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Auburn whacks Mississippi State!

Tate_breaks_loose_against_the_bulldogs_medium

Ben Tate and the Tigers pound the Bulldogs, 49-24!

 

     War Eagle, everybody! Facing the first SEC game in the Gene Chizik era, the Gus Malzhan offense came through again, posting almost 600 yards on the night. The 2009 Auburn/Mississippi State game was a far cry from the 3-2 slug-fest of a year ago. This time, the two teams combined for 910 total yards, and Auburn won where it counts, 49-24.

 

     The Bulldogs had few answers for the Auburn offense, which posted 589 total yards. The passing game, plagued by dropped balls, didn't fare quite as well as last week against Louisiana Tech, but it was adequate, with no interceptions, and 8.0 net yards per pass. The running game thrived again, picking up 395 yards, an average of 6.6 yards per carry. McCalebb and Tate were AGAIN both over 100 yards. Darvin Adams picked up 5 catches for 115 yards, despite two drops.

 

     The Auburn defense had some problems with the MSU rushing game, giving up 4.3 yards per carry, but they limited dual quarterbacks Chris Relf and Tyson Lee to 1.38 net yards per pass, which was the difference in the ball game. Auburn's REALLY mixing up the coverages well. They change up basically at the snap. Show cover two, zone blitz. Show man, drop into three deep. Show cover one, go cover-zero and get a safety free at a dead run at the QB. If there's a flaw, it's gap control on those man coverages. MSU averaged 8 yards per carry on QB keepers. You've GOT to figure the West Virginia and other teams will test this...

 

     On special teams, Wes Byrum nailed all of his extra points, and the combination of Byrum and Morgan Hull had a decent game kicking off, with only one ball kicked out of bounds. Otherwise, it was a terrible special teams night for the Tigers. Auburn kick returners danced around for 20.8 kick return yards per return, but punt returns were awful once again. Demond Washington averaged just 2.7 yards per return and we had ANOTHER fumble, there. Auburn kickoff coverage was subject to poor tackling, giving up 27.4 yards to Leon Berry. Clinton Durst had a rough night punting, averaging only 35.8 yards per punt. One was blocked, and returned for a Bulldog touchdown. After a solid year last season, Auburn fans were left cringing in their seats late in this game, in kicking situations.

 

     Fortunately, the Auburn offense was way too much for the Bulldogs to handle. The Tiger attack offered up no fumbles, no interceptions, no sacks, and 83 plays for 589 yards. As much as it might surprise folks who watched Auburn last season, the offense was the difference, this time, turning a potentially close game into a blowout.

 

Grades, after the jump!

Star-divide

 

     Stats from all outlets, are pretty spotty, tonight. We've got tackles recorded by Aaron Savage on the official Auburn website, we've got Rollinson completing 6 passes on ESPN's box score, and errors galore. All I can go by, it seems, is what I saw. Auburn beat a determined MSU Bulldog team 49-24, in a game not as close as the score indicated.

 

Defensive line: A. Missing in action, this week, was Nick Fairley. I'm not sure, what happened there, but he didn't start, and didn't record any stats, after a stellar game against Louisiana Tech. Mike Blanc filled in in the middle, and the Auburn rush did an adequate, if not spectacular job. Some folks might question this grade. After all, the starting unit recorded 1 sack, 1.5 tackles for loss, and two QB hurries, total. What's the deal? 16 total tackles, minimal gap control problems, and even a big interception pick-six in coverage by Antonio Coleman help this grade. And Coleman wasn't alone in pass coverage. Goggins had a pass breakup, too. This was a marvelous game up front, in terms of controlling a dangerous running spread offense.

