Here’s a couple grades after LSU’s 30-27 win at Florida on Saturday:

OFFENSE: B

It wasn’t pretty at times, but the Tigers returned to their bread and butter between the tackles led by Leonard Fournette’s personal-best 140 yards and two touchdowns. Anthony Jennings didn’t have much time to work from the pocket against Florida’s defensive front, but delivered late in the fourth quarter with a key 41-yard connection with Travin Dural on 3rd-and-25. A well-placed corner route to Dural a few plays later went for an 11-yard touchdown and a 27-24 lead.

DEFENSE: B

The secondary was torched by Demarcus Robinson on a 71-yard hook-up during Florida’s game-tying scoring drive in the final two minutes, but came through with the game’s biggest play on the Gators’ ensuing possession. Approaching midfield with the score knotted at 27, Florida quarterback Jeff Driskel tossed his second interception of the night, this one hauled in by Rickey Jefferson. The sophomore safety returned the tipped pass inside Florida’s 40 which set up Delahoussaye’s boot.

SPECIAL TEAMS: B-

Colby Delahoussaye’s clutch 50-yard field goal with three seconds left saved the day, but it was an otherwise disappointing night on special teams for the Tigers. Just two of Jamie Keehn’s eight punts were down inside the 20 and one was returned for a 62-yard touchdown by Andre Debose in the first quarter. The usually reliable Delahoussaye shanked a PAT in the third quarter, but the miss didn’t come back to haunt the Tigers.

COACHING: B+

Les Miles didn’t ask Jennings to do too much and stuck to a vintage LSU game plan — run the football and wait for big plays with an opportunistic defense. Miles’ gamble on 4th-and-goal from the 1 in the second quarter paid off for Tigers as Kenny Hilliard capped a 12-play, 75-yard drive with a quick pitch touchdown to the strong side. The only gripe was poor clock management in the final seconds with no timeouts that nearly cost the Tigers a shot at the field goal.

OVERALL: B+

The Tigers snapped a two-game SEC losing streak with its backs against the wall, trailing in the Swamp with 6:10 left in the game. Jennings was serviceable at quarterback, stepped into several throws and avoided mistakes, one of the reasons he lasted all four quarters and wasn’t yanked by Brandon Harris. After being battered and bruised by national media outlets throughout the week, LSU got back to what its does best — smashmouth football. The Tigers ran 72 plays — 50 on the ground — and pounded the Gators at the point of attack.