David Malinsky
4* LSU -15.5 over TENNESSEE
We have been on the anti-Les Miles bandwagon for so long that we are not accustomed to writing from this direction – his 3-16 ATS tally as an SEC home favorite is something that has been awfully good to our pockets through the years. It is also something that has become common knowledge in the marketplace, however, and that brings us a price range that is far below where the current realities of these programs calls for. So we confidently shift gears, with the comfort that the X’s and O’s issues that Miles rarely maximizes are also not in play here – this one is all about the physical disparity between the teams.
In this weeks NCAA VERITIES & BALDERDASH column we went into detail about how the Phil Fulmer/Lane Kiffin exits have left the Tennessee roster extremely short-handed. Counting some walk-ons that were elevated to scholarship status they opened fall camp with 76 players, but have already lost nine since that time. It leaves them with a dearth of talent and experience that makes it tough to compete from the opening kickoff against this class of competition, but almost impossible as the game wears on. Through the first three lined games the Volunteers have been out-scored 75-14 in the third and fourth quarter, despite all of those games being in Knoxville, and while getting whipped by Oregon and Florida can be excused, what happened vs. U.A.B. on Saturday was chilling. A weak team from Conference USA simply pushed Tennessee all over the field in the latter stages, winning the second half 16-0 to force the game into O.T., and the only reason that the Blazers did not win in regulation is that they missed five FG’s. Total offense was 544-287, but somehow Tennessee survived to get the outright win, which helps to keep this spread where it is.
Now Derek Dooley has to take his young team on the road for the first time, against the most physical opponent in the trenches they have faced so far, and it is difficult to see this being anything but ugly. There will be little chance of Tennessee generating ball control on the ground, with an OL that has one SR on the entire two-deep chart, and in some stretches last week had three true FR playing together at the same time, getting nowhere against that L.S.U. defensive front. As for Matt Simms finding time to throw, his own statements are a truly dark, yet accurate, assessment of the current realities - “I know it sounds weird, but I really think I’ve kind of mastered how to take a sack and just protect my body and protect the football, as crazy as that sounds. It’s something that’s going to happen each and every game, and you’ve just got to continue to fight through it and stay healthy.” That is what you hear from a QB that has been sacked 11 times in the last two games. And it fits in well with Dooley’s own post-game assessment on Saturday - ”They looked like two equal teams out there. Actually, it really didn’t. It looked like one superior team. It’s just where we are right now.”
So what happens to a defense when their own offense can not pick up some first downs to give them a little rest? They wear out, as the recent results have shown. It got so bad vs. U.A.B. that four different defensive starters had to be on the field for more than 90 plays (SS Prentiss Waggner played every down, plus four more on special teams), and they were so worn down that Dooley had to cancel a day of practice this week. While the L.S.U. offense may lack sophistication, the Tigers have a big and physical OL, with four of the starters at least 300 pounds, including 6-6/318 Joseph Barksdale, 6-7/324 Josh Williford and 6-6/329 Alex Hurst, and they can literally bulldoze their way through a defense that will already show up weary, and have a difficult time gutting through four quarters. That is accentuated by this game being moved up to an afternoon starting time, with a hot and humid forecast for Baton Rouge (kickoff should be around 84 degrees), and with all of that pressure on the Tigers because of their sluggish offensive opening to this season, they will relish the chance to make some explosions.