Michael Spiers
House of Cards?
By: Michael Spiers
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
LSU is 3-0, ranked 3rd in the country, and last Saturday beat Florida 20-10 in a rivalry game. On paper, things look great in Baton Rouge. But if you really watch the games, the Tigers’ start isn’t as flawless as it seems.
Brian Kelly made headlines after that Florida win for snapping at a reporter about LSU’s struggling running game. He later apologized, but honestly, you can’t blame him.
The offense has been frustrating to watch. Through three games, LSU is last in the SEC in scoring at just 20 points per game and has only five offensive touchdowns.
In a league like the SEC, if your offense isn’t clicking, even wins start to feel shaky.
The running game has been the biggest problem.
Against Florida, LSU barely managed 100 yards on the ground, and half of those yards came on one big burst from Caden Durham. Outside of that play, the Tigers were stuck in neutral.
Kelly insists LSU can run the ball and points to the last play of the game as proof. Sure, one play is nice, but relying on a single breakaway won’t get you through the tougher SEC matchups coming up.
Quarterback Garrett Nussmeier has had a lot to deal with too. He’s now battling a torso injury and lingering knee issues and is limited on how much he can throw in practice.
Still, he’s completing 65 percent of his passes, but the offense hasn’t looked like the high-powered unit everyone expected with a potential first-round talent at quarterback. If Nussmeier isn’t 100 percent, the pressure on the running game only grows.
The defense, thankfully, has been carrying the team.
Even after All-American linebacker Whit Weeks was ejected for targeting in the first half, LSU forced five turnovers against Florida and played physical from start to finish. Transfer Jack Pyburn and the secondary stepped up big time.
But let’s be real: in the SEC, you can’t expect the defense to win every game. The offense has to start showing up, or the schedule is going to catch up to them fast.
Outside of on field action, there’s been some good news for the Tigers this week. LSU just landed 2027 quarterback Peyton Houston, the top-rated pocket passer in the nation for his class, and the godbrother of former LSU star Devin White.
He’s the first commit of that class and gives hope for the future at a spot where LSU has struggled to find consistency. With Nussmeier leaving after this season, Houston or another QB recruit is going to have to step up eventually.
So where does all this leave LSU? Unbeaten? Yes. Ranked in the top five? Check. But the offense looks sloppy, the quarterback isn’t fully healthy, and the run game has no rhythm.
Kelly might be right that fans can get spoiled, but when you’re running an SEC powerhouse, just winning isn’t enough. People expect domination.
The next few games will tell the story. The Tigers host Southeastern Louisiana this Saturday in what is supposed to be a tune-up, but the real test comes when LSU heads to Ole Miss on September 27.
If the Tigers struggle there, all the questions about the offense will come screaming back. If they pull off a convincing win, Kelly’s outburst and early offensive struggles might just fade into the background.
Right now, LSU is a bit of a paradox: unbeaten with a frustrated coach, a hobbled quarterback, and an offense that hasn’t hit full stride.
Wins are nice, but the cracks are already showing, and the rest of the SEC is ready to expose them if LSU doesn’t clean things up.
Camden County Wildcats Coach’s Show w Travis Roland September 16 2025
Early Grounding
By: Michael Spiers
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
The Falcons’ season opener didn’t end the way we wanted as fans of this team, but it sure wasn’t a disaster either.
Atlanta fell 23-20 to Tampa Bay, and yeah, that stings, especially when the game came down to a very makeable field goal. Younghoe Koo pushed a 44-yarder wide, and just like that, the Falcons started the season 0-1.
It’s tough because that moment overshadows some good things the Falcons did.
But make no mistake, the kicking situation is officially something to watch. Koo missed nine kicks last year, and when your head coach admits he changes his decisions based on whether or not he trusts the kicker, that’s a problem.
By Monday, Atlanta had already brought in Parker Romo to compete with Koo and rookie Lenny Krieg. Having three kickers in the building tells you all you need to know about the nerves inside Flowery Branch.
But here’s where I lean a little more positive: Atlanta still had a shot to win.
In a sloppy, uneven game, against a team like the Bucs that knows how to ugly things up, the Falcons had the ball in the fourth quarter with a chance to tie. That’s not nothing.
