Prevot names favorites, sets timeline 
June, 14, 2012
6/14/12
12:24
PM ET
By
William Wilkerson | ESPN.com
Those turning blue in the face with worry over the legitimacy of ESPN 300 defensive end Torrodney Prevot’s excuse for not making it to Texas’ camp need to exhale.
“Honestly I had to work and I couldn’t take off,” said the No. 234 player in the country from Alief (Texas) Taylor. “Texas is still very high on my list. We didn’t make the camp this past weekend, but my uncle and I are setting something up for us and my mom to go down there.”
The speed-rushing Prevot, who is 6-foot-4 and 215 pounds, expects that visit to happen within the next couple of weeks. It’s going to have to happen sooner than later considering his itch to get a decision made in the near future.
“Honestly I had to work and I couldn’t take off,” said the No. 234 player in the country from Alief (Texas) Taylor. “Texas is still very high on my list. We didn’t make the camp this past weekend, but my uncle and I are setting something up for us and my mom to go down there.”
The speed-rushing Prevot, who is 6-foot-4 and 215 pounds, expects that visit to happen within the next couple of weeks. It’s going to have to happen sooner than later considering his itch to get a decision made in the near future.
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A month ago, this list would have been a must-read for LSU fans. Funny how quickly things change.
At the start of May, perhaps the biggest question in LSU recruiting was the matter of where the Tigers would find their quarterback of the future. In mid-June, LSU holds commitments from two four-star prospects in Anthony Jennings (Marietta, Ga./Marietta) and ESPN 300 member Hayden Rettig (Los Angeles, Cathedral).
At the start of May, perhaps the biggest question in LSU recruiting was the matter of where the Tigers would find their quarterback of the future. In mid-June, LSU holds commitments from two four-star prospects in Anthony Jennings (Marietta, Ga./Marietta) and ESPN 300 member Hayden Rettig (Los Angeles, Cathedral).
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GTN Roundtable (June 13) 
June, 13, 2012
6/13/12
6:35
AM ET
By
Gary Laney and
David Helman | ESPN.com
GeauxTigerNation writers Gary Laney and David Helman share their thoughts on issues regarding LSU sports:
1. What should LSU do with its Thanksgiving weekend game?
Gary Laney: I love that it appears that a renewed LSU-Texas A&M rivalry appears to be in the works for a season finale. It's a more natural rivalry than LSU-Arkansas in that there is a geographic tie with Interstate 10 and Houston being primarily an Aggie city, but also a prime destination for LSU alumni.
1. What should LSU do with its Thanksgiving weekend game?
Gary Laney: I love that it appears that a renewed LSU-Texas A&M rivalry appears to be in the works for a season finale. It's a more natural rivalry than LSU-Arkansas in that there is a geographic tie with Interstate 10 and Houston being primarily an Aggie city, but also a prime destination for LSU alumni.
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After an impressive showing at the Oklahoma camp, 2014 cornerback Tony Brown (Beaumont, Texas/Ozen) picked up an offer Tuesday from the Sooners.
Brown, a 6-foot, 180-pound cornerback and ball hawk, left the OU camp with his eighth offer overall. He now has offers from Alabama, LSU, Nebraska, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, TCU and Mississippi State, along with the Sooners.
“There was good competition there,” Brown said of the OU camp. “I went there to compete. They had a few guys there who were supposed to be good, and I wanted to go against them.”
Brown, a 6-foot, 180-pound cornerback and ball hawk, left the OU camp with his eighth offer overall. He now has offers from Alabama, LSU, Nebraska, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, TCU and Mississippi State, along with the Sooners.
“There was good competition there,” Brown said of the OU camp. “I went there to compete. They had a few guys there who were supposed to be good, and I wanted to go against them.”
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Ethan Pocic is so happy with his decision to commit to LSU, he's going to try to get here early.
It hasn't yet been two weeks since the offensive tackle and ESPN 150 member from Lemont, Ill., pledged his commitment to LSU, but Pocic already has his eyes set on early enrollment in hopes of being one of the first members of the class of 2013. If that's not enough, he hopes on getting to come down to Baton Rouge as often as possible in the coming months.
"I'm enrolling early. I've already taken the classes and everything," Pocic said. "I'll also be taking an official visit, and probably an unofficial as well."
