Five ways Auburn’s offense can improve with a new coordinator

Here are five ways the offense can improve with a new offensive coordinator.

Mike Bobo has officially been let go by Auburn. Now, the offense faces several questions heading into the offseason.

First, obviously, the Tigers need to find a new offensive coordinator. Who that may be is still undecided. Second, there are questions about the efficiencies and the decisions that will be made for the offense in the future. Schematically, what changes for the Tigers? Is it similar to what Bobo ran? What does the team need to do to improve? Which players benefit the most from the upcoming changes?

Here are five ways Auburn’s offense can improve under their new coordinator.

Auburn is on pace to have its best rushing attack since 2013

Could we see the best rushing attack at Auburn since 2013?

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Tank Bigsby and Jarquez Hunter have been feasting over the course of these first three games.

Bigsby has cracked the century mark in every game so far. Hunter set the Auburn record for the longest touchdown run ever. Hunter also is second in the nation in yards per carry (12.6). Now, with a fourth of the season gone, Auburn is on pace to finish with its best rushing attack since 2013.

Auburn is currently averaging 287.3 rushing yards per game (seventh nationally). If the Tigers continue on the pace they are on, it will be the most rushing yards per game since the 2013 team averaged 328.3 rushing yards per game. The next closest is the 2016 team, which averaged 271.3 rushing yards per game.

Looking at the way Auburn’s offensive line is playing, I expect the Tigers to keep their foot on the gas with the rushing attack. Could we see two Auburn rushers eclipse 1,000 yards before the season ends?

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Five offensive keys for Auburn vs Penn State

Here are the five offensive keys for Saturday’s game against Penn State.

We’ve talked about it for months and now is the time for Auburn’s offense to step up on the road.

No. 22 Auburn travels up to Penn State to take on the 10th ranked Nittany Lions in a battle under the lights at Happy Valley. This is Auburn’s first road game against a Big Ten opponent in 90 years (1931).

Safe to say this is uncharted territory for Bryan Harsin’s Tigers. However, Auburn comes into this game with something the Tigers didn’t have very often last season: Confidence.

Auburn has been firing on all cylinders offensively through the first two games of the season. Auburn leads the nation in points per game (61.0) and is seventh in total yards per game (575.5). Granted, Auburn’s strength of schedule is last in the nation at 130th, but even that presents some challenges for Penn State. According to James Franklin, Auburn is a difficult opponent to assess because of how much they haven’t put on tape. What will Auburn try and do to move the ball effectively against this sound Penn State defense?

Here are the five offensive keys to the game for Auburn.

Report Card: Grading Auburn coming out of fall camp

As we head into game week, let’s take a look at every Auburn position group and grade them.

We’re almost a week away from Auburn football.

Auburn has had an up and down fall camp. At least according to the media. Bryan Harsin held a Zoom press conference and had a lot of positive things to say about the team and how they were progressing leading into this final fall practice.

As we head into game week, let’s take a look at every Auburn position group and grade them.

Auburn freshmen impact (No. 13: Tar’Varish Dawson)

Get to know Auburn freshman Tar’Varish Dawson.

This is the fourth article in a series detailing and ranking the incoming Auburn freshmen’s impact in 2021.

Name: Tar’Varish Dawson

Position: Wide Receiver

Height: 5’11”

Weight: 165 lbs

Hometown: Fort Meyers, Florida

High School: Lehigh Senior

Twitter: TarvarishD

His impact in 2021: In a young receiver room, Dawson may be hidden in the depth chart until 2022. However, he has tremendous upside as an athlete. He had eight receptions for 690 yards with nine touchdown catches and 290 rushing yards with six touchdown runs plus seven interceptions as a senior. He also had a punt return for a touchdown. Tar’Varish is a speedy athlete that could see the field in multiple ways during his time with the Tigers. Give him a year to get his feet wet.

No: 14 Cayden Bridges

No: 15 Dematrius Davis

No: 16 AD Diamond

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Please, Chad Morris! Release the Tank and let it loose

Auburn’s offense can only be as good as its running game and, right now, Chad Morris is holding that back.

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The stats out there right now showing how good Tank Bigsby has been for Auburn so far this season are mind-boggling. The biggest one is in missed tackles.

Per Sports Info Solutions, Bigsby is leading the country by making defenders miss 9.5 tackles per 25 rush attempts. The second closest? North Carolina’s Javonte Williams at 6.7.

