
3 matchups that will define Florida vs. LSU (and a prediction)
Florida and No. 22 LSU meet for the 71st time on Saturday afternoon in The Swamp (3:30 PM ET, ABC).
The Gators hold a narrow series lead but the Tigers have won the past 5, their longest winning streak in the history of what has become one of the SEC’s most zany rivalries.
Anything can and often does happen in the Florida-LSU game. To wit:
(1) an LSU win set up by a fake field goal in The Swamp in 2010;
(2) another LSU win secured by a fake field goal – this time in Death Valley in 2015;
(3) The entire saga of 2016, which started when LSU refused to allow Florida to reschedule a football game in Gainesville after a hurricane hit Florida’s coast in October. The Gators, who had raised over $200,000 for flood relief for Louisiana the year prior, didn’t appreciate LSU athletic director Joe Alleva refusing to accommodate the state of Florida’s own weather tragedy. The Gators then beat the Tigers in Death Valley with a goal-line stand, and celebrated securing a SEC title game berth on LSU’s home field. Florida announcer Mick Hubert’s call of the SEC East clinching stand remains iconic.
(4) The Swamp reaching earthquake levels of loud on Brad Stewart’s game-clinching pick-6 of Joe Burrow in 2018.
(5) And of course Marco Wilson’s shoe throw costing Florida the game — and likely a College Football Playoff spot — in 2020.
The shoe Marco Wilson threw has yet to actually land
(Video via @kennthdavid) #LSUvsUF pic.twitter.com/JptAlDFuaI
— NOTSportsCenter (@NOTSportsCenter) December 13, 2020
Florida is 20-29 in the sport since Wilson threw that shoe.
Will the Gators fall to a cool 20-30 in their past 50? Will LSU get a 6th consecutive win over the Gators?
LSU is favored by 4 points, via DraftKings Sportsbook.
Here are 3 matchups that will define the Gators and the Tigers.
LSU’s Empty and Shock sets vs. Florida’s banged-up secondary
The staple of Brian Kelly’s offense is a series of empty and 1-back sets the Tigers call “Shock.”
The concept features 3 receivers to one side, a boundary receiver on the other side, and an “X” figure who can flex in the slot or as a solo running back. The concept is lauded in NFL circles for how multiple it makes an offense despite the base simplicity. LSU runs a host of concepts out of the formation, adapting it to any number of coverages. At its core, however, it involves 3 basic routes by the overloaded side of the field: a shallow hitch at the boundary, a slot fade, and a stick route by the inside receiver in trips — sometimes a tight end depending on concept. This base framework allows LSU to attack in a number of ways — and in the Kelly era, the Tigers have feasted on the Gators in this concept.
— MTFilmClips (@MTFilm) May 15, 2024
Above is the standard Shock/Lucy. The Florida defense pushes to the strongside, where the overload is located. That’s a simple read for the quarterback, who hits the intermediate route runner in the space vacated by Florida’s strongside push.
— MTFilmClips (@MTFilm) May 15, 2024
Here, Florida switches to man coverage, and LSU attacks vertically, hitting the isolated go by the backside receiver. Florida’s young safety has to choose between the slot-fade and the backside go — and with elite receiver talent, that split-second choice is enough to create separation.
— MTFilmClips (@MTFilm) May 15, 2024
LSU is struggling to run the football this season, but the one area they’ve been successful is using “Shock” to set up inside zone. Here, it looks more like an RPO (because the quarterback is Jayden Daniels) — but the concept works because of how well it spaces out the second level of a defense, making it difficult to fill run gaps on the inside as LSU attacks.
The Tigers’ excellent offense averages 6.31 yards per play this season and ranks 6th in SP+ offensive efficiency. “Shock” is their best concept — averaging 9.2 yards per play. The Tigers also have a pulse running out of “Shock” — averaging 4.7 yards per carry — their best number in any concept. They’ll need to run better to take pressure off quarterback Garrett Nussmeier. He’s had a nice season but has attempted a staggering 375 passes, ranking 6th nationally. By Saturday, he’ll have thrown more than Heisman winners Joe Burrow (379) and Jayden Daniels (388) did their entire first seasons.
