football


29
Oct 11

Ole Miss at Auburn

Big day today, as we head out to campus with the in-laws in tow. We tailgated with the nice folks from Gameday for Heroes. They’ve helped put donated tickets into the hands of more than 1,200 troops and their families this year. That’s a full infantry battalion. Just an amazing job they’ve done this year.

At the tailgate we saw Ken, for whom I worked at al.com. He was done on a campus tour with one of his kids. Ken graduated from Auburn with a master’s degree. His uncle attended Auburn. His great-grandfather was at Auburn before the Great War. And now another generation of their family maybe enrolling their next year.

We also saw our friend Wendy, who made it into town for the game. Her parents were there, and they’re lovely folks.

We made it into the stadium in time to find seats way up high in the end zone, watched the eagle flight, the band play and the football game unfold before us. Auburn ran out a 17-0 lead and found themselves tied at the end of a first half that felt very unsatisfying.

There was some question about what the second half might hold. Ole Miss had been outscored 77-21 in the 3rd quarter this year. Auburn was on the wrong side of a 55-40 equation for their season’s third quarter efforts. But the Tigers reeled off 24 unanswered points on their way to a 41-23 victory (that garbage time score by Ole Miss shouldn’t have even been allowed, technically). So the Tigers are 6-3, having escaped a murderous October with three wins — two of which were unexpected. Auburn is bowl eligible. Not bad for a team that started fall camp with 54 (!!!) freshmen on the roster. Twenty-one of them played in the season opener, the first collegiate game of their career.

That extra practice leading up to a bowl game is going to be a great addition to the 2012 prospects. But let’s not get ahead of things. There are still three more games to go in this year. And there are also pictures from Ole Miss.

Here’s T’Sharvan Bell, after intercepting a Randall Mackey pass and returning it 41 yards, setting up an Auburn field goal:

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At least his hand is in focus.

Aubie had fun with Ole Miss’ rebellious mascot issue.

Aubie

Kiehl Frazier carries for a minimal gain. Defenses are keying on him when he’s in the game. The freshman quarterback is going to have to stand up and throw the ball eventually.

Frazier

Dyer found his way into the end zone on this score.

Dyer

He finished the night 13th all time in school rushing. He’s on pace to finish the year 10th. He’s a sophomore, at Running Back U. He’s that good.

The Yankee and her parents, enjoying the game:

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More from the game tomorrow.


22
Oct 11

Syrup Sop

One fine fall day each year, usually in October, and always when Auburn is playing on the road, nearby Loachapoka holds their annual Syrup Sopping. The town of less than 200 grows by something like 15,000 percent for crafts, music, visiting and, of course, the local syrup.

Amazing how much this has grown in the last decade or so. Syrup Sopping started in 1972 and it is nothing like I remember from undergrad, at least in terms of the size. It takes an hour just to get down there now.

But, then, Loachapoka has always been a town of extremes. It was a boomtown that became a small town. At one point in the mid-19th century this was the largest town in this part of the state, because of the railroad.

The town gets its name from the Creek Indian, and means either land where turtles live or are killed. The first white settler came in 1836, and the natives moved west, mostly to Oklahoma, some willingly, some by force of treaty or arms.

Jefferson Davis ate in the town, Stephen Douglas campaigned there against Abraham Lincoln. They mustered more than three regiments during the Civil War.

After the depression of 1873, a massive fire that same decade and alternate railways coming online the place all but dried up.

They saw their first airplane in 1917. Imagine how that must have felt to a bunch of farmers.

You just can’t get better syrup from sorghum and ribbon cane, which is the basis of the festival and what brings you back for more. There’s crafts and food and even a little music, but the syrup and the honey, that’s the point.

Over at one of the antebellum homes they set up a gooseneck trailer as a stage. Someone’s 10-year-old son’s band was playing in the afternoon. They were a rock band. Didn’t get to see them, but here is their Facebook page, where you’ll learn they’ve played three gigs. So, they are young, but they have the terminology down.

