I'm eagerly anticipating that matchup, but as a Jordan Love fan, I'm also wary of the result.
Right now, in two games against Wake Forest and San Diego State, he's doing a great job of illustrating that there's a nuanced difference between seeing the field and making good decisions.
Love can see the field in real time. It's one of his selling points. I think he can get stumped by high IQ football, just like anyone at this level. If a defender or a defensive coordinator does a good job bait-and-switching him, he can end up making a bad decision. We saw that happen to Tua Tagovailoa himself a couple of times in the Georgia and Clemson games. We saw it happen to Jordan Love in the shadow of his own end zone against Wake Forest.
But Jordan Love's problem right now as I see it against Wake Forest and again facing San Diego State, is he's seeing the field, and then STILL making the bad decision. It's not just that he's pressing, trying to win it all himself. He's doing things you can't do.
That can be such a wildcard because that sort of poor decision-making can be pathological (as may be the case with a Jameis Winston), it can be a thing that comes and goes (as we're seeing with Baker Mayfield), or it may be something the coach can tell the player to knock the f--k off, and he's just like, "OK coach" and then that's it (e.g. Patrick Mahomes).
I know this. If Jordan Love heads into Baton Rouge with the same mentality I saw against Wake Forest and San Diego State, then you're going to see a lot of good, but also a lot of ugly.