Auburn


4
Sep 11

A funny thing happened on the way to Harvey Updyke’s trial

Let’s be honest. This hasn’t been about the individual who allegedly poisoned the historic oaks at Toomer’s Corner since he discovered a talk radio host would put him on the air. This hasn’t been about the oaks themselves since the day he first appeared in court.

This is about Auburn’s people.

Auburn University has gone to great lengths and expense to save the oaks. The campus experts have consulted with some of their best peers in the country. The community grieved a bit, accepted the support and condolences of friends near and far and is moving on in a wait-and-see environment.

The university decided in mid-summer that they would allow for Toomer’s Corner to be rolled again this fall. The cleanup was the concern, they said, and the firm that does the cleaning would no longer use a pressure wash system, but would clean the trees by hand.

And so football is here. There’s new signage everywhere. Many things in town and on campus are unchanged, as they often are. Many things in town and on campus are new, as they often are. The Tigers won their home opener; fans rolled Toomer’s Corner.

But it all feels different now.

Opinions varied when the roll on announcement was made. Some were ready to continue the tradition. Others counseled restrain. More than a few groups volunteered to help with the cleaning. It was time, they said to themselves, to demonstrate a new kind of contribution to a place they appreciate. After the season’s first game, some of them followed through and helped with the cleanup. Volunteers came and went, working alongside the professional cleaning company for a brief time. It rained and the mushy paper turned even more fragile.

But the health of the trees and the soaked cellulose are the only things around Toomer’s Corner that are fragile. The spirit is strong.

Toomers

What makes history?

I thought a lot about that while we helped clean up the celebration today. We decided, for our part, that we’d clean a little farther down College Street.

That tree above grows near Langdon Hall and, while it is a bit younger than the Toomer’s Oaks, it has a history of its own. Inside Langdon Hall they debated secession. Near this spot is where students of another generation heard President Roosevelt ask for a declaration of war over a loudspeaker after Pearl Harbor was bombed in 1941. Near here is the lathe that commemorates Auburn’s role in the Civil War as a hospital and who’s young men served. Recovered from Selma and presented to Auburn in 1952, it has been the site of endless ghost tales these last 60 years. Near this spot many young couples have been engaged, another was recently married and, during my time in school, I asked a nice girl out on a date and she agreed. That’s a lot of history, too.

None of those things belong to a tree, but to the people of Auburn.

LangdonHall
The greatest generation would help clean up after a Toomer’s Corner celebration.

They’re calling it Unrolling Toomer’s. It is going to grow slowly, but there’s enthusiasm there. It requires garbage bags, a few yard tools, gloves and work, hard work.

As all good traditions, it has started informally, organically and by word of mouth. Unrolling Toomer’s is late Sunday mornings, or after church lets out, and you simply clean until you’ve had your share. Some picked a little, others cleaned up pounds of the stuff.

No one ran anyone off, and the cleaning company doesn’t mind the help. Unrolling Toomer’s started small, but there will be a few more volunteers on College Street next week. There will be more the time after that. One day there might be great crowds, hopefully including you, and perhaps big cheers. This should be as much of a celebration as rolling the corner.

After all, this is about the people. These particular good-natured people think it is great to be an Auburn Tiger.


3
Sep 11

After the game …

We bumped into Trooper Taylor, who is Auburn’s wide receiver coach, assistant-head coach and a top-notch recruiter. When you talk to him for more than two minutes and get a sense of his enthusiasm it isn’t hard to see why. We’re going to celebrate Thanksgiving with him this year, the joke goes. He just doesn’t know it yet.

He’s seen The Yankee cycling around town, and remembers where. He works with young men for a living, he’s clearly having a ball and it is hard not to see, and reflect, his enthusiasm when you’re around him.

And if you take a picture with him, he insists you wear his championship ring.

Ring

“Hold it up like bling,” Taylor said. He knows my personality so well.

I looked at him, he is a former college wide receiver himself, and wondered Can you outrun me?

Trooper Taylor gives off the impression of a man living the dream, who likes to share it with everyone around him.


3
Sep 11

Football: Auburn hosts Utah State

Our friend Brian came down to crash last night. he was working today’s game for al.com. He sat up in the press box and then worked his way down to the field for the game’s big finish. It is a tough job he has there.

This is at Tiger Walk, where I saw a handful of people who’d jockeyed for the better part of an hour move aside so a little boy could get a right on the rope line to see his football heroes. And then they moved again so a young man in a wheelchair could have a nice view. Auburn people, in their environment, are so incredibly gracious it just makes you proud to be a part of the place.

