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NEXT AUBURN GAMEDAY:
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Auburn at #9 LSU Tigers
Tiger Stadium
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Kickoff at 6:30 pm CT
TV: ESPN2 or ESPN360.com
XM Radio 214
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Click for full game report!

Latest Auburn News...

  • Weather forecast for #17 Auburn at Arkansas this morning is 45 degrees and clear. Kickoff on ESPN at 11 AM Central http://bit.ly/t7gGw 2009-10-10
  • The first meeting between Auburn and Arkansas was a 21-15 Auburn victory in the 1984 Liberty Bowl. 2009-10-07
  • Auburn is tied for 4th in the nation in turnover margin (+1.6) and tied for 7th in interceptions (eight) and turnovers forced (13). 2009-10-07
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Posted on October 4th, 2009 by WarEagles

Auburn Tigers News for 2009-10-04

Posted on October 1st, 2009 by Kevin Strickand

Why Auburn will Vanquish the Vols

Saturday’s showdown between first-year coaches Lane Kiffin of and of offers a variety of interesting subplots. As both replaced coaching legends whose stars had dimmed, and as each are tasked with re-establishing the proud traditions of their respective programs, this head-to-head matchup is inevitably a major benchmark in measuring the progress of each.

Come Sunday morning, Tiger fans will have more reason to boast while Volunteer supporters will be left scratching their heads and wondering when they’ll be able to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

The meeting between the Tigers and Volunteers is a study in contrasts. In everything from the demeanor of their head coaches to their respective strengths and weaknesses, the two teams are polar opposites.

Chizik is low key. He gives little to the media beyond standard coaching cliches and pat phrases. His press conferences are virtually interchangeable. He’s cautious, reserved and evokes a business only aura.

Kiffin is ebullient. He’s angered opposing coaches and drawn the ire of SEC Commissioner Roy Kramer by sniping at rivals, and engaging in media-fueled battles with opposing coaches. His press conferences are events, because no one is really sure what Kiffin’s going to say— or have to apologize for—next.

Chizik’s Tigers have surpassed early expectations. Poll voters haven’t noticed, but is 4-0.

Kiffin’s Volunteers have struggled to match his abrasive bravado. checks in at 2-2, or 3-1 if you count moral victories. At this point, polls are the last thing on their mind.

Chizik came to with a reputation as a defensive wizard. As defensive coordinator at and then Texas he presided over two straight undefeated seasons and one national title—or two if you count titles like cross-state rival Bama fans do.

Kiffin was the pick at in large part because of his work with the offense at USC, where the Trojans were a perennial national contender.

Irony number one?

Chizik won his Texas national title while running the Longhorn defense against Kiffin’s Trojans.

Irony number two?

Despite Kiffin’s offensive reputation, ’s best chance on Saturday rests with its defense. The Volunteer offense remains stuck on start and has shown little sign of go. The defense is talented and extremely effective.

Conversely, Chizik’s defensive rep is overshadowed by ’s performance on offense. Questions abound for the Tiger defense, but the offense has rolled up more than 500 yards per game on average and is scoring a blistering 45 points per outing.

On Saturday something has to give.

defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin, Lane’s father, devised an outstanding plan to put the brakes on Tim Tebow and the Florida Gators in a 23-13 loss/moral victory at Florida.

Chances are the elder Kiffin will have a similar scheme to derail a resurgent and the high-scoring Tiger offense.

Kiffin’s task was made significantly more difficult with the loss of linebacker Nick Reveiz, whose 27 tackles are third on the team.

The problem for the Volunteers is that the offense seems capable of putting points on the board. might be able to slow it down, but the chance of stopping it outright seems remote.

averages 526 yards and 45 points per game. The Tigers pick up an average of seven yards per play. Even if the Volunteer defense is able to cut that production in half, it will likely still be enough against a offense that puts the in in inept.

The Volunteers are moderately effective at running the ball (nearly 200 yards per game), but to say quarterback Jonathan Crompton has struggled would be putting it kindly.

Crompton has thrown eight interceptions in just four games. A six-year old child could draw up the defensive gameplan against .

Put eight men in the box to limit the run and put pressure on Crompton. Force him to make a mistake.

After torched for two big plays early in a 41-30 Tiger win, that’s essentially the plan defensive coordinator Ted Roof employed. The result? Five Mountaineer interceptions and a Tiger win.

’s defense has issues. The Tigers allow a too-high 4.6 yards per play. Opponents average more than 150 yards rushing and more than 170 passing. Opponents score an average of 24 points per game.

That must improve for loftier season expectations to come to fruition. As it pertains to Saturday’s meeting, however, the Volunteers show no indication they are capable of taking advantage of the defensive questions the Tigers present.

