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<p>Louisiana's window of spring football practices is always a fast and furious against the end of the school year and the April and May showers that cost days or work.</p>
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<p>But those weeks are also a highly valuable opportunity to discover or put eyes on new or ascending prospects worth noting for upcoming rankings updates or likely recruiting momentum. </p>
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<p>Visits with more than two dozen schools during less than a month provided notes on a long list of standouts of all positions and levels and stages of their recruiting processes.</p>
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<p>Here's a few notes on a half-dozen rising senior offensive linemen we had a chance to see during the past few weeks.</p>
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<p><strong>[player_tooltip player_id='1782493' first='Nolan' last='Daniel'] — 6-3, 280 OL — West Feliciana</strong></p>
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<p>Already a top-100 prospect in the the class rankings, Daniel clearly looked that part — if not a potential stock-riser candidate in the next update — during spring action this month with a good frame, strong build and mobility and tenacity that particular standout. He was an all-district performer at left tackle this fall, but worked at left guard in the Saints' spring game and was highly effective pulling, getting to the second level and always finishing blocks, including a couple particularly memorable pancakes locating defenders on the move, unloading and putting them on the turf. </p>
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<p><strong>Parker Millet — 6-3, 260 OL — St. Charles Catholic</strong></p>
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<p>The Comets will have to replace a few graduated offensive line standouts from this past year's state-championship run, making the position group one of the most notable to watch in the program's pursuit of a potential repeat. Millet, an all-district performer as a junior, is a clear leader with his combination of talent, experience and approach and will bounce out to left tackle this season after previously playing more guard and looked good manning the position in practice this past week with his frame and mobility.</p>
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<p><strong>[player_tooltip player_id='1594309' first='Maison' last='Smith'] — 6-3, 275 OL — University Lab</strong></p>
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<p>The big, two-way standout in the trenches for the Cubs, the program's next Division-I talent to watch in that regard after graduating a couple good ones in 2026, was working on the offensive side during the practice we were able to catch the team early in spring action. And Smith looked good holding down the left tackle spot. He's always shown good athleticism, balance and all-around mobility — popping off the film early on with his disruptive pass-rushing in the middle of the defensive line — and looks as lean and in as good of shape as ever amid what sounds like a particularly productive offseason of strength-and-conditioning work.</p>
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<p><strong>[player_tooltip player_id='1593644' first='Albert' last='Simien'] — 6-4, 280 OL — Sam Houston</strong></p>
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<p>Most of this series has been centered on under-the-radar or rankings-riser prospects, and neither of those is the case for Simien, who can't go any higher than already steadily being in the state's top tier of elite prospects for well over a year. But getting a chance to visit Moss Bluff this spring, hear more from the humble and hardworking star and his coaches and teammates, including notes that he's young for his grade and only two years into playing the position, only further bolstered confidence in his recruiting stock and potential.</p>
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<p><strong>Reggie Trusclair Jr. — 6-2, 270 OL — Plaquemine</strong></p>
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<p>The Green Devils' left tackle is listed as the smallest prospect in this group, but is also up there among the most mobile, quick and balanced on his feet and with good all-around athleticism that includes some basketball background — always a solid testament for pass-protectors. Trusclair's teammates and coaches also praised his continued development of some nastiness to his game to go well with his work ethic and leadership in the program among a strong 2027 group in Plaquemine overall.</p>
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<p><strong>[player_tooltip player_id='1593649' first='Zyion' last='Wesley'] — 6-4, 285 OL — Edna Karr</strong></p>
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<p>Another highly ranked prospect with whom spending time this spring only further cemented confidence. The physical, hard-nosed mauler is a clear leader and alpha dog of the Cougars' offense, if not entire roster, with the mentality, passion and work ethic to not accept less than striving for greatness and to earn and hold the respect of his peers to follow his lead in those pursuits. Wesley will be one of the state's top assets to his future program in not only his blocking efforts on the field, but the intangibles he brings day in and day out.</p>
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Louisiana's window of spring football practices is always a fast and furious against the end of the school year and the April and May showers that cost days or work.
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