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LSU Tigers football

The LSU Tigers football program, also known as the Fighting Tigers, represents Louisiana State University in college football. The Tigers compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).

LSU Tigers football
First season1893 (131 years ago)
Athletic directorScott Woodward
Head coachBrian Kelly
3rd season, 20–7 (.741)
StadiumTiger Stadium
(capacity: 102,321)
Field surfaceGrass
LocationBaton Rouge, Louisiana
ConferenceSoutheastern Conference
Past conferencesSIAA (1893–1922)
SoCon (1923–1932)
All-time record806–434–47 (.645)
Bowl record31–24–1 (.563)
Playoff appearances1 (2019)
Playoff record2–0 (1.000)
Claimed national titles4 (1958, 2003, 2007, 2019)
Unclaimed national titles4 (1908, 1936, 1962, 2011)
National finalist4 (2003, 2007, 2011, 2019)
Conference titles16 (12 SEC, 3 SIAA, 1 SoCon)
Division titles10 (1996, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2011, 2019, 2022)
RivalriesAlabama (rivalry)
Arkansas (rivalry)
Auburn (rivalry)
Florida (rivalry)
Mississippi State (rivalry)
Ole Miss (rivalry)
Texas A&M (rivalry)
Tulane (rivalry)
Heisman winnersBilly Cannon – 1959
Joe Burrow – 2019
Jayden Daniels – 2023
Consensus All-Americans40[1][2]
Current uniform
ColorsPurple and gold[3]
   
Fight songFight for LSU
MascotMike the Tiger
Marching bandLouisiana State University Tiger Marching Band
WebsiteLSUsports.net

LSU ranks 16th best in winning percentage in NCAA Division I FBS history and claims four national championships (1958, 2003, 2007, and 2019), 16 conference championships, and 39 consensus All-Americans.[4] Three players for the Tigers have won the Heisman Trophy: Billy Cannon in 1959, Joe Burrow in 2019, and Jayden Daniels in 2023.

The team plays on the university's campus at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The program's current head coach is Brian Kelly.

History edit

Early history (1893–1954) edit

 
Charles Coates, LSU's first coach

Dr. Charles E. Coates, a chemistry professor at the university known for his work on sugar, and former football player at Johns Hopkins, assembled a group of students to create the school's first team. Coates' plan for a football team dated back to autumn of the previous year, when he assembled a team and held one or two scrimmages before shelving the idea for the following autumn. The team wore makeshift uniforms with purple and gold ribbons for its first game, a 34–0 loss to Tulane and the only game played by LSU that year. The game was played in front of a crowd of 1,500 at Crescent City Base Ball Park in New Orleans.[5] The game sparked a rivalry between the schools that lasted well into the 20th century. Future Louisiana governor Ruffin G. Pleasant was the quarterback and captain of the LSU team. According to legend, purple and gold were chosen because they were Mardi Gras colors, and the green was sold out.[n 1] The game was the only one Coates ever coached, and the only football game Pleasant played in. Pleasant was later inducted into the LSU Athletic Hall of Fame.[6]

 
The 1895 team.

LSU achieved its first victory by beating Natchez Athletic Club 26–0 in 1894. Samuel Marmaduke Dinwidie Clark has the honor of scoring the very first touchdown in LSU history. The first football game played on the LSU campus was at State Field on December 3, 1894, a loss against Mississippi. LSU's only touchdown in that game was scored by the head coach, Albert Simmonds.[7] This was the first year of play for William S. Slaughter who lettered as an end for 5 years (1894, 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898). Slaughter was LSU's first five time football letterman. By 1895, LSU had its first win in Baton Rouge. In 1896 LSU hired Allen Jeardeau of Platteville, Wisconsin. LSU went undefeated, winning the school's first conference championship in the school's first year as a member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA), the first southern athletics. conference.[8] Tulane was forced to forfeit for its attempt to play Hall of Fame Penn back George H. Brooke.[9] This was the first team to be called the "Tigers." The mascot was reputed to be named after the “Fighting Tigers,” the name of the 9th Louisiana Infantry in the Civil War.[10] Coach Jeardeau returned for his second but final year at LSU in 1897 for two games in Baton Rouge. A yellow fever outbreak throughout the South caused the postponement of LSU's classes starting, and the football season being cut back to only two games.

 
Chavanne as LSU cadet

Another outbreak of yellow fever similar to the one in 1897 caused LSU to play only one game in 1898. By the time LSU was able to play its only game of the season, Allen Jeardeau had departed from the school as head football coach, and no provision had been made to replace him. The job of coach then fell to the team's captain, Edmond Chavanne, thus the first LSU alumnus to coach the team. New coach John P. Gregg led the Tigers to a 1–4 season in 1899, including a loss to the "iron men" of Sewanee. The only wins were in an exhibition game against a high school team (which LSU does not officially record as a win) and against rival, Tulane. It was the first year of play for LSU's second five-year letterman, John J. Coleman (1899, 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903).

 
Auburn vs. LSU on State Field, 1902

Chavanne was rehired in 1900, posting a 2–2 record. Chavanne was replaced by W. S. Borland as head coach in 1901, leading the team to a successful 5–1 season. After the Tulane game, a 22–0 loss, LSU protested to the SIAA, and alleged that Tulane had used a professional player during the game. Several months later, the SIAA ruled the game an 11–0 forfeit in favor of LSU.[11] The seven-game 1902 season was the longest yet for the Tigers and also featured the most games on the road. LSU upset Texas, avenged last season's loss to Auburn, and lost only to Vanderbilt, which claimed an SIAA title after the win. The 1903 season broke the previous season's record for most games played (seven) with nine games. Dan A. Killian coached the Tigers from 1904 to 1906. Back René A. Messa made some All-Southern teams in 1904. The 1905 team went 3–0.

 
1907 LSU Tigers Football Team in Havana, Cuba for the 1907 Bacardi Bowl

In 1907, LSU became the first American college football team to play on foreign soil in the Bacardi Bowl against the University of Havana on Christmas Day in Havana, Cuba. LSU won 56–0. John Seip ran back a 67-yard punt return.

 
Doc Fenton

The 1908 team posted an undefeated 10–0 record. Quarterback Doc Fenton led the nation in scoring with 132 points, posting then school records of 36 extra points and 6 field goals. Mike Lally was his running mate in the backfield. LSU beat Auburn 10–2, Seip going over for the first touchdown. Auburn's 2 was had by a safety, after T. C. Locke blocked Fenton's punt. Fenton could not recover the fumble because he was knocked unconscious by a spectator's cane.[12] The National Championship Foundation retroactively awarded 1908 LSU the national championship though it is not claimed by LSU. This season also led to an SIAA championship; but was clouded by accusations of professionalism from Grantland Rice and rival school Tulane.[13] Auburn and Vanderbilt were among those listed as alternative conference champions. Both Fenton and Seip were inaugural inductees into the LSU Athletic Hall of Fame. 1910 was a disastrous year for the Tigers. After a strong 1909 campaign under coaches Joe Pritchard and John W. Mayhew, which saw their only conference loss come to SIAA champion Sewanee, the team lost some star power; Stovall, Lally, and Seip had all graduated.[14]

 
1914 LSU-Tulane

Pat Dwyer, an assistant at Auburn in 1908, was hired in 1911. He once used guard Tom Dutton for a "kangaroo play" in which back Lawrence Dupont would crawl between Dutton's legs; supposedly very effective in short yardage situations.[15] The 1913 team lost only to SIAA champion Auburn by a touchdown. Fullback Alf Reid made All-Southern.[16] LSU's largest loss margin came on October 31, 1914 in a game against Texas A&M in Dallas, Texas. The final score was Texas A&M 63, LSU 9. In 1916, Walter Camp gave Phillip Cooper honorable mention on his All-America team. Irving Pray and Dana X. Bible also served as the Tigers coach in 1916 Washington's Wayne Sutton coached the 1917 team to a 3–5 record.

 
LSU–Tulane, 1922

Irving Pray coached full seasons in 1919 and 1922, the inaugural season of the Southern Conference (SoCon). Branch Bocock led the Tigers for the 1921 season, in which they were beaten only by Tulane.[17] Mike Donahue came from Auburn to be the seventeenth head football coach at LSU in 1923. The biggest win in Donahue's tenure was probably the 20–14 victory over Indiana in 1924.[18] The final game of the 1924 season saw the first game played at Tiger Stadium, with an original seating capacity of 12,000, on Thanksgiving Day against Tulane. 18,000 fans managed to fit into the stadium to watch the Green Wave defeat the Tigers 13–0.[19] In 1925, the team's first full season in Tiger Stadium began with shutout wins over Louisiana Normal and Southwestern Louisiana. The following week coach Wallace Wade's national champion Alabama blew-out LSU in Tiger Stadium, 42–0, which was at the time the worst home loss in school history.[19] The 1925 team also beat John Heisman's Rice team, but ended the season with a second straight shutout loss to Tulane. Donahue resigned after the 1927 season, less than two months after signing a six-year contract extension with the team.[20] LSU compiled a record of 23 wins, 19 losses, and three ties while with Donahue, which included a 5–14–2 record in SoCon games.[21]

 
Louisiana governor and U.S. senator Huey Long was instrumental in building the program.

Vanderbilt coach Dan McGugin recommended Russ Cohen for the LSU job.[22] Cohen's best year at LSU was his first, in 1928. Led by All-Southern captain Jess Tinsley, Tigers posted a 6–2–1 record, suffering losses to Arkansas and Wallace Wade's Alabama Crimson Tide. Star halfback Percy Brown broke his shoulder against Alabama.[23] The tie was to Bill Banker and rival Tulane, which was as good as its ever been from 1929 to 1931. In 1931 LSU played its first night game in Tiger Stadium, a 31–0 victory over Spring Hill. Under West Point's Biff Jones, the 1932 team tied for the Southern Conference championship in its last season as a member of the conference. The 1933 lost no games and was led by track and field athlete Jack Torrance. Jones resigned after the 1934 season after a heated exchange with noted LSU supporter, Louisiana senator Huey P. Long.[24] In the last game of the season, Long was displeased after the team had lost two straight games and were trailing at halftime to Oregon. Long decided to give a motivational speech to the team at halftime, but was turned away by Jones at the locker room door.[25] The ensuing argument ended with Jones declaring to resign, effective at the end of the game.[24] Gaynell Tinsley, the cousin of Jess, has a profile at the College Football Hall of Fame which describes him this way: "Tinsley was a magnificent athletic specimen, standing 6-0, and weighing 196-pounds, size he used equally well as a defensive stalwart who was a blocking master."[26] As a sophomore in 1934, Tinsley had a 65-yard pass reception, thrown by halfback Abe Mickal, against Southern Methodist University, which stood as a record for several years as "the longest pass in Southern football history."[26]

 
Gaynell Tinsley

Under head coach Bernie Moore, LSU won their first Southeastern Conference (SEC) Championship finishing with a 5–0 conference record and 9–2–0 overall in 1935. LSU played in their first Sugar Bowl game, falling to No. 4 TCU 3–2 at Tulane Stadium. The Tigers and Horned Frogs both took home the Williamson Poll national championship, which is not claimed by LSU. End Gaynell Tinsley was named a consensus All-American in 1935 and 1936, becoming the first All-America selection for LSU. Coach Moore once said, "Tinsley could have made All-American at any position. He was so tough, he made blockers quit. He's the greatest lineman I ever saw." Along with Tinsley in the line were Marvin Stewart, Justin Rukas, and Jeff Barrett. In the backfield were Mickal, Jesse Fatherree, and Pinky Rohm – all members of LSU's "Early Days" team of the century.[27] The team's quarterback was Bill May, awarded the Jacobs Blocking Trophy in 1936. The 1936 team won the school's second SEC Championship finishing with a 6–0 conference record and 9–1–1 overall. The Tigers finished runner-up to Minnesota in the AP Poll. LSU won the Williamson Poll and Sagarin Ratings national championships, which are not claimed by the school. LSU's largest margin of victory, and most points scored in a football game came on November 21, in a game at Tiger Stadium against USL (University of Southwestern Louisiana, now University of Louisiana Lafayette). The final score was LSU 93, USL 0. The 1937 team featured Ken Kavanaugh and was upset by Vanderbilt using a hidden ball trick, the school's first-ever victory over a ranked opponent.[28] This season also featured the first game in the Florida–LSU football rivalry, which was won 19–0 by LSU. In 1939, in a game against Holy Cross, Kavanaugh caught four touchdown passes in the 26–7 win. According to Kavanaugh and teammate Young Bussey, Kavanaugh found four rusty nails on the sideline during the game. The next week against Rice, he found another nail and scored another touchdown to give LSU a 7–0 win. The pattern continued against Loyola and Vanderbilt, as Kavanaugh found two nails before each game and in each scored two touchdowns. A sportswriter for the Baton Rouge Advocate claimed he saw coach Moore at a local store stocking up on nails before LSU's game against No. 1 Tennessee.[29] Kavanaugh failed to score in the game, however, and the Tigers lost 20–0.[30] The Nashville Banner named Kavanaugh co-MVP of the Southeastern Conference along with Bob Foxx of Tennessee.[31][32] Kavanaugh was a consensus All-America selection for the 1939 All-America Team. The 1943 team was led by Steve Van Buren, moved to running back because of a lack of players due to World War II conscription,[33] and won the Orange Bowl. Van Buren led the NCAA in scoring that season, with 98 points (110 including the bowl game). The 1946 team played in one of the most notable instances of the Cotton Bowl Classic – "Ice Bowl." LSU, led by head coach Moore and quarterback Y. A. Tittle, entered the game against Arkansas with a 9–1 record. Ice, sleet and snow pelted the stadium as LSU players filled oil drums with charcoal and started fires for makeshift heaters while fans built fires in the stands. LSU dominated the game with a 271–54 advantage in total yards and 15–1 advantage in first downs, but that did not equate to the numbers on the scoreboard; the game ended in a 0–0 tie and LSU finished the season 9–1–1.

In 1948, Moore retired, and Gaynell Tinsley, who had been working as an assistant, was promoted to replace his former mentor.[34] The 1949 team made it to the Sugar Bowl, where it was swamped by Oklahoma. Tinsley became the first person to participate in the Sugar Bowl as both a player and a head coach.[35] Tinsley's LSU teams never met with the same success they had achieved in 1949. In seven years as head coach at LSU, Tinsley's teams compiled a record of 35–34–6.[36]

Paul Dietzel (1955–1961) edit

 
Billy Cannon
 
Paul Dietzel

In 1955, Paul Dietzel became the head coach at LSU.[37] Jim Taylor was an All-American in 1957, and led the SEC in scoring in 1956 and 1957. During Dietzel's first three years, none of his teams had a winning season.

In 1958, however, Dietzel came up with a unique "three-platoon system." Instead of replacing individual players during the game, Dietzel would bring in an entirely new set of players between plays and series. The three teams were called the White Team (the first-string offense and defense), the Gold (Go) Team (the second-string offense), and the Chinese Bandits (the second-string defense). The system worked, as the 1958 team won the school's first claimed national championship, beating No. 12 Clemson 7–0 in the Sugar Bowl. The only score was a pass from Billy Cannon to sophomore Mickey Mangham, one of the smallest players on the team. Cannon won the Heisman Trophy in 1959. On Halloween, late in the game between No. 1 LSU and No. 3 Ole Miss, LSU was trailing 3–0. Cannon returned a punt 89 yards for a TD, breaking seven tackles. This has become known as Cannon's Halloween Run. The Rebels then drove down the field but were stopped on the LSU 1-yard line as the game ended resulting in a 7–3 victory for LSU in Tiger Stadium. In the Sugar Bowl, one of the most anticipated rematches in college football history took place. This game, however, would not be the classic that transpired only weeks before. Ole Miss dominated the game from start to finish and came away with a decisive 21–0 win over the Tigers. LSU finished the season having only given up 29 points.

Charles McClendon (1962–1979) edit

 
LSU vs. Tulane, 1973

Dietzel left for Army after the 1961 season, and Charles "Charlie" McClendon, an assistant since 1953, was named his successor. McClendon picked up where Dietzel left off, with three top ten finishes in his first four years. Doug Moreau broke Fenton's record of 6 field goals in 1965. In the 1966 Cotton Bowl, unranked LSU upset undefeated and No. 2 ranked Arkansas, winning the game 14–7 and snapping Arkansas' 22-game winning streak.[38]

In 1972, number 6 LSU survived an upset bid from unranked Ole Miss in Tiger Stadium by winning the game on a touchdown pass from quarterback Bert Jones to running back Brad Davis. Ole Miss fans say the 1972 contest featured a few seconds of free football. The Tigers trailed the Rebels 16–10 with four seconds to play. After a lengthy incompletion by Jones, the game clock still showed one second remaining. The Tigers used the precious second to win the game on the last play, 17–16. A song was written to commemorate the game, called One Second Blues, which is featured on the album "Hey Fightin' Tigers".[39] The alleged home-clock advantage inspired a sign at the Louisiana state line, leaving Mississippi, reading, "You are now entering Louisiana. Set your clocks back four seconds."[40][41] For that year, the Ole Miss yearbook reported the score for the game as "Ole Miss 16, LSU 10 + 7 ".

Bo Rein tragedy edit

After having just four coaches over 44 years from 1935 to 1979, the team went through eight coaches in a 20-year period from 1980 to 1999. This stretch began with the death of Bo Rein in a plane crash before coaching a single game for the Tigers.[42] Following the 1979 season, NC State head coach Bo Rein was hired to replace McClendon as LSU's head coach. In January 1980, Rein took a recruiting trip to Shreveport, Louisiana. On his January 10, 1980, return trip back to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, his private aircraft crashed, leaving no survivors.[43]

Rein and experienced pilot Louis Benscotter left Shreveport in a Cessna 441 aircraft. The flight was planned to be a 40-minute trip, but when Benscotter rerouted east to avoid a storm, air traffic control lost contact with him. The aircraft climbed to 40,000 feet and kept heading due east. After being tracked on radar, the aircraft was eventually intercepted by U.S. Air National Guard Convair F-106 Delta Dart fighter aircraft over North Carolina, a thousand miles off-course and at an altitude of 41,600 ft (12,700 m), 6,600 ft (2,000 m) feet higher than its maximum certified ceiling. The military pilots could not see anyone in the cockpit and the aircraft continued on over the Atlantic Ocean, where it crashed after running out of fuel. A US Coast Guard crew spotted some debris, but no wreckage was ever recovered. The bodies of Rein and Benscotter have never been found.[44]

The cause of the crash is undetermined but was most likely cabin depressurization causing hypoxia, a lack of oxygen,[45] resulting in the occupants losing consciousness as in the 1999 South Dakota Learjet crash.[46] Rein's two-month stint at LSU is the fourth shortest head coaching stint in FBS history, behind only George O'Leary's five-day tenure at Notre Dame in December 2001, Mike Haywood's sixteen-day stint at Pittsburgh in December 2010 and Manny Diaz's eighteen-day stint as Temple head coach in December 2018.[47]

Jerry Stovall (1980–1983) edit

Jerry Stovall was hired to replace Rein as head coach in 1980.[48] LSU defeated Alabama 20–10 in Birmingham, Alabama in Bear Bryant's last game coaching against LSU, in 1982. LSU's defense held Alabama to 119 yards of total offense,[49] as the Tigers defeated the Tide for the first time since 1970. "You don't understand how it feels to get hit in the mouth for 11 years," Stovall said in the locker room after the game. "This is going to feel pretty good when it soaks in."[50] 1983 was the first season calling LSU football for radio play-by-play man Jim Hawthorne, who served in this role until the 2016 season and became known as the "Voice of the Tigers".[51] LSU finished that season with a record of 4–7, and Stovall was dismissed as LSU's head coach.[52]

Bill Arnsparger (1984–1986) edit

Only two hours after the firing of Stovall, LSU hired Miami Dolphins defensive coordinator Bill Arnsparger as head coach.[53] As the LSU head coach, Arnsparger led the Tigers to two Sugar Bowl berths in three seasons, in 1984 and 1986, both times against Nebraska. In 1984, LSU finished in a tie for second behind Florida, but the Southeastern Conference (SEC) presidents voted to strip Florida of the conference championship due to NCAA rules violations and LSU participated in the Sugar Bowl instead. His 1986 LSU squad won the school's first outright SEC title since 1970 and the Tigers' last in the pre-championship game era, though the season was marred somewhat by an upset home loss to Miami University, his alma mater. By 1985, Arnsparger was growing frustrated with various scandals in the LSU athletic department, particularly involving basketball coach Dale Brown. After Sports Illustrated ran a cover story about the university's issues, Arnsparger met privately with athletic director Bob Brodhead to complain that the negative coverage was harming football recruiting and to threaten to leave the school if something wasn't done. Shortly after the final regular season game in 1986, Arnsparger announced he was resigning to become the athletic director at Florida.[54]

Mike Archer (1987–1990) edit

Mike Archer came to LSU as an assistant coach in 1984 after being both a player and an assistant coach at Miami. He replaced Bill Arnsparger as the LSU Tigers football head coach in 1987 when Arnsparger left to become the athletic director at the University of Florida.[55] Archer was Arnsparger's defensive coordinator in 1985 and 1986, and was Arnsparger's hand-picked successor. When Archer took the LSU head coaching job, he was 34 years old, the youngest head coach in Division I-A football. Archer was chosen over a number of interviewed candidates, which reportedly included Steve Spurrier, Mike Shanahan, and Mack Brown.

In 1987, LSU finished the season ranked #5 in both major polls with a 10–1–1 record, blemished only by a tie against Ohio State and a loss to Alabama. The latter was all that kept the Tigers out of the 1988 Sugar Bowl; Auburn went instead. It was LSU's first 10-win season in more than 25 years. In 1988, unranked LSU staged a near-literal, earth-shattering upset victory over No. 4 Auburn in Tiger Stadium, winning the game 7–6 with 1:41 remaining on a touchdown pass from quarterback Tommy Hodson to tailback Eddie Fuller. The reaction of the crowd was so immense that it registered as an earthquake on a seismograph in LSU's Howe-Russell Geoscience Complex.[56] It was later dubbed "The Earthquake Game" by ESPN.[57] After back-to-back losing seasons in 1989 and 1990, Archer was forced to resign.[58] He lost four of his last five games in 1990, the lone win coming in the season finale against Tulane.

Curley Hallman (1991–1994) edit

Archer was replaced by Southern Miss head coach Curley Hallman.[59] During Hallman's first season in 1991, several of Hallman's football players were accused of instigating a fight with LSU men's basketball players, including All-American Shaquille O'Neal, in Broussard Hall, LSU's athletic dormitory, two days prior to the Tigers' contest with Mississippi State.[60][61] LSU started the 1991 season with one-sided losses to Georgia (31–10) and Hallman's alma mater, Texas A&M (45–7), and finished 5–6. The season marked the second time LSU suffered three consecutive losing seasons, and the first time since 1954 to 1956.

