Nearly a month after helping to shut down a Louisiana satellite camp, LSU is reportedly up to its old tricks once again.

According to former Kentucky and current Belhaven head coach Hal Mumme, LSU has flexed its muscle inside Louisiana’s borders to get yet another satellite camp shut down. In an article written by Pete Thamel of Sports Illustrated, Mumme expressed his frustration with the behind-the-scenes forces at work that helped to cancel the camp he was scheduled to attend a day before the actual event.

Why would LSU go to these lengths to cancel the camps? The specific reason is unclear, as LSU has refused to comment, but it’s worth noting that Texas was scheduled to participate in both satellite camps. Considering Tom Herman was in talks with LSU before landing the head coaching job in Austin, one reason could be animosity toward the new Longhorn coach.

Following the cancellation of the camps, Mumme’s expressed disappointment has more to do with the lost opportunity for many Louisiana prospects that would never be on LSU’s radar to begin with. The Belhaven coach claims these are the real victims of LSU’s backdoor politics, not Texas or Tom Herman.

“If you are the head coach at LSU, you should want the other kids in your state to have an opportunity,” Mumme said. “Ed needs to think about those kids that aren’t going to get a scholarship to LSU. I’ve been in the SEC as the coach of the (flagship) university of the state. You have show respect to those other kids as well.”

On the other end of the spectrum, LSU landed only three of the Louisiana’s Top 10 prospects during the 2017 recruiting cycle. The same number as Alabama, while Clemson, Florida, Mississippi State and Georgia Tech all landed one of the state’s highest-rated prospects.

Ed Orgeron took some heat for letting so many of Louisiana’s highest-ranked recruits leave the state, particularly losing three to division rival Alabama. If LSU is overreacting to those losses but turns around and keeps the vast majority of the top prospects home for the 2018 recruiting cycle, few inside Louisiana are likely to complain about the school’s satellite camp practices.