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Evangel Christian quarterback Peyton “Pop” Houston will pledge to a college from his long list of offers Monday, Sept. 15, he told On3 | Rivals on Friday.
Houston is the No. 2 overall prospect in Louisiana vs. All Y’all’s 2027 class rankings and a consensus four-star prospect across major national recruiting networks Rivals, 247 and ESPN.
USC had been predicted this summer by multiple national to be the favorite land Houston, particularly after longtime friend Ethan “Boobie” Feaster — a Louisiana native who now lives in DeSoto, Texas — joined the Trojans’ 2026 class.
But Oklahoma and Texas have been among the major programs most heavily involved from early in his recruiting process, and the opportunity to play for home-state LSU and offensive coordinator Joe Sloan has also intrigued Houston and his family.
His offer list has also included Clemson, Notre Dame, Georgia, Texas A&M, Miami, Michigan, Penn State, Texas Tech, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Tennessee, Arkansas, TCU, SMU and Baylor
Houston earned LSWA Class 5A all-state honors last fall as a sophomore in his first full season of varsity action with a state-leading 4,480 yards.
The 6-foot, 195-pound passer completed 310 and his 443 passes (70%) for the state-leading yardage and 38 touchdowns, while also rushing for another 690 yards and seven more scores.
He earned national headlines by his sixth start of the season, even as his Eagles struggled overall through the first half of the season to find their rhythm until more of their players became available.
The Cotton Valley native threw for a record-breaking 817 yards and accounted for 10 touchdowns in a wild, 77-76 loss to Captain Shreve during District 1-5A action.
John Curtis open the season Friday with its longest road trip in program history.
The Patriots kick off 2025 in Los Angeles against a Cathedral (1-1) squad that finished last season 10-1.
The game marks the fourth straight season coach J.T. Curtis and company have faced and out-of-state opponent and their first out-of-state road game since beating Oak Grove (Miss.) in 2022.
John Curtis is 2-1 during its current run of out-of-state competition following a 2023 win against Santaluces Community (Fla.) and 2024 loss to Rabun Gap (N.C.), both of which matchups hosted in Louisiana.
Friday’s contest will be broadcast by the John Curtis Christian Patriots Broadcast Team with coverage scheduled to begin at 5:45 p.m. (Central), just ahead of a 6 p.m. kickoff.
In 2024, John Curtis stumbled through some early ups and downs and a late three-game slide in the gauntlet of Catholic League district play before clicking to three straight playoff wins and a Division-I Select semifinal appearance.
The 4-5 regular-season record marks the program’s first below-.500 mark since 1969 before becoming the lowest seed — No. 19 in the bracket — to reach the Division-I Select semifinals since Louisiana instituted division in 2013.
The Patriots enter this season considered among the state’s top contenders once again with a strong returning core of talent and experience, including young standouts who earned early playing time last season,
John Curtis is the No. 10 team in Class 5A in the LSWA preseason polls and the No. 6 team in Louisiana vs. All Y’all’s “Preseason Top 50” rankings of all classifications.
LSU received bad recruiting news heading into its second straight weekend to start the 2025 season.
New Albany (Miss.) offensive lineman Emmanuel Tucker announced his flip Friday morning from the Tigers’ 2026 class to home-state Ole Miss.
“The best in the Sip stay in the Sip,” the 6-foot-7, 285-pound blocker told On3 | Rivals national recruiting reporter Hayes Fawcett.
Tucker became the second Mississippi native in less than eight days to flip his pledge from LSU to another SEC program, following Hattiesburg (Miss.) wide receiver Tristen Keys announcing his plans Aug. 28 to instead join Tennessee’s incoming class.
The big offensive lineman had initially committed to Mississippi State early this summer before a mid-June flip to to LSU that represented at the time another notable out-of-state recruiting win on offensive line coach Brad Davis’ impressive recent résumé.
But Ole Miss continued to push and appears to set now to ultimately keep Tucker home for college.
LSU coach Brian Kelly and company’s class now has now slipped to 17 total commitments — 11 in-state and six out-of-state — and outside of the nation’s top-10 classes according to the On3 | Rivals industry rankings, a weighted average of a major recruiting networks.
Up front, Davis and the Tigers still hold three pledges: a pair of in-state standouts in Brysten Martinez (East Ascension) and Jalan Chapman (Warren Easton) and another Mississippi native in Bryson Cooley of West Jones (Laurel, Miss.).
Cooley became LSU’s third 2026 commitment from Mississippi when he made his July 4 announcement, but Keys’ and Tucker’s moves now leave him as the lone remaining pledge of that group.
Evangel Christian had two prime opportunities late in a back-and-forth second half to stun highly ranked Neville and its home crowd.
But, each time, the Tigers stood tall and shut down the Eagles’ final punches to escape with the 33-32 win in the season opener at Bill Ruple Stadium.
Neville senior safety Jayden Reed, a Louisiana (Lafayette) commit, wrapped up a tackle for loss on a potential go-ahead two-point attempt after an Evangel touchdown midway through the fourth quarter.
