Volume 122 · No. 47
Wednesday, November 2, 2016
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STUDENT LIFE
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Tigers brace for showdown against physical Alabama front seven
FRONT
LINES
BY JACOB HAMILTON @jac0b_hamilt0n Colin Jeter knows what the future holds as well as anyone. Saturday is the senior tight end’s third time around on the front lines of the LSU-Alabama rivalry. He knows the shield and spear struggle that is to come. “It’s going to be a juggernaut battle,” Jeter said. “It’s going to be basically a street fight. We’re going to come out, and we’re going to hit each other in the mouth.” So what happens when an unstoppable force clad in purple and gold meets an immovable object draped in crimson? No. 15 LSU and No. 1 Alabama battle at 7 p.m. on Saturday at Tiger Stadium in a contest that will surely be decided by dueling front lines. “This is the No. 1 team in the country and one of the best
defenses in the country, if not the best,” Jeter said. “It’s time to test the offense for real … We’ve had a few tests but nothing that’s going to be like Alabama. It’s going to take perfect execution by all of us.” LSU (5-2, 3-1 Southeastern Conference) resembles a freight train since Ed Orgeron took over for Les Miles, handily winning three consecutive games and imposing its will on the ground to the tune of 304 rushing yards per game set up by an enhanced passing attack. Junior running back Leonard Fournette is back, fresh off an LSU single-game rushing record performance, coupled with the NCAA fourth-leading yards per carry rusher, sophomore running back Derrius Guice. LSU’s back to full strength on the offensive line for the first time since Sept. 17, too. Orgeron indicated that sophomore right tackle Toby
see ALABAMA, page 2
Season’s Readings sale to be held Nov. 29 BY CJ CARVER @CWCarver_ At the end of the month, local authors will come together with LSU Press and The Southern Review to offer a special holiday treat. Their Season’s Readings book and journal sale on Nov. 29. The sale will be held as a part of the University’s Holiday Spectacular and will feature many of the publishers’ works at discounted prices. Season’s Readings will take place from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at the Club at LSU Union Square with free parking available in the Union Square Parking Garage from 4:30p.m. to 8:30p.m. In addition to works being sold at 20 percent off, free gift wrapping will be available and more than a dozen local authors will be in attendance. Guests will be able to meet the authors and enjoy complimentary hors d’oeuvres, coffee and a cash bar. Many LSU Press and The Southern Review works will be available, and authors will be in attendance to sign copies of their works. Featured works include: “The Golden Band from Tigerland” by Faye Phillips, “Devils Walking” by Stanley Nelson, “Military Aviation in the Gulf South” by Vincent P. Caire, “Lift Your Spirits” by Liz Williams, “Fonville Winans’s Louisiana” by Cyril
CAROLINE MAGEE / The Daily Reveille
see HOLIDAYS, page 2 ACADEMICS
Rucks Department selects 11 students as 2016-17 Rucks Fellows
BY NATALIE ANDERSON @natalie_mechell The E. J. Ourso College of Business Rucks Department of Management selected 11 students for the 2016-2017 Rucks Fellows. This award goes to graduating seniors with the highest GPAs in the management curriculum. The award is a gift from alumnus William W. Rucks and his wife Catherine. The recipients are selected by the faculty and represent the highest level of academic achievement among senior management students. The recipients receive exclusive opportunities, including networking with faculty and
business leaders at special events, preferential enrollment in management courses and recognition during graduation. These special opportunities are intended to enhance their development as future business leaders. This year’s recipients are Rhiannon Ballard, Hannah Brown, Christina Davisson, Katherine Key, Ashton Lane, Makayla McManus, Sally Robichaux, Claire Schnell, Krishna Surakanti, Brent Swann and Benjamin LaPlace, who is currently involved in a student exchange program in Colorado. Ballard, a human resource management senior with dual minors in dance and personal
investing, is also a Chancellor’s Future Leaders in Research Scholar. She plans to pursue her passion for dance by working for and buying into her own dance studio post-graduation. Brown is a business management senior with a minor in information systems and decision sciences. She has made the Dean’s List for the last six semesters and is a Tiger Excellence Award recipient. Brown has been a member of The Golden Band from Tiger Land for four years and has been captain of the Tiger Band Colorguard for three years. Davisson will be graduating
see FELLOWS, page 2
courtesy of LSU MEDIA RELATIONS
The E. J. Ourso College of Business Rucks Department of Management has selected 11 students to be the 2016-2017 Rucks Fellows.
