Did Bo Nix throw shade at Mac Jones?

Bo Nix has things to say about Mac Jones. Were they compliments or was Nix throwing a little shade?

The Iron Bowl is one of college football’s biggest rivalry games. There is always trash talking going on between the Alabama and Auburn fan bases, but we really do not see it from players too often.

That is why a comment made by Auburn quarterback Bo Nix on Tuesday was interesting. The sophomore was asked about Alabama’s starting quarterback Mac Jones, and here was his answer:

It is hard to gauge tone through a tweet, and it might have been completely harmless. But some might take it as Nix saying two things: 1) Jones is a game-manager and 2) he is a product of his surrounding talent.

Admittedly, that could be a major reach, but it is hard to know based off that one quote. Nothing Nix said is inaccurate, though.

Jones is incredible at managing games (and dominating them, to be honest) and he has one of the best supporting casts in the entire country. That doesn’t, however, mean that he still isn’t one of the best quarterbacks in college football right now.

We’ll see if this quote comes up later.

Alabama welcomes Auburn to Bryant-Denny Stadium on Saturday for the 2020 edition of the Iron Bowl. The Crimson Tide are major favorites, but will be without head coach Nick Saban due to COVID-19.

Stay tuned for more updates from Roll Tide Wire, part of the USA TODAY Sports College Wire network!

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BetMGM betting odds for the Iron Bowl

The Alabama Crimson Tide is favored to win the 2020 Iron Bowl over Auburn by over three touchdowns.

Alabama and Auburn will face off this Saturday for the 2020 Iron Bowl. As Auburn comes off of a big win in last year’s in-state rivalry, they look to make it back-to-back wins during a season in which the Tigers don’t appear to be nearly as strong.

However, as any sports fan knows, records and the ‘eye test,’ mean nothing during rivalry games. Anything is possible, and nothing is off the table.

As Alabama enters the game ranked No. 1 in the country, No. 22 Auburn will be the traveling team and the underdog, both in terms of the AP Poll and the BetMGM betting odds.

Odds courtesy of BetMGM, The King of Sportsbooks. 

Here are how the lines look for the upcoming Iron Bowl, as determined by BetMGM:

Spread:

Alabama: -24 (-121)

Auburn: +24 (100)

Money line:

Alabama: -1667

Auburn: +850

Over/Under:

O/U: 60.5

Over: -139

Under: +115

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

 

10 Auburn players Alabama fans should know for the Iron Bowl

Alabama is set to host in-state Auburn on Saturday for the Iron Bowl. The No. 1 Crimson Tide (7-0) are fresh off a dominant 63-3 victory over Kentucky while the No. 19 Tigers (5-2) are on a three-game win streak. Fans are plenty familiar with the …

Alabama is set to host in-state Auburn on Saturday for the Iron Bowl. The No. 1 Crimson Tide (7-0) are fresh off a dominant 63-3 victory over Kentucky while the No. 19 Tigers (5-2) are on a three-game win streak.

Fans are plenty familiar with the standout players for Alabama, but there might be a few out there who are curious to know more about Auburn as Saturday approaches. Well, we have got you covered.

Below are 10 Auburn players that Crimson Tide fans should know about for the upcoming Iron Bowl. Enjoy!

LSU remains out of AP Top 25 Poll for Week 10

LSU lost at Auburn, 48-11 on Saturday and fell to 2-3 on the season.

LSU suffered a 48-11 loss at Auburn on Saturday and moved to 2-3 on the year.

The Tigers have a bye next week before hosting Alabama on November 14.

LSU allowed 506 total yards of offense to Auburn and only gained 32 rushing yards with its own offense. John Emery Jr. led the Tigers in rushing with just 21 yards gained on nine carries.

Freshman tight end Arik Gilbert led the team in receiving with 55 yards on six receptions.

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TJ Finley started the game at quarterback for the Tigers and went 13-of-24 for 143 yards and two interceptions. He was benched for fellow freshman Max Johnson who went 15-of-24 for 172 yards and a touchdown.

LSU’s defense had a challenge stopping Auburn quarterback Bo Nix who went 18-of-24 for 300 yards and three passing touchdowns.

LSU gave up 206 total rushing yards to Auburn. The Tigers also committed three turnovers, with two interceptions and a fumble.