Last season these two teams waged an epic battle on the floor of Jordan-Hare that resulted in 792 combined yards. Punting yards. punted ten times for 399 yards, the Tigers nine for 393.

Given ’s offensive prowess and the Tigers’ defensive questions, you may see another 800-yard effort—with no punts—on Saturday.

As the lights go down, you’ll also see a 5-0 team. The only question is whether poll voters will finally take notice.

Posted on September 11th, 2009 by Admin

Why Auburn will beat Mississippi State

By Kevin Strickland Gameday Correspondent

A year ago and waged one of the ugliest football games in the history of the college sport.

prevailed 3-2 on the strength of a 35-yard field goal in the second quarter.

It was ’s first full game as the starter after sharing duties with Kodi Burns, and Todd was serviceable, hitting 15 of 26 passes for 154 yards.

topped the century mark, rushing for 102 yards.

But the Tigers couldn’t score. While Byrum hit the second quarter field goal, he also missed an 18-yard attempt and flubbed a 38-yarder.

was a miserable three of 16 on third down conversions. Only two drives consisted of eight plays; nine covered five or fewer.

The Tigers’ last two offensive possessions ended in fumbles.

It was a hideous display. Everything about ’s offensive effort looked out of sync.

The only consolation was that for all ’s offensive woes, the Tiger defense was devastatingly effective.

did not convert a single third down the entire game. The Bulldogs’ most effective possession covered 22 yards in five plays and ended in a punt.

MSU punted an astounding 10 times.

When the Bulldogs recovered a Todd fumble at the Tiger 32, the defense denied the scoring threat. MSU penetrated only as far as the Tiger 21 and then failed to convert a field goal opportunity.

That’s one primary reason why will beat on Saturday.

The Tiger defense has traditionally handled whatever has thrown at it.   Since 2001, the Bulldogs have scored a grand total of 76 points against the Tigers.  MSU managed a mere 22 over the last four years.  In the last nine meetings, MSU is 2-7 against the Tigers.

The Tiger defense should be able to control the offensive schemes of new Bulldog head coach Dan Mullen, who will learn that life in the SEC is a little tougher when you don’t have Tim Tebow running the show.

MSU Coach Dan Mullen

MSU Coach Dan Mullen

Mullen’s Bulldogs will still be extremely dangerous, particularly with Chris Relf calling the shots.

After MSU’s mediocre first half in the under starter Tyson Lee, Relf came on and led the Bulldogs to scores on five of six second half possessions.

The 6′3″, 230-lb. redshirt sophomore may have wrangled the starting job away from Lee, who opened against Jackson State on Saturday but left in the second quarter and did not return to action.

The Bulldogs looked quicker and more polished against Jackson State than they did all last season, but Jackson State isn’t exactly SEC caliber.

In a head-to-head matchup, the edge goes to the defense.

’s front four should control the line of scrimmage, and that will take pressure off the greener secondary.

The question for the Tigers is whether ’s emerging offensive firepower can overcome the Bulldog defense.

To paraphrase the president, “yes, they can.”

Take away the last two stunted seasons, where would have had difficulty putting points on the board against a team of junior high cheerleaders, and averages close to 30 points per game since 2001.

Over the last four years, while State cobbled together just 22 (19 of that coming in a 19-14 win in 2007), posted 79 points.

’s offense under new coordinator showed signs of evolving last week against . The Tigers played with much greater confidence and poise.

The infusion of speed in the person of SEC freshman adds a new dimension to the Tiger backfield.

Byrum seems to have rectified the yips that plagued his sophomore season and kicked the ball with greater authority.

’s defense won’t hold to three points again, and that  bodes well for the Tigers.

will likely be better on offense under Mullen, but the down side for the Bulldogs is that should be significantly improved under Malzhan.

is probably two touchdowns a game better on offense than they were at this point last season.

With the Tiger defense holding State in check, that boosted confidence and production will be more than enough.

Even if that supposition turns out not to be true, the tale told in Saturday intangibles points to the Bulldogs’ demise.

When took the field against Jackson State on Saturday, the team performed a choreographed dance routine that included more moves than a Lady Gaga video.

The pre-game dance ended with players jumping in unison and barking. One word came to mind as the spectacle unfolded: undisciplined.

The Bulldogs were just that.

committed a dozen penalties that cost them 152 yards. The Bulldogs put the ball on the ground four times, losing two. Bulldog kicker Sean Brauchle missed two very makeable field goals, one from 38 yards and another from 37.

Those are the kinds of things that will get you killed in the SEC.

faced a tougher opponent than did in week one and showed greater poise in completing its assignments.

At home, under the lights, that gives the Tigers more than enough of an advantage.

The Tigers should pull away down the stretch and give his first SEC win and a realistic shot at opening his tenure 4-0.