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Obstacles May Be Too Big To Overcome This Season

  Todd_2_medium
Who's Bad?

The only thing more disturbing than Saturday night's loss to Vanderbilt is the words coming out of the players mouths since arriving home. Maybe I'm stating the obvious, but it's clear the Auburn coaches have lost the trust of its offensive players. When you hear how open and honest they are to the media, it makes you wonder what they're saying to each other away from the spotlight.

Take for example this little nugget from center Ryan Pugh: "We came out in the first quarter and rushed for about 100 yards and looked like the Auburn of old," Pugh said. "We got our confidence going and then all of a sudden we completely go away from it.

"As a player, it's frustrating. As someone watching the game, I'm sure it's frustrating. To come out like that and then come out and lay an egg in the second quarter and the second half is really embarrassing on offense."

Or this from Ben Tate, trying to make sense of it all: "We're definitely trying to find our identity," Tate said. "As an offense, to be truthful, we're just awful. There's no other way to put it. Your numbers don't lie. When you look at yourself on film, that doesn't lie either. Other teams are probably just licking their chops. We're just not good on offense right now. We just have to find a way to get better."

This doesn't sound like a team that believes it can still win.

I keep thinking back to the comment offensive coordinator Tony Franklin made last week. He was sharing his frustration, saying that it's much harder at Auburn than at Troy because his assistants there knew the spread offense. Franklin went on to say that he's had to teach the Auburn coaches at the same time he's teaching the players.

Is it possible that Franklin's not the one to blame for this meltdown? It's something to think about. Regardless of who comes in as coordinator - offense or defense, Tuberville insists that his core group of assistant coaches remain on staff. Is this really fair to Franklin?

Looking at it this way, you suddenly see Franklin's job in a whole new light. How difficult must it be to have coaches on your staff that have no idea how to run your offense?

Tuberville likes to brag about how he's kept his coaching staff mostly intact since leaving Ole Miss in 1999. Is this a good thing? Have they become complacent? Regardless of what happens on the field, they know their jobs are safe, even if their coordinator's is not.

At the least, shouldn't wide receivers coach Greg Knox be catching some heat - finally? Despite having a number of top recruits over the years, rarely have any of his receivers really lived up to the hype. In fact, most have gone on to better careers in the NFL than what they had at Auburn. Take Robert Dunn out of the equation and this year's group may be the worst Tuberville has ever fielded.

Looking down the road, is this season really salvageable? Can the coaches win back the trust of the players? More importantly, can the coaches' figure out how to run this offense? Can Franklin actually coach something other than the spread? It makes you dizzy just thinking about it.

With Amen Corner just six weeks away, does Auburn really have a chance at righting the ship? History says no. Time will tell.

 

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More Than Meets The Eye...

Word has it that those closest to Troy football have said that when Franklin went from the Auburn sidelines to the Auburn coaches box during games,…something was definitely not right at Auburn with Franklin. That coaching on the sidelines is what Franklin is all about, not calling plays from the coaches box. Whether he chose to go up or Tuberville sent him up, he is not doing what he has always been known to do and no doubt prefers to do. Kind of like putting a muzzle on a dog or a dog on a leash, I suppose. Franklin has hinted all around the fact that he has more or less been put in a virtual box of sorts, in terms of being made to taper back on his spread offense. He has said what is being run at Auburn is not his offense. Since the start of the season when I saw the makings of a pathetic offense, I gave up on the spread and said get Franklin out of these, NOW. Now I’m not so sure. Moreover, I have heard reports off of some of the pay for subscription Auburn sites without saying which one in particular, that there are some things going on that look to be undermining Franklin’s ability to do what he was hired to do.

by WarEagle99 on Oct 7, 2008 8:44 AM CDT reply actions  

Thought this was an interesting article

http://smartfootball.blogspot.com/

Check it out and tell me what you think about this guys assumptions. Sounds like a smart, informative, and evidence to back it up story to me.