 

Linebackers: A. Again, there was a huge amount of responsibility placed on a thin Auburn linebacking corps. They had to fill inside gaps, AND contain on the corner, and they had to do it with suspect numbers. Eltoro Freeman made a good first impression on the field, racking up six total tackles, and rattling the QB once. Craig Stevens was his usual self, chalking up 7 tackles, including two for losses. Adam Herring had 4 stops, including 1 for loss. Josh Bynes was the real story, with a lead-tying 8 tackles, and key plays on key downs. But you MUST look at linebacker coverage. Tight end Kendrick Cook, no catches. 3rd wide receiver O'Neal Wilder, 1 catch for 25. Tight end Marcus Green, 1 catch for 3 yards. In short, slot receivers were SHUT DOWN, something that has not happened in many years on the Plains! In addition, MSU's tailbacks, a group former Tiger coach Greg Knox called "the best unit he's ever seen!" (Better than Carnell and Ronnie?) managed only 4.4 yards per carry.

 

Secondary: A. If nothing else defensively was apparent last Saturday, it's clear that Auburn has a pair of outstanding corners. Walter McFadden and Neiko Thorpe HANDLED the outside receivers, forcing State to look elsewhere for big plays. Leon Berry had 60 yards, but a fair amount of it was on sneaky plays out of the slot. Brandon McCrae had 3 catches for 33. Super-de-douper all-freshman signee prospect Chad Bumphis had a total of 8 yards. Zach Etheridge had 8 tackles, McFadden 7, Thorpe 7, and free safety Darren Bates had 3. That's pretty sure tackling, and this bunch limited Bulldog passers to a pedestrian 6.2 yards per pass, 3.8 yards per pass net.

 

Punting: D-. Clinton Durst never had a chance, in this one. Our ridiculous spread punting formation was exposed, in this game. When possibly the worst team in the SEC manages to shoot gaps, and race around the back protection guys for a block, you've got problems. It's time to get back to a regular lineup, a step and a half Saturn-V punt, and solid coverage. These sneaky rugby punts might cost us a game in the future, against good athletic SEC teams. Durst's net was ony 17.4, a grade only saved from failing because Durst killed two inside the 20. If there's any positive, it was guys like Josh Harris running bouncing red zone punts down inside the 5 yard line. Please, Mr. Boulware, let's shore up our protection, this week?

 

Punt returns: D+. Let's see, six punts, only three fielded, one of them fumbled, and 2.3 yards per return. Again, we survived the fumble with no turnover. We were relieved and excited by the 3 fair catches. War Eagle! Sad to say, this was actually an improvement over game one.

 

Kickoff Returns: C. If I graded solely on blocking, this would be an F. But Mario Fannin and Onterrio McCalebb were stalwart, refusing to go down, and somehow, despite numerous hits, they managed 21.0 yards per return. Bravo! Come on, up men! Block somebody, willya?

 

Kickoffs: C. On 8 kickoffs, Auburn averaged nearly hitting it to the goal line, with generally high kicks, and all to the sideline. One, by Morgan Hull, actually went out of bounds. Ooops. Still, we had State return men bottled up near the goal line, in the corners. And yet, a true freshman, Leon Berry slashed, broke arm tackles, and abused the Auburn return coverage unit for 26.6 yards per return. Good thing we didn't save this performance for Phillip Livas, last week, eh?

 

Place kicking: A. It's hard to argue with 7 of 7 on PAT's, but some of 'em just squeezed inside the uprights. Are Wes Byrum's kicking troubles over? We're not convinced, just yet.

 

Offensive line: B. I'm not going to name names, but we continue to be slowed by key penalties at critical times. It was the same player, both times. And it's sad, because I'll bet if you averaged up cockroach and rodeo blocks for the game, that penalized player had more than the rest of the line combined. Complaining aside, it's pretty exciting for a fan, to watch this line. We get a pretty heavy dose of inside runs in this offense, that appear to go nowhere. I'm typing out "second and 12" on the screen, and it turns out that the carry picked up 5 yards. That's some pretty dominant line play. It's taken at LEAST a six man rush this year, to put any pressure on Chris Todd. This Grimes guy is a keeper. They don't even look that good to casual observation, but our quarterback has yet to be sacked, we haven't thrown a pick, and we have yet to see an Auburn three 'n' out this season. Amazing, really.