Yet we haven’t seen the true power of Tank Bigsby because he is basically being held down. Despite averaging 6.9 yards per game on the ground against South Carolina, the true freshman received just 16 total carries. Bo Nix? Ran the ball 15 times. In the red zone, Chad Morris finally went to Bigsby in the first half, securing him his first career touchdown.

Yet Morris is basically ignoring what his strength is on offense. Even Gus Malzahn knows what he has.

“He looks like an Auburn running back to me,” Malzahn said on Tuesday. “He’s running with great passion and that’s a good thing. It fits, too. He’s been able to run the ball effectively. He’s broken tackles. Our offensive line really took that next step with running the football. We just need to keep building upon those things.”

Keep building on those things, in my opinion, means giving the ball to Bigsby more. Maybe the lack of a real fall camp is keeping Morris back from running the freshman more. Maybe it is just the fact that he is still new to the college game. Who knows what Morris is thinking in his play-calling.

Sure, it is cliche to say that Auburn’s offense is and always has been built around the ground game. Even if the arrival of Morris means more opportunity for Nix to throw the ball, why has that not changed after four games in which the quarterback has struggled — 54.9% completion percentage and five touchdowns to four interceptions — is beyond me.

It made sense that Nix threw the ball a lot against Georgia because the Tigers fell behind early and the Bulldogs were basically daring them to win through the air. Yet against Arkansas and South Carolina, with Bigsby (and D.J. Williams) able to move the ball on the ground, Morris made no adjustments. This isn’t an Air Raid attack. This isn’t Mike Leach’s offense. The Tigers are built to run the ball yet the offensive coordinator is still riding on the arm of mediocrity.

Maybe that will change after the loss against the Gamecocks. Bigsby had only 16 carries against South Carolina and shockingly no receptions. You have a stud in the backfield that is being kept grounded.

There’s a reason Alabama gives the ball to Najee Harris. He had 31 carries for 152 yards and a reception in the win against Georgia.

And there’s a reason why Malzahn used to ride the legs of Tre Mason and Kerryon Johnson.

It works and, so far, Morris’ plan for this offense isn’t. As long as defenses can set back and let Nix throw the ball 45-50 times a game, this offense won’t reach its potential.

It’s up to Auburn’s new offensive coordinator.

Everything Auburn OC Chad Morris said about Tigers offense

Chad Morris has put in charge of the Auburn offense in his first year as coordinator.

Auburn offensive coordinator Chad Morris met with the media on Thursday to discuss what he has seen from the Tigers offense so far during fall camp.

Here is everything he had to say:

Opening Statement

“First of all, it’s absolutely great to just get back to some football and some type of normalcy and be able to get back out on the field. With us not going through spring ball and having an opportunity to coach these guys on the field, it’s been a joy to be out there. It has been some challenging times, as we’ve all gone through for the past several months. I know our training staff and our medical staff, Dr. Goodlett, has been working overtime, and just big a thank you to them, because everybody is just all hands on deck and going full-speed ahead. I’m excited. We’ve gotten, I think, 12 practices in, and I’m really excited about moving forward.”

On a difficult year after leaving Arkansas

“It’s been some challenging times. That’s something you try to teach your own kids in life, that when things go bad and don’t go the way you planned, you pick yourself up and dust yourself off and you don’t flinch. That’s the great thing about this game, that it teaches you those valuable lessons.

“It’s been great. I’m telling you, I’ve been extremely excited to just get back out on the field coaching a position, coaching the offense and really just getting involved in being a part of that development and watching this team watching the growth happen every day. I’m extremely excited about it. I’m glad to be on the field and coaching football.”

On his success of developing quarterbacks

“Well, I think the first thing you have to do is that you have to simplify things as much as you possibly can. I’ve always felt, from a developmental standpoint, that when you coach these guys, it’s all about footwork. So everything we talk about generates with our feet and moves up our body and out our arms as that ball is released. So we’re really talking about the base and building a great foundation

“And then understanding and being able to read the coverages like we want. Giving them the options of where to go with the football. I think that’s been a big part of it, and another part of it has been just being able to be open and transparent with our quarterback position. Listen to those guys and what do they see and what can they execute. That’s been really good. I’ve really enjoyed our quarterback room and getting in there with Bo (Nix) and those guys and listening to them talk and give me feedback.”