page 2
Wednesday, November 2, 2016
ALABAMA, from page 1 Weathersby would return from a high ankle sprain that has kept him out of the lineup. Sophomore left guard Will Clapp admitted that returning against Alabama (8-0, 5-0 SEC) isn’t ideal for Weathersby, but having the 6-foot5, 302 pounder back will be a substantial boost for an offensive line on the heels of a dominating rushing performance. “We’re probably in the best shape we’ve been physically and injury-wise this Saturday night,” Orgeron said. The unstoppable force, of course, is the same team that ended Fournette’s Heisman candidacy last season. Fournette averaged 193.1 rushing yards per game and thrice eclipsed 200 in the season’s first seven
HOLIDAYS, from page 1 Vetter, “Waterlines” by Alison Pelegrin, “Afton Villa” by Genevieve Trimble, “Legendary Louisiana Outlaws” by Keagan LeJeune, Billy Cannon and his biographer Charles deGravelles, “Louisiana Wild” by C. C. Lockwood, “A Confederacy of Dunces Cookbook” by Cynthia LeJeune Nobles, “Seat Yourself” by Alex Cook, “Hungry for Louisiana” by Maggie Richardson, “River Road Rambler” by Mary Ann Sternberg, “Best of
FELLOWS, from page 1 in December with a degree in management and a concentration in entrepreneurship. She has been on the Chancellor’s List multiple times and has been a TOPS Honors scholarship and Tiger Athletic Foundation scholarship recipient. “It wasn’t really something I was expecting, but it was a good surprise, especially since I’m at the end of my college career,” Davisson said. Davisson also said the networking opportunity has opened many doors for her and has provided résumé experience for both work and graduate school. Key, a business management senior with a concentration in human resources and a minor in
games, but Alabama held the 6-foot-1, 235-pound back to 31 yards on 19 rushing attempts. “For any player — any competitor — when stuff like that happens, it’s frustrating,” Jeter said. “But Leonard’s a tough guy. He’s proved that his whole life … He just comes to work every day, whether he’s putting that frustration on the field, running someone over — whatever he has to do.” The 2016 season has remained consistent for the defending national champion Crimson Tide, which Orgeron said has a defense ranking among the finest he’s ever seen. Alabama coach Nick Saban’s squad allows a nation-leading 70.1 rushing yards per game with its physically imposing three-man front and punishing
linebackers’ signature blend of speed and power. Junior fullback J.D. Moore recognizes that blocks won’t come as easily against a physical and technically sound Alabama front seven that holds opponents under 2.2 yards per carry and is tied for the 10th-most tackles for loss, 64, in the nation. But all-out dominating their physical specimens isn’t necessary for success, he said. “Obviously a knockout blow is not always going to be the result of a block,” Moore said. “We’ll take a stalemate over a knockout.” A winning game plan requires loosening the Tide up through the air so they can’t drop a safety into the box to shut down any semblance of a rushing attack, senior center Ethan
Pocic said. “We’re going to do some things with Leonard that he’s able to do,” Orgeron said. “Whatever happened last year is the past. We have a great game plan for Leonard. But … it’s going to be very tough moving the football on this defense.” For Moore, a fondness for contests decided at the line of scrimmage is a fundamental characteristic of linemen and fullbacks, who relish the between-the-tackles battles in a sport that’s increasingly spreading the field and replacing big guys with speedsters. “I don’t know what else you could ask for,” Moore said. “There’s going to be a whole lot of emotions and motivation out there. I think we’ll be ready to go. … It’s going to be fun.”