These things would no doubt happen in other places, too. It isn’t a judgement, merely a statement. Anyway. Tiger Walk. The players walk down the two blocks from the athletic department and into the stadium, fans line up in the thousands to cheer them on. Here are two of them:

TigerWalk

We set out to tailgate with friends, who tried to upgrade our tickets. We already have good seats for the season, so we gave them back. Somehow and for some reason they gave us some more, which upgraded our tickets to the scholarship level. So we’re in the Nelson Club. This is a tilt-shift shot from my phone looking into the south end zone:

TiltShift

Aubie, if you hadn’t heard, stole the crystal football during the off-season. You can see all of his exploits here. He was finally “caught” by the canine training unit on campus. During the pre-game they showed a video of his confrontation with the football coach. Aubie was ashamed and scared, two new components of his personality that you don’t normall see in the character. (The Aubie character is quite defined.) And then, a moment later, he ran the crystal football onto the field.

Aubie

Now it is on permanent display in the Lovelace Museum. Just before Aubie “returned” the missing trophy, The Yankee and I had a run-in with the football ourselves. That wasn’t a typical part of your gameday experience.

Blake

The first touchdown of the year, Barrett Trotter found Emory Blake for a 56-yard touchdown. Blake finished with three catches for 95 yards.

Utah State’s new quarterback had a field day for the Aggies. Chuckie Keeton completed 21 passes for 213 yards. He’s throwing here to Michael Smith, who had 65 total yards,

Aggies

Auburn’s defense is talented, but young. And young is overselling it. They’re brand new. Only four of these guys had serious playing time last year and just two started.

Defense

If you’ve ever wondered if it would be cool to be a freshman and return a kickoff 97 yards for a score in your first ever collegiate game, just ask Tre Mason about that feeling:

Mason

BCS MVP Mike Dyer had a “quiet” day, in part because Utah State took Auburn out of their game plan and dominated the Tigers’ line.

Dyer

Dyer gained 58 yards and had two scores, including the game winner with 30 seconds ont he clock. We talked to him for a minute after the game.

But what will Auburn do without Cam Newton!?!?

Aggies

Barrett Trotter went 17 of 23, including one poor throw and a lot of smart decisions to get rid of the ball when he had to. He picked up 261 yards passing and three touchdowns. He looked collected as he helped rally Auburn past upset-minded Utah State and created two scoring drives in the final three minutes to claim the win. Auburn is going to be fine at quarterback.

I suggested to The Yankee that part of why the team struggled was that she’d forgotten one of her rituals:

Aggies

But the Tigers didn’t give up and they found a way to win against Utah State. The Aggies wanted that win, and probably should have won. They controlled, if not dictated, the happenings of 55 minutes of play, but couldn’t hang on in the final minutes.

Auburn won 42-38, and they weren’t very happy about how it came to pass. Utah State left feeling dejected — you could see it on their kids’ faces as they stood with their handful of traveling fans. They should be proud. They played inspired football and were a great deal of fun to watch. There were more than a few Auburn folks congratulating them after their game, too.


2
Sep 11

Football, fans and feathers

No matter how good or bad your week, no matter what you’re planning to do, you’ll be hard pressed to find a better way to start your weekend than with the cuteness of owls:

owl

Or to watch people coo over hawks:

owl

Or to watch them race just over your head:

owl

And there’s no better way to enjoy an evening than having an amazing golden eagle — Nova, War Eagle VII — show off his stuff:

owl

The Raptor Center hosts an educational program on Friday evenings before home games in the fall. If you’ve never gone, I’d recommend it. We visit it a few times a year. Great for kids, too.

More pictures from the program will go up in the September photo gallery next week.


27
Aug 11

One week away from the 2011 season, we look back at 2010 …

To celebrate the kickoff of the 2011 football season, here’s a picture from every week of Auburn’s championship 2010 season.

Kodi Burns, quarterback turned receiver, scores the first touchdown of the season against Arkansas State, beating the visiting Indian-Red Wolves 52-26. The obscuring shaker just adds to the atmosphere:

Burns

Auburn was on the road for their second game, a 17-14 win over conference foe Mississippi State:

RV

The legend of Cam Newton begins in the 27-24 overtime win over visiting Clemson. After only three games he’d amassed 315 yards rushing, 525 yards passing and nine touchdowns. Even still, Clemson had to miss a field goal to allow Auburn to escape from their biggest scare of the early season.

Heisman

Auburn rallied past South Carolina. Linebacker Josh Bynes forced this fumble and secured an interception, each helping to turn the tide in a 35-27 victory. Cam Newton would be responsible for all five of Auburn’s scores, on the ground or through the air. Freshman tailback Michael Dyer gained 100 yards, proving to college football onlookers that the Tigers suddenly had too many weapons to defend.