Florida might be the perfect foe for LSU to find balance.
The Gators enter having just been carved up by Texas, though Steve Sarkisian uses far more motion and misdirection than LSU. Florida is banged up — 3 starters in the secondary are out, as is Grayson Howard, Florida’s best linebacker. The backups were not up to the challenge against Quinn Ewers and Texas, but they need to be Saturday. If Florida can’t slow the “Shock” aspect of the LSU offense, it will be a long day for the Gators.
Florida’s power run game vs. LSU’s leaky run defense
LSU has surrendered 150 yards per game on the ground and 20 rushing touchdowns in 2024. The absence of Jacobian Guillory and All-American linebacker Harold Perkins Jr. has been felt in run fits on the interior in particular, where LSU surrenders 5.01 yards per carry this season and allows a success rate of 49.1%, 13th in the SEC, per Stats Solutions. In SEC play, the problems for LSU have been even more pronounced, as the Tigers have surrendered 4.75 yards or more per rush against 3 of their 5 conference foes to date.
The Gators should get All-SEC running back Montrell Johnson Jr. back for this game, giving a boost to a run game that has looked powerful over the past month. Johnson was injured against Tennessee and his return will give the Gators their best pass-protecting runner as well, making the offense more multiple. Johnson is also capable of the home run.
https://twitter.com/espn/status/1829989384965193754
True freshman Jadan Baugh runs a little like Le’Veon Bell, with a low center of gravity and strong leg drive that allows him to get stronger as the game goes on. Baugh’s success rate of 48.3% ranks 6th among SEC running backs. Johnson’s 8.1 yards per carry against ranked opponents leads the country.
This 1-2 punch for Florida will have to control the clock, help the battered defense rest, and move the chains to set up the pass for Florida to have a chance to win.
DJ Lagway vs. 2-high looks from LSU
DJ Lagway is progressing well from his hamstring injury suffered against Georgia. If I were a betting man, I’d wager the Gators are planning to have the freshman phenom give it a go in a rivalry game Saturday afternoon.
If that happens, Florida will hit an explosive or two down the field. That’s inevitable, as Lagway’s 13 explosive passes of 30 yards or more this season demonstrate. He’s tied for 2nd in the SEC with 11 such completions covering 40+ yards — on just 92 total attempts. Lagway’s average depth of target of 12.4 leads the SEC and his explosive pass success rate is a staggering 65% — more than 20% higher than any other quarterback in the country. The 5-star recruit and 2024 national prep player of the year has lived up the hype to date in Gainesville.
Lagway has feasted when opponents gang up to stop Florida’s running game. Lagway’s success against Kentucky illustrates this best.
DJ Lagway strike. Hard to replicate this a talent.
Gators lead 13-6.
— Neil W. Blackmon (@nwblackmon) October 20, 2024
On the above throw, Kentucky has an extra man in the box and 1 deep safety. This is a middle of the field zone and Lagway has 2 slot receivers running seam routes to exploit the 1-high safety look. Once the cheating Kentucky safety commits to tight end Hayden Hansen, Lagway has the matchup he wants against a corner and flat-footed safety in pursuit. This is a great read and a simple throw.
You want to know why DJ Lagway was the most important recruit at Florida since Timothy Tebow?
— Neil W. Blackmon (@nwblackmon) October 20, 2024
On this throw, Lagway again gets a 1-deep safety look. Florida uses pre-snap motion that usually signals run and the deep safety cheats. A corner then drops to protect the deep ball, but he can’t get over quick enough. Without a second high safety to help, Elijhah Badger ends up with a free release and Lagway makes a great throw to hit him in stride for a huge gain.
