Chattanooga Times Free Press

No. 10 LSU eyes best season since 2012

- BY BRYAN LAZARE

BATON ROUGE, La. — Although LSU cannot win the Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ip, victories in its next two games will result in a regular season that exceeded expectatio­ns by a wide margin.

The 10th-ranked Tigers need to beat Rice this Saturday and Texas A&M in College Station the following week for their first 10-win regular season since 2012. That probably also would put LSU in a New Year’s Six Bowl.

So while coach Ed Orgeron hoped the Tigers could contend for a championsh­ip, he doesn’t want to downplay the improvemen­t he’s seen in the program, which was ranked 25th in the preseason poll and climbed as high as fourth before sliding back on the heels of a loss to No. 1 Alabama.

“This team wanted to win a national championsh­ip,” Orgeron said. “But we never set that as a goal for this team. This is LSU. I know the expectatio­ns. We are getting the most out of this football team. We still have two tough games to go. Going to a New Year’s Day bowl would be a good step.”

The Tigers did enough to defeat Arkansas 24-17 last Saturday. LSU squandered much of a 21-point advantage in the fourth quarter before running out the clock to preserve its eighth victory of the year.

“We have to finish the game,” Orgeron said. “I was disappoint­ed that we did not finish the game strong.”

For the first time since the Ole Miss game in late September, quarterbac­k Joe Burrow threw a touchdown pass — a 40-yarder to Justin Jefferson. However, for the fifth consecutiv­e game, Burrow failed to throw for more than 200 yards.

Moreover, the Tigers have had just one back rush for more than 100 yards in that five-game span. Clyde Edwards-Helaire ran for 145 yards in LSU’s 36-16 victory against Georgia.

“We have lost our identity on offense,” Oregeron said. “We have been trying some new things. Maybe we have put too much in. We may need to simplify.

Orgeron said he told offensive coordinato­r Steve Ensminger, “Let’s look at what we did vs. Georgia. Are we covering up for some of our weaknesses? Is it that we can’t have enough receivers out in routes because of (pass) protection?”

This season was expected to be a rebuilding year, largely because LSU’s offense entered the season with only three returning starters: tight end Foster Moreau, left tackle Saahdiq Charles and left guard Garrett Brumfield. LSU lost a fourth returning starter when right guard Ed Ingram was suspended indefinite­ly before the start of practice.

Charles and Brumfield have missed a combined eight games. Those two players have been together on the starting offensive line just four times.

“The offensive line has played good, but we have not been consistent,” starting center Lloyd Cushenberr­y said. “It’s a little mixture of everything. Sometimes things happen in football. Coming into the season, people thought we were going to get demolished in every game. We have done well.”

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