Volume 124 · No. 2
Wednesday, June 14, 2017
EST. 1887
lsunow.com
@lsureveille
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SECOND TO NONE
Coaches know what it takes to win in Omaha BY BRANDON ADAM @badam_TDR
LSU’s return to Omaha also marks the return for its young coaches. Coach Paul Mainieri has put former Tigers Nolan Cain, Micah Gibbs and Sean Ochinko in key staff positions. All three were key parts on LSU’s 2009 National Championship team. “You want to make it feel like it’s the same game,” Ochinko said. “You’re going to have a little bit of those nerves and anxious butterflies playing in front of all those people, but after you get the first inning over with, you realize it’s the same game.” The assistant coach had four hits, one of which was a home run, and three RBIs in Game 3 of the National Championship series against Texas.
RUICHEN ZHU / The Daily Reveille
Ochinko said he is extremely happy that the players are having the experience, but that they still have more to play for. His comments were echoed by Gibbs, who took over for Andy Cannizaro as the Tigers’ hitting coach this fall. “The big thing is it’s the same game,” Gibbs, who started at catcher for all three games against Texas, said. “With such a veteran team, they’re older guys and this is what they came back for. I think they are going to have plenty of motivation once we get there.” While the Tigers do have a veteran team, only eight players on the current roster who played in the 2015
see OMAHA, page 2
ACADEMICS
Former U.S. Senator John Breaux to join Manship School in fall BY KATHERINE ROBERTS @krobe844 The Manship School of Mass Communication will welcome former Sen. John Breaux to the school in the fall as he teaches a new 4000-level political communication elective focusing on the inner workings of politics in the nation’s capital. With 34 years of experience representing Louisiana in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate, Sen. Breaux is an expert for the class, said Martin Johnson, the Associate Dean for Graduate Studies at the
Manship School. “In terms of understanding Washington and understanding contemporary politics, you’re just not going to find many people who are not in office today that have the level of expertise and depth that Sen. Breaux has,” Johnson said. Sen. Breaux said he will focus on why congress and government does not work as well as the people would like it to, how people can help make it better as well as what the average citizen needs to do. “We see a tremendous amount of turmoil in Washington D.C. today and a tremendous amount
of change,” Johnson said. “Understanding all of those changes and the context of the policy making process and how Washington works is, I think, the main thing everybody hopes to get out of this. Bringing Sen. Breaux back to Louisiana to help explain to our students and to the broader community what’s going on in Washington — what are the problems and the dysfunctions, what are the opportunities, what sources of optimism we may have, that sort of thing.” Having taught a number of times at different universities such as the University, the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and
Tulane University, Sen. Breaux is familiar with the college atmosphere; however, he said this will be his first time teaching on a regular basis. Not only will he be available to the students, but the community will also be able to hear Sen. Breaux speak next semester. Johnson said one of the elements to having Sen. Breaux join the Manship School are several public talks for the community to listen to him speak on different areas of politics. Sen. Breaux said he hopes students will walk away from his class with an appreciation for
their own government and why it is important for them to be involved. “I think too many people in the country complain about government but don’t really involve themselves in any way of trying to make it work better,” Sen. Breaux said. “Hopefully after we finish our classes people will say, ‘I can help to make it better and here’s what I’d like to be able to do in order to accomplish that.’ If I can give them a sense of optimism that all is not lost, and that they can work to make things better, I think that would be a good achievement for everybody.”