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Tigers Hold Off the Vols!

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Neiko Thorpe and Craig Stevens celebrate with the Auburn fans, after beating Tennessee, 26-22!

 

     War Eagle, everybody! It's time once again, for the Acid Reign report, on Auburn's excellent 26-22 victory over the Tennessee Volunteers, in Knoxville! In football, the game's often about fortune, particularly the bounces of that prolate, elongated spheroid. Tennessee came up on the short end of luck, repeatedly. The newspaper folks in Birmingham believe that despite the final score, the game wasn't even close. I disagree. Auburn left two fumbles on the ground, but the ball bounced the right way, and Auburn kept it. Chris Todd had an interception overturned on replay, and had several more ducks chucked up into the night air in Knoxville that fluttered fortuitously to the turf. Meanwhile, the Vols suffered through numerous just-off-the-hands passes that were incomplete. When Jonathan Crompton lost the handle on a ball, there was Josh Bynes for Auburn, to set up a field goal. Don't get me wrong, though. Auburn came in with a great plan, fought hard, and deserved to win.

 

     Offensively, Auburn faced a tough challenge. Tennessee's Monte Kiffin used some Tampa-2 looks, but also used a bewildering array of blended coverage, and opportune blitzes. UT did a good job of adjusting AFTER Chris Todd would check off. This resulted in Auburn running the play clock down MUCH more often than in past games. Finally, I think it got to the point that Auburn just started running the play that was sent in, no matter what. I was particularly worried about Auburn's chances of running the ball, in this one. Bart Eddins did an admirable job filling in for suspended starting guard Byron Issom. A somewhat simplified blocking package helped, and Tennesssee's vaunted D-line was slowed down sufficiently for Auburn to churn out 459 yards of offense. Tennessee was determined not to give up the big play, and with Eric Berry back in the secondary, Auburn was equally determined not to turn it over to him. The Tigers needed to play a turnover free game, and thanks to those lucky bounces, did exactly that.

 

     Defensively, this game was a mixed bag. Auburn attacked the line of scrimmage well, causing trouble in the Vol backfield. Tennessee had plenty of big plays, including 5 runs of more than 10 yards. But, Tennessee could not string together a series of 4 to 5 yard runs that could move the chains. They had to rely on the arm of Jonathan Crompton, and with a sub-50% completion percentage, the Vols could not mount enough scoring drives. I suppose I have not scouted Crompton well enough, this season. He's gotten a ton of unfavorable press, but I don't think he played that badly, overall. His receivers didn't help him, at all. Crompton was not sacked, and did not throw an interception. While he wasn't terribly accurate on his short to medium throws, if it gets to a receiver's hands (or backside, or their helmet!), the receiver should catch it! Auburn's focus was to stop the run, and make Crompton be patient, and it worked. Barely. If Tennessee had caught the ball better, we might all be writing about a tough Tiger loss.

 

     Special teams took a giant leap forward this week, with no major mistakes, and some actual excitement on the kick return unit! All is not well, of course. Tennessee ripped the kick coverage unit for 25 yards per return, and we had a couple of shaky-looking punts. I think, though, that we're really working on directing punts away from return men, and UT managed only one nine yard return, on 6 Auburn punts. Wes Byrum continues to be amazing, and his leg was the difference in the ball game. While UT's Lincoln was missing a chip shot field goal and getting an extra point blocked, Byrum was busy nailing 4 of 5 field goals. Byrum had his first miss of the year, but big deal. It was a 46 yarder. You're going to miss those, occasionally.

 

Grades, after the jump!

Star-divide

 

Defensive Line: C. I will admit that this unit did a pretty fair job in gap control most of the time, setting up the linebackers to make plays. Otherwise, it was an anemic performance, highlighted by a non-existent pass rush. The defensive line made a total of six tackles (2 for loss), and one quarterback hurry. That's NOT going to cut it in Fayetteville, next week!

 

Linebackers: B+. Josh Bynes and Craig Stevens had superb games, combining for 20 tackles. Eltoro Freeman, despite playing nearly every snap, was pretty much invisible. Had one quarterback hurry, no tackles. The other two guys controlled the line of scrimmage on most plays, hurried the QB twice, and even broke up 3 short passes. If we can continue to tackle at the point of attack, October might not be such a bad month for Auburn, after all!

 

Secondary: C+. There were WAY too many Tennessee receivers wide open underneath, and too many missed tackles that allowed short plays to become big gains. Auburn basically had Tennessee shut out, in the first half, till Zach Etheridge let the tight end get behind him. A safety can't do that, PARTICULARLY in prevent defense, near the end of a half! Neiko Thorpe and Walter McFadden were less effective than usual, in coverage, but both made up for it with good run support. Darren Bates had a nice game, with six solo tackles, as well. Several sure interceptions were dropped in this game.

