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Tigers Emerge Victorious in Lexington!

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Can this guy be stopped?

 

 

     War Eagle, everybody! It's time now for the Acid Reign report on Auburn's hair-raising 37-34 victory over the Kentucky Wildcats. Looking over the box score of this one, it's hard to figure out how the game was this close. The Tigers outgained the Wildcats by 185 yards, turnovers were equal at one apiece, and Auburn won the time of possession battle by over 3 minutes. One small stat that stands out is that Auburn was penalized 8 times to Kentucky's 2. We got most of those flags in the secondary, either for interference, or for hits out of bounds. We kept many Kentucky drives alive on those things.

 

     Except for a dismal 3rd quarter, the Auburn offense had their way with the Kentucky defense. The Wildcats can't be happy with surrendering 311 rushing yards. As usual, Auburn did it with Cam Newton, who carried 28 times for 198 yards and 4 scores. The rest of the team managed only 24 carries for 122 yards. Newton also passed for 210 yards on 13 completions in 21 attempts. On a day when many front-runners had bad days, Newton continued to put up numbers worthy of a Heisman candidate. The third quarter swoon was mostly Newton, too. He opened the period with a throw behind Emory Blake on a crossing route that was intercepted. Incompletions doomed the next two drives to three and out. Without an effective Auburn punting unit, Kentucky used those opportunities to run off 17 points on short fields. Newton did not back down. He hit big passes to Terrell Zachary and Darvin Adams to move the chains, and added three runs on a field goal drive. On Auburn's final possession, Newton carried the ball 10 times as Auburn ground the clock away.

 

     Wes Byrum won yet another game with his field goals, but aside from place-kicking, this was a poor Auburn special teams effort. Randal Cobb averaged 28.7 yards per kick return, and Derrick Locke tallied 31.5. This enabled Kentucky to start most of their drives near midfield. Kentucky has a kicker in Joe Mansour who can kick off to the end zone. We need us one of those! We burned the redshirt of freshman punter Steven Clark, and only got a 34 yard average out of it.

 

     Watching the game, I felt like it was the worst defensive performance of the season, by far. I was absolutely shocked to look at the stats and see that we held Kentucky to 336 total yards. With Ryan Mallett bringing his arm to town next Saturday, I thought it was a terrible time for the secondary to regress, and for the pass rush to disappear. Auburn had no quarterback hurries, and only a single sack from Craig Stevens. For the life of me, I can't understand how a starting secondary of all-upper classmen can't figure out how to line up. Most of these guys have multiple YEARS of SEC experience, and yet we left Randall Cobb, KY's most dangerous player, uncovered in the slot repeatedly. I don't get it! For all the ripping on the secondary, though, they did make Kentucky work for it. Checking the box score, four of the top five tacklers were in the secondary. Add in former safety Darren Bates' 8 tackles,and you've got 33 of Auburn's total 72 tackles.

 

Unit Grades, after the jump!

 

 

Star-divide

 

Defensive Line: C. This unit managed very little pass rush, and that was against a line with only one returning starter. They did fill lanes, though, and Auburn held Kentucky to a 3.7 yard per carry average. Kentucky double-teamed Nick Fairley, and slowed him down to 3 tackles. When that happens, someone else on the line must be able to beat a one on one block. It didn't happen Saturday.

 

Linebackers: C. The linebacking corps, particularly Craig Stevens, was pretty solid on most running plays. For every two or three stops for nothing, there would be a big run given up. Randall Cobb made everyone look bad on one run-all-over-the-field scramble for a score. I had hoped that we'd get better coverage of tight ends and slot receivers from this crew this season, but it looks like they often don't know who to cover. Hartline really picked us apart underneath.

 

Secondary: D+. Any time you allow the opposing QB to hit 23 of 28 passes, you aren't covering too well. Only one pass was successfully defended all day, a rake-out job on a hitch by Demond Washington. Otherwise, Hartline was able to take the snap, five-step it, and connect with a wide open guy. I ask again, how do these veteran guys decide not to even put a man on Randall Cobb in the slot? We've got TWO position coaches in the secondary, plus a head coach with a defensive backfield pedigree. I can't understand why we aren't better here. Passing grade because these guys did make a bunch of tackles, even if a few of them were out of bounds. If they can't see Cobb in the slot, they probably can't see the white sideline, either.

 

Punting: D. You've got to have a punter that averages 40 yards, in the SEC. We're not there.

