šŸ“” Overpaid coach, overbilled team is the Auburn story

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Auburn might drop completely out of the Top 25 after this loss. And maybe they should.

It didn't have to be pretty.

It didn't have to be convincing.

It didn't have to be anything except a win.

This was the most pivotal game of Auburn's season, and the Tigers stumbled and fumbled the season away.

There were so many chances. That's the frustrating thing about this Auburn offense. There are glimpses of something better, shadows of hope, rumors of talent.

There was a time not too long ago when Auburn quarterback Jarrett Stidham was considered a better quarterback than Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. Crazy but true.

Tua had four touchdown passes in the first half on Saturday against Arkansas. Stidham has five touchdown passes through six games.

The regression of Auburn's quarterback since his game-winning drive against Washington is striking. Is Stidham even better than Florida's Feleipe Franks at this point?

The game started with Auburn staring at a chance to get back into contention for the SEC West crown. LSU's loss to Florida just before kickoff in Starkville put Auburn closer to once again controlling its own destiny. It only took two drives of Auburn's offense to know the truth, though.

This offense is a fraud.



And Auburn's defense? The Tigers couldn't even control a newborn puppy at Davis Wade Stadium on Saturday. Never mind an angry Bulldog named Nick Fitzgerald.

Fitzgerald, State's tough-as-dirt quarterback, knew what needed to be done against Auburn. He had to sacrifice his body for the win. He did it, rushing for 195 yards on 28 carries and two touchdowns.

His first rushing touchdown came on a crucial fourth-and-1 play at the goal line at the end of the second quarter. With time expiring in the half, Fitzgerald smashed through a pair of Auburn defenders.

He bulldozed his way through Auburn's defense throughout the second half. Right up the middle. Every time. He then skipped into the end zone to give Mississippi State its game-clinching touchdown.

Stidham matched Fitzgerald's rushes with one overthrown pass after another.

The play calling was there. Malzahn and offensive coordinator Chip Lindsay drew up a few plays that should have been easy touchdowns. But Stidham couldn't connect.

He badly overthrew Darius Slayton in the first half on a trick play so perfect that Slayton was 20 yards wide open. Slayton was again wide open in the end zone with 11:39 left in the fourth quarter, but Stidham's pass was too high and Slayton had it knocked away trying get his toes inbounds.

Auburn had to settle for a field goal when it needed a touchdown.

Sometimes a season can come down to one play.

There were so many that went against Auburn here in Starkville, but the fumble by Auburn running back Boobee Whitlow felt like the killer. Whitlow lost possession while reaching for the goal line after a brilliant 41-yard rush that looked like it might just save a game and maybe Auburn's championship hopes in the process.

The play was ruled a fumble on the field. Was he in? The replay was inconclusive. The verdict is not.

Auburn overbilled itself this season, and probably overpaid its coach, too.

Overpaid coach, overbilled team is the Auburn story
 
If there was ever a test case about one game making a season, this would be the cautionary tale. Gus must have felt he won the biggest of all lotteries with back to back wins against better teams. Not only has his bank account found the perpetual fountain of youth but he's too rich to quit and much too tenured to be fired anytime soon. 7 years and 7 mil/year seem like a long time to pay a head coach to go away. Actually, now that the immediate future looks a lot like the past to these barners it may be far more entertaining just to observe how they learn to economically live with the idea that beating Bama does not a championship make.
 
Play calling...don’t know....execution seems more the culprit.....
Oline...is not good( understatement)
No RBs....
A QB is only as good as receivers and protection...
The D was wore out by fourth quarter.....
Tennessee is licking their chops ( who the hell...do we pull for though...)
......and the Gus Bus is on flat tires.....
 
I'm not rooting for a team but I'm in favor of one person--Pruitt--and it's only a 'by proxy' type of fandom.


I still take the utmost delight in knowing the last time Saban was shut out at home was when Bama did the trick for him in Baton Rouge with coach Fran. I will enjoy every second of a good Tenn beatdown, anytime, any place, anywhere, any coach.
 
PMARSHONAU: A baffling and distressing night for Auburn football

VIPBy PHILLIP MARSHALL17 hrs
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It was a play that defined what this season has been like for Auburn’s offense and quarterback Jarrett Stidham. And it was costly.