The 1992 season included being shut out 32–0 by Ole Miss on Halloween, and beaten 30–6 at Arkansas in the season finale, which was the first meeting between the Tigers and the Razorbacks upon Arkansas joining the SEC. The Tigers finished 2–9, still the worst in school history. In 1993, LSU's centennial football season, the Tigers lost 58–3 to the Florida Gators in Tiger Stadium, the worst loss in school history. Amazingly, just four weeks after that, the Tigers stunned the Alabama Crimson Tide, 17–13, at Bryant–Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, ending the Tide's 31-game unbeaten streak. LSU entered the season finale at 5–5, with a chance at its first bowl bid since the end of the 1988 season. However, the Tigers gave up 412 yards rushing in a 42–24 loss to Arkansas at home. The beginning of the end for Hallman came on September 17, 1994, at Jordan–Hare Stadium against Auburn. LSU led 23–9 early in the fourth quarter, and the Bayou Bengals were in good position to end Auburn's 13-game winning streak. But LSU quarterback Jamie Howard threw two interceptions that were returned for Auburn touchdowns, tying the game. LSU regained the lead with a field goal, but when the Bayou Bengals were trying to run out the clock, Howard threw his fourth interception of the game, and incredibly, Auburn returned the pick for another touchdown, giving the home team a 30–26 lead. LSU drove into Auburn territory in the game's final minute, but Howard threw his fifth and sixth interceptions on consecutive drives, sealing the win for Auburn. LSU never recovered, and ultimately finished 4–7. On November 12, LSU lost to Southern Miss, Hallman's former team, 20–18 in front of the smallest Death Valley crowd since 1974 (announced attendance was 51,718, but LSU officials estimated the actual crowd was closer to 40,000). Two days later, LSU athletic director Joe Dean gave Hallman an ultimatum–resign or be fired. When Hallman refused to resign, Dean fired him, though he was allowed to finish out the season.[62] He closed out his career at LSU with a 30–12 win over Arkansas—the Tigers' first regular-season win in the series since 1956. His overall record was 16–28; his winning percentage of .364 is the worst for a non-interim coach in school history.

Gerry DiNardo (1995–1999) edit

On December 13, 1994, LSU hired Vanderbilt head coach Gerry DiNardo as Hallman's replacement.[63] Prior to the 1995 season, DiNardo petitioned the NCAA to reverse a rule which had been in place since 1983 that prohibited teams from wearing white jerseys at home. After the ruling, LSU was able to wear its white jerseys at home in Tiger Stadium for the first time since 1982.[64] For its first home game of the 1995 season in what was dubbed the “Bring Back the Magic" Game, LSU in white jerseys upset No. 5 Auburn, winning 12–6.[65] With no time remaining in the game, LSU defensive back Troy Twillie intercepted Auburn quarterback Patrick Nix's 11-yard pass into the end zone to secure the victory.[65] The Tigers achieved their first winning season in six seasons and finished with a 7–4–1 record defeating a Nick Saban led Michigan State team in the 1995 Independence Bowl.[66]

After nine straight losses to Steve Spurrier-led Florida, the No. 14 Tigers defeated the No. 1 ranked defending national champion Gators 28–21 in Tiger Stadium in 1997. LSU running back Kevin Faulk was featured on the following week's cover of Sports Illustrated with the title "See you later, Gators."[67] In a game referred to as, "No. 1 Falls," it was the first time LSU defeated a No. 1 ranked team and the first time the goalposts were ever torn down in Tiger Stadium.[68] In 1998, LSU started the season with a preseason ranking of No. 9. They climbed to No. 6 before losing to No. 12 Georgia on October 3. The next week the No. 11-ranked Tigers lost to the No. 6 Florida. After the loss to the Gators, LSU dropped 13 of the next 17 games, including losses to a No. 10 Notre Dame and No. 13 Arkansas later in the 1998 season. In 1999 LSU lost to No. 10 Georgia, No. 8 Florida, No. 12 Mississippi State, No. 25 Ole Miss, and No. 12 Alabama.[69] On November 15, 1999, two days after the Tigers lost to unranked Houston at home, LSU chancellor Mark Emmert fired DiNardo with one game remaining in the season. DiNardo was given the option to coach the final game of the season against Arkansas, but DiNardo declined.[70] Instead, offensive line coach Hal Hunter was named interim coach, leading LSU to a 35–10 victory over the Razorbacks.

Nick Saban (2000–2004) edit

 
Arkansas vs. LSU, 2004
 
2004 Sugar Bowl (BCS National Championship Game), LSU 21 – Oklahoma 14

On December 1, 1999, LSU hired Michigan State head coach Nick Saban as DiNardo's replacement.[71] In Saban's first season of 2000, LSU returned to national prominence by beating No. 11 Tennessee in overtime 38–31 on ESPN, after which the goal posts were torn down for only the 2nd time in the history of Tiger Stadium. The victory over Tennessee also marked the first time that LSU played in an overtime game at home. Just a few weeks later, the goal posts were again ripped down as LSU beat Alabama 30–28 on CBS in Baton Rouge for the first time in 31 years. This was the 3rd and final time that the goal posts came down in Death Valley.

In 2001, No. 21 LSU staged an upset victory over No. 2 Tennessee in the SEC Championship, winning 31–20. The victory earned LSU a spot in its first Sugar Bowl since 1986, and knocked the Volunteers out of national title contention. No. 16 LSU survived an upset bid from unranked Kentucky in 2002 by winning the game 33–30 on a miraculous 75-yard Hail Mary pass as time expired known as the "Bluegrass Miracle". Kentucky coach Guy Morriss had received the traditional Gatorade bath right before the Hail Mary. Kentucky fans, believing they had won, had already rushed the field and torn down one goal post.

In 2003, No. 11 LSU outlasted No. 7 Georgia, 17–10. With ESPN College Gameday on hand for the first time since 1997, Quarterback Matt Mauck found wide receiver Skyler Green for a 34-yard touchdown with 3:03 remaining in the game. All-American cornerback Corey Webster sealed the victory with an interception in the final minute. The contest dubbed the "Let the Valley Shake" Game is notable for LSU fans chanting LSU-LSU after a Georgia touchdown.[72] Georgia head coach Mark Richt was quoted as saying, "Usually when the opposing team does well, the crowd quiets down.[72] All I began to hear was a chant, 'L-S-U, L-S-U.'[72] It got louder and louder and louder. It was the loudest I've ever heard a stadium."[72] The win catapulted LSU onto the national scene. LSU won its second title and became the BCS national champion by defeating Oklahoma 21–14 in the 2004 Sugar Bowl (BCS National Championship Game).

The following season saw the Tigers post a 9–3 record, ending the year with a No. 16 ranking after a loss in the 2005 Capital One Bowl on a final play touchdown pass. Prior to the game, Saban announced that he would be leaving LSU to become the head coach for the Miami Dolphins.[73]

Les Miles (2005–2016) edit

On January 4, 2005, Oklahoma State head coach Les Miles was named the new LSU head coach.[74] In Miles's first season in 2005 at LSU was moved to Arizona State's Sun Devil Stadium due to the effects of Hurricane Katrina. With one endzone painted with "www.KatrinaSRF.com" and the other with "Together We Stand" along with logos of the states of Louisiana and Arizona, LSU rallied in the fourth quarter for a 35–31 comeback victory. Trailing 17–7 in the fourth quarter, LSU returned a blocked field goal and punt for touchdowns to ignite the comeback. The lead went back-and-forth with Arizona State taking a 31–28 lead with 4:07 to play. Quarterback JaMarcus Russell then lead the Tigers on a 10-play, 91-yard drive capped with a 39-yard touchdown pass to Early Doucet on fourth-and-10 to give LSU a 35–31 lead. LSU's defense then stopped Arizona State on downs at the LSU 30-yard line to secure the victory. In 2006, Russell completed a touchdown pass to WR Early Doucet with 9 seconds to go to beat Tennessee in Neyland Stadium after a breakout performance by Tennessee backup QB Jonathan Crompton.

 
2008 BCS National Championship Game, LSU 38 – Ohio State 24

No. 2 LSU played what was hyped as one of the most exciting games ever played in Tiger Stadium against No. 9 Florida in 2007. The game is also known for the LSU students leaving thousands of messages on the phone of Florida quarterback, Tim Tebow, prompting him to give a "telephone" hand gesture to the LSU student section following an early touchdown. Florida began the fourth quarter with a 24–14 lead, but behind solid defense and being a perfect 5 for 5 on fourth down conversions, the Tigers were able to take the lead 28–24 with 1:06 left in the game after a Jacob Hester touchdown to defeat the Gators. It was LSU's first national primetime game on CBS since 1981 and the game has been dubbed, "Primetime Drama." LSU went on to defeat No. 1 Ohio State in the BCS national championship 38–24, becoming the first school to win two BCS national championship titles and improving their BCS record to 4–0, the best of any team. They also became the first two loss team to ever play in the BCS national championship.

 
LSU vs. Alabama, 2011 "Game of the Century"

In the 5th game of the 2010 season, undefeated No. 12 LSU trailed the Volunteers 14–10 with 0:04 left on the clock and the ball spotted on Tennessee's 2-yard line. On 3rd and goal, after a failed quarterback sneak attempt and with time disappearing off the clock, LSU attempted to send in several players for a substitution package. Seeing that the time was about to expire, center T-Bob Hebert snapped the ball before quarterback Jordan Jefferson was ready, the ball was fumbled, Jefferson was tackled, and the clock expired. On further review, Tennessee was penalized half the distance to the goalline for illegal participation. Amid the confusion in the waning seconds, Tennessee coaches sent 4 players onto the field when they saw LSU make a substitution. Only two players then left the field, leaving the Volunteers with 13 players lined up on defense. Due to the penalty, LSU got the ball back for a single untimed play on the 1-yard line. With the last play, running back Stevan Ridley received the toss sweep, charging forward, only to be hit near the line of scrimmage, but continued to drive forward through two Tennessee defenders and into the endzone for the game-winning score.

The ninth regulation game of the 2011 season for LSU found the No. 1 nationally ranked Tigers against the No. 2 Alabama Crimson Tide in a match called the "Game of the Century"[75] or the "Matchup of the Year".[76] Both teams were undefeated and both were also coming off a bye week; viewed as important to the BCS Championship game as the "inside track" by many of the sportswriters, the press built up the game in a Super Bowl-style atmosphere. Ultimately, the game came down to field position and a series of field goals as the top-ranked defense of both teams prevented any touchdowns. Alabama missed three field goals and a fourth was blocked during regulation, leading to a 6–6 tie heading into overtime. On the first possession of overtime, Alabama again missed a field goal from 52 yards out, only to watch LSU earn the win on the next possession with a chip-shot field goal. As a result, it was the second-lowest scoring matchup between No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the history of the NCAA, with a 9–6 decision.[77] For the first time in BCS National Championship history, two SEC teams, the No. 1 LSU Tigers and the No. 2 Alabama Crimson Tide, again faced each other in the National Championship Game. Alabama won the game, 21–0. The SEC-only title game added impetus to the push for a national playoff system and hastened the death of the BCS system as implemented up to that time.[78] Having lost three straight games after a 7–0 start into the season, rumors were floating that LSU would buy-out Miles' contract after the 2015 season.[79] However, Miles was retained for the 2016 season.[80] On September 25, 2016, LSU fired Miles and offensive coordinator Cam Cameron after an 18–13 loss to Auburn the previous day and a 2–2 start to begin the season.[81]

Ed Orgeron (2016–2021) edit

 
Ed Orgeron

After the firing of Les Miles, defensive line coach Ed Orgeron became LSU's interim head coach.[82] Orgeron stated that he was going to "flip the script". He promoted tight ends coach Steve Ensminger to offensive coordinator and brought back Pete Jenkins to take over as defensive line coach. Orgeron also decided to shorten practices and spend more time in the film room in order to keep players fresh. In addition, he brought the "theme of daily practices" he modeled from coach Pete Carroll during Orgeron's first stint as an assistant at USC. These practice days have descriptive nicknames like Tell the Truth Monday, Competition Tuesday, Turnover Wednesday, No Repeat Thursday, and Focus Friday. Under Orgeron's watch, LSU finished out the season with a 6–2 record. Later in 2016, he was hired as the full-time head coach.[83]

The beginning of the 2017 season saw Orgeron hire Matt Canada to be the offensive coordinator. Canada was known for an offensive playbook that was heavily based on setting skilled positions in motion prior to the snap, thus using jet sweeps often. The season began with LSU ranked in the top 15, but early losses to Mississippi State and Troy quickly found LSU unranked. However, the team went 7–2 in their remaining games, finishing the year with a 9–4 record.

 
LSU vs. Texas, 2019 "3rd and 17"

The 2018 season began with a season opening upset of 8th-ranked Miami, followed by another upset of 7th-ranked Auburn. These victories helped LSU rise to 5th in the CFP rankings, but a loss to 25th-ranked Florida sent LSU tumbling back to 13th. In response, the Tigers pulled off a shocking upset of No. 2 Georgia.[84] The Tigers then avenged the previous year's loss to Mississippi State. The victories over Georgia and Mississippi State propelled LSU to being ranked No. 3 by the CFP going into a game against top-ranked Alabama. The LSU offense that had seemed to turn around after Steve Ensminger took over the duties of offensive coordinator was unable to score against Alabama's defense. After the loss to Alabama, LSU was able to defeat Arkansas and Rice before falling to Texas A&M in a 7-overtime game. With a 9–3 record, LSU was invited to the Fiesta Bowl to play the University of Central Florida, who had not lost a game in the previous two seasons. On New Years Day 2019, LSU gave UCF their first loss since 2016. LSU finished the 2018 season with a record of 10–3 and were ranked sixth in the nation by the AP poll and seventh by the Coaches poll. LSU was not predicted to have a good season in 2018, and some, including SEC commentator Paul Finebaum, believed it would be Orgeron's last until he had a turnaround season.

 
2020 College Football Playoff National Championship Game, post-game press conference, LSU 42 - Clemson 25

After opening the season with a home win versus Georgia Southern, Orgeron's 2019 team recorded a statement road win over Texas in week two. The key play of the game was a third down pass needing seventeen yards for a first down late in the fourth quarter.[85][86] The Joe Burrow to Justin Jefferson pass resulted in a 61-yard touchdown sealing the victory.[87] That play led to the game being labeled the "3rd-and-17" Game.[85][88] This game propelled the team to an undefeated regular season, including a 46–41 victory over Alabama in the 2019 version of the "Game of the Century" at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa. A win over Arkansas in the penultimate game of the regular season clinched the SEC West division title and secured a berth in the 2019 SEC Championship Game against Georgia. This was their first appearance in the SEC Championship Game since 2011. The traditionally defensive-minded Tigers averaged over 48 points per game, led by quarterback Joe Burrow, Baton Rouge-native running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire, and star receivers Ja'Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson. Burrow set new LSU and SEC single-season records for passing yards with 4,366; his 44 touchdown passes set a new LSU record and tied the SEC mark. Orgeron's Tigers defeated the Georgia Bulldogs in the SEC Championship Game to win their first SEC title since 2011. On Sunday, December 8, 2019, they were named the No. 1 seed in the College Football Playoff. They met the Big 12 Conference champion Oklahoma Sooners in the semifinals in the Peach Bowl, defeating them by a score of 63–28. Following the regular season, Orgeron was named the winner of the 2019 AP College Football Coach of the Year Award and Home Depot Coach of the Year Award. Joe Burrow won the 2019 Heisman Trophy.[89] On January 13, 2020, Orgeron won his first national championship as a head coach with a win over the unbeaten defending national champion Clemson Tigers, 42–25, finishing the season 15–0.[90] Orgeron and the LSU Tigers won the national title in their home state at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans.

LSU's 2020 season was shortened in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. They played a ten-game, all-SEC schedule. LSU started the season ranked No. 6 in the AP Poll, but dropped out of the rankings after three games and finished the season with a record of 5–5. The Tigers had three different starting quarterbacks throughout the course of the season. Myles Brennan started the first three games, but was injured during the game against Missouri on October 10 and was lost for the season. T. J. Finley started the next five games. Max Johnson started the final two games of the season. He led the Tigers to an upset win over the No. 6 Florida Gators in Gainesville and a shootout win over Ole Miss in the season finale. In March 2021, a woman testifying in front of Louisiana state legislators claimed that she had reported an instance of sexual harassment by LSU running back Derrius Guice to Orgeron, but that the coach had taken no action against him, and in fact called the woman and asked her to forgive Guice. Despite high expectations and a favorable schedule, LSU stumbled to a 3–3 start in 2021, losing several games in which they were favored. Following the tumultuous start, Orgeron's Tigers were able to upend the No. 20-ranked Florida Gators in a thrilling rivalry game matchup. Despite the victory, LSU administrators announced the following day, on October 17, 2021, that they had reached a mutual agreement for Orgeron to leave the program at the end of the 2021 season.[91][92] Orgeron's last game was a last-second victory against Texas A&M at home, which allowed the Tigers to finish the season at 6–6 and become bowl eligible. Despite this, Orgeron announced shortly after the game that he would not coach in the bowl game, and that offensive line coach Brad Davis would be named interim head coach.

Brian Kelly (2022–present) edit

On November 30, 2021, Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly was named the 34th head coach at LSU, replacing Ed Orgeron.[93] Kelly cited "wanting to be with the best" and "the commitment to excellence, rich traditions, and unrivaled pride and passion of LSU Football" for the move.[94] His signed contract also more than triples his previous salary, from his 2021 salary of $2.67 million to $9 million in 2022 with the total deal being worth $95 million over ten years excluding incentives. His season started with a 24–23 loss to Florida State in the Allstate Louisiana Kickoff at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans. Florida State had a 24–10 lead, but LSU slowly chipped away at the Seminoles' lead and scored a last-second touchdown to make the game 24–23. The Tigers opted to kick the extra point to force overtime, but Florida State was able to successfully block the kick, and thus sealed the victory.[95] Moving forward, the Tigers would win 4 straight against Southern, Mississippi State, New Mexico, and Auburn before eventually losing to Tennessee by a score of 13–40. The Tigers would then go on to beat Florida, upset #7 ranked Ole Miss, upset #6 ranked Alabama 32–31, beat unranked Arkansas 13–10, clinching the SEC West and earning a spot in the 2022 SEC Championship against #1 ranked Georgia. They would go on to win against UAB 41-10 but lose to Texas A&M 23–38.

Conference affiliations edit

LSU has been independent and affiliated with three conferences.[96]: 181–196 [inconsistent]

Championships edit

Claimed National championships edit

LSU claims four national championships (1958, 2003, 2007, and 2019)[97] and have been selected national champions in four additional seasons (1908, 1936, 1962, 2011) by NCAA-designated major selectors.[98] They are additionally recorded as being the Williamson System co-champions for 1935, an apparent error in the NCAA records book.[98][99] In 1958 they finished as the only undefeated team with a victory over Clemson in the Sugar Bowl, and were named the national champions by both major polls (AP and Coaches). In 2003, 2007, and 2019 LSU claimed the national championship after winning a postseason bowl national championship game.

Year Coach Selector Record Bowl Final AP Final Coaches
1958 Paul Dietzel AP and Coaches [n 2] 11–0 Won Sugar Bowl No. 1 No. 1
2003 Nick Saban Bowl Championship Series [n 3] 13–1 Won Sugar Bowl (BCS National Championship Game) No. 2 No. 1
2007 Les Miles Bowl Championship Series [n 4] 12–2 Won BCS National Championship Game No. 1 No. 1
2019 Ed Orgeron College Football Playoff [n 5] 15–0 Won Peach Bowl (College Football Playoff Semifinal)
Won College Football Playoff National Championship Game
No. 1 No. 1

Claimed national championships:

1958 national championship
The 1958 LSU Tigers football team under head coach Paul Dietzel, cruised to an undefeated season capped by a win over Clemson in the 1959 Sugar Bowl. LSU was named the national champion in both the AP Poll and the Coaches' Poll prior to their 7-0 Sugar Bowl victory over Clemson. LSU's shutout victory over #12 Clemson was convincing and highlighted LSU as the only team in the country to go undefeated. Army, Auburn, and Air Force did not lose all season but they each had one game that ended in a tie. It was the first recognized national championship for LSU in the poll era. With a 10–0 regular season record, LSU was crowned national champion by the Associated Press and the Coaches' Poll (UPI), as well as by 37 other selectors. LSU's total first place votes was 130 to win the 1958 National Championship in the AP poll. LSU received 29 of the 35 first-place votes to win the #1 ranking in the Coaches poll. LSU earned the #1 rankings in the AP and Coaches poll during week 6 and held on to the #1 rankings for the rest of the year to win the 1958 National Championship in both major polls. [100]

2003 national championship
The 2003 LSU Tigers football team was coached by Nick Saban. LSU won the BCS National Championship, the first national championship for LSU since 1958. The Tigers battled for an 11–1 regular season record and then defeated Georgia in the SEC Championship Game. The LSU Tigers faced off against Oklahoma for the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) national title. LSU beat Oklahoma 21–14 in the 2004 Sugar Bowl designated as the BCS National Championship Game.

2007 national championship
The 2007 LSU Tigers football team, coached by Les Miles, won the Southeastern Conference championship and the national championship with a 12–2 record. The LSU Tigers took on the top ranked Ohio State Buckeyes in the 2008 BCS National Championship Game defeating them 38–24. This win made the LSU Tigers the first team to win two BCS National Championships in its history. On their way to the BCS championship, the Tigers won their tenth Southeastern Conference championship by defeating Tennessee in the 2007 SEC Championship Game. LSU became the first program to win multiple BCS National Championship Games and the second program to win a national championship with multiple losses.

2019 national championship
The 2019 LSU Tigers football team, coached by Ed Orgeron, won the Southeastern Conference championship and the national championship with a 15–0 record. The LSU Tigers defeated the Clemson Tigers in the 2020 College Football Playoff National Championship defeating them 42–25. On their way to the College Football Playoff National Championship, the Tigers won their twelfth Southeastern Conference championship by defeating Georgia in the 2019 SEC Championship Game.

Conference championships edit

LSU has won a total of 16 conference championships in three different conferences.[101]: 107  Since becoming a founding member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) in 1933, LSU has won 12 SEC championships.

Year Conference Coach Overall record Conference record
1896 SIAA Allen Jeardeau 6–0 4–0
1902 W. S. Borland 6–1 5–1
1908 Edgar R. Wingard 10–0 3–0
1932 SoCon Biff Jones 6–3–1 4–0
1935 SEC Bernie Moore 9–2–0 5–0
1936 9–1–1 6–0
1958 Paul Dietzel 11–0 6–0
1961 10–1 6–0
1970 Charles McClendon 9–3 5–0
1986 Bill Arnsparger 9–3 5–1
1988 Mike Archer 8–4 6–1
2001 Nick Saban 10–3 5–3
2003 13–1 7–1
2007 Les Miles 12–2 6–2
2011 13–1 8–0
2019 Ed Orgeron 15–0 8–0

‡ LSU claims a co-championship,[101]: 107  while Clemson claims a sole championship.[102]

Division championships edit

Since the SEC began divisional play in 1992, LSU has won or shared the SEC West title 10 times, and is 5–2 in the SEC Championship game.[101]: 119–121 

Year Division Opponent SEC CG Result
1996 SEC West N/A (lost tiebreaker to Alabama)
1997 N/A (lost tiebreaker to Auburn)
2001 Tennessee W 31–20
2002 N/A (lost tiebreaker to Arkansas)
2003 Georgia W 34–13
2005 Georgia L 14–34
2007 Tennessee W 21–14
2011 Georgia W 42–10
2019 Georgia W 37–10
2022 Georgia L 30–50

Logos and uniforms edit

Helmets
Pre-1946, LSU wore leather helmets. From 1947 through 1955, LSU wore an old gold helmet. In 1956, head coach Paul Dietzel changed the color of the helmet to a yellow-gold similar to that of the Green Bay Packers. It featured a white one-inch center stripe with purple three-quarter inch flanking stripes. From 1957 through 1971, LSU added jersey numbers to the sides of the helmet. In 1972, the first logo was introduced, a tiger head inside a purple circle with LSU written underneath the tiger head. In 1977, LSU introduced its current helmet. The logo features curved LSU lettering written above the Tiger head logo. Purple face masks were introduced in 1980. In 2014, LSU introduced a new Tiger head logo.