And junior linebacker Jakobe Collins busted through the middle of the line on a 40-yard field goal attempt in the final seconds to block the kick and extinguish the Eagles’ early-season upset bid.
“Let me tell you one thing: It was 33-32, the good guys won, so that’s all I care about,” coach Mike Collins smiled on the Neville Tiger Network broadcast immediately following the contest. “I’m gonna tell you that right now. Our guys just kept fighting and kept fighting and, you know, we did a lot of — crazy things happened tonight, and the chips fall where they may at the end of the ball game. And we got the opportunity to come up with a big block on the field-goal attempt.”
Evangel stormed to a 14-0 lead in the first quarter with a six-minute opening march powered by running back Damari Drake (Grambling State) en route to a 3-yard finish from 2026 defensive lineman Ashton Dawson (Arkansas), then a “tush push” touchdown from junior quarterback Peyton “Pop” Houston later in the period.
But Neville punched back in the second quarter behind its own 2027 passer, Parker Robinson, who went 4-for-4 down the field, including a gorgeous over-the-shoulder strike to fellow junior Emaude Sledge to set up a 1-yard Ja’Marion Roberson run across the goal-line.
A sack by senior safety Julian “JuJu” Burns put the Eagles behind the sticks on the following possession and paired with an Evangel personal foul to set the Tigers up on a short field.
And Robinson again stepped up, rolling out right on a fourth-and-12 and finding tight end Mason Hart for a circus conversion to set up another Roberson score for the 14-14 tie before halftime.
“I think we took a lot of grit away,” Robinson said. “They’re a tough team. They fought hard. I mean, they never gave up. And that’s something that we needed to learn. We really needed a challenge like this. And just props to them. They’ve got a really great squad, and Pop’s a good player. He’s a tough player. And it’s always gonna be a good game with people like him and the athletes they’ve got. So I think it was a really good test for us, especially the first game of the year, and I think it’s gonna help both of us make really good runs the rest of the year.”
The teams traded blows back and forth during a chaotic second half.
Evangel reclaimed a 20-14 lead on a deflected punt chased in for an Amare Chambers scoop-and-score.
And when Neville knotted the game back at 20-20 on a third Roberson score, the Eagles needed mere seconds to strike back with an 82-yard touchdown from Houston to Johnny Casey Jr. (Louisiana Tech) to reclaimed a 26-20 edge into the fourth.
The Tigers took advantage of a fumble recovery to set up a game-tying touchdown from sophomore running back Jarvis Blackston.
And special teams miscues began mounting as a theme for the night, and one that would prove particularly costly for Evangel down the stretch.
Neville senior punter Brooks Yerger flipped the field and pinned the Eagles back inside their own 5, where a penalty further stalled them and set up a punt junior cornerback Kayden “K.J.” Jones would house 55 yards for the home team’s first lead at 33-26 after the extra point.
The explosive Evangel offense countered again with a Demarkus Evans reverse to midfield, 30-yard Houston dash off a low snap an 18-yard Drake glide for his second end-zone trip.
But Reed and the Tigers snuffed out the potential go-ahead two-point attempt to cling to the 33-32 advantage.
And when the Eagles set themselves up for a final field goal shot at victory, Jakobe Collins was instead quickly into the backfield for Neville’s game-sealing block.
“It’s never not entertaining when we play these guys,” Mike Collins said. “It’s unbelievable, I swear. It’s two times we’ve played here, it’s been decided by a point. And we go over there and we finally take the lead toward the end of the ball game over there last year. But up until then, it was nip-and-tuck the whole time. And, you know, they’re well-coached, they’ve got good athletes, they’ve got good players and the quarterback’s fantastic. But I’m gonna tell ya, our guys just kept fighting and kept fighting. We could’ve laid down early in the ball game and said, ‘to heck with it.’ But that’s not the way we’re built, and I couldn’t be more proud of ’em.”
A great Week 1 for Louisiana college football teams is in the rearview, and the second full weekend of the 2025 season brings a fresh set of challenges and opportunities.
The nation has been abuzz about LSU’s road upset of Clemson and will bring its “1-0” mantra home and seek to play to its standard against in-state foe Louisiana Tech.
Louisiana (Lafayette) will have a second chance at a first win in its newly renovated Cajun Field home digs — but with a different starting quarterback.
And Tulane and ULM will make trips east to the Yellowhammer State to face South Alabama and Alabama, respectively.
Louisiana vs. All Y’all’s “PODnas” cohosts Jerit Roser and Daniel Hawkes touch on those matchups, a couple other notable national games and the New Orleans Saints’ opener against the Arizona Cardinals.
Check out the full conversation and make sure to keep up with all the new episodes of “PODnas” on the Louisiana vs. All Y’all channel.
Episodes are scheduled for Tuesday and Friday mornings during football season to recap and preview the biggest games and storylines with a particular focus on Louisiana.