The LSU Tigers have a pretty good 2027 recruiting class, all things considered. However, they could have used Four-Star LB Frederrick Ford.
The Michigan Wolverines landed four-star linebacker Frederick Ford, a 6’4, 203-pound prospect from Greenwood High School in Mississippi who chose Michigan over Tennessee, Mississippi State, LSU, and Ole Miss.
Ford is a 90.53 Rivals Industry Composite player, a top-150 prospect nationally per ESPN, the No. 10 linebacker in the country, and the No. 7 player in Mississippi. His decision leaves LSU with a significant gap in its 2027 recruiting class.
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Why this matters for LSU’s 2027 class
LSU currently holds the No. 11 class in the 2027 cycle, and the Tigers have zero linebacker commits. Ford would have filled a glaring positional need. LSU does have defensive talent in the class, including edge rushers Chris Whitehead and KJ Green, as well as a few other defensive players. But the linebacker position remains completely unaddressed, and Ford was the primary target to fix that.
Ford is set to play for what could be an elite Michigan defense. That’s a tough pull for any program to compete against, and LSU came up short.
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LSU’s options are thin at linebacker
Here’s where it gets difficult for the Tigers. The remaining linebacker targets on LSU’s board are limited. The Tigers have sent an offer to Theo Wilson, but he isn’t seriously considering LSU at this point. Beyond Wilson, the other linebackers LSU has offered have already committed to other schools.
That leaves the Tigers in a tough spot. They either need to identify new targets, flip a committed prospect from another program, or wait for the board to shift as decommitments and reclassifications shake things up over the next several months.
LSU’s class is still strong, but the need is real
To be fair, LSU’s 2027 class looks good overall. Sitting at No. 11 nationally with defensive talent already in the fold is a solid position. But a recruiting class without a single linebacker commit is incomplete, and that hole becomes more glaring when a top-150 national prospect picks a different program.
Ford choosing Michigan doesn’t derail LSU’s class, but it does force the Tigers’ staff to scramble for alternatives at a position where the cupboard is nearly bare. How LSU addresses this need over the coming months will be worth watching closely.
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This article was originally published on A to Z Sports. Read the full story here: LSU Tigers just lost out on an elite player that they desperately needed in their 2027 recruiting class
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