BRIAN KELLY: What I would like to just point out is consistency takes its shape in many ways. For us it's been a football team that has had to do a lot of things differently, and with that comes blind faith. And I told our team I was really proud of the way they have just embraced change. It's hard. It's hard for everybody to change.
So, I've been really proud of the way they have embraced change and done the things that we've asked them to do to become more consistent on a day-to-day basis and within our process and their preparation and their mindset, their habits, the way they think. We've been able to make the progress necessary to have a modest winning streak, and this is modest.
We've got a lot of work ahead of us. This month will tell us a lot, right? We've got an SEC slate in front of us over the next four weeks, which will challenge us to a new level. We'll certainly find out even more about our grit and what kind of football team this will continue to grow to be.
We know where our issues are. It's a team that will fight, but we're thin in some areas. So, we've got to make sure we keep our team rested. We've got to stay away from injuries, things of that nature. But, there's no doubt about the fight. These guys will fight for the right reasons.
I just wanted to make sure that from my perspective that this win this past weekend against a New Mexico team was significant in that we built some consistency with a group that has been willing to follow a whole new pattern. It's been enjoyable.
Now we get into, obviously, the SEC over the next month. Two games on the road, two at home, and we begin with Auburn. I think the first thing is that routines will stay the same other than we're going to get on a plane, but we'll be in a stadium that will not be pro-LSU.
The first month of the season it was pro-LSU for the most part, so now the enemy is distractions. We'll have to do a great job of not being distracted and to be focussed on making sure that our guys are locked in on what's important, and we'll work on that skill this week as well as the preparation that we've had all year.
Auburn has some talented football players offensively. Both backs are outstanding. Bigsby, obviously, he is a three-year starter, over 2,000 career rushing yards, 19 touchdowns. I think that's kind of for us when we're watching film, the running backs are outstanding players.
Ashford at quarterback started last week against Missouri. He, too, is a great runner. That's going to be our biggest concern is to keep him in wraps in terms of running the football. He is very capable. He is a transfer from Oregon. Extremely gifted athlete. Again, I think from our perspective, a guy that can throw it, but more importantly, a dual-threat quarterback that is dangerous running the football.
Outstanding receiving corps and a defense that has a guy that's a game-wrecker in Derick Hall. He is a guy that you're going to have to find. We'll have to game-plan and make sure we know where he is. Riley, outstanding linebacker. Again, a football team that's playing at home, coming off its SEC win against Missouri in overtime. It will be a great challenge for our football team.
With that, we'll open it up to questions.
Q. You mentioned Ashford at quarterback. Do you expect Ashford to start, or are you going to prepare for multiple quarterbacks this week?
BRIAN KELLY: I think you always have to keep an eye on whether Finley plays as well. Certainly he gives you the throwing end of things, so we'll have to prepare for both. We don't have any firsthand information that one is playing over the other, but we'll be prepared for either one.
Q. Just any injury updates? Jayden, is he still feeling okay, and then Amani and Jay Ward as well?
BRIAN KELLY: Jayden, no residual effect from Saturday. He will be able to practice. Let's see, Jay Ward feeling really good. I think he is a go for Tuesday. We'll probably limit his workload on Tuesday, but he should be able to go. Amani, it will be a day-to-day situation with him.
Q. Just wondering what prompted your opening remarks there. Were you pleasantly surprised by kind of their focus, I guess, for lack of a better word and your ability to kind of coalesce everything?
BRIAN KELLY: Well, I think it was important to point out that in anything that you do, when there's change, it requires a commitment. Even though this is a modest winning streak of three games, it should be noted that these guys are doing everything possible to make sure that LSU football regains its place. They're working really hard at it, but there's still a lot of work ahead of us.
So, I just wanted to make sure that it was dually noted that there's going to be some tough days ahead of us, and we're going to have to grind through it, but they are giving us all that they have.