It hasn't yet been two weeks since the offensive tackle and ESPN 150 member from Lemont, Ill., pledged his commitment to LSU, but Pocic already has his eyes set on early enrollment in hopes of being one of the first members of the class of 2013. If that's not enough, he hopes on getting to come down to Baton Rouge as often as possible in the coming months.
"I'm enrolling early. I've already taken the classes and everything," Pocic said. "I'll also be taking an official visit, and probably an unofficial as well."
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When one thinks of LSU's offense, the thought of a physical running game comes to mind.
And make no mistake about it, that starts up front with a quality offensive line.
LSU had a good offensive line last season and may have a better one in 2012. Here are five things to know about the Tigers' offensive line this off-season.
And make no mistake about it, that starts up front with a quality offensive line.
LSU had a good offensive line last season and may have a better one in 2012. Here are five things to know about the Tigers' offensive line this off-season.
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Eddie Vanderdoes might go to high school in California, but there are plenty of Southeastern Conference programs -- including Alabama and LSU -- who are recruiting the standout defensive tackle.
Vanderdoes was the headliner at the Oregon NFTC this past weekend, and he said each time he tries to narrow it down, another intriguing school shows interest. Florida and Oregon are also high on his list.
RecruitingNation's Brandon Oliver has the full story (Insider) here. And check out this additional story on Vanderdoes, who is also pretty good at baseball.
Vanderdoes was the headliner at the Oregon NFTC this past weekend, and he said each time he tries to narrow it down, another intriguing school shows interest. Florida and Oregon are also high on his list.
RecruitingNation's Brandon Oliver has the full story (Insider) here. And check out this additional story on Vanderdoes, who is also pretty good at baseball.
Two schools continue to surge to the top of Greg Gilmore's recruitment.
Just days after naming LSU as his leading school ahead of Florida, the Gators have fortified their position -- if not grown closer to the Tigers. After a recent trip to Gainesville, Gilmore left plenty impressed.
“It was good,” the four-star defensive tackle from Hope Mills (N.C.) South View said. “It was real good. All my questions were answered.”
Just days after naming LSU as his leading school ahead of Florida, the Gators have fortified their position -- if not grown closer to the Tigers. After a recent trip to Gainesville, Gilmore left plenty impressed.
“It was good,” the four-star defensive tackle from Hope Mills (N.C.) South View said. “It was real good. All my questions were answered.”
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If Torrodney Prevot is ever in a job interview and is asked to explain a time when he was unselfish in his line of work, he can point to today.
The four-star defensive end from Alief (Texas) Taylor was supposed to be one of the headliners of Sunday's Texas minicamp, where the Longhorns were hoping to make a lasting impression on a player courted by programs from around the country.
But he couldn’t make it down for one simple reason: “I had to work and couldn’t take off,” he said.
The four-star defensive end from Alief (Texas) Taylor was supposed to be one of the headliners of Sunday's Texas minicamp, where the Longhorns were hoping to make a lasting impression on a player courted by programs from around the country.
But he couldn’t make it down for one simple reason: “I had to work and couldn’t take off,” he said.
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DB Carter has LSU on his list
June, 10, 2012
6/10/12
6:07
PM ET
By GeauxTigerNation staff | ESPN.com
The Tigers are known for putting plenty of defensive backs into the NFL, and that isn't lost on 2013 defensive back Jamal Carter (Miami Southridge/Miami), who has more than 50 offers.
LSU is one of the programs who would love to land the 6-foot-1, 190-pound standout, who performed at the South Florida Under Armour Sevens this weekend. Carter, who has not narrowed his list, comes from a long line of defensive backs, and his coach said Carter's intelligence is just as impressive as his physical abilities.
Derek Tyson from GatorNation has more on Carter here.
LSU is one of the programs who would love to land the 6-foot-1, 190-pound standout, who performed at the South Florida Under Armour Sevens this weekend. Carter, who has not narrowed his list, comes from a long line of defensive backs, and his coach said Carter's intelligence is just as impressive as his physical abilities.
Derek Tyson from GatorNation has more on Carter here.
BATON ROUGE, La. -- Who would have thought the Cape Cod League would prove to be a preview for the LSU-Stony Brook Super Regional?