The loss keeps the Tigers out of the AP Poll for the fourth straight week. The last time LSU was listed in the AP Top 25 was after a 41-7 win over Vanderbilt following week two of the SEC season.

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The SEC has five teams ranked in the Week 10 AP Poll. Auburn moved back into the rankings after the win over the Tigers which improved its record to 4-2 on the season.

Here is the updated AP Poll after 10 weeks of college football.

  1.  Clemson (7-0)
  2. Alabama (6-0)
  3. Ohio State (2-0)
  4. Notre Dame (6-0)
  5. Georgia (4-1)
  6. Cincinnati (5-0)
  7. Texas A&M (4-1)
  8. Florida (3-1)
  9. BYU (7-0)
  10. Wisconsin (1-0)
  11. Miami  (5-1)
  12. Oregon (0-0)
  13. Indiana (2-0)
  14. Oklahoma State (4-1)
  15. Coastal Carolina (6-0)
  16. Marshall (5-0)
  17. Iowa State (4-2)
  18. SMU (6-1)
  19. Oklahoma (4-2)
  20. USC (0-0)
  21. Boise State (2-0)
  22. Texas (4-2)
  23. Michigan (1-1)
  24. Auburn (4-2)
  25. Liberty (6-0)

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Everything Gus Malzahn said after Auburn’s 48-11 rout of LSU

Here is everything Gus Malzahn had to say afterwards.

Auburn ended its three-game losing streak to LSU in historic fashion.

Gus Malzahn and Auburn dominated, taking out three years of frustration in a 48-11 victory Saturday at Jordan-Hare Stadium.

It was the biggest victory in the history of the series by either team and improved Auburn to 4-2 on the season.

Here is everything Malzahn had to say afterwards.

Opening statement…

“When I look at the game, we talk about playing Auburn football. We rushed for 206 yards and held them to 32 yards. With a freshman quarterback, we knew they were going to come in here running. On defense, we had four sacks, a fumble for a touchdown and an interception that went down to the five-yard line. I’m real proud of our offensive line for running the football 200-plus yards against a national champion. They were leading the league in sacks, and we gave up zero sacks today. As far as the game goes, I thought the drive right before half – we went 99 yards for a touchdown – and the drive coming out of the locker room – 75 yards for a touchdown — it was a complete game.

“I’m real proud of our team. I’m real proud of our coaches. We’ve seen this team grow and face adversity. Here at Auburn, sometimes you face more adversity than at other places. We did that. We overcame it. We have an off week coming up. You look at our quarterback, he was 18-for-24 with no interceptions, three touchdowns and 300 yards. He rushed the ball 11 times for 81 yards and a touchdown. He’s a real quarterback. I just want to make sure everyone understands that.

“I’m real proud of our team. We’ve got momentum now. We’ve got an off week. That was the sixth straight SEC game that we had. Our bodies are really talking to us. We need to heal up. We’ve got four left. We’ll have a chance to kind of evaluate the areas we need to improve on to get the best plan for the next four games.”

On the scene in the locker room tonight after three close losses to LSU…

“Yeah, that was tough, especially on the older guys and the staff. We had three tough losses. Three years ago we were up 20-0 and they came back. They had a punt return and they ended up winning. Two years ago I mean it was extremely tough. We were winning the game the whole time, then two 15-yard penalties and they kick a field goal the last play of the game. Then of course last year. Our guys, like I said. They were extremely motivated. I said they would be, and our staff was, too, so I’m real proud of the players and the staff.”

Were the seniors excited?…

“Yeah, the seniors. We don’t have very many of them, but they were excited.”

Update on Jamien Sherwood?…

“You know, I don’t. He’s one of our best players, and we lost him pretty early in the game. It says a lot about our other guys stepping up and getting the job done. So, we’ll see. I don’t know exactly his status right now.”

On Kevin Steele’s schemes giving LSU problems last two years…

“What it was was stop the run. Stop the run, make them one-dimensional and we could pin our ears back and get after a true freshman quarterback on the road. This is one of the toughest places traditionally to play in college football, so really that was the plan. Simple as that. I told our guys, ‘We need to rush for 200 yards against these guys, we need to stop the run, make them one-dimensional, get after the rookie quarterback and take some shots.’ Really, that was really the game plan in a nutshell.”

