COACH FISHER:Â Happy for our seniors and our players. They've overcome a lot, tough situations. They keep fighting and doing the things they had to do. Very proud of them. Very proud for our fans that we got to have a great game here. Very proud for these seniors to go out their last game ever in Kyle Field in a big win and a big situation.Â
Guys did a really nice job in all three phases. I though special teams, we did a good job. Kicked the ball well. We turned it well. Caught it, did the things we had to do.Â
Defensively, I thought we did a nice job. They got some yards and got some things going early, but we bent and kept them to a couple of field goals. Got that big critical turnover in the second half. Got touchdowns.Â
Offensively, we controlled the line of scrimmage. We were really efficient on the night. Stayed out of negative plays, stayed ahead of the chains.Â
[Devon] Achane was awesome, just absolutely awesome. Amari [Daniels] ran the ball well when he got in there. 22 (Le'Veon Moss), we had to put him in there, too. But Achane was so hot. Thought our receivers -- Moose [Muhammad] made two big catches. Made one of them with one arm because they were holding the other and did that. But he made some nice plays in the game, really big plays, too. Got us down for that third score and got us up.
Conner [Weigman], I thought, made the throws, managed the game, understood what we went, went checks, made really smart plays on the night, and had a great couple big scrambles that really helped us.Â
In regard to our offensive line, I thought -- and our tight ends did a really nice job in the game, our fullbacks blocking. And we executed. That's what happens when you execute. You move the ball up and down the field. In defense, we got critical stops. Played a really good football game against a really good team.Â
Q. Jimbo, I'm going to ask a question the whole country is asking: Where has that been all year?
COACH FISHER:Â That's what I was saying, young guys and growing and developing. What I said, it's going to be there. There's nothing wrong with what we're doing. It's how we got to do and how we get the maturity out of them and what happens and execute what we got.Â
And our kids just relaxed and played and they grew up. They matured. There was a lot of injuries in young guys all year. It's not an excuse, but it's the facts of life. They could do it in streaks. Couldn't do it whole times. But this game we finally put it together for 60 minutes and played a really good game. It's that simple.Â
Q. What does that say about [Devon] Achane, the fact that he returned from the injury when maybe he could have just said he was not going to finish --Â
COACH FISHER: I told you he wasn't. You didn't believe me. You guys sitting here wouldn't believe us, that these guys -- you guys trying to make the players say they were going to quit and do everything else. They wouldn't do it, and I said they weren't. You questioned everything they did. All y'all did. That team was very tight together. It says the character and who he is and what he is.Â
Q. What does that say about him (Devon Achane) to come out and do that?Â
COACH FISHER:Â What I just said. It says a lot. He's a tremendous human being, a tremendous player, a tremendous leader, and a tremendous competitor. He has nothing but heart and toughness about him in everything he does.Â
Q. Jimbo, did you all approach this as, Hey, this is our bowl game, and did it feel like a bowl game?
COACH FISHER:Â No.Â
Q. And secondly, y'all came out of the start of the second half --
COACH FISHER:Â Misexecuted two plays.
Q. I wanted to ask, what was different -- that was kind of like the situation with Florida.Â
COACH FISHER:Â Misexecuted plays. It was there. We just got to get our head around, threw the ball behind, and didn't stay on the read on third down. It was that simple. Plays were there.Â
Q. Two SEC wins this year, and Demani Richardson made a key play in both of them. What is it about him that he finds himself in those positions?Â
COACH FISHER:Â Demani's played a lot of ball. He's a very veteran player. He's been around a long time. He knows how to win. He's a great leader. He's going to play no matter what. He's hopefully going to have a nice career at the next level.
Q. How important was it for each one of the guys to have Conner [Weigman], Devon [Achane] and Evan [Stewart] all out there at the same time? I think it was only the second time this year that all three have been on the field at the same time.Â
COACH FISHER:Â Not very often. Like I say, the injuries and the things. And then get Moose [Muhammad] in there playing and Noah Thomas and the tight ends and the O-line. It was good. Like I say, we still haven't had our full team. But that's ball. Sometimes you have those years. You got to learn to overcome it. That's why you've got to build depth and keep executing.
Q. I've got a couple on Devon [Achane]. When push came to shove, you guys went with the run game. What were you seeing from LSU's defense and what you wanted --Â
COACH FISHER:Â Look, they've got great loose-down players. They're great pass-rush guys. They are great guys that can rush and things. You don't want to get in situations to let them do that. We thought schemes in which we had and we could get hats on hats, and our guys did a great job of blocking them.
Q. And just as Devon [Achane] looms his future, what has he meant to this offense since the last few years?
COACH FISHER:Â He's a very versatile guy. That's his greatness. It's his speed but it's his natural instincts to play the game and his versatility to block, to run, to catch, to catch it down the field, to return. He can do everything on the football field. And he's a tremendous and very humble human being. Amazingly humble.Â
Q. For Conner [Weigman] to have the night that he had against this defense, how does that help him better himself going into the offseason?Â
COACH FISHER:Â You learn how to win and manage a game. Sometimes managing a game is throwing for 400 yards. Sometimes it's throwing for 150 and being highly efficient and throwing touch downs and being great on third down and doing the things you got to do. Numbers don't dictate wins. Situations dictate wins and knowing how to play and how to win and how to grow as a quarterback. He's a very intelligent young man.Â
Q. And you look at Moose Muhammad's growth and maturity, where has he really stood out, especially over the last couple of weeks?
COACH FISHER:Â Moose has tremendous ball skills. He's a strong-bodied, very sure-handed guys. Makes contested catches and uses his body very well. Can stick his foot in the ground and separate. He has a tremendous future ahead of him.
