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LSU's Miles boots QB Perrilloux
Star's career marked by legal, disciplinary issues
BATON ROUGE, La. -- Ryan Perrilloux seemed like a perfect fit for LSU.
The Louisiana native had the rocket arm, mobility and versatility to make him a constant big-play threat and one of the most sought-after quarterback prospects in the country coming out of high school. He even had the French last name.
In spurts as a backup or fill-in starter last season, the sophomore showed the potential to rise to stardom, winning MVP honors in the Tigers' Southeastern Conference championship game triumph over Tennessee.
His lack of discipline off the field, however, became an increasing distraction for head coach Les Miles, who finally decided Perrilloux's presence on the roster was more trouble than it was worth.
Perrilloux was kicked off the defending national championship team Friday after a college career marked by legal and disciplinary problems.
Perrilloux "didn't fulfill his obligation as an LSU student-athlete," Miles said in a statement. "Ryan was given every opportunity to be a part of this football team."
Miles did not attribute his decision to any specific recent violation.
Still, it was clear Perrilloux's repeated breaking of team rules, and sometimes the law, made Miles worry whether it was worth keeping the talented heir-apparent to the starting job and risk another off-the-field distraction next season.
A backup to Matt Flynn last season, Perrilloux showed glimpses of great promise, drilling receivers downfield or punishing tacklers while running the option.
He played sparingly in LSU's victory over Ohio State for the national title. But the starting job for this coming season appeared to be his, provided he could avoid trouble off the field.
The quarterback is expected to finish the spring semester, LSU officials said. He must do so to remain eligible to play next season if he transfers.
Perrilloux was suspended last summer and during recent spring drills. He was on the fringe of a counterfeiting investigation and was caught trying to enter a Baton Rouge casino with false identification. He also was involved in a nightclub fight in November, causing him to miss a game at Alabama. He was cleared of wrongdoing.
Miles again suspended Perrilloux, whose father died Feb. 7, in mid-February after he missed a team meeting, skipped some classes and was late for conditioning workouts.
Perrilloux had to meet academic requirements and do extra conditioning before he was reinstated April 6, in time to go with the Tigers to meet President Bush at the White House. Perrilloux was not allowed to play in LSU's spring game.
During the spring, redshirt freshman Jarrett Lee and junior Andrew Hatch, a transfer from Harvard, split time as the quarterback of the Tigers and now will enter next season as the leading candidates for the starting job.
Appearing in 12 of LSU's 14 games last season with two starts, Perrilloux completed 51 of 75 passes (68 percent) for 694 yards, eight touchdowns and two interceptions.


Posted by mgmtgrad on May 6, 2008 at 10:13 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Nice to hear that a top rated national program has the leadership to do the right thing.
Everyone should have a second chance. But, it would reflect poorly on any BCS Div 1 school to pick him up just to win.
Let him earn his way back via academics and time spent being a good student athlete at a school that doesn't participate in the BCS.
Bottom line:
He get's a 2nd chance.
All coaches in a BCS conference play by the same rules and back each other up when a "4 or 5 star player doesn't.
Marcus J
Posted by extrapoint on May 19, 2008 at 8:19 a.m. (Suggest removal)
This is one kid who let his head get away with him. You could see it from the beginning
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