Special helmets

  • In 1997, LSU wore white helmets in the Independence Bowl vs Notre Dame.
  • In 2007, LSU wore white helmets in a game against Tulane to promote relief for Hurricane Katrina.
  • In 2009, LSU wore "old" gold styled helmets in a game against Arkansas as part of a Nike Pro Combat promotion. The uniforms were donned "Couchon De Lait" which is cajun for pig roast. The name stemmed from LSU's proximity to the cajun culture of the nearby Acadiana area and the mascot of Arkansas being the razorbacks, a type of wild boar or pig.[103]
  • In 2011 for a Nike Pro Combat promotion, the Tigers wore a white helmet with old gold and purple stripes to accompany a white uniform.[104]
  • In 2015, LSU wore their white helmets in a game against South Carolina that was moved from Williams-Brice Stadium to Tiger Stadium due to the flooding disaster in South Carolina and again at Ole Miss where LSU wore all-white uniforms. The Tigers wore those helmets again for 2019 games vs. Northwestern State and Vanderbilt.
  • A special throwback helmet with LSU's original "L" that is still used by their L Club and the jersey number of each player was used in a home game against Mississippi State in 2016 along with a special gold throwback jersey with a custom number font replicating jerseys from the Y. A. Tittle era at LSU.
  • The Tigers wore purple helmets for their 2018 home game vs. Mississippi State.
  • In 2021, the Tigers wore white helmets along with their all-white uniform for their home game vs. Texas A&M, and repeated this for their 2022 game vs. Tennessee.

Jerseys

 
The Tigers coming out of the tunnel

The current style of jerseys were introduced by coach Paul Dietzel in 1957 with "TV" numerals on the shoulders. Those numbers were moved to the sleeves in 1959. LSU's white jerseys have purple numbers on the front, back and sleeves with a gold center stripe flanked by two purple stripes encircling the shoulders. LSU's purple jerseys have white numbers on the front, back and sleeves with a white center stripe flanked by two yellow stripes encircling the shoulders.

Names were added to the backs of jerseys in 1972.

LSU has worn gold jerseys four times recently: vs. Vanderbilt in 1996, vs. Notre Dame in the 1997 Independence Bowl, at Florida in 1998 and throwbacks vs. Mississippi State in 2016. LSU also wore gold jerseys as their primary jerseys during the 1940s. Save for the throwback jerseys, LSU wore gold due to the intense dislike of purple exhibited by then-LSU coach Gerry DiNardo. DiNardo's successor, Nick Saban, resurrected purple jerseys for the second game of the 2000 season vs. Houston.

Since the wearing of white jerseys has become a tradition for LSU football, the white jerseys are typically worn for both home and away games.[105] The exception is for non-SEC home games, other than the home opener, where LSU wears purple jerseys. Also, though rare, in the case of away games the home teams may choose to wear white, and if so, purple is the default for LSU; this occurred in the 2004 season opener vs. Oregon State, which did not want to wear its black jerseys in the intense Louisiana heat.

In 2015, South Carolina was forced to move its scheduled home game vs. LSU to Baton Rouge due to severe flooding in Columbia, South Carolina. Prior to the site change, the Gamecocks declared they would wear white jerseys at Williams-Brice Stadium, so the Tigers wore purple jerseys for the first time for an SEC game in Tiger Stadium (South Carolina was the designated home team) since 1994 vs. Alabama.

In 2019, LSU was asked by the Southeastern Conference to wear purple jerseys for its away game vs. Vanderbilt to provide sufficient contrast to the Commodores' gray jerseys.

From 1983 through 1994, LSU was mandated to wear purple jerseys at home, due to an NCAA rule which required the visiting team to wear white jerseys (LSU wore white jerseys as the designated home team for the 1987 Sugar Bowl vs. Nebraska and 1987 Gator Bowl vs. South Carolina). In 1995, the NCAA changed the rule to allow the home team to wear white if it obtained prior approval of the visiting team. In 1997, the Southeastern Conference ruled the home team would have choice of jersey color without consent of the visitors for conference games.

Pants

 
LSU on defense

The team traditionally wears one style of pants, which are gold with white and purple trim. For a 1995 game at Kentucky, the Tigers wore purple pants, which had no stripes and a tiger head logo on the left thigh. LSU lost to the Wildcats 24–16 and the pants were never worn again.[106]

LSU has worn white pants on 16 occasions since 1996:

  • Three times with gold jerseys vs. Vanderbilt in 1996, vs. Notre Dame in the 1997 Independence Bowl, and at Florida in 1998.
  • In 2016, LSU wore gold throwback jerseys with white pants vs. Mississippi State.
  • Six times with purple jerseys, in a 2007 game at Tulane to promote relief for Hurricane Katrina, A 2015 game against South Carolina that was moved from Williams-Brice Stadium to Tiger Stadium due to the flood disaster in that state, a 2016 home game against Southern Miss, 2019 games vs. Northwestern State (home) and Vanderbilt (away), and 2022 vs. New Mexico (home).
  • Seven times with white jerseys, in a 2009 game against Arkansas, a 2011 game against Auburn for a Nike Pro Combat promotion, a 2015 game at Ole Miss, a 2018 home game vs. Mississippi State when LSU wore special white jerseys to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I. These uniforms were made to look like white tigers,[104] 2021 vs. Texas A&M and 2022 vs. Tennessee.

Traditions edit

Tiger Stadium edit

5-yard linesTiger Stadium is notable for putting all 5-yard line numbers on the field, not just those that are multiples of 10. However, the 10-yard line numbers are the only numbers that get directional arrows, as the rules make no provision for 5-yard line numbers.[107]

H-style goal posts – LSU's Tiger Stadium sports "H" style goal posts, as opposed to the more modern "Y" style used by most other schools today. This "H" style allows the team to run through the goal post in the north end zone when entering the field.[107]

The crossbar from the goalposts which stood in the north end zone of Tiger Stadium from 1955 through 1984 is now mounted above the door which leads from LSU's locker room onto the playing field. The crossbar is painted with the word "WIN!", and superstition dictates every player entering the field touch the bar on his way out the door.

Night games in Tiger Stadium – The tradition of playing night games in Tiger Stadium began on October 3, 1931, when LSU defeated Spring Hill 35–0. Several reasons were cited for playing at night such as avoiding the heat and humidity of afternoon games, avoiding scheduling conflicts with Tulane and Loyola football and giving more fans the opportunity to see the Tigers play. Attendance increased and night football became an LSU tradition. LSU has also traditionally played better during night games based on winning percentage.[108]

 
LSU Golden Girls

Pregame showLouisiana State University Tiger Marching Band "pregame show" was created in 1964, and revised over the next nine years into its current format. The marching band lines up along the end zone shortly before kick off. Then the band strikes up a drum cadence and begins to spread out evenly across the field. When the front of the band reaches the center of the field, the band stops and begins to play an arrangement of "Pregame" (Hold That Tiger). While it does this, the band turns to salute the fans in all four corners of the stadium. Then the band, resuming its march across the field, begins playing "Touchdown for LSU".

Tailgating – For home football games, thousands of LSU fans gather on the Baton Rouge campus. They set up motor homes and tents as early as Thursday before Saturday football games.[109] Tailgating is found across the entire campus with many fans tailgating in the same spot year after year.

LSU has been consistently ranked as the top tailgating location in the country. ESPN.com ranked LSU as the top tailgating destination in America.[citation needed] The Sporting News proclaimed "Saturday Night in Death Valley" and Tiger tailgating as the top tradition in college football.[110] Sports Illustrated said, "When It Comes To Great Tailgating, Nothing Compares To LSU."[111] LSU's tailgating was named No. 1 in an Associated Press poll on top tailgating spots and by a CNN network survey on top tailgating locations.[112]

Victory Gold – In 2012, a new tradition was established at Tiger Stadium. Following an LSU football victory, the lights that illuminate the upper arches on the north end of the stadium light up in LSU "Victory Gold".[113]

Victory Hill – The LSU football players, coaches, cheerleaders and Mike the Tiger in his cage, "Walk Down Victory Hill" on North Stadium Drive prior to each home game on their way to Tiger Stadium.[107] Thousands of fans line both sides of the road to watch and cheer for the Tigers football team. The practice was started under head coach Gerry Dinardo and it endures today.

The LSU Tiger Marching Band or The Golden Band from Tigerland, Golden Girls and Colorguard, "March Down Victory Hill" about an hour prior to each home game. Fans line both sides of the road and listen for the cadence of drums announcing the band's departure from the Greek Theatre and await the arrival of the band.[114] The band stops on top of Victory Hill and begins to play their drum cadence while beginning to march down Victory Hill. The band then stops on Victory Hill and begins to play the opening strains of the "Pregame Salute." Then, while playing the introduction to "Touchdown for LSU," the band begins to run in tempo through the streets and down the hill amidst the crowd of cheering fans. From there, the band enters the PMAC and plays a pep rally for TAF members.

White jerseys – LSU is notable as one of the few college football teams that wears white jerseys for home games as opposed to their darker jerseys (in their case, purple). Most other NCAA football teams wear their darker jerseys in home games, even though football is one of the few college sports that do not require a specific jersey type for each respective team (for instance, college basketball requires home teams to wear white or light-colored jerseys while the away team wears their darker jerseys), and is similar to the National Football League in letting the home team decide what to wear.

The tradition started in 1958, when Coach Paul Dietzel decided that LSU would wear white jerseys for home games. Another story is the tradition first started when Dietzel had LSU wear white at home for good luck against a ranked Georgia Tech team in 1957 because Georgia Tech's team had long been known for wearing white at home. LSU won the game and he continued that tradition for the 1958 season and LSU went on to win the national championship that year. Since the 1958 championship season, LSU continued to wear white jerseys at home games through the 18-year tenure of Charles McClendon. Then in 1983, new NCAA rules prohibited teams from wearing white jerseys at home. Because of this, LSU wore purple jerseys during home games from 1983 to 1994. The team's fans believed wearing purple jerseys were "bad luck" and often complained about being forced to wear purple jerseys at home.[115]

In 1995, LSU's new coach, Gerry DiNardo, was determined to restore LSU's tradition of white home jerseys. DiNardo personally met with each member of the NCAA Football Rules Committee, lobbying LSU's case. DiNardo was successful, and LSU again began wearing white jerseys at home when the 1995 season began. In LSU's first home game with the white jerseys, unranked LSU prevailed in a 12–6 upset victory over No. 6 Auburn.[116]

The 1995 rule allowing LSU to wear white at home had one stipulation: the visiting team must agree for conference and non-conference games. In 1997, the SEC amended its rule to allow the home team its choice of jersey color for conference games without prior approval of the visiting team. Therefore, only for non-conference home games does the home team seek permission to wear white jerseys at home. In 2009, the NCAA further relaxed the previous rule that required most away teams to wear white. The rule now states that teams must simply wear contrasting colors.[117]

After the 1995 rule change, on three occasions LSU was forced to wear colored jerseys at Tiger Stadium. The first time was in 1996 against Vanderbilt, who was still angry at LSU for hiring Gerry DiNardo, who left Vanderbilt to become LSU's head coach after the 1994 season. LSU wore gold jerseys for that game (a 35–0 LSU victory), and fans were encouraged to wear white in an effort to "white out" the Commodores. The other was in 2004 when Oregon State did not want to suffer in its black jerseys due to the humid weather of Louisiana in late summer, thus forcing LSU to wear its purple jerseys for a nationally televised game on ESPN. On October 10, 2015, LSU was scheduled to play a road conference game at South Carolina, but due to massive flooding in the state of South Carolina, the game was relocated from Columbia to Baton Rouge. Despite the game being played at Tiger Stadium, South Carolina was still the designated home team and had first choice of jersey selection. South Carolina chose to wear white as they had originally planned, forcing LSU to wear their purple jerseys at Tiger Stadium for an SEC game for the first time since 1994.[118]

After the 1995 rule change, LSU was forced to wear colored jerseys on the road on four occasions. In 1998 and 2000, Florida coach Steve Spurrier exercised this option and forced LSU to don a colored jersey at Gainesville. The Tigers wore gold in 1998 under Gerry DiNardo (lost 22–10) and purple in 2000 under Nick Saban (lost 41–9). In 2007 and 2009, LSU also wore its purple jerseys on the road at Mississippi State, but the Tigers emerged victorious both times (45–0 in 2007 and 30–26 in 2009).[119]

Songs and cheers edit

Callin' Baton Rouge – The Garth Brooks song "Callin' Baton Rouge" is played at each game.[120]

 
LSU cheerleader

Geaux Tigers – A common cheer for all LSU athletics, Geaux Tigers, pronounced "Go Tigers", is derived from a common ending in Cajun French names, -eaux. Fans began using this spelling in the 1990s to add local flavor to the standard cheer. The phrase was trademarked by the university in 2005.[121]

Hot Boudin – A cheer before and during games about famous food in Louisiana. It goes "Hot boudin, cold coush-coush, come on tigers, push push push."[122] Push is pronounced poosh to rhyme with coush-coush [koosh-koosh]. Coush-coush is a Cajun dish generally served for breakfast.[123]

Neck - A spinoff of "Talkin' Out da Side of Ya Neck!"[124]

Tiger bait – LSU fans will yell "Tiger Bait, Tiger Bait" at visiting fans.[125]

Tiger Bandits – Whenever LSU forces a turnover or gets the ball back via a defensive stop, the LSU band plays the Tiger Bandits song and LSU fans bow in respect to the defensive stop. The original title of the song was called "Chinese Bandits", but the title was eventually changed to "Tiger Bandits" (or just simply "Bandits") to make the tradition more inclusive. The term "Chinese Bandits" originated as the nickname that LSU Coach Paul Dietzel gave to the defensive unit he organized in 1958, which helped LSU to win its first national championship. The next season, the 1959 Chinese Bandit defense held their opponents to an average of only 143.2 yards per game. No LSU defense since has done better.[96]

Jersey No. 18 edit

Jersey No. 18 is an LSU tradition established in 2003 when quarterback Matt Mauck guided LSU to a national championship. After Mauck's final season, he passed jersey No. 18 to running back Jacob Hester, who helped LSU win the 2007 national championship. The jersey became synonymous with success on and off the field as well as having a selfless attitude. Each season, a player is chosen by the coaching staff to wear the No. 18 jersey.[126] In 2017, it was the first year LSU awarded the jersey to two players, one each on offense and defense.[127]

No. 18 by season:

"DBU" edit

Beginning in 2012, LSU had a high number of defensive backs earn recognition for their play, leading to both current and former players to refer to the school as "Defensive Back University", or "DBU".[139][140] This has led to a sense of pride among LSU defensive backs, who strive to continue the tradition of excellence at the position.[141] Since 2005, 28 LSU defensive backs have been drafted into the NFL, including seven in the first round: LaRon Landry (6th pick in 2007), Patrick Peterson (5th pick in 2011), Morris Claiborne (6th pick in 2012), Eric Reid (18th pick in 2013), Jamal Adams (6th pick in 2017), Tre'Davious White (27th pick in 2017), and Derek Stingley Jr. (3rd pick in 2022).[142]

Rivalries edit

Alabama edit

LSU and Alabama have played every year since the 1960s. It has been mentioned by the LSU fan base, the origins of the rivalry date back to a 15-game undefeated streak Alabama had in Tiger Stadium, which is generally considered to be one of the most hostile atmospheres in college football. While the Alabama rivalries against Auburn and Tennessee may overshadow their rivalry with LSU, the significance of this annual rivalry increased after Alabama hired former LSU coach Nick Saban in 2007. The LSU-Alabama rivalry continued after the November 5, 2011 game and the 2012 National Championship where the two teams faced off.[143] Alabama leads the series 56-27-5 through the 2023 season.[144]

Arkansas edit

 
The Golden Boot trophy is awarded to the annual winner of the Arkansas-LSU football game.

Prior to Arkansas joining LSU in the Southeastern Conference, the two programs met a total of 36 times, including the famed Ice Bowl. The schools played against each other for the first time in 1901 in Baton Rouge, a 15-0 LSU victory. The rivalry grew while it was played annually from 1906 to 1936, with 1918 being the only year the game was not played between those dates. The series was contested in Shreveport from 1913 to 1936.

After the Razorbacks left the Southwest Conference in 1990, Arkansas joined the SEC in 1991 and rekindled the rivalry with LSU. During their first year in the SEC, Arkansas would defeat the Tigers in the Razorbacks' first game against LSU in Fayetteville, 30–6; their first victory against LSU since the Razorbacks' 32–0 shutout of the Tigers in 1929. The winner takes home the Golden Boot, a 175-pound, four foot tall, 24-karat gold trophy in the shape of the states of Arkansas and Louisiana that resembles a boot. The game, played the day after Thanksgiving until the 2010 season, was usually the last regular season game for each team and is broadcast on CBS. LSU and Arkansas now close their respective seasons against the SEC's newest members, the Tigers vs. Texas A&M and the Razorbacks vs. Missouri.

In 2002, the rivalry gained momentum as the game winner would represent the Western Division of the SEC in the SEC Championship Game. Arkansas won on a last-second touchdown pass by Matt Jones. In 2006, the Razorbacks, who had already clinched the SEC Western Division and were on a 10-game winning streak, were beaten by LSU in Little Rock. In 2007, Arkansas defeated top-ranked LSU in triple overtime, giving them their first win in Baton Rouge since 1993, and again defended the Golden Boot trophy with a last-minute touchdown drive in 2008. Fifteenth-ranked LSU won back the trophy for the first time in two years in 2009 after Razorback kicker Alex Tejada missed a field goal that would have sent the game into a second overtime, and LSU went on to lose the Capitol One Bowl. In 2011, with both teams ranked in the top 3 in the AP Poll, No. 1 LSU prevailed over No. 3 Arkansas by a score of 41–17, sending LSU to the SEC title game en route to being shutout in the 2012 BCS National Championship Game. LSU rode the momentum from the 2011 win by grinding out back-to-back one-possession wins in 2012 and 2013 against Arkansas teams that won four and three games, respectively. Arkansas returned the favor with consecutive 17-point victories in 2014 (breaking a 17-game SEC losing streak for the Hogs while pitching a 17–0 shutout against the No. 17 Tigers; Arkansas's tenth time holding LSU to 0 points and the only shutout in the series since 1995) and 2015 (a 31–14 romp in Baton Rouge which saw the unranked Razorbacks lead the No. 9 Tigers the whole game). LSU lost against Arkansas in overtime in 2021, but rebounded in 2022 to win 13–10 in Fayetteville. LSU leads the series 42–23–2 through the 2023 season, with two LSU wins being vacated.[145]

Auburn edit

While Auburn's rivalries against Alabama and Georgia may overshadow its rivalry with LSU, in the 2000s, LSU had a heated rivalry with the Auburn Tigers. LSU and Auburn were not yearly rivals until the SEC's 1992 expansion placed both Tiger teams in the Western Division.

The two share more than just a nickname, as they have both enjoyed success in the SEC West and plenty of memorable match ups. The home team won every game from 2000 through 2007. LSU leads the series 30-24-1 through the 2023 season, with three LSU wins being vacated.[146]

Florida edit

Although both universities were founding members of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) in December 1932, the Florida Gators and Tigers did not meet on the gridiron for the first time until 1937. LSU is Florida's permanent inter-divisional rival. LSU has played Florida every year since 1971. The longest winning streak in the LSU–Florida series is held by Florida, with nine victories from 1988 to 1996. LSU's longest winning streak is four, from 1977 to 1980. The winner of the Florida-LSU game went on to win the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) national championship game from 2006 to 2008. Some of the notable games in this rivalry include the 1960: Wristband Robbery, 1964: Hurricane Delay, 1972: Flooded Swamp, 1989: College Football's First Overtime Game, 1997: LSU's Revenge, 2006: Tebow Domination, 2007: 5 for 5 on fourth down, and 2016: Hurricane Delay Pt 2.

Florida handed LSU its most lopsided defeat in program history, a 58–3 rout at Baton Rouge in 1993.

With a few exceptions, mostly during Spurrier's coaching tenure when the Gators routinely won by large margins, this rivalry has been known for close games in recent years, with both teams usually coming into the match-up highly ranked. The Gators and Tigers have combined to win five national championships and eleven SEC titles over the past two decades. Due to three vacated LSU wins, Florida leads the series 33–31–3 through the 2023 season.[147]

Mississippi State edit

The LSU–Mississippi State rivalry, is an annual football game between the Louisiana State Tigers and Mississippi State Bulldogs. Both universities are founding members of the Southeastern Conference, as well as the Western Division. This rivalry is LSU's longest rivalry with 108 meetings. LSU is second only to Ole Miss (3 games behind) on Mississippi St.’s list of most-commonly played opponents.

Mississippi State's 34–29 victory on September 20, 2014, engineered by quarterback Dak Prescott, a Louisiana native, was the Bulldogs' first over LSU since 1999, their first in Baton Rouge since 1991, and just their fourth overall since 1985. State defeated LSU 37-7 in 2017 for their first win in the series at Starkville since 1999. The Tigers lead the series 75-36-3 through the 2023 season, with two LSU wins being vacated.[148]

Ole Miss edit

 
Magnolia Bowl trophy

LSU's traditional SEC rival is Ole Miss. Throughout the 50's and 60's, games between the two schools featured highly ranked squads on both sides and seemingly every contest had conference, and at times national, title implications. The Magnolia Bowl Trophy is now awarded to the winner of the LSU-Ole Miss rivalry now known as the "Magnolia Bowl". Recently, the second to last regular season game has been between these two colleges. There is still a strong rivalry between both schools.

From 1961 through 1988, LSU did not play on the Ole Miss campus in Oxford, Mississippi. Instead, all of the Rebels' home dates in the series were contested at Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium in Jackson. LSU and Ole Miss played at Oxford in 1989 for the first time in 29 seasons, then moved the series permanently to Vaught–Hemingway Stadium in 1994 after the 1991 and 1992 contests returned to Jackson. LSU leads the series 63-42-4 through the 2023 season, with two LSU wins being vacated.[149]

Texas A&M edit

LSU and Texas A&M began play in 1899. Since then, there have been four distinct eras; 1899 to 1923, 1942 to 1975, 1986 to 1995, and the current SEC era beginning in 2011. A&M took that first matchup over LSU, 52–0. The Aggies claimed the 1899 to 1923 era with 7 wins to LSU's 3, with two tie games. LSU took the 1942 to 1975 era winning 19 to A&M's 7, with one tie game. The 1986 to 1995 era belonged again to A&M, with the Aggies winning 6 games to LSU's 4. The current era began with A&M entering the SEC in 2011. LSU claimed victory 8 times in the first 10 meetings. In 2018, the Tigers lost at Kyle Field 74–72 in a game with 7 overtimes, the most overtimes in one game in FBS history. During the series, the two teams have meet in two bowl games. LSU won in the 1944 Orange Bowl 19–14 and prevailed 41–24 in the 2011 Cotton Bowl Classic. LSU leads the series 32–23–3 through the 2023 season, with four Tigers wins being vacated.[150]

Tulane edit

LSU's oldest rival is Tulane; the first LSU-Tulane football game was played in 1893 and for the first 50 or so years of Tiger football, no team was more hated by LSU fans than the Green Wave. The series, in which they battle for the Tiger Rag, was played continuously from 1919 to 1994.[151] The intrastate rivalry featured two teams which were geographically close (Baton Rouge and New Orleans are roughly 80 miles (130 km) apart) and drew on socio-political tensions between the state's capital and seat of government and its biggest and most culturally important city. As opponents in the SIAA, Southern Conference and SEC, the Tulane rivalry flourished for many years but slowly declined after Tulane left the SEC and de-emphasized athletics. Until 1949, the series was very competitive, with LSU leading 23–18–5; since 1949, LSU has dominated, going 45–4–2. The two teams renewed the annual series in 2006 and ended it again after the 2009 meeting with LSU leading 69–23–7.[152]

Yearly records edit

All-time record vs. current SEC members edit

Through the 2020 season[101]: 106 [153][failed verification]

School LSU record Streak First meeting Last meeting
Alabama 26-55–5 Lost 1 1895 2023
Arkansas 43-23–2 Won 2 1901 2023
Auburn 30–24–1 Won 2 1901 2023
Florida 31–33–3 Won 5 1937 2023
Georgia 18–14-1 Lost 1 1928 2022
Kentucky 40–17–1 Lost 1 1949 2021
Mississippi State 75-36-3 Won 3 1896 2023
Missouri 2-2-0 Won 1 1978 2023
Ole Miss 63–42–4 Lose 1 1894 2023
South Carolina 19–2–1 Won 7 1930 2020
Tennessee 10–21–3 Lost 1 1925 2022
Texas A&M 32-23–3 Won 1 1899 2023
Vanderbilt 24–7–1 Won 9 1902 2020

College Football Playoff rankings and polls edit

College Football Playoff rankings

The LSU Tigers football team finished in the Top 25 in the first College Football Playoff ranking. The Tigers finished No. 1 in the final ranking in 2019.