When the third and deciding game between LSU and Stony Brook starts 12:05 p.m. Sunday at LSU's Alex Box Stadium, the 2011 Cape Cod League Pitcher of the Year, LSU right-hander Ryan Eades, will toe the rubber against the reigning Cape Cod League Player of the Year, Stony Brook leadoff hitter Travis Jankowski, who was drafted in the supplemental first round by the San Diego Padres in the MLB draft on Monday.
Eades (5-2, 3.55 ERA), a sophomore, has been a mainstay in the LSU weekend rotation, making his turn in all 16 Tiger weekends this season. His 17th start will be to continue the season, and the Tigers are hoping for some of the magic that made him so good at the Cape as opposed to being the LSU pitcher that gets batted around the most.
Opponents hit .287 against the sophomore from Slidell, La., and he has made a habit of working his way out of trouble and "hanging in" his starts. Stony Brook, which has 20 hits in the first two games of the super regional, hasn't been a team that allows pitchers who flirt with trouble to get off the hook.
When the third and deciding game between LSU and Stony Brook starts 12:05 p.m. Sunday at LSU's Alex Box Stadium, the 2011 Cape Cod League Pitcher of the Year, LSU right-hander Ryan Eades, will toe the rubber against the reigning Cape Cod League Player of the Year, Stony Brook leadoff hitter Travis Jankowski, who was drafted in the supplemental first round by the San Diego Padres in the MLB draft on Monday.
[+] Enlarge
AP Photo/Dave MartinRyan Eades will take the mound Sunday against Stony Brook with LSU's season hanging in the balance.
AP Photo/Dave MartinRyan Eades will take the mound Sunday against Stony Brook with LSU's season hanging in the balance. Opponents hit .287 against the sophomore from Slidell, La., and he has made a habit of working his way out of trouble and "hanging in" his starts. Stony Brook, which has 20 hits in the first two games of the super regional, hasn't been a team that allows pitchers who flirt with trouble to get off the hook.
BATON ROUGE, La. – Tyler Johnson pitched a 3-hitter Saturday as Stony Brook evened its best-of-3 NCAA Super Regional series against LSU with a 3-1 win at Alex Box Stadium.
The third and deciding game will be noon Sunday at LSU. The Tigers will be going for their 16th College World Series appearance while Stony Brook is playing in its first super regional.
Overview: Johnson outpitched LSU ace Kevin Gausman (12-2), who earlier in the day got a win out of the bullpen in LSU's 5-4 12-inning win in Game 1. That game was completed Saturday morning after rain suspended play Friday.
The third and deciding game will be noon Sunday at LSU. The Tigers will be going for their 16th College World Series appearance while Stony Brook is playing in its first super regional.
Overview: Johnson outpitched LSU ace Kevin Gausman (12-2), who earlier in the day got a win out of the bullpen in LSU's 5-4 12-inning win in Game 1. That game was completed Saturday morning after rain suspended play Friday.
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Rapid Reaction LSU 5, Stony Brook 4 (12 innings) 
June, 9, 2012
6/09/12
12:33
PM ET
By
Gary Laney | ESPN.com
BATON ROUGE, La. – Mason Katz's RBI single in the bottom of the 12th Saturday morning lifted LSU to a 5-4 win over Stony Brook in the completion of the first game of a best-of-3 super regional suspended Friday by rain.
Overview: Katz, who homered in the 11th inning Friday to send the game to the 12th inning, singled in the 12th to plate Tyler Moore, who led off the 12th inning with a seeing-eye bloop single the fell between three Stony Brook players for a hit. After an Austin Nola sacrifice bunt and an intentional walk to JaCoby Jones, Katz lined a Frankie Vanderka pitch to left-center field for the winning run.
The two teams will meet again for Game 2 starting at 11:05 a.m. Kevin Gausman (12-1) who pitched the 12th inning to get the win, is scheduled to start the second game for LSU against Stony Brook ace Tyler Johnson (11-1).
Overview: Katz, who homered in the 11th inning Friday to send the game to the 12th inning, singled in the 12th to plate Tyler Moore, who led off the 12th inning with a seeing-eye bloop single the fell between three Stony Brook players for a hit. After an Austin Nola sacrifice bunt and an intentional walk to JaCoby Jones, Katz lined a Frankie Vanderka pitch to left-center field for the winning run.