 

Punt Returns: I. It's hard to grade this. Tydlacka did not kick it to Carr but once, and Carr wisely let it go for a touchback.

 

Kick Returns: D. We are not blocking these well at all. Washington only managed a 16.5 yard average, and had a near disaster with a bobble on the last one.

 

Place-kicking: A. Wes Byrum was again perfect on scoring opportunities. He cooly smacked the game-winner right down the middle. His lone kickoff was a short 55-yard knuckler. Cody Parkey was OK, nothing special on kickoffs.

 

Offensive Line: A. Against another SEC defense, this unit excelled. Kentucky had no sacks, and only two tackles for loss. That's a line that's doing some serious damage up front. Minor points off on Brandon Moseley getting an illegal formation flag for lining up too far back. That's a small quibble, though. Moseley has really come on, and is playing at a pretty high level, as are all of the starting linemen. These 300 yard rushing games on SEC teams are awesome!

 

Receivers: A. One of the reasons Kodi Burns stays in the game despite not catching the ball is some really effective blocking. That continued against the Wildcats, and Kodi did get his first reception, and what a good one it was! Darvin Adams made some clutch catches in traffic. We did have a couple of drops in this one, but far more often these guys go get balls that maybe could have been thrown a little better. Zachary's fumble was a scary thing. It could have been ruled either way.

 

Running Backs: B. There were some decent runs, decent pass protection and McCalebb did a nice job on a bubble screen reception. I think these guys were overshadowed by Newton, and actually had a pretty good game. Michael Dyer was rescued by the line after losing the ball once.

 

Quarterback: A. Cam had a pretty brutal stretch to start the third quarter, with a pick and drive killing incompletions on his next three pass attempts. Aside from that, he's making the awesome look routine. It's hard to measure what it means to an offense to have the ball in the most dangerous runner's hands on every play! Newton had a pretty good day throwing, and made good choices. The interception was the right read, just a bad throw. Cam had one throw that went 40 yards in the air complete to Burns while Cam was falling backwards. I think everyone's jaw dropped on that one! Best of all, Cam rose to the occasion when the game was on the line. He took command, and gut-checked us inexorably down the field for the winning kick. That's a great quality bit of leadership shown on the road in the SEC. Bravo, sir! A big War Eagle!

 

     As far as revenge on Kentucky goes, I think Auburn did exactly to them what they did to us in 2009. I know it had to be gut wrenching to watch that last drive, as Kentucky was helpless to stop the machine. We felt the same way in Auburn, when Cobb and co. ran over us late. The way the Kentucky offense was playing, I know they'd have liked to had the ball back one more time. I don't think opposing fans like seeing Wes Byrum enter a tight game late. You know the game's over at that point!

 

     With the next two games, Auburn is in great shape to take command of the SEC Western Division. Both will be at home, against strong teams (Arkansas and LSU) with flaws. The pressure's on next week, as the Tigers will host potent Arkansas on CBS national television. It's a great opportunity for exposure, but it's also a chance to choke on the big stage. The Razorbacks are beatable, but it's going to take a much better pass rush and coverage effort than we showed against Kentucky. I'll be at the keyboard again next Saturday, but I'll be in the stadium for LSU.

 

War Eagle! We're half way through the season; can you believe it? Auburn remains unblemished, and has a chance to run the table and head to Atlanta! Football life is great in Auburn again!

--

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Comments

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Acid, how would you scheme against Arkansas defensively this week?

Obviously, our secondary is our weakness. I would bring the heat early and often and put Mallett on the turf. If we bring a four-man rush and rely on our coverage, he’ll pick us apart. We bring a heavy blitz, and we give up some big plays. But Mallett gets scattershot if he gets knocked around alot.

Also, the defensive line was quiet last night. I hope Tracy Rocker gets after them this week in practice and they come out and wreak havoc against the Hogs.

Do you remember that spelling bee you won in the first grade? Rock? "R-O-K"?

by jd is legend on Oct 10, 2010 6:45 PM CDT reply actions  

I think you....

…..have to load the box and bring it against Mallett. You can sit back there in scared zone, and he’ll beat you anyway. There’s no guarantee of getting Childs and those dangerous receivers down, anyway. Although, we did tackle pretty well in the secondary against KY. Best hope is rattling Mallett. We cannot let him get comfortable!