 

Receivers: B+. It's hard to give this grade, after Darvin Adams lit up the Bulldog secondary for 115 yards. There were other great catches, including a monster fake block, spring-open deal by Jay Wisner, and a tremendous comeback, leaping grab by Terrell Zachary on a ball basically thrown up for grabs. Again, downfield blocking was good, especially by Tommy Trott. He just BURIED a guy on Ben Tate's big burst for the game-clinching TD run. Still, drops hurt. Adams was Todd's primary target, and he dropped at least two. Stallworth had a drop. We still need a bit sharper routes, but you can't argue with any of these guys' efforts cracking on folks, downfield.

 

Running Backs: A. No fumbles, this game, and again with great protections. Blocking was good again by Fannin and Douglas. Running might have been better. State has a faster, more aggressive D. I think McCalebb found that out, and was a slight bit more limited in his 16 carries for 7.1 yards a carry. I have to admit, though, that big 48 yard burst that gave Auburn the lead back for good, was a thing of beauty. Ben Tate THRIVED on contact, and got stronger and stronger as the game went out. When they sprinted up to the line in the 4th quarter, and Tate knifed through the D for 35 and a score, it was over. Eric Smith, after his one-game absence, had both good blocking plays, and good running plays. If we have depth issues, it's not at running back!

 

Quarterbacks: B-. We had too many throwaways, and a sub-par 45 percent completion percentage. While Auburn rolled on the ground in this game, the above number gives cause for concern. Particularly troubling is the fact that at least two completions in this total were sailer-balls just thrown up for grabs, that actually worked. I guess have to be fired up about the 3 QB TDs on the ground, and the Wildcat TD pass to true freshman tight end Phillip Lutzencirchen. Still no sacks, and no interceptions. But dang, these numbers worry me. We've got some tough games ahead. We'll need better than 45 percent, I think.

 

     I'll have to admit, I expected a big offensive game against La. Tech. I did NOT expect a 49 point outburst against the likes of Carl Torbush, even if he only had 4 starters returning. If I had been told that Auburn would only complete 45 percent of its passes, I would have said that 49 points was crazy-talk! The pessimist in me didn't want to believe it, but this Malzhan single-wing/shotgun/dipsy-doodle/nosebleed drive blocking offense now has me convinced. Auburn might be two or three wins ahead of where I predicted them, at the start of the season. I laughed when La Tech got tired in the 4th quarter. MSU was whoofing before then. Ben Tate's TD run late was a thing of beauty, mostly because the Bulldog guys were too gassed to come up out of their stance, and chase him. I've still got to figure that the LSUs and Bamas of the league won't get this tired, but I could be wrong.

 

     Defensively, we've still got a few holes, but some real speed and talent, too. We might be somewhat lacking in depth in the front seven, but we have two corners that have, so far, taken the outside receivers out of the game. 9 on 9, inside the tackle box, definitely works to an Auburn defense's favor!

 

     The pessimist in me is REALLY worried about the special teams. Yes, we have SUPER kickers and punters. No, the spread punt thing got exposed, this week. Getting folks downfield to cover is useless, when you expose the best punter in the SEC to brutal hits and blocked punts. Sorry. Let's shore that thing up, and protect Durst so that he can hang 'em, again, shall we? Coverage is really spotty. Return blocking is nearly non-existent. I guess the reason we haven't had one of those ubiquitous block-in-the-back calls, is because we don't hit at all, in the return game.

 

     Auburn faces a huge step up in competition, this week. Despite a lackluster showing a week ago, West Virginia has some of the best talent in the country, coming to Auburn this weekend. What was a green D last season, is now veteran. There are some questions up front for the Mountaineers on offense, but they can hurt us on the edges with Noel Devine and Jock Sanders, and a new/old veteran QB with a tremendous arm. We can't surrender on special teams, not against this bunch. It's a great challenge for Gene Chizik and Auburn, and I'll be surprised if we aren't an underdog at home, in this one. It's time for Gene Chizik and company to prove the nation wrong again, as they have the first two weeks. War Eagle, and isn't it great to be 2-0, or what?

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Great analysis, as usual.