Preseason polls

The LSU Tigers football team has been ranked No. 1 in the Pre-season Associated Press Poll (AP Poll) in 1959 and the Pre-season Coaches' Poll in 2012.

Final polls

The LSU Tigers football team finished the season ranked No. 1 in the Final Associated Press Poll (AP Poll) in 1958, 2007, and 2019. The Tigers were ranked No. 1 in the Final Coaches' Poll in 1958, 2003, 2007, and 2019.[154] The Tigers also finished No. 2 in the Final AP Poll in 1936, 2003, and 2011 and the Final Coaches Poll in 2011.

Bowl games edit

LSU has played in 52 bowl games, compiling a record of 28–23–1.[155] The Tigers have played in 20 straight bowl games since 2000, the fourth longest active streak in the NCAA and second longest in the Southeastern Conference.[156]

Individual accomplishments edit

Player awards edit

Heisman Trophy voting history edit

 
QB Joe Burrow, 2019 Heisman Trophy winner
Year Player Finish Votes
1939 Ken Kavanaugh 7th [157]
1958 Billy Cannon 3rd [158] 975
1959 Billy Cannon 1st [159] 1,929
1962 Jerry Stovall 2nd [160] 618
1972 Bert Jones 4th [161] 351
1977 Charles Alexander 9th [162] 54
1978 Charles Alexander 5th [163] 282
2007 Glenn Dorsey 9th [164] 30
2011 Tyrann Mathieu 5th [165] 327
2015 Leonard Fournette 6th [166] 110
2019 Joe Burrow 1st [167] 2,608
2023 Jayden Daniels 1st [168] 2,028

Coaches awards edit

All-Americans edit

LSU players have been selected as consensus All-Americans on 40 occasions through the 2023 season, with 13 selections being unanimous.[1][2]

Consensus All-Americans

† Unanimous selection

Retired numbers edit

No. Player Pos. Career Retired Ref.
20 Billy Cannon RB 1957–1959 1960 [169]
37 Tommy Casanova DB 1969–1971 2009 [170]
21 Jerry Stovall RB 1960–1962 2018 [171]

SEC Legends edit

Starting in 1994, the Southeastern Conference has annually honored one former football player from each of the member schools as an "SEC Legend".

Statistical leaders edit

LSU and the NFL edit

LSU Tigers players in the NFL Draft edit

The LSU Tigers football team has had 319 players drafted into the National Football League (NFL).[172] This includes 39 players taken in the first round and three overall number one picks: Billy Cannon in the 1960 NFL Draft and 1960 AFL Draft, Jamarcus Russell in the 2007 NFL Draft and Joe Burrow in the 2020 NFL Draft.[173]

Hall of Fame inductees edit

Pro Football Hall of Fame edit

 
QB Y. A. Tittle
 
FB Jim Taylor
 
DB Johnny Robinson

Six former LSU football players have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.[174]

Player Position Seasons at LSU Inducted
Steve Van Buren HB 1940–1943 1965
Y. A. Tittle QB 1944–1947 1971
Jim Taylor FB 1956–1957 1976
Kevin Mawae C 1989–1993 2019
Johnny Robinson S 1957–1959 2019
Alan Faneca G 1994–1997 2021

Canadian Football Hall of Fame edit

One former LSU player is a member of the Canadian Football Hall of Fame.[175]

Player Position Seasons at LSU Inducted
Ron Estay DL 1969–1971 2003

College Football Hall of Fame edit

LSU has had eleven players and five head coaches inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

Players
Player Position Seasons at LSU Inducted
Gaynell Tinsley End 1934–1936 1956
Ken Kavanaugh End 1937–1939 1963
Abe Mickal RB 1933–1935 1967
Doc Fenton QB, End 1904–1909 1971
Tommy Casanova CB 1969–1971 1995
Billy Cannon HB 1957–1959 2008
Jerry Stovall HB 1960–1962 2010
Charles Alexander HB 1975–1978 2012
Bert Jones QB 1969–1972 2016
Glenn Dorsey DT 2004–2007 2021
Kevin Faulk RB 1995-1998 2022
Coaches
Coach Seasons at LSU Induction
Dana X. Bible 1916 1951
Michael "Iron Mike" Donahue 1923–1927 1951
Lawrence "Biff" Jones 1932–1934 1954
Bernie Moore 1935–1947 1954
Charles McClendon 1962–1979 1986

Stadium edit

Tiger Stadium edit

 
Tiger Stadium
 
Tiger Stadium (Welcome to Death Valley)
 
Tiger Stadium (Student Section)

Tiger Stadium is the 102,321 capacity home of the LSU Tigers football team. The stadium is the sixth largest on-campus stadium in the NCAA and the ninth largest stadium in the world. The current record attendance of 102,321 was set on September 20, 2014, when LSU played host to Mississippi State. Tiger Stadium contains 70 skyboxes, called "Tiger Den" suites and a 3,200 seat club level named "The Stadium Club". The Paul Manasseh Press Box is located in the west upper-deck. On April 27, 2012, the LSU Board of Supervisors voted unanimously in favor of an $80 million south end-zone upper deck expansion that added approximately 60 "Tiger Den" suites, 3,000 club seats and 1,500 general public seats to bring the total capacity of Tiger Stadium to 102,321, making it the 6th-largest college football stadium in the country.

Tiger Stadium first opened its gates in the fall of 1924 with a seating capacity of 12,000. In the season finale, LSU hosted Tulane in the first game. As of the 2021 season, LSU has gone on to post a 439-154-18 (.733) mark in Tiger Stadium. Moreover, Tiger Stadium is also known for night games, an idea that was first introduced in 1931 against Spring Hill (a 35-0 LSU victory). In 2006, LSU celebrated its 75th year of playing night football in Tiger Stadium. LSU has played the majority of its games at night, and the Tigers have fared better under the lights than during the day. From 1960 to 2022, LSU is 237–68–4 (.773) at night in Tiger Stadium compared to a 26–27–3 (.491) record during the day over that span.[113] 445-155-18 (.733)

State Field edit

State Field was the former home stadium of the LSU Tigers football team from 1893 to 1923. The field was located on the old downtown Baton Rouge campus of LSU.

Practice and training facilities edit

Charles McClendon Practice Facility
 
Charles McClendon Practice Facility

The Charles McClendon Practice Facility is the name of the LSU Tigers football practice facility. The facility features the LSU Football Operations Center, the Tigers Indoor Practice Facility and four outdoor 100-yard football practice fields.[154] In 2002, it was named after former LSU head coach and College Football Hall of Fame member, Charles McClendon.[176]

LSU Football Operations Center
 
LSU Football Operations Center

The LSU Football Operations Center, built in 2006, is an all-in-one facility[177] that includes the Tigers locker room, players' lounge, Peterson-Roberts weight room, training room, equipment room, video operations center and coaches offices.[178][179][180] The operations center atrium holds team displays and graphics, trophy cases and memorabilia of LSU football.[181][182]

LSU Indoor Practice Facility
 
LSU Indoor Practice Facility and Outdoor Practice Fields

The LSU Indoor Practice Facility, built in 1991, is a climate-controlled 82,500 square feet facility connected to the Football Operations Center. It holds the 100-yd Anderson-Feazel LSU indoor field with Momentum Field Turf by SportExe. The indoor practice facility is located behind the football operations center.[154]

LSU Outdoor Practice Fields

The four outdoor practice fields are directly adjacent to the football operations center and indoor practice facility. Three of the fields are natural grass, while the fourth, The Scott & Espe Moran Outdoor Turf Field has a Momentum Field Turf by SportExe playing surface.[154]

Head coaches edit

LSU has had 32 head coaches since organized football began in 1893. In that time, 12 coaches have led the Tigers in postseason bowl games: Bernie Moore, Gus Tinsley, Paul Dietzel, Charles McClendon, Jerry Stovall, Bill Arnsparger, Mike Archer, Gerry DiNardo, Nick Saban, Les Miles, Ed Orgeron, and Brian Kelly. Six of those coaches also won conference championships after LSU left the Southern Conference to join the SEC: Moore, Dietzel, McClendon, Arnsparger, Archer, Saban, Miles, and Orgeron won a combined 12 as a member of the SEC. During their tenures, Dietzel, Saban, Miles, and most recently Orgeron, each won national championships awarded by major selectors while with the Tigers. Of the 32 different head coaches who have led the Tigers, Dana X. Bible, Michael Donahue, Lawrence "Biff" Jones, Moore and McClendon have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.[183]

Coaching staff edit

LSU Tigers
Name Position Consecutive season at LSU in current position Previous position
Mike Denbrock Offensive coordinator / tight ends 1st Cincinnati – Offensive coordinator / tight ends (20182021)
Matt House Defensive coordinator & linebackers 1st Kansas City Chiefs – Linebackers (20192021)
Brian Polian Special teams coordinator / recruiting coordinator 1st Notre Dame – Special teams coordinator / assistant head coach (2021)
Frank Wilson Assistant head coach / running backs 1st McNeese State – Head coach (20202021)
Joe Sloan Quarterbacks 1st Louisiana Tech – Offensive coordinator (20202021)
Cortez Hankton Pass game coordinator & wide receivers 1st Georgia – Pass game coordinator & wide receivers (20192021)
Brad Davis Offensive line 2nd LSU – Interim head coach / offensive line (2021)
Jamar Cain Run game coordinator / defensive line 1st Oklahoma – Outside linebackers / defensive ends (20202021)
Robert Steeples Cornerbacks 1st Minnesota Vikings – Assistant special teams (2021)
Kerry Cooks Safeties 1st Notre Dame – Defensive assistant (2020–2021)
Jake Flint Director of athletic development 1st Notre Dame – Co-director of strength & conditioning (2017–2021)
Reference:[184]

Recruiting edit

Since 2002, LSU has been ranked in the Top 25 in recruiting ranking by multiple ranking services.[185]

Future opponents edit

Conference opponents edit

From 1992 to 2023, LSU played in the West Division of the SEC and played each opponent in the division each year along with several teams from the East Division. The SEC will expand the conference to 16 teams and will eliminate its two divisions in 2024, causing a new scheduling format for the Tigers to play against the other members of the conference.[186] Only the 2024 conference schedule was announced on June 14, 2023, while the conference still considers a new format for the future.[187]

2024 Conference Schedule edit

LSU will not play Auburn for the first time since 1991, the year before the SEC expanded from 10 teams to 12, and will not play Mississippi State for the first time since 1943, when State did not field a team during World War II.

OpponentSiteResult
Alabama
at Arkansas
at Florida
Oklahoma
  • Tiger Stadium
  • Baton Rouge, LA
Ole Miss
at South Carolina
at Texas A&M
Vanderbilt
  • Tiger Stadium
  • Baton Rouge, LA

Non-conference opponents edit

Announced schedules as of April 13, 2024[188]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ An LSU baseball team had also worn purple and gold in its first varsity game against Tulane earlier in 1893, even though LSU's official colors at the time were actually blue and white.[5]
  2. ^ Other consensus selectors for 1958 included B(QPRS), BR, BS, CFRA, DeS, DuS, FN, HAF, L, NCF, PS, SR, WS
  3. ^ Other consensus selectors for 2003 included A&H, BR, CM, DeS, DuS, MCFR, NFF, R(FACT), SR, USAT/ESPN, W
  4. ^ Other consensus selectors for 2007 included AP, B(QPRS), BR, CCR, CM, FWAA, MCFR, NFF, SR, USAT, W
  5. ^ Other consensus selectors for 2019 included A&H, AP, BR, CCR, CFRA, CM, DuS, FWAA/NFF, MCFR, SR, USAT/AMWAY, W

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Bibliography
  • Vincent, Herb (2008). LSU Football Vault: The History of the Fighting Tigers. Whitman Publishing, LLC. ISBN 978-0794824280.