…..One thing that should be considered, though is that the SEC office evidently took notice of Auburn beating up Relf, Parker, Garcia and the ULM QB in succession. They were pretty quick on a flag on Fairley on only one step and a hit on Hartline. It will be a razor-wire act.

……Bottom line, the AU offense needs to move the ball, score and not turn it over.

by Acid Reign on Oct 10, 2010 7:29 PM CDT up reply actions  

For a team lacking a large amount of talent at DB..

This defense is playing about as good as it can.
Seriously, Auburn had fell off the recruiting wagon under the previous regime, and that fact is showing in conference play now. It will take at least two more classes comparable to last year’s to be able to cover effectively and stop the run at the same time.
Ted Roof, Tommy Thigpen, and Coach Chizik are doing a masterful job with what they have to work with, and Auburn is 6-0 at this point. I stated earlier in the season, that I would not look at a win negatively again this season, and last nights is no exception.
Even Stan White said pre-game that this is the kind of game that you will take the “W” whether the score is 17-14 or 37-14. Get the “W” and get out of there as fast as you can. He also the first team to 35 would win it, so he was right on that point too.
Very good analysis Acid, and JD brought up some very good points as well. I’d be interested in your response to his question.

WAR EAGLE!

Come and join me at http://trackemtigers.com

by KoolBell777 on Oct 10, 2010 7:03 PM CDT reply actions  

Mentally Tough

Acid, pretty accurate evaluation.

Much like you I was surprised that the total yardage given up by the Auburn D was as low as it turned out to be. The mostly three step drops KY used negated any pass rush by Auburn. This helped them move the ball. Our poor coverage of slot recievers and backs out of the backfield only magnifies the soft coverage. The untimely penalties kept two of the KY touchdown drives alive.

Thru six games our D has generally soldout to stop the run and made our opponents pass the ball. This tactic coupled with soft zone has made our opponents have to drive the ball patiently and mistake free. For the most part it has worked to slow down our opponents enough to win six times.

Arky has generally been a play action 4 step drop passing attack so if they stay true to form our pass rush may return. It is our best chance to stop them on D.

Putting statistics aside this Auburn team has won with mental toughness. Each win makes them that much stronger. They may not win next week and they may lose more than once during the balance of the season, but I for one would not bet against our Tigers in a close game. They play with a calm relaxed attitude. They expect to win and play that way.

Much like KoolBell 777 I will never see a win as a negative.

WAR EAGLE!!!! Beat Arkansas

by Challenger10 on Oct 10, 2010 7:42 PM CDT reply actions  

Acid you said it when...

you said that Auburn has a chance to choke on the big stage. This game against Arky this weekend is huge in so many ways. Its the kind of game that AU has lost everytime since the ‘04 season. Each time we’ve had a chance to clearly put ourselves ahead of the pack, we have stumbled. This Saturday is going to show whether or not that trend will continue into 2010.

Its a big game for AU. One of the biggest in this decade actually. I have confidence that the coaches and the players can pull together and find a way to win.

War Eagle! Beat Arkansas!

BREAKING NEWS: ESPN has several sources reporting that the University of Alabama's 1st string waterboy will be declaring himself eligible in the 2011 NFL draft. He projects as WR with 4.29 speed and a vertical of 12....feet.

by WarEagle86 on Oct 10, 2010 8:25 PM CDT reply actions  

Just like last week was probally

One of if not the biggest game in recent memory for South Carolina. I was thinking the same thing. I would love for Auburn to go 2-0 the next two weeks but it won’t be easy. But if we do i think we will have a great show @ the title!!

by War Eagle Aubie on Oct 10, 2010 10:28 PM CDT reply actions  

That last drive we made

reminded me of the end of the Iron Bowl last year what Bama did to us in a way. To me, it seemed that it was very well orchestrated and their defense couldn’t do a thing to stop us. Like watching a train wreck in ultra slow motion.

How about that Cam Newton?!! And how about that insane throw to Kodi Burns as Cam is hurtling off the ground towards the sidelines for an amazing completion. I think I will remember that play forever. It shouldn’t have been even attempted and yet it worked. The throw was there and Kodi made a great catch. Just blew my mind. Truly special.

Any word on injuries? Seems like we got through that game without getting beat up too badly, but I really hadn’t heard anything definitive on the subject.

by mgizmo2005 on Oct 11, 2010 11:49 AM CDT reply actions  

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