Let’s talk about Michael Penix Jr. He’s not a rookie anymore, and while he wasn’t throwing bombs all over the place, he looked steady. He completed 23 of 30 short throws and even ran one in late to keep Atlanta alive.
The deep ball? Yeah, that part was ugly. He went 0-for-7 on throws beyond 15 yards. But before everyone panics, remember this: he didn’t have Darnell Mooney.
Without Mooney’s speed to stretch the defense, Tampa could just load up on Drake London. London still caught 10 balls, but he averaged less than seven yards per grab. That’s not a Drake problem; that’s a spacing problem.
The good news? Raheem Morris said Mooney’s shoulder is close to being ready. When he’s back, it’s going to open things up for London, Pitts, and Bijan, and you’ll see Penix hitting some of those deep shots.
And honestly, I loved what I saw from the defense, at least in flashes. They pressured Baker Mayfield on almost half of his dropbacks. That’s huge compared to last year.
James Pearce Jr. looked like the real deal, and nine different defenders recorded at least one pressure. The issue was finishing. Mayfield escaped a few times, scrambled for chunks, and that’s where the game got away.
But if you’re giving me a choice between a defense that can’t touch the QB at all and one that’s flying around but not quite closing yet, I’ll take the latter every day.
Those plays are going to start breaking the Falcons’ way soon.
So yeah, there’s frustration. You’ve got to make a 44-yarder at home. You’ve got to take advantage of opportunities. But it’s Week 1, not Week 15.
The Falcons didn’t get blown out. They didn’t look lost. They were a couple of missed plays away from forcing overtime.
Now, the road gets tough: Minnesota, Washington, Buffalo, and San Francisco are on deck.
If the Falcons want to avoid an early-season hole, the kicking issue needs to get sorted out fast, and Mooney’s return has to inject some juice into the passing game.
But here’s the bottom line: this team looks different, and I mean that in a good way.
They have a young quarterback who’s calm under pressure, a defense that’s hunting the ball, and plenty of talent at the skill spots.
If they clean up the little things, and someone steps up in the kicking game, I believe Atlanta’s still in good shape.
It wasn’t the start fans wanted, but it’s not time to hit the panic button either.
Camden County Wildcats Coach’s Show w Travis Roland September 9 2025
The Reset
By: Michael Spiers
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
The Jacksonville Jaguars have spent all offseason telling us they’re different.
New head coach. New coordinators. A new general manager calling the shots. A bunch of new faces on the roster. It’s a complete reset.
But here’s the reality: in the NFL, it doesn’t matter how shiny things look in May or how sharp you look in a preseason practice clip. It only matters if you win when the real games begin.
And for the Jaguars, that moment comes this Sunday in Week 1 against the Carolina Panthers.
This game is more than just a season opener. It’s the first chance for Jacksonville to prove they’ve actually turned the corner after a miserable 4-13 season that cost Doug Pederson his job.
Fans are hungry for a team they can believe in again. And frankly, the players are too. You can sense that energy every time Liam Coen talks about setting the tone
Coen, who takes over as head coach after building one of the league’s most exciting offenses in Tampa, hasn’t shied away from the obvious. The Jaguars must start fast.
That’s something Pederson’s teams simply could not do. In 2022 Jacksonville dug itself a 2-6 hole before going on a miracle run to the playoffs. In 2023 the Jags stumbled to a 1-2 start and never quite found their stride again.
Even when the wins came later, the early-season stumbles kept the team from hitting its full potential.
Coen wants to flip that script immediately, and a lot of that pressure falls on Trevor Lawrence. Believe it or not, Lawrence has only one Week 1 win in his career. One.
That’s not the record you expect from a quarterback who was hyped as a once-in-a-generation talent coming out of Clemson.
He doesn’t need to throw for 400 yards to make a statement, but a clean, efficient performance that shows he’s in command of Coen’s offense would go a long way.
Now, the offense isn’t the only side of the ball with something to prove. The defense flat-out cratered last season, finishing bottom five in most major categories.
That’s why Anthony Campanile was brought in as defensive coordinator, and his challenge is steep.
