Sam Leavitt enters 2026 with LSU as one of the biggest swing pieces in college football, and his path to Baton Rouge was anything but straightforward.
The former Arizona State quarterback was the No. 2-ranked QB in ESPN’s transfer rankings when he became available in early January, but that lofty billing did not make the market simple. Teams had mixed internal reviews on him, and his Lisfranc injury raised enough concern that several programs viewed him as a second- or third-choice quarterback target. That uncertainty mattered, because the price to land him was always going to be steep.
Lane Kiffin eventually made the move. Once Demond Williams Jr. did not get out of his Washington contract and Brendan Sorsby landed elsewhere, LSU sharpened its focus on Leavitt. Kiffin even flew to Knoxville to reconnect with him during a Tennessee visit, a push that helped revive a relationship that had cooled after the Williams situation shifted.
It worked. Leavitt picked LSU over Miami in mid-January, and he became the headliner of the nation’s top-ranked transfer class according to 247Sports.
There’s a reason LSU went that hard. Leavitt was a major reason Arizona State surged after his arrival in 2024, helping the Sun Devils go 16-4 overall with an 11-2 record as a starter and a College Football Playoff berth. He fit the profile Kiffin wanted: accurate, mobile and calm when the pocket tightened.
Across 20 starts for Arizona State, Leavitt threw for 4,513 yards and 34 touchdowns against nine interceptions, while adding 816 rushing yards and 10 scores. In 24 career games between Michigan State and Arizona State, he completed 376 of 612 passes for a 61.4 percent completion rate, with 4,652 passing yards and 36 touchdown passes.
But the résumé comes with real durability questions. Leavitt’s Lisfranc injury in September ended his 2025 season after seven games, and he finished that year with 1,628 passing yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions. The injury also shaped his first spring at LSU, when he spent much of practice unable to run, throw or plant as he recovered from surgery and learned Kiffin’s offense by watching.
Kiffin said Leavitt was "taking it very seriously," and also noted the system "is a lot to learn" and "not easy" when a quarterback can’t fully take part. While Leavitt watched, redshirt freshmen Husan Longstreet and redshirt sophomore Landen Clark handled most of the reps and made clear progress as spring went on.
Leavitt’s actual on-field work was limited, but it finally started to ramp up. He got into 7-on-7 work during LSU’s final closed spring scrimmage and then took about eight snaps Saturday in Tiger Stadium, his most meaningful live work since his November foot surgery. His first throw in that final 7-on-7 period went for a long touchdown.
That’s the part LSU is betting on now: that Leavitt’s talent, Big 12 production and playoff experience can carry over fast enough to match the urgency around this roster. Kiffin has made his expectations plain, saying he wants LSU to play "really smart, physical football" and that he wants opponents to "fear LSU the way that I had to fear LSU, like when I was at Alabama."
The burden lands on Leavitt’s shoulders, and the health piece is non-negotiable. Joel Klatt placed him among the top 10 quarterbacks for 2026, while also acknowledging the injury questions. Then in June, Kiffin said Leavitt was operating "pretty much full strength now," which at least gives LSU a path forward entering fall camp.
And the supporting cast is there. LSU rebuilt around him with an offensive line that includes No. 4 overall transfer Jordan Seaton from Colorado, plus nine new wide receivers through the portal, led by Winston Watkins, Jayce Brown and Eugene Wilson III.
Now it has to show up in games. Baton Rouge doesn’t hand out patience, and LSU opens the season at home against Clemson on Saturday, Sept. 5 at 7:30 p.m.
ET on ABC. The Tigers have met five times, with LSU holding a 4-1 series edge after winning the last two, including a 17-10 victory a year ago and a 42-25 win over Clemson in the 2020 College Football Playoff National Championship.
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