External links edit

  • Official website  

tigers, football, program, also, known, fighting, tigers, represents, louisiana, state, university, college, football, tigers, compete, football, bowl, subdivision, national, collegiate, athletic, association, ncaa, western, division, southeastern, conference,. The LSU Tigers football program also known as the Fighting Tigers represents Louisiana State University in college football The Tigers compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision FBS of the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA and the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference SEC LSU Tigers football2024 LSU Tigers football teamFirst season1893 131 years ago Athletic directorScott WoodwardHead coachBrian Kelly 3rd season 20 7 741 StadiumTiger Stadium capacity 102 321 Field surfaceGrassLocationBaton Rouge LouisianaConferenceSoutheastern ConferencePast conferencesSIAA 1893 1922 SoCon 1923 1932 All time record806 434 47 645 Bowl record31 24 1 563 Playoff appearances1 2019 Playoff record2 0 1 000 Claimed national titles4 1958 2003 2007 2019 Unclaimed national titles4 1908 1936 1962 2011 National finalist4 2003 2007 2011 2019 Conference titles16 12 SEC 3 SIAA 1 SoCon Division titles10 1996 1997 2001 2002 2003 2005 2007 2011 2019 2022 RivalriesAlabama rivalry Arkansas rivalry Auburn rivalry Florida rivalry Mississippi State rivalry Ole Miss rivalry Texas A amp M rivalry Tulane rivalry Heisman winnersBilly Cannon 1959Joe Burrow 2019Jayden Daniels 2023Consensus All Americans40 1 2 Current uniformColorsPurple and gold 3 Fight songFight for LSUMascotMike the TigerMarching bandLouisiana State University Tiger Marching BandWebsiteLSUsports net LSU ranks 16th best in winning percentage in NCAA Division I FBS history and claims four national championships 1958 2003 2007 and 2019 16 conference championships and 39 consensus All Americans 4 Three players for the Tigers have won the Heisman Trophy Billy Cannon in 1959 Joe Burrow in 2019 and Jayden Daniels in 2023 The team plays on the university s campus at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge Louisiana The program s current head coach is Brian Kelly Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1893 1954 1 2 Paul Dietzel 1955 1961 1 3 Charles McClendon 1962 1979 1 3 1 Bo Rein tragedy 1 4 Jerry Stovall 1980 1983 1 5 Bill Arnsparger 1984 1986 1 6 Mike Archer 1987 1990 1 7 Curley Hallman 1991 1994 1 8 Gerry DiNardo 1995 1999 1 9 Nick Saban 2000 2004 1 10 Les Miles 2005 2016 1 11 Ed Orgeron 2016 2021 1 12 Brian Kelly 2022 present 2 Conference affiliations 3 Championships 3 1 Claimed National championships 3 2 Conference championships 3 3 Division championships 4 Logos and uniforms 5 Traditions 5 1 Tiger Stadium 5 2 Songs and cheers 5 3 Jersey No 18 5 4 DBU 6 Rivalries 6 1 Alabama 6 2 Arkansas 6 3 Auburn 6 4 Florida 6 5 Mississippi State 6 6 Ole Miss 6 7 Texas A amp M 6 8 Tulane 7 Yearly records 7 1 All time record vs current SEC members 7 2 College Football Playoff rankings and polls 7 3 Bowl games 8 Individual accomplishments 8 1 Player awards 8 2 Heisman Trophy voting history 8 3 Coaches awards 8 4 All Americans 8 5 Retired numbers 8 6 SEC Legends 8 7 Statistical leaders 9 LSU and the NFL 9 1 LSU Tigers players in the NFL Draft 10 Hall of Fame inductees 10 1 Pro Football Hall of Fame 10 2 Canadian Football Hall of Fame 10 3 College Football Hall of Fame 11 Stadium 11 1 Tiger Stadium 11 2 State Field 12 Practice and training facilities 13 Head coaches 13 1 Coaching staff 14 Recruiting 15 Future opponents 15 1 Conference opponents 15 1 1 2024 Conference Schedule 15 2 Non conference opponents 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 External linksHistory editMain article History of LSU Tigers football See also List of LSU Tigers football seasons Early history 1893 1954 edit nbsp Charles Coates LSU s first coach Dr Charles E Coates a chemistry professor at the university known for his work on sugar and former football player at Johns Hopkins assembled a group of students to create the school s first team Coates plan for a football team dated back to autumn of the previous year when he assembled a team and held one or two scrimmages before shelving the idea for the following autumn The team wore makeshift uniforms with purple and gold ribbons for its first game a 34 0 loss to Tulane and the only game played by LSU that year The game was played in front of a crowd of 1 500 at Crescent City Base Ball Park in New Orleans 5 The game sparked a rivalry between the schools that lasted well into the 20th century Future Louisiana governor Ruffin G Pleasant was the quarterback and captain of the LSU team According to legend purple and gold were chosen because they were Mardi Gras colors and the green was sold out n 1 The game was the only one Coates ever coached and the only football game Pleasant played in Pleasant was later inducted into the LSU Athletic Hall of Fame 6 nbsp The 1895 team LSU achieved its first victory by beating Natchez Athletic Club 26 0 in 1894 Samuel Marmaduke Dinwidie Clark has the honor of scoring the very first touchdown in LSU history The first football game played on the LSU campus was at State Field on December 3 1894 a loss against Mississippi LSU s only touchdown in that game was scored by the head coach Albert Simmonds 7 This was the first year of play for William S Slaughter who lettered as an end for 5 years 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 Slaughter was LSU s first five time football letterman By 1895 LSU had its first win in Baton Rouge In 1896 LSU hired Allen Jeardeau of Platteville Wisconsin LSU went undefeated winning the school s first conference championship in the school s first year as a member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association SIAA the first southern athletics conference 8 Tulane was forced to forfeit for its attempt to play Hall of Fame Penn back George H Brooke 9 This was the first team to be called the Tigers The mascot was reputed to be named after the Fighting Tigers the name of the 9th Louisiana Infantry in the Civil War 10 Coach Jeardeau returned for his second but final year at LSU in 1897 for two games in Baton Rouge A yellow fever outbreak throughout the South caused the postponement of LSU s classes starting and the football season being cut back to only two games nbsp Chavanne as LSU cadet Another outbreak of yellow fever similar to the one in 1897 caused LSU to play only one game in 1898 By the time LSU was able to play its only game of the season Allen Jeardeau had departed from the school as head football coach and no provision had been made to replace him The job of coach then fell to the team s captain Edmond Chavanne thus the first LSU alumnus to coach the team New coach John P Gregg led the Tigers to a 1 4 season in 1899 including a loss to the iron men of Sewanee The only wins were in an exhibition game against a high school team which LSU does not officially record as a win and against rival Tulane It was the first year of play for LSU s second five year letterman John J Coleman 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 nbsp Auburn vs LSU on State Field 1902 Chavanne was rehired in 1900 posting a 2 2 record Chavanne was replaced by W S Borland as head coach in 1901 leading the team to a successful 5 1 season After the Tulane game a 22 0 loss LSU protested to the SIAA and alleged that Tulane had used a professional player during the game Several months later the SIAA ruled the game an 11 0 forfeit in favor of LSU 11 The seven game 1902 season was the longest yet for the Tigers and also featured the most games on the road LSU upset Texas avenged last season s loss to Auburn and lost only to Vanderbilt which claimed an SIAA title after the win The 1903 season broke the previous season s record for most games played seven with nine games Dan A Killian coached the Tigers from 1904 to 1906 Back Rene A Messa made some All Southern teams in 1904 The 1905 team went 3 0 nbsp 1907 LSU Tigers Football Team in Havana Cuba for the 1907 Bacardi Bowl In 1907 LSU became the first American college football team to play on foreign soil in the Bacardi Bowl against the University of Havana on Christmas Day in Havana Cuba LSU won 56 0 John Seip ran back a 67 yard punt return nbsp Doc Fenton The 1908 team posted an undefeated 10 0 record Quarterback Doc Fenton led the nation in scoring with 132 points posting then school records of 36 extra points and 6 field goals Mike Lally was his running mate in the backfield LSU beat Auburn 10 2 Seip going over for the first touchdown Auburn s 2 was had by a safety after T C Locke blocked Fenton s punt Fenton could not recover the fumble because he was knocked unconscious by a spectator s cane 12 The National Championship Foundation retroactively awarded 1908 LSU the national championship though it is not claimed by LSU This season also led to an SIAA championship but was clouded by accusations of professionalism from Grantland Rice and rival school Tulane 13 Auburn and Vanderbilt were among those listed as alternative conference champions Both Fenton and Seip were inaugural inductees into the LSU Athletic Hall of Fame 1910 was a disastrous year for the Tigers After a strong 1909 campaign under coaches Joe Pritchard and John W Mayhew which saw their only conference loss come to SIAA champion Sewanee the team lost some star power Stovall Lally and Seip had all graduated 14 nbsp 1914 LSU Tulane Pat Dwyer an assistant at Auburn in 1908 was hired in 1911 He once used guard Tom Dutton for a kangaroo play in which back Lawrence Dupont would crawl between Dutton s legs supposedly very effective in short yardage situations 15 The 1913 team lost only to SIAA champion Auburn by a touchdown Fullback Alf Reid made All Southern 16 LSU s largest loss margin came on October 31 1914 in a game against Texas A amp M in Dallas Texas The final score was Texas A amp M 63 LSU 9 In 1916 Walter Camp gave Phillip Cooper honorable mention on his All America team Irving Pray and Dana X Bible also served as the Tigers coach in 1916 Washington s Wayne Sutton coached the 1917 team to a 3 5 record nbsp LSU Tulane 1922 Irving Pray coached full seasons in 1919 and 1922 the inaugural season of the Southern Conference SoCon Branch Bocock led the Tigers for the 1921 season in which they were beaten only by Tulane 17 Mike Donahue came from Auburn to be the seventeenth head football coach at LSU in 1923 The biggest win in Donahue s tenure was probably the 20 14 victory over Indiana in 1924 18 The final game of the 1924 season saw the first game played at Tiger Stadium with an original seating capacity of 12 000 on Thanksgiving Day against Tulane 18 000 fans managed to fit into the stadium to watch the Green Wave defeat the Tigers 13 0 19 In 1925 the team s first full season in Tiger Stadium began with shutout wins over Louisiana Normal and Southwestern Louisiana The following week coach Wallace Wade s national champion Alabama blew out LSU in Tiger Stadium 42 0 which was at the time the worst home loss in school history 19 The 1925 team also beat John Heisman s Rice team but ended the season with a second straight shutout loss to Tulane Donahue resigned after the 1927 season less than two months after signing a six year contract extension with the team 20 LSU compiled a record of 23 wins 19 losses and three ties while with Donahue which included a 5 14 2 record in SoCon games 21 nbsp Louisiana governor and U S senator Huey Long was instrumental in building the program Vanderbilt coach Dan McGugin recommended Russ Cohen for the LSU job 22 Cohen s best year at LSU was his first in 1928 Led by All Southern captain Jess Tinsley Tigers posted a 6 2 1 record suffering losses to Arkansas and Wallace Wade s Alabama Crimson Tide Star halfback Percy Brown broke his shoulder against Alabama 23 The tie was to Bill Banker and rival Tulane which was as good as its ever been from 1929 to 1931 In 1931 LSU played its first night game in Tiger Stadium a 31 0 victory over Spring Hill Under West Point s Biff Jones the 1932 team tied for the Southern Conference championship in its last season as a member of the conference The 1933 lost no games and was led by track and field athlete Jack Torrance Jones resigned after the 1934 season after a heated exchange with noted LSU supporter Louisiana senator Huey P Long 24 In the last game of the season Long was displeased after the team had lost two straight games and were trailing at halftime to Oregon Long decided to give a motivational speech to the team at halftime but was turned away by Jones at the locker room door 25 The ensuing argument ended with Jones declaring to resign effective at the end of the game 24 Gaynell Tinsley the cousin of Jess has a profile at the College Football Hall of Fame which describes him this way Tinsley was a magnificent athletic specimen standing 6 0 and weighing 196 pounds size he used equally well as a defensive stalwart who was a blocking master 26 As a sophomore in 1934 Tinsley had a 65 yard pass reception thrown by halfback Abe Mickal against Southern Methodist University which stood as a record for several years as the longest pass in Southern football history 26 nbsp Gaynell Tinsley Under head coach Bernie Moore LSU won their first Southeastern Conference SEC Championship finishing with a 5 0 conference record and 9 2 0 overall in 1935 LSU played in their first Sugar Bowl game falling to No 4 TCU 3 2 at Tulane Stadium The Tigers and Horned Frogs both took home the Williamson Poll national championship which is not claimed by LSU End Gaynell Tinsley was named a consensus All American in 1935 and 1936 becoming the first All America selection for LSU Coach Moore once said Tinsley could have made All American at any position He was so tough he made blockers quit He s the greatest lineman I ever saw Along with Tinsley in the line were Marvin Stewart Justin Rukas and Jeff Barrett In the backfield were Mickal Jesse Fatherree and Pinky Rohm all members of LSU s Early Days team of the century 27 The team s quarterback was Bill May awarded the Jacobs Blocking Trophy in 1936 The 1936 team won the school s second SEC Championship finishing with a 6 0 conference record and 9 1 1 overall The Tigers finished runner up to Minnesota in the AP Poll LSU won the Williamson Poll and Sagarin Ratings national championships which are not claimed by the school LSU s largest margin of victory and most points scored in a football game came on November 21 in a game at Tiger Stadium against USL University of Southwestern Louisiana now University of Louisiana Lafayette The final score was LSU 93 USL 0 The 1937 team featured Ken Kavanaugh and was upset by Vanderbilt using a hidden ball trick the school s first ever victory over a ranked opponent 28 This season also featured the first game in the Florida LSU football rivalry which was won 19 0 by LSU In 1939 in a game against Holy Cross Kavanaugh caught four touchdown passes in the 26 7 win According to Kavanaugh and teammate Young Bussey Kavanaugh found four rusty nails on the sideline during the game The next week against Rice he found another nail and scored another touchdown to give LSU a 7 0 win The pattern continued against Loyola and Vanderbilt as Kavanaugh found two nails before each game and in each scored two touchdowns A sportswriter for the Baton Rouge Advocate claimed he saw coach Moore at a local store stocking up on nails before LSU s game against No 1 Tennessee 29 Kavanaugh failed to score in the game however and the Tigers lost 20 0 30 The Nashville Banner named Kavanaugh co MVP of the Southeastern Conference along with Bob Foxx of Tennessee 31 32 Kavanaugh was a consensus All America selection for the 1939 All America Team The 1943 team was led by Steve Van Buren moved to running back because of a lack of players due to World War II conscription 33 and won the Orange Bowl Van Buren led the NCAA in scoring that season with 98 points 110 including the bowl game The 1946 team played in one of the most notable instances of the Cotton Bowl Classic Ice Bowl LSU led by head coach Moore and quarterback Y A Tittle entered the game against Arkansas with a 9 1 record Ice sleet and snow pelted the stadium as LSU players filled oil drums with charcoal and started fires for makeshift heaters while fans built fires in the stands LSU dominated the game with a 271 54 advantage in total yards and 15 1 advantage in first downs but that did not equate to the numbers on the scoreboard the game ended in a 0 0 tie and LSU finished the season 9 1 1 In 1948 Moore retired and Gaynell Tinsley who had been working as an assistant was promoted to replace his former mentor 34 The 1949 team made it to the Sugar Bowl where it was swamped by Oklahoma Tinsley became the first person to participate in the Sugar Bowl as both a player and a head coach 35 Tinsley s LSU teams never met with the same success they had achieved in 1949 In seven years as head coach at LSU Tinsley s teams compiled a record of 35 34 6 36 Paul Dietzel 1955 1961 edit nbsp Billy Cannon nbsp Paul Dietzel In 1955 Paul Dietzel became the head coach at LSU 37 Jim Taylor was an All American in 1957 and led the SEC in scoring in 1956 and 1957 During Dietzel s first three years none of his teams had a winning season In 1958 however Dietzel came up with a unique three platoon system Instead of replacing individual players during the game Dietzel would bring in an entirely new set of players between plays and series The three teams were called the White Team the first string offense and defense the Gold Go Team the second string offense and the Chinese Bandits the second string defense The system worked as the 1958 team won the school s first claimed national championship beating No 12 Clemson 7 0 in the Sugar Bowl The only score was a pass from Billy Cannon to sophomore Mickey Mangham one of the smallest players on the team Cannon won the Heisman Trophy in 1959 On Halloween late in the game between No 1 LSU and No 3 Ole Miss LSU was trailing 3 0 Cannon returned a punt 89 yards for a TD breaking seven tackles This has become known as Cannon s Halloween Run The Rebels then drove down the field but were stopped on the LSU 1 yard line as the game ended resulting in a 7 3 victory for LSU in Tiger Stadium In the Sugar Bowl one of the most anticipated rematches in college football history took place This game however would not be the classic that transpired only weeks before Ole Miss dominated the game from start to finish and came away with a decisive 21 0 win over the Tigers LSU finished the season having only given up 29 points Charles McClendon 1962 1979 edit nbsp LSU vs Tulane 1973 Dietzel left for Army after the 1961 season and Charles Charlie McClendon an assistant since 1953 was named his successor McClendon picked up where Dietzel left off with three top ten finishes in his first four years Doug Moreau broke Fenton s record of 6 field goals in 1965 In the 1966 Cotton Bowl unranked LSU upset undefeated and No 2 ranked Arkansas winning the game 14 7 and snapping Arkansas 22 game winning streak 38 In 1972 number 6 LSU survived an upset bid from unranked Ole Miss in Tiger Stadium by winning the game on a touchdown pass from quarterback Bert Jones to running back Brad Davis Ole Miss fans say the 1972 contest featured a few seconds of free football The Tigers trailed the Rebels 16 10 with four seconds to play After a lengthy incompletion by Jones the game clock still showed one second remaining The Tigers used the precious second to win the game on the last play 17 16 A song was written to commemorate the game called One Second Blues which is featured on the album Hey Fightin Tigers 39 The alleged home clock advantage inspired a sign at the Louisiana state line leaving Mississippi reading You are now entering Louisiana Set your clocks back four seconds 40 41 For that year the Ole Miss yearbook reported the score for the game as Ole Miss 16 LSU 10 7 Bo Rein tragedy edit After having just four coaches over 44 years from 1935 to 1979 the team went through eight coaches in a 20 year period from 1980 to 1999 This stretch began with the death of Bo Rein in a plane crash before coaching a single game for the Tigers 42 Following the 1979 season NC State head coach Bo Rein was hired to replace McClendon as LSU s head coach In January 1980 Rein took a recruiting trip to Shreveport Louisiana On his January 10 1980 return trip back to Baton Rouge Louisiana his private aircraft crashed leaving no survivors 43 Rein and experienced pilot Louis Benscotter left Shreveport in a Cessna 441 aircraft The flight was planned to be a 40 minute trip but when Benscotter rerouted east to avoid a storm air traffic control lost contact with him The aircraft climbed to 40 000 feet and kept heading due east After being tracked on radar the aircraft was eventually intercepted by U S Air National Guard Convair F 106 Delta Dart fighter aircraft over North Carolina a thousand miles off course and at an altitude of 41 600 ft 12 700 m 6 600 ft 2 000 m feet higher than its maximum certified ceiling The military pilots could not see anyone in the cockpit and the aircraft continued on over the Atlantic Ocean where it crashed after running out of fuel A US Coast Guard crew spotted some debris but no wreckage was ever recovered The bodies of Rein and Benscotter have never been found 44 The cause of the crash is undetermined but was most likely cabin depressurization causing hypoxia a lack of oxygen 45 resulting in the occupants losing consciousness as in the 1999 South Dakota Learjet crash 46 Rein s two month stint at LSU is the fourth shortest head coaching stint in FBS history behind only George O Leary s five day tenure at Notre Dame in December 2001 Mike Haywood s sixteen day stint at Pittsburgh in December 2010 and Manny Diaz s eighteen day stint as Temple head coach in December 2018 47 Jerry Stovall 1980 1983 edit Jerry Stovall was hired to replace Rein as head coach in 1980 48 LSU defeated Alabama 20 10 in Birmingham Alabama in Bear Bryant s last game coaching against LSU in 1982 LSU s defense held Alabama to 119 yards of total offense 49 as the Tigers defeated the Tide for the first time since 1970 You don t understand how it feels to get hit in the mouth for 11 years Stovall said in the locker room after the game This is going to feel pretty good when it soaks in 50 1983 was the first season calling LSU football for radio play by play man Jim Hawthorne who served in this role until the 2016 season and became known as the Voice of the Tigers 51 LSU finished that season with a record of 4 7 and Stovall was dismissed as LSU s head coach 52 Bill Arnsparger 1984 1986 edit Only two hours after the firing of Stovall LSU hired Miami Dolphins defensive coordinator Bill Arnsparger as head coach 53 As the LSU head coach Arnsparger led the Tigers to two Sugar Bowl berths in three seasons in 1984 and 1986 both times against Nebraska In 1984 LSU finished in a tie for second behind Florida but the Southeastern Conference SEC presidents voted to strip Florida of the conference championship due to NCAA rules violations and LSU participated in the Sugar Bowl instead His 1986 LSU squad won the school s first outright SEC title since 1970 and the Tigers last in the pre championship game era though the season was marred somewhat by an upset home loss to Miami University his alma mater By 1985 Arnsparger was growing frustrated with various scandals in the LSU athletic department particularly involving basketball coach Dale Brown After Sports Illustrated ran a cover story about the university s issues Arnsparger met privately with athletic director Bob Brodhead to complain that the negative coverage was harming football recruiting and to threaten to leave the school if something wasn t done Shortly after the final regular season game in 1986 Arnsparger announced he was resigning to become the athletic director at Florida 54 Mike Archer 1987 1990 edit Mike Archer came to LSU as an assistant coach in 1984 after being both a player and an assistant coach at Miami He replaced Bill Arnsparger as the LSU Tigers football head coach in 1987 when Arnsparger left to become the athletic director at the University of Florida 55 Archer was Arnsparger s defensive coordinator in 1985 and 1986 and was Arnsparger s hand picked successor When Archer took the LSU head coaching job he was 34 years old the youngest head coach in Division I A football Archer was chosen over a number of interviewed candidates which reportedly included Steve Spurrier Mike Shanahan and Mack Brown In 1987 LSU finished the season ranked 5 in both major polls with a 10 1 1 record blemished only by a tie against Ohio State and a loss to Alabama The latter was all that kept the Tigers out of the 1988 Sugar Bowl Auburn went instead It was LSU s first 10 win season in more than 25 years In 1988 unranked LSU staged a near literal earth shattering upset victory over No 4 Auburn in Tiger Stadium winning the game 7 6 with 1 41 remaining on a touchdown pass from quarterback Tommy Hodson to tailback Eddie Fuller The reaction of the crowd was so immense that it registered as an earthquake on a seismograph in LSU s Howe Russell Geoscience Complex 56 It was later dubbed The Earthquake Game by ESPN 57 After back to back losing seasons in 1989 and 1990 Archer was forced to resign 58 He lost four of his last five games in 1990 the lone win coming in the season finale against Tulane Curley Hallman 1991 1994 edit Archer was replaced by Southern Miss head coach Curley Hallman 59 During Hallman s first season in 1991 several of Hallman s football players were accused of instigating a fight with LSU men s basketball players including All American Shaquille O Neal in Broussard Hall LSU s athletic dormitory two days prior to the Tigers contest with Mississippi State 60 61 LSU started the 1991 season with one sided losses to Georgia 31 10 and Hallman s alma mater Texas A amp M 45 7 and finished 5 6 The season marked the second time LSU suffered three consecutive losing seasons and the first time since 1954 to 1956 The 1992 season included being shut out 32 0 by Ole Miss on Halloween and beaten 30 6 at Arkansas in the season finale which was the first meeting between the Tigers and the Razorbacks upon Arkansas joining the SEC The Tigers finished 2 9 still the worst in school history In 1993 LSU s centennial football season the Tigers lost 58 3 to the Florida Gators in Tiger Stadium the worst loss in school history Amazingly just four weeks after that the Tigers stunned the Alabama Crimson Tide 17 13 at Bryant Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa ending the Tide s 31 game unbeaten streak LSU entered the season finale at 5 5 with a chance at its first bowl bid since the end of the 1988 season However the Tigers gave up 412 yards rushing in a 42 24 loss to Arkansas at home The beginning of the end for Hallman came on September 17 1994 at Jordan Hare Stadium against Auburn LSU led 23 9 early in the fourth quarter and the Bayou Bengals were in good position to end Auburn s 13 game winning streak But LSU quarterback Jamie Howard threw two interceptions that were returned for Auburn touchdowns tying the game LSU regained the lead with a field goal but when the Bayou Bengals were trying to run out the clock Howard threw his fourth interception of the game and incredibly Auburn returned the pick for another touchdown giving the home team a 30 26 lead LSU drove into Auburn territory in the game s final minute but Howard threw his fifth and sixth interceptions on consecutive drives sealing the win for Auburn LSU never recovered and ultimately finished 4 7 On November 12 LSU lost to Southern Miss Hallman s former team 20 18 in front of the smallest Death Valley crowd since 1974 announced attendance was 51 718 but LSU officials estimated the actual crowd was closer to 40 000 Two days later LSU athletic director Joe Dean gave Hallman an ultimatum resign or be fired When Hallman refused to resign Dean fired him though he was allowed to finish out the season 62 He closed out his career at LSU with a 30 12 win over Arkansas the Tigers first regular season win in the series since 1956 His overall record was 16 28 his winning percentage of 364 is the worst for a non interim coach in school history Gerry DiNardo 1995 1999 edit On December 13 1994 LSU hired Vanderbilt head coach Gerry DiNardo as Hallman s replacement 63 Prior to the 1995 season DiNardo petitioned the NCAA to reverse a rule which had been in