Miss St has a real running threat with Dixon. Why they didnt keep working that running attack is a mystery, especially later in the game. We eventually shut down their passing attack, but their running was still effective.

Miss St has generally had a size advantage over Auburn on the line, both DL and OL. They stayed with us early due to this size advantage. But as the game wore on, they wore out. So kudos to Coach Yoxall for whipping our guys into fighting shape.

Our play calling was so much fun. To see Auburn run options, sweeps, and reverses, well, it’s about time. Simple but effective plays kept Miss St confused. I got worried though when we made that big first drive and then stalled in the red zone.

The Bulldogs got ornery the second quarter when they kept pounding on the ground for consistent gains. I felt like they were exploiting our LB situation to good effect. But our secondary really came to the rescue. They were awesome last night.

Kodi had a terrific game, and threw a nice pass into the end zone. I am so happy for him to be enjoying this level of success.

Our OL protected Todd all night. Yeah, he had a little tougher time passing last night than the first game, but our big guys gave him plenty of time to look. He even ran the ball effectively.

by KungFuPanda9 on Sep 13, 2009 7:38 AM CDT reply actions  

offensive line

It looks like we have an offensive line coach

by dnabors on Sep 13, 2009 7:39 AM CDT reply actions  

Great Review

I concur about out kick/punt returns. We are awful. Period. I would take Tre Smith back there over what we are doing now. I am just praying that someone, anyone catches the ball on the punt returns. And what is the deal on blocking on special teams? Our Kick return blocking is so weak. Maybe Boulware will get embarrassed and step up. The rest of this Tiger team has, why not Special Teams.

I hate that I felt this way, but I wanted Mario to keep pounding the ball late in the game. He had 75 yard at that point. I wanted 3 guys to post 100. Is that awful of me?

If you are a War Damn Eagle, you can War Damn anything.

by WarDamnZach on Sep 13, 2009 7:56 AM CDT reply actions  

Fannin

Yeah, I was thinking the same thing last night. Have we ever had 3 guys over 100 yards in a game?

I've seen good TEAMS beat teams with great individuals.

by Indytiger1 on Sep 13, 2009 9:43 AM CDT up reply actions  

I don't have stats that old...

……But I THINK Auburn may have 3 over a hundred on Homecoming, 1983. We played Maryland, with Boomer Esiason. They kept moving it, so Auburn had to keep the gas on. I know Tommy Agee had about 200 yards on dive plays out of the wishbone, and Bo went over a hundred. I think Lionel James may have, too. Auburn dumped the Terps something like 38-23, en route to Pat Dye’s first SEC title, and a number one finish in the New York Times computer rankings.

by Acid Reign on Sep 13, 2009 11:24 AM CDT up reply actions  

I was hoping

that Fannin would have broken one to put him over 100, too.

I find it hard to believe that until this season, we’ve never had two backs rush for over 100 yards each in two consecutive games.

by War Eagle Atlanta on Sep 13, 2009 10:00 AM CDT up reply actions  

Did anyone notice...

…the rather intense conversation Chizik seemed to be having with Boulware on the sidelines after another poor punt return?

by atlWDE on Sep 13, 2009 1:45 PM CDT up reply actions  

O-Line a B?

No, I would give them an A. How many yards did the RB’s have? Our total offense for that matter? I would give them a B- for stupid penalties, but otherwise they’re playing incredibly well.

by auburn tigers on Sep 13, 2009 8:07 AM CDT reply actions  

false start on Ziemba,

…..hold on Pugh, hold on Vance Smith, and both McCain and Ziemba had trouble keeping McPhee from turning the corner and hammering Todd. McPhee is going to give a lot of SEC lines fits, though, I think. He’s a good one.

by Acid Reign on Sep 13, 2009 11:26 AM CDT up reply actions  

Great Game Offensively for Us

Our running attack seemed unstoppable, and I love how we pass down field and take shots at the safeties. The Wildcat with Kodi is fizzling out anytime soon. We saw a few new wrinkles last night, and I can’t imagine not having more to add in as the season progresses.