 

Punting: B+. We punted six times, once off of a trick play pooch attempt by Chris Todd. The trick didn't really work, and the ball hit for a touchback. Clinton Durst's average looked good at 43.6 yards, but he's not hitting the ball as solidly as last season. We're getting lucky rolls on those things. Tennessee went after Auburn's protection scheme, and did not get there for any blocks! It wasn't very pretty, but you have to be pleased with a 40.6 yard net.

 

Punt Returns: C. Anthony Gulley got a chance to redeem himself this week, and let 'em both hit and roll, the second was downed at the Auburn 17. Exit Gulley, enter Phillip Pierre-Louis. PPL had two returns for only 9 yards, and added two fair catches, and let only one short punt hit the ground. This was the best return man performance of the year, by far! PPL made good decisions, and hung onto the ball in traffic. This is exactly what we need, going into the meat of the schedule! We now have a return guy, let's try to get at least a block or two, next week, in the return game.

 

Kick Returns: A. Auburn showed a spark, this time. UT's first kick was a squib, and Eric Smith turned the corner for 14, just before the half. The second half opened with a STRONG 35-yard tackle breaking effort by Ben Tate. McCalebb weaved through traffic for 39 yards on the next one. Then McCalebb rocketed 52 yards on the last one, and nearly broke it for the TD! We're starting to get actual blocking on these, and it's becoming a strength!

 

Kickoffs: D. Morgan Hull hit the ball pretty well early, kicking the first one 4 yards deep in the end zone, but weakened with each subsequent kick. The last two only reached the ten, and seven yard lines. A 65 yard average is respectable, and we had no out of bounds deals. Coverage was spotty, as usual, for the most part. Tennessee was getting an effortless 25+ yards, every time, till Jay Wisner stood up Oku for only 14, on the last kickoff. Tennessee averaged 25 yards per return.

 

Placekicking: A. Wes Byrum had his first miss, from 46 yards, but hit everything else. Byrum had 3 chip shot field goals, a 43-yarder, and hit both extra points.

 

Offensive Line: A. When you run for 224 yards, and put up 459 total on a Monte Kiffin defense, you're doing a tremendous job up front! We had just a couple of protection errors on stunts, and one false start. This was a super effort, and great job filling in by Bart Eddins!

 

Receivers: B. It was another solid effort blocking downfield, but our guys struggled to get open against some shifting coverage, and made a few wrong route adjustments. Tennessee doubled our outside guys on most plays, so there wasn't much opportunity, there. There were only six Auburn receiver corps catches, in the game, 2 by Adams, 2 by Zachary (including the game clinching TD on a quick hitch/blitz beater that T-Zach took to the house!), and one apiece for Trott and Wisner. Had one ball that hit Trott's hands, but it was an awkward throw. Kodi Burns dropped a sure first down pass right in his chest. Darvin Adams saved Todd with a tremendous catch on an air-ball thrown up for grabs.

 

Running Backs: B-. Ben Tate had a powerful game running the ball, but had a fumble in the red zone, his second of the year. Onterio McCalebb ran well, too, with some tough inside yards, but had a couple of notable gaffes in blitz pickup, and dropped a touchdown that might have made it a blow-out. McCalebb added 62 receiving yards, giving him 113 offensive yards. Mario Fannin made some nice blocks, and had a good field-stretching 32 yard run. Off the bubble screen, though, he usually could not make the first man miss. Had one 16 yard reception on the throwback pass, but the other 5 catches produced only six yards. Fannin also dropped a couple of balls.

 

Quarterback: A. Chris Todd didn't exactly light 'em up, in this one, and had a few throws that Tennessee might have picked off. But, Todd did a great job of managing the game, and kept Auburn out of numerous bad plays. Even with a half dozen dropped balls this time, Todd hit on 19 of 32, for a respectable 6.8 net yards per pass. Todd showed tremendous poise and reflexes under pressure, avoiding a number of sure sacks with miraculous dump-off passes. Todd's lone miscue was a mishandled snap in the red zone that Onterrio McCalebb covered. Kodi Burns continues to run the Wildcat for tough yards, and made a great throw to Fannin on the wide receiver reverse/throwback.

 

     Auburn did exactly what they had to do, going into Knoxville. They disrupted Tennessee's bread 'n' butter running game, and continued to generate offense. The special teams stepped up, and played pretty close to a complete game, for the first time all year. It wasn't always pretty, and Tennessee came roaring back in the end, but the Tigers held on for a 26-22 win. They don't come often in Knoxville, as this is only Auburn's third win in Neyland Stadium in the past 30 years. With the win, Auburn is 5-0, and has equaled their wins from last season. The offense is only one point shy of its total points, in 12 games last year!

