, image and likeness operations.

At the same time, Tulane would have to energize an alumni base that is much smaller than LSU’s and historically cares less about football.

Perhaps we’d see LSU play Tulane again. The two used to be major in-state rivals before the annual game faded. Although, that game would benefit Tulane more than it would LSU. And I’m not sure we’d see LSU rushing to help Tulane were the Green Wave to move up.

A lot would also depend on the financial situation of the conference Tulane joined. The Big 12 is trending in the right direction, but what the future of the Pac-12 looks like remains in serious doubt.

Tulane moving up would give more juice to a state that already treats football as a religion. It might not be to LSU’s benefit, but it would be interesting to see how it played out.

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Report: LSU losing offensive analyst to Tulane

Carter Sheridan is returning to the Green Wave to take an on-field role.

LSU is seeing another shakeup to its support staff, according to a report from On3’s Matt Zenitz.

Offensive analyst [autotag]Carter Sheridan[/autotag] is leaving to become the running backs coach at Tulane. Sheridan will become the second LSU analyst to leave for an on-field position with the Green Wave, joining defensive analyst [autotag]Gerald Chatman[/autotag].

Chatman served as LSU’s interim defensive line coach in the spring before leaving to take a full-time defensive line coaching gig in New Orleans.

A native of New Orleans, Sheridan was hired in 2020 and stayed on after the coaching change. This will be his second stint with the Green Wave; he served as the team’s receivers coach after spending 12 years as an assistant within the New Orleans Saints organization.

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First look at the Oklahoma Sooners SEC opponents in 2024

The Oklahoma Sooners received their opponents for their inaugural season in the SEC in 2024.

After anticipation so thick you could cut it with a knife, Oklahoma’s opponents have been revealed for their inaugural season in the SEC.

Oklahoma completes its move to the SEC next summer, but that will not stop fans of the Crimson and Cream from salivating at the matchups the Sooners will face in their first season as SEC members.

In a schedule reveal show, Oklahoma and Texas were the first to know their opponents — fitting that the new kids on the block were thrown into the fire early.

We have taken the liberty of mapping Oklahoma’s 2024 schedule with the scheduled nonconference games locked in.

In case anyone needed a reminder, along with eight conference games, each SEC team is required to play one opponent from the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 or a major independent during the 2024 season when the SEC becomes a 16-team conference.

As it stands, Oklahoma doesn’t have a Power Five team on the 2024 schedule. So, that will be the final piece to make its first year in the SEC complete.

Here’s a look at Oklahoma’s SEC opponents in their first season in the SEC.

What could the Oklahoma Sooners’ 2024 schedule look like in the SEC?

With the SEC deciding on an eight-game conference schedule for 2024, here’s how the Oklahoma Sooners schedule could look in their first year in the SEC.

At their spring meetings in Destin, Florida, the SEC decided to continue their use of an eight-game schedule for the 2024 season. It was one of the bigger debates at hand for a conference that’s been at the forefront of college football for some time.

Settling on an eight-game schedule, the SEC put in several provisions for how the league members should schedule nonconference games. Namely, each team would schedule at least one Power Five team. That could prove problematic for the Sooners.

Oklahoma has just two nonconference games scheduled for the 2024 season. The Sooners will play Temple and Tulane. Georgia would have been on the slate, but after Oklahoma and Texas announced they would join the SEC, the conference directed Georgia to cancel its nonconference game with the Sooners.

So that leaves a hole in the schedule. Because the Sooners have just two nonconference games scheduled, they’ll have to find two more games. Perusing future nonconference schedules, we found a pair of games that could make a lot of sense if Joe Castiglione can work his athletic director magic to make it happen.

Here’s a look at what the Sooners’ 2024 schedule could look like when it gets released on July 14 on the SEC network.

LSU coach Jay Johnson explains decision to start Paul Skenes in regional win over Tulane

Skenes tossed 124 pitches in a complete game on Friday, allowing LSU to entirely preserve its bullpen.

The Tigers began the Baton Rouge Regional on Friday by easily dispatching Tulane, 7-2, behind a complete-game performance from ace pitcher [autotag]Paul Skenes[/autotag].

The decision to start Skenes came as a bit of a surprise considering coaches often opt to save their best arms for tougher matchups later in the regional. However, after the game, coach [autotag]Jay Johnson[/autotag] said that the decision to start Skenes over [autotag]Ty Floyd[/autotag] or [autotag]Thatcher Hurd[/autotag] was an easy one.

Skenes, who threw 124 pitches in the first nine-inning complete game of his career, told the media that his ability to go the distance preserved LSU’s bullpen moving forward. Johnson confirmed this was the primary motivation behind giving Skenes the start.

Only time will tell if the decision to start Skenes was the right one, but for now, LSU is 1-0 as it awaits the result of Game 2 between Oregon State and Sam Houston State.

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LSU beats Tulane in Game 1 of the Baton Rouge Regional

Paul Skenes pitched the first nine-inning complete game in his career as the Tigers took down their in-state rival.

Much to the surprise of many, [autotag]Paul Skenes[/autotag] got the start on the mound for Game 1 of the Baton Rouge Regional against 19-40 Tulane.

We’ll see if that pays off in the long run for coach Jay Johnson and the Tigers, but it certainly did on Friday as they opened their NCAA tournament run with a 7-2 win to advance to the winners’ bracket.

LSU drew first blood in the bottom of the first inning when [autotag]Dylan Crews[/autotag] scored on a [autotag]Hayden Travinski[/autotag] RBI double to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead.