The Jaguars don’t need to turn into the ’85 Bears overnight, but they have to be better at pressuring the quarterback and holding their ground against the run.
One player who could make a big difference is veteran defensive lineman Arik Armstead. Last year, he was misused badly and his production tanked.
This season, he’s back where he belongs, working inside at the 3-technique spot, and Coen has been glowing about what that does for the defense.
Armstead’s length, quickness, and experience can be a nightmare for interior linemen. If he’s healthy and disruptive, it changes everything about how opponents attack Jacksonville.
Of course, the matchup with Carolina also has some fun storylines.
The Panthers, like the Jaguars, are being led by a young offensive-minded head coach in Dave Canales. He and Coen have crossed paths before, and there’s mutual respect between them.
Both franchises are trying to prove their former No. 1 overall pick quarterbacks are worth building around. Both are filled with rookies and newcomers who want to prove themselves. In a lot of ways, these two teams are mirror images, which makes Sunday an even better measuring stick.
This game has to be about showing signs of progress.
Fans have been told for months that this is a new era in Jacksonville. That the franchise has finally found the right leadership. That the roster upgrades will pay off. Week 1 is the first real chance to back up all that talk.
If the Jaguars come out, play with energy, execute Coen’s system, and beat the Panthers, it’ll be the kind of early confidence boost this team desperately needs.
It won’t mean they’re suddenly Super Bowl contenders, but it will prove the rebuild is moving in the right direction.
If they stumble out of the gate again? If Lawrence looks shaky and the defense springs leaks like last season? Then it’s déjà vu, and the ghosts of 2024 will creep back in fast.
Week 1 won’t define the entire season, but for a franchise desperate to turn the page, this opener matters more than most.
It’s the Jaguars’ first real chance to show that, finally, things really are different in Jacksonville.
Camden County Wildcats Coach’s Show w Travis Roland September 2 2025
Should I Stay Or Should I Go?
By: Michael Spiers
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
Arch Manning has not even played his first full season as the Texas starter and the talk has already shifted to his future.
Will he be a one-year starter who takes off for the NFL in 2026, or will he do what Peyton and Eli did and stick around for four full years before making the leap?
It is not an easy question, but it is one that shows just how unique Arch’s situation is.
The NFL is obviously interested. Everywhere you look you see him ranked as the number one or number two overall prospect for 2026 and the top quarterback on the board.
People who study the game see the arm strength, the mobility, and the calm presence that stood out when he stepped in last year.
His limited stats still popped off the page. Eight touchdowns, only two picks, and more than 800 yards on just 72 passes.
In today’s game, where guys like Caleb Williams and Bryce Young left school after two years of starting, Arch could very easily go early too.
But there is a catch. Arch has barely played. He has fewer than 250 career snaps, which is the same as about three and a half games. Even if he starts every game this season, that still leaves him with only 18 career starts.
When you look at the current NFL, almost every starting quarterback had 25 or more starts in college. That experience matters when you are running the most important position on the field.
This is where family history comes in. Peyton went back to Tennessee for his senior year even though he was already projected as the first pick. Eli stayed at Ole Miss when he could have gone out early.
Both of them believed in being patient, in developing more before cashing in. Arch has shown the same kind of mindset. He stayed at Texas behind Quinn Ewers instead of transferring. That tells me he is not in a rush.
Money also does not change the equation like it used to. In the past, leaving early meant you secured your first big contract sooner. Today, staying in school can be just as profitable thanks to NIL.
Arch is already tied in with brands like Red Bull, Panini, Uber, and EA Sports. His family is more than secure financially and being the quarterback at Texas brings seven figures in NIL deals anyway.
There is also the idea of legacy. Texas is ranked number one to start the season and they believe they can win a national championship.
If they fall short, does Arch decide he wants one more crack at it in 2026? It is possible. He has talked about how much he loves Austin, his teammates, and the program. That could make it easier to stay.
NFL scouts are excited but also cautious. They know he looks the part, but they want to see how he handles the road trips against teams like Ohio State, Florida, and Georgia this year.
They want to know if he can stay calm when the spotlight is brightest. Until then, he is still more potential than proven.
