LSU took down Florida behind another Heisman-caliber performance from Jayden Daniels Saturday night.

The Gators held a lead in the 3rd quarter, but a couple of big plays from Daniels and the Tigers’ offense helped LSU regain and keep that lead in the 4th quarter, and it led to the Tigers’ 7th win of the season.

Here are a few takeaways from Saturday night’s contest.

Jayden Daniels posts another Heisman moment

It was unclear whether or not Jayden Daniels would play against Florida this week. The quarterback was in concussion protocol earlier this week.

He did suit up for the Tigers, and he showed up in a big way.

Daniels monster season continued on Saturday night as the quarterback racked up 372 passing yards and 234 rushing yards along with 5 total touchdowns. His performance made him the only other quarterback in SEC history besides Johnny Manziel to pick up 200+ rushing yards and 200+ passing yards in a single game.

Daniels helped lead LSU to 702 total yards of offense on the night.

Daniels also became the first quarterback in FBS history to record 12,000 career passing yards and 3,000 career rushing yards in a career.

With his performance on Saturday, Daniels now has 3,164 passing yards, 918 rushing yards and 38 total touchdowns on the season.

LSU receiver duo balls out

Daniels had a pair of targets that he favored all night.

Brian Thomas Jr. and Malik Nabers combined for 282 total yards with Thomas picking up 150 yards and Nabers recording 132 yards. Thomas also had a pair of touchdowns. The pair was critical in the win for LSU.

Behind every Heisman-caliber quarterback are some offensive weapons to look to, and Thomas and Nabers were that on Saturday night.

Tigers bend but don’t break late

Florida wasn’t ready to let LSU put the game away after the Tigers took a 10-point lead in the 3rd quarter.

The Gators answered LSU’s opening drive touchdown in the second half with a score of their own to cut the deficit to 3, and then capitalized on a muffed LSU kick to take the lead halfway through the 3rd quarter.

The game then turned into a shootout as teams traded touchdowns into the 4th quarter.

With a 10-point lead halfway through the 4th quarter, Florida was mounting a drive looking for a touchdown. LSU held strong on 4th down, forcing an incompletion that seemed to seal the deal for the Tigers.

LSU managed to score and take a 17-point lead on the next drive, all but ending Florida’s comeback chances.