Five Tigers named to preseason All-SEC third team

Georgia and Alabama led the way with 14 selections, followed by LSU.

Five Auburn Tigers were selected to the preseason All-SEC third team on Tuesday.

Running back [autotag]Jarquez Hunter[/autotag], tight end [autotag]Luke Deal[/autotag], offensive guard [autotag]Kam Stutts[/autotag], cornerback [autotag]Nehemiah Pritchett[/autotag], and punter [autotag]Oscar Chapman[/autotag] received the honor after being selected by SEC coaches. No players on Auburn’s roster cracked the first or second team.

[autotag]Jarquez Hunter[/autotag] may be the name most familiar to Auburn fans. The junior tailback is coming off a strong season in 2022, totaling 899 all-purpose yards and nine touchdowns. He should be a focal point of [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag]’s offense in 2023, and it wouldn’t be a very big surprise to see him jump up to the second, or even first team by season’s end.

Senior tight end [autotag]Luke Deal[/autotag] has yet to see significant playing time during his Auburn career but brings leadership and experience to an Auburn locker room filled with new faces. Deal also has an opportunity to break out with [autotag]Payton Thorne[/autotag], who threw for 546 passing yards and four touchdowns to tight ends in 2022.

Guard [autotag]Kam Stutts[/autotag] has been locked in a positional competition all camp long. The sixth-year lineman was shaky in 2022 but will hope to have a starting role throughout the season on a revamped offensive line.

The lone Auburn defensive player to be selected by SEC coaches to the preseason All-Conference team, cornerback [autotag]Nehemiah Pritchett[/autotag] has been a key member of Auburn’s secondary for the past three seasons, totaling 89 tackles, 4.5 TFL, 25 PD, and two interceptions in that span.

Aussie punter [autotag]Oscar Chapman[/autotag] rounds out the Auburn selectees. The senior punter’s boot has been electric at times during his tenure on the plains. Chapman averaged 43.9 yards per punt last year, sending 12 of them over 50 yards.

Auburn’s five selections to the All-Conference team were among the lowest in the SEC. Georgia and Alabama led the way with 14 selections a piece, with LSU closely trailing behind with 11 players selected.

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Auburn to play exciting SEC schedule in 2024 according to On3 Roundtable

The latest episode of the On3 Roundtable breaks down Auburn’s 2024 schedule, which is headlined by a date with Oklahoma at Jordan-Hare Stadium.

The SEC released its conference schedule for the 2024 football season last week, and it has created extensive conversation.

Many annual matchups are going by the wayside in favor of more diverse contests, and Auburn is no different. The Tigers’ annual meeting with LSU is gone, but there is still plenty of excitement.

AuburnLive’s Justin Hokanson joined a recent episode of On3 Roundtable to give his thoughts on Auburn’s schedule.

“It’s exciting right,” Hokanson said. “You know, to be able to play with one of the newcomers right off the bat and to get them in Jordan-Hare is cool. Whether it would have been Oklahoma or Texas, I don’t think it would have mattered. So, I think that’s just a cool opportunity for Auburn to host Oklahoma in [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag]’s second season.”

Hokanson gave his thoughts on Auburn’s returning matchups and some of the other teams the Tigers will not see annually.

“The rest of the schedule, you know, you got Alabama and Georgia as you normally do,” Hokanson said. “You’ve got A&M and Arkansas, who you’ve been playing. Really the biggest differences in the ‘24 schedule — now granted, we don’t know past ’24, because it could go to nine games, but just for ‘24 — no LSU for the first time since 1991.

“No Ole Miss for the first time since 1989. And no Mississippi State for the first time since 1954. So those three teams were always a part of the West in the new SEC, but even going back, Auburn played the Mississippi schools a ton. It’s the first time that they won’t play one of those three, since like the 30s.”

Hokanson also gave his thoughts on Auburn not seeing the Bayou Bengals every year.

