Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SEC report

Meetings address Troy upset

- Compiled by Bob Holt

There have been a whole lot of meetings at LSU this week in the wake of Troy’s 24-21 upset victory Saturday.

In addition to the usual staff, team and position group meetings, the Tigers held a players only meeting Sunday.

That was followed by a Monday meeting among Coach Ed Orgeron, Athletic Director Joe Alleva, and coordinato­rs Dave Aranda and Matt Canada.

A meeting involving the athletic director, head coach and coordinato­rs is highly unusual during an SEC game week.

Then again, LSU had won 49 consecutiv­e home nonconfere­nce games before losing to Troy — a 21-point underdog — to fall to 3-2.

The Baton Rouge

Advocate, citing an unnamed source, said the meeting among Alleva, Orgeron, Aranda and Canada in Orgeron’s office focused on accountabi­lity, and that the four agreed on the direction of the program.

Orgeron said on Wednesday’s SEC coaches teleconfer­ence he and Alleva called the meeting.

“I think the reason why Joe wanted to do it and I wanted to do it is because we’re not playing very well,” Orgeron said. “We all know that.

“We wanted to see what we could correct, and we threw everything out on the table. I thought it was very positive.”

The meeting was held after Orgeron’s weekly news conference.

“Joe and I meet all of the time,” Orgeron said. “We said, ‘Let’s bring in the coordinato­rs. Let’s talk to them, see what’s going on.’ ”

Aranda has a $1.8 million salary and Canada is at $1.3 million, making them the highest-paid coordinato­r duo in the nation.

“We feel like we have two very good coordinato­rs,” Orgeron said. “[Alleva] wanted to know what was going on, what we could do better. We all got on the same page. Very positive.”

Hand’s eye

Auburn offensive line coach Herb Hand didn’t let having a torn retina in his right eye slow him down much.

Hand didn’t miss a 5114 victory at Missouri the day before he underwent surgery or the Tigers’ 4910 victory over Mississipp­i State the next week.

The week of the Missouri game, Hand noticed a blind spot in his vision when using his right eye, AL.com reported, and he went to see an optometris­t who referred him to an eye specialist in Montgomery, Ala., the day before Auburn traveled to Missouri.

The specialist recommende­d Hand undergo surgery on his right eye as soon as possible.

Auburn Coach Gus Malzahn told Hand it was fine for him to stay home, have the surgery and miss the Missouri game.

But Hand wouldn’t go for that. He insisted on making the trip to Missouri.

“Herb’s an extremely tough guy, there’s no doubt,” Malzahn said. “The doctor wanted to operate that Friday, and I told Herb, ‘Hey, go ahead and get it done and we’ll be fine,’ because the prep was already in.

“But he felt really strongly he wanted to go to the game. It says a lot about Herb that he wanted to be there, and he did a good job that night, too.”

Hand had surgery at

8 a.m. Sunday and was at practice the Tuesday of the Mississipp­i State game week.

“He’s doing better now,” Malzahn said. “He’s wearing a patch over [the eye] until it heals properly.

“But if you saw him this week in practice, you wouldn’t know any different other than the patch.”

Malzahn said Hand did a good job preparing last week, but he is more like his old self now.

“This week you can tell he has his energy back and all that,” Malzahn said.

Patterson playing

Ole Miss quarterbac­k Shea Patterson, who played in the final three games last season as a true freshman after senior Chad Kelly went down with a knee injury, took every snap in the Rebels’ 66-3 loss at Alabama.

Why subject Patterson to that pounding for its entirety?

“Shea is a sophomore,” Ole Miss interim coach Matt Luke said. “We’re trying to get him as much experience as possible.”

Patterson completed 14 of 29 passes for 165 yards with 2 intercepti­ons against the Crimson Tide. He was sacked five times.

“He was coming up to me wanting to stay in the game, wanting to compete,” Luke said. “I think him getting as much experience as possible is important.”

QB question

Georgia sophomore quarterbac­k Jacob Eason started the season opener in the Bulldogs’ 31-10 victory over Appalachia­n State, but he was sidelined by a left knee injury in the first half.

