BATON ROUGE — He dismissed the notion that Friday was a victory lap, maybe because his beloved horse, Daisy Mae, wasn’t here, but the final public exhibition of Devin White’s skills on LSU’s campus prior to his NFL career sure seemed like one.

“There is still work to be done,” White said. “I haven’t gotten drafted yet, so I’m trying to solidify myself.”

White joined Shreveport’s and 10 other former Tigers at LSU’s Pro Day on Friday at the indoor football facility.

He did it all at the recent NFL Combine, but the 6-foot, 237-pound White wanted to put an exclamation point on his resume prior to next month’s NFL Draft (in Nashville, April 25-27).

“It just shows my competitive nature, my hard work,” said White, who opted out of the timed exercises, but participated in individual drills. “I’m not trying to do what anybody else did. I’m trying to create a lane for myself. I want to go in the top five.”

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Linebackers don’t traditionally go early (four selected in the top 10 — one in the top five, Khalil Mack, Oakland, 2014 — in the past five drafts), but the former North Webster star has a message for NFL franchises who play the waiting game.

“People know ‘Devin isn’t going to be on the board long, and we’re not going to find another Devin 10 years from now. He’s rare,’” White said. “Draft me, because when I hit free agency in five years, the price will go up. I’ll be looking for $100 million then.”

When White took the field, Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin moved to a prime location to view his inside linebackers coach Jerry Olsavsky work up a sweat on White.

“It was a tremendous day for our program,” LSU head coach Ed Orgeron said. “Every NFL team was here today. They know if they get an LSU Tiger they get a hard-nosed, tough, well-coached young man with great character.

“I was most proud of Devin White, and all of his teammates cheering each other on. One team, one heartbeat — a magnificent representation of our program today.”

White also used Friday to announce he’s signed with Nike.

"I've been a Nike guy for a long time," said White, who planned to have dinner with executives from the company on Friday night. "I want to forever be a part of their brand. We're about to combine and become one big family."

Unlike his close friend and fellow 318 product, Williams had something to prove Friday. The cornerback posted solid 40-yard dash (4.37) at the Combine, but then shut things down due to cramps.

“Being able to get a second chance — I produced well. I felt comfortable,” said Williams, a 6-foot-1, 182-pound former Calvary star who went through individual drills with New Orleans Saints secondary coach Aaron Glenn.

Williams led LSU Pro Day participants in the broad jump (10-4) and the vertical jump (36 inches).

Safety John Battle was able to exhale following Friday’s final whistle. The effort to impress prospective NFL teams has been a grind.

“I can’t wait to go to Raising Canes and get a Caniac — big-boy it,” said Battle, who ran the 40 in 4.6 on Friday morning. “I’ve been eating rabbit food. I can’t wait to feel the grease in my body.”

For tight end Foster Moreau, things since his final game in a Tigers uniform have become unexpectedly chaotic. Moreau hauled in just 52 passes in four seasons — 22 as a senior — with LSU, but a breakthrough performance during the Senior Bowl week have put the former No. 18 on the radar for the proceedings in Nashville.

“The Senior Bowl definitely raised questions and then I answered them at the Combine,” Moreau said. “Teams didn’t expect me to (be a good pass-catcher) because I haven’t shown that on game tape, but what I did at LSU helped us win a lot of games.”

With the help for former LSU star Matt Flynn, Moreau displayed good hands Friday.

“We should have used him more in the passing game,” Orgeron said of the 6-4, 252-pound Moreau, “but I believe he’s done himself well and will be a great pro.”