“So that’s the biggest difference is not having Ole Miss, Mississippi State, or LSU on the schedule and that LSU game really had grown into a really awesome rivalry since the mid-90s,” Hokanson said. “Really took off in the 2000s with (Tommy) Tubberville and (Nick) Saban and they just had some classics over the years. So, you take that one out, you move Oklahoma in, which is a new one, but Auburn fans, I mean, the new age of college football, they’re not too attached. I mean, they’re attached to Georgia, Alabama.”

Auburn’s schedule will be new, but it will surely be entertaining.

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Four-star LB Joseph Phillips commits to Auburn over Georgia, Tennessee

The Tuskegee product has elected to stay close to home by committing to Auburn.

[autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag] was not messing around when he said recruiting would be his top priority after taking over the Auburn football program in December.

Just days after Auburn landed the commitments of Kensley Faustin and Bryce Cain, the Tigers picked up the commitment of [autotag]Joseph Phillips[/autotag], a four-star linebacker from the state of Alabama.

According to 247Sports, Phillips has a composite rating of 0.9427. He is the No. 125 player overall, the No. 10 linebacker nationally and the No. 8 player in the state of Alabama.

The Tuskegee, Alabama, native attends Booker T. Washington High School where he recorded 75 tackles, 19 tackles for loss, nine sacks, two forced fumbles, four fumble recoveries and one defensive touchdown in 2022. Additionally, he caught 29 passes for 336 yards and six touchdowns.

Phillips chose Auburn over Clemson, Georgia, Tennessee and Texas A&M.

Phillips is the eighth player and the first linebacker to join Auburn’s 2024 recruiting class, which is ranked No. 24 nationally according to 247Sports.

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Jarquez Hunter listed among underrated SEC players

Hunter is considered an “under the radar” player to the outside world but could become a popular name in 2023.

Now that three-year starter [autotag]Tank Bigsby[/autotag] is preparing for the NFL, it is time for Jarquez Hunter to take the reigns of the top spot on the running back depth chart for the Auburn Tigers.

Hunter has made his mark on Auburn football in a short time. Hunter has rushed for 1,268 yards and 10 touchdowns off of 193 carries in two seasons at Auburn, he rushed for 668 yards and seven touchdowns in 2022. He is considered an “under the radar” player now but could become a popular name within the college football world once the season begins.

An article from Mike Farell Sports titled “Underrated Players: SEC Edition” was written by Luke Brumm and included Hunter as Auburn’s selection on the list. Brumm says that Hunter could etch his name into Auburn lore this season.

Jarquez Hunter was in Tank Bigsby’s shadow last season, but it’s his time now. The running back went for 668 yards on 104 attempts and added 7 touchdowns. I see him becoming a 1,000-yard rusher next season.

Bigsby will leave a big spot to fill in the Auburn offense, but Hunter will have some help. Hunter will be joined in the running back room by sophomore [autotag]Damari Alston[/autotag], USF transfer [autotag]Brian Battie[/autotag], and incoming freshman [autotag]Jeremiah Cobb[/autotag].

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Predicting every week 3 SEC game

What do you think about these predictions?

Week two had some wild outcomes in the SEC.

Arkansas beat no. 15 Texas like a drum. South Carolina hit a walk-off field goal to beat East Carolina. No. 7 Texas A&M survived a scare from Colorado and lost starting QB Haynes King in the process. Mississippi State hammered NC State. And Vanderbilt, who I still have no faith in, managed to pull out a win over Colorado State. I went 10-3 on my picks in the Southeastern Conference to put me at 19-6 (76%) on the season. This week, there are a lot more intriguing matchups on paper.  Let’s dive in.

Here are my predictions for the week three slate.

Auburn’s new offensive scheme takes pressure off their weakest unit

How much can Mike Bobo and his new scheme help improve the offensive line play?

Death. Taxes. Auburn fans talking about how the offense is going to get better.

Over the past two seasons, expectations of Auburn’s offense have been squandered by offensive line play. Last season, it might have been the unit that put the final nail in Gus Malzahn’s coffin. Offenses can’t run the ball without an offensive line. Quarterbacks can’t have time to throw the ball deep without an offensive line. So how does Mike Bobo and his new scheme help improve the offensive line play?

Mike G of the War Rapport joined Zac Blackerby with the Locked on Auburn podcast to talk about how much the offensive line will benefit from this new Mike Bobo scheme.

“I expect to see a scheme that helps (the offensive line) out quite a bit this year,” Mike G said on Locked On Auburn. “A scheme that is not dependent on slow developing, run play-action plays, they’ll get the ball out of the quarterbacks hands. The scheme will take a little bit of pressure off of these guys. And then in games one, two, and four (Akron, Alabama State, Georgia State), i expect that we will see some new guys rotating into the lineup. Hopefully Auburn is in a position where they can see some new guys in action and then find out what kind of depth they have at offensive line. In the past when, say, a left tackle has gotten injured, Auburn has had a merry-go-round at that spot, taking guys out of their natural position, instead of actually letting the backup left tackle step in. I’m looking forward to seeing more depth because we’ve been one guy deep on offensive line since 2017.

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Another writer takes a shot at Bo Nix

Another writer takes a shot at Bo Nix

The varying opinions from writers on Auburn quarterback Bo Nix spread far and wide.

On Wednesday, Connor O’Gara, Senior National Columnist for Saturday Down South and host of the Saturday Down South Podcast gave his five biggest gripes about the preseason all-SEC teams, and Nix being listed as the third-team all-SEC quarterback was his biggest complaint.

Here’s what he had to say.

Sorry. At best, Nix is a middle-of-the-pack SEC quarterback. It’s pretty simple — he’s been solid at home and horrendous on the road. In 2 seasons, he has yet to finish in the top 8 in the SEC in quarterback rating, yards per attempt and completion percentage. A guy who has yet to have a season-long average of 7.0 yards per attempt OR 60% accuracy would be excusable if he was prolific as a runner. But Nix has yet to hit 400 rushing yards in a season. Nix has mechanical flaws that haven’t been corrected, despite the fact that he’ll enter 2021 with more experience than any returning SEC quarterback.

If we’re being honest, experience is why Nix got this preseason honor. Yes, it was a brutal year for preseason All-SEC quarterbacks. That’s why only 3 SEC quarterbacks were in attendance, including the 2 others who got preseason All-SEC love (Matt Corral and JT Daniels). I’d rather give that to Connor Bazelak, who was better than Nix in 2020, and with less talent around him.

I’d even rather give it to Myles Brennan or Max Johnson, both of whom showed more potential in their limited starts than Nix has in 2 seasons. Of course, quarterbacks in a battle don’t get that type of preseason love. Tua Tagovailoa wasn’t a preseason All-SEC quarterback in 2018 despite the fact that he delivered one of the best moments in college football history a few months earlier.

If you’re wondering why Bryce Young didn’t get that recognition, it’s because hasn’t started yet, though his bank account surely doesn’t reflect that. The same probably goes for Emory Jones, though he at least has half a season’s worth of snaps as a decent SEC quarterback.

Nix is a familiar name, and in a year in which there aren’t many of those, he stood to benefit the most.

The ballot only allowed media members to choose from the seven SEC quarterbacks that have significant starting experience in the SEC (JT Daniels, Matt Corral, Emory Jones, Bo Nix, Connor Bazelak, Will Rogers, and Ken Seals).

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Running back Damari Alston commits to the Auburn Tigers

The Tigers just landed a big-time running back!

Auburn has landed four-star running back Damari Alston after he announced his decision on his Instagram Sunday afternoon.

Alston, from College Park, Georgia, selected Bryan Harsin and the Auburn Tigers over LSU and Northwestern. He is a 5-foot-10, 205-pound back that can do it all.

Last season, Alston rushed for 1,507 yards and 25 touchdowns on 224 touches while adding 229 receiving yards and two scores on just 22 catches.

Auburn emerged as the favorite to land Alston’s services as several predictions came in for the Tigers. His relationship with Auburn running backs coach Carnell Williams appeared to be a factor.

Alston is the seventh member of Auburn’s 2022 signing class. He joins quarterback Holden Geriner, tight end Micah Riley-Ducker, wide receiver Jay Fair, linebacker Powell Gordon, safety Caleb Wooden, and kicker Alex McPherson.

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The HIPAA Screen

Was there a HIPAA violation at SEC media days?

This is by John Carvalho. He is a professor emeritus of journalism at Auburn University. He taught sports journalism and other courses there for 18 years.

For more than a year, the COVID virus has provided sports journalists with a variety of new challenges, both ethical and professional.

As we approach the 2021 college football season, and questions of vaccination remain, the debate is whether such questions are acceptable.

Every time a question comes up about an athlete’s or a coach’s vaccination, someone will warn against violating the individual’s privacy, and the term “HIPAA” will come up. The initials refer to the Health Insurance Portability and Privacy Act, which protects health information.

It’s a smokescreen. Health information is private and cannot be disclosed without the individual’s permission, but asking for the information does not constitute a violation.

It’s surprising that we don’t see the “HIPAA” play call more often. Constantly, questions are asked about players’ physical condition. Under this misinterpretation, Sharife Cooper’s ankle could have kept a squad of attorneys busy last season.

But of course, Sharife’s ankle is not the center of a politicized health concern, and in fact, athletes sign a release permitting the release of such information, but any time the topic is COVID, the first casualty is rational discussion.

So when Bryan Harsin was reported to have declined comment on whether he was vaccinated, the dividing line was set, with about half of the folks disappointed that he didn’t say and the other half saying that it was his right to not answer it under HIPAA.

My main disappointment was not Harsin’s personal vaccination status. He could have private reasons, including previous infection, for not answering. I wish he had made more of a public appeal for folks to get vaccinated, given the increasing hospitalizations and low vaccination rate in Alabama. He could do that without referencing his own status.

That got lost in the HIPAA smoke. Harsin was criticized for his lack of proactiveness on COVID and it somehow mashed up with the HIPAA debate. In my case, I’m guessing some folks thought that when I was talking about “leadership on the issue,” I was referring to his own getting vaccinated rather than using his platform.

Obviously, the question, from Giana Han of Alabama Media Group, was not a HIPAA violation; she was simply doing her job, asking a question that she knew readers were curious about. Harsin’s response, wise or unwise, was within his rights. He might have considered his introductory statements about working through team doctors to inform players to carry the rest of the issue, but he could have gone further.

I discussed the HIPAA issue a few years ago when Adam Schefter of ESPN published Jason Pierre-Paul’s medical records after Paul had a finger amputated following a fireworks accident. In a column, I speculated that Schefter was not guilty of a HIPAA violation, though whoever passed the records along to Schefter certainly was.

Schefter was guilty, in my opinion, of an ethical violation, by publishing private information, even if he did not bear the legal responsibility. His decision was that his audience would want to know such details, so he published the records (literally). I would not have chosen to go that far.

A similar double standard exists with college injuries. Fans want to know the medical condition of top players, private or not. Let’s stay that the situation was different, that under HIPAA or under FERPA–which covers all student records–a student-athlete could request that the specifics of an injury not be divulged, with just the game missed being reported (as is the case often with disciplinary suspensions).

Would fans be as understanding toward the athletes as they are toward coaches and their vaccination choices? Would they be equally understanding toward athletes from rival schools? Or would they ignore the players’ privacy and insist that all such information be released, even if their preferences represented a double standard?

Such is the craziness that likely will continue as long as COVID is with us. The problem will be with the variants–not only of the virus but also of the ethics media apply and fans demand in reporting it.

Preseason SEC Football Media Poll announced

Auburn received little love from the media.

The annual Preseason SEC Football Media Poll, as well as the preseason All-SEC team, was announced early on Friday morning.

Alabama led the way with 16 representatives on the Preseason All-SEC Team, including eight on the first team – six on defense. Georgia and Auburn had 10 members selected to the Preseason All-SEC Team, while Texas A&M had seven.

Eight times since 1992 has the predicted champion prior to the season proceeded to win the SEC Championship Game.

Let’s take a look at the standings as projected by the media.