Well, they won't be official stats or plays that count, but they are all we have to go on right now.
OFFENSE
1. Kickoff return. Jackson makes a short return of 22 yards. Never really got a chance to turn on the speed, but he looks to be the #1 return guy.
2. Fournette off right tackle for 2. Harris hands to Fournette who follows left guard Clapp who pulls right. But McNeese overloaded that side. Boutte, Alexander, and Gordon absolutely sealed the inside, but Jeter was left blocking two men outside. Clapp blocked into an inside hole instead of going out to help Jeter and the hole collapsed for Fournette. Maybe Harris should have been checked out of the play when he saw Jeter having to block two men. Or...maybe Gordon should have taken one and left Alexander, Clapp, and Boutte to block inside.
3. Fournette off left tackle for 9. Both guards pull left and Fournette follows. Clapp and Gordon seal the outside, Hawkins and Pocic seal the inside and Boutte demolishes a linebacker in the hole to spring Fournette for a first down. The big new guard is quick and he can pull, he is not just a road grader. Fournette waited for his hole and ran hard through it. Good play.
4. Jackson jet sweep right for 4. Harris hands to Jackson who runs down the line to the H-back side. Jeter doesn't get a clean key block on the safety and Alexander cannot get to the outside backer who comes in unblocked. Teams will look for the jet every time a guy with sub-4.3 speed is in the game. This play will work with better execution and if they also send Jackson downfield enough that the defense must respect it. Big Ethan Pocic was five yards beyond Jackson going downfield looking for a cutback block. We will see this play again.
5. Swing pass left to Guice, loss of 4. Fournette out, Guice and Broussette in the pro set. Ferguson whiffed his block and the DB dropped Guice for a loss. Freshman receiver has to be able to block to play at LSU. Defense saw this one coming as soon as Guice went into motion, at least the cornerback did. He shrugged off Ferguson and blew up the play.
6. Incomplete pass to Dupree. 3rd and 10 with four receiver going downfield. Pass blocking is excellent, Harris has time but is late getting a very long pass away to Dupre who was open. Dupre had to slow down for a short ball and allow double coverage to catch up. Bad timing by the quarterback, who was given plenty of time by his O-line.
7. Punt. A halfback whiffed a block that almost got the punt blocked, but Keehn launched a 66-yard boomer that landed at the 5 and bounced into the end zone. Still a 46-yard net. Keehn could be an All-SEC punter this year. I didn't get the halfbacks number but we probably won't see it next week anyway.
DEFENSE
8. Defend right sweep, loss of 1. The offense power sweeps right but LSU is fast and strong to the outside forcing the sweep wide where Tolliver reads it instantly, drops his receiver, and tackles the ball carrier. Tolliver starts the first defensive play of the first game in his college career and forces a loss.
9. Safety blitz, loss of 6. Jefferson telegraphed a safety blitz and had to hold up but went unblocked anyway and sacked the quarterback. SEC defenses would have picked up that blitz, Jefferson will have to be more wily, but he is fast and strong.
10. Pass defense, gain of 8. With all the defensive backs in deep coverage, Beckwith was slow to pick up the running back slipping out into the flat after blowing past Jones. The linebackers will see this play until they stop it.
11. Punt. Out of bounds, no return. White was back to receive but had no opportunity.
So . . . Harris had 50% passing, which is not bad . . . nor good. Fournette averaged 5.5 yards, which is good. Offensive line run-blocked and pass-protected very well. Defense looks fast. Offense looks fast.
Lots that we don't know. No receiver caught a pass. No defensive linemen made a tackle. No defensive back had to defend a pass. We don't know who is kicking off yet.