KEVIN STEELE: Yeah, I mean, I don’t know the specific numbers. I’ve kept up with who is at practice and who is not, but I’m not at this point in time, I don’t have them in front of me. So I would be giving you misinformation trying to remember.
Q. Ladarius Tennison started at Mississippi State. Just wondered how he played, and do you see him starting in the Bowl game? And also, the secondary, are you guys going to be up to full speed in the secondary for the Bowl?
KEVIN STEELE: Ladarius played really, really good. He played like a starter. We do see him starting at the star position in this game. He really has just progressed and is a very good football player. Yes, we see that.
What was the other part of your question?
Q. I was going to ask you about the secondary.
KEVIN STEELE: Yeah.
Q. Healthy? You’re ready to go in the secondary?
KEVIN STEELE: We’re a little banged up. Sherwood is probably the biggest question. He had a little ankle injury and so he’s a little bit of a question but there’s a chance. There’s a chance.
Q. I know you were talking about possibly moving an off-field coach into an on-field role for this game. Is that something you still foresee happening?
KEVIN STEELE: We did that, actually, just for a game day headset. And then we had a positive graduate assistant and so we had to get someone in that could coach the scout team.
So Brandon Fisher is going to move on to the active coaching roster. That’s more for a headset reason and communication on game day than it was actually coaching or coaching practice, because he helped run the scout team. But game day, we needed him on the headset because we are down one with the headset, obviously.
Q. You’ve had a week to prepare. How did you go about it, and are they similar in any fashion offensively to any teams you’ve encountered in the SEC in recent years?
KEVIN STEELE: In terms of their scheme, they are a little bit like Georgia schematically. And maybe in some ways
Kentucky. I would say most similar would probably be Kentucky in terms of schematically. They are very, very, very well-coached. They play extremely hard. They do not beat themselves. They execute very well.
Q. How do you compartmentalize preparing for this game and weighing the uncertain future with a new coaching staff coming in and whether or not assistants will be retained and all that?
KEVIN STEELE: Right. Well, that’s a good question, and it is compartmentalized. There’s the personal side of it and it involves your family and the other families on the staff and then there’s our players.
This has got to be all about the players and helping them be successful on game day. We’ll cross that other when it’s time — that bridge, when we get to it. We are not to that. We have to get through this game and represent Auburn well and give everything we have to Auburn and to players here, and don’t allow anything else to be a distraction. I mean, we owe that to each other as a team, as a team, as a staff, to each other. And it’s really not as hard as what people might think it would be.
Q. How much contact have you had with Coach Harsin and has he been out there watching any of the practices?
KEVIN STEELE: Well, it’s been minimal because obviously he has a lot on his plate. So he’s doing what he does and we’re doing something totally separate and they are not joined at this point in time.
But I’ve seen him around the building, and then we’ve had — he had a Zoom conference call with all of us. And then he’s been around some of the players. I think it’s good that they are getting to see him and get a feel for him.
But other than that, it really has not, you know, been in terms of — he’s here. So he’s kind of involved in the Bowl. He’s allowed us to keep that totally separate from him.