LSU Fiction” with editors Nolde Alexius and Judy Kahn and Poet Laureate of the State of Louisiana Ava Leavell Haymon. The University’s annual Holiday Spectacular has existed since 1995. Formerly known as the “Candlelight Celebration,” the event’s website describes it as “a collaborative initiative to promote all there is to do and see at LSU during the holiday season.” Other events that will take place during the Holiday Spectacular include holiday
performances by students, faculty and other community organizations, the University’s Christmas tree lighting ceremony, the Staff Senate’s Holiday on the Campus carnival for students and children of students, faculty and staff, a pre-Kwanzaa celebration, Benjamin Britten’s “Ceremony of Carols” concert with LSU Women’s Chorale along with the St. James Treble Choir and ending with the President’s Late Night Breakfast in the 459 Commons and The 5 dining halls.
Both LSU Press and The Southern Review were founded in 1935. According to the LSU Press website, they “quickly established itself as one of the nation’s outstanding scholarly presses and continues to garner national and international accolades, including four Pulitzer Prizes.” The Southern Review is “one of the nation’s premier literary journals,” according to their website, and publishes various works in the genres of fiction, nonfiction and poetry.
ceramics, will also graduate this December. She has been on the Dean’s List and President’s List multiple times. She is a member of the Roger Hadfield Ogden Honors College and an LSU Ambassador. Her future plans include working in human resources for a business or corporation after graduating. Lane is a business management senior with a minor in personal investing. She has been inducted into four national honor societies and been on the Dean’s List. After graduation, she plans to work for her father’s company Gerry Lane Enterprises. McManus, a human resources management senior with a minor in communication studies, has made both the Dean’s List and Chancellor’s List. She has been
part of the LSU Musical Theatre Club and Society for Human Resource Management. She plans to pursue a master’s degree in business post-graduation. Robichaux is a business management senior who has made the Chancellor’s Honor Roll, been a member of the Phi Eta Sigma National Honor Society and won the 2013 PricewaterhouseCoopers Challenge. She plans to get her teaching certification next summer. Schnell, a general management senior, has been on the Dean’s List every semester during her time at the University. She is a member of The National Society of Collegiate Scholars and Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society. After graduation, she wants to attend law school.
Surakanti, a management senior, is a member of The National Society of Collegiate Scholars and the Alpha Delta Lambda Honors Society. He plans to obtain his master’s degree before going to work for Google to aid in technological advances in India. Swann is a business management senior with a minor in entrepreneurship who transferred from LSU-Eunice. Swann said the recipients will receive $2,000 after graduating. He also values the exclusive networking opportunities. Swann said gaining experience with internships is great, but being recognized academically does not happen enough. “It kind of felt like all my hard work, academically, was finally paying off,” Swann said.
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Sports
page 3
FOOTBALL
FOOTBALL
LSU lineman suspended LSU lands at No. 13 in first after arrest in Georgia College Football Playoff ranking BY CHRISTIAN BOUTWELL @CBoutwell_ LSU freshman offensive guard Donavaughn Campbell was arrested on two counts of battery and has been suspended from LSU’s team as of Tuesday afternoon, an LSU spokesman confirmed to The Daily Reveille. Campbell was charged with battery on Sunday and was released on a $5,000 bond the same day, according to Georgia Tech Police Department arrest records. According to the report, Campbell and Georgia Tech defensive back Jalen Johnson
were arrested at the Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity House in Atlanta. A Georgia Tech Police Department officer was approached by a “group of males who were at 190 Fifth Street, NW with injuries to their faces and head stating that they had been punched by two individuals,” according to the report. Johnson played in all eight games for Georgia Tech this season and was arrested Sunday morning on one count of simple battery, hours after Georgia Tech’s 38-35 win versus Duke on Saturday. Johnson was also released on a $5,000 bond Sunday morning.