place since 1983 that prohibited teams from wearing white jerseys at home After the ruling LSU was able to wear its white jerseys at home in Tiger Stadium for the first time since 1982 64 For its first home game of the 1995 season in what was dubbed the Bring Back the Magic Game LSU in white jerseys upset No 5 Auburn winning 12 6 65 With no time remaining in the game LSU defensive back Troy Twillie intercepted Auburn quarterback Patrick Nix s 11 yard pass into the end zone to secure the victory 65 The Tigers achieved their first winning season in six seasons and finished with a 7 4 1 record defeating a Nick Saban led Michigan State team in the 1995 Independence Bowl 66 After nine straight losses to Steve Spurrier led Florida the No 14 Tigers defeated the No 1 ranked defending national champion Gators 28 21 in Tiger Stadium in 1997 LSU running back Kevin Faulk was featured on the following week s cover of Sports Illustrated with the title See you later Gators 67 In a game referred to as No 1 Falls it was the first time LSU defeated a No 1 ranked team and the first time the goalposts were ever torn down in Tiger Stadium 68 In 1998 LSU started the season with a preseason ranking of No 9 They climbed to No 6 before losing to No 12 Georgia on October 3 The next week the No 11 ranked Tigers lost to the No 6 Florida After the loss to the Gators LSU dropped 13 of the next 17 games including losses to a No 10 Notre Dame and No 13 Arkansas later in the 1998 season In 1999 LSU lost to No 10 Georgia No 8 Florida No 12 Mississippi State No 25 Ole Miss and No 12 Alabama 69 On November 15 1999 two days after the Tigers lost to unranked Houston at home LSU chancellor Mark Emmert fired DiNardo with one game remaining in the season DiNardo was given the option to coach the final game of the season against Arkansas but DiNardo declined 70 Instead offensive line coach Hal Hunter was named interim coach leading LSU to a 35 10 victory over the Razorbacks Nick Saban 2000 2004 edit nbsp Arkansas vs LSU 2004 nbsp 2004 Sugar Bowl BCS National Championship Game LSU 21 Oklahoma 14 On December 1 1999 LSU hired Michigan State head coach Nick Saban as DiNardo s replacement 71 In Saban s first season of 2000 LSU returned to national prominence by beating No 11 Tennessee in overtime 38 31 on ESPN after which the goal posts were torn down for only the 2nd time in the history of Tiger Stadium The victory over Tennessee also marked the first time that LSU played in an overtime game at home Just a few weeks later the goal posts were again ripped down as LSU beat Alabama 30 28 on CBS in Baton Rouge for the first time in 31 years This was the 3rd and final time that the goal posts came down in Death Valley In 2001 No 21 LSU staged an upset victory over No 2 Tennessee in the SEC Championship winning 31 20 The victory earned LSU a spot in its first Sugar Bowl since 1986 and knocked the Volunteers out of national title contention No 16 LSU survived an upset bid from unranked Kentucky in 2002 by winning the game 33 30 on a miraculous 75 yard Hail Mary pass as time expired known as the Bluegrass Miracle Kentucky coach Guy Morriss had received the traditional Gatorade bath right before the Hail Mary Kentucky fans believing they had won had already rushed the field and torn down one goal post In 2003 No 11 LSU outlasted No 7 Georgia 17 10 With ESPN College Gameday on hand for the first time since 1997 Quarterback Matt Mauck found wide receiver Skyler Green for a 34 yard touchdown with 3 03 remaining in the game All American cornerback Corey Webster sealed the victory with an interception in the final minute The contest dubbed the Let the Valley Shake Game is notable for LSU fans chanting LSU LSU after a Georgia touchdown 72 Georgia head coach Mark Richt was quoted as saying Usually when the opposing team does well the crowd quiets down 72 All I began to hear was a chant L S U L S U 72 It got louder and louder and louder It was the loudest I ve ever heard a stadium 72 The win catapulted LSU onto the national scene LSU won its second title and became the BCS national champion by defeating Oklahoma 21 14 in the 2004 Sugar Bowl BCS National Championship Game The following season saw the Tigers post a 9 3 record ending the year with a No 16 ranking after a loss in the 2005 Capital One Bowl on a final play touchdown pass Prior to the game Saban announced that he would be leaving LSU to become the head coach for the Miami Dolphins 73 Les Miles 2005 2016 edit On January 4 2005 Oklahoma State head coach Les Miles was named the new LSU head coach 74 In Miles s first season in 2005 at LSU was moved to Arizona State s Sun Devil Stadium due to the effects of Hurricane Katrina With one endzone painted with www KatrinaSRF com and the other with Together We Stand along with logos of the states of Louisiana and Arizona LSU rallied in the fourth quarter for a 35 31 comeback victory Trailing 17 7 in the fourth quarter LSU returned a blocked field goal and punt for touchdowns to ignite the comeback The lead went back and forth with Arizona State taking a 31 28 lead with 4 07 to play Quarterback JaMarcus Russell then lead the Tigers on a 10 play 91 yard drive capped with a 39 yard touchdown pass to Early Doucet on fourth and 10 to give LSU a 35 31 lead LSU s defense then stopped Arizona State on downs at the LSU 30 yard line to secure the victory In 2006 Russell completed a touchdown pass to WR Early Doucet with 9 seconds to go to beat Tennessee in Neyland Stadium after a breakout performance by Tennessee backup QB Jonathan Crompton nbsp 2008 BCS National Championship Game LSU 38 Ohio State 24 No 2 LSU played what was hyped as one of the most exciting games ever played in Tiger Stadium against No 9 Florida in 2007 The game is also known for the LSU students leaving thousands of messages on the phone of Florida quarterback Tim Tebow prompting him to give a telephone hand gesture to the LSU student section following an early touchdown Florida began the fourth quarter with a 24 14 lead but behind solid defense and being a perfect 5 for 5 on fourth down conversions the Tigers were able to take the lead 28 24 with 1 06 left in the game after a Jacob Hester touchdown to defeat the Gators It was LSU s first national primetime game on CBS since 1981 and the game has been dubbed Primetime Drama LSU went on to defeat No 1 Ohio State in the BCS national championship 38 24 becoming the first school to win two BCS national championship titles and improving their BCS record to 4 0 the best of any team They also became the first two loss team to ever play in the BCS national championship nbsp LSU vs Alabama 2011 Game of the Century In the 5th game of the 2010 season undefeated No 12 LSU trailed the Volunteers 14 10 with 0 04 left on the clock and the ball spotted on Tennessee s 2 yard line On 3rd and goal after a failed quarterback sneak attempt and with time disappearing off the clock LSU attempted to send in several players for a substitution package Seeing that the time was about to expire center T Bob Hebert snapped the ball before quarterback Jordan Jefferson was ready the ball was fumbled Jefferson was tackled and the clock expired On further review Tennessee was penalized half the distance to the goalline for illegal participation Amid the confusion in the waning seconds Tennessee coaches sent 4 players onto the field when they saw LSU make a substitution Only two players then left the field leaving the Volunteers with 13 players lined up on defense Due to the penalty LSU got the ball back for a single untimed play on the 1 yard line With the last play running back Stevan Ridley received the toss sweep charging forward only to be hit near the line of scrimmage but continued to drive forward through two Tennessee defenders and into the endzone for the game winning score The ninth regulation game of the 2011 season for LSU found the No 1 nationally ranked Tigers against the No 2 Alabama Crimson Tide in a match called the Game of the Century 75 or the Matchup of the Year 76 Both teams were undefeated and both were also coming off a bye week viewed as important to the BCS Championship game as the inside track by many of the sportswriters the press built up the game in a Super Bowl style atmosphere Ultimately the game came down to field position and a series of field goals as the top ranked defense of both teams prevented any touchdowns Alabama missed three field goals and a fourth was blocked during regulation leading to a 6 6 tie heading into overtime On the first possession of overtime Alabama again missed a field goal from 52 yards out only to watch LSU earn the win on the next possession with a chip shot field goal As a result it was the second lowest scoring matchup between No 1 and No 2 teams in the history of the NCAA with a 9 6 decision 77 For the first time in BCS National Championship history two SEC teams the No 1 LSU Tigers and the No 2 Alabama Crimson Tide again faced each other in the National Championship Game Alabama won the game 21 0 The SEC only title game added impetus to the push for a national playoff system and hastened the death of the BCS system as implemented up to that time 78 Having lost three straight games after a 7 0 start into the season rumors were floating that LSU would buy out Miles contract after the 2015 season 79 However Miles was retained for the 2016 season 80 On September 25 2016 LSU fired Miles and offensive coordinator Cam Cameron after an 18 13 loss to Auburn the previous day and a 2 2 start to begin the season 81 Ed Orgeron 2016 2021 edit nbsp Ed Orgeron After the firing of Les Miles defensive line coach Ed Orgeron became LSU s interim head coach 82 Orgeron stated that he was going to flip the script He promoted tight ends coach Steve Ensminger to offensive coordinator and brought back Pete Jenkins to take over as defensive line coach Orgeron also decided to shorten practices and spend more time in the film room in order to keep players fresh In addition he brought the theme of daily practices he modeled from coach Pete Carroll during Orgeron s first stint as an assistant at USC These practice days have descriptive nicknames like Tell the Truth Monday Competition Tuesday Turnover Wednesday No Repeat Thursday and Focus Friday Under Orgeron s watch LSU finished out the season with a 6 2 record Later in 2016 he was hired as the full time head coach 83 The beginning of the 2017 season saw Orgeron hire Matt Canada to be the offensive coordinator Canada was known for an offensive playbook that was heavily based on setting skilled positions in motion prior to the snap thus using jet sweeps often The season began with LSU ranked in the top 15 but early losses to Mississippi State and Troy quickly found LSU unranked However the team went 7 2 in their remaining games finishing the year with a 9 4 record nbsp LSU vs Texas 2019 3rd and 17 The 2018 season began with a season opening upset of 8th ranked Miami followed by another upset of 7th ranked Auburn These victories helped LSU rise to 5th in the CFP rankings but a loss to 25th ranked Florida sent LSU tumbling back to 13th In response the Tigers pulled off a shocking upset of No 2 Georgia 84 The Tigers then avenged the previous year s loss to Mississippi State The victories over Georgia and Mississippi State propelled LSU to being ranked No 3 by the CFP going into a game against top ranked Alabama The LSU offense that had seemed to turn around after Steve Ensminger took over the duties of offensive coordinator was unable to score against Alabama s defense After the loss to Alabama LSU was able to defeat Arkansas and Rice before falling to Texas A amp M in a 7 overtime game With a 9 3 record LSU was invited to the Fiesta Bowl to play the University of Central Florida who had not lost a game in the previous two seasons On New Years Day 2019 LSU gave UCF their first loss since 2016 LSU finished the 2018 season with a record of 10 3 and were ranked sixth in the nation by the AP poll and seventh by the Coaches poll LSU was not predicted to have a good season in 2018 and some including SEC commentator Paul Finebaum believed it would be Orgeron s last until he had a turnaround season nbsp 2020 College Football Playoff National Championship Game post game press conference LSU 42 Clemson 25 After opening the season with a home win versus Georgia Southern Orgeron s 2019 team recorded a statement road win over Texas in week two The key play of the game was a third down pass needing seventeen yards for a first down late in the fourth quarter 85 86 The Joe Burrow to Justin Jefferson pass resulted in a 61 yard touchdown sealing the victory 87 That play led to the game being labeled the 3rd and 17 Game 85 88 This game propelled the team to an undefeated regular season including a 46 41 victory over Alabama in the 2019 version of the Game of the Century at Bryant Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa A win over Arkansas in the penultimate game of the regular season clinched the SEC West division title and secured a berth in the 2019 SEC Championship Game against Georgia This was their first appearance in the SEC Championship Game since 2011 The traditionally defensive minded Tigers averaged over 48 points per game led by quarterback Joe Burrow Baton Rouge native running back Clyde Edwards Helaire and star receivers Ja Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson Burrow set new LSU and SEC single season records for passing yards with 4 366 his 44 touchdown passes set a new LSU record and tied the SEC mark Orgeron s Tigers defeated the Georgia Bulldogs in the SEC Championship Game to win their first SEC title since 2011 On Sunday December 8 2019 they were named the No 1 seed in the College Football Playoff They met the Big 12 Conference champion Oklahoma Sooners in the semifinals in the Peach Bowl defeating them by a score of 63 28 Following the regular season Orgeron was named the winner of the 2019 AP College Football Coach of the Year Award and Home Depot Coach of the Year Award Joe Burrow won the 2019 Heisman Trophy 89 On January 13 2020 Orgeron won his first national championship as a head coach with a win over the unbeaten defending national champion Clemson Tigers 42 25 finishing the season 15 0 90 Orgeron and the LSU Tigers won the national title in their home state at the Mercedes Benz Superdome in New Orleans LSU s 2020 season was shortened in response to the COVID 19 pandemic They played a ten game all SEC schedule LSU started the season ranked No 6 in the AP Poll but dropped out of the rankings after three games and finished the season with a record of 5 5 The Tigers had three different starting quarterbacks throughout the course of the season Myles Brennan started the first three games but was injured during the game against Missouri on October 10 and was lost for the season T J Finley started the next five games Max Johnson started the final two games of the season He led the Tigers to an upset win over the No 6 Florida Gators in Gainesville and a shootout win over Ole Miss in the season finale In March 2021 a woman testifying in front of Louisiana state legislators claimed that she had reported an instance of sexual harassment by LSU running back Derrius Guice to Orgeron but that the coach had taken no action against him and in fact called the woman and asked her to forgive Guice Despite high expectations and a favorable schedule LSU stumbled to a 3 3 start in 2021 losing several games in which they were favored Following the tumultuous start Orgeron s Tigers were able to upend the No 20 ranked Florida Gators in a thrilling rivalry game matchup Despite the victory LSU administrators announced the following day on October 17 2021 that they had reached a mutual agreement for Orgeron to leave the program at the end of the 2021 season 91 92 Orgeron s last game was a last second victory against Texas A amp M at home which allowed the Tigers to finish the season at 6 6 and become bowl eligible Despite this Orgeron announced shortly after the game that he would not coach in the bowl game and that offensive line coach Brad Davis would be named interim head coach Brian Kelly 2022 present edit On November 30 2021 Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly was named the 34th head coach at LSU replacing Ed Orgeron 93 Kelly cited wanting to be with the best and the commitment to excellence rich traditions and unrivaled pride and passion of LSU Football for the move 94 His signed contract also more than triples his previous salary from his 2021 salary of 2 67 million to 9 million in 2022 with the total deal being worth 95 million over ten years excluding incentives His season started with a 24 23 loss to Florida State in the Allstate Louisiana Kickoff at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans Florida State had a 24 10 lead but LSU slowly chipped away at the Seminoles lead and scored a last second touchdown to make the game 24 23 The Tigers opted to kick the extra point to force overtime but Florida State was able to successfully block the kick and thus sealed the victory 95 Moving forward the Tigers would win 4 straight against Southern Mississippi State New Mexico and Auburn before eventually losing to Tennessee by a score of 13 40 The Tigers would then go on to beat Florida upset 7 ranked Ole Miss upset 6 ranked Alabama 32 31 beat unranked Arkansas 13 10 clinching the SEC West and earning a spot in the 2022 SEC Championship against 1 ranked Georgia They would go on to win against UAB 41 10 but lose to Texas A amp M 23 38 Conference affiliations editLSU has been independent and affiliated with three conferences 96 181 196 inconsistent Independent 1893 1895 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1896 1922 Southern Conference 1923 1932 Southeastern Conference 1933 present Championships editClaimed National championships edit LSU claims four national championships 1958 2003 2007 and 2019 97 and have been selected national champions in four additional seasons 1908 1936 1962 2011 by NCAA designated major selectors 98 They are additionally recorded as being the Williamson System co champions for 1935 an apparent error in the NCAA records book 98 99 In 1958 they finished as the only undefeated team with a victory over Clemson in the Sugar Bowl and were named the national champions by both major polls AP and Coaches In 2003 2007 and 2019 LSU claimed the national championship after winning a postseason bowl national championship game Year Coach Selector Record Bowl Final AP Final Coaches 1958 Paul Dietzel AP and Coaches n 2 11 0 Won Sugar Bowl No 1 No 1 2003 Nick Saban Bowl Championship Series n 3 13 1 Won Sugar Bowl BCS National Championship Game No 2 No 1 2007 Les Miles Bowl Championship Series n 4 12 2 Won BCS National Championship Game No 1 No 1 2019 Ed Orgeron College Football Playoff n 5 15 0 Won Peach Bowl College Football Playoff Semifinal Won College Football Playoff National Championship Game No 1 No 1 Claimed national championships 1958 national championshipThe 1958 LSU Tigers football team under head coach Paul Dietzel cruised to an undefeated season capped by a win over Clemson in the 1959 Sugar Bowl LSU was named the national champion in both the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll prior to their 7 0 Sugar Bowl victory over Clemson LSU s shutout victory over 12 Clemson was convincing and highlighted LSU as the only team in the country to go undefeated Army Auburn and Air Force did not lose all season but they each had one game that ended in a tie It was the first recognized national championship for LSU in the poll era With a 10 0 regular season record LSU was crowned national champion by the Associated Press and the Coaches Poll UPI as well as by 37 other selectors LSU s total first place votes was 130 to win the 1958 National Championship in the AP poll LSU received 29 of the 35 first place votes to win the 1 ranking in the Coaches poll LSU earned the 1 rankings in the AP and Coaches poll during week 6 and held on to the 1 rankings for the rest of the year to win the 1958 National Championship in both major polls 100 2003 national championshipThe 2003 LSU Tigers football team was coached by Nick Saban LSU won the BCS National Championship the first national championship for LSU since 1958 The Tigers battled for an 11 1 regular season record and then defeated Georgia in the SEC Championship Game The LSU Tigers faced off against Oklahoma for the Bowl Championship Series BCS national title LSU beat Oklahoma 21 14 in the 2004 Sugar Bowl designated as the BCS National Championship Game 2007 national championshipThe 2007 LSU Tigers football team coached by Les Miles won the Southeastern Conference championship and the national championship with a 12 2 record The LSU Tigers took on the top ranked Ohio State Buckeyes in the 2008 BCS National Championship Game defeating them 38 24 This win made the LSU Tigers the first team to win two BCS National Championships in its history On their way to the BCS championship the Tigers won their tenth Southeastern Conference championship by defeating Tennessee in the 2007 SEC Championship Game LSU became the first program to win multiple BCS National Championship Games and the second program to win a national championship with multiple losses 2019 national championshipThe 2019 LSU Tigers football team coached by Ed Orgeron won the Southeastern Conference championship and the national championship with a 15 0 record The LSU Tigers defeated the Clemson Tigers in the 2020 College Football Playoff National Championship defeating them 42 25 On their way to the College Football Playoff National Championship the Tigers won their twelfth Southeastern Conference championship by defeating Georgia in the 2019 SEC Championship Game Conference championships edit LSU has won a total of 16 conference championships in three different conferences 101 107 Since becoming a founding member of the Southeastern Conference SEC in 1933 LSU has won 12 SEC championships Year Conference Coach Overall record Conference record 1896 SIAA Allen Jeardeau 6 0 4 0 1902 W S Borland 6 1 5 1 1908 Edgar R Wingard 10 0 3 0 1932 SoCon Biff Jones 6 3 1 4 0 1935 SEC Bernie Moore 9 2 0 5 0 1936 9 1 1 6 0 1958 Paul Dietzel 11 0 6 0 1961 10 1 6 0 1970 Charles McClendon 9 3 5 0 1986 Bill Arnsparger 9 3 5 1 1988 Mike Archer 8 4 6 1 2001 Nick Saban 10 3 5 3 2003 13 1 7 1 2007 Les Miles 12 2 6 2 2011 13 1 8 0 2019 Ed Orgeron 15 0 8 0 LSU claims a co championship 101 107 while Clemson claims a sole championship 102 Division championships edit Since the SEC began divisional play in 1992 LSU has won or shared the SEC West title 10 times and is 5 2 in the SEC Championship game 101 119 121 Year Division Opponent SEC CG Result 1996 SEC West N A lost tiebreaker to Alabama 1997 N A lost tiebreaker to Auburn 2001 Tennessee W 31 20 2002 N A lost tiebreaker to Arkansas 2003 Georgia W 34 13 2005 Georgia L 14 34 2007 Tennessee W 21 14 2011 Georgia W 42 10 2019 Georgia W 37 10 2022 Georgia L 30 50Logos and uniforms editHelmets Pre 1946 LSU wore leather helmets From 1947 through 1955 LSU wore an old gold helmet In 1956 head coach Paul Dietzel changed the color of the helmet to a yellow gold similar to that of the Green Bay Packers It featured a white one inch center stripe with purple three quarter inch flanking stripes From 1957 through 1971 LSU added jersey numbers to the sides of the helmet In 1972 the first logo was introduced a tiger head inside a purple circle with LSU written underneath the tiger head In 1977 LSU introduced its current helmet The logo features curved LSU lettering written above the Tiger head logo Purple face masks were introduced in 1980 In 2014 LSU introduced a new Tiger head logo Special helmets In 1997 LSU wore white helmets in the Independence Bowl vs Notre Dame In 2007 LSU wore white helmets in a game against Tulane to promote relief for Hurricane Katrina In 2009 LSU wore old gold styled helmets in a game against Arkansas as part of a Nike Pro Combat promotion The uniforms were donned Couchon De Lait which is cajun for pig roast The name stemmed from LSU s proximity to the cajun culture of the nearby Acadiana area and the mascot of Arkansas being the razorbacks a type of wild boar or pig 103 In 2011 for a Nike Pro Combat promotion the Tigers wore a white helmet with old gold and purple stripes to accompany a white uniform 104 In 2015 LSU wore their white helmets in a game against South Carolina that was moved from Williams Brice Stadium to Tiger Stadium due to the flooding disaster in South Carolina and again at Ole Miss where LSU wore all white uniforms The Tigers wore those helmets again for 2019 games vs Northwestern State and Vanderbilt A special throwback helmet with LSU s original L that is still used by their L Club and the jersey number of each player was used in a home game against Mississippi State in 2016 along with a special gold throwback jersey with a custom number font replicating jerseys from the Y A Tittle era at LSU The Tigers wore purple helmets for their 2018 home game vs Mississippi State In 2021 the Tigers wore white helmets along with their all white uniform for their home game vs Texas A amp M and repeated this for their 2022 game vs Tennessee Jerseys nbsp The Tigers coming out of the tunnel The current style of jerseys were introduced by coach Paul Dietzel in 1957 with TV numerals on the shoulders Those numbers were moved to the sleeves in 1959 LSU s white jerseys have purple numbers on the front back and sleeves with a gold center stripe flanked by two purple stripes encircling the shoulders LSU s purple jerseys have white numbers on the front back and sleeves with a white center stripe flanked by two yellow stripes encircling the shoulders Names were added to the backs of jerseys in 1972 LSU has worn gold jerseys four times recently vs Vanderbilt in 1996 vs Notre Dame in the 1997 Independence Bowl at Florida in 1998 and throwbacks vs Mississippi State in 2016 LSU also wore gold jerseys as their primary jerseys during the 1940s Save for the throwback jerseys LSU wore gold due to the intense dislike of purple exhibited by then LSU coach Gerry DiNardo DiNardo s successor Nick Saban resurrected purple jerseys for the second game of the 2000 season vs Houston Since the wearing of white jerseys has become a tradition for LSU football the white jerseys are typically worn for both home and away games 105 The exception is for non SEC home games other than the home opener where LSU wears purple jerseys Also though rare in the case of away games the home teams may choose to wear white and if so purple is the default for LSU this occurred in the 2004 season opener vs Oregon State which did not want to wear its black jerseys in the intense Louisiana heat In 2015 South Carolina was forced to move its scheduled home game vs LSU to Baton Rouge due to severe flooding in Columbia South Carolina Prior to the site change the Gamecocks declared they would wear white jerseys at Williams Brice Stadium so the Tigers wore purple jerseys for the first time for an SEC game in Tiger Stadium South Carolina was the designated home team since 1994 vs Alabama In 2019 LSU was asked by the Southeastern Conference to wear purple jerseys for its away game vs Vanderbilt to provide sufficient contrast to the Commodores gray jerseys From 1983 through 1994 LSU was mandated to wear purple jerseys at home due to an NCAA rule which required the visiting team to wear white jerseys LSU wore white jerseys as the designated home team for the 1987 Sugar Bowl vs Nebraska and 1987 Gator Bowl vs South Carolina In 1995 the NCAA changed the rule to allow the home team to wear white if it obtained prior approval of the visiting team In 1997 the Southeastern Conference ruled the home team would have choice of jersey color without consent of the visitors for conference games Pants nbsp LSU on defense The team traditionally wears one style of pants which are gold with white and purple trim For a 1995 game at Kentucky the Tigers wore purple pants which had no stripes and a tiger head logo on the left thigh LSU lost to the Wildcats 24 16 and the pants were never worn again 106 LSU has worn white pants on 16 occasions since 1996 Three times with gold jerseys vs Vanderbilt in 1996 vs Notre Dame in the 1997 Independence Bowl and at Florida in 1998 In 2016 LSU wore gold throwback jerseys with white pants vs Mississippi State Six times with purple jerseys in a 2007 game at Tulane to promote relief for Hurricane Katrina A 2015 game against South Carolina that was moved from