On the two takeaways by Nehemiah Pritchett and Christian Tutt…

“I want to take you back. We had the ball down there to Seth, and we’re on the what, one- or two-yard line, and they reviewed it. He didn’t step out of bounds, and we lost the ball. That was a big momentum [swing]. Then the next series, that’s when we had the interception that you know went down to the five-yard line. We were able to run the football in I think then. Then we had the strip sack and Christian picked it up and went house call on it. The momentum really swung hard our way. We could feel it, and I think they could feel it.”

On the dominating third quarter…

“Yeah, you know I think we played our best game. They’re defending national champs. They played really well the last two weeks, and to dismantle them like we did I think it says a lot about our overall team. Not just the third quarter. We played four quarters of football. We played 60 minutes is what we did, and that’s what we’ve been talking about every game. We did that today, and like I said it’s going to give us some momentum.”

On getting to clear the bench in the fourth quarter…

“There’s no doubt. I’ll second the odd year. But yeah, it was good. With 10 SEC games, I don’t know how much you get a chance to play your backups. That’s something that kind of stresses you a little bit. We did that the entire fourth quarter and I think some of the third quarter.”

On Auburn’s linebackers…

“Our linebackers, they’re real linebackers. They played outstanding. We’re down K.J. Britt. Keep that in mind, you know. One of the most dominating defensive players in our league, and those guys are getting better each week. We were able to rotate some of the young guys in even early in the game, Riley and some of those other guys to give them some experience, but both those linebackers are really good at blitzing, and today they finished some in the pass rush.”

On the Bucks, like Derick Hall, producing tonight…

“We’ve really worked extremely hard on that. That’s been an emphasis, and we’ve improved. Their offensive line, I think, is a very solid offensive line, and for us to do it against them says a lot. I think we can continue that.”

On the offensive line today without Brandon Council…

“We didn’t have Brandon Council, and Council’s our most flexible guy. KJ—Keiondre Jones—made his first start, and to be able to run for 206, to give up no sacks—and there was stress going into this deal, because No. 8, he’s a nightmare, and there’s some other guys that are really good too. To give up zero sacks says a lot about our offensive line. They really answered the bell today. I think that’s the fourth game in a row we rushed for 200 yards; I don’t remember the last time we did that in SEC play four straight times. We did some things we can build on.”

On being able to sustain long drives…

“It’s coming together. I said, what—two or three weeks ago?—we’re a work in progress; we were a work in progress. We didn’t have spring. We didn’t have the same kind of offensive guys for a week. So, Chad and his staff has done a great job just staying to it. We scored, I think, on six straight drives we scored touchdowns. They’re starting to come together. Our starting quarterback, he got beat up pretty bad two weeks ago, and he’s establishing himself as one of the best in our league. I think it’s about time people start recognizing that. It’s something we can build upon—running the football, play-action shots, he made some really good moves with his feet, and third downs, we won the third-down battle today by quite a bit.”

On Bo Nix’s demeanor…

“He’s focused. He’s got a lot of winner in him. He played extremely well today and led us to a victory.”

On whether Bo Nix has improved his patience in the pocket in recent weeks…

“Yeah, there’s no doubt. And also, too, it works with the offensive line and the quarterback trusting protection. Our line did a great job passing off their twists. We did a very good job on No. 8, and (Nix) was very calm in the pocket. He stayed in, and that’s something Chad has been working on really hard with him. I’m really proud of Chad Morris, too. You can see this offense coming together that he envisioned. They played a complete game. Of course, Kevin and the defensive staff, against a team that had been averaging 40 points or something like that, they dominated.”

On not having a close game after the drama of Arkansas and Ole Miss wins with the contentious calls…

“It didn’t have a cloud of doubt for us. When the whistle blows, you stop, alright? I feel like we earned both those victories, so we didn’t feel that way. Other media may have said that, but today it was good to have a game really under control midway through the third quarter.”

Keys to Auburn’s dominant 48-11 win over LSU

We knew it was coming, we just didn’t know how it would look. Whenever Auburn and LSU face off the one given is that something strange is going to follow.