BY CHRISTIAN BOUTWELL @CBoutwell_ In the College Football Playoff’s first release of its rankings this season, LSU made the top 15. The 12-person selection committee listed the Tigers (5-2, 3-1 Southeastern Conference) at No. 13 ahead of its meeting with topranked Alabama on Saturday at 7 p.m. at Tiger Stadium. According to the poll, LSU’s two losses this season were against top 10 teams: a 13-18 loss against No. 9 Auburn on Sept. 24 and a 1416 loss versus No. 8 Wisconsin to open the season.
The Tigers are listed at No. 15 in the Associated Press’ poll and No. 14 in the Amway Coaches Poll. LSU’s next four games will include three against top 15 teams, too, including its bout Saturday against the Tide. On Nov. 19, LSU will host No. 11 Florida at Tiger Stadium and will then travel to face No. 4 Texas A&M at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas, on Nov. 24. The Tigers will also face unranked Arkansas on Nov. 12. The selection committee, which meets each Monday and Tuesday, will issue a new top 25 each week until Selection Day on Sunday, Dec. 4.
POLL RELEASE DATE
TIME (ET)
Nov. 8
7 p.m.
Nov. 15
9 p.m.
Nov. 22
7 p.m.
Nov. 29
7 p.m.
Dec. 4
12 p.m.
Selection Day and Playoff Semifinal teams announced
PRACTICE REPORT Moore, Chark, Jeter return; Lindsey Scott mimicking Alabama’s Jalen Hurts BY JOSH THORNTON @JoshuaThornton_ Preparation for No. 1 Alabama is full speed ahead for LSU. During the abbreviated media viewing period, LSU freshman quarterback Lindsey Scott was seen working as the scout team’s version of Alabama quarterback Jalen Hurts. Scott was used to practice read-option play to mimic Hurts, who is known as a dual-threat quarterback. Hurts is second on Alabama’s team in rushing with 521 yards and leads the team in rushing touchdowns. “[Alabama] has freshmen in Jalen Hurts, like defending the wildcat back there,” Orgeron said Monday at his “Lunch with Ed Orgeron” news conference. “[He’s like a] tailback back there. You have to consider him as one — one that can also throw the ball.” Sophomore offensive tackle Toby Weathersby practiced in drills without a yellow non-contact jersey. And in his weekly press conference, Orgeron said Weathersby could play if he has a good week of practice. Last Wednesday, Weathersby said his ankle is — for the most part — healed, but he is continuing to rehab it. “I still rehab three times a day.
It’s not going to stop,” Weathersby said. “Even if it’s feeling better, I’m going to continue to keep strengthening it and so I can be back to myself.” However, sophomore offensive lineman Maea Teuhema worked with the first-team offensive line at right tackle as Weathersby rotated with Teuhema at right tackle. Junior wide receiver D.J. Chark (finger) and senior tight end Colin Jeter (wrist) practiced Tuesday, after missing practice time during the bye week. Sophomore wide receiver Jazz Ferguson was the only absent player from practice for undisclosed, school-related reasons. Toward the end of practice, a scuffle between sophomore nose tackle Travonte Valentine and senior offensive guard Josh Boutte occurred. Valentine had been demoted to third string nose tackle, Orgeron said last week. Valentine has played in five games this season and did not play in LSU’s last two games. After LSU’s 45-10 win versus Southern Miss on Oct. 15, Orgeron said Valentine did not have a good week of practice, thus leading to the end of his streak of games played.
JORDAN MARCELL / The Daily Reveille
[LEFT] LSU sophomore running back Derrius Guice (5) participates in team drills on Oct. 11 during the Tigers’ practice at the LSU Practice Facilities. [BELOW] Former LSU linebacker Lamar Louis (11) holds then-sophomore wide receiver D.J. Chark (82) while doing the big cat drill during practice on March 19, 2015, at the LSU Practice Facilities.