In the bottom of the second inning, the Tigers tacked on two more runs when [autotag]Brayden Jobert[/autotag] scored on an RBI double and [autotag]Gavin Dugas[/autotag] scored on an RBI groundout by [autotag]Josh Pearson[/autotag] to make it 3-0.

In the bottom of the third inning, Travinski scored on an RBI groundout by Jobert to give LSU a 4-0 lead.

In the bottom of the fifth inning, LSU scored two runs off of two sacrifice flyouts to score [autotag]Cade Beloso[/autotag] and Travinski to make it 6-0 Tigers after 5 innings.

In the top of the seventh inning, Tulane finally got on the board with a two-run homer off of Skenes to cut the lead to 6-2.

LSU loaded the bases in the bottom of the eighth inning and Travinski walked to score another run to make the score 7-2 LSU as we headed to the ninth inning.

Skenes stayed on the mound to start the ninth inning as he looked to pitch his first complete game. Skenes retired the hitters 1-2-3 as he pitched the first nine-inning complete game of his career. His final stat line was nine innings pitched as he allowed two runs on seven hits, zero walks and 12 strikeouts.

LSU moves on to the winners’ bracket to face the victor of Friday night’s matchup between Oregon State/Sam Houston State on Saturday.

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Paul Skenes to start LSU’s regional opener vs. Tulane

When LSU opens the Baton Rouge Regional against the Green Wave, it will do so with the National Player of the Year on the mound.

When LSU takes the field at Alex Box Stadium on Friday afternoon against Tulane to begin the Baton Rouge Regional, it will do so with the National Player of the Year on the mound.

In a fairly surprising decision, Tigers coach [autotag]Jay Johnson[/autotag] announced that ace [autotag]Paul Skenes[/autotag] will get the start at pitcher against Tulane, which is just 19-40 but got hot at the right time and captured the American Athletic Conference tournament title.

It was expected that Skenes would be saved for a potentially tougher matchup later in the weekend, but the Tigers will look to secure an opening win and put themselves in the winners’ bracket on Saturday.

Skenes, who was also named a First Team All-American after transferring in from Air Force last offseason, is 10-2 on the season with a 1.89 earned run average. A projected top-two pick in this summer’s MLB draft, Skenes’ 167 strikeouts this season is the second-highest single-season mark at LSU behind Ben McDonald’s 202 in 1989.

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Sooners take on talented, battle tested ECU team to kickoff NCAA Tournament

Oklahoma will take on the ECU Pirates in their first game of the Charlottesville regional at 6 pm on Friday evening.

Oklahoma has its work cut out. Friday evening, they’ll take the field to play against the best the American Athletic Conference offers in baseball. The East Carolina Pirates are a dangerous and scrappy team fully capable of winning the Charlottesville Regional and moving on to the Super Regionals.

Oklahoma is just a year removed from a magical run to the NCAA championship series in Omaha. Things are very different this time around for the Sooners. Why, you might ask? Well, for starters, they lost so many players from that team.

Josh Callaway of Sooners Illustrated perfectly captures the sheer magnitude of what losses Oklahoma overcame to make the tournament.

On top of those losses, the Sooners had the 16th most difficult schedule in the nation. They are tested and hung in there enough to make the 64-team tournament.

15 of OU’s 31 wins this season came against teams in the NCAA Tournament field. Many detractors will say they don’t belong here, but arguing against their schedule is a difficult one. They enter the tournament winners of 12 of their last 19 games despite their lackluster showing in the Big 12 tournament.

Their opponents on Friday night, the Pirates, should come in locked in after losing a chance at an AAC tournament title and the possibility of hosting a regional when they failed to defeat Tulane. The Green Wave became the worst team ever to make the NCAA tournament after they pulled off a Cinderella run through the conference tournament.

Starting on the mound will be Trey Yesavage, a sophomore righthander who is 6-1 with an ERA of 2.80 and a team-high 98 strikeouts. He is 11th in hte nation in WHIP (0.99) and 17th in strikeouts per nine innings (12.48).

Yesavage is tracking to be a top 50 pick in the 2024 MLB Draft, so getting to him won’t be easy.

Offensively, the Pirates were second in the AAC with a team batting average of .292. Outfielder Carter Cunningham leads the way, batting .324. He has hit eight home runs and has 35 RBIs. Five other ECU players are batting over .300. Josh Moylan is the chief run producer with 19 doubles, two triples, 15 home runs, and a team-high 66 RBI.

Oklahoma and ECU have never met on the diamond. That changes on Friday night. The game will be shown at 6 p.m. CT on Friday at Davenport Field at Disharoon Park in Charlottesville, Virginia. The game will be broadcast on ESPN2/ESPN+.

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How to watch LSU baseball open the Baton Rouge Regional against Tulane on Friday

The Tigers open their postseason run against the 19-40 Green Wave.

It’s NCAA tournament time once again for LSU baseball, and unlike in coach Jay Johnson’s first season, the Tigers are hosting a regional as the No. 5 national seed.

They’re joined in the Baton Rouge Regional by Oregon State — a team LSU has a good deal of history with — and Sam Houston State, but first, Johnson’s team will face Tulane.

The Green Wave are 19-40 on the year and have the worst record of any team in the tournament. Tulane went 8-16 in American play and only won a single regular season series, but they went 4-1 en route to a conference tournament title.

Here’s what you need to know to watch as LSU begins its postseason run.