On third-and-one at its own 45 in the second quarter, Auburn called the perfect trick play. Boobee Whitlow was in the wildcat. The pitch went to back to Stidham. Darius Slayton was running all alone, far away from the nearest defender. But Stidham overthrew him. He could have underthrown it, and Slayton could have stopped, caught the ball and still scored.

It was baffling play, and not the last one, on a baffling night as No. 8 Auburn lost 23-9 to Mississippi State at Davis Wade Stadium.

Ryan Davis fumbled the first punt he tried to return and got it back. Then he fumbled the second one and did not get it back, leading to a disputed Mississippi State touchdown on the final play of the first half. Another drive died on a bad snap in the wildcat. After kicking a 46-yard field goal, Anders Carlson missed badly on a 49-yarder. Boobee Whitlow fumbled as he crossed the goal line on a 41-yard run.

For the third consecutive game, Auburn failed to break 100 yards rushing. For the first time since losing 14-6 at Clemson last season, Auburn did not score a touchdown. Mississippi State rushed for an astounding 349 yards, ran 74 plays to Auburn’s 59 and kept the ball for 41:53 to Auburn’s 18:07. Quarterback Nick Fitzgerald did his best Cam Newton impersonation, rushing for 195 yards on 28 carries.

Auburn simply did not play like a good team on either side of the ball, much less like the No. 8 team in the country. Mississippi State deserved to win. And Auburn deserved to lose. Mississippi State was more physical on both sides of the ball and played with more fire, more consistency and more confidence.

Defensive coordinator Kevin Steele, taking ā€œfull responsibilityā€ and vowing to ā€œget it fixed,ā€ said the defense’s struggles came from misfits against the run game and the poorest tackling in his tenure of two-plus seasons.

The offense showed signs of life, turning up the tempo and gaining 225 yards of offense in the second half, and gave itself ample opportunities. Like the call on the goal line at the end of the half, Whitlow’s fumble could have gone either way and was a crushing blow. A big play to the 30 resulted in a field goal. A drive inside the 10 resulted in a field goal. And a fourth-down pass went incomplete in State territory after a blocked field goal. Auburn mounted a last-gasp drive to the State 19, but Stidham was sacked on third down and threw an incompletion under pressure on fourth down.

At the end of the day Auburn gave away two certain touchdowns – on Whitlow’s run and on the overthrown pass to Slayton. Needless to say, those plays were crucial.

For much of the game, Auburn played like a team that was unsure of itself. Mississippi State played like a team that believed it was going to win and soon became convinced of it. The championship talk can be put away now. No, Auburn is not mathematically out of the race in the West. But to believe Auburn can win out from here is a stretch and a large one.

Other than presumably against Liberty in the 11th game of the season, if it plays anything like it did at Mississippi State, Auburn can lose to anybody on its schedule. That includes Tennessee next Saturday at Jordan-Hare Stadium, at Ole Miss and against Texas A&M at home. Georgia and Alabama on the road? That’s not even worthy of discussion at this point.

Gus Malzahn, nine months after signing a seven-year contract worth $49 million, isn’t going to be fired. But he is going take intense heat. That’s life.

Malzahn and his staff have some serious soul-searching to do. If there are answers to be found, they need to find them in a hurry. Are there any answers? If there aren’t, a disappointing first half of the season is going to turn into a full-blown disaster.

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Maybe these Tigers never were going to be a championship contender. But they should have been better than they were Saturday against a team that had lost to Kentucky and Florida at home and 49-10 at Jordan-Hare Stadium last season.

It was distressing night for Auburn players, Auburn coaches and Auburn fans. And the bitter taste won’t soon go away.
 
The barn should get the RB to change his name 1st thing on Monday......Boobee Whitlow...C'Mon Man.....Bobby Whitlow or just Bo Whitlow would be even better.

" I'm not a smart man Jenny but I know a stupid contract when I see one"....Forrest Gump. How in the hell could anybody commit that much money to any coach not named Saban or Urban with that much buyout? Gus used that Arkansas leverage for a ton of money.
 
Hell, according to Auburn's standard's (see last year before the UCF game), Gus gonna get another extension and a few more million stacked on to his contract if they keep this up. :devil:
 
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