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Opinion
page 5
Customers, patrons have duty to tip servers responsibly ALL’S NAIR IN LOVE AND WAR ANJANA NAIR @anjanaaanair Working in a restaurant has taught me a number of things: how to change toilet paper in bathrooms, grind burgers from scratch and keep smiling when the difficult table — who was there for three hours — doesn’t tip. I’ve spent the last few months of my life asking myself the same question every day: Why don’t people tip? It’s a simple question. Yet, when I ask Google, somehow the only search results that pop up are articles persuading people to stand up against tipping culture and stop tipping altogether. Let me tell you who you’re really screwing over. In most states, including Louisiana, servers get paid $2.13 an hour. It’s called the tipping wage. It’s allowed to be below minimum wage to account for the fact that servers are meant to make most of
their wages from tips. That means every table, every person and every tip counts. Most people who work in the service industry are not doing it because it’s a fun job. Especially for a college student or full-time server trying to pay bills, serving is hard work with unrecognized value. Specifically in the South, eating in restaurants and expecting hospitality with your food is a principle aspect of our culture. Servers, like anyone else, work hard at their jobs, which often include labor-intensive work in addition to unwaveringly maintaining a sweet, engaging demeanor for hours at a time. I never fully realized the importance of tipping until I started working in the service industry. My coworkers often work nine or 10 hour shifts and only make $30 to $40 in tips at the end of the night, and it’s simply heartbreaking. I know one girl who has a $500 rent payment due at the end of the week, and she’s been eating
microwaveable chicken nuggets for the past two weeks because she can’t afford anything else. Another co-worker is struggling to buy a car so she can stop walking to work, but is living paycheck to paycheck. These are things that every consumer should keep in mind: taking a stand against tipping means screwing over real people with real bills. Now, you may be thinking, “That’s not my problem, the restaurant should be paying the servers more.” Except that the federal labor law states that the minimum wage for tipped workers is mandated at $2.13 an hour. If a server does not make enough tips to equal the regular $7.25 minimum wage, then they will be compensated. Sounds fair enough, until you realize that not all restaurants do this. The purpose of being a server is to provide customers with great service, and they are expected to tip you in return. If not, then why would anyone choose to be a server? Why not be a hostess or a cook and make a decent hourly wage?
Similarly, if you don’t want to tip, why go out to eat and have someone wait on you hand and foot instead of making your own food at home? What should be understood is that having money to pay for the bill is equally as important as having money to pay for a tip. If you only have money to pay for the food, then you don’t have enough money to eat out. Some people tip based on their evaluation of the server instead of tipping based on a percentage of the bill. The problem arises when your evaluation hinges on things that are not the server’s fault. Your server is not purposely holding your food hostage in the kitchen when it takes too long. Most likely, they’re yelling at the cooks and fighting for your food to come out because they know that the longer the food takes, the less likely they are to get a sustainable tip. Your server is not responsible for catering to your individual taste palette when you don’t like your food, either. Chances are, you ordered
something you shouldn’t have, or you’re in a restaurant that doesn’t serve food you like. You chose the restaurant. You chose the food. So why shoot the messenger? Working in the service industry can be demeaning and frustrating, especially because when you depend on tips as your income, you’re not allowed to react to rude customers. You have to develop a thick skin and constantly uphold a pleasant attitude. It’s not an easy task, but it should be worth it. It’s hard to see your managers getting paid large sums of money and driving expensive cars while you struggle to make people understand why you deserve the extra five dollars in tips. If you are one of those people who can’t — or won’t — understand the value of your server, here’s a gracious tip from me to you: next time, stay at home for dinner. Anjana Nair is an 18-year-old international studies sophomore from Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Planning for finances not that different from weather forecasts JAY TALKING JAY CRANFORD @hjcranford Did you know Baton Rouge is consistently one of the wettest cities in America? I’m sure you did because it rains all the time here. After about the third time I was on campus during a thunderstorm with no umbrella, I realized I’ll just have to carry one with me at all times. It’s better to constantly carry around an umbrella than occasionally be caught in a storm without it, right? One time, while I was walking to class, wet from the rain and listening to the squish of my socks, that thought ran through my mind. This prompted me to think about how personal finance and weather are similar. They both revolve around planning for variables that may never happen, though we constantly have warnings about them. For example, every day meteorologists update forecasts for when it will rain ranging from right now all the way to next week. What are the chances they accurately predict the chance of rain in one week’s time? If I had to guess, it’s
probably a percentage lower than the number of students left in Tiger Stadium after halftime — so pretty low. Think of meteorologists as stock experts you see on the news and read about online. A quick search on any finance website will turn up dozens of opinions ranging from the market going up 100 percent in one year to full-on doomsday coming right around the corner. It’s also a well-known fact that most expert stock pickers will not outperform the market in a given year. Does this mean we shouldn’t listen to meteorologists and stock experts? Well, sort of. The truth is we know that in the future it will either rain or it won’t, and the stock market will either go up or go down. All the predictions, percentages and future telling are just noise that will distract you from your plans. For example, my plan every day is to attend all my classes. If it starts raining, I’m not going to skip class, even though I would like to. Instead, I will pull out my umbrella and keep walking across campus. So if rain is not going to change my plans, there’s no reason to check the forecast before I leave. It would just be
useless noise. What I can do, however, is be aware of the worst-case scenario — rain — and then focus on what I can control to create a backup plan — carrying an umbrella. If my financial plan is to start saving for retirement so I can retire when I’m 40 years old, I shouldn’t be concerned with trying to time the market, avoid the bad times and only invest when the market is rising. Instead, I need to lay out a plan for how to
achieve my goals, focusing on what I can control. So for my retirement plan, I should focus on how I will cut costs to save the money I’m going to be investing for retirement. I should also be aware that the worst-case scenario is a sudden large decline in the market. Much like rain, a market decline will happen and while we can speculate when it will, we won’t know until it’s too late. However, there are precautions you can take, such
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The Daily Reveille (USPS 145-800) is written, edited and produced solely by students of Louisiana State University. The Daily Reveille is an independent entity of the Office of Student Media within the Manship School of Mass Communication. Signed opinions are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the editor, The Daily Reveille or the university. Letters submitted for publication should be sent via e-mail to opinion@lsureveille.com or delivered to B-39 Hodges Hall. They must be 400 words or less. Letters must provide a contact phone number for verification purposes, which will not be printed. The Daily Reveille reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for space consideration while preserving the original intent. The Daily Reveille also reserves the right to reject any letter without notification of the author. Writers must include their full names and phone numbers. The Daily Reveille’s editor in chief, hired every semester by the LSU Student Media Board, has final authority on all editorial decisions.
as hedging your investments or taking less risky investments that won’t decline as much. Forget the forecasts and the predictions. Instead, make your plan being aware of the inherent risks associated with it and knowing how you will react when it starts to pour. It will make your life much less stressful. Jay Cranford is a 22-year-old finance senior from St. Simons Island, Georgia.
cartoon by BETSY PRIMES / The Daily Reveille
Quote of the Day “Oh, I think I shall wish everyone a Happy Winds Day.”
