Will a new approach improve LSU special teams after a disastrous season?

There’s no way around it: LSU special teams were a problem in head coach Brian Kelly’s first season.
From the blocked extra point in the season-opening loss to Florida State to dropped kicks and mental gaffes, those often-overlooked units had issues throughout the year. Punt returns became such an adventure that fans understandably cheered for successful fair catches.
The Tigers’ overall roster depth did not help, but they finished 92nd in SP+, an ESPN metric that measures efficiency. The coverage teams ranked in the bottom third of the country in average punt (10.94) and kickoff (23.10) return yardage allowed.
Usually, special teams mistakes come from the specialists themselves. But LSU’s problems weren’t at kicker, punter or long snapper.
Kelly assessed what went wrong after the season, saying he rewatched every game to diagnose issues and possible corrections. He didn’t blame special teams coordinator Brian Polian, and he didn’t find a critical error with the schemes. He thought LSU dropped the ball too much, which had plagued the Florida State and Tennessee losses in particular.
His solution was to rework how LSU coaches special teams. After Polian moved into an off-field role — he later left to become the John Carroll University athletic director — Kelly promoted defensive analyst John Jancek to outside linebackers coach and special teams coordinator.
Even though Jancek held the title, the other assistants took on more responsibility coaching individual special teams units with responsibilities spread amongst the staff. For instance, offensive line coach Brad Davis oversees blocking on field goals.
The staff recently underwent another shakeup when defensive line coach Jimmy Lindsey had to step away because of “a personal health matter,” Kelly said in a statement Wednesday. Jancek replaced Lindsey for the time being, and defensive analyst Bob Diaco stepped into the role of outside linebackers and special teams coach. LSU will still use the decentralized approach.
The change has to make a difference. LSU has Southeastern Conference championship and College Football Playoff aspirations, and if it wants to reach its potential, special teams can’t be a hindrance toward those goals.
It should help that LSU has 40 new players, further rebuilding the roster from the end of the Ed Orgeron era. The Tigers haven’t accumulated the overall depth of Alabama or Georgia yet, but they are in a better position than they were a year ago.
One of the signees, Alabama wide receiver Aaron Anderson, could immediately become the punt returner. With the playmaking ability he showed at Edna Karr High and obvious burst early in preseason practice, he may improve LSU’s 4.78 yards per return last season, the second-lowest average in the SEC.
LSU also brought back starters in punter Jay Bramblett, long snapper Slade Roy and kicker Damian Ramos, though Ramos has to hold off sophomore Nathan Dibert after they both struggled in the spring game. The group was productive last season and never caused glaring concerns.

Latest Player Notes

How a Wisconsin legend got his German protégé into Badgers pro day

Mar 15, 2024 Marlon Werthmann put his life on hold for the opportunity in front of him Friday at the McClain Center.Werthmann ...

Why former Wisconsin football running back Braelon Allen didn't run the 40 at pro day

Mar 15, 2024 Braelon Allen’s sweat covered his shirt and dripped off his beard as he approached a group of reporters Friday.The ...

How can UW recruit its best class ever? It starts with these five prospects

By Andy Yamashita Seattle Times staff reporter Jedd Fisch has lofty recruiting goals at Washington. He didn’t waste any ...

Texas football kicks off spring practice Tuesday. We answer 24 questions for the 2024 team

Things certainly look fresh for the 2024 college football season, especially on the Texas campus.There’s a new conference ...

College Football Playoff: Conferences solve their differences (for now) and agree on general framework for 2026 and beyond

The FBS conferences and Notre Dame agreed on Friday to continue the College Football Playoff beyond the 2025 season, signing ...

Ball security, leadership key as Aztecs look to identify starting quarterback

San Diego State seemingly auditions a new starting quarterback on an annual basis.In the past 12 years, the Aztecs have opened ...

Results and more: A look at what happened at Penn State football’s Pro Day inside Holuba Hall

Most of those at Penn State’s Pro Day Friday were relatively quiet throughout the afternoon’s workouts, but there was one ...

Defense dominates first two weeks of Oregon State spring practice as Beavers ready for 2-week breather

CORVALLIS – Oregon State hit the break of spring practices Saturday, not exactly the midpoint but a good place to assess ...

Dillon Gabriel to have similar input, autonomy as Bo Nix had in Oregon’s offense

Published Mar. 16, 2024, 6:26 p.m.By James CrepeaEUGENE — Dillon Gabriel will have much of the same autonomy as Bo Nix did ...

Two transfers, one underclassman who impressed in Missouri football's spring game

With that, spring camp’s a wrap.Missouri football held its Black & Gold spring game Saturday in front of a healthy crowd ...
See More Player Notes