Alabama may not have settled its quarterback job yet, but that uncertainty does not change the matchup problem it can create for LSU.
The Crimson Tide are in the middle of a battle between redshirt freshman Keelon Russell and redshirt junior Austin Mack, and either way, LSU is going to see a mobile athlete under center. That matters because the Tigers have had trouble over the last two years against quarterbacks who can hurt them with their legs.
Jalen Milroe did exactly that in 2024, running for 185 yards and four touchdowns against LSU. Marcel Reed followed the same script, picking up 62 rushing yards and three scores while not even playing the whole game against LSU in 2024, then coming back in 2025 with another big outing: 108 rushing yards and two touchdowns.
LSU’s defense was good enough to hold Alabama to 20 points in last year’s meeting, and that came in a season when Alabama’s rushing attack was basically a non-factor behind pocket-passer quarterback Ty Simpson. The Tide managed only 56 rushing yards, and LSU finished with 59 on the ground.
Even with both teams ranking among the SEC’s two worst rushing offenses last season, Alabama still has the more dangerous ground threat because its quarterbacks can create plays with their feet. Russell played in two games last year and ran three times for 17 yards. Mack appeared in four games and totaled 22 rushing yards and a touchdown on nine attempts.
LSU’s defense was better in 2025 than it had been since the 2019 national championship season, but mobile quarterbacks still gave it problems. That unit should improve again in 2026, though Harold Perkins is no longer there to chase down plays, and Whit Weeks will be the one leading the linebacker group and tracking Russell or Mack throughout the game.
There is some hope for LSU up front, where the defensive line could produce multiple game-wreckers. But that remains more of a projection than a proven reality before the season starts.
That is why this game could tilt Alabama’s way even if LSU is expected to be the favorite. A quarterback who keeps extending plays can wear down a defense, and that opens the door for the Tide to hit with mid-range routes.
If LSU gets dragged into that kind of game again, Alabama could walk out of Death Valley with the kind of win that has been hard for the Tigers to stop.
In Other News...
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Among the headliners, Kansas State transfer Jayce Brown brings the most proven production and the kind of big-play rsum that can quickly separate a crowded room, while Hawaii transfer Jackson Harris adds a vertical element that should stretch the field. Winnie Watkins already knows the system and gives LSU a steadier presence in the slot, which matters as much now as it ever has with so much turnover. The competition is far from settled, but the early shape of the pecking order says plenty about how much the Tigers are counting on this group to come together fast. [Read more 🡒]
LSU Awaits A Massive Recruiting Answer On Its Future Secondary
LSUs summer recruiting push is coming to a head with a cluster of defensive back decisions set to land on the same day, giving the Tigers a chance to clarify what their future secondary might look like. The group includes Louisiana safety Jayden Anding, North Carolina safety Davion Jones and Texas standout Karnell "Greedy" James, a trio that has been on LSUs radar as it tries to keep building out the back end with regional talent and a national reach.
Andings timetable has already shifted into July 2, while Jones has gone through official visits to multiple finalists and is still drawing LSU interest despite a lean toward South Carolina. James remains the biggest swing piece in the mix, with LSU continuing to press for one of its top defensive back targets as the Tigers wait for the answers that could shape the class and, eventually, the depth chart behind it. [Read more 🡒]