Winnie the Pooh
entertainer, honey gatherer 1926 — Present
page 6
Wednesday, November 2, 2016
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THE Daily Commuter Puzzle ACROSS 1 Divided 6 “Beauty is only __ deep” 10 Maple tree secretions 14 Tranquillity 15 Give up land 16 Scheme 17 Fall flower 18 Very excited 19 __ up; form a row 20 Mississippi riverboats 22 Per person 24 __ up; quit 25 Flabbergasted 26 Take out, as text 29 Robbery 30 Nay’s opposite 31 Mistake 33 Supplies with nourishment 37 Rip 39 Song of an Alpine goatherd 41 Metal bar 42 Lopsided 44 As __ a hornet 46 __ Lanka 47 Drew or Mariah 49 Group of seven 51 Talk show host __ Hall 54 Goose egg 55 Stopped temporarily 56 Radar’s rank on “M*A*S*H” 60 __ together; combines 61 Resound 63 __ a hard drive; clear all data 64 Ascend 65 Paper quantity 66 Whiplash sites 67 Playthings 68 __ up; arranges 69 Lock of hair DOWN 1 Hot tubs 2 Bothersome person 3 Tardy
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4 Cold period in history 5 One who eats on the house 6 Frighten 7 Beer barrels 8 “What’ll __”; Irving Berlin hit 9 Nullify 10 Sliver of wood 11 ET, for one 12 Explorer __ de León 13 Spirited horse 21 __ so often; occasionally 23 “__, the Magic Dragon” 25 Tear to bits 26 Facts & figures 27 Facial features 28 Hose problem 29 Nov. 2, 2016 32 Juliet’s love 34 Vane direction 35 Urgent 36 Narrow cut 38 Courtroom breaks
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40 High-powered surgical beam 43 Diminish 45 Snake 48 Passengers 50 More impoverished 51 Take __; undo 52 AM/FM device
53 Full of lather 54 __ in; uses a camera’s closeup feature 56 Informal talk 57 Marathon 58 __ for; requests 59 More or __ 62 Average grade
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BASKETBALL
Tigers motivated by No. 12 SEC media preseason ranking
BY SETH NIEMAN @seth_nieman When LSU coach Johnny Jones, Antonio Blakeney and Brandon Sampson returned from Southeastern Conference Media Day on Oct. 19, they knew the Tigers had something to prove. LSU was ranked No. 12 out of the 14 teams in the SEC’s media preseason basketball rankings. “We had an opportunity to get back and reflect on media day being picked 12th, and it’s kind of unfamiliar territory for us,” Jones said. “Those who had the privilege of a vote — we’re hoping that we’ll be able to prove them wrong.” The Tigers finished fourth last season behind Texas A&M, Kentucky and South Carolina. LSU finished the regular season 18-13, 11-7 in the SEC, and was eliminated from the SEC Tournament after enduring a 71-38 thumping from Texas A&M. The low ranking comes after the departures of Ben Simmons, Tim Quarterman and Keith Hornsby, three of LSU’s leading scorers from last season. So who does LSU expect to step up now? Blakeney. “I think it’s challenging, but
a challenge I’m willing to take,” said Blakeney, who was named to the preseason Second Team AllSEC at SEC Media Day. “It’s fun. All the young guys looking up to me and talking to me. A lot is expected, but I just have to go out and lead by example.” Junior guard Jalyn Patterson said while he thinks the ranking will motivate the team, he doesn’t let it affect him. “It is kind of disrespect that they picked us 12th,” he said. “But we’ll just have to use that as motivation and play.” Players noticed a change of tempo in LSU’s practices following the release of the preseason poll. “Being picked 12th is not something we expected,” Sampson said. “It is what it is. We have to play through it, and I think we’ll prove ourselves. Practice was really intense. LSU begins its season on Nov. 7 with an exhibition match against Reinhardt University at the PMAC at 7 p.m. The Tigers begin the regular season at home on Nov. 12 against Wofford College. “The only way you clean that up is not by talking about it, but by being about it in playing, and we have to make sure we do those things,” Jones said.
HASKELL WHITTINGTON / The Daily Reveille
LSU freshman guard Antonio Blakeney shoots the second final free throw of the game during LSU’s 96-91 victory against the Florida Gators on Feb. 27 at the PMAC.
LSU STUDENT MEDIA PRESENTS
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LIVING EXPO
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LSU STUDENT UNION
ROYAL COTILLION BALLROOM
NOV. 2, 10 AM - 2 PM 1
Oakbrook
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The Retreat
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Woodlands
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Wildwood
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University House / University Edge
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Campus Apartments
13 Arlington
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AT&T
14 Max Fitness
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American Campus
15 The Exchange
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Park Place
16 Sterling
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10 Tiger Plaza
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11 Bella Brazillian 12 Beau Chene
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ENTRANCE
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with Baton Rouge
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