JaCoby Stevens

JaCoby Stevens (born June 19, 1998) is an American football safety for the LSU Tigers.

JaCoby Stevens
LSU Tigers No. 3
PositionSafety
ClassSenior
MajorSport Administration
Career history
College
  • LSU (2017–present)
High schoolOakland
(Murfreesboro, Tennessee)
Personal information
Born: (1998-06-19) June 19, 1998
Height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight228 lb (103 kg)
Career highlights and awards

Early life and high school

Stevens grew up in Murfreesboro, Tennessee and attended The Ensworth School before transferring to Oakland High School after his freshman year.[1][2] Stevens played both wide receiver and defensive back for Oakland and was also a member of the basketball team. As a junior, he recorded 84 tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss, six interceptions, two fumbles recovered and scored two defensive touchdowns on defense and caught 32 passes for 806 yards with 11 touchdowns and had three rushing touchdowns on offense.[3] As a senior, he recorded 61 tackles with 9 interceptions on defense with 34 receptions for 689 yards and 12 touchdowns on offense and was named Tennessee's Mr. Football.[4][5] Stevens was rated a five-star recruit and initially committed to play college football at LSU over offers from Tennessee, Alabama, Auburn and Georgia.[6] He decommitted during his senior season after the team fired head coach Les Miles, but ultimately re-committed.[7]

College career

Stevens played both safety and wide receiver as a true freshman, appearing in six games with one start at wide receiver and catching two passes for 32 yards.[8] Stevens moved permanently to safety before his sophomore and started the last four games of the season, recording 35 tackles, 6.5 tackles for loss, 1.5 sacks and an interception with five passes broken up.[9][10] In his first full season as a starter, Stevens recorded 85 tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss and five sacks with three interceptions and nine passes defended and was named second team All-Southeastern Conference by the league's coaches and helped LSU win the 2019 National Championship.[11]

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gollark: This is called "loop unrolling" and while it technically might be, please don't it would make your code look bad.
gollark: Interesting.
gollark: Maybe in fifty years. Although it would probably be possible to train a neural network or something on it *now*.
gollark: Well, probably, but current technology won't allow me to do something like "run a subset of my brain on my computer and have it evaluate the message content".

References

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