Q. Just considering you're switching guys, Jay Ward and Greg Brooks, and you've had guys out with injuries. Now Joe is back this week. What has the challenge been, or maybe not at all, of kind of the constant movement?
BRIAN KELLY: You would like a little more continuity. I think Matt and Carey have done a good job of communicating what we need to do back there. I think it's going to be a little bit easier with Joe Foucha in terms of he is an experienced player, so it was a little bit more difficult when we had to move Jarrick back there because you didn't have an experienced safety.
As we move forward now with Jay Ward probably coming back this week and being healthy and getting Joe, you've got experience back there. In one instance we would like a little more continuity, but on the positive side with Brooks, Foucha, and Jay Ward, you've got experience.
Q. The hurricane appears to be heading towards Florida and hopefully not in the path of your game, but is it something you're going to have to monitor, your officials watching obviously throughout the week?
BRIAN KELLY: Yeah, no doubt. We've talked about a game plan in terms of what it might look like. Hopefully that's going to pass through.
We're going to get probably some rain of some kind, and that will be our first time in that kind of element. It's a grass situation, so you put those plans together relative to what that would look like if, in fact, we did get hit with some severe rain.
Q. How big was the game for Jayden Daniels and his growth, and what did you go back on the film and see? In the game it was obvious, he was determined to stay in the pocket, but when you go back and look at film, what did you see?
BRIAN KELLY: There are a couple of things. Decisiveness is starting to be part of the vocabulary instead of being hesitant, and that comes with knowledge of the offense.
I think the other thing is that he has become a lot quicker in his setup. I think I mentioned this quick feet, but slowing down and not rushing through progressions.
I think one of the bigger plays in his development was the dig that he threw to Jaray Jenkins in the Red Zone. That was his fourth receiver through a progression.
Those are the kind of things you're looking for in terms of development of a quarterback, and we're starting to see that as well as the screen to Malik Nabers, how quickly that ball comes out. I think a little bit of everything was coming together, and the word I would use is just he is becoming more comfortable and more decisive.
Q. Not to harp on the open again, but you seem pleased. Does this seem better through four games than you thought they would be, or are you pleased with the progress over a month?
BRIAN KELLY: I guess the setup was we're going to find out now. This first month was kind of like, let's put this together, you know, and the preface was these guys have worked really hard to do exactly what we've asked them to do. They've put themselves in a position. They have followed a process, and they've been consistent with it. Now we're going to have to apply it to the SEC, and that is a step up.
The next month there's going to be some good days, and there's going to be some bad days. They cannot try to do things differently. It's like anything else. You know the old Mike Tyson line, you know, "Everybody has a plan until they get hit in the mouth," right? We're going to have to stick with our plan and stick with our process every single day because we're going to get hit in the mouth, and we're going to have to trust it and keep going. I guess that was the preface that I was trying to make.
Q. I want to talk to you about weather. How do you manage a game where the playing conditions can be affected by something like that and especially with a team where you do like to pass the ball a lot?
BRIAN KELLY: I've been in two remnants of hurricanes. One at North Carolina State, which was abysmal. I think the other one was at Clemson. They affect the game conditions. So, you have to plan accordingly in terms of your passing game, running game.
Kicking game is affected dramatically. Field position, tactically how you call a game. You just have to have wrap your head around it prior to and prepare for it and then, quite frankly, you have to react accordingly during the game.
I'm not making too much of it. I'm not going to put too much on our players. Our players just need to play. As coaches we'll adapt accordingly during the game.
Q. How would you grade Jack Bech's performance as a punt returner on Saturday?
BRIAN KELLY: Fearless. Fearless. We'll work on a couple of things where fearless shouldn't be always the number one criteria for returning punts. We want some decision-making in that as well, but that's how Jack plays, right?
He is at his best when he is not worried about any factors other than competing and getting the ball in his hands, and it's fun to watch, right? That's just the kind of player he is. You can see what kind of impact he can have in our punt return game.