True freshman quarterbac­k Jake Fromm finished the Appalachia­n State game and has made four consecutiv­e starts for the 5-0 Bulldogs, including victories at Notre Dame and Tennessee.

Eason, last season’s starter, played off the bench in Georgia’s 41-0 pounding of the Volunteers, prompting the question of whether he or Fromm will start Saturday at Vanderbilt.

Bulldogs Coach Kirby Smart is keeping that decision in-house.

“It’s not something we have to announce,” Smart told reporters.

Vanderbilt Coach Derek Mason said he expects Fromm to start.

“Listen, we can quit with the coaching dramatics,” Mason said with a smile when asked about Georgia’s quarterbac­k situation. “Right now, I believe Fromm is the guy.

“I believe Eason is an extremely talented quarterbac­k. But that’s up to Kirby who he decides to go with. I mean he’s not fooling me, if that’s what we think we’re doing here. That young man Fromm’s won ballgames.”

Smart was asked about Mason’s comments, and whether he was right about Fromm starting?

“Derek Mason’s entitled to his opinion,” Smart said. “Derek Mason’s not at our practices. He doesn’t watch our practice tape, that I know of. So I’m not really concerned with those comments.”

Smart said the coaches have discussed the situation with Eason and Fromm.

“They both completely understand,” Smart said. “They see it from our perspectiv­e, and the team’s perspectiv­e, and the team goals and team focus. As long as that’s put first, then all the right decisions are made based off that.”

Franks back

Florida redshirt freshman quarterbac­k Feleipe Franks will return to the starting lineup against LSU — a team he was verbally committed to as a recruit for more than a year before flipping to the Gators.

Franks, who is from Crawfordvi­lle, Fla., decided to stay home rather than sign with LSU. He was part of Florida Coach

Jim McElwain’s second recruiting class.

“He was obviously a target when we got here,” McElwain said. “He was one of the best players in the state of Florida.

“At the time, I think more than anything for him probably, opportunit­y-wise we didn’t have a lot on the roster, so it probably was a pretty good fit for him.”

Franks is starting again after junior Luke Del

Rio — who replaced him at Kentucky and rallied the Gators to a victory — suffered a season-ending shoulder injury against Vanderbilt last week.

After Del Rio went down in the second quarter, Franks came off the bench to compete 10 of 14 passes for 185 yards to help the Gators beat the Commodores 38-24.

Two-minute drill

Auburn senior Daniel Carlson has hit an SECrecord 162 consecutiv­e extra points. He kicked seven extra points last week against Mississipp­i State in the Tigers’ 49-10 victory to break the SEC record of 161 in a row by Tennessee’s John Becksvoort from 19911994.

Alabama’s 59-0 victory at Vanderbilt and 66-3 victory over Ole Miss represente­d the Crimson Tide’s most points in back-to-back SEC games since 1945, when they beat Kentucky 60-19 and Vanderbilt 71-0.

Georgia’s 41-0 victory at Tennessee ended the Volunteers’ scoring streak at 289 games. The Vols hadn’t been shut out since a 31-0 loss to Florida on Sept. 17, 1994.

Mississipp­i State had seven false-start penalties at Auburn.

Ole Miss was 0 of 13 on third-down conversion­s at Alabama.

Unless LSU shuts out Florida, the Gators will have the NCAA record for consecutiv­e games scoring to themselves. Florida is tied with Michigan at 365 games in a row. The Wolverines set the record from 1984-2014. Florida was last shut out by Auburn 16-0 Oct. 29, 1988.

 ?? AP/MATTHEW HINTON ?? After Saturday’s home loss to Troy, LSU Coach Ed Orgeron (above), offensive coordinato­r Matt Canada and defensive coordinato­r Dave Aranda had a meeting with Athletic Director Joe Alleva. “I think the reason why Joe wanted to do it and I wanted to do it...
AP/MATTHEW HINTON After Saturday’s home loss to Troy, LSU Coach Ed Orgeron (above), offensive coordinato­r Matt Canada and defensive coordinato­r Dave Aranda had a meeting with Athletic Director Joe Alleva. “I think the reason why Joe wanted to do it and I wanted to do it...

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