LSU lands top 5 ESPN college football players: ESPN posted their top 50 college football players in the country before the postseason, and, as expected, was dominated by the LSU Tigers.
After posting a perfect 13-0 record en route to an SEC Championship and No. 1 spot in the college football play-off, the Tigers put five players on the list of top 50 doubles. 'ESPN, all of which ranked in the top 26. None of these players were ranked in the pre-season version of the roster.
Topping the list at No. 1 overall was star quarterback Joe Burrow, who set a record season on track to become the second Heisman Trophy winner in program history. Throughout 13 games, the main caller completed 342 of 439 yards (77.9 yards) for 4,715 yards with 48 carries - six interceptions while running for 289 yards and 3 carries on 96 carries.
LSU lands top 5 ESPN college football players
"What a difference a year ago made," ESPN wrote. "The former Ohio State transfer went from being a midfield quarterback to the SEC to best quarterback in college football. He broke last season's personal touchdown total in just four games. and he's two touchdown passes under 50 this season. "
Burrow was joined by three other members of LSU's high-powered offensive. Sophomore Ja'Marr Chase was the highest-ranked wide receiver on the list. ° 6 overall, while junior catcher Justin Jefferson was No. 1. ° 20 overall and junior runner Clyde Edwards-Helaire completed the group at n. ° 26 overall.
Chase became the second LSU player to win the Biletnikoff Award after leading the country in receptions (124.8 yards per game) and touchdown receptions (18) while averaging a career-high 20.5 yards per catch in 73 receptions. Jefferson tallied 88 team-leading catches for 1,207 yards and 14 touchdowns, while Edwards-Helaire accumulated 1,290 yards and 16 touchdowns on 197 carries, adding 50 receptions for 399 yards and a score.
True freshman cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. was the only LSU defense member to reach ESPN's top 50, reaching No. 19 on the list. The 6-foot-1, 190-pounder led the SEC in both interceptions (six) and pass breaks (21) while recording 34 tackles and one loss for 13 games, obtaining 247 Sports True. Freshman of the Year and consensus All-America honors.
"Many freshmen are steadfast in their debut seasons; almost none dominate the way Stingley did in late 2019," wrote ESPN. "He finished the season tied second overall nationally in defensive passes (six INT, 15 breakouts), and Pro Football Focus named him his first national year of the year."
Ian McDiarmid has a hilarious reaction to comparisons to Bill Belichick
Emperor Palpatine or Bill Belichick? You decide. Lately, there have been some memes floating around on the Internet with the release of "Star Wars: The Rise Of Skywalker", which compares the New England Patriots head coach to Darth Sidious and even made the man laugh. Ian McDiarmid has reportedly found the comparisons to be fun, but says the coach may need to wear more black. For more information, check out the "Nissan Social Drive" video above, presented by Nissan.
Chase Young says Zach Harrison develops faster than he does
By any measure, Ohio State junior defensive back Chase Young has had a sensational 2019 season for the Buckeyes.
Young set a school-record season record of 16.5, which also leads the nation, was named the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, took home both the Chuck Bednarik Award and the Bronko Nagurski Trophy and the Heisman Trophy was a finalist.
But could there be another Buckeyes pass rusher waiting in the wings?
According to Young, yes, and his name is Zach Harrison.
Harrison is a true freshman, the defensive end, making an immediate impact on an Ohio State defense that ranks among the nation's best units.
The former five-star prospect in the 2019 recruiting class joins the College Football Playoff with 3.5 catches for five tackles per loss.
Young thinks that Harrison is more advanced than during his first season.
"Zach, I think it's ahead of me just because I think it's developing so much faster," Young said recently about Harrison. "He's taking coaching a lot faster than me."
This level of praise from a Young caliber player should tell a lot about what the future holds for Harrison and Ohio State.
"Zach is working really hard and I'm really happy with him," said defensive coordinator Greg Mattison in October. "He is a typical Buckeye who works as hard as he can every day and is very talented. He has a great character and wants to be a great football player. And then he works with (defensive line coach Larry Johnson) and every day he does so. you see better "