Look, the trickle-down is the other ten guys, they want to block for him. That is an added incentive when you have a punt returner that can break it. It adds a great energy to the entire group.
Q. You mentioned Joe Foucha's experience. Is the reality that he wasn't hurt and that he only missed a few games, does that lend to you on being able to lean on him for starter reps right away? What has he looked like in practice? That's one thing Greg Brooks has talked about, that he has had a lot of time in practice to get ready.
BRIAN KELLY: Yes, he has been actively involved. He has been involved in any articulation between our offense and defense that hasn't involved game plan, which is quite a bit.
Every day we'll have some 11-on-11 work where there is no, hey, we're getting ready for New Mexico or we're getting ready for Mississippi State. He is involved in that. He is in our defensive structures.
When we start to over the past month when we got ready for team time for our opponent, he would come over on to scout. He was a pain to deal with because he was so good playing so hard as a scout team member that he made us better, so I have been able to firsthand see his action on a day-to-day basis, and he will be ready to play right away.
Q. Are you expecting Kayshon back for this game?
BRIAN KELLY: Yes.
Q. Just the general thought that each week we talked about you wanting to get the ball to someone, someone specifically, right, get them involved. You have such a deep and talented receiver room. When does it become forcing an issue?
BRIAN KELLY: Yeah, I think that's a great point. So, I think there was only one time that I really alluded to the fact that after Week 1 that we needed to get him going a little bit. Other than that, I think we have to be able to let the game come to these guys naturally.
We moved some guys around, obviously. You saw Nabers into the short field, you know, playing the W, and you saw Jack playing the slot a little bit more.
Other than moving guys around a little bit, I think that's all you'll see from a manipulation standpoint. Other than that, the offense has got to come to you, and when you get your opportunity, you have to make plays because there's so much step there.
Q. I think at the end of camp you talked about Harold Perkins and that he had a little bit of ways to go. Seems like he is flashing more and more. How did you think he performed the other night in a starting role?
BRIAN KELLY: Here's the thing with Harold. He is going to flash because of his skill set. I mean, he is twitchy. He is fast. He has all those tools that are going to allow him to show.
Then, Matt is doing a great job of keeping it in the easiest form within a defense. He has just gotten here, so to give him the entire playbook is not fair to him, so Matt has given him pieces of the playbook that allows him to go play fast because that's his best trait, but he is learning.
I'll tell you what, he is so coachable. That's the great part about it. He comes to the sideline. He wants to know what he needs to do better each and every snap.
We're really pleased with his progress, but I think what we're more pleased with is what he is doing off the field in the classroom and then how coachable he is.
Q. What do you think about the offensive line? Just over the last two games and how they're able to provide holes in the running game for your running backs these last two weeks?
BRIAN KELLY: Yeah, I don't know that it was our banner day this past weekend. That's a tough defense. They're standing up. They're moving around. There's so much movement. O-linemen want to know that what they see, they're going to hit. That wasn't the case on Saturday. The guy in front of you wasn't going to be there on the snap of the ball. That takes a little bit of, I would say, the aggressiveness away from your offensive line.
We won't have that this weekend. They're going to have to put their hand in the dirt. They're going to have to get off the ball. They're going to have to move people against their will, and I think you'll see a good indication over the next month of this offensive line really having to get after it.
Q. Now that it seems like you have Joe coming back here. Mostly his academic issues and things and getting people eligible is behind you. Has it been frustrating for you? Is there anything that needs to change in terms of preparing players or working with transfers to get them eligible faster because it seems like it's unusual situations.
BRIAN KELLY: I think those are all things that we can address at the end of the year. There are things that Joe could have done better. Maybe there are things that we can do institutionally. We can always look at that, but that's not for now.
I mean, we'll take care of those things and have good discussion about what we can do better. Like I said, it's always the student-athlete that's responsible at the end of the day, but, yeah, those are discussions that we can have at the of the year.
