BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA - Marcus Randall hit his stride in the third quarter and so did LSU's defense, as the 14th-ranked Tigers beat South Carolina 38-14 Saturday night. <br>
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Making his first start at quarterback because of an injury to Matt Mauck, Randall completed 4 of 10 passes for 52 yards and ran five times for another 39 yards and a touchdown to help LSU (6-1, 3-0 SEC) scored 25 unanswered points in the third quarter. <br>
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Demetrius Hookfin had two interceptions, and the Tigers outgained South Carolina (5-3, 3-2) in yardage 132-1 during the period, and LSU held the ball for 10:52. <br>
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Mauck is out indefinitely after injuring his right foot in the Tigers' victory over Florida on Oct. 12. <br>
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After bumbling through the first half and trailing 14-6, the Tigers scored on their first possession of the second half. The 58-yard drive included three third-down conversions before Randall scored on a 12-yard run. He then hit Michael Clayton for the 2-point conversion, tying the score at 14. <br>
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Hookfin intercepted Corey Jenkins' pass on South Carolina's next possession, and less than four minutes later, John Corbello kicked his third field goal a 37-yarder to give LSU a three-point lead. <br>
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With LSU facing fourth-and-7, Corbello apparently kicked his fourth field goal of the game from 44 yards, but the Gamecocks were flagged for roughing the kicker, setting the Tigers up with first down at the South Carolina 13. Shyrone Carey took the handoff and scored to make it 24-14. <br>
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Just 15 seconds later, Hookfin latched onto another interception, taking it 10 yards to give LSU a 31-14 lead going into the fourth quarter. <br>
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Hookfin had a third interception that he returned for a touchdown, but it was nullified by a penalty. <br>
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Domanick Davis closed out the scoring with a 5-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter to make it 38-14. <br>
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Randall completed 12 of 23 passes for 183 yards. Davis ran for 113 yards on 26 carries. <br>
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South Carolina, which had won four straight, including three SEC games, had little trouble with the Tigers in the first half, and LSU didn't live up to its ranking of No. in the country in total defense. <br>
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After giving up an average of 207.8 yards per game in the first six games, the Tigers allowed South Carolina to gain 212 by halftime, including 139 yards rushing. <br>
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LSU, which rushed for only 67 yards in the first half, drew eight penalties for 62 yards before halftime. <br>
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Because of the second-half turnaround, LSU ended up outgaining the Gamecocks 414 to 275. <br>
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Jenkins completed 5 of 12 for 62 yards and a touchdown. He was intercepted twice and sacked twice. Jenkins also ran for 41 yards on 15 carries.