We did see a bluegrass band, Volume 5 that was quite good. The vocalist could do a fair impression of Dan Tyminski, as the man standing next to me observed “He sounds just like them Soggy Bottom Boys. What was it, ‘O Brother, Where Art Thou?’ That was the name of that song!”

Well, no, that was the movie, which also had a song Tyminski reprised. While he was a little short on details, he had a good ear.

And then Volume 5 thought they’d lighten the mood by covering “You’ll Never Leave Harlan Alive.”

It was about as inspiring as the Auburn game. LSU is good, Auburn is young, can’t block, was on the road with a new starting quarterback in Clint Moseley who noted that “Sulligent’s defense was fast too.” Sulligent being the last team he played in high school. After the game he said he thought Sweet Water was fast, but the top college football team in the nation was in a different league than the traditional 2A high school powerhouse.

Woof.

Auburn will have better days. No one expected anything but a visit to the woodshed this week at Baton Rouge, but still. If not for a garbage-time touchdown this would have been the biggest blowout since 1948. The Truman administration! That’s pre-Shug Jordan.

As it was, the 45-10 loss is merely the biggest since the second George W. Bush administration and the 2008 finale against Alabama. Things got better after that pretty quickly, and they’ll turn around for these guys too.

They’ve survived their stout October schedule, winning two more games in that stretch than many thought they would. There’s talent for the future, but they’re still growing up today. Next week Auburn hosts Ole Miss, who’ve lost 10 conference games in a row. With a win over the Rebels Auburn would be eligible for a bowl game already.

Even still, it was a hard one to watch. LSU is good. And so now I’m looking forward to the inevitable disappointment of the 1 vs. 2 LSU-Alabama game in a few weeks.


16
Oct 11

Catching up

Fan shots from Jordan-Hare Stadium.

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Cats, food, people and many more photos here.


15
Oct 11

Florida at Auburn

Lemonier

Suddenly Auburn’s defense is looking worthy, mostly on the strength of a young and angry defensive line, led tonight by Corey Lemonier. This was Florida’s first pass of the game, where they thought they’d challenge a defender deep. The pass was intercepted, and that was the biggest threat of the night from the Gators.

Auburn’s offense is still struggling, but the defense, the special teams and a few odd calls from officials kept an inept Florida team at bay. In the end, the Tigers won 17-6. It should have been at least 23-6, or perhaps 27-6.

Binoculars

It wasn’t the best game to see — a common theme in college football today, based on what I was able to see — but it was a win. Auburn used all three of their quarterbacks and generated less than 300 yards, but held the misfiring Gators to less than 200.

Auburn wasn’t expect to win any games during this stretch of October, but they’ve won two. They are now 5-2 on the year and headed next weekend into Baton Rouge for a big clash with LSU.

More here tomorrow.


12
Oct 11

Auburn exonerated; terms Bammerfreude, Urbanfreude, Mullenfreude coined

Cam

On a dark Thursday last November I remember finding myself in a tough spot, thinking: Either an institution I love or members of the journalism profession will be embarrassed.

Sorry national sportswriters, couldn’t happen to a better class of folks. From al.com:

The NCAA did not find any major rules violations in Auburn’s signing of quarterback Cam Newton and has concluded its investigation.

The NCAA enforcement staff also concluded its investigation into charges by four former players on HBO who accused the school of providing extra benefits. Again, it found no wrongdoing.

The NCAA issued a statement Wednesday saying it interviewed more than 50 people to see if Auburn provided Newton or his family improper benefits. The NCAA said it could not find any reason to keep the investigation open because its findings did not meet a “burden of proof” that Auburn did anything wrong in signing the quarterback who led the Tigers to the national title last season.

And, also:

The NCAA took some of the constant scrutiny to task, saying charges must “meet a burden of proof, which is a higher standard than rampant public speculation online and in the media.”

“The allegations must be based on credible and persuasive information,” the NCAA said.

As I would tell any journalism student, or anyone else: your assertion does not mean evidence.

Cam

(Apparently true to my word, I did not write much about this here over the last year. In the archives I find two mentions. One, here, just after this “story” broke and something else the night Newton declared for the NFL draft.)

Just because why not:

Toomers

War Eagle.