Defense played well. Gave up some yards, but kept the points down, and in the end that is really all that matters. The DBs played exceptional, and the front seven play was SEC level.

After this game, I think Auburn can play with anybody in the SEC. Yeah, that means you Florida.

If hip hop is dead, then it happened the day that Dilla died.
-Akrobatik

by Bestjagfan on Sep 13, 2009 10:03 AM CDT reply actions  

Anyone pissed off....

that we could have been doing this last year if Tuberville wasn’t such a parnoid control freak? I know the admin made him that way….but what better way to get folks off your back than to succeed? It just shows he gave up.

I am very proud of our young men and the coaching staff for showing everybody what we’re made of. If we whip WVU next week, do you think anyone will notice that the sleeper has awakened???? This will show everybody, including Tiger fans what we’ve got and what to expect the rest of the year. I am really getting excited about this team!!

On what day did the Lord create Bear Bryant and couldn't he have rested on that day too?

by Col.Angus on Sep 13, 2009 10:49 AM CDT reply actions  

I would say...

That we need to be 5-0 before we crack the top 25 unless we really pound it out on West Virginia on national TV.

by Mattco on Sep 13, 2009 11:00 AM CDT up reply actions  

I think we will be close to cracking the top 25 today....

and if we beat WVU next weekend we are in easily. It just doesn’t take that long for a solid SEC team to get noticed…..even coming off of a dismal season last year. Look for ESPN to start building AU up with some kind words during the upcoming week……Herbstreit has already started it on the Fartbaum show. I still look for AU to beat WVU at home by the way.

I hardly think that Tuberville gave up last season I just think he had to much of a mess to correct it midseason. It does show however that Franklin only had his system and doesn’t have the ability to modify it based on the type of talent he has to work with….but then again thats a dead horse thats been beaten almost as much as the ganging on of Tuberville.

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Sep 13, 2009 12:07 PM CDT up reply actions  

I stayed up...

late last night to watch College football final last night on ESPN and we didn’t even get a mention…. They didn’t even show the box score. Not sour grapes… just surprised since I thought for sure they would mention the offensive production we have seen 2 weeks in a row.

Did anyone notice the line during the second long pass attempt of Caudles? The only movement during the whole play was the center snapping the ball… weird.

Hating Lowder since 1993.

by pmikler on Sep 13, 2009 2:06 PM CDT up reply actions  

Weird yes,

but it was an attempt to catch the defense off sides.

I've seen good TEAMS beat teams with great individuals.

by Indytiger1 on Sep 13, 2009 4:29 PM CDT up reply actions  

It looked...

more designed than that… They stayed down the whole play. If they were trying to catch them off sides the line would at least get up after the defense passed the line of scrimmage. Caudle was out in the flat being run down and the line was still frozen. Maybe it was to confuse and freeze the defense downfield…?

Hating Lowder since 1993.

by pmikler on Sep 13, 2009 9:04 PM CDT up reply actions  

and

i just rewatched the play and nobody moved off sides on the defense….

Excuse me for getting caught up in the small stuff….It was just so weird to me.

Hating Lowder since 1993.

by pmikler on Sep 13, 2009 9:40 PM CDT up reply actions  

True, true...

Last time I mention the Tubs, god that was a miserable season for all concerned.

On what day did the Lord create Bear Bryant and couldn't he have rested on that day too?

by Col.Angus on Sep 13, 2009 2:26 PM CDT up reply actions  

One thing I've noticed...

…..is that there a no keys evident yet, for a defense to home in on. No tells. Conventional wisdom against a misdirection offense like the single wing/wildcat, is to watch the guard. They usually block in the direction of the run. Not with Malzhan’s offense. State tried some of that, slanting, and it resulted in McCalebb and Tate barrelling through empty space, against the grain.