The two teams will meet again for Game 2 starting at 11:05 a.m. Kevin Gausman (12-1) who pitched the 12th inning to get the win, is scheduled to start the second game for LSU against Stony Brook ace Tyler Johnson (11-1).
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LSU, Florida, Alabama up next for Hill 
June, 9, 2012
6/09/12
12:32
PM ET
By
Brad Bournival | ESPN.com
Four-star defensive tackle Michael Hill (Pendleton, S.C./Pendleton) isn’t as close to committing to a school as some might think.
Though he liked his time at Ohio State this week, his schedule is packed with trips to other universities, according to his high school coach, Paul Sutherland.
“No, you won’t see a commitment,” Sutherland said. “I’d say late summer would be the earliest.”
Though he liked his time at Ohio State this week, his schedule is packed with trips to other universities, according to his high school coach, Paul Sutherland.
“No, you won’t see a commitment,” Sutherland said. “I’d say late summer would be the earliest.”
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BATON ROUGE -- There are five giant letters staring players in the face when they do their "postgame" press conferences at LSU's Alex Box Stadium.
Hung on the wall across from the microphones in big, bold font, the letters spell out "Omaha" for all to see. It's quite a mental image considering the two teams answering the questions, Stony Brook (50-12) and No. 7 LSU (46-16), are two wins away from Omaha, Neb., and a trip to the College World Series.
That pressure is more than enough for all 16 teams in this Super Regional round of the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship. But it will be a bit more for the Tigers and Seawolves on Saturday after one of the most surreal afternoons in LSU baseball history.
The Tigers opened their Super Regional against the Seawolves on Friday morning, as they have many times in the past.
Unlike past years though, Friday's game did not end. Instead, a titanic extra-inning battle between the two teams was suspended until Saturday morning by apocalyptic rainfall and nearby lightning. Game 1 will resume in the top of the 12th inning Saturday morning at 10:05 a.m., with Stony Brook coming to the plate in a 4-4 tie.
"It's a unique situation -- we'll both wake up tomorrow and come out here early in the morning, and who knows how long the first game is going to last," LSU coach Paul Mainieri said.
Game 2 will begin just 50 minutes after the deadlock is decided, meaning that Saturday morning's loser will have less than an hour to digest its fortunes before appearing in an elimination game with Omaha at stake.
"It's a funny situation, because not many chances is it a 0-0 (series) with Omaha on the line in one day," center fielder Mason Katz said. "But we still have to finish this first game. We're not talking about the second game, because we've got to do our job in the first game."
As strange as the situation seems, it might be the only fitting conclusion for a game as absurd as Friday's. Playing in front of an impressive weekday-morning crowd of 9,222, the Tigers seemed certain to drop the opener in an abysmal offensive performance that saw them knock just three hits in seven innings.
Stony Brook stranded 12 runners, but needed just a two-run shot from left fielder Sal Intagliata to hold a 2-1 advantage as the game wound toward what seemed to be the end.
Then came the game-saving rallies -- yes, there were multiple -- when the LSU offense rose from the dead to tie the Seawolves on three separate occasions. It began innocently enough, when LSU second baseman JaCoby Jones smacked a leadoff home run into left field to open the ninth inning, tying the score, 2-2. In a venue as renowned for late-game heroics as LSU, this part was almost expected.
"I asked (Mainieri) if he wanted me to take the first pitch or swing away, and he said to hit it out," Jones said.
What wasn't expected was the Seawolves' counter punch at the start of extra innings, when left fielder Steven Goldstein crushed a solo homer of his own to retake the lead, 3-2.
The Alex Box crowd had the relief of Jones' shot coming with no outs, but things weren't so easy the second time around. Two quick outs sent pitch-hitting first baseman Tyler Moore to the plate with his prospects looking bleak. The freshman battled to a full count and, on the Tigers last strike of the afternoon, he delivered more magic -- another game-tying homer.
"I was just trying to stay alive and hit something hard in play," Moore said.
Enough is enough. Two separate home runs to save the game for an LSU squad at the end of its rope. Surely the drama was over, and that certainly seemed to be the case when the Seawolves took the lead in the 11th inning on a sacrifice fly.
Of course, on the third pitch of the bottom of the 11th frame, Katz proved that line of logic wrong with another game-tying solo shot -- the Tigers' third in three straight innings. Even in the magical Alex Box, the euphoria was tinged with a hint of the surreal.