Q. Are you going to have Corn Flakes later?Â
COACH FISHER:Â I don't know what that is about.Â
Q. Just wondering from a momentum standpoint, how big is it to have a win like this heading into the offseason?
COACH FISHER:Â I think it's good for your confidence and what goes on and just shows you what you're capable of. Also shows those are things you've got to grow to, and that's part of growing up, getting to winning and learning how to do that. And our kids had to fight through that.Â
They played in stretches during the year. You've got to learn -- it's not just your ability but your mental toughness to compete in games. And that's what I think they continually grew and grew on.Â
Q. Jimbo, at 17-17, they get the ball back, seemed to have the momentum. Then you forced the fumble. Your offense builds off of the turnover and goes and scores. You haven't been able to do a lot this year, so what does it say about the team's growth?
COACH FISHER:Â That's what I said. We finally played off each over. When we used to punt the ball back, we'd move it to midfield, punted it inside the 10. We weren't getting stops all year. We were getting the ball back down here.Â
We played to each other. Our defense, first half, we scored three straight drives. Come out, we go three and out. We misexecute two plays and get it. And then we miss another play, miss a block on the second series and get it again. Then they get the turnover and we go right back to pounding and getting their confidence.Â
It was just a matter of executing -- relaxing and executing plays. It's that simple. There's no magical formula. It's continuing to not get bored and make each job each and every play and not look too much into something.Â
Q. For you as a play caller, when you go tempo, there's probably less presnap motion. But what's your philosophy on presnap motion? What does that help make them do?
COACH FISHER: You can motion in presnap. Listen, tempo -- we're so caught up in tempo. Name me a tempo team that's won the national championship. Call one. There ain't one. There ain't one in the last 15 -- y'all caught up in tempo. Tempo ain't won a national championship, all right?Â
So team's line up and play good football. You can run tempo and you can have parts of it and use tempo off and on. But pure tempo teams haven't won one. We can say that all we want, okay? You can run tempo; you can not run tempo. It depends on what your game plan is for your team to win that game. Sometimes it's tempo; sometimes it's not tempo.Â
Q. How do you reconcile the promise you see with how many young guys are out there making plays on the field tonight with the missed opportunities that you've had throughout this season?
COACH FISHER:Â It's ball. You got kids?Â
Q. Yes, two.
COACH FISHER:Â You understand. How old?
Q. 7 and 2.
COACH FISHER:Â When they're 12 and 13, see if they're doing what they're doing when they're 7 and 2. That's what it gets down to. And you've got to help coach them and you got to lead them. You've got to show them, and they've got to learn how to get over that hump.Â
That's disappointing. That's coaching. That's our job. No matter what it is, no matter what that circumstance is. If we had some older guys that stayed healthy, maybe it changes but we didn't. As coaches, that's the situation you're in. As a coach, you have to do that.Â
It's about learning how to win, learning how to stay mature, learning how to focus for the whole time and learning there's not a secret to this. There's nothing fabulous about this. Just go do your job. Run your route. Fit your block. Make your run. Do the things you've got to do and play. There's no magical formula. There's no substitute for maturity and age and development.Â
You've got to grow through that. Listen, we showed them on film all year. Those things, "Yes, sir." They bought right in it.Â
Listen, they don't do it on purpose. I know that. We go back and coach the heck out of them during that week. The whole year they have practiced hard. We've got to do a better job coaching them in that. At the same time, now they can start to see where that comes from. And that's part of growth and, hopefully, we can build on that in the future. We'll see. We'll find out.Â
Q. And what does your next few days look like in terms of what's on your plate?
COACH FISHER:Â We'll get together and get the criteria for what they're doing in December, the lifting, the classes, all that type of stuff and get the recruiting trail going.Â
Q. Coach, I have two questions for you. First, in the first half, I think, three possessions, 17 points. That's where you wanted it all year long. I mean, taking advantage of the ball --
COACH FISHER:Â I'd take more possessions.Â
Q. But making the most of the possessions you have had in the first half.
COACH FISHER:Â That's what you want all the time, yes.Â
Q. My second question to you is on Devon [Achane], the fact that I think he needed 113 to get to 1,000 and he surpassed that and then some.Â
COACH FISHER:Â I didn't even know that.
Q. Just on him becoming a 1,000-yard rusher.
COACH FISHER:Â I mean, that's a criteria and a mark. But he could be a 2,000-yard rusher. He's capable of doing that, too. He's a capable guy, catches.Â
I love -- he's one of my favorite guys to coach because he gets ball. He's a natural player, but he's so smart, so instinctive. You can tell him something one time and he just naturally does it.Â
Q. Coach, just a couple of questions about the O-line. Any particular aspect of their run blocking you thought pleased you the most, just push, angles, anything in particular that stood out?Â
COACH FISHER:Â We ran zone gaps. They were blocking down in the gaps and they were hitting the zones. And we weren't getting penetration, and we were getting hats to hats and getting it declared. Our tight ends, too, and fullbacks did a really nice job on that, too. They all did a really nice job.
Q. Given how well y'all were able to run the ball, how much do you think that affected your ability to limit their pass rush and not have --
COACH FISHER:Â That's huge. That's the whole thing. You can't get in long downs. They're a great loose-down team in that regard. Not that they didn't play the run well, but when you got loose downs, they were hard to handle. They have a lot of guys who can rush and play. You had to make them take them. Not that they couldn't, I'm not saying that at all. But you're better off trying to do that. We were able to run it and working the clock in the right down-and-distance situations.