War Eagle

by Paratiger on Oct 7, 2008 12:01 PM CDT reply actions  

Good Lord...

Alright, by this point I think everyone and their twin brother have read the analysis of the spread offense by Smart Football, but I keep seeing posts where people are trying to point this out. Now I spent a good amount of time last night reading the blog and analyzing the thoughts and appreciate where the storyline is going. I agree that he may be facing an uphill battle both with talent and possibly even coaching (the Tuby group), but Franklin is the Offensive Coordinator for a big-time SEC school with big expectations. If a particular style (Airraid) of his offense can not work, then he must be a leader and make adjustments. I’ve continued to see over the last 6 games an offense that comes out firing and then sputters into utter chaos by the 2nd half. Folks, we have the 104th ranked offense in the nation. Do not make excuses for this offense to get to the point it has, which is one of the top 20 worst offenses in the FBS. I still believe that a coach should be able to make adjustments based on the talent he has (not what he wants) and shouldn’t force something to work that just isn’t. If he valued his job he would do what it takes to make Auburn’s offense come alive, but he seems to still want to prove his system works…and it’s been a miserable failure.

I watched the LSU-UK video and see a few things. First, a QB (Couch) who has a rocket for an arm with impeccable accuracy. Not something I’ve seen out of either AU QB. Second, extremely quick reads of the defense and then very quick passes. The UK O-line isn’t having to block for 10 seconds in order for Couch to make a play (unlike Todd or Burns who sit back in the pocket and just wait for someone to get open resulting in a sack or broken play). Franklin is not only OC, but also QB coach and should be teaching his two boys how to read quickly and then make a quick release. Unfortunately, either Todd and Burns isn’t making the proper reads or Franklin isn’t coaching them up properly. Either way, I don’t see any semblance of the Airraid system in Auburn’s offense. Franklin’s lack of creativity, inability to make adjustments and belligerent need to prove his system continues to dig a deeper hole for him. It’s a train wreck and everyone is watching. I either expect him to become a leader or walk away from his failed experiment. There’s always challenges in fully changing systems, especially when expectations are for improvement from the previous system instead of further decline. Regardless, I don’t buy into this apologist talk on him not getting a fair shake.

by crashmattb on Oct 7, 2008 4:37 PM CDT up reply actions  

Excellent Article

It’s about time someone made these points. Count me among those who don’t fault Franklin for the anemic offensive production this year – don’t even fault him even in part. He is clearly being handcuffed.
Watch those videos of Couch at Kentucky. He is not rifling his passes, he does not have minutes in the pocket to find a receiver, he is not mobile. He was finding open receivers simply because the defense couldn’t cover everyone who might catch a ball. How many of those receivers and backs went on to NFL careers? How is Couch’s NFL career progressing? Those were mediocre athletes, by SEC standards – just like those at Troy last year, who rolled up a mile more yardage than AU did against our common SEC opponents.
I watch our games this year and I see a team playing without discipline or focus. This is most evident on special teams, a fact critically and repeatedly pointed out on this blog. I guess that’s Franklin’s fault too. Just where are Gran, Ensminger, Nall, and Knox, when the blame is being assigned?
Run the damn spread – Tony Franklin’s spread – or hire Borges back. Or Barfield.

by atlWDE on Oct 7, 2008 8:15 PM CDT reply actions  

I agree about special teams

I have never seen an Auburn team or a team in any Sec game this year when a team started as far back in their own red zone as us. How can a new offense be effective with those circumstances, we have driven sixty or seventy yards on several occasions just to punt. And how many times has the other team stared at 40+. To start off with an all sec kicker as well, and get benched for a soccer player that never played the oval type football game in his life. But he is kicking it pretty good I might say. Why cant we find a fg kicker to do the same.

Auburn Elvis

by AuburnElvis on Oct 7, 2008 10:26 PM CDT up reply actions  

WOW......

Some sane people are still here….

Thanks!!!

by WDE on Oct 8, 2008 8:54 AM CDT up reply actions  

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