Lots of Positives In Auburn's Win Over Southern Miss
Brad Lester fights through the rain against USM. - photo by al.com
I've seen fire and I've seen rain. That old James Taylor lyric sums up what Auburn fans saw on the field and in the stands during Saturday's 27-13 win over Southern Miss. On a day when most people went home sunburned and soaking wet, Auburn put on a performance that was both masterful and confounding.
It took quarterback Chris Todd less than 10 minutes to throw for more yards than he and Kodi Burns did combined a week earlier against ULM - a team that suddenly looks much better after losing in the closing moments to Arkansas. Eleven Auburn receivers caught passes Saturday, the most in a game since 2005.
On the flip side, the Tigers five fumbles were the most since the 2001 Florida game. Auburn's two touchdown win could and should have been at least twice that much. Tommy Tuberville knows that fumbling like they did Saturday will cost them the SEC West in two weeks.
"It kept them (USM) in the game," said Tuberville. "That is part of it. Hopefully, we got it out of our system. Eric Smith's fumble right there at the end is a true no-no when you are trying to run the clock out. We gave them an opportunity to possibly get back in the game. We learned from all of these situations with our young guys playing.
"We fumbled twice in the red zone. We have to get better. Last year, I think in the second game we played we turned it over a lot of times and couldn't win the game. We turned it over a few times, but our defense stood up and kept us in the ball game and got the ball back in good field position. It was a good team game. It was truly a team game."
The biggest news of course, came at quarterback where Chris Todd put a strangle hold on the starting job. It's apparent that Todd has a much stronger and deeper grasp of how Tony Franklin's system works. My guess is the battle is far from over and Tuberville seemed to indicate that on Sunday.
"He's (Burns) been supportive of Chris and Chris of him," said Tuberville. "You've got to move on. We're going into the conference. He's been a big part of what we've been doing and he'll continue that. That's not to say in a couple of week's he's not the starter. That's how the business goes."
Through the first two games, Todd has completed more than 60 percent of his passes, racking up 318 yards through the air with a touchdown and an interception. Burns has been less successful throwing the ball, completing only 4 of 14 passes for 14 yards and one interception.
Running the ball is another story. Burns has rushed for 68 yards on eight attempts and scored once. Look for Burns to become a situational quarterback in the coming weeks. Inside the five yard line it's darn near impossible to keep him out of the end-zone as Southern Miss learned Saturday.
With all eyes on the quarterback you may have missed what was happening on the offensive line. Hugh Nall's guys turned in one of the great performances in recent memory. They manhandled the Golden Eagle defensive line and gave Todd enough time to drink a beer back there before throwing the ball. And what makes it even more impressive is how they did it - with a make shift lineup due to injuries.
Ryan Pugh moved from right tackle to center, replacing Jason Bosley who started at Pugh's position. Bosley has been nursing a sore shoulder that has made it difficult to snap the ball when lined up in the shotgun formation. Needless to say, it went off without a hitch.
Ninth-ranked Auburn takes on Miss State from Starkville on Saturday night at 6 p.m. CT. The game will be televised by ESPN 2. Keep your eye on Hurricane Ike this week. Where he makes landfall could have an impact on the weather. The game has the potential to be very wet. The Bulldogs enter the contest with a 1-1 record after defeating Southeast Louisiana 34-10 on Saturday.
|
Get onboard now! The first edition of Talkin' Tigers is just around the corner. The weekly online magazine is free to Track'em Tigers readers. We'll be talking with some of the legends of Auburn football and will go in-depth on the issues facing Auburn athletics. The publication will be delivered to your inbox weekly. It cost nothing to join and you can unsubscribe anytime. Just enter your email address in the box below to get started!
For Email Marketing you can trust
|
0 recs |
5 comments
Comments
Do you think...
Robert Dunn was kicking someone’s ass for that block in the back (that wasn’t even needed) that nullified his second punt return for a TD in successive weeks? That USM kicker (Barefoot?) finally got tired of kicking it to him…(and definitely got tired of trying to tackle him. Did anyone see Dunn steamroll that guy?)
So far, I’m liking the spread, but I’m thinking that when we get into the red zone, maybe we might want to resort back to a power offense and ram it right down the middle on them. Anyone second that?
by War Eagle Atlanta on
Sep 8, 2008 4:34 PM CDT
reply
actions
0 recs
I agree
When Auburn was inside the 5 yard line or so, it would drive me crazy when they lined up in shotgun and ran straight to the side of the end zone. I thought that Tuberville had said that they’ve practiced with the QB under center too. If that’s the case, why not go with a traditional ‘pound it in’ formation when on the goal line?
by ThatsWhatSheSaid! on
Sep 8, 2008 5:09 PM CDT
up
reply
actions
0 recs
OMG yes....
i absolutely believe that we should have resorted back to power football inside the 10. Pull out the I-formation and lets pour it to them. No fullback in the cubboard, no problem. Put Gabe McKinsey in there to block and lets get ugly. By the time we drove it down the field those boys would be dead tired (I loved how he ran the defense from one side to the other trying to tackle us on the drives.) When the camera backed off it looked like their entire defense had “hands on the hips”. Wearing them out. And then all the sudden trying to stop a power game after a finesse game put us in the position to score.
..OR they could have put in Kodi inside the 10 and just let him pick them apart running and passing.
Keep it up if you ask me. They seem to be getting a lil better from game 1. That i like. Progression. SEC now boys so lets keep getting better and better and better.
by Paratiger on
Sep 8, 2008 6:14 PM CDT
up
reply
actions
0 recs
I would'nt mind.....
seeing Tate pounding the ball up the middle behind a fullback especially late in the 1st half and in the second half after the opposing D is sucking wind.
Anyone know what Slaughter did to get in the doghouse? Must be something significant for Tubberville to say his suspension would be a lengthy one. I hope the kid gets his head on straight and does whatever is asked to rectify the situation.
Mississippi State will be a true test for our offense but our defense should dominate.
by Todd92 on
Sep 8, 2008 7:26 PM CDT
reply
actions
0 recs
We weren't deep before the season, in blockers...
…..and now it’s down to nearly nothing. We basically has one fullback, redshirt freshman John Douglas. He hurt his knee against ULM. The only other fullback is senior walk-on Ryan Hastie, who did get some snaps leading that weird-looking shotgun/I-formation thing we run, sometimes.
……At tight end, we’ve got Tommy Trott, who is lighter this year. Mckenzie is playing 35 percent of the snaps at strong-side DE, so he’s pretty much out. Brent Slusher is hurt. Freshman Vance Smith comes in sometimes. He’s bigger than the other Y receivers, but not the typical 260-270 pound SEC-sized tight end.
…..Summary: Undersized tight ends, and only one with any experience. One walk-on fullback. We just don’t really have what it takes to run the ball down an SEC defenses’ throat, right now! Maybe when Douglas gets back…
by Acid Reign on
Sep 9, 2008 1:37 AM CDT
reply
actions
0 recs