……We’ve needed an OC with the “go for the throat” mentality, for a long time. Tuberville would have run both first half clocks out this year. We would have been tied with La Tech, and losing to State, I think. Malzhan’s O has found a different gear in the 2 minute drill, and come away with crucial points. A lead over La Tech, and we turned a deficit against MSU into a double digit lead with TWO late drives in the first half!

by Acid Reign on Sep 13, 2009 11:31 AM CDT up reply actions  

I noticed that, too

in both games. With less than two minutes to go in the half against La Tech, they ran a conservative play that gained a bit, so they put the hammer down and ended up with a field goal.

Last night, we were already up, but we tried to score again with less than two minutes left and got another TD. I like that. Tubs would have definitely run the clock out.

by War Eagle Atlanta on Sep 13, 2009 11:41 AM CDT up reply actions  

Good points...

After that blocked punt for a TD, MSU had the momentum. You could just sense it. But I saw the offense huddled on the sidelines, and then they then came back out and just retook the game with those two drives to end the half.

Think about that. When was the last time an Auburn offense did that?

by atlWDE on Sep 13, 2009 1:55 PM CDT up reply actions  

The past is the past.

I think that I would only be pissed if we were having the same issues with a new spangley coach. I know, I was one of those people who really mourned the loss of Tubs. I was wrong. We needed fresh ideas and solid HC leadership, an OC with huge cajones, instead of a Riverboat gambler, and a DC that craftily uses the talent that he has. I think that the game with the Mountaineers will be a close one, but I do not think that Bill Stewart has the brains or the talent to out coach Gene Chizik. War Eagle!

by Tiger on the mountain on Sep 13, 2009 12:00 PM CDT up reply actions  

Excellent analysis, Acid.

This week settled some concerns on the defensive side of the ball, but it raised some serious issues in the special teams arena. I hope that next week we will see some improvement. What we, as fans, are not used to seeing are adjustments. Hopefully, Boulware will adjust the hell out of the special teams this week in practice. This season is exciting and full of possibilities!

Bring on the Mountaineers and let’s send them limping back on their Country Roads! War Eagle!

by Tiger on the mountain on Sep 13, 2009 12:06 PM CDT reply actions  

Overall an excellent gameplan.....

by Malzahn and if it weren’t for the snafus on special teams it would have been an even bigger margin of victory. I agree on the “spread punt” formation…….one missed assignment and its lights out…..you just can’t allow someone to come up the middle unblocked and we can’t afford that against the better competition thats waiting further down the road. Speaking of further down the road if we beat WVU handily we won’t be an underdog in Knoxville. And yes I now believe we are much better than UT.

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Sep 13, 2009 12:12 PM CDT reply actions  

Box score for West Virginia vs East Carolina

http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/football/boxscore?gid=200909120017

This will be a pass happy offense. If we can shut down their air game, we have a good chance of winning this game.

Our secondary seems more than able to handle their receivers.

W VA
Net yards rushing 175
net yards passing 334
yards per pass play 10.8
total plays 68
penalties 11 for 104 yds
fumbles 3

by KungFuPanda9 on Sep 13, 2009 1:48 PM CDT reply actions  

The surprising stat is.....

175 yds rushing. That is far below what I would have predicted for WVU in most any game….Noel Devine is such a weapon that defenses go the extra mile to contain him on the perimeter and with any kind of push up front whomever their inside runner might be usually gains ample yardage and Devine is gonna get his no matter what….that low a number is an indication that maybe their OL is not what they need it to be. East Carolina usually fields a pretty good DL but I daresay not that good to keep the WVU ground game from eating up yards and the clock.

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Sep 14, 2009 8:57 AM CDT up reply actions  

WAR EAGLE!!

With all the above statements made…I am just grateful to be playing AUBURN Football!! Also, I am definitely drinking the McCalebb kool-aid! War Eagle….

by CKTCooper on Sep 13, 2009 2:32 PM CDT reply actions  

POLLS!

HAS ANYONE SEEN THE THE AP POLL??? My goodness what the heck do we have to do? LSU…#9, OK ST #16…C’mon really?

by CKTCooper on Sep 13, 2009 2:37 PM CDT reply actions  

We have to beat WVU....badly

Since we are playing at home we will have whack WVU by 10+ points to break into the top 25. I for one am grateful we aren’t ranked. I want it to be motivation for the kids AND THE STAFF, to stay focused and to keep pouring it on. Trust me, nobody is paying ANY attention to us even though we wasted two decent teams but that won’t be the case in two weeks if we are 4-0 heading to Knoxville. We just have to keep our foot on the pedal and keep putting up 30+ points a game. The rest will take care of itself.

