FSU blocks LSU extra point, spoils Brian Kelly's Tigers debut
Shyheim Brown blocked LSU's extra point attempt with no time left to give Florida State a 24-23 victory Sunday night, spoiling Brian Kelly’s debut as the Tigers' coach.
Despite a slew of mistakes including a muffed punt with 2:15 left, LSU came within the extra point of tying it in the wild finish.
FSU’s Treshaun Ward fumbled at the LSU 1-yard line with 1:20 to go, and Tigers quarterback Jayden Daniels drove LSU for a touchdown on a 2-yard pass to Jaray Jenkins with no time left.
With LSU fans celebrating an apparent two-touchdown comeback in the final 4:07 — and Florida State fans bracing themselves for what could have gone down as an infamous implosion — Brown deflected Damian Ramos’ kick, touching off an FSU celebration during which players wildly rushed the field.
On Monday's "Undisputed," Shannon Sharpe broke down why Kelly's Tigers have a long road ahead of them after Sunday's showing.
"This is a bad look," he said. "I mean, LSU — wow. This is basically a home game for you. Every other SEC team won (in Week 1) except LSU. Brian Kelly did not get off to the glowing start that everybody thought that he would. He's gonna find out that it's a lot more difficult. And the pressure — yeah, there's pressure at Notre Dame, but it's not like pressure in the SEC. … They gave you (Kelly) a 10-year deal … and you lose to unranked Florida State? And Florida State has been bad since Jimbo [Fisher] left."
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Skip Bayless and Shannon Sharpe share their takeaways from Kelly's LSU debut.
Tens of thousands of garnet and gold-clad spectators helped sell out the Superdome, virtually negating what could have been a home advantage for LSU in a game played just 80 miles from its Baton Rouge campus. And they left happy after Florida State (2-0) — coming off four straight losing seasons — prolonged a promising start to coach Mike Norvell’s third season in charge.
This game was arguably more meaningful to Norvell than Kelly, who was lured from Notre Dame with a decade-long, $100 million contract designed to give him time to remake LSU football in his image. Kelly’s staff includes only one assistant from last season, while 16 transfer players were brought in to patch up a roster in flux.
One of those transfers was former Arizona State QB Daniels, who started after a tight competition in camp with Garrett Nussmeier. He completed 26 of 35 passes for 209 yards and two touchdowns, both to Jenkins. Daniels also rushed for 114 yards.
Another transfer, running back Noah Cain (from Penn State), scored LSU’s first TD from a yard out on fourth down late in the third quarter to make it 17-10.
Jordan Travis marched the Seminoles right back to the end zone, highlighted by a 15-yard completion to Johnny Wilson as the elusive QB jumped away from closing defenders. DJ Lundy finished the drive with a 1-yard TD run to make it 24-10 with 9:04 to go.
LSU took its only lead, at 3-0, on its first possession. But that drive stalled shortly after first-year center Garrett Dellinger’s shotgun snap over Daniels’ head on second and goal from the FSU 5-yard line.
Florida State’s lead was just 7-3 at halftime after both teams blew red-zone opportunities.
Travis passed for 260 yards and two touchdowns for Florida State.
Travis’ scoring passes came on a 39-yard throw to Ontaria Wilson on a flea flicker and a 27-yard pass that Wilson corralled with one hand while being interfered with. Travis also rushed for 31 yards on a combination of designed runs and scrambles, repeatedly leaving LSU pass rushers grasping air as he spun or darted away from pressure.
LSU’s line didn’t look ready when the ball was snapped on a field goal attempt, and Jared Verse knifed in past left tackle Cameron Wire to block Ramos’ kick.
The Seminoles couldn’t cash in on Malik Nabers first of two muffed punts, which FSU recovered on the LSU 16. Norvell kept the offense on the field on fourth-and-2 from the 8-yard line, and Travis’ pass to the far corner of the end zone fell incomplete.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.