"We heard a lot about the eighth-inning magic and ninth-inning magic, and we've been a very resilient team," Katz said. "We have a good group of guys that, in any situation, no one gives up."
With so much drama on display, the eventual downpour seemed destined to happen -- a bizarre finish to a bizarre day. And if the two teams can dodge the rain drops Saturday, someone just might punch a ticket to Omaha in one afternoon.
Hung on the wall across from the microphones in big, bold font, the letters spell out "Omaha" for all to see. It's quite a mental image considering the two teams answering the questions, Stony Brook (50-12) and No. 7 LSU (46-16), are two wins away from Omaha, Neb., and a trip to the College World Series.
That pressure is more than enough for all 16 teams in this Super Regional round of the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship. But it will be a bit more for the Tigers and Seawolves on Saturday after one of the most surreal afternoons in LSU baseball history.
The Tigers opened their Super Regional against the Seawolves on Friday morning, as they have many times in the past.
Unlike past years though, Friday's game did not end. Instead, a titanic extra-inning battle between the two teams was suspended until Saturday morning by apocalyptic rainfall and nearby lightning. Game 1 will resume in the top of the 12th inning Saturday morning at 10:05 a.m., with Stony Brook coming to the plate in a 4-4 tie.
"It's a unique situation -- we'll both wake up tomorrow and come out here early in the morning, and who knows how long the first game is going to last," LSU coach Paul Mainieri said.
Game 2 will begin just 50 minutes after the deadlock is decided, meaning that Saturday morning's loser will have less than an hour to digest its fortunes before appearing in an elimination game with Omaha at stake.
[+] Enlarge
AP Photo/Gerald HerbertLSU centerfielder Mason Katz celebrates after his game-tying solo home run in the 11th inning against Stony Brook on Friday, the third game-tying homer of the game for the Tigers.
AP Photo/Gerald HerbertLSU centerfielder Mason Katz celebrates after his game-tying solo home run in the 11th inning against Stony Brook on Friday, the third game-tying homer of the game for the Tigers.As strange as the situation seems, it might be the only fitting conclusion for a game as absurd as Friday's. Playing in front of an impressive weekday-morning crowd of 9,222, the Tigers seemed certain to drop the opener in an abysmal offensive performance that saw them knock just three hits in seven innings.
Stony Brook stranded 12 runners, but needed just a two-run shot from left fielder Sal Intagliata to hold a 2-1 advantage as the game wound toward what seemed to be the end.
Then came the game-saving rallies -- yes, there were multiple -- when the LSU offense rose from the dead to tie the Seawolves on three separate occasions. It began innocently enough, when LSU second baseman JaCoby Jones smacked a leadoff home run into left field to open the ninth inning, tying the score, 2-2. In a venue as renowned for late-game heroics as LSU, this part was almost expected.
"I asked (Mainieri) if he wanted me to take the first pitch or swing away, and he said to hit it out," Jones said.
What wasn't expected was the Seawolves' counter punch at the start of extra innings, when left fielder Steven Goldstein crushed a solo homer of his own to retake the lead, 3-2.
The Alex Box crowd had the relief of Jones' shot coming with no outs, but things weren't so easy the second time around. Two quick outs sent pitch-hitting first baseman Tyler Moore to the plate with his prospects looking bleak. The freshman battled to a full count and, on the Tigers last strike of the afternoon, he delivered more magic -- another game-tying homer.
"I was just trying to stay alive and hit something hard in play," Moore said.
Enough is enough. Two separate home runs to save the game for an LSU squad at the end of its rope. Surely the drama was over, and that certainly seemed to be the case when the Seawolves took the lead in the 11th inning on a sacrifice fly.
Of course, on the third pitch of the bottom of the 11th frame, Katz proved that line of logic wrong with another game-tying solo shot -- the Tigers' third in three straight innings. Even in the magical Alex Box, the euphoria was tinged with a hint of the surreal.
"We heard a lot about the eighth-inning magic and ninth-inning magic, and we've been a very resilient team," Katz said. "We have a good group of guys that, in any situation, no one gives up."
With so much drama on display, the eventual downpour seemed destined to happen -- a bizarre finish to a bizarre day. And if the two teams can dodge the rain drops Saturday, someone just might punch a ticket to Omaha in one afternoon.