Bynes

Auburn, now in top 10, improved to 5-0 with a tuneup win over Louisiana Monroe 52-3.

Flags

Auburn traveled to Kentucky and escaped the Bluegrass State on a Wes Byrum field goal as time expired. The Tigers orchestrated a 19-play, 86-yard drive in the final 7:22 to set up the game-winner. The 37-34 victory has been somewhat forgotten. All of these big scores, though, were only foreshadowing.

Nova

The game the scoreboard broke. Arkansas and Auburn set an SEC record for points scored in a regulation game. When everyone recovered from heart palpitations they discovered the guys in blue had emerged with a 65-43 victory that was a lot closer than the score suggested. Arkansas lost their starting quarterback early. No matter, the backup tossed it around for 332 yards and four scores. But in the end the stir he created was the man who would begin to show his Heisman bona fides. Cam Newton rushed for 188 yards and three scores and threw for 140 more yards and another score.

Heisman

And finally doubters would be satisfied. LSU brought one of the best defenses in the country into Jordan-Hare Stadium, and they were torched for 526 total yards, 440 of which Auburn gathered on the ground. Mike Dyer collected 100 yards rushing, but the man of the hour was the man wearing the number two.

Heisman

That’s the end of this famous run:

A thing of beauty is a joy forever.

After gunning down Arkansas and running over LSU, the season definitely took on a special feel. Up next was Ole Miss, who were just a mascot-less speed bump in the way of a juggernaut. Ole Miss was looking for a Halloween surprise, dressing up as a football team (albeit in new, gray unis) but Auburn took the win in Oxford 51-31. Cam Newton caught a touchdown pass from Kodi Burns. The Tigers were showing themselves to be:

Mural

Up next was Homecoming. Auburn hosted Tennessee-Chattanooga 62-24, improving to 10-0 on the season, ranked third in the nation and put up statistical superlatives across the board. Cam Newton, in just 30 minutes of play, set a personal best for passing yards. The Tigers put up 484 of offense in the first half, and eclipsed 600 yards offense for the second time of the season. It was the fifth time they’d scored more than 50 points on the season. Terrell Zachery found a career high for receiving yards, including this 80-yard touchdown reception.

T-Zac

Auburn clinched their appearance in the SEC Championship game in a 49-31 victory over Georgia in a controversial reunion of the Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry. And by controversial I mean that Auburn’s Nick Fairley had one late hit, was flagged for it, and Georgia whined and whimpered about it for the rest of the game. Then they tried to take him out late in the contest, which prompted a fight. Most of Georgia’s sideline stormed the field. Two of Auburn’s players were ejected in garbage time (and suspended for the first half of the upcoming Iron Bowl) and despite all of that, Auburn still won and Georgia looked like poor losers.

But on the day when Auburn earned the right to go to Atlanta, the Tigers’ offensive line deserved special recognition. Guys like Cameron Newton, well on his way to the Heisman Trophy, wouldn’t have accomplished all he did on the field without these guys:

OLine

Same story for Mike Dyer, who would in the Georgia game break Bo Jackson’s freshman rushing record:

And the same shot, as told by AUHD:

It was simultaneously the biggest choke ever by Alabama and the largest comeback by Auburn, as the Tigers finished their regular season a perfect 12-0 after the 28-27 victory.

In a year full of tremendous efforts, Antoine Carter may have saved the season on this play, shifting the momentum of the game inexorably into Auburn’s favor:

Some time after this a deranged individual would prove his poor decision making and self-worth by poisoning the trees at Toomer’s Corner.

Toomers

But before we knew that, it felt like this:

Half of Auburn was in Atlanta for the SEC Championship game against South Carolina. More of us were in the new Auburn Arena to watch a simulcast. The Tigers played their most complete game of the season, proving themselves a force while winning their first SEC Championship since 2004. Auburn thumped Steve Spurrier’s Gamecocks 52-17. More than a few of us grew misty-eyed when the score became 49-14 and we realized these Tigers would have a shot at football glory.

That night I wrote “For 1983, 1993 and 2004. For 270,000 alumni. For every coach and player from Shug to Gene. For Auburn and for ol’ API.”

The state’s newspapers the next day:

A month later Auburn faced Oregon in Arizona and brought home the national championship after Mike Dyer’s run:

… which was exhausting, and Wes Byrum lined up behind senior backup quarterback Neil Caudle to cinch the win:

Kodi Burns, the quarterback who so famously and selflessly said he’d move to wide receiver, unifying the team behind eventual Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton, scored the first touchdown in the season and the first touchdown in this game. From September through January, this team was a joy to watch.

And then there was the final celebration of the year at Toomer’s Corner:

War Eagle, and let’s kick off 2011.