The Mannings have always played the long game. Eli held out on draft day because the Chargers were not the right fit. Peyton turned down the NFL as a junior even though he was a lock to go first overall.
Arch may make his decision based more on where he might land in 2026 than when he could be drafted. If the right team has the top pick, maybe he goes. If not, sticking at Texas makes sense.
If you ask me, Arch should wait. Give it another year, get more starts, build up confidence, and maybe bring Texas a national title.
He does not need the money and he does not need to race his uncles to the NFL. What he needs is to be fully ready when he gets there.
And if history tells us anything, patience has worked out pretty well for the Manning family.
Above The Radar
By: Michael Spiers
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
The buzz around South Carolina football is as loud as it’s been in a long time.
After rattling off six straight wins to close the 2024 season, finishing 9-3, and just missing out on a playoff spot, the Gamecocks have folks thinking this could be the year they break through.
Shane Beamer is heading into his fifth season in Columbia, and his message to the team has been simple: take it a step further.
Beamer’s already done plenty to get the program trending up. His 29 wins in four seasons are more than any South Carolina coach has ever managed in that span, even Steve Spurrier. He’s also notched seven wins over ranked teams, three of them against top-10 opponents.
In today’s college football world of transfer portals, NIL deals, and constant roster changes, Beamer has kept things steady with a team-first culture.
Even with 39 letterwinners moving on, the staff is mostly intact, and the roster has been bolstered through both high school recruiting and the transfer portal.
The biggest reason for optimism? Quarterback LaNorris Sellers.
The redshirt sophomore turned heads last year after overcoming a rocky start. He threw for more than 2,500 yards and 18 touchdowns, ran for nearly 700 more, and finished the season looking like one of the SEC’s most dangerous dual threats.
Sellers is already popping up on Heisman watch lists, and if he takes another step, he could be the star that makes everything click.
The challenge is what’s around him. The Gamecocks lost Raheim “Rocket” Sanders, their top rusher, and tight end Josh Simon, who led the team in receiving.
Utah State transfer Rahsul Faison and returnee Oscar Adaway III are expected to handle much of the running game, but Sellers’ legs will be leaned on again.
At receiver, South Carolina has young talent waiting for a breakout. Nyck Harbor has the athleticism to be special, and freshman Donovan Murph could make noise right away.
Tight end Michael Smith is also back, giving Sellers a go-to target across the middle.
Defense is a bit more of a question mark.
Last year’s unit was nasty, finishing near the top of the SEC in sacks and interceptions.
But five key players are gone, including Nagurski Trophy winner Kyle Kennard and both starting linebackers. That leaves a lot of pressure on young guys to grow up quickly.
Edge rusher Dylan Stewart is the headliner after a huge freshman year, and Jalon Kilgore is a playmaker in the secondary.
The linebackers don’t have much experience, but defensive coordinator Clayton White has more overall depth to work with than in years past.
Special teams, normally a South Carolina strength under Beamer, will look a lot different.
All-American punter Kai Kroeger is gone, along with the starting kicker, holder, and snapper. Punter Mason Love is expected to hold things down, but other spots may take a few games to sort out.
As always, the schedule is a grind. Things start with a showcase game in Atlanta against Virginia Tech, followed by the home opener against South Carolina State.
Then comes a stretch with Vanderbilt, Missouri, and Kentucky—games the Gamecocks need to take care of before October arrives.
That’s when things get brutal: at LSU, then home games against Oklahoma and Alabama in back-to-back weeks.
November isn’t much easier with trips to Ole Miss and Texas A&M before closing with Coastal Carolina and the annual Palmetto State showdown against Clemson.
The formula for a playoff push is clear. If South Carolina can start 6-2 or better, they’ll have a shot to control their own destiny down the stretch.
Sellers gives them the kind of quarterback who can carry a team, Stewart is a budding star on defense, and Beamer has proven he knows how to get his players believing.
The question is whether this group can grow up fast enough in the right spots to survive the SEC grind.
One thing’s for sure the season. The Gamecocks won’t be flying under the radar in 2025.
Camden County Wildcats Coach’s Show w Travis Roland August 19 2025
Camden County Wildcats Coach’s Show w Travis Roland August 11 2025










