
LSU Tigers

Houston Cougars
Highlights
Summary
HOUSTON (Interstat) ā The Houston Cougars rallied from a three-touchdown deficit to beat the LSU Tigers 38-28 on Saturday at NRG Stadium. LSUās Barion Brown opened the game with a 99-yard kickoff return touchdown, and the Tigers led 28-7 in the first quarter. Houston quarterback Conner Weigman then guided the comeback, completing 21 of 29 passes for 172 yards and four touchdowns. His scoring throws went to Amare Thomas (two), Tanner Koziol and Traville Frederick Jr. LSU quarterback Michael Van Buren Jr. threw two touchdown passes to TreyāDez Green. The Cougars outscored the Tigers 31-7 after the first quarter to improve to 10-3. LSU fell to 7-6.
Extended Summary
HOUSTON (Interstat) ā In a game defined by explosive starts, grinding responses, and a decisive final drive, the Houston Cougars outlasted the LSU Tigers 31-28 on Saturday at NRG Stadium, securing a 10-win season in a dramatic non-conference finale. The contest, played on December 27, 2025, unfolded in starkly contrasting chapters. LSU, the visiting Tigers, authored a near-perfect opening act. On the very first play from scrimmage following the opening kickoff, electric return man Barion Brown fielded a Houston kick at his own 1-yard line, found a seam, and raced 99 yards for a touchdown. Just over three minutes later, LSU quarterback Michael Van Buren Jr. connected with towering tight end TreyāDez Green on a 23-yard scoring pass. In a breathtaking span, LSU led 14-0 before many in the crowd of 71,500 had settled into their seats. Houston, however, demonstrated the resilience that has characterized its season. The Cougars, now 10-3, did not panic. Instead, they embarked on a methodical, 16-play, 75-yard drive that consumed over eight minutes of clock. Quarterback Conner Weigman, a Cypress, Texas, native, capped the marathon march with an 8-yard touchdown pass to Amare Thomas, cutting the deficit to 14-7 as the first quarter ended. The second quarter belonged entirely to Houston. Weigman, who finished an efficient 21-of-29 for 172 yards and four touchdowns while adding 46 rushing yards, guided two more scoring drives. He found Thomas again for a 4-yard score early in the quarter. Then, just before halftime, he engineered a crisp two-minute drill, culminating in a 7-yard touchdown pass to tight end Tanner Koziol with four seconds remaining. The Cougars took a 21-14 lead into the break, having completely flipped the momentum after the disastrous start. The most important sequence of the game arrived in the third quarter, as LSU fought back to tie. The Tigers received the second-half kickoff and Van Buren Jr., the top star for LSU, immediately went to work. He hit Green for a 42-yard gain down the seam, then found the same target for a 4-yard touchdown pass, knotting the score at 21-21. Van Buren Jr. finished 11-of-17 for 179 yards and two touchdowns, both to Green, who had four catches for 80 yards. Houston responded with its own statement drive. Weigman methodically moved the Cougars 72 yards in 11 plays, mixing runs by Dean Connors, who had a team-high 56 rushing yards, with precise short passes. The drive ended with Weigman hitting tight end Traville Frederick Jr. for a 2-yard score, restoring Houstonās lead at 28-21. Undaunted, LSU answered right back. Van Buren Jr. led a 75-yard drive to open the fourth quarter, finishing it with a 6-yard touchdown pass to Kyle Parker to tie the game at 28-28 with 14:54 to play. The stage was set for a final, decisive possession. That possession belonged to Houston. Taking over at their own 25-yard line with 7:42 remaining, the Cougars embarked on a masterclass in clock management and situational football. Weigman and Connors, behind a physical offensive line, churned out first downs. The key play was a 26-yard burst by Connors on a rush right that moved Houston into LSU territory. The drive consumed over six minutes of clock, marching 67 yards on 13 plays, and positioned kicker Ethan Sanchez for a 25-yard field goal attempt with 1:29 left. Sanchezās kick was true, putting Houston ahead 31-28. LSU had one final chance, but with no timeouts and 89 yards to go, the task proved too great. The Tigersā last-gasp drive ended with a turnover on downs, sealing the victory for Houston. Defensively, the game was highlighted by pressure and key stops. Houstonās defense recorded three sacks, with Eddie Walls III and Latrell McCutchin Sr. each notching one. LSU linebacker Davhon Keys was a force for the Tigers, registering 10 tackles and a quarterback hurry. The victory caps a successful 10-3 campaign for Houston under coach Willie Fritz, while LSU concludes its season at 7-6. The gameās result defied the pregame projections, as national statistical models had favored LSU with a 61.9% probability to win and projected a 28-26 Tigers victory. Instead, Houstonās balanced attack and clutch fourth-quarter execution secured a hard-fought three-point win in a game that featured four ties and two lead changes.
Preview
LSU, Houston Set for Texas Showdown in Regular-Season Finale HOUSTON (Interstat) ā The LSU Tigers and Houston Cougars will close their regular seasons with a nonconference clash Saturday at NRG Stadium, a matchup pitting a surging Houston squad against an LSU team seeking to end a late-season slide. The game is scheduled for a 7 p.m. CST kickoff on Dec. 27, 2025. Houston (9-3) enters with momentum, having won four of its last five games, including a 31-24 road victory over Baylor last Saturday. Quarterback Conner Weigman powered that win, accounting for three total touchdowns while rushing for 121 yards. The Cougarsā balanced offense, featuring running backs DJ Butler and Dean Connors, averages 29.8 points per game. LSU (7-5) arrives looking to halt a two-game skid after a 17-13 loss at Oklahoma. The Tigersā offense has struggled, failing to surpass 25 points in any of its five losses. Quarterback Michael Van Buren Jr. and running back Caden Durham will be central to reigniting a unit that managed just 13 points against the Sooners. Despite the records, LSU is a narrow 2.5-point favorite according to sportsbooks, with an over/under set at 41.5 points. National Statisticalās game simulator projects a tight 28-26 LSU victory. The Tigers hold a 4-1 series advantage, but the programs have not met since 1995. This game serves as a final tune-up before both teams await their bowl destinations. āWe have to finish,ā LSU coach Brian Kelly said this week. āOur execution in critical moments hasnāt been there. This is our last opportunity to correct that before the postseason.ā Houston coach Willie Fritz emphasized the value of the challenge. āPlaying an SEC team with LSUās talent at the end of the year is exactly what we need,ā Fritz said. āItās a great measuring stick for our program.ā The game will be televised on ESPN.