If Florida wins, this game doesn’t matter because we expect them to and LSU hasn’t been playing very well anyway. Worse, even if they lose, Florida fans can say Tim Tebow didn’t play, or was playing hurt two weeks after a bad concussion. Thus, do BCS voters take that into account when ranking Florida if they lose on Saturday?
This could cause BCS chaos, people! Dogs and cats living together. Mass hysteria!
The key matchup isn’t Florida’s offense against LSU’s defense. It’s whether LSU’s offense can get away with doing just enough not to lose again against Florida’s defense. The Gators don’t suck on that side of the ball like, say, everyone else LSU has played.
The Tigers’ offense has shown all the hallmarks of having a quarterback who just isn’t ready to manage a game yet. LSU is almost totally ineffective in the red zone, can’t get its running backs going because opposing defenses know to stop them first and has made a few plays through the air, but missed a lot of them too. Make no mistake, Jordan Jefferson is going to figure it out any day now, but he hasn’t yet, and that’s not a good sign for Saturday.
Here’s how the Tigers can win: I’ll admit it’s kind of obvious, but either Keiland Williams or Charles Scott is going to have to step up, along with the offensive line. Not because they’re the key (obviously Gary Crowton’s sparing use of his two stud backs so far shows they aren’t), but because it will open things up for the real playmakers: Brandon LaFell and Terrance Toliver. Those guys can beat Florida’s DB’s and cause all kinds of hell for Florida’s defense. That is, if Jefferson can find them consistently.
Frankly, it’s more likely they’ll get open than Florida’s defense suddenly letting Scott and Williams waltz through the front seven like they’re Jim Brown and O.J. Simpson before he cut two people’s heads off.
Notice how I didn’t mention any of the receivers because they might as well have been anonymous through the first five weeks of this season. I wonder if Tebow even knew their names before the concussion, because he certainly doesn’t now.
Look, even with a foggy Tim Tebow or a full-strength John Brantley, Florida is better than LSU at almost every position, in virtually every matchup and in all three phases of the game. LSU’s only shot is a hall-of-fame defensive effort, a crowd on par with Ohio State fans at this year’s USC game and efficiency on offense that hasn’t been displayed yet. Doesn’t look good, does it?
Florida is a seven point favorite at the moment, and given all the issues surrounding their personnel, it’s hard to see them covering, though they should still beat LSU.
My prediction: both teams start slow and LSU actually takes an early lead. Florida then proceeds to suck the life out of the stadium by matriculating the ball down the field, playing solid defense the rest of the way, and winning a close game. Florida wins but doesn’t cover the seven points.



The end result of this was nothing looked cohesive on that side of the ball, Washington dominated the time of possession (36:52 to 23:08), and Charles Scott and Keiland Williams had a combined 19 carries and no touchdowns. That is not the LSU way of doing things. They did have some big plays in the passing game, but Jefferson never looked particularly comfortable and was not very efficient. They are not a finesse team and shouldn’t try to be one. If anything, they can improve the passing game’s efficiency by running the ball more and making Jefferson even more of a running threat than the eight carries he had last week. As it was, you could tell what was coming based on the formation LSU was in. Shotgun with Williams next to Jefferson was probably some kind of pass. I-formation meant run with Scott. It’s not rocket science (or even high school biology with Les Miles) but that was way, way too predictable last Saturday.
















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