We knew it was coming, we just didn’t know how it would look. Whenever Auburn and LSU face off the one given is that something strange is going to follow.

This time that meant the worst rule in college football would make an appearance when Seth Williams fumbled it out of the endzone and Auburn’s offense would have a historic performence against a struggling LSU defense in a 48-11 blowout victory over the defending national champions.

The last four times Auburn and LSU have played the games were decided by a total of 13 points. Saturday, the Tigers won by 37 points, the biggest margin of victory in the series.

Here’s how Auburn pulled off the upset over the Bayou Bengals.

Twitter reacts to Auburn routing LSU

For the first time in a long time Auburn fans could enjoy a football game without nearly having a heart attack. Auburn defeated LSU 48-11 and exorcised some demons from the last three years. This was a fun one to watch folks. Here’s what people had …

For the first time in a long time Auburn fans could enjoy a football game without nearly having a heart attack. Auburn defeated LSU 48-11 and exorcised some demons from the last three years. This was a fun one to watch folks. Here’s what people had to say:

It started off in scary Halloween fashion when Zakoby McClain was nearly ejected for targeting and Seth Williams fumbled near the end zone for a touchback.

It didn’t help that Gary Danielson was insufferable either.

But let me tell y’all what. Eli Stove came to PLAY today.

So did the defense.

EVERYBODY CAME TO PLAY TODAY!

As time waned off the clock, it became apparent to all of America that this game was a good ole-fashioned butt whooping. Auburn fans loved every minute of it.

War Eagle! And finally,

 

Auburn destroyed LSU with the help of this incredible 91-yard TD

Auburn crushed LSU by 37 points.

In case it wasn’t obvious before this weekend’s matchups, 2020 LSU is a very different team from 2019 LSU. The Tigers are missing a lot of people from last year’s team for a variety of reasons, but perhaps no one is missed more than former defensive coordinator Dave Aranda, who’s now the head coach of Baylor.

And that continued to be clear Saturday against Auburn, which absolutely destroyed the defending national champs, 48-11.

After a scoreless first quarter, things got ugly for LSU in the second quarter with Auburn having a 21-3 lead at the half, and then the wheels completely fell off in the second half. By the end of the third quarter, Auburn had a 42-3 lead and extended it with a ridiculous one-play, 91-yard touchdown drive.

Auburn opened the fourth quarter with the ball on LSU’s 9-yard line, and sophomore quarterback Bo Nix took a huge shot downfield.

With his back foot inches away from his own goal line, Nix launched the ball deep to junior wide receiver Anthony Schwartz, and the ball landed perfectly in Schwartz’s hands at LSU’s 46-yard line. Then he took off and ran it in for a 91-yard score, putting Auburn up 48-3.

While LSU struggled, Nix completed 18-of-24 passes for 300 yards and three passing touchdowns and added 81 rushing yards, plus a rushing touchdown. As CBS pointed out, he’s the first Auburn quarterback to finish with 300 passing yards, at least three passing touchdowns and at least one rushing touchdown since Cam Newton in 2010.

Schwartz was Nix’s primary target Saturday, finishing with four catches for 123 yards and that one spectacular touchdown.

Auburn moved to 4-2 on the season, while LSU fell to 2-3.

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Instant Reaction: LSU demolished by Bo Nix and Auburn, 48-11

LSU suffered its worst loss since 1996 with a 48-11 loss at Auburn. Bo Nix passed for nearly 300 yards and accounted for four touchdowns.

LSU (2-3) dropped below .500 once again following a blowout loss against Bo Nix and Auburn (4-2) on Saturday. Auburn sent LSU home with a 48-11 loss that sends them into a bye week with plenty of questions to address moving forward.

Defense was the story of the first quarter with both teams pitching a shutout, but things got away from LSU in the second quarter and the snowball continued for the rest of the game. Auburn jumped out to a 21-0 lead in the second quarter. A missed field goal and a failed opportunity to take advantage of an Auburn fumble led to Auburn striking first and never looking back. Bo Nix completed a short pass to Eli Stove to open the scoring after an Auburn interception return was ruled out ay the LSU four-yard line. The Auburn defense got on the board a few drives later when Christian Tutt returned a TJ Finley fumble 20 yards for a score to put Auburn up 14-0.

