LSU continued its frustrating season and slide down the SEC standings this weekend with its second straight conference series lost by sweep and a seventh loss in eight game in all.
The Tigers (23-18, 6-11) dropped home games to No. 9 Texas A&M (31-7, 11-5) on Friday, 10-4; Saturday, 7-2; and Sunday, 5-2.
LSU fell behind earlier each day — in the third, second and first innings, respectively — and did not ever claim a lead and only managed to even pull back even once for a half-inning Friday.
The home sweep marked the program’s first since falling to Ole Miss in May 2022 and its first time being swept in consecutive SEC series since on the road at Tennessee and home against Vanderbilt in 2021.
LSU remains No. 14 in the 16-team conference standings, now just a game ahead of South Carolina (19-22, 5-12), which moved on March 21 from former Tigers coach Paul Mainieri amid a disappointing season in Columbia, S.C.
“We are certainly not where we want to be at this juncture, and not where we expect to be,” coach Jay Johnson said. “The only way I know how to move forward is through hard work. We will have some individual meetings, put together plans for our players and help them apply it to the games.”
The Tigers managed seven hits Sunday, but could only convert twice — both in an eighth-inning rally that made things briefly interesting.
Sophomore designated hitter Cade Arrambide hit a leadoff homer to left-center, and sophomore centerfielder Derek Curiel reached on a single through the left side, advanced to third on single through the right side by freshman catcher Omar Serna Jr. and then scored on a passed ball.
But Texas A&M starter Weston Moss was stingy with five strikeouts and just three hits and two walks allowed during 4 1/3 innings, and junior reliever Gavin Lyons kept the Tigers scoreless through the next 2 2/3 with just two walks, a hit batter, two strikes and no hits.
The Aggies meanwhile hung four runs, all earned, on LSU senior righty Zac Cowan in 2 2/3 innings and scored at least a run in each of the first four frames.
Sophomore righty Devin Sheerin was one of the weekend’s few bright spots for the home team with 4 1/3 innings of relief in which he fanned nine batters and allowed just one run on three hits.
Unfortunately, those types of performances were few and far between in the series against a stout Texas A&M.
The Aggies got to all three LSU starters: six runs on seven hits and three walks Friday in five innings by sophomore ace Casan Evans and seven runs on seven hits and four walks Saturday in 5 1/3 innings on sophomore righty William Schmidt before chasing Cowan off the mound in Sunday’s third inning.
Each deficit left the bullpen to absorb innings and the offense to try in vain to climb out of holes the Tigers could never overcome.
Junior shortstop Steven Milam went 5-for-13 with home runs Friday and Saturday to bring his season total to six, and Arrambide was 4-for-13.
Curiel (3-for-12, two runs, a walk) and Serna (3-for-8, two walks, an RBI) were the only other Tigers to record at least three hits.
LSU was out-hit, 28-22, on the weekend, but also drew just seven walks while doling out 18 to the Aggies and particularly struggled 1-for-17 (.059) with runners in scoring position and 7-for-40 (.175) with runners on base to leave ultimately 21 runners stranded.
The Tigers remain home Tuesday against in-state UNO (16-25) with a 6:30 p.m. first pitch scheduled before traveling to Mississippi State (30-10, 9-8) for three games beginning Friday.