On what day did the Lord create Bear Bryant and couldn't he have rested on that day too?

by Col.Angus on Sep 13, 2009 4:44 PM CDT up reply actions  

Word

Balls to the wall, and everything else will fall into place.

If hip hop is dead, then it happened the day that Dilla died.
-Akrobatik

by Bestjagfan on Sep 13, 2009 6:49 PM CDT up reply actions  

True but...

I also said that in 2004 and we got screwed…..again.
And LSU wins a title with TWO losses. It isn’t remotely fair but there isn’t anything you can do.

On what day did the Lord create Bear Bryant and couldn't he have rested on that day too?

by Col.Angus on Sep 13, 2009 9:00 PM CDT up reply actions  

LSU getting in

with two losses in 2007 was the dividend being paid out to the conference on the investment that Auburn made in 2004. We’ll get our check in the mail one day.

by War Eagle Atlanta on Sep 13, 2009 9:32 PM CDT up reply actions  

Yep WEA said it.....

plus with the strength or at least apparent strength of the West and the SEC overall this season were AU to do it again, and thats a great big ole “IF” right now, we would be in like Flint (and if you don’t like “My Man Flint” then you’re either too young or just not cool or both). If we beat WVU we are in and I don’t think it has to be a big margin just a solid win.

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Sep 14, 2009 9:02 AM CDT up reply actions  

It has to do with the amount of Sports Writers.....

that are in that part of the country and their historically documented infatuation with all things green and gold. But I don’t mind at the moment. Keep us under the radar as long as possible.

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Sep 14, 2009 9:04 AM CDT up reply actions  

AU and WVU

got some votes in the AP poll but not enough. almost the same number of votes actually. Boy, I can’t wait to actually watch that game!

by mgizmo2005 on Sep 13, 2009 4:59 PM CDT reply actions  

Does anyone have any news on Tommy Trott's knee?

We came away with less injuries than I expected and we really still looked very strong in the 4th. OMac and Tate seemed to just get stronger. AU and WVU will be a good game. I can’t remember the last time I had this much fun watching Auburn football.

by rn4au on Sep 13, 2009 5:41 PM CDT reply actions  

Latest word on Trott...

……Was that he’s got a knee sprain, the one that was operated on last fall. He got rolled up on pretty well, and it was gruesome. I’m frankly surprised that they are calling it a sprain. He easily could have had a broken bone.

……Trott hasn’t caught a pass yet this year, but he’s been super sealing up guys on the edge. He sprung McCalebb on that big 48-yard run. Just BURIED a defender on the play.

by Acid Reign on Sep 13, 2009 6:15 PM CDT up reply actions  

Thanks Acid

I figured it was’nt broken since he was walking on it afterwards. I’m a little concerned.

by rn4au on Sep 13, 2009 10:33 PM CDT up reply actions  

We need

to get you on the team physician’s staff so you can nurse these guys back to health AND give us the skinny on all these injuries.

No one else need know besides us…

by War Eagle Atlanta on Sep 13, 2009 11:18 PM CDT up reply actions  

I'd love that but...

I’m busy raising my 10 yr old twin linemen…and nursing their team through snotty noses, bruised arms and legs and all the war wounds that come with little boys knocking the snot out of each other. I’ve got my hands full. :) However, if I hear or observe anything useful, you’ll be the first to know ;-)

by rn4au on Sep 14, 2009 8:09 AM CDT reply actions  

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Interesting Proposal for New SEC Format
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Toomers Trees Show Signs of New Growth
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NOLA Bound!
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When it rains it pours if your last name is Tuberville
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Retrospective on Regression
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Auburn Finalizes 2012 Football Schedule: Previews and Analysis

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Managers

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