Big 12 Media Days opened with an odd moment for Baylor, and Dave Aranda quickly became the center of it. The Bears coach was trying to explain what he sees in quarterback DJ Lagway, but the language he chose while talking about Lagway’s path from Florida to Baylor landed badly.
Aranda said Lagway looked like someone who wanted to break free from what had been holding him back. The problem was the phrase he used to make that point.
“He’s very driven, there is a huge chip on his shoulder. I could see on the recruiting trip, … I could see someone that just wanted to be free,” Aranda said of Lagway.
“Like (he was in a) straight jacket, maybe, someone that is just all boxed in and boxed up and just wanted to be free, express himself, play free. And I think he’s felt that (freedom) … at Baylor.
“He’s smiling more, he’s open more, he’s engaging with teammates more. He’s taken the O-line out to eat, he’s taken the receivers off to (practice) seven-on-seven, or they’re at his house watching films.
He’s just totally engaged, totally driven. So guys are connected to him and want to play for him, they don’t want to let him down.”
The intent was clear enough: Aranda was saying Lagway had been constrained by Billy Napier and interim head coach Billy Gonzales’s offense. But the “straight jacket” comparison made the whole thing feel like an unnecessary misstep, especially with Aranda entering the 2026 season on the hot seat. It was the kind of unforced error that does him no favors.
Elsewhere in the SEC chatter, LSU legend Andrew Whitworth had plenty to say about the Tigers’ recent recruiting win with 4-star Ruston safety Jayden Anding. Whitworth was at the 2026 American Century Championship at Edgewood Tahoe Resort in Stateline, Nevada, and spoke about why Anding’s commitment mattered to him personally.
For Whitworth, this one hit close to home. Anding is the best friend of Whitworth’s nephew, Hayden Clark, and Anding’s brother, Aidan, is already at LSU. That made the decision feel especially meaningful.
"Well, first off, Jayden, that's my nephew Hayden Clark's best friend. They go to the same high school, so I'm really excited for him to be an LSU Tiger.
His brother's already there. So that's really cool," Whitworth said.
"You heard Lane talk about why he wanted to go there and be a part of LSU. I think when I was there, you looked at it following the (Gerry) DiNardo years...
Nick Saban said when he took over the job, 'If you could just keep the kids in Louisiana and steal a recruit here and there, they're gonna be really good for a long time.'
"I think Lane saw that, if you go to that place, you have, even in this day and era of time, with a little nudge, you could just keep Louisiana boys in Louisiana and win. I think, as you do that, and then you start to reach off the state a little bit, you build momentum.
And we did that at LSU when I was there. We were Saban's first recruiting class, and that's what we did.
Marcus Spears, Michael Clayton...
"We went around and told people, 'If you come here, we're going to win here,' and we were able to get guys to flip their commitments. So that momentum matters. And so I'm excited about where they are."
Whitworth has said before that Kiffin is proving him right on the recruiting trail, and that has continued since June. The bigger question now is whether that success on the trail turns into more meaningful results on the field than LSU has had in recent seasons under Brian Kelly.
In Other News...
Auburn Champion Sends A Strong Message About Alex Golesh
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Burns confidence matters because he has seen Golesh up close before, and that kind of firsthand perspective tends to carry more weight than offseason buzz. Even so, Auburns outlook remains split as some see a rapid jump and others expect a slower climb, which leaves the Tigers in a familiar spot for a program that is still trying to turn belief into something more tangible. [Read more 🡒]
Auburn's Late Recruiting Win Looks Bigger Than Fans Realized
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Auburn also came away with three players from the final Best in Bama rankings, a haul that includes Jaquez Wilkes, Spencer and Shadarius Toodle. Alex Golesh has already singled out Spencer for the way he has performed and handled himself, suggesting the Tigers may not have to wait long to see whether the latest recruiting win turns into an early on-field boost. [Read more 🡒]
Auburn Finally Has A Kicker Fans Can Believe In Again
Alex McPherson gave Auburn something it has been searching for in the kicking game, and he did it by turning a once-unstable spot into a real strength. After working back from serious health problems, he settled in for a strong 2025 season and finished 20 of 23 on field goals, a level of consistency that changed the way the Tigers could approach close games.
Now Auburn heads into 2026 with McPherson still in line as the starter, Connor Gibbs back as the kickoff specialist and Towns McGough headed to Cal. McPherson sounded confident during spring practice, and for a program that has spent too long wondering what might happen when the offense stalled near the goal line, simply having a kicker the staff can trust again matters plenty. [Read more 🡒]
