Domanick Davis
In his four years at LSU, Domanick Davis became one of the most prolific players in the school’s history.
Davis set a Southeastern Conference record his senior season by tallying 2,120 all-purpose yards and ranks second at LSU and third in the SEC with 5,743 career all-purpose yards.
Along with his duties at running back, Davis returned both kickoffs and punts and became LSU’s all-time leader in both categories. With 3,294 return yards — kickoff and punt combined — Davis set an SEC record.
“[Davis] is a very explosive special teams guy,” said Daniel Schreiner, NFL draft guru and operator of mojosports.com. “He will mainly be a special teams guy at first. He will be a solid middle round pick.”
Davis played backup to Rondell Mealey as a freshman and LaBrandon Toefield as a sophomore and junior but emerged as the starter his senior season because of injuries to Toefield.
As the starter his senior season, he led the SEC and ranked sixth in the country by averaging 163.1 yards per game. Davis finished his LSU career with 2,056 rushing yards.
“Davis is a very good outside runner, and he is both quick and fast,” Schreiner said. “I love him because he runs with a low center of gravity. Kick returning will be his bread and butter.”
Jerel Myers
As a freshman, Jerel Myers made a name for himself, breaking the Southeastern Conference record with 64 catches and totalling 854 yards receiving.
His numbers declined after his freshman season and culminated in a 17-catch, 181-yard senior season.
Myers was invited to participate in the East-West Shrine Classic and showed once again his playmaking ability. He hauled in six catches for 148 yards in the all-star game against the top cornerbacks in college football.
Demetrius Hookfin
Demetrius Hookfin materialized into one of the top cornerbacks in the Southeastern Conference in his four years at LSU.
Hookfin led the SEC with 17 pass breakups and ranked second in the league with five interceptions on his way to garnering Second-Team All-SEC honors this past year.
He was named SEC Player of the Week against South Carolina when he grabbed two interceptions, returning one for a touchdown.
The three-year starter finished his LSU career with 114 tackles and seven interceptions.
Reggie Robinson
Heading into his senior season in 2001, Reggie Robinson suffered a herniated disc in his neck and was forced to sit out a year and received a medical redshirt.
In his first three seasons, Robinson caught 87 passes for 1,061 yards and six touchdowns as one of the leaders of the offense.
During his senior campaign, Robinson recorded seven catches for 119 yards.
LSU Draft Prospects
April 22, 2003