Everything Bruce Pearl said after Auburn’s overtime loss to Ole Miss

Auburn head coach Bruce Pearl speaks after the Tigers’ overtime loss to Ole Miss on Saturday.

Opening Statement…

“Romello White and (Devontae) Shuler are pretty good players, older players. Schuler is an All-SEC guard and played like it, particularly down the stretch. Romello White was a monster in there. Our strategy was to front the post, front it to a fault, make them lob it over the top, but our bigs just wouldn’t do it, couldn’t do it. We probably could’ve doubled a little bit more. I was just disappointed that we couldn’t keep it out of there and make them lob it over the top. I asked the guys after the game just to do the little things, the basics. You score 84 points against a team that gives up 63 a game and is the number two defensive team – it’s not our offense, it’s our ability to defend, defense, rebounding, toughness, strength, just getting pushed around. The guys, defensively, don’t have to be Superman. They’ve just got to do a better job of getting the guy in front of you and a better job of communicating, a better job of getting a deflection, forcing some more turnovers. Five-point lead at the end of regulation, timeout. Steven Pearl drew up both plays they were going to run. He drew them both up. Shuler set a back screen, we didn’t stay sticky, he comes off it and knocks down a 3-ball. Then they ran something else where they cleared us out and drove us downhill. Can’t guard, can’t win.

On the final shot from Shuler…

“He’s a veteran player. The zone had been good for us. Again, when they ran that middle ball screen, we asked our guards to switch out. They didn’t. They switched flat, which then let Shuler get to his spot. It’s just simple things like that that we could’ve done better or differently. A lot of stuff we talked about doing, we didn’t do.”

On Jaylin Williams and Sharife Cooper setting up the late 3 for Auburn…

“Our guys have done a really good job competing and fighting and playing hard. We played really well today. We did a lot of really good things. You score 84 against Ole Miss, man. Now, I thought we had some careless turnovers. That was a real problem for us. Sharife (Cooper) and Allen (Flanigan) had 11 turnovers. That’s a lot. Some teams don’t have 11 turnovers. That was a factor for us. They had 17 points off our turnovers. Were all of them forced? I don’t think so. Our guys are obviously competing until the end. The pressure was a factor. We turned them over. We just didn’t finish.”

On what changed from the 14-point lead to the end of regulation…

“I’ll have to go back and look at it. My guess is that we stopped rebounding and they got to the paint. I don’t know exactly what the issue is. We had a couple of really bad turnovers. Passing with no purpose, stepping out of bounds, or just not valuing possessions offensively and not getting stops on the defensive end. Ole Miss got some real effort and energy plays. Their two best players were dominant tonight. I thought overall we played well. We did a lot of really good things. The kids played hard. Down the stretch, I even told our guys in timeouts, ‘If we get beat, they’ll say they were older, more experienced, been there done that.’ I said, ‘Let’s not let that happen.’ We told them what they would do and they did it.”

Auburn 40, Ole Miss 34: 1st half thoughts and analysis

Auburn leads Ole Miss 40-34 at halftime behind nine points and seven assists from guard Sharife Cooper.

Happy Saturday, everyone! That was an interesting first half in which Auburn fell behind early and then took some control for he game. The result is a 40-34 lead for the Tigers over Ole Miss as Sharife Cooper leads the team with nine points, seven assists and two steals but has turned the ball over four times in the first 20 minutes.

It will be a hard-fought second half as Auburn looks to break even in the series against Ole Miss for the season. Here are my thoughts and analysis (hard-hitting, I’m sure) at halftime.

  • Allen Flanigan MUST learn that the opposing scouting report is going to say he will not stop once int he lane and pull up for a jumper and, the majority of the time, it will result in a charge.
  • Speaking of Flanigan, he really is struggling mightily right now. Hopefully that rebound and outback with 4:30 left to play will give him some confidence but he does have three fouls.
  • If and when Cooper gets that three-point shot down, watch out. He’s basically unguardable at that point.
  • That pass near the end of the half from Cooper to Cambridge? Chef’s kiss.
  • I like Bruce Pearl’s beard but you would think that a beard plus wearing a mask plus him running around and screaming would result in it being extremely hot. These are things I think of.
  • I have probably said this before but I would like to volunteer to attend a practice at the invitation of Bruce Pearl and show players the basics of blocking out.
  • Devan Cambridge just doesn’t look confident shooting the ball anymore and that is a weapon Auburn needs.
  • Justin Ferguson mentioned this in a tweet but I will add on to it: Kermit Davis looks like a guy that would be a golf pro or your local preacher and then … he starts yelling at a level I don’t think most people even have. And since Ferguson mentioned it, my top 5 SEC coaches I wouldn’t want to be yelled at:
    1. Frank Martin
    2. Bruce Pearl
    3. Kermit Davis
    4. Tom Crean
    5. ohn Calipari
  • Dead last is Will Wade because he looks like a petulant child at all times.
  • JT Thor is starting to progress nicely on the offensive side of the floor.
  • I’m all here for Dylan Cardwell smiles and reactions after he dunks yet another alley-oop. His enthusiasm is contagious and I love it.
  • The symmetry of the AU interlocking logo at mid-court is absolutely perfect. That is all.
  • Is it just me or are Ole Miss’ basketball powder blue uniforms a lot darker than the football ones? I prefer the football ones.

Williams’ late heroics saves Malzahn, Morris … for now

It wasn’t pretty but Auburn came out with a 35-28 victory over Ole Miss thanks to late heroics by Seth Williams.

I apologize if this almost feels like a repeat of last week’s postgame column but, well, I really have run out of words to describe the Gus Malzahn era. Sure, the Tigers pulled out the victory but is anyone actually feeling good about beating an overmatched Ole Miss team?

Frustrating. On Saturday, knowing that the Rebels were going to run the ball, the Tigers defense still couldn’t stop it. In fact, they missed so many tackles that it started to look like a 30-and-over flag football league game.

Discipline? Yeah, right. That’s definitely not the way to put this Auburn team. A week after the Tigers spent more time talking trash to South Carolina than actually defending them, special teams broke down on a number of occasions, including the almost-killer missed extra point. Oh, and that non-call on the kickoff that Shaun Shivers seemed to touch and Ole Miss recovery for a touchdown? Let’s just hope some of Malzahn’s salary is going to keeping the replay officials in his pocket. It is the reason Seth Williams’ heroics were possible.

As I watch Malzahn adjust his belt for yet another time and Chad Morris call for yet another short screen pass, I want to do nothing but yell — or throw something — at the television. It is the same things that have been prevalent during this eight-year run that must end.

The Tigers put up 35 points, you say? Great. This is the worst defense in all of college football. The fact they didn’t put up even more should disgust you.

Remember how hiring James Franklin was a mistake for Tommy Tuberville and it ultimately was the downfall of his tenure at Auburn? Well, the Chad Morris hire might be even as bad. At least Tuberville was trying to be inventive with a new-school offense. Morris basically comes from the same cloth as Malzahn and it shows.

It won’t change, though, as Auburn will likely not be able to afford the buyout that Malzahn has in place. While it would be good for the program — do we really think this team will improve any before the season ends and into next season? — to get rid of him, the money might be too much.

Yet even the die-hard Malzahn supporters are running out of material to throw back in the face of those that want him gone.

Seth Williams has saved Malzahn and Morris from an even hotter seat this week. If it weren’t against NCAA violations, maybe they should treat him to a nice dinner tonight.

I’m going to need some bourbon after watching that.