Q. With Charles turner at center, how would you evaluate the way he has played, and I guess especially where is your confidence level with him as he starts to face some bigger guys on the opposite side?
BRIAN KELLY: Yeah, I think it's a really good question. First of all, he is a great communicator. He knows what he is doing up front. He is getting people in the right place, but it's going to get harder. It's going to get harder.
The competition is going to be such that he is going to be in the mix each and every week. He knows, and he is up for the challenge. Again, I think we're putting him in a situation where he has two guards next to him that are big guys. Big, physical guys.
The center is always working in combination. You know, most centers today are not the biggest. They're usually the smartest, and they're usually guys that can move, and Charles can do those things for us.
Q. We recently went to Jena, Louisiana, where all 4,000 people in the town have No. 10 jerseys.
BRIAN KELLY: I'll bet.
Q. And loved Jaray, and he has impacted adults, kids, gives them hope to get out of a small town and what not. Just you being around him, what kind of person is he? I never heard anyone say anything negative about him.
BRIAN KELLY: Well, first of all, I'm proud of the fact that he got his degree because there was a time there where he was considering going to the NFL, and he would not have had his degree, so I think from that perspective making the decision to come back and get his degree and then play in the season, that stands out to me.
I think the other thing is that he has gone about this year in a manner that I think can be modelled for all of our other guys. A veteran guy that has done everything we've asked him to do and had never been a special teams player, but now is involved in special teams. He is doing the other jobs and has quietly put together as consistent a performance of any player that we've had on this team.
I just think the maturity that he has shown and the decision-making, as I mentioned earlier, as well as being able to model him based upon doing other jobs and being selfless has been -- we can really push him out front and say, look how 10 is doing it.
Q. You mentioned Ashford's maneuverability.
BRIAN KELLY: Yeah.
Q. Does having Jayden and having your team have faced him, I guess, in fall camp provide some muscle memory in your preparation, or how do you go about that preparation?
BRIAN KELLY: This is going to be interesting this week. Well, not interesting, but they run a very similar defense, so we'll go against each other quite a bit this week. Like last week, we didn't go against each other very much because the defenses don't match, and the offenses certainly didn't match.
This week we'll go ones versus ones quite a bit this week because there's so much carry-over, and we'll be able to keep the speed up with a Jayden going against our defense or their defensive structure with having BJ Ojulari at Jack like their Jack.
There will be a lot of carry-over where we'll be able to go against each other and really assimilate that game speed from both sides.
Q. At Notre Dame you played on road venues all over the country.
BRIAN KELLY: Yes.
Q. A couple of years ago you played in Georgia. What have you been to other SEC venue, and what was your impressions?
BRIAN KELLY: The Georgia atmosphere was terrific. It didn't finish the way I wanted it to. When I was at Central Michigan, I played at Kentucky. I don't know that Kentucky's program was at where it is with Coach Stoops today, but when you are at Central Michigan, and you play in an SEC environment, it's all big at that point.
Those are I believe the SEC venues I have been in. But, you know, like I said, I've played in so many different venues that capture your attention. Just excited about the challenge of playing at Jordan-Hare.
Q. How would you evaluate going into next week? Is Damian Ramos still your, you know -- you have full confidence in him to be your kicker?
BRIAN KELLY: I have full confidence that he will be our field goal extra point kicker. You saw that we went and made a change on kickoffs, and that might be the case. I haven't made that decision yet. I'll talk to Brian as the week goes on because that obviously impacts a redshirt situation. We'll see how that plays out during the week, but I have the utmost confidence in his ability.
There's some technical things that he has to clean up. He gets a little bit too fast to the ball on his kickoffs. He gets his shoulders over himself. Those are technical things that we can clean up, but he has a great mindset for his PATs and field goals, so I have 100% confidence in him.
Thank you.
FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports