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Monday, August 31, 2009

Men's basketball releases 2009-10 schedule

The Auburn men's basketball 2009-10 schedule was released this evening. The Tigers play 11 games against teams that made the postseason in 2008, including seven against NCAA tournament teams. Three of the team's non-conference games are against teams from the ACC -- Virginia, N.C. State and Florida State

Auburn opens its season Nov. 13 against Niagara at Beard-Eaves-Memorial Coliseum. Its SEC opener is Jan. 9 against South Carolina at home.

"We have a very demanding schedule this year with three ACC teams on it and a couple of good road games," Auburn head coach Jeff Lebo said. "We have a return game at Missouri State, and we will play in Huntsville. A couple of years ago, we wanted to play in different parts of the state so we have been to Birmingham, Montgomery and Mobile and now we are going to be up in Huntsville. That will be great for our Auburn fans in that area and in northern Alabama.

"We play at Florida State, which went to the NCAA Tournament, North Carolina State and Virginia in Auburn. We have a good mixture of some high level teams."

All 16 of Auburn's SEC games will be televised, as will its SEC tournament games.

2009-10 AUBURN BASKETBALL SCHEDULE (all times Central)
  • Nov. 6: Miles College (exh.), 7 pm
  • Nov. 13: (1) Niagara, 8:30 pm
  • Nov. 16: at Missouri State, 7:05 pm
  • Nov. 20: (2) Central Florida, 5 pm
  • Nov. 21: (2) IUPUI, 5 pm
  • Nov. 22: (2) North Carolina State, 7:15 pm
  • Nov. 25: High Point, 6 pm
  • Dec. 1: (3) at Alabama A&M, TBA
  • Dec. 4: Troy, 7 pm
  • Dec. 7: Virginia, 7 pm
  • Dec. 17: at Florida State, TBA
  • Dec. 20: Sam Houston State, 1 pm
  • Dec. 22: Alabama State, 7 pm
  • Dec. 29: Charleston Southern, 7 pm
  • Jan. 2: Georgia Southern, 1 pm
  • Jan. 5: West Georgia, 7 pm
  • Jan. 9: South Carolina (SEC Net), 12:30 pm
  • Jan. 14: at Tennessee (ESPN/2, ESPN360), 6 pm
  • Jan. 16: Kentucky (SEC Net), 3 pm
  • Jan. 20: at LSU (SEC Net), 7 pm
  • Jan. 23: at Vanderbilt (SEC Net), 12:30 pm
  • Jan. 28: Ole Miss (ESPNU), 6 pm
  • Jan. 30: Alabama (SEC Net), 3 pm
  • Feb. 6: at Arkansas (SEC Net), 12:30 pm
  • Feb. 10: Georgia (CSS), 8 pm
  • Feb. 13: at Mississippi State (FSN), 6 pm
  • Feb. 18: at Florida (ESPN/2, ESPN360), 6 pm
  • Feb. 20: Arkansas (FSN), 6 pm
  • Feb. 24: at Ole Miss (SEC Net), 7 pm
  • Feb. 27: LSU (FSN), 6 pm
  • Mar. 3: Mississippi State (SEC Net), 7 pm
  • Mar. 6: at Alabama (SEC Net), 12:30 pm
  • Mar. 11-14: (4) SEC Tournament (SEC Net/ABC), TBA
(1) Glenn Wilkes Classic (Auburn, AL)
(2) Glenn Wilkes Classic (Dayton Beach, FL)
(3) Huntsville, AL (Von Braun Center)
(4) Nashville, TN (Sommet Center)
* All Times Central

LIVE chat coming Wednesday

OK, folks. We've hammered down a date and time for our second shot at a live chat. It will be Wednesday afternoon at 1 p.m. ET/noon CT. When I get a link to chatroom, I'll post it here.

Please follow along. These things are much more fun when there are plenty of participants. And come prepared with your best questions.

Lunchtime links: Monday edition (8/31)

Here's something I'm planning on doing every day now that the season's here. I'm going to peruse online articles and link a few notable ones on the blog around lunchtime every day Buster Olney-style, especially stuff about Auburn's upcoming opponent.

This is a new experiment, so it might take a while for things to settle in with it, but bear with me. We'll keep this limited to Louisiana Tech stuff today. Now for the links ...
  • Derek Dooley wants to build his program around players he recruits from high schools, not transfers from major schools or junior colleges, writes Ethan Conley. Regardless, the Bulldogs do have some talented transfers that could make a difference in the Auburn game.

Physical practices a balancing act for Auburn

I wrote a story today about how Auburn, being low on numbers but wanting to instill a physical mindset, approached practice this August. Here's how it starts:

AUBURN, Ala. — From the moment he took the Auburn head coaching job, Gene Chizik vowed to return the program to its smashmouth roots.

But ingraining that physical mentality while managing a short-handed roster this August has been a delicate balancing act.

After a physical spring session, Auburn has had to be careful with the amount of hitting it has done so far, practicing at different tempos and levels of tackling throughout the preseason to preserve a healthy roster of players for when the games actually start.

Now, less than a week away from Saturday’s season opener against Louisiana Tech at Jordan-Hare Stadium, questions about Auburn’s physical preparedness remain.

“I don’t know exactly where we are in that department,” Chizik said. “We’re trying to go enough of our first teams against each other, where we stay sharp in that department. Because that is a concern if you don’t do that.

“But there is a fine line with us doing too much of that versus doing too little of it. But I feel good with where we’re at. I still feel like our plan is smart.”

Read the rest here. Also, follow the blog on Twitter for instant news.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Late practice notes: Tigers upbeat as season nears

AUBURN, Ala. — A clock that counts down the number of days until the start of the season hangs on a wall in the Auburn locker room. As of Sunday night, the time until Tigers’ Sept. 5 opener against Louisiana Tech was down to five days and some change.

“It’s real close,” senior tight end
Tommy Trott said. “It’s a lot different than the summer when the thing says 160-some days. So it’s right around the corner.”

There was a different tenor to the Tigers’ full-pad practice Sunday night, one fueled by the thoughts of an actual game breaking the monotony of preseason practice.


“Tonight was really kind of an upbeat practice I thought, tempo-wise,” head coach
Gene Chizik said. “The guys had a little bit more of a bounce in their step as you would imagine going into game week.”

Auburn’s preparation will differ slightly from a traditional game week, when it devotes most of Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday practices to its opponent. The Tigers began Louisiana Tech prep last week, mixing it in with their normal drills.


“We don’t feel like we’re in a real game-week scenario yet,” Chizik said. “So we’ll try to taper off and get our legs back under us yet before Friday.”


Follow the blog on Twitter
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Here are some other notes from Sunday interviews ...

  • Junior Mario Fannin said he is the team’s No. 1 punt returner. “It’s going to be fun,” he said. “I think it’s going to actually enhance my game more as far as focusing and being tuned into the game. It will help me make wiser decisions when it comes to other things on the field.” Fannin, a do-all utility back, has returned only one punt in his life during a game. It was in high school. He took it back for a touchdown. He returned kicks last year, averaging 22.5 yards per return, but added punt returns to his repertoire this offseason. “It’s been a learning experience,” he said. “Now, the ball is traveling higher and you have faster guys running down the field toward you. It’s mainly just focusing on the ball and making the right decision.” The team has gone live on a few occasions, just to replicate the pressure of catching high-hanging punts with gunners bearing down on you. “I didn’t drop it,” Fannin said. “That’s the main thing.”
  • Fannin also said he’ll be in the mix on kick returns, as will Onterio McCalebb, Terrell Zachery and Harry Adams.
  • Chizik plans to release a depth chart later this week. We're assuming it will be earlier than Saturday morning.
  • Chizik also said freshman safety Daren Bates will get in the game in some manner, whether it’s on defense or special teams.The 5-foot-11, 195-pound Bates has made a quick impression after arriving to camp two days late because of the NCAA Clearinghouse process. With junior Mike McNeil still sidelined by a broken leg suffered last April, Bates has a chance to jump Mike Slade and Drew Cole for playing time at the safety position opposite Zac Etheridge. “He got a late start, but over the last eight or nine days, you can really see the light coming on,” Chizik said. “You can see him do some things that make you think he’s got a chance to contribute. One of those is being a physical player. I think he’s going to be that. I think he’s one of those guys that’ll stick his face in there and be an aggressive football player at the safety position — and that’s what you need.”
  • Chizik said offensive lineman Aubrey Phillips is “doing well.” The freshman, who transferred this summer from Florida State, had a non-football related medical episode early in camp that has kept him in street clothes since. “He’s in meetings and he’s with our football team, so we’re excited about that,” Chizik said, not offering a date for his return. “He’s doing better.” Chizik also said he has not received word from the NCAA as to whether Phillips would be immediately eligible to play this season.
  • Kodi Burns said he expects to be the Wildcat quarterback Saturday. “We’ve worked on it a little bit,” he said. “We’ll see what happens in this game.”
  • Chizik had great things to say about Louisiana Tech, which returns 17 starters from a team that went 8-5 last year and won its first bowl game (the Independence Bowl) since 1977. (Click here to read a Q&A on the Bulldogs I did with one of the team's beat writers this summer). "Well, I just think coach (Derek) Dooley has done a great job with them. They're really, really talented. They've got some great special teams players. If you look at their special teams, that certainly stands out right at the top at how good they were in really every phase last year. They do a great job with that. What they are is a very sound team. They do everything that makes sense. They don't take a lot of chances. They're just a very sound football team. They play physical. They have a great scheme on defense that is very aggressive but very sound. Offensively they do a lot of great things with throwing the ball. Their offensive line, they're big, they're physical, so they run the ball much better. It's just a much improved team from over the past few years that you would imagine. But they're really impressive."
  • Not to spoil what's going to be my advance for Friday, but Auburn's players had great things to say about the Bulldogs as well. "It's kind of scary," defensive end Antonio Coleman said. "You can't underestimate them because they have a great football team. I've seen some film on them. I've got a DVD right here on them. They've got a good football team. You can't roll your helmets out and beat them just because you're Auburn. We're just going to go out there and play football."
  • Trott had similar sentiments, speaking a whole lot of truth at the end of this particular quote. "It might as well be their Super Bowl, their finale. I'm sure they're geared up, they're excited, fired up. I mean, what a way to start the season. And after watching what they did to Mississippi State, we've watched the game, we've watched all kinds of cut-ups from that game. It really lets you know that you've got to be on top of your game. You've got no business going out there and thinking that you should win that game, because let's be honest, last year we were a 5-7 ballclub . Besides a whole lot of summer preparation, we haven't proven anything different on the field."
  • Coleman on the excitement of it being game week: "It's been a long time coming, like I said before. Since that last loss to Alabama it's been nothing but a lot of hard work for the last eight months."
  • Trott had some very insightful things to say about Auburn's offense, which, he accurately says, has not been feared in quite some time. "It's not just last year or this year," he said. "I know there was a lot of excitement and hope for last year's offense, but since that '04 team really, I can't remember a time when we've been feared as an offense that's going to go out there and put a lot of points on the board. Coach (Trooper Taylor) says it all the time: 'Why aren't y'all working? Why aren't y'all staying after practice? Look through the papers and tell me the last time somebody said something nice about you as a receiver, a receiving corps.' Or somebody's really predicted this offense to be something special. It's just been a while and people haven't had a lot of nice things to say about us as an offense, not necessarily us as a team, because this defense has been carrying us for a few years now. But definitely, I mean, we want to go out there and prove that we're capable to not only help this team win ballgames, as opposed to hurting it, which it feels like we were doing from time to time last year, but also help carry this team too."
  • Trott says his knee is 100 percent after undergoing surgery last fall. "I don't even think about it any more, to be honest," he said.
  • Chizik sees CB Neiko Thorpe as having a great future in this game called football. "He's very talented, he's very blessed," Chizik said. "He's got to learn the game, he's got to learn the intricacies of playing back there, which I don't think he fully gets yet. That usually comes, like with any position, with time. But he's got a chance to be a really good one. It's hard for me to go out on a limb and say things like that about younger players because the jury is mostly timed out. I say it, if he keeps progressing, if he keeps working like he does, he's got a chance to be a very good football player and another one in a long line of really good DBs that have come out of here in the last few years."
  • We got plenty of material from the veteran players trying to soothe the nerves of the newcomers who will be playing in front of a large crowd for the first time in their careers. "As far as the gameday experience, coach (Tracy) Rocker is just telling them calm down, don't get nervous," Coleman said. "You're going to be nervous, but just get out there and if you know what to do everything will be fine." Coleman recounted his first game. "I wasn't so much nervous but when I got out on the field it was like I was stuck in mud," he said. "I don't know what it was, but it was like I was running with 50-pound shoes on. After a series or two you get out of that and you get a feel for the game. It's way faster than high school ball."
  • Burns on his first bit of playing time: "My first rodeo was the Mississippi State game, and I had no idea I was going to get to play. Coach (Al) Borges sat me down and talked about it, but in the back of my mind it was, `There’s no way I’m going to play.’ Sure enough, I was sitting down on the bench and they said my name, and said to go in the game. It was a really exciting feeling. I really wasn’t too nervous. I really don’t get nervous. I just wanted to go out there and prove what I had."
  • One more from our "Remember When ..." series. Here's cornerback Walt McFadden: "It was crazy. Tiger Walk. That just blew me away. I remember on kickoff, I was supposed to run down the field like 40 yards and I ain't even make it down there because I was so excited just looking in the stands. I got in a lot of trouble for that. I think the play was a touchback and our tradition was to run all the way to the end zone to get the crowd to start jumping up and down. I didn't even make it down there. I was so excited that I ran right off to the sidelines. It wasn't a good thing."
  • While we were interviewing McFadden, defensive lineman Antoine Carter hovered over some reporters' shoulders before chiming in with a question of his own, asking Walt, "What are some of the goals of the defense coming into the first game?" To which Walt responded: "We want this game to be a shutout. I believe that's going to be a goal for us. A whole bunch of three-and-outs, a whole bunch of turnovers, a lot of big plays and just to show the world we're back." Burns, who was waiting to be interviewed next, then chimed in with a question of his own. "How many times has Kodi Burns burned you for a TD?" McFadden answered quickly. "That's a negative." Many guffaws were had.

It's college football preview time!

Our college football preview section ran in today's newspaper. Click here to read everything, including full coverage of Alabama, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Troy, Northern Alabama, Tuskegee, LaGrange College and more.

Here are a couple of stories I wrote that are Auburn related:
Here are team capsules for the SEC:
And here is the main story on how there's been a shift in the Iron Bowl rivalry (note: not for Auburn fans who are faint of heart):
One more thing: I think we'll be doing a live chat at some point this week, probably Wednesday around the lunch hour. These things are fun if people participate, so I encourage you to bring your best and most burning Auburn questions. I will post (and tweet) the exact time of the chat as soon as we finalize a time, so you might as well follow the blog on Twitter just to make sure you don't miss it.

I'll post again tonight after we do interviews with players following practice, but it will be late.

Auburn cornerbacks low on depth but high on talent

I wrote a story for today's newspaper about Auburn's cornerbacks. Here's how it starts:

AUBURN, Ala. — At 22 years old, Walt McFadden feels old. The fifth-year senior is by far the dean of the Auburn cornerbacks — a wise, battled-tested veteran leader whose younger teammates have taken to calling “Daddy Walt.”

“I’m trying to get away from that,” McFadden said, feeling even older because of the nickname. “I’m still their age, you know?”

While McFadden doesn’t necessarily enjoy the moniker, he has embraced taking under his wing the youthful trio of Neiko Thorpe, Harry Adams and Demond Washington, a group of cornerbacks expected to get the majority of playing time this season.

“I don’t think there’s a weak link back there,” McFadden said.

For the full story, click here. Also, f0llow the blog on Twitter for instant updates.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Caudle named Auburn's No. 2 quarterback; Rollison's redshirt still undecided

AUBURN, Ala. — It wasn’t the quarterback news he had hoped to hear two weeks ago, but Neil Caudle will take it.

Auburn head coach Gene Chizik announced after Friday’s practice that Caudle will be the Tigers’ No. 2 quarterback, beating out true freshman Tyrik Rollison for the backup role to starter Chris Todd.

“He’s worked really, really hard for this,” Chizik said, eight days before Auburn’s season opener against Louisiana Tech. “I’m really proud for him. If he has a chance to go in the football game, we feel like he gives us the best chance to win.”

A 6-foot-3, 200-pound junior from Spain Park High in Hoover, Ala., Caudle has only played in mop-up duty during his three-plus years at Auburn. He has thrown eight career passes, completing four of them for 32 yards.

He and
Kodi Burns dueled to a virtual tie for the top quarterback spot at the end of the spring, but Todd, who missed spring drills while rehabbing from offseason shoulder surgery, re-claimed the starting job Aug. 13. Burns moved to wide receiver while Caudle and Rollison battled it out for the No. 2 job.

“I wanted the No. 1 job. I couldn’t have that,” Caudle said. “To see improvement is definitely a good thing. I’ve been throwing the ball well. I’ve been more comfortable out there. The game has been slowing down for me.”

“If you just look at him right now, he feels like he has just a better comfort level now than maybe he did two weeks ago,” Chizik said. “We figured that would happen over time. We figured someone would separate (himself) and Neil’s done that.”

If you followed the blog on Twitter, you would have found out about this seconds after Chizik said it. Seriously. So I encourage you to follow along.

Here's some more news and notes from Friday ...
  • The quarterback news was nice for Caudle, whose career has been dotted by a number of false starts. He separated his shoulder in a preseason scrimmage in 2007 and never factored into last year’s quarterback competition between Burns and Todd when Tony Franklin was offensive coordinator. “Neil to me is the ultimate tough guy,” Chizik said. “He has been through a lot of adversity. He just keeps coming back. ... I’m proud for him. I’m proud of him. It couldn’t happen to a better guy.”
  • Chizik said Friday’s decision does not necessarily mean a redshirt year for Rollison, the 6-foot, 194-pound dual-threat jewel of Auburn’s 2009 recruiting class. The coaches gave the freshman the majority of reps with the second team after naming Todd the starter, just to see what he was capable of. “We don’t have any intention in that direction yet,” Chizik said of redshirting Rollison. “We’re going to keep working with Tyrik and we’re going to keep, slowly but surely, feeding him pieces of the offense. Right now, there’s some things he does really well and we feel like there’s some things we can really build on. (We’re) just kind of increasing his library of what he can and can’t do within the offense.”
  • Chizik said Rollison took the news well. “He just wants to win and he wants to be a great teammate,” Chizik said. “He knows he’s very talented, which he is, and he knows he’s got work to do. With a really, really good heart, he’s accepted it and will continue to work every day like he’s done.”
  • Those looking for this as a sign that Caudle has a leg up on the competition for the 2010 quarterback job are getting ahead of themselves. Todd is a senior, meaning the quarterback race next season will likely come down to Caudle, Rollison, Barrett Trotter, who is out this year after tearing an ACL, and freshman Clint Moseley, a likely redshirt candidate. “Every year is a new year,” Chizik said. “It’s really hard to say. I don’t know that that would be a fair assessment at this point because every year is new and we’ll start it all over again.”
  • Chizik said the depth chart isn't complete, but it's getting closer. I have to imagine backup quarterback was a big one to cross off the list.
  • Auburn probably will play anywhere from 10 to 15 true freshman this season by most estimations. That's pretty daunting for most first-year players. "It's tough," Chizik said. "You can do all you want on the practice field, and then all of a sudden you put 90,000 out there and it changes. Conventional wisdom would say it shouldn't, but it does. And so they've got to get used to the speed of the game. I mean, think about all these guys who came out of high school right now. They've gotten used to practice speed against their own guys, but game speed is different. And there's a lot of challenges that come with that and I've experienced it first hand. So we've just got to again work through the growing pains that come with it because we'd rather not be in this situation, but it is what it is. And we're here. So they'll grow, they'll make their share of mistakes, we know that. We're trying to put them in positions where they don't make mistakes, but we know that's what comes with the territory, but it's tough. It is."
  • Running backs coach Curtis Luper doesn't have a No. 2 back picked out quite yet. "I’ll kind of determine that starting next Saturday," he said. "Generally – hopefully – someone will emerge as the guy after the first couple of weeks." Mario Fannin, Onterio McCalebb and Dontae Aycock are all options for carries behind starter Ben Tate.
  • Luper would like to have a change-of-pace back to Tate. Eric Smith, who has not practiced with the team since his arrest for third-degree assault, figured to be the power back. Now, the Tigers are still searching. It might be Aycock, who at 225 pounds is a little bigger than Tate and McCalebb. "It puts a lot of pressure on the defense because they can get accustomed to one style of guy and then here comes a guy that’s totally different," Luper said. "A lot of times you hear of guys like thunder and lightning. You’ve heard that comparison – an analogy used to describe two different kinds of backs. It keeps the defense off balance and it presents certain issues for them."
  • Offensive line coach Jeff Grimes had questions about his backup group. How did he feel about them Friday, eight days before the season opener? "Still questions," he said with a smile. "Not ready to say anything about any one guy that guy that's going to be a backup at this spot at that spot. Certainly you want to have those decisions made as soon as you can. But sometimes it's not a bad thing for guys to know they're competing all the way up to the end. You get the best preparation out of all the guys you can if they're still competing. I know a little bit more than I did a week or two ago, but not where I ready to name anybody as backup at any spot yet."
  • Grimes said in the past he's had a sixth lineman who is close to the starting five in ability. "If that's the case, I'll rotate a guy in there," he said. "Certainly you like to do that because it develops a little more depth and you have guys with game experience. But if you're in the position where you don't have a guy that's anywhere close to the starters, you're not going to throw somebody out there just to do it." Asked if that's the case this year, Grimes smiled again and said, "We'll see."
  • Grimes confirmed that the starting five everybody expected up front will be that way. Just for reference, this is the starting lineup: LT Lee Ziemba, LG Mike Berry, C Ryan Pugh, RG Byron "Lee" Isom, RT Andrew McCain.
  • Grimes' hope for Game 1: "My hope is that we step out there and we make a statement with how we play the game, in terms of our style of play more than anything else. Certainly we want to be technically proficient, we don't have to have penalties, we don't want to give up sacks or anything. The main thing is I'm looking for five guys that will just dominate the game up front and play it the way I think it ought to be played. And if that happens, it'll show up. If we play hard, play physical, and do what we need do, that gives us a chance to do what we need to do on offense. Nothing can happen if we don't do that."

Caudle named backup quarterback

Junior Neil Caudle will be Auburn's backup quarterback, Tigers coach Gene Chizik announced Friday.

Caudle battled true freshman Tyrik Rollison for the backup role after Auburn named Chris Todd its starter two weeks ago.

"He's worked really, really hard for this," Chizik said. "I'm really proud for him. I really feel good about where he is. If he has a chance to go in the football game, we feel like he has the best chance to win."

Chizik said Friday's decision does not necessarily mean Rollison will redshirt this season.

The 6-foot-3, 200-pound Caudle has only played in mop-up duty during his time at Auburn. He has thrown eight career passes, completing four of them for 32 yards.

Check back for more in a little bit.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Reactions to the NCAA's decision on Billings

AUBURN, Ala. — The NCAA has ruled Auburn senior wide receiver Montez Billings out for the first four games of the season because of an academic issue, the school announced Thursday.

Billings, who returned to practice this August after sitting out the spring, graduated in May but still had an undisclosed NCAA-related academic issue he had to satisfy before he was cleared for games. Head coach Gene Chizik recently said the issue was “out of his hands.”

“This is unfortunate for Montez, but we’ve exhausted all avenues to get him on the field as soon as possible,” said Auburn senior associate athletics director Rich McGlynn, who handles NCAA compliance. “While we don’t necessarily agree with the NCAA’s ruling, we have to respect and abide by their decision.”

Billings will be eligible to play in Week 5, Auburn’s first SEC road game at Tennessee on Oct. 3.

“We would have liked to had a decision that was more favorable,” Chizik said. “But it is what it is, like I said, and we’re moving on. He’s been great. And he’s looking forward to getting back for the fifth game of the year.”

The 6-foot-2, 183-pound Billings is the Tigers’ leading returning receiver. He caught 24 passes for 277 yards last season. Auburn’s other returning healthy receivers combined for 15 catches last year.

Billings has started 20 games in three years. The senior from Pelham, Ala., has 55 career catches for 645 yards and one touchdown.

With Billings’ status hanging in the air for the last few months, Chizik said the team wasn’t caught off guard by the Thursday’s news.

“Any time there’s a guy who you know can play for you and he’s not, you’ve got to make provisions for that,” he said. “We’ve always got a plan.”

Make sure to follow the blog on Twitter before reading this other news and notes ....
  • So what does that mean for Billings in the interim? His practice role diminished as Auburn began preparation for its Sept. 5 opener against Louisiana Tech. He has worked with the scout team this week, sporting a blue, nameless No. 19 jersey during Thursday’s practice instead of his usual No. 84. “He’s in the all meetings, in terms of staying with our offense,” Chizik said. “He’s going to help our football team anyway we ask him to help it. Scout team, if that shoe fits, then that’s what we’ll do. But he’s certainly going to stay up on everything because we’re looking forward to getting him to help us.”
  • And what does that mean for the Tigers' receiving corps? Auburn has several options in Billings’ absence. Freshman DeAngelo Benton recently moved up to the top spot on the depth chart at the “9” position, according to Taylor. Other options include Darvin Adams, a slot receiver who missed Thursday’s practice with an undisclosed injury, and converted quarterback Kodi Burns.
  • Emory Blake, a polished freshman from Austin, Texas, will be in the mix as well. The 6-foot-1, 192-pound receiver had worked mostly as an outside receiver on the other side of the ball (the “2” position), but is taking reps at the “9” now. “Coach Troop says every day is an interview and the doors are always open,” Blake said. “You just have to come in and make plays every day and if you do that, you’ll see your way on the field.”
  • Sophomore Quindarius Carr, who can play all three receiver positions, is also in the running for playing time. “He’s kind of my catch-all,” Taylor said. “I feel like I can move all the way around.”
  • Special teams coordinator Jay Boulware wouldn’t say for certain that punter Clinton Durst and place-kicker Wes Byrum will start when Auburn opens its season against Louisiana Tech on Sept. 5, but he made it sound like that will be the case. “It’s sure looking that way,” Boulware said.
  • Durst, a second-team preseason All-SEC pick who averaged 42.1 yards a punt last year, briefly quit the team in January in a scholarship dispute. He returned for spring ball and battled Ryan Shoemaker for the starting job. Durst separated himself with a strong August, and head coach Gene Chizik rewarded the senior with a scholarship less than two weeks ago.
  • Byrum has bounced back from a 2008 season during which he went 11-for-19 on field goal attempts. He briefly lost the top spot to walk-on Chandler Brooks in the spring but has since come on strong, pulling ahead of Brooks and Morgan Hull. During a live kicking drill at the beginning of Thursday’s practice, the junior drilled a 50-yarder to cap the session, clearing the bar with yards to spare. “We’ll see how Byrum carries over,” Boulware said. “He’s done a phenomenal job for us this camp and he’s had a number of days where he’s knocked every field goal through at the top of practice, and that’s big. Last spring he couldn’t do that. So we’ll see where he ends up.”
  • Injured wide receiver Tim Hawthorne, who has been sidelined with a broken foot since the summer, was not in pads Thursday, but he also was not wearing a protective boot on his right foot for the first time while participating in catching drills with receivers. Does that mean the receiver is any closer to a return? “I don’t really know,” Taylor said. “I would like to (play him). If he can help us, I’ll put him out there. I’m definitely going to give him a shot because he’s earned it with his leadership, what he’s done this summer and even while he’s been hurt. He’s been incredible as a leader with these young guys.”
  • Auburn has been spared by the flu bug that’s affected much of the area recently. Other than backup quarterback Tyrik Rollison, who missed Tuesday’s practice, and Hawthorne, nobody else has shown flu-like symptoms so far. “We’ve been really good,” Chizik said. “I think our training staff has done a good job of being proactive to prepare us for that. It’s running rampant, obviously, around the state. We’ve been pretty fortunate up to this point.”
  • BB&T Corporation has replaced Colonial Bank as one of the corporate sponsors of Auburn athletics. The North Carolina-based bank, which recently secured the assets of the Montgomery-based Colonial BancGroup Inc., will sponsor the university’s football, basketball and baseball programs, placing its logo at Jordan-Hare Stadium, Beard-Eaves-Memorial Coliseum and Plainsman Park. Colonial Bank was founded by Bobby Lowder, an Auburn Trustee and prominent Tigers football donor. BB&T acquired 90 branches in Alabama with its purchase of Colonial and is now the fourth-largest bank in the state.
  • DE Antonio Coleman talked about coming out of a stance where he's standing up. "It just lets me get out in space and drop in coverage or come off the edge," he said. "I’m used to it. I’ve done it before, but it’s been a couple years. I did it with (Will) Muschamp. We did some of it last year, but it wasn’t much at all. I’m just getting back used to it. ... I prefer both. I like to be multiple – outside linebacker, defensive end – just moving around and giving the offense problems. " Coleman says he envisions his future NFL career being a hybrid type role. "That’s what I’m banking on," he said.
  • LB Adam Herring told us that he had surgery on his heel in December. That's the mysterious injury that's kept him out until this week.
  • Auburn will go to Jordan-Hare Stadium today for its final practice this week. Chizik plans to do situational work at the stadium. The Tigers will take Saturday off before going into their regular game week schedule starting Sunday.

Billings to miss first four games

Auburn senior wide receiver Montez Billings will miss the first four games of the season because of an academic issue, the school announced Thursday.

Billings, who sat out last spring, graduated in May but had an undisclosed NCAA-related academic issue he had to satisfy. Head coach Gene Chizik recently said the issue was in “somebody else’s” hands.

“This is unfortunate for Montez, but we’ve exhausted all avenues to get him on the field as soon as possible,” Auburn senior associate athletics director Rich McGlynn said. “While we don’t necessarily agree with the NCAA’s ruling, we have to respect and abide by their decision.”

Billings is the Tigers’ leading returning receiver. He caught 24 passes for 277 yards last season. He has 55 career catches for 645 yards and one touchdown.

Check back for more tonight after we do interviews.

Early practice notes: D. Adams, Eltoro out

We reporters just got to see what is probably our last bit of open practice for the foreseeable future, and we came away with a few observations. Here they are, as usual, in a tidy, bullet-point format:

(Also, follow the blog on Twitter)
  • WR Darvin Adams and LB Eltoro Freeman did not practice. Adams, one of three projected starters at wideout, was not in pads and rode on a stationary bike during our viewing period. Freeman was also on the bikes, not using his left leg. He also had a big cast back on his right wrist.
  • Other Muscle Beach participants included OL Kevin Carroll, OL Darrell Roseman, LB Jonathan Evans and S Mike McNeil. TE Robert Cooper, LB Spencer Pybus and OL Andre Harris did not dress out or do conditioning work.
  • WR Tim Hawthorne did not dress out, but he did not have a protective boot on his broken foot. He even participated in a drill where receivers threw passes back and forth to each other.
  • WR Montez Billings wore a blue No. 19 jersey and appears to still be on the scout team. He returned a few punts during a special teams drill, but that was all.
  • DB D'Antoine Hood (Central-Phenix) tested his ankle on the sideline during field goal drills. He was on the field in what appeared to be a scout team capacity on punt coverage. He has been out of action the last few weeks with a high-ankle sprain.
  • Wide receivers coach Trooper Taylor wasn't wearing his trademark backwards hat. He looks strange without it.
  • We saw some more 11-on-11 work, with an eclectic mix of first- and second-team players. Here are the highlights:
  • Neil Caudle took all eight snaps in the drill. He went 4-for-8 in the drill, completing screen passes to Onterio McCalebb and Dontae Aycock, a quick slant for a first down to Terrell Zachery and a pass to the flat to TE Gabe McKenzie.
  • After McCalebb caught his screen pass, running backs coach Curtis Luper yelled at him that he was out too wide on the play. "You make it too hard on him," Luper said, referring to the lineman who had to race farther out toward the sideline to make the initial block. By the way, it looked like that forced the lineman to hold his defender in order to spring McCalebb.
  • CB Harry Adams gave up the first-down pass to Zachery. Offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn called the exact same play the next time and Adams broke the pass up.
  • Walk-on CB Caleb Blanton had a nice pass break up against Quindarius Carr.

Running back rotation up in the air

I wrote a story for today's newspaper about the running back depth chart. Here's how it starts:

AUBURN, Ala. — Auburn running backs coach Curtis Luper spoke confidently about his group last week, touting the experience of his multitude of veterans and the raw skills of his newcomers, seemingly immune from the crippling depth problems his fellow assistants have had to deal with all month.

Eric Smith’s arrest and tenuous standing on the team doesn’t bring the Tigers’ running back depth to a critical level, but it certainly changes the position’s dynamic.

Auburn, at least for now, has one less option in its running game. Coaches have already determined that senior Ben Tate will be the primary ballcarrier, but they still need to establish a clear No. 2 out of a group that includes H-back Mario Fannin and true freshmen Onterio McCalebb and Dontae Aycock.

“Obviously, you need two in this league. We think we have three who could possibly do what we ask them to do,” offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn said last week, before the Smith ordeal. “We’re going to figure out that order pretty quick.”

Read the rest online here. Also, follow the blog on Twitter by clicking here.

If there was one position where Auburn could afford to lose a player, it was running back. Tate has a lock on the No. 1 job, Fannin can play there in a pinch and McCalebb and Aycock have impressed for being youngsters.

Still, Smith, at 237 pounds, was the power back of the group. Tate and Fannin could probably play that way, but they're not as big. So it will be interesting to see how Auburn handles short-yardage situations.

But the biggest question is how Auburn will split the carries this season. Just for fun, I looked back at how Malzahn split the carries among running backs in his three years as a college coach at Tulsa and Arkansas:

Tulsa in 2008
  • RB Tarrion Adams, 247 carries, 1,523 yards, 6.2 avg., 14 TD
  • RB Jawad Williams, 86 carries, 523 yards, 6.1 avg., 3 TD
  • RB Charles Opeseyitan, 45 carries, 355 yards, 7.9 avg, 2 TD
  • FB Courtney Tennial, 45 carries, 220 yards, 4.9 avg., 7 TD
  • HB Charles Clay, 25 carries, 151 yards, 5.8 avg., 2 TD
Tulsa in 2007
  • RB Adams, 202 carries, 1,113 yards, 5.5 avg., 7 TD
  • RB Williams, 104 carries, 452 yards, 4.3 avg., 2 TD
  • HB Clay, 49 carries, 255 yards, 5.2 avg., 1 TD
  • FB Cody Madison, 8 carries, 25 yards, 3.1 avg., 0 TD
Arkansas in 2006
  • RB Darren McFadden, 284 carries, 1,714 yards, 5.8 avg., 14 TD
  • RB Felix Jones, 154 carries, 1,225 yards, 7.6 avg., 6 TD
  • RB Michael Smith, 35 carries, 247 yards, 7.1 avg., 3 TD
  • RB Hezekiah Smith, 9 carries, 61 yards, 6.8 avg., 0 TD
  • FB Peyton Hillis, 13 carries, 57 yards, 4.4 avg., 1 TD
And just for fun, here's Auburn breakdown of carries from last year:
  • RB Tate, 159 carries, 664 yards, 4.2 avg., 3 TD
  • RB Brad Lester, 80 carries, 314 yards, 3.6 avg., 2 TD
  • RB Fannin, 54 carries, 238 yards, 4.4 avg., 1 TD
  • RB Smith, 21 carries, 98 yards, 4.0 avg., 0 TD
  • RB Tristan Davis, 8 carries, 44 yards, 5.5 avg., 1 TD
So what does this tell us? Well, a couple of things (and yes, I do realize that each situation, including Auburn's this year, is as unique):
  1. That Arkansas backfield in 2006 was amazing. No wonder the Razorbacks never threw the ball, driving Mitch Mustain's mother crazy. I wouldn't put the ball in the air either with that roster of backs.
  2. Auburn's running game was abysmal last year. The team leader had 664 rushing yards? Seriously?
  3. Malzahn clearly likes having a No. 1 guy, but he does not hesitate to give the backup running back a major role in the offense. In two of his college seasons, the No. 2 running back got at least 50 percent of the carries as the starter.
  4. There is clearly a No. 2 guy and not a group of players getting equal carries behind the starter.
So who is Auburn's backup going to be. Here's guessing that it's going to be McCalebb, just because his speed something different to the equation. I think Fannin will do the most of his work at H-back, which will get him out in the passing game more. And although Aycock might not redshirt this year, I doubt he'll have a major role.

Thoughts?

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Practice notes: Auburn shifts focus to La. Tech

AUBURN, Ala. — After three weeks of focusing on itself, Auburn is finally turning its attention to Louisiana Tech.

Head coach Gene Chizik has slowly added bits of game preparation into the Tigers’ daily routine, splitting practices up between fundamentals and scout work for their season opener against the Bulldogs on Sept. 5 at Jordan-Hare Stadium.

“It’s kind of been a breath of fresh air,” offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn said. “You can tell our guys have kind of raised their level. I know it’s getting close to the first game when you actually game-plan specifically for a team. It’s been good for our players and our coaches.”

The Tigers have practices today and Friday before an off day Saturday. They’ll begin their regular game-week routine on Sunday, something players have been itching to do for a while.

“It gets old after a while going against the first-team offense, everyone out there banging and stuff, getting little nicks and bruises,” linebacker Craig Stevens said. “Now you get a chance to see the other team you’ll see out on game day.”

Follow the blog on Twitter. Also, read some more observations from post-practice interviews ...
  • Prior to his return Tuesday, the last time injury-riddled linebacker Adam Herring practiced with the team was Iron Bowl week last November. Apparently, he has picked up where he left off. “I thought when he came back he was going to be out of shape,” Stevens said. “He’s not too out of shape. He’s been running around out there, making plays. He knows all the calls and stuff. ... I think he’ll be ready for the season.”
  • Herring, who played in 11 games last year mostly on special teams, missed the spring, summer and first part of August with a variety of undisclosed injuries. Now that he’s back, the 6-foot-1, 216-pound sophomore provides a boost to a linebacking corps low on numbers. In addition to being another body on the field, he’s versatile, able to play in the middle and on the strong side. “He’s fighting hard to get back in the mix,” defensive coordinator Ted Roof said. “I was real pleased with his initial deal. It looked like he had been playing, it didn’t look like he had been watching. So that was positive to see. He’s a guy that has a motor. He’s shown some natural instincts for the ball yesterday and took another step forward today.”
  • Stevens on Herring: “I think he’ll be able to help us out in the long run.”
  • Former Tigers quarterback Randy Campbell was unanimously nominated to fill the District 6 position on the Auburn Board of Trustees currently held by Paul Spina, according to a university press release. The Alabama state senate must approve the nomination before Campbell joins the board. Campbell played at Auburn from 1981-83, the last two years of his career overlapping with Bo Jackson’s. He helped lead the Tigers to the 1983 SEC title.
  • He graduated in 1984 with a Bachelor of Science degree in industrial operations management. Campbell currently lives in Shoal Creek, Ala., and is the president of Campbell Financial Partners and Harland Partners, both in Birmingham.
  • Freshman QB Tyrik Rollison returned to practice after missing Tuesday’s session with the flu. He was not wearing a surgical mask as a precaution.
  • RG Byron Isom got some reps Wednesday. He missed a few practices last week with an undisclosed injury.
  • LG Mike Berry has been working at every guard, center and tackle just to stay ready in case he needs to be moved around. "You just have to learn how to tie it all in together," he said. "You have to be a big-picture type learner. There are different techniques at each position. As far as everything else, it's pretty basic." This does not speak well for Auburn's offensive line depth.
  • Malzahn and Roof both said the depth chart is not yet complete, but it’s not bound to surprise many players. “I think everybody knows where they stand,” Stevens said.
  • Roof, in fact, joked that the depth chart was 91.3 percent complete. "Things clear up, but there's different situations that come and go by packages," he said. "We pretty much have got to the point where we're pretty set on things, but you don't want to ever have people feel like they don't have a chance to compete and earn playing time. We look at all the tape from all the kids, whether they're scouts or whoever, so that's something we keep a beat on."
  • This always seems to happen after I write a story about someone. I led yesterday's notebook with an item about walk-on linebacker Wade Christopher. Then Roof has this gem of a quote today: "He's been an Iron Man. He's played all three linebacker positions. He's been an Iron Man. I think he's earned the respect of his teammates and certainly his coaches. He's a guy that always knows what to do and he's always available and always willing. You ask, 'Can you do this?' He says, 'Yeah coach I got it, I know what to do.' As a coach, you have a lot of confidence and respect kids like that." Kind of wish I had that yesterday.
  • Roof has been happy with what LB Eltoro Freeman has done while battling injuries this August. "He's done a good job throughout the course of two-a-days when he's been nicked of getting mental reps and studying the game," Roof said. "He does a lot of extra work on himself, additional time that's voluntary. He's been able to stay up with the speed of the game and get mental reps, which any of the time there's first-year player -- you hear me talk so much about the transition from high school or junior college to the SEC ..."
  • Roof on DL Nick Fairley, a junior college transfer who has worked at a variety of spots on the line: "I've seen him do some good things. He seems to have some natural instincts, still got to work to become more physical and the speed of the game and the tempo of the game. He's gotten better each day. He's not where we want him to be, but he's gotten better. I have every reason to believe that he'll develop into an awful good player for us."
  • Don't know if you've heard, but RB Onterio McCalebb is FAST. This quote from Malzahn prove it: "He’s a burst, now. He can be a 1-play drive type guy if we can get him in the right situation. He’s gotten better and better. He’s tough. Coach (Curtis) Luper has really strained him and stressed him to try to get ready. He’s responded and showed a lot of toughness. He’s not a physically big type guy but he’s pretty tough."
  • Stevens on tackling McCalebb: "It's hard trying to catch him but once you get him, you know he don't feel you because he's light. The problem is just catching him. If you catch him, you'll put something on him. ... You're going to have to get ready for his speed when you see him in the game. Ben and Mario, they're more power and they're still elusive with it, but Onterio, he's just straight speed and you'll have to get ready for that."
  • But does he have any moves? "Nah," Stevens said. "I haven't really seen him put too many moves on people. He just basically, once he gets the ball, he just runs past everybody for real, to tell you the truth. Just runs and uses his speed to run past everybody."

Burns catching on at wide receiver

I wrote a story about quarterback-turned-wide receiver Kodi Burns for today's newspaper. Here's how it starts:

AUBURN, Ala. — Auburn’s football team had the day off a week ago Monday, but not Kodi Burns. The quarterback-turned-wide receiver took it upon himself to go to the Tigers’ indoor practice facility and work on the finer points of his new position, catching over 100 passes on a JUGS machine.

Word spread. Other wideouts got text messages from teammates. Soon, every one of them was there, working alongside Burns.

“That is off Kodi’s leadership,” wide receivers coach Trooper Taylor said. “They don’t want to get out-worked by him.”

It has been nearly two weeks since Auburn’s coaches named Chris Todd the starting quarterback and introduced the radical idea of moving Burns to wide receiver in order to get his athletic abilities on the field.

And while Burns’ receiving skills continue to be a work in progress — hence the never-ending JUGS machine work — Taylor promises the junior will have a role in his rotation of receivers.

“With Kodi moving into the wide receiver room, that has opened up some doors and closed the slot for somebody else,” Taylor said. “He’s going to be out there. He’s proved that he can make some plays.”

Read the whole thing here. And while you're on the Internet clicking around, why don't you follow the blog on Twitter?

There has been some internal debate in the media room of just how much Burns will be on the field this year. Auburn's coaches seem serious about involving him in the game plan, but you have to wonder how quickly somebody who has never played wide receiver can pick up the position (it is a lot more than just running and catching).

Burns won't fail for a lack of effort, that's for sure. He's jumped into this switch with all he's got, as evidenced by his extra work, which takes place every day after practice, at least when Burns can squeeze in the time.

I truly think Burns will be the Wildcat quarterback, even if he's a departure from the speed back that usually goes into that role. I think his ability to throw and his shiftiness are enough to compensate for his lack of blazing speed. As for receiver, I remain skeptical that someone can get everything about playing the position down in three weeks. I think he'll be used in certain situations, but I doubt if Burns will be one of the main go-to guys at receiver.

I think his biggest value is his ability to give Auburn different looks from all over the field. Teams have to respect his ability to pass, even if he's a wide receiver. That seems like a great toy for offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn to use this year, and as he's proven at previous stops, he's imaginative enough to make it work.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Late Tuesday practice notes: Christopher keeping LB spot warm; QB Rollison has the flu

AUBURN, Ala. — Weak-side linebacker Eltoro Freeman is slowly working himself back into Auburn’s rotation from a hamstring injury. Walk-on Wade Christopher has kept his spot warm.

Christopher, a redshirt sophomore from Vestavia Hills, Ala., has moved around all three linebacker positions, filling in whenever there’s been a need.

“I feel like my strength is just knowing how all three positions work,” he said. “I feel like I can play at any one of them. I know as far as what one guy does and how the others defend off it.”

Freeman, a projected starter, returned Tuesday after missing most of the last two weeks with hamstring and hand issues (he no longer had a cast on his right wrist). But Christopher worked with the first team at weak side during an 11-on-11 drill.

“I’m just happy to help the defense any way I can,” Christopher said. “Obviously you don’t want guys going down in front of you, but that’s the point of having depth. You have to have guys behind you stepping up.”

The 6-foot-1, 225-pound Christopher didn’t have any major scholarship offers coming out of high school but got a chance to walk on at Auburn, his favorite team growing up. He also chose the school for its strong Biomedical Science program.

He played sparingly his freshman year on special teams before being redshirted last year. But with Auburn’s depth situation at linebacker this August, there’s a good chance he could get on the field early this season.

“I haven’t been on the field and I’m fittin’ to get out there,” Christopher said. “So I’m really excited.”

Here are some more late practice notes (which you can find out even quicker about if you follow the blog on Twitter) ...
  • Freshman quarterback Tyrik Rollison, who is battling junior Neil Caudle for the backup job, missed Tuesday’s practice because of the flu, Auburn head coach Gene Chizik said. Coaches have given Rollison the majority of reps with the second team since naming Chris Todd the starting quarterback two weeks ago. Caudle worked with the second team during a portion of Tuesday’s practice open to the media. According to the Opelika-Auburn News, 25 players on Opelika High’s football team sat out of practice Monday, most with flu-like symptoms. Chizik is trying to avoid a similar situation on the eve of the season. “We’re trying everything we can do to keep it from spreading to our team,” Chizik said. “(Rollison’s) just got a little bit of that. He’s fine. He’ll be fine.”
  • Wide receiver Montez Billings has to meet more than Chizik’s standards to get back on the field. Days after wide receivers coach Trooper Taylor said all he was waiting for was Chizik’s approval to allow the senior back into the receiver rotation, Chizik said he was waiting for word from someone else. “It’s in somebody else’s (hands),” he said. Billings, who graduated last spring, sat out the spring because of an academic issue. He returned this summer but still has an ambiguous team standing. On Tuesday, he worked as a scout team player, wearing a blue No. 18 jersey during drills instead of his usual 84. “I don’t really know exactly where we are with that,” Chizik said, “but obviously we’re going to be paying close attention to that in the next few days.”
  • It sounds like Auburn is doing some more prep for Louisiana Tech than the last couple weeks. "We've got to the point now where we've started to do some looks teams. We spent some of the day going against each other, trying to keep a fastball tempo mentality, but still work enough Louisiana Tech. We're working Louisiana Tech, there's no question about it, we're more in that mode than we've been, but we've got so many things within ourselves that we've got to fix that we just can't go full-bore on Louisiana Tech yet."
  • DE Antonio Coleman did some of his pass rushing standing up instead of coming out of his stance. "Antonio is a guy right now that athletically you can do both with," Chizik said. "You can stand him up; you can move him down. I think he kind of likes standing up. It's a whole different perspective because you can see and you're a linebacker some, you're a defensive lineman some, you're a hybrid. I think he's kind of built for that. And it's good to kind of be able to possibly have those options with a guy like him. And before we got here, he's done that before too. So I think he's got a comfort level with it."
  • Chizik said Coleman IS NOT working at linebacker.
  • TE Tommy Trott's description of Gus Malzahn's offense: "Detailed, detailed, detailed." Sounds like Malzahn is a nit-picker when it comes to placement. "He’s chewing you out before the ball’s even snapped because, really in this offense, alignments are so critical," Trott said. "I’ve never really realized it but the way he stresses it, it totally makes sense. Things that he says, ‘We’re going to stretch the field vertically and horizontally.’ You never really realize that if your alignments aren’t perfect with where he wants them, if you’re in a yard or two, that doesn’t make the defense accountable for the horizontal, or the width of the field, and the length of the field. He’s all about details. Routes, they’re precision routes, precision passing. The quarterback is taking three steps and he’s getting rid of the ball instead of sitting back there and patting the ball and waiting to see if the receiver going to keep it high or if he feels like he has to banana it or stuff like that."
  • Count Trott among those who think Todd's shoulder is back. "He’s slinging the ball around," Trott said. "He looks so good. Honestly, we saw it from him for a while last year. I’m not sure when his shoulder got tired. He says he was never 100 percent. We thought he was throwing the ball around really well last year at the end of the season. Looking back at it, and what we see now, it’s pretty obvious that he wasn’t there last year. Being the competitor that he is, he was trying to battle through things to say on the field. It’s evident of what we see now, it’s pretty obvious he was 100 percent last year."
  • Trott thinks Todd wants to show a thing or two to Auburn fans who got increasingly vocal with their displeasure for how he played last year. "I’m sure he does – not that you’re going to go out there and prove yourself to the fans – but you’re going to go out there to have fun and succeed," Trott said. "He came and busted his butt, and obviously last year didn’t go as well as he wanted. I’m sure he got a lot of criticism. That’s just the way it is in SEC football. I’m sure he is real excited about the chance to go out there and prove himself, and truly show what he is capable of doing."
  • DB D'Antoine Hood (Central-Phenix) is still not practicing right now because of a high-ankle sprain. DB T'Sharvan Bell is back but working between safety and cornerback.
  • That leaves only four scholarship players working exclusively as cornerbacks -- Walt McFadden, Neiko Thorpe, Harry Adams and Demond Washington. McFadden's not concerend. "I’m not going to be the iron man," he said. "We’ve got four DBs that can help out. You can put them in at any time of the game and they would help out. I believe that if any one of us goes down, we’ve got a guy that can back him up. They’ve just got to grow up."
  • Chizik said he hopes to have the depth chart, which is about 90 percent complete, finalized soon. He didn't say he would post it for players to see, per se. "They know, "Chizik said. "You can tell how many reps you're getting or things of that nature. Obviously they know that we're not going to be spending a lot of time repping guys right now that we don't think can help."

Early practice notes: Tigers go 11-on-11

We had the chance to view about 25 minutes worth of practice today and saw a little bit more than we normally get to see. There was about a five-minute period where the team went 11-on-11, with the ones matching up against the ones and the twos against the twos in full pads.

Although you can't read much into it, here's some observations from that brief period (also, follow the blog on Twitter for instant updates):
  • QB Chris Todd completed all four of his passes.
  • DE Antonio Coleman got to Todd at least twice. They didn't whistle anything dead, but Coleman clearly got a hand on Todd (they weren't live).
  • LB Wade Christopher, a walk-on, worked with the ones at weak-side linebacker.
  • S Daren Bates, a freshman, was with the first unit. So was DL Nick Fairley for at least a portion of it. He worked at end.
  • Freshman OL John Sullen ran some with the first team at right guard.
  • WR Kodi Burns was with the ones. They threw a WR screen pass to him for a small gain.
  • QB Neil Caudle threw a pick with the second team, but it didn't appear to be his fault. It went right through the wide receiver Travante Stallworth's hands.
And some other non-11-on-11 drill observations ...
  • LB Eltoro Freeman looked like he was closer to a return, but he still did not participate in drills during the portion we saw. He did not have the cast on his right wrist, although Gene Chizik said he was bothered by a hamstring problem.
  • Freshman QB Tyrik Rollison was not at practice. Don't know if that means anything at all.
  • RB Eric Smith was not at practice. He hasn't been since his arrest last Friday.
  • Injured DB Aairon Savage was at practice and appeared to be in good spirits. His left foot was in a boot.
  • Today's group at Muscle Beach was small: LB Joey Caldwell, OL Darrell Roseman, OL A.J. Greene and LB Jonathan Evans.
  • TE Robert Cooper was not dressed out. Neither was LB Spencer Pybus.
  • RG Byron Isom was back at practice after missing some days with an unknown injury last week, but he still gave way to Sullen during a few drills.
  • OL Rudy Odom wasn't out there and is not on the roster. We'll ask Chizik about that tonight.
  • There weres ome rumors out there about Burns returning punts. We saw a No. 18 out there doing some punt return work, but it was not Burns. We think, THINK, it was wide receiver Montez Billings wearing a scout team jersey.

Monday, August 24, 2009

RB Eric Smith surrenders to police

AUBURN, Ala. — Backup Tigers running back Eric Smith turned himself in to the Auburn Police Department at a little after 1:30 p.m. Monday on a third-degree assault charge, police Capt. Tom Stofer said.

Smith, 19, had a warrant out for his arrest stemming from an altercation early Friday morning in the parking lot of an area hotel.

After turning himself in, Smith was transported to the Lee County Detention Center, where he was booked for third-degree assault, a Class A misdemeanor in Alabama. He was released on $500 bond, Lee County Sheriff Jay Jones said

Smith was originally arrested for disorderly conduct, a Class C misdemeanor, at 1:42 a.m. Friday in the parking lot of the Lexington Hotel. He was released on bond, but assault charges were filed later that day by a 22-year-old male Auburn student who was injured at the hotel and transported to East Alabama Medical Center for treatment to a laceration over his left eye.

Reports in the Birmingham News and Opelika-Auburn News, citing the second page of the original police report, said officers responded to the scene after receiving a call about a fight. While there, they witnessed Smith strike the alleged victim, Decari Jenkins, in the back of the head, causing him to fall forward and hit the asphalt. He was knocked unconscious.

Smith alleges in the report that Jenkins punched him in the nose earlier that night. The officers noted that Smith appeared to have blood coming from his nose at the time of the incident.

Smith is scheduled to appear in Auburn Municipal Court on Nov. 5, assistant police chief Tommy Dawson said. Punishment for a Class A misdemeanor, according to Alabama law, is not to exceed a $6,000 fine and one year in jail.

Smith, a sophomore from Seffner, Fla., has not practiced since the incident. Auburn head coach Gene Chizik has refused to comment on his status with the team.

Make no mistake, DE Eguae impressing early

I wrote a story for today's newspaper about defensive end Nosa Eguae. Here's how it starts:

AUBURN, Ala. — There isn’t a move Auburn defensive end Antonio Coleman makes that his understudy Nosa Eguae doesn’t watch with a discerning eye.

