LSU’s season may end up being judged by one player, and Paul Finebaum made that clear when he put the spotlight squarely on Sam Leavitt.
The SEC Network analyst was asked about the former Arizona State quarterback on "The Paul Finebaum Show," and he didn’t dance around it. “I think Sam Leavitt is the key to it all,” Finebaum said.
That kind of statement carries real weight considering how much LSU has invested in this reset. The Tigers fired Brian Kelly during the season and then turned to former Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin after the year. Kiffin arrives with a résumé that includes a 55-19 record over six seasons, double-digit wins in four of his final five years, and an 11-1 finish last season that sent Ole Miss to the College Football Playoff for the first time in program history.
Now he’s trying to carry that momentum into Baton Rouge with the No. 1 transfer portal class in the country, and Leavitt sits at the center of it. The quarterback is the No. 1-ranked player in the portal after two seasons at Arizona State and one at Michigan State. Across his college career, he has completed 61.3% of his passes for 4,513 yards, 34 touchdowns and nine interceptions.
His 2024 season was the one that put him on the national radar. Leavitt helped Arizona State win its first Big 12 championship and earn a College Football Playoff berth. But last year also came with a setback, as injuries limited him to seven games and he completed 60.7% of his passes.
That’s why the excitement around him comes with a warning label. LSU had to rebuild its quarterback room through the portal after losing most of it last season, and the whole operation leans hard on Leavitt delivering.
The concern isn’t just whether he can play at a high level. It’s whether he can stay on the field.
His injury history is already part of the conversation. A Lisfranc foot injury cut into last season and kept him out of spring work. Even during his breakout 2024 run, he missed a game against Cincinnati because of a rib injury.
For LSU, that makes Leavitt more than a headline addition. He’s the hinge point.
If he’s healthy and productive, the Tigers have a chance to look like the roster Kiffin and LSU built. If the injuries return, the whole thing gets shaky fast.
In Other News...
LSU Just Took A Recruiting Hit With More Decisions Still Looming
LSU took a recruiting punch Thursday when one of its top cornerback targets came off the board, cutting into a class that still has some momentum to protect. Brandon Sherrard entered the day as one of the more closely watched defensive backs on LSUs board, with a profile that included a June 12 visit to Baton Rouge after seeing Texas a week earlier, and the Tigers had been hoping that trip would keep them squarely in the mix.
Even with that swing, the day is not finished for LSU. Jayden Anding, the Ruston High safety and younger brother of LSU cornerback Aidan Anding, is scheduled to announce between LSU and Ole Miss, while Tae Walden Jr. remains another name to watch with the Tigers still involved among his options. For a staff trying to stack defensive talent and keep local and regional targets from drifting elsewhere, the next few hours could matter just as much as the decision that already went against them. [Read more 🡒]
LSU Finally Has A First Real Look At Its 2026 Receiver Pecking Order
LSUs receiver room has spent the offseason looking more like a construction zone than a finished product, and that is what makes this first real glimpse at the 2026 pecking order so important. After losing multiple receivers to the portal and the NFL Draft, the Tigers brought in nine new wideouts, a haul that gives the staff both volume and variety as it tries to sort out who fits where. Kansas State transfer Jayce Brown arrives with proven production and the kind of big-play ability that can quickly change a depth chart, while Hawaii transfer Jackson Harris brings a vertical element that LSU has made a habit of valuing.
Winnie Watkins gives the group a different kind of stability. Already familiar with the system, he is expected to anchor the slot role and provide the kind of reliability every new receiver room needs while the newcomers adjust. The larger question is how quickly all of those pieces settle into order, because LSU is not just looking for bodies here. It needs a clear chain of trust, and the early signs suggest the Tigers may already have at least one receiver separating from the pack. [Read more 🡒]
LSU Is Already Watching A Louisiana Defensive Lineman Fans Need To Know
Broderick Sanders is still young enough to have just finished eighth grade at John Curtis, but the Louisiana defensive lineman is already drawing real attention from major college programs. The Patriots prospect has been in varsity action in three games, a sign that his development is moving quickly, and he continues to lean on the support of his parents and coaches as he works to sharpen his game.
The early interest has put Sanders on a fast track for a player his age, with LSU among the schools watching him closely and other SEC programs also in the mix. For LSU fans, it is the kind of in-state name worth filing away now, especially with Sanders still in the early stages of building a profile that could grow a lot more before he ever reaches high schools final years. [Read more 🡒]