 

     From Tennessee, I think most of us were looking for widespread buffoonery from Lane Kiffin and his players, but we didn't get much of it. Yes, there were drops, and receivers not looking for the ball. But for the most part, Tennessee looked like a well-prepared team, with a good plan, and great effort. It's way too early to write the Kiffin era off. If Tennessee can cut down on mistakes, they'll beat a lot of folks down the stretch, this year.

 

     Next week, Auburn faces a big challenge on the road in Fayetteville. Arkansas has a great quarterback in Ryan Mallett, and their receivers will not drop balls like Tennessee's did. Auburn will have to play well, and continue the offensive onslaught, to have a chance to win. It's great to be an Auburn Tiger, folks, and thanks for reading!

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nice job Acid

and a win on the road in a hostile environment by our Auburn Tigers! I’ll take it. It wasn’t as pretty as some but we never trailed in the game and only looked bad at the end when it was already too late for Tennessee. I have to agree that if UT’s receivers could catch, we would have lost. I thought our coverage in the secondary would be a lot better. Crompton did get lousy press and he deserved some of it, but I saw him make throws right where they should have been, but just got dropped. Our offensive balance is really something to behold considering what we looked like last year. Both teams have clearly improved but Auburn maybe just better offensively. I think maybe the pace of the game has some effect on the defense but hopefully they will get used to it. Another hostile environment to play in next week when Malzahn takes his offense back to Fayetteville. Let’s hope our defense makes the trip as well.

by mgizmo2005 on Oct 4, 2009 12:26 PM CDT reply actions  

Poll and such...

I don’t agree that if the Tenn WR could catch we would have lost, we would just have had to play harder. Not that it matters NOW :)

AP Poll has us at 17…FINALLY!

War Eagle!

by CKTCooper on Oct 4, 2009 12:35 PM CDT reply actions  

I watched the game again this morning.

I saw alot more that I was excited about than not. I do agree with Acid, that the D needs to step it up. UT’s problems this season have alot to do with their overall sloppyness. Crompton gets the brunt of the blame, but clearly there are issues with receivers, protection, etc. We will not see the same sloppyness in Fayetteville. The Arkansas game always makes me nervous. But I think that we tweak a couple things on D, and we have a solid shot.

By hard nose play and Chris Todd truly making repeated heads-up play, no one will be sleeping through an Auburn game this season!
War Eagle!!

by Tiger on the mountain on Oct 4, 2009 12:50 PM CDT reply actions  

I don't feel as bad about the Arky game as this one.

That said, I had picked Tennessee to beat us (I’m so glad I was wrong of course!). The reason I feel better about our chances against Arkansas is that we’ll be able to move the ball on them a lot better than we did Tennessee. I also think that we can contain Mallett enough to keep them in check. He’ll make some big plays but we’ll be making plenty more of our own.

War Eagle

by WarEagle86 on Oct 4, 2009 12:53 PM CDT reply actions  

It's true, Tennessee has the better D, by far.

Our offense should be able to do what they want for the most part. It is the Arkansas O against our D that causes me a little worry. I will say that it may not always be pretty, but our guys do what they need to to get the job done on both sides of the ball.

by Tiger on the mountain on Oct 4, 2009 12:59 PM CDT up reply actions  

I skipped...

…..part of my 30-year high school reunion, and went down to Auburn for the Arky game, last year. I’m STILL having nightmares about Casey Dick tossing that 10 yard square in at us, over and over again. We were HELPLESS against it, and couldn’t get ANY pressure on Dick. Then, we’d get scalded when Petrino called the draw to Michael Smith. We got shredded, shredded, shredded in that game.

…..It’s basically the same players for both the Auburn D and the Arkansas O, except Arky now has huge QB with a big-time arm. This game really worries me.

by Acid Reign on Oct 4, 2009 1:09 PM CDT up reply actions  

I agree

Anyone who views this game as just another Saturday before we head to the Bayou is really kidding themselves and discounting a talented Arkansas offense. Dangerous!

by Tiger on the mountain on Oct 4, 2009 1:13 PM CDT up reply actions  

Put up or shut up game for our defense against Arkansas.

I know we’re thin, young, inexperienced whatever. But if we go in there sloppy we are going to have trouble early, often, and everywhere in between. Mallett will break us down like a shotgun if we don’t stay poised and disciplined all game long.

War Eagle

by WarEagle86 on Oct 4, 2009 1:51 PM CDT up reply actions  

I'm glad

you graded the kick coverage a D. We were horrible. I kept thinking they’d break one sooner or later.

Four field goals won’t cut it with stronger teams. We need TDs when we get that close. Where was Darvin Adams all night? I guess the Vol defense negated him for the most part, hence quite a few throws to the backs, Tate and McCalebb—in addition to H-back Fannin.

