Facing one of the most important snaps of perhaps the most consequential game of the past five seasons, LSU gave star Clemson quarterback Cade Klubnik a look he liked.
It was fourth down. Clemson needed only 5 yards. LSU led by just one touchdown — a lead that could quickly either shrink or disappear if it let Klubnik lead a scoring drive. Just a few ticks over nine minutes were left in the fourth quarter.
Klubnik looked confident — enough to stare down his first read and fire away.
His pass would’ve been completed for a first down. But LSU transfer corner Mansoor Delane read the in-breaking route, glued himself to the receiver’s hip and made a play on the ball, swatting it out of harm’s way and allowing his offense to take over on downs and try to build its lead.
Two years ago,