The questions for Lagway come when he faces 2-high or “Tampa 2” style defenses and is asked to make intermediate and short throws. Can Lagway consistently take what a defense gives him? He’s made some elite throws down the field against 2-high looks out of play-action, including this throw for a touchdown against Georgia.
DJ LAGWAY WITH A DIME TO AIDAN MIZELL🥶
📺 ABC/ESPN+ pic.twitter.com/6spdDyxWsD
— ESPN (@espn) November 2, 2024
But he’s struggled to consistently execute in intermediate concepts — where Graham Mertz thrived. Lagway is just 8-for-22 on throws of 11-20 yards, per SEC StatCat. In SEC play, that number falls to just 5-for-18.
LSU is prolific at creating pressure with 3 or 4, ranking 4th in the SEC in quarterback pressures and sacks.
Lagway won’t have a great amount of time, and if LSU can confuse him by showing man but playing 2 high safeties or Cover 2, they’ll force him to take what the defense gives him, which goes against his natural instincts and what he’s shown he can do as a freshman to date. Expect LSU to sit in quarters or Cover 2 and force the issue.
Prediction: Florida 33, LSU 28 (assuming Lagway plays)
Florida will run the football effectively at home against an LSU team that is not gap sound and weak at linebacker beyond Whit Weeks. The Gators will also force at least 1 Garrett Nussmeier turnover. While the Gators will surrender some explosives in the passing game, Lagway, assuming he’s healthy enough to do so, will put together a performance with enough explosives of his own to put the Gators on the precipice of bowl eligibility. Florida snaps a 5-game losing streak to LSU with a huge win for Billy Napier in The Swamp.
I waited for you leeland
but then out the corner of my round eye I thought I spotted you know who, so I pulled the trigger.
Well, you know who must’ve been going elsewhere Humper.
I remember when this game would have been important. Now it’s just to see whose program has slid more. Watching Florida first, then LSU, Alabama and now Georgia all slide back down towards their historical spots has brought me great pleasure.
I am really looking forward to seeing if this idiot volt will man up and show up back here when uga curb stomps them this weekend .
This train’s destination is the playoff kid. Brush up on your reading comprehension until then.
I deff hope your man enough to show back up when the loss to uga and missing the playoffs happen volt .. prob going to pull a g white (your more educated cousin ) and not show up again is my guess .
As usual the vol is a premature celebrator
Florida 4-5
LSU 6-3
Alabama 7-2
Georgia 7-2
Tenneseee 8-1
Tennessee is the SEC #1. The arc of reality bends towards normalcy. Things are starting to right themselves again.
Volt my delusional fried,
Lest just review the records of the school’s vs Tennessee you mentioned as well as the last time each won a title.
Gators leads 32–22. Last Natty (2008)
Georgia leads 28–23–2 Last Natty (2022)
Alabama leads 59–40–8 Last Naty ( 2020)
LSU trails 10-21-3 Last Natty (2019)
The normalcy you mentioned would be Tennessee being 95-129-13 against these schools for an impressive winging percentage of 40%. Let’s also add Tennessee has not won a natty let alone an SEC title this century.
Next time you come up to the big boy table make sure to remind all how things are going right themselves need only look at history as numbers do not lie.
Florida has fallen and cannot get up. The sooner you accept your fate, the better.
Ah i see you had no comment for those stats volt .. Florida might be down but has won 17 of the last 20 against your boys .. when you feel like addressing those numbers I just shared on you please let me know . Also when Tennessee wins a conference or natty this century you can come back to the big boy table. Better call your recruits this weekend !
No worries, I show you how it’s done in a different article
“I waited for you leeland”
Well, you are a stalker, doghumper.
Stay out of things you don’t understand and are not meant for you
Give me lsu 28 to 17.. until Napier proves he can win this kind of game I can’t pick the gators
I was thinking 27 to 20 for the same reason, LSU seems susceptible to the run game, especially a QB run, so you never know. You taking boy to the game?
He and I will be there hump.. he also talked me into taking him to the fsu game in tally .. that will be the bad vs horrible haha
Y’all are going to beat FSU like a red headed step kid, that team has given up.
That’s awesome, I will be looking for you and he doing the G8r bait chant. I have no doubt you aren’t raising him woke style…should be a great game. Safe travels
The gator bait chant is Alvie and well in both my son and hump! Pulling for the dawgs to curb stomp
The Vols for the main reason of you and the other uga fans to unleash on this idiot volt!
LSU “seems” susceptible to the run? Exchange “seems” with “is” is the better word.
I hear you. We certainly have our issues this year as well so you know, stones in a glass house.
“The Gators hold a narrow series lead”
Where did you read that? The series is 34-33-3, and LSU is the one with 34 wins.
The series is 33-31-3.
LSU vacated 3 wins.
Good talk, see ya out there.
Darn it Neil, you’re fast. I’m surprised you aren’t whoopin me and leeland at first to post.
Really?
“I’m surprised you aren’t whoopin me’
Yeah, you’re into that sort of thing, creep.
Actually it is 33-31-3 as 3 wins were vacated by the NCAA, cost the mad hatter his golden parachute ticket to College Football hall of fame consideration…
LSU won the games on the field. You can’t go back and play them again, and if you did, LSU would win them again.
And when you were cheating to win those games that is why the wins were vacated !
Rogue booster. Hard to blame the program for a booster like that. But, whatever. LSU will just have to win the next three to get back to 34.
I think Nuss will have a get right game against a beat up Gator secondary, if the run game can get going it’ll help out considerably. Playing in the Swamp is never easy but if our defense can create havoc and get off the field on third down we win.
As to the shoe throw game, way too much has been made of that bone headed play by Wilson. The game was lost when Mullen decided to hold Kyle Pitts out of the game to keep him fresh for the postseason, if he was in the game I doubt the Tigers get those red zone stops that kept points off the board. The shoe throw merely facilitated a 57 yard field goal in the fog.
The shoe toss wasn’t about Wilson. It was about Mullen making light of it and not punishing that stupid behavior. Mullen lost me in that postgame presser.
I get that STL, I’m just saying holding Pitts out was the more impactful move.
That was on Mullen too.
The LCI (Lousy Coach Index) predicts Gators have a 100% chance to achieve a moral victory! Billy is said to have already choreographed a new dance to celebrate his latest moral victory and the dance is called Gator Fans R Gonna Hate Me!
I’m not sure I would expose Lagway to re-injuring that hammy just to try to salvage a 500 season and an invite to the Gasparilla Bowl.
No lagway, chance of Gator win no bueno. Billy has a tough decision risk the future of his five star qb or risk being the first Gators coach since FDR was president in the mid 30’s to have 3 consecutive losing seasons. That’s something that would follow him for the rest of his career and rightly so.
Billy has no decision making option imo. If your star QB says I’m good to go and ready to play, coach…what can he do?
He could pull a mullen-rino and hold him out like Mullen did with Pitts 4 years ago against LSU, which started this whole dark chapter. Imagine if UF wins that game and somehow upsets bama. CBN crisis averted.
Perhaps the bullg8r vetting process for hiring CBN wasn’t 100% but I do know this, any Mullet’esque similarities would have resulted in no contract offer for Billy. Besides, I’m still not 100% sure the Pitts decision was Dan’s, he isn’t that smart or caring.
Pitts wanted to play.
Did the UF public relations dept write his revisionist history of the Hurricane fiasco? There are two sides to every story. It was never as one sided as he makes this sound. In the end UF played at LSU and in return LSU played two years in a row at UF.
Nothing revisionist I remember from your AD down to your coaches down to the players, fans and even your sports media guys every one of them behaved like D bags and in the end got what you deserved
Not revisionist at all. Neil’s hisotry is accurate, as is your two-for-one recollection.