I can’t say enough about the offensive line and the protection they afforded Todd. A few hurries, but NO sacks. Todd actually looked pretty nimble in the pocket, dodging one huge rush in the second half that I thought had him.

by War Eagle Atlanta on Oct 4, 2009 1:16 PM CDT reply actions  

Definitely agree with that last point. Todd continues to amaze me with his scrambling ability. He has turned several sure sacks into positive plays this season.

by atlWDE on Oct 4, 2009 2:40 PM CDT up reply actions  

Finally...

During the game, I finally proved I’m not a complete moron when it comes to football. I only wish Todd92 could’ve seen me go. Maybe, he would now take me more serious and not consider me a total idiot. Haha, it was great win for the Tigers and now comes the Arkansas Razorbacks. For whatever reason, this team seems to have our number year in and year out. However, we match up well with them this time. Plus, getting a road game under our belt was great experience. I think it will be a great game and that our guys will be there until the end. You know, I’m really looking forward to the next game. Something that last year didn’t happen once the early part of the season was over.

by Sparkey on Oct 4, 2009 1:54 PM CDT reply actions  

Alright Acid.

For the most part I agree with you about the defense, but what I am really starting to think is that the slack defense is by design, not lack of talent. I think that Roof and Chizik have sat down and mapped out a plan to try to help the defense last through the season with minimal injuries. Part of that is playing more slack zones and trying to just contain offenses instead of fully pressing offenses and shutting them down.

If we ever get some of the injured defensive players back, which a rumor floating is that Pybus is done at Auburn now, I think that our defense would really start showing some speed and aggressiveness.

I think that our offensive output was far better than I thought, the points were about where I saw us ending though. It just looked like our team really wasn’t in full sync last night on offense and they still performed well, War Eagle boys, you deserve it.

Our offensive line was just slightly less than stellar against a well schemed defensive front 7. Sure our running backs didn’t pick up every blitz, but Monte is probably the best defensive coordinator (I would say best coordinator if Gus wasn’t doing such a bang up job) in the country. I will say that we will not see a better defensive coordinator who can adjust on the fly the rest of the season.

All the running backs ran hard, including Hardesty and Brown. I think Tate is on a mission and I think he might hit the end of the season rocking between 1200-1500 yards for us.

Receivers just looked a bit off last night. For us, the timing seemed a bit off and their hands seemed a bit hard. For Tennessee, man, the receivers and Crompton just look they are in a different playbook. Bad timing issues, bad passes, bad catching, you name it and the relationship between Crompton and the UT receivers seem to have it.

As always, be proud of your Tigers. They played well in a tough environment last night and came away with a win. This was the first time they were faced with a bit of adversity and they kept plucking along and took it home for us.

War Eagle.

by Mattco on Oct 4, 2009 4:24 PM CDT reply actions  

I forgot to add.

My only defensive concern that I really have is that we are not getting near the pass rush that a top caliber team needs to beat other top caliber teams. For us to beat and contain Mallet and the Hogs, we need to knock him on his butt a lot. FSU made this public back in the 90s, they were going to knock down the quarterback if it cost them 15 or not. We need to get some of this attitude.

by Mattco on Oct 4, 2009 4:33 PM CDT up reply actions  

I was guessing the same thing...

….about Pybus. From what snippets I’ve gleaned off the net, it sounds like he’s had a serious, serious head injury. No sense risking spending the rest of his life as a vegetable, I think.

…..I think there is a definite premium on “keeping it in front” on the defense. And in college, that’s a sound idea, defensively. I think Auburn will score points. The idea is to make the opposing team work for it. College kids DO make mistakes. Auburn used some good run blitzes with Bynes and Stevens, last night, and it kept UT from sustaining drives.

by Acid Reign on Oct 4, 2009 6:25 PM CDT up reply actions  

Well...

if that’s true about Pybus, then I wish they would say so instead of us wanting him to come back. I think that we should be told so we can start wishing him well and telling him thank you for his efforts as an Auburn Tiger. I understand playing injuries close to the vest, but at this point I think Chizik should say what’s going on with Pybus and let the Auburn family support him through such a rough time. I wish Pybus the best and he will be in my prayers.

by Sparkey on Oct 4, 2009 11:26 PM CDT up reply actions  

Great Post...

I agree with your kick coverage grade. I’m afraid that down the road we’ll get beat because of it. Something has to give fast. Arkansas is truly the mirror opposite of Tennessee – great offense, terrible defense. I wonder what the over/under will be tomorrow?

Track'em Tigers.com

by Jay Coulter on Oct 4, 2009 7:35 PM CDT reply actions  

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