The Palm Beach Post

Underdog role doesn’t bother Orgeron, LSU

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TUSCALOOSA, ALA. — Ed Orgeron isn’t the least bit interested in point spreads. Blocking, tackling and turnovers are what’s on his mind.

So what if his 19th-ranked LSU Tigers are 21-point underdogs to No. 2 Alabama tonight, a perception chasm that would have been unthinkabl­e back when they were waging 2011’s “Game of the Century.”

“That don’t mean anything to us,” Orgeron said. “I mean, it’s the way you play the game. I think Syracuse didn’t listen to that when they played Clemson. It’s just the way you play the game. You never can tell. We go in there with the mindset we’re going to win the football game.”

In fact, Clemson was favored by 22½ points over the Orange and lost.

This one is a Southeaste­rn Conference Western Division rivalry game that has only ratcheted up in intensity since former Tigers coach Nick Saban arrived in Tuscaloosa and rebuilt a national power. That’s exactly what Orgeron is trying to do.

Alabama, though, has won the last six meetings since the national championsh­ip game in January 2012.

Orgeron called this a “very important game” for the state of Louisiana, the fans and the Tigers (7-2, 3-1 SEC). An upset would make quite a statement.

The Tide (8-0, 5-0) has been scarcely challenged so far in SEC games but trailed Georgia in the initial playoff rankings released Tuesday night, coming in at No. 2.

Safe to presume Saban wasn’t “wasting” — his word — his time watching that broadcast. More likely, he was scrutinizi­ng film of a Derrius Guice-led offense trying to figure out how to stuff another star LSU tailback.

The Tigers have won three straight since a stunning loss to Troy .

“LSU has played really, really well in their last three or four games,” Saban said. “They’re on the rise.”

This one will put that trajectory to the test more than any other game on LSU’s schedule, of course. The Tigers’ final three SEC opponents have a combined 4-11 record, potentiall­y making them the team to beat in the West if they can pull off the upset of the Tide.

“They’re on top of the world right now,” Orgeron said. “This is the benchmark.”

Some other things to watch:

Star tailbacks: The game will feature two — at least — of the SEC’s top tailbacks. Guice is coming off his third career 250-yard performanc­e and is the league’s No. 2 rusher. Alabama’s Damien Harris splits carries in a deep backfield, but still is averaging 8.6 yards per attempt with 10 touchdowns. The Tide held Leonard Fournette to 66 yards on 36 carries combined the past two seasons.

Streaks: Beyond LSU’s six-game losing streak in the series, Orgeron is 0-4 as a head coach against Alabama, dating to his days at Mississipp­i. Saban is 8-3 against his former team. The Tide have already pushed winning streaks against Arkansas and Tennessee to 11 games.

 ??  ?? Coach Ed Orgeron and LSU have won three straight.
Coach Ed Orgeron and LSU have won three straight.

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