Auburn took a 21-0 lead with a 99-yard touchdown drive with a good dose of Tank Bigsby and Bo Nix wearing down the LSU defense.

TJ Finley replaced by Max Johnson

In his first road start for LSU, TJ Finley had a tough game. Finley completed 13-of-24 passes for 143 yards with a pair of interceptions and a fumble. After showing so much poise against South Carolina last week, Aubrun’s defense made Finley look like a freshman at times.

With the game well out of reach in the second half, Ed Orgeron decided to give Finley a rest and sent Max Johnson in to lead the offense for the remainder of the game.

Johnson completed 15-of-24 attempts for 172 yards and a touchdown. It may be misguided to suggest Johnson should have started in place of Finley, because Auburn was in full control the entire game.

LSU defense can’t catch Bo Nix

Auburn quarterback Bo Nix was the easy pick for MVP of the game. Before leaving the game for an early rest in the fourth quarter, Nix had passed for 299 yards and three touchdowns. That included a 91-yard pass to a speedy Anthony Schwartz, who got by two LSU defenders who may have had a miscommunication or blown assignment on the play.

Nix completed 18-of-24 pass attempts while coming up just shy of his first 300-yard performance since passing for 335 yards against Mississippi State on Sept. 28, 2019. Nix was one yard shy of his third career 300-yard passing game. He also ended his day leading Auburn in rushing yardage. Nix rushed for 81 yards and a touchdown prior to leaving the game.

Worst loss in a generation?

You have to go back to 1996 for the last time LSU lost a game as decisively as they did on Saturday. LSU’s 37-point setback was the largest margin-of-defeat for the Tigers since losing 56-13 at Florida on Oct. 12, 1996. The big difference between now and then? Florida was the No. 1 team in the country in 1996 on their way to a national championship.

Odds are fairly good this Auburn team won’t be making a national title run this season.

What’s next?

LSU will be off next week, giving them plenty of time to regroup. Next up for the Tigers is a chance to pull a major upset of No. 2 Alabama. LSU hosts Alabama on Nov. 14. Auburn, after a bye week of their own, will visit Mississippi State on Nov. 14 as well.

Auburn football: 3 reasons the Tigers beat LSU

Auburn and LSU meet up on Saturday in Jordan-Hare Stadium.

Auburn faces off against LSU on Halloween for the first time in 122 years. The last time these two teams played each other on the spookiest day of the year, LSU left with a victory. That won’t be the case this year and here’s why:

Auburn keeps getting lucky

Right now Auburn is 3-2, but they could very easily be 1-4. This is in large part due to the Tigers getting bailed out by the officials against Arkansas and Ole Miss. Yes, Bo Nix fumbled the ball against Arkansas and yes, Shaun Shivers touched that ball, but you aren’t about to hear me complain about it. If Auburn makes a ghoulish mistake Saturday chances are it’ll go undetected by officials. It is what it is and at this point it’s an advantage.

The Tank is unleashed

Y’all know the only reason the betting line swung to LSU’s favor this week was because of their 52-24 beatdown against South Carolina, right? I mean it makes sense, sure. Auburn lost to South Carolina, LSU decimated South Carolina, therefore by the transitive property of winning LSU should probably destroy Auburn. But here’s the thing, that game against South Carolina last week wasn’t exactly perfect.

LSU allowed South Carolina more than 400 yards of offense and the Gamecocks averaged over five yards per carry. If I’m Chad Morris I’m jumping all over that weakness and showcasing my running back rotation with talented freshman Tank Bigsby at the helm.

Kevin Steele cooks up defensive concoction against freshman QB

Last season Kevin Steele’s defensive scheme against LSU was brilliant. Heck, almost everything Steele does is brilliant. While Auburn doesn’t have Derrick Brown nor Marlon Davidson’s menacing presences at the line this year, they still have a talented linebacker corps and antagonistic secondary which can still pose as a menace to a young, inexperienced quarterback. I’m anxious to see what he has up his sleeve Saturday.

Very much like last week’s game the common theme is this is another must-win game for Gus Malzahn. Malzahn is 2-5 against LSU with his last victory being 2016. If Auburn gets the run game going early I like his chances of winning.