Driven to make as few mistakes as possible, the freshman culls information in every possible manner, whether it’s watching the senior All-SEC performer come out of his stance or simply carry himself in public.

“I don’t know if I’d be where I am right now if I didn’t have a dude like AC in front of me,” Eguae said. “Every time he’s in, I’m taking mental reps. It doesn’t matter what he’s doing; if he’s stretching, I look at him. He’s just one of those guys that you can look at no matter what.”

People might be saying that of Eguae soon. The 6-foot-2, 244-pound freshman has been a quick study in his short time on the Plains, working primarily as Coleman’s backup at rush end while cross-training on the other side of the line.

Although it might be difficult for him to get playing time this year, Eguae has drawn rave reviews from teammates and coaches for his attention to detail and eagerness to get things right.

“He’s the type of kid that gets it,” defensive coordinator Ted Roof said. “Football makes sense to him. As a coach, you tell you him something and then you coach him and you see it transform so he doesn’t make the same mistake again.”

Read the whole story here.

I'm not sure if Eguae will get on the field much this season. Coleman obviously has the rush end position locked down, and Antoine Carter and Michael Goggans will rotate at the end positions as well. You wouldn't want to burn a redshirt on someone to play in a reserve role like, especially when size and strength are going to be an issue, as they always are when a freshman defensive lineman is involved (at 244 pounds, he could stand to gain about 15 or so).

But it seems like Eguae can be a sleeper in this freshman class. He was only a 3-star recruit. And while we have admittedly seen very little of him in any kind of practice situation, what fellow players and coaches are saying about him is hard to ignore. He should be a n interesting player to see develop at Auburn.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Late notes: WR Benton could be a starter

AUBURN, Ala. — If the season started today, true freshman DeAngelo Benton would start at one of the outside receiver spots, wide receivers coach Trooper Taylor said Sunday.

“I really didn’t expect it,” Benton said. “I figured I was going to have to work hard. I’ve been working hard and I finally got a chance to get to the No. 1 spot. I have to do my job and stay there.”

Benton, the 21-year-old former Parade All-American who spent the previous two years trying to qualify for college, has made giant strides in his game since arriving on the Plains this summer.

“(He’s) making plays,” Taylor said. “We’re about play-makers, guys. And again, that could change tomorrow. If a guy doesn’t make plays, it has to be consistent. But he’s done a nice job and he’s earned that, and we’re going to play the best players no matter if he’s a freshman (or) walk-on.”

Here are some other notes about Sunday's practice that you'd find out about quicker if you followed the blog on Twitter (shameless plug alert!) ...
  • Taylor listed about a million different scenarios about his wide receivers and who might be on the field. The crux of what he was trying to say I think boiled down to this: Benton and Terrell Zachery are expected to be the starting wide receivers on the outside. Taylor said depending on the formation, Darvin Adams or Tommy Trott would be the other starter on the inside.
  • Zachery returned to practice after dealing with some tendinitis in his left Achilles’ heel, something that bothered him this summer. The junior worked on a stationary bike for a few practices last week
  • Taylor has made several comments about wanting to rotate no more than six players at receiver. That group got more competitive, apparently, with Kodi Burns moving into the mix." With Kodi moving into the wide receiver room, that has opened up some doors and closed the slot for somebody else," Taylor said. "He's going to be out there. He's proved that he can make some plays For me, it's like having another coach in the room. He understand this offense. He knows where the receivers are supposed to be. He has brought a lot to that room. The confidence he bring to that room was really shocking to me. He has that presence about him. It makes a difference."
  • There was a lot of good Kodi material out there today which I plan to put into a feature story for Wednesday, so I won't spoil it here.
  • Trooper said competition for those six spots is intense. "Going into it, I thought it was going to be a really easy decision," he said. "I was fortunate that these guys have stepped up. ... I'm excited about it because I feel like I have some depth and some choices. Before, it was almost going to be by default."
  • Wide receivers Montez Billings and Philip Pierre-Louis continue to have an ambiguous standing with the team. Both players have been allowed to practice but still have issues they must resolve to Chizik’s satisfaction before Taylor can think about putting them in the rotation. How ambiguous are their situations? Read some of these quotes from Taylor about both of them and see if you can decipher what exactly is going on.
  • On Billings: "He is not out there yet. He is practicing and he's not been back out. Until Coach tells me I can have him … Today, I put him back down with the scout team and brought him back for different scenarios. Until he gets everything cleared with Coach and back on page with doing things right, he and Philip are still in the same boat. Both of those guys have to prove they want to be Auburn Men to be back out there." Trooper seemed to differ from Chizik in his opinion about if Billings has done enough to get back in his good graces. "It’s really at the head coach’s discretion to be honest with you guys," he said. "As far as I’m concerned, he’s really done everything we’ve asked him to do. Again, I didn’t set that rule. Coach did and he’s going to make that decision when he’s ready. As far as Tez’s work habits and what he’s been doing so far, I’m proud of him. He’s already graduated. He has his degree and now he’s trying to earn his way back on the football field."
  • Asked if Billings would be part of the team's plans if given the proper approval, Taylor said absolutely. “You’ll see him in the very first game,” he said. “He’d be in the (outside) position right there. He’d be able to help us.”
  • Now to Pierre-Louis, who worked his way back from a torn ACL suffered in last year’s season opener but was not with the team at the start of camp while dealing with personal issues: "He’s got to do everything right," Taylor said. "When coach talks about being an Auburn man, it’s about making choices and if you choose to not be a part of this team by the choices that you make, I’m not going to waste my time teaching you and coaching you because you’re not going to be out there and it’s not fair to those other guys. He’s got a little ways to go, but he’s took it on the chin. He hasn’t had any blemishes since and he’s really trying to earn his way back and I told him it’s at the head coach’s discretion. I don’t make those choices. Once he clears him to go 100 percent, I’m going to try to get him back in the mix if I can"
  • And then Taylor caps it off with this statement about PPL: "It may be one of those things where it’s too far gone and he just waits a year." That doesn't make it sound like Pierre-Louis will be in Auburn's plans any time soon.
  • Taylor said his decisions to play young guys will not be affected by Billings and Pierre-Louis' situations. "The guys that I picked as young guys, they’re going to play already," he said. "It’s not going to be based off Tim or Montez because they play different positions."
  • Taylor said freshman Anthony Gulley has improved, but out of the freshmen (assuming he's not including Benton, who he claims is as old as he is) Emory Blake has been the most impressive. "I would say Emory Blake really has jumped out of all of them and really shown me he understands football," Taylor said. "The thing that those four guys do, they do exactly what you tell them. Most guys, you feel like you’re retraining them. These guys know. They came in and they bought in right off the bat. So they come in and doing just what you tell them and that helps you because you can trust them. That’s big as a coach – being able to trust them."
  • Taylor said doing conditioning work during practice on the sidelines with strength coach Kevin Yoxall is not a fun experience. "I promise you, you’d rather practice than be on Muscle Beach®," he said. "He comes up with some stuff – I don’t know how anybody puts their son through that. I promise you, you get healthy in a hurry rather being over there on Muscle Beach®. You ain’t over there building no muscles, I can promise you that."
  • Quarterback Chris Todd joked about working at wide receiver when he sat down with reporters, saying coaches "saw potential in my athletic ability." But seriously, Todd commented about being mobile enough as a quarterback in Gus Malzahn's offense. "The biggest thing is taking care of the ball, no matter what you're doing," he said. "Really, that's it. Knowing where to fill in and where to squeeze into gaps and reading the defense. You get more comfortable every day."
  • Chizik said he’d like to get another scrimmage in before the start of the season to work on procedural matters and situations like the team did Saturday.
  • Chizik again refused to comment on the situation surrounding running back Eric Smith, who will surrender to police Monday on a third-degree assault charge, according to the Opelika-Auburn News. "As I've said the other day, I'm not going into the details of Eric Smith's situation," he said.
  • Auburn does not practice today and will resume in the late afternoon Tuesday.