Williams Brice Stadium to Tiger Stadium due to the flood disaster in that state a 2016 home game against Southern Miss 2019 games vs Northwestern State home and Vanderbilt away and 2022 vs New Mexico home Seven times with white jerseys in a 2009 game against Arkansas a 2011 game against Auburn for a Nike Pro Combat promotion a 2015 game at Ole Miss a 2018 home game vs Mississippi State when LSU wore special white jerseys to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I These uniforms were made to look like white tigers 104 2021 vs Texas A amp M and 2022 vs Tennessee Traditions editMain article Louisiana State University traditions Tiger Stadium edit 5 yard lines Tiger Stadium is notable for putting all 5 yard line numbers on the field not just those that are multiples of 10 However the 10 yard line numbers are the only numbers that get directional arrows as the rules make no provision for 5 yard line numbers 107 H style goal posts LSU s Tiger Stadium sports H style goal posts as opposed to the more modern Y style used by most other schools today This H style allows the team to run through the goal post in the north end zone when entering the field 107 The crossbar from the goalposts which stood in the north end zone of Tiger Stadium from 1955 through 1984 is now mounted above the door which leads from LSU s locker room onto the playing field The crossbar is painted with the word WIN and superstition dictates every player entering the field touch the bar on his way out the door Night games in Tiger Stadium The tradition of playing night games in Tiger Stadium began on October 3 1931 when LSU defeated Spring Hill 35 0 Several reasons were cited for playing at night such as avoiding the heat and humidity of afternoon games avoiding scheduling conflicts with Tulane and Loyola football and giving more fans the opportunity to see the Tigers play Attendance increased and night football became an LSU tradition LSU has also traditionally played better during night games based on winning percentage 108 nbsp LSU Golden Girls Pregame show Louisiana State University Tiger Marching Band pregame show was created in 1964 and revised over the next nine years into its current format The marching band lines up along the end zone shortly before kick off Then the band strikes up a drum cadence and begins to spread out evenly across the field When the front of the band reaches the center of the field the band stops and begins to play an arrangement of Pregame Hold That Tiger While it does this the band turns to salute the fans in all four corners of the stadium Then the band resuming its march across the field begins playing Touchdown for LSU Tailgating For home football games thousands of LSU fans gather on the Baton Rouge campus They set up motor homes and tents as early as Thursday before Saturday football games 109 Tailgating is found across the entire campus with many fans tailgating in the same spot year after year LSU has been consistently ranked as the top tailgating location in the country ESPN com ranked LSU as the top tailgating destination in America citation needed The Sporting News proclaimed Saturday Night in Death Valley and Tiger tailgating as the top tradition in college football 110 Sports Illustrated said When It Comes To Great Tailgating Nothing Compares To LSU 111 LSU s tailgating was named No 1 in an Associated Press poll on top tailgating spots and by a CNN network survey on top tailgating locations 112 Victory Gold In 2012 a new tradition was established at Tiger Stadium Following an LSU football victory the lights that illuminate the upper arches on the north end of the stadium light up in LSU Victory Gold 113 Victory Hill The LSU football players coaches cheerleaders and Mike the Tiger in his cage Walk Down Victory Hill on North Stadium Drive prior to each home game on their way to Tiger Stadium 107 Thousands of fans line both sides of the road to watch and cheer for the Tigers football team The practice was started under head coach Gerry Dinardo and it endures today The LSU Tiger Marching Band or The Golden Band from Tigerland Golden Girls and Colorguard March Down Victory Hill about an hour prior to each home game Fans line both sides of the road and listen for the cadence of drums announcing the band s departure from the Greek Theatre and await the arrival of the band 114 The band stops on top of Victory Hill and begins to play their drum cadence while beginning to march down Victory Hill The band then stops on Victory Hill and begins to play the opening strains of the Pregame Salute Then while playing the introduction to Touchdown for LSU the band begins to run in tempo through the streets and down the hill amidst the crowd of cheering fans From there the band enters the PMAC and plays a pep rally for TAF members White jerseys LSU is notable as one of the few college football teams that wears white jerseys for home games as opposed to their darker jerseys in their case purple Most other NCAA football teams wear their darker jerseys in home games even though football is one of the few college sports that do not require a specific jersey type for each respective team for instance college basketball requires home teams to wear white or light colored jerseys while the away team wears their darker jerseys and is similar to the National Football League in letting the home team decide what to wear The tradition started in 1958 when Coach Paul Dietzel decided that LSU would wear white jerseys for home games Another story is the tradition first started when Dietzel had LSU wear white at home for good luck against a ranked Georgia Tech team in 1957 because Georgia Tech s team had long been known for wearing white at home LSU won the game and he continued that tradition for the 1958 season and LSU went on to win the national championship that year Since the 1958 championship season LSU continued to wear white jerseys at home games through the 18 year tenure of Charles McClendon Then in 1983 new NCAA rules prohibited teams from wearing white jerseys at home Because of this LSU wore purple jerseys during home games from 1983 to 1994 The team s fans believed wearing purple jerseys were bad luck and often complained about being forced to wear purple jerseys at home 115 In 1995 LSU s new coach Gerry DiNardo was determined to restore LSU s tradition of white home jerseys DiNardo personally met with each member of the NCAA Football Rules Committee lobbying LSU s case DiNardo was successful and LSU again began wearing white jerseys at home when the 1995 season began In LSU s first home game with the white jerseys unranked LSU prevailed in a 12 6 upset victory over No 6 Auburn 116 The 1995 rule allowing LSU to wear white at home had one stipulation the visiting team must agree for conference and non conference games In 1997 the SEC amended its rule to allow the home team its choice of jersey color for conference games without prior approval of the visiting team Therefore only for non conference home games does the home team seek permission to wear white jerseys at home In 2009 the NCAA further relaxed the previous rule that required most away teams to wear white The rule now states that teams must simply wear contrasting colors 117 After the 1995 rule change on three occasions LSU was forced to wear colored jerseys at Tiger Stadium The first time was in 1996 against Vanderbilt who was still angry at LSU for hiring Gerry DiNardo who left Vanderbilt to become LSU s head coach after the 1994 season LSU wore gold jerseys for that game a 35 0 LSU victory and fans were encouraged to wear white in an effort to white out the Commodores The other was in 2004 when Oregon State did not want to suffer in its black jerseys due to the humid weather of Louisiana in late summer thus forcing LSU to wear its purple jerseys for a nationally televised game on ESPN On October 10 2015 LSU was scheduled to play a road conference game at South Carolina but due to massive flooding in the state of South Carolina the game was relocated from Columbia to Baton Rouge Despite the game being played at Tiger Stadium South Carolina was still the designated home team and had first choice of jersey selection South Carolina chose to wear white as they had originally planned forcing LSU to wear their purple jerseys at Tiger Stadium for an SEC game for the first time since 1994 118 After the 1995 rule change LSU was forced to wear colored jerseys on the road on four occasions In 1998 and 2000 Florida coach Steve Spurrier exercised this option and forced LSU to don a colored jersey at Gainesville The Tigers wore gold in 1998 under Gerry DiNardo lost 22 10 and purple in 2000 under Nick Saban lost 41 9 In 2007 and 2009 LSU also wore its purple jerseys on the road at Mississippi State but the Tigers emerged victorious both times 45 0 in 2007 and 30 26 in 2009 119 Songs and cheers edit Callin Baton Rouge The Garth Brooks song Callin Baton Rouge is played at each game 120 nbsp LSU cheerleader Geaux Tigers A common cheer for all LSU athletics Geaux Tigers pronounced Go Tigers is derived from a common ending in Cajun French names eaux Fans began using this spelling in the 1990s to add local flavor to the standard cheer The phrase was trademarked by the university in 2005 121 Hot Boudin A cheer before and during games about famous food in Louisiana It goes Hot boudin cold coush coush come on tigers push push push 122 Push is pronounced poosh to rhyme with coush coush koosh koosh Coush coush is a Cajun dish generally served for breakfast 123 Neck A spinoff of Talkin Out da Side of Ya Neck 124 Tiger bait LSU fans will yell Tiger Bait Tiger Bait at visiting fans 125 Tiger Bandits Whenever LSU forces a turnover or gets the ball back via a defensive stop the LSU band plays the Tiger Bandits song and LSU fans bow in respect to the defensive stop The original title of the song was called Chinese Bandits but the title was eventually changed to Tiger Bandits or just simply Bandits to make the tradition more inclusive The term Chinese Bandits originated as the nickname that LSU Coach Paul Dietzel gave to the defensive unit he organized in 1958 which helped LSU to win its first national championship The next season the 1959 Chinese Bandit defense held their opponents to an average of only 143 2 yards per game No LSU defense since has done better 96 Jersey No 18 edit Jersey No 18 is an LSU tradition established in 2003 when quarterback Matt Mauck guided LSU to a national championship After Mauck s final season he passed jersey No 18 to running back Jacob Hester who helped LSU win the 2007 national championship The jersey became synonymous with success on and off the field as well as having a selfless attitude Each season a player is chosen by the coaching staff to wear the No 18 jersey 126 In 2017 it was the first year LSU awarded the jersey to two players one each on offense and defense 127 No 18 by season 2003 Matt Mauck quarterback 2004 2007 Jacob Hester running back 2008 2009 Richard Dickson tight end 2010 Richard Murphy running back 128 2011 Brandon Taylor safety 129 2012 Bennie Logan defensive tackle 130 2013 Lamin Barrow linebacker 131 2014 Terrence Magee running back 132 2015 2016 Tre Davious White cornerback 133 2017 Christian LaCouture defensive end and J D Moore fullback 127 2018 Foster Moreau tight end 134 2019 Lloyd Cushenberry center and K Lavon Chaisson linebacker 135 2020 Chris Curry running back and Damone Clark linebacker 136 2021 Avery Atkins placekicker punter and Damone Clark linebacker 137 2022 BJ Ojulari defensive end 138 2023 Mekhi Wingo defensive tackle DBU edit Beginning in 2012 LSU had a high number of defensive backs earn recognition for their play leading to both current and former players to refer to the school as Defensive Back University or DBU 139 140 This has led to a sense of pride among LSU defensive backs who strive to continue the tradition of excellence at the position 141 Since 2005 28 LSU defensive backs have been drafted into the NFL including seven in the first round LaRon Landry 6th pick in 2007 Patrick Peterson 5th pick in 2011 Morris Claiborne 6th pick in 2012 Eric Reid 18th pick in 2013 Jamal Adams 6th pick in 2017 Tre Davious White 27th pick in 2017 and Derek Stingley Jr 3rd pick in 2022 142 Rivalries editAlabama edit Main article Alabama LSU football rivalry LSU and Alabama have played every year since the 1960s It has been mentioned by the LSU fan base the origins of the rivalry date back to a 15 game undefeated streak Alabama had in Tiger Stadium which is generally considered to be one of the most hostile atmospheres in college football While the Alabama rivalries against Auburn and Tennessee may overshadow their rivalry with LSU the significance of this annual rivalry increased after Alabama hired former LSU coach Nick Saban in 2007 The LSU Alabama rivalry continued after the November 5 2011 game and the 2012 National Championship where the two teams faced off 143 Alabama leads the series 56 27 5 through the 2023 season 144 Arkansas edit Main article Arkansas LSU football rivalry nbsp The Golden Boot trophy is awarded to the annual winner of the Arkansas LSU football game Prior to Arkansas joining LSU in the Southeastern Conference the two programs met a total of 36 times including the famed Ice Bowl The schools played against each other for the first time in 1901 in Baton Rouge a 15 0 LSU victory The rivalry grew while it was played annually from 1906 to 1936 with 1918 being the only year the game was not played between those dates The series was contested in Shreveport from 1913 to 1936 After the Razorbacks left the Southwest Conference in 1990 Arkansas joined the SEC in 1991 and rekindled the rivalry with LSU During their first year in the SEC Arkansas would defeat the Tigers in the Razorbacks first game against LSU in Fayetteville 30 6 their first victory against LSU since the Razorbacks 32 0 shutout of the Tigers in 1929 The winner takes home the Golden Boot a 175 pound four foot tall 24 karat gold trophy in the shape of the states of Arkansas and Louisiana that resembles a boot The game played the day after Thanksgiving until the 2010 season was usually the last regular season game for each team and is broadcast on CBS LSU and Arkansas now close their respective seasons against the SEC s newest members the Tigers vs Texas A amp M and the Razorbacks vs Missouri In 2002 the rivalry gained momentum as the game winner would represent the Western Division of the SEC in the SEC Championship Game Arkansas won on a last second touchdown pass by Matt Jones In 2006 the Razorbacks who had already clinched the SEC Western Division and were on a 10 game winning streak were beaten by LSU in Little Rock In 2007 Arkansas defeated top ranked LSU in triple overtime giving them their first win in Baton Rouge since 1993 and again defended the Golden Boot trophy with a last minute touchdown drive in 2008 Fifteenth ranked LSU won back the trophy for the first time in two years in 2009 after Razorback kicker Alex Tejada missed a field goal that would have sent the game into a second overtime and LSU went on to lose the Capitol One Bowl In 2011 with both teams ranked in the top 3 in the AP Poll No 1 LSU prevailed over No 3 Arkansas by a score of 41 17 sending LSU to the SEC title game en route to being shutout in the 2012 BCS National Championship Game LSU rode the momentum from the 2011 win by grinding out back to back one possession wins in 2012 and 2013 against Arkansas teams that won four and three games respectively Arkansas returned the favor with consecutive 17 point victories in 2014 breaking a 17 game SEC losing streak for the Hogs while pitching a 17 0 shutout against the No 17 Tigers Arkansas s tenth time holding LSU to 0 points and the only shutout in the series since 1995 and 2015 a 31 14 romp in Baton Rouge which saw the unranked Razorbacks lead the No 9 Tigers the whole game LSU lost against Arkansas in overtime in 2021 but rebounded in 2022 to win 13 10 in Fayetteville LSU leads the series 42 23 2 through the 2023 season with two LSU wins being vacated 145 Auburn edit Main article Auburn LSU football rivalry While Auburn s rivalries against Alabama and Georgia may overshadow its rivalry with LSU in the 2000s LSU had a heated rivalry with the Auburn Tigers LSU and Auburn were not yearly rivals until the SEC s 1992 expansion placed both Tiger teams in the Western Division The two share more than just a nickname as they have both enjoyed success in the SEC West and plenty of memorable match ups The home team won every game from 2000 through 2007 LSU leads the series 30 24 1 through the 2023 season with three LSU wins being vacated 146 Florida edit Main article Florida LSU football rivalry Although both universities were founding members of the Southeastern Conference SEC in December 1932 the Florida Gators and Tigers did not meet on the gridiron for the first time until 1937 LSU is Florida s permanent inter divisional rival LSU has played Florida every year since 1971 The longest winning streak in the LSU Florida series is held by Florida with nine victories from 1988 to 1996 LSU s longest winning streak is four from 1977 to 1980 The winner of the Florida LSU game went on to win the Bowl Championship Series BCS national championship game from 2006 to 2008 Some of the notable games in this rivalry include the 1960 Wristband Robbery 1964 Hurricane Delay 1972 Flooded Swamp 1989 College Football s First Overtime Game 1997 LSU s Revenge 2006 Tebow Domination 2007 5 for 5 on fourth down and 2016 Hurricane Delay Pt 2 Florida handed LSU its most lopsided defeat in program history a 58 3 rout at Baton Rouge in 1993 With a few exceptions mostly during Spurrier s coaching tenure when the Gators routinely won by large margins this rivalry has been known for close games in recent years with both teams usually coming into the match up highly ranked The Gators and Tigers have combined to win five national championships and eleven SEC titles over the past two decades Due to three vacated LSU wins Florida leads the series 33 31 3 through the 2023 season 147 Mississippi State edit Main article LSU Mississippi State football rivalry The LSU Mississippi State rivalry is an annual football game between the Louisiana State Tigers and Mississippi State Bulldogs Both universities are founding members of the Southeastern Conference as well as the Western Division This rivalry is LSU s longest rivalry with 108 meetings LSU is second only to Ole Miss 3 games behind on Mississippi St s list of most commonly played opponents Mississippi State s 34 29 victory on September 20 2014 engineered by quarterback Dak Prescott a Louisiana native was the Bulldogs first over LSU since 1999 their first in Baton Rouge since 1991 and just their fourth overall since 1985 State defeated LSU 37 7 in 2017 for their first win in the series at Starkville since 1999 The Tigers lead the series 75 36 3 through the 2023 season with two LSU wins being vacated 148 Ole Miss edit nbsp Magnolia Bowl trophy Main article Magnolia Bowl LSU s traditional SEC rival is Ole Miss Throughout the 50 s and 60 s games between the two schools featured highly ranked squads on both sides and seemingly every contest had conference and at times national title implications The Magnolia Bowl Trophy is now awarded to the winner of the LSU Ole Miss rivalry now known as the Magnolia Bowl Recently the second to last regular season game has been between these two colleges There is still a strong rivalry between both schools From 1961 through 1988 LSU did not play on the Ole Miss campus in Oxford Mississippi Instead all of the Rebels home dates in the series were contested at Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium in Jackson LSU and Ole Miss played at Oxford in 1989 for the first time in 29 seasons then moved the series permanently to Vaught Hemingway Stadium in 1994 after the 1991 and 1992 contests returned to Jackson LSU leads the series 63 42 4 through the 2023 season with two LSU wins being vacated 149 Texas A amp M edit Main article LSU Texas A amp M football rivalry LSU and Texas A amp M began play in 1899 Since then there have been four distinct eras 1899 to 1923 1942 to 1975 1986 to 1995 and the current SEC era beginning in 2011 A amp M took that first matchup over LSU 52 0 The Aggies claimed the 1899 to 1923 era with 7 wins to LSU s 3 with two tie games LSU took the 1942 to 1975 era winning 19 to A amp M s 7 with one tie game The 1986 to 1995 era belonged again to A amp M with the Aggies winning 6 games to LSU s 4 The current era began with A amp M entering the SEC in 2011 LSU claimed victory 8 times in the first 10 meetings In 2018 the Tigers lost at Kyle Field 74 72 in a game with 7 overtimes the most overtimes in one game in FBS history During the series the two teams have meet in two bowl games LSU won in the 1944 Orange Bowl 19 14 and prevailed 41 24 in the 2011 Cotton Bowl Classic LSU leads the series 32 23 3 through the 2023 season with four Tigers wins being vacated 150 Tulane edit Main article Battle for the Rag LSU s oldest rival is Tulane the first LSU Tulane football game was played in 1893 and for the first 50 or so years of Tiger football no team was more hated by LSU fans than the Green Wave The series in which they battle for the Tiger Rag was played continuously from 1919 to 1994 151 The intrastate rivalry featured two teams which were geographically close Baton Rouge and New Orleans are roughly 80 miles 130 km apart and drew on socio political tensions between the state s capital and seat of government and its biggest and most culturally important city As opponents in the SIAA Southern Conference and SEC the Tulane rivalry flourished for many years but slowly declined after Tulane left the SEC and de emphasized athletics Until 1949 the series was very competitive with LSU leading 23 18 5 since 1949 LSU has dominated going 45 4 2 The two teams renewed the annual series in 2006 and ended it again after the 2009 meeting with LSU leading 69 23 7 152 Yearly records editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Main article List of LSU Tigers football seasons All time record vs current SEC members edit Through the 2020 season 101 106 153 failed verification School LSU record Streak First meeting Last meeting Alabama 26 55 5 Lost 1 1895 2023 Arkansas 43 23 2 Won 2 1901 2023 Auburn 30 24 1 Won 2 1901 2023 Florida 31 33 3 Won 5 1937 2023 Georgia 18 14 1 Lost 1 1928 2022 Kentucky 40 17 1 Lost 1 1949 2021 Mississippi State 75 36 3 Won 3 1896 2023 Missouri 2 2 0 Won 1 1978 2023 Ole Miss 63 42 4 Lose 1 1894 2023 South Carolina 19 2 1 Won 7 1930 2020 Tennessee 10 21 3 Lost 1 1925 2022 Texas A amp M 32 23 3 Won 1 1899 2023 Vanderbilt 24 7 1 Won 9 1902 2020 College Football Playoff rankings and polls edit College Football Playoff rankings The LSU Tigers football team finished in the Top 25 in the first College Football Playoff ranking The Tigers finished No 1 in the final ranking in 2019 Preseason polls The LSU Tigers football team has been ranked No 1 in the Pre season Associated Press Poll AP Poll in 1959 and the Pre season Coaches Poll in 2012 Final polls The LSU Tigers football team finished the season ranked No 1 in the Final Associated Press Poll AP Poll in 1958 2007 and 2019 The Tigers were ranked No 1 in the Final Coaches Poll in 1958 2003 2007 and 2019 154 The Tigers also finished No 2 in the Final AP Poll in 1936 2003 and 2011 and the Final Coaches Poll in 2011 Bowl games edit Main article List of LSU Tigers bowl games LSU has played in 52 bowl games compiling a record of 28 23 1 155 The Tigers have played in 20 straight bowl games since 2000 the fourth longest active streak in the NCAA and second longest in the Southeastern Conference 156 Individual accomplishments editPlayer awards edit Heisman Trophy Billy Cannon 1959 Joe Burrow 2019 Jayden Daniels 2023 AP Player of the Year Joe Burrow 2019 Jayden Daniels 2023 Bronko Nagurski Trophy Glenn Dorsey 2007 Chic Harley Award Billy Cannon 1958 1959 Chuck Bednarik Award Patrick Peterson 2010 Tyrann Mathieu 2011 Dave Rimington Trophy Ben Wilkerson 2004 Davey O Brien Award Joe Burrow 2019 Jayden Daniels 2023 Dick Butkus Award Devin White 2018 Fred Biletnikoff Award Josh Reed 2001 Ja Marr Chase 2019 Jack Tatum Trophy Patrick Peterson 2010 Grant Delpit 2018 Jim Thorpe Award Patrick Peterson 2010 Morris Claiborne 2011 Grant Delpit 2019 Joe Moore Award Offensive line 2019 Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award Joe Burrow 2019 Jayden Daniels 2023 Knute Rockne Memorial Trophy Ken Kavanaugh 1939 Lombardi Award Glenn Dorsey 2007 Lott Trophy Glenn Dorsey 2007 Manning Award JaMarcus Russell 2006 Joe Burrow 2019 Maxwell Award Joe Burrow 2019 Outland Trophy Glenn Dorsey 2007 Paul Hornung Award Odell Beckham Jr 2013 Sporting News Player of the Year Billy Cannon 1958 1959 Bert Jones 1972 UPI Player of the Year Billy Cannon 1958 1959 Walter Camp Award Joe Burrow 2019 Jayden Daniels 2023 Walter Camp Football Foundation All Century Team Tommy Casanova 1969 1971 Walter Camp Memorial Trophy Billy Cannon 1959 Jerry Stovall 1962 William V Campbell Trophy Rudy Niswanger 2005 Wuerffel Trophy Rudy Niswanger 2005 Heisman Trophy voting history edit nbsp QB Joe Burrow 2019 Heisman Trophy winner Year Player Finish Votes 1939 Ken Kavanaugh 7th 157 1958 Billy Cannon 3rd 158 975 1959 Billy Cannon 1st 159 1 929 1962 Jerry Stovall 2nd 160 618 1972 Bert Jones 4th 161 351 1977 Charles Alexander 9th 162 54 1978 Charles Alexander 5th 163 282 2007 Glenn Dorsey 9th 164 30 2011 Tyrann Mathieu 5th 165 327 2015 Leonard Fournette 6th 166 110 2019 Joe Burrow 1st 167 2 608 2023 Jayden Daniels 1st 168 2 028 Coaches awards edit AFCA Coach of the Year Paul Dietzel 1958 Charles McClendon 1970 Les Miles 2011 Ed Orgeron 2019 AP Coach of the Year Nick Saban 2003 Les Miles 2011 Ed Orgeron 2019 Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Paul Dietzel 1958 Nick Saban 2003 Ed Orgeron 2019 George Munger Award Ed Orgeron 2019 Home Depot Coach of the Year Les Miles 2011 Ed Orgeron 2019 Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award Les Miles 2011 Paul Bear Bryant Award Nick Saban 2003 Ed Orgeron 2019 Walter Camp Coach of the Year Jerry Stovall 1982 Les Miles 2011 Ed Orgeron 2019 Broyles Award Assistant John Chavis 2011 Joe Brady 2019 All Americans edit Main article List of LSU Tigers football All Americans LSU players have been selected as consensus All Americans on 40 occasions through the 2023 season with 13 selections being unanimous 1 2 Consensus All Americans Gaynell Tinsley 1935 1936 Ken Kavanaugh 1939 Sid Fournet 1954 Billy Cannon 1958 1959 Roy Winston 1961 Jerry Stovall 1962 Mike Anderson 1970 Tommy Casanova 1970 1971 Bert Jones 1972 Charles Alexander 1977 1978 Nacho Albergamo 1987 Wendell Davis 1987 Alan Faneca 1997 Chad Kessler 1997 Josh Reed 2001 Chad Lavalais 2003 Marcus Spears 2004 Ben Wilkerson 2004 LaRon Landry 2006 Glenn Dorsey 2007 Craig Steltz 2007 Josh Jasper 2010 Patrick Peterson 2010 Morris Claiborne 2011 Tyrann Mathieu 2011 Leonard Fournette 2015 Tre Davious White 2016 Grant Delpit 2018 2 2019 Devin White 2018 2 Greedy Williams 2018 2 Joe Burrow 2019 Ja Marr Chase 2019 Derek Stingley Jr 2019 Jayden Daniels 2023 Malik Nabers 2023 Unanimous selection Retired numbers edit See also List of NCAA football retired numbers No Player Pos Career Retired Ref 20 Billy Cannon RB 1957 1959 1960 169 37 Tommy Casanova DB 1969 1971 2009 170 21 Jerry Stovall RB 1960 1962 2018 171 SEC Legends edit Main article SEC Football Legends Starting in 1994 the Southeastern Conference has annually honored one former football player from each of the member schools as an SEC Legend Statistical leaders edit Main article LSU Tigers football statistical leadersLSU and the NFL editLSU Tigers players in the NFL Draft edit Main article List of LSU Tigers in the NFL Draft The LSU Tigers football team has had 319 players drafted into the National Football League NFL 172 This includes 39 players taken in the first round and three overall number one picks Billy Cannon in the 1960 NFL Draft and 1960 AFL Draft Jamarcus Russell in the 2007 NFL Draft and Joe Burrow in the 2020 NFL Draft 173 Hall of Fame inductees editPro Football Hall of Fame edit nbsp QB Y A Tittle nbsp FB Jim Taylor nbsp DB Johnny Robinson Main article Pro Football Hall of Fame Six former LSU football players have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame 174 Player Position Seasons at LSU Inducted Steve Van Buren HB 1940 1943 1965 Y A Tittle QB 1944 1947 1971 Jim Taylor FB 1956 1957 1976 Kevin Mawae C 1989 1993 2019 Johnny Robinson S 1957 1959 2019 Alan Faneca G 1994 1997 2021 Canadian Football Hall of Fame edit Main article Canadian Football Hall of Fame One former LSU player is a member of the Canadian Football Hall of Fame 175 Player Position Seasons at LSU Inducted Ron Estay DL 1969 1971 2003 College Football Hall of Fame edit Main article College Football Hall of Fame LSU has had eleven players and five head coaches inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame Players Player Position Seasons at LSU Inducted Gaynell Tinsley End 1934 1936 1956 Ken Kavanaugh End 1937 1939 1963 Abe Mickal RB 1933 1935 1967 Doc Fenton QB End 1904 1909 1971 Tommy Casanova CB 1969 1971 1995 Billy Cannon HB 1957 1959 2008 Jerry Stovall HB 1960 1962 2010 Charles Alexander HB 1975 1978 2012 Bert Jones QB 1969 1972 2016 Glenn Dorsey DT 2004 2007 2021 Kevin Faulk RB 1995 1998 2022 Coaches Coach Seasons at LSU Induction Dana X Bible 1916 1951 Michael Iron Mike Donahue 1923 1927 1951 Lawrence Biff Jones 1932 1934 1954 Bernie Moore 1935 1947 1954 Charles McClendon 1962 1979 1986Stadium editTiger Stadium edit nbsp Tiger Stadium nbsp Tiger Stadium Welcome to Death Valley Main article Tiger Stadium Louisiana nbsp Tiger Stadium Student Section Tiger Stadium is the 102 321 capacity home of the LSU Tigers football team The stadium is the sixth largest on campus stadium in the NCAA and the ninth largest stadium in the world The current record attendance of 102 321 was set on September 20 2014 when LSU played host to Mississippi State Tiger Stadium contains 70 skyboxes called Tiger Den suites and a 3 200 seat club level named The Stadium Club The Paul Manasseh Press Box is located in the west upper deck On April 27 2012 the LSU Board of Supervisors voted unanimously in favor of an 80 million south end zone upper deck expansion that added approximately 60 Tiger Den suites 3 000 club seats and 1 500 general public seats to bring the total capacity of Tiger Stadium to 102 321 making it the 6th largest college football stadium in the country Tiger Stadium first opened its gates in the fall of 1924 with a seating capacity of 12 000 In the season finale LSU hosted Tulane in the first game As of the 2021 season LSU has gone on to post a 439 154 18 733 mark in Tiger Stadium Moreover Tiger Stadium is also known for night games an idea that was first introduced in 1931 against Spring Hill a 35 0 LSU victory In 2006 LSU celebrated its 75th year of playing night football in Tiger Stadium LSU has played the majority of its games at night and the Tigers have fared better under the lights than during the day From 1960 to 2022 LSU is 237 68 4 773 at night in Tiger Stadium compared to a 26 27 3 491 record during the day over that span 113 445 155 18 733 State Field edit Main article State Field State Field was the former home stadium of the LSU Tigers football team from 1893 to 1923 The field was located on the old downtown Baton Rouge campus of LSU Practice and training facilities editCharles McClendon Practice Facility Main article Charles McClendon Practice Facility nbsp Charles McClendon Practice Facility The Charles McClendon Practice Facility is the name of the LSU Tigers football practice facility The facility features the LSU Football Operations Center the Tigers Indoor Practice Facility and four outdoor 100 yard football practice fields 154 In 2002 it was named after former LSU head coach and College Football Hall of Fame member Charles McClendon 176 LSU Football Operations Center nbsp LSU Football Operations Center Main article LSU Football Operations Center The LSU Football Operations Center built in 2006 is an all in one facility 177 that includes the Tigers locker room players lounge Peterson Roberts weight room training room equipment room video operations center and coaches offices 178 179 180 The operations center atrium holds team displays and graphics trophy cases and memorabilia of LSU football 181 182 LSU Indoor Practice Facility nbsp LSU Indoor Practice Facility and Outdoor Practice Fields Main article LSU Indoor Practice Facility The LSU Indoor Practice Facility built in 1991 is a climate controlled 82 500 square feet facility connected to the Football Operations Center It holds the 100 yd Anderson Feazel LSU indoor field with Momentum Field Turf by SportExe The indoor practice facility is located behind the football operations center 154 LSU Outdoor Practice Fields The four outdoor practice fields are directly adjacent to the football operations center and indoor practice facility Three of the fields are natural grass while the fourth The Scott amp Espe Moran Outdoor Turf Field has a Momentum Field Turf by SportExe playing surface 154 Head coaches editMain article List of LSU Tigers head football coaches LSU has had 32 head coaches since organized football began in 1893 In that time 12 coaches have led the Tigers in postseason bowl games Bernie Moore Gus Tinsley Paul Dietzel Charles McClendon Jerry Stovall Bill Arnsparger Mike Archer Gerry DiNardo Nick Saban Les Miles Ed Orgeron and Brian Kelly Six of those coaches also won conference championships after LSU left the Southern Conference to join the SEC Moore Dietzel McClendon Arnsparger Archer Saban Miles and Orgeron won a combined 12 as a member of the SEC During their tenures Dietzel Saban Miles and most recently Orgeron each won national championships awarded by major selectors while with the Tigers Of the 32 different head coaches who have led the Tigers Dana X Bible Michael Donahue Lawrence Biff Jones Moore and McClendon have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame 183 Coaching staff edit LSU Tigers Name Position Consecutive season at LSU in current position Previous position Mike Denbrock Offensive coordinator tight ends 1st Cincinnati Offensive coordinator tight ends 2018 2021 Matt House Defensive coordinator amp linebackers 1st Kansas City Chiefs Linebackers 2019 2021 Brian Polian Special teams coordinator recruiting coordinator 1st Notre Dame Special teams coordinator assistant head coach 2021 Frank Wilson Assistant head coach running backs 1st McNeese State Head coach 2020 2021 Joe Sloan Quarterbacks 1st Louisiana Tech Offensive coordinator 2020 2021 Cortez Hankton Pass game coordinator amp wide receivers 1st Georgia Pass game coordinator amp wide receivers 2019 2021 Brad Davis Offensive line 2nd LSU Interim head coach offensive line 2021 Jamar Cain Run game coordinator defensive line 1st Oklahoma Outside linebackers defensive ends 2020 2021 Robert Steeples Cornerbacks 1st Minnesota Vikings Assistant special teams 2021 Kerry Cooks Safeties 1st Notre Dame Defensive assistant 2020 2021 Jake Flint Director of athletic development 1st Notre Dame Co director of strength amp conditioning 2017 2021 Reference 184 Recruiting editMain article List of LSU Tigers football recruiting history Since 2002 LSU has been ranked in the Top 25 in recruiting ranking by multiple ranking services 185 Future opponents editConference opponents edit From 1992 to 2023 LSU played in the West Division of the SEC and played each opponent in the division each year along with several teams from the East Division The SEC will expand the conference to 16 teams and will eliminate its two divisions in 2024 causing a new scheduling format for the Tigers to play against the other members of the conference 186 Only the 2024 conference schedule was announced on June 14 2023 while the conference still considers a new format for the future 187 2024 Conference Schedule editLSU will not play Auburn for the first time since 1991 the year before the SEC expanded from 10 teams to 12 and will not play Mississippi State for the first time since 1943 when State did not field a team during World War II OpponentSiteResultAlabamaTiger StadiumBaton Rouge LA rivalry at ArkansasDonald W Reynolds Razorback StadiumFayetteville AR rivalry at FloridaBen Hill Griffin StadiumGainesville FL rivalry OklahomaTiger StadiumBaton Rouge LA Ole MissTiger StadiumBaton Rouge LA Magnolia Bowl at South CarolinaWilliams Brice StadiumColumbia SC at Texas A amp MKyle FieldCollege Station TX rivalry VanderbiltTiger StadiumBaton Rouge LA Non conference opponents edit Announced schedules as of April 13 2024 188 2025 2026 2027 2029 2030 2031 2032 at Clemson Clemson Houston at NRG Stadium Houston Arizona State at Arizona State at Utah Utah Louisiana Tech McNeese UTSA Rice Western Kentucky McNeeseSee also editLouisiana State University traditions LSU Tigers and Lady Tigers Tiger Athletic Foundation List of NCAA Division I FBS football programsNotes edit An LSU baseball team had also worn purple and gold in its first varsity game against Tulane earlier in 1893 even though LSU s official colors at the time were actually blue and white 5 Other consensus selectors for 1958 included B QPRS BR BS CFRA DeS DuS FN HAF L NCF PS SR WS Other consensus selectors for 2003 included A amp H BR CM DeS DuS MCFR NFF R FACT SR USAT ESPN W Other consensus selectors for 2007 included AP B QPRS BR CCR CM FWAA MCFR NFF SR USAT W Other consensus selectors for 2019 included A amp H AP BR CCR CFRA CM DuS FWAA NFF MCFR SR USAT AMWAY WReferences edit a b Award Winners PDF ncaa org p 21 Retrieved December 18 2018 a b c d e Alabama s Tua Tagovailoa heads 2018 consensus All America Team December 18 2018 Retrieved December 13 2018 Brand Guidelines Colors LSUAthletics LingoApp com Retrieved March 14 2022 Wilco Daniel September 11 2018 Colleges most represented on 2018 NFL Opening Day rosters Ncaa com Retrieved November 10 2018 a b Vincent 2008 p 7 Vincent 2008 p 8 Vincent 2008 p 9 Bailey John Wendell 1924 Handbook of Southern Intercollegiate Track and Field Athletics Mississippi Agricultural and Mechanical College p 14 Baton Rouge Wins Without Winning The Daily Picayune October 25 1896 pg 8 Battles The 9th Louisiana Infantry Retrieved December 28 2018 Letulle Gayle Tulane Football History tulane edu Archived from the original on December 26 2014 Retrieved April 9 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link George Doc Fenton From The LSU Football Vault The 1908 Season Archived from the original on July 14 2015 Retrieved February 4 2016 National Collegiate Athletic Association 1911 Louisiana State University The Official National Collegiate Athletic Association Football Guide 227 Tom Dutton Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Composite All Southern Eleven Chosen By Eighteen Dopesters Atlanta Constitution December 2 1913 p 8 Retrieved March 3 2015 via Newspapers com nbsp National Association of Basketball Coaches of the United States American Football Coaches Association 1922 Athletic Journal Volume 3 Athletic Journal Publishing Company p 16 Retrieved April 9 2016 Ronnie Thomas April 26 1968 One Way To Break The Monotony Times Daily a b Vincent 2008 p 36 Another Break At Louisiana Coach Quits Pittsburgh Post Gazette Associated Press December 29 1927 p 17 Retrieved April 3 2016 Vincent 2008 p 39 Edwin Pope 1955 Football s Greatest Coaches Atlanta Tupper and Love p 341 Retrieved March 8 2015 via archive org nbsp 1928 Season PDF grfx cstv com Archived from the original PDF on April 25 2014 Retrieved September 11 2023 a b Vincent 2008 p 49 Vincent 2008 p 48 a b Gaynell Tinsley College Football Hall of Fame Teams of the Century PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2016 Retrieved May 26 2016 Peiser Howell October 26 2004 Flashback Hidden ball play beat LSU in 1937 scout com Retrieved April 9 2016 Nails Bring Ken Kavanaugh Luck Grabbing Passes The Evening Independent Associated Press November 1 1939 p 16 Retrieved April 10 2016 Vols Vanquish L S U 20 to 0 The Tuscaloosa News Associated Press November 5 1939 p 10 Retrieved April 15 2016 Moshier Jeff December 30 1939 Playing Square The Evening Independent p 18 Retrieved April 15 2016 Scott Richard 2008 SEC Football 75 Years of Pride and Passion Voyageur Press p 49 ISBN 978 0 7603 3597 0 Vincent 2008 p 57 Gaynell Tinsley Gets Louisiana State Post Eugene Register Guard Associated Press March 11 1948 Retrieved May 16 2016 Johnson Raymond December 30 1949 Gus Tinsley First in History In Sugar Bowl as Player Coach The Tennessean p 25 Retrieved May 17 2016 LSU Shakes Up Athletic Department Head Grid Coach Tinsley Fired Council Bluffs Nonpareil February 6 1955 LSU Gumbo Yearbook 1956 LSU Press p 318 319 Schaeffer Rick 2014 100 Things Arkansas Fans Should Know amp Do Before They Die Triumph Books p 49 ISBN 978 1600789915 Retrieved February 28 2016 One Second Blues Song Info AllMusic All Media Network LLC Retrieved February 28 2016 Walsh Christopher J 2006 Where Football Is King A History of the SEC Taylor Trade Publishing ISBN 1461734770 Retrieved February 28 2016 Stewart Wayne 2015 You re the Ref 174 Scenarios to Test Your Football Knowledge Skyhorse Publishing Inc ISBN 978 1634509008 Retrieved February 28 2016 Oller Rob January 5 2008 Promising start ended tragically The Columbus Dispatch Retrieved April 9 2016 BuckeyeXtra The Columbus Dispatch Promising start ended tragically LSU Coach Presumed Killed The Washington Post Plane Crash Info 1980 planecrashinfo com January 11 1980 Plane Crash That Killed Rein Similar To Stewart s Over and out Shortest coaching tenures New York Daily News May 3 2010 Jerry Stovall Apparent Successor to Rein s Job Sarasota Herald Tribune Associated Press January 12 1980 Retrieved April 9 2016 1982 University of Alabama Football Statistics PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 20 2016 Retrieved April 9 2016 Alfano Peter November 7 1982 L S U Defeats Alabama The New York Times Retrieved April 9 2016 Lowe C Kent June 18 2016 Generations knew only Jim Hawthorne as Voice of the Tigers The Advocate Retrieved June 26 2017 LSU hires Arnsparger The Index Journal Associated Press December 3 1983 p 11 Retrieved July 5 2017 via Newspapers com L S U Ousts Stovall Arsparger is Hired The New York Times December 3 1983 Arnsparger Remains Coy About Future Says He Won t Coach Los Angeles Times December 1986 A Bull s Eye for a New Archer LSU vs Auburn seismogram October 08 1988 LSU University Archives Print Materials Collection www louisianadigitallibrary org Retrieved February 18 2016 Henderson Jeremy September 17 2012 What really happened at the Auburn LSU Earthquake Game The War Eagle Reader Retrieved May 15 2014 Archer Quits as Lsu Coach Chicago Tribune November 16 1990 Southern Miss Coach Hallman heads to LSU Four LSU football players arrested 3 LSU players disciplined after fight September 21 1991 HALLMAN FIRED AS LSU COACH The Washington Post Washington D C November 16 1994 ISSN 0190 8286 OCLC 1330888409 DINARDO LEAVES VANDERBILT TAKES LSU FOOTBALL COACHING JOB The Washington Post Washington D C December 13 1994 ISSN 0190 8286 OCLC 1330888409 Rosetta Randy September 17 2015 Former LSU coach Gerry DiNardo helped bring back the magic pump life into rivalry with Auburn Podcast The Times Picayune Retrieved July 5 2017 a b 1995 The Bring Back the Magic Game The Advocate October 10 2017 Retrieved August 2 2022 LSU blasts Michigan State for Independence Bowl title The Galveston Daily News Associated Press December 30 1995 p 17 Retrieved July 5 2017 via Newspapers com Photo Gallery LSU Football on the cover of Sports Illustrated lsusports net Louisiana State University August 15 2006 Retrieved April 9 2016 In No 1 Upset of the Day LSU Beats Florida 28 21 Los Angeles Times Associated Press October 12 1997 Retrieved April 9 2016 ESPN College Football Encyclopedia pp 1408 09 Lsu Fires Dinardo Before Last Game Chicago Tribune November 16 1999 Saban Doubles Salary by Accepting LSU Job Los Angeles Times December 1999 a b c d Skyler Green Nick Saban Laser Pick French Fries and the LSU Georgia Game That Changed Everything si com October 8 2018 Saban Leaving LSU to Coach the Miami Dolphins LSUSports net December 24 2004 Archived from the original on December 26 2022 Retrieved October 1 2023 LSU hires Miles as coach Andy Staples November 6 2011 After all the buildup Game of Century decided by kickers Sports Illustrated Retrieved November 6 2011 Michael Bonnette November 5 2011 It s GameDay The Matchup of the Year Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Retrieved November 6 2011 Jayson Love November 6 2011 5 Lowest Scoring No 1 vs No 2 Matchup Since 1946 Bleacher Report Retrieved November 6 2011 Thomas Watts June 21 2012 College Football Playoff I Didn t Say You Stole the Money Bama Hammer Archived from the original on October 15 2012 Retrieved August 6 2012 Sources LSU very likely to let go of Miles soon November 27 2015 Schlabach LSU avoids making a disastrous decision but barely November 29 2015 Tracy Marc September 25 2016 L S U Fires les Miles After Failure Most Programs Would Love to Experience The New York Times LSU fires Miles Cameron promotes Orgeron September 25 2016 Bigger than life LSU erases tag hires Orgeron November 26 2016 Georgia vs LSU Game Recap October 13 2018 ESPN a b Third and 17 An Oral History lsusports net September 10 2019 Retrieved August 4 2022 It was 3rd and 17 and LSU would not leave the game to its past or its struggling defense theadvertiser com September 11 2019 Retrieved August 4 2022 LSU led by quarterback Joe Burrow tops Texas in a shootout in Austin washingtonpost com September 7 2019 Retrieved August 4 2022 Inside the play 3rd and 17 against LSU burntorangenation com September 12 2019 Retrieved August 4 2022 Witz Billy December 15 2019 Joe Burrow Wins the 2019 Heisman Trophy in a Record Breaking Landslide The New York Times Clemson vs LSU Game Recap January 13 2020 ESPN LSU coach ed Orgeron agree to part ways at conclusion of 2021 college football season October 18 2021 Orgeron content to leave LSU after a great run October 17 2021 Kelly leaves ND for LSU gets 10 year 95M deal November 30 2021 Brian Kelly Named 34th LSU Football Head Coach November 30 2021 A Deeper Look into the Details of Brian Kelly s LSU Contract December 2021 a b LSU Sports Information Office LSU Football 2015 Official Media Guide PDF LSUsports net LSU Publications Office p 179 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved January 7 2016 2021 LSU Football Record Book Lsusports net August 29 2021 Retrieved February 12 2022 a b FOOTBALL BOWL SUBDIVISION RECORDS PDF Fs ncaa org Retrieved February 21 2022 Williamson Paul B January 16 1936 Frogs Rated First In Final Grid Standings S M U Mustangs Placed Second By Williamson Fort Worth Star Telegram Fort Worth Texas Retrieved January 2 2023 No Undisputable National Champions Picked Sugar Bowl Game One of Best 1958 Bowl Games Sports Reference com a b c d 2017 LSU Tigers Media Guide PDF Louisiana State Athletics Archived from the original PDF on January 19 2018 Retrieved April 27 2018 2014 Clemson Football Media Guide PDF Clemson University 2014 p 200 Archived from the original PDF on December 30 2014 Retrieved January 16 2018 Photo of LSU vs Arkansas 2009 Archived from the original on March 4 2013 Retrieved February 18 2016 a b Luke Johnson October 21 2011 LSU football team to change its stripes with new uniforms for Auburn game New Orleans Times Picayune NOLA com Retrieved October 22 2011 Football Football to Wear Traditional White Jerseys in BCS Game L guru SUsports net The Official Web Site of LSU Tigers Athletics LSUsports net Archived from the original on October 6 2013 Retrieved August 15 2012 Rabalais Scott 2008 The Fighting Tigers 1993 2008 Into a New Century of LSU Football illustrated ed LSU Press p 24 ISBN 978 0807133705 Retrieved February 11 2016 a b c LSU Football Tiger Stadium ESPN com Retrieved February 4 2016 2016 LSU Tigers Media Guide PDF Louisiana State University Archived from the original PDF on August 28 2016 Retrieved July 19 2017 ESPN com Page2 Welcome to Death Valley Espn go com September 18 2003 Retrieved August 15 2012 Gibbons grace gibb Grace September 16 2022 High stakes football and high southern fashion found across SEC universities The Reveille Retrieved September 20 2022 Bash On The Bayou When It Comes To Great Tailgating Nothing Compares To LSU Si com November 17 2017 Retrieved November 17 2017 2013 LSU Tigers Football media guide a b LSU s Tiger Stadium 102 321 Lsusports net Archived from the original on April 1 2019 Retrieved May 29 2013 Tiger Band Louisiana State University Athletic Department Retrieved June 3 2007 Archived from the original on October 16 2007 Retrieved July 26 2013 Rabalais 2008 p 21 Rosetta Randy September 17 2015 Former LSU coach Gerry DiNardo helped bring back the magic pump life into rivalry with Auburn The Times Picayune Retrieved July 5 2017 NCAA changing rules to accommodate USC UCLA jersey tradition Los Angeles Times February 19 2009 Retrieved October 5 2009 LSU will wear purple for an SEC game in Tiger Stadium for first time in 21 years Scout com October 7 2015 Retrieved October 28 2015 Nightingale Cory The tradition of LSU s famed home white jerseys Saturday Down South Retrieved July 22 2017 Brasted Chelsea January 12 2015 Garth Brooks tells Today show Callin Baton Rouge is his favorite song to play live The Times Picayune Retrieved July 22 2017 Branch Chris November 1 2011 Postcard From L S U Geaux Just Go With It The New York Times Retrieved July 11 2017 Guilbeau Glenn September 30 2016 From Larose to LSU head coach for now Ed Orgeron USA Today Retrieved July 22 2017 coush coush Definition in the Food Dictionary at Epicurious com Retrieved August 15 2012 LSU s Neck Chant Why the Controversial Song was Banned Fanbuzz August 31 2022 Retrieved November 15 2022 Orgera Ryan Parent Wayne 2014 The Louisiana field guide understanding life in the Pelican State p 235 ISBN 9780807157770 Guilbeau Glenn August 8 2015 How the No 18 became an LSU tradition USA Today Archived from the original on November 4 2016 Retrieved November 2 2016 a b Dellenger Ross July 31 2017 From 130 to 18 J D Moore joins Christian LaCouture donning LSU s traditional jersey The Advocate Retrieved August 12 2017 Whittaker Rachel August 30 2010 Football Richard Murphy takes new leadership role with the Tigers The Daily Reveille Retrieved November 2 2016 Clarkson Roger December 2 2011 LSU s Taylor continues No 18 tradition Athens Banner Herald Retrieved November 2 2016 Laney Gary August 16 2012 LSU s Bennie Logan wears No 18 well Espn com Retrieved November 2 2016 Gisclair Casey August 20 2013 LSU s new No 18 hopes to make his mark Tri Parish Times Retrieved November 2 2016 permanent dead link Dellenger Ross August 4 2014 Terrence Magee to wear LSU s tradition based No 18 jersey The Advocate Retrieved November 2 2016 Roser Jerit August 5 2015 LSU s No 18 jersey awarded to junior cornerback Tre Davious White The Times Picayune Retrieved November 2 2016 Kubena Brooks August 4 2018 Foster Moreau to wear special No 18 jersey for LSU in 2018 The Advocate Retrieved August 4 2018 Mickles Sheldon August 2 2019 Lloyd Cushenberry K Lavon Chaisson to carry on No 18 tradition for LSU in 2019 The Advocate Retrieved August 2 2019 Bonnette Michael September 18 2020 Football Presents No 18 Jerseys for 2020 LSU Sports CBS Sports Retrieved January 1 2021 Jackson Devin September 1 2021 LSU kicker Avery Atkins becomes latest Tiger to wear famed No 18 jersey theadvocate com Retrieved August 26 2022 Nettuno Tyler August 6 2022 BJ Ojulari to wear traditional No 18 jersey this fall usatoday com Retrieved August 26 2022 Goodbread Chase May 20 2015 LSU stakes claim to DBU over Florida NFL com Retrieved October 18 2017 Laney Gary July 19 2012 Even after draft Reid says LSU is DBU ESPN com Retrieved October 18 2017 Klemko Robert November 30 2016 Jamal Adams and LSU s DBU Tradition Sports Illustrated Retrieved October 18 2017 Kleinpeter Jim February 22 2017 LSU is DBU Ranking drafted Tiger DBs 17 1 The Times Picayune Retrieved October 18 2017 NCAAF Football Series records Alabama vs LSU mcubed January 12 2016 Retrieved February 11 2016 Winsipedia LSU Tigers vs Alabama Crimson Tide football series history Winsipedia Winsipedia LSU Tigers vs Arkansas Razorbacks football series history Winsipedia Winsipedia LSU Tigers vs Auburn Tigers football series history Winsipedia Winsipedia LSU Tigers vs Florida Gators football series history Winsipedia Winsipedia LSU Tigers vs Mississippi State Bulldogs football series history Winsipedia Winsipedia LSU Tigers vs Ole Miss Rebels football series history Winsipedia Winsipedia LSU Tigers vs Texas A amp M Aggies football series history Winsipedia College football s most unique rivalry trophies Foxsports com Retrieved October 7 2018 Winsipedia LSU Tigers vs Tulane Green Wave football series history Winsipedia 2023 LSU Fighting Tigers Schedule and Results Sports reference com Retrieved November 12 2023 a b c d 2013 LSU Football Media Guide Lsusports net Archived from the original on August 12 2013 Retrieved July 28 2013 LSU Fighting Tigers Bowls Sports reference com Retrieved January 14 2020 Longest Active Bowl Streaks in College Football Scout com December 15 2016 Retrieved July 5 2017 1939 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 1958 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 1959 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 1962 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 1972 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 1977 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 1978 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 2007 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 2011 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 2015 Heisman Trophy Voting Sports reference com Retrieved May 19 2018 2019 Heisman Trophy winner QB Joe Burrow sets records in capturing LSU s first Heisman since 1959 Cbssports com December 15 2019 Retrieved December 15 2019 2023 Heisman Trophy winner LSU QB Jayden Daniels claims award becoming third Tigers player to receive honor Cbssports com December 9 2023 Retrieved December 9 2023 LSU s retired numbers Meet the 13 Tigers to receive the honor Nola com May 11 2018 Retrieved September 15 2018 LSU Retires Three Legends Jerseys Lsusports net May 18 2009 Archived from the original on March 15 2015 Retrieved December 14 2009 LSU to Retire Football Jersey of Jerry Stovall Lsusports net May 8 2018 Archived from the original on September 9 2018 Retrieved September 8 2018 Draft History by School LSU Nfl com Retrieved December 23 2013 Tigers in the NFL Draft LSU Lsusports net Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Retrieved December 23 2013 Hall of Fame Inductees by College Profootballhof com Retrieved August 2 2019 Canadian Football Hall of Fame Ron Estay cfhof ca Retrieved May 24 2016 ESPN com NCF LSU renames practice facility in honor of former coach A espncdn com Retrieved February 21 2022 Glier Ray August 13 2013 How the SEC Became Goliath The Making of College Football s Most Dominant Conference New York City Simon and Schuster p 83 ISBN 978 1476710303 Retrieved December 27 2014 Football Operations Center Lsutaf org Archived from the original on February 21 2014 Retrieved February 11 2014 Ranking the SEC s football facilities Espn com June 14 2012 Retrieved February 11 2014 A Look At LSU s Facilities Football com August 11 2013 Archived from the original on February 25 2014 Retrieved September 12 2013 LSU Football Guide Lsusports net Archived from the original on February 20 2014 Retrieved February 11 2014 Glier Ray November 8 2008 L S U Gets Ready for Reunion With Saban The New York Times Retrieved December 26 2014 2010 LSU Football Media Guide Baton Rouge Louisiana LSU Sports Information Office 2010 Archived from the original on October 25 2012 Retrieved February 3 2012 Staff Directory lsusports net LSU Football Signing Classes Lsusports net Archived from the original on June 25 2018 Retrieved May 19 2018 Emerson Seth June 1 2023 SEC approves 8 game football schedule for 2024 no decision yet on long term format The Athletic Retrieved June 20 2023 Alexander Wilson Rabalais Scott June 14 2023 These are LSU football s opponents in the new 2024 SEC schedule The Times Picayune The New Orleans Advocate Retrieved June 20 2023 LSU football schedule updates Tigers reportedly to host Georgia in 2018 Central Michigan in 2021 The Advocate April 13 2024 Bibliography Vincent Herb 2008 LSU Football Vault The History of the Fighting Tigers Whitman Publishing LLC ISBN 978 0794824280 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to LSU Tigers football Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LSU Tigers football amp oldid 1222738610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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