Auburn football: Six Tigers earn spots on preseason Coaches All-SEC team

The Tigers put two players on the first-team All-SEC team as voted on by the coaches.

Big things are expected of Auburn’s defense and that is apparent by placement of two Tigers on the first-team All-SEC defensive team by conference coaches.

Defensive lineman Big Kat Bryant and linebacker K.J. Britt earned those spots on the first team. As a junior in 2019, Britt made 69 total tackles along with 10 tackles for a loss, 2.5 sacks and a forced fumble. Bryant, looking to replace Derrick Brown and Marlon Davidson as studs along the defensive line, made 16 tackles, two tackles for a loss, 1.5 sacks, nine quarterback hurries and recovered one fumble last season.

Brodarious Hamm, one of the new-look offensive lines for the Tigers, earned second team honors. Bo Nix, Seth Williams and Christian Tutt were named to the third team. Tutt earned spots at the all-purpose position, defensive back and return specialist.

2020 Preseason Coaches All-SEC Football Team (* – ties)

First Team Preseason All-SEC

OFFENSE

TE          Kyle Pitts, Florida

OL         Alex Leatherwood, Alabama

Trey Smith, Tennessee

Darian Kinnard, Kentucky

Landon Dickerson, Alabama

C            Drake Jackson, Kentucky

WR        DeVonta Smith, Alabama

Jaylen Waddle, Alabama

QB         Kyle Trask, Florida

RB          Najee Harris, Alabama

Kylin Hill, Mississippi State

AP          Jaylen Waddle, Alabama

DEFENSE

DL          Bobby Brown, Texas A&M

LaBryan Ray, Alabama

Big Kat Bryant, Auburn

Jordan Davis, Georgia

LB          Dylan Moses, Alabama

K.J. Britt, Auburn

Nick Bolton, Missouri

DB         Patrick Surtain II, Alabama

Derek Stingley, LSU

Richard LeCounte, Georgia

Jacoby Stevens, LSU

SPECIAL TEAMS

PK          Brent Cimaglia, Tennessee

P            Max Duffy, Kentucky

RS          Jaylen Waddle, Alabama

Second Team Preseason All-SEC

OFFENSE

TE          Jalen Wydermyer, Texas A&M

OL          Sadarius Hutcherson, South Carolina

Deonte Brown, Alabama

Landon Young, Kentucky

Austin Deculus, LSU*

Brodarious Hamm, Auburn*

Wanya Morris, Tennessee*

Ed Ingram, LSU*

C            Trey Hill, Georgia

WR        George Pickens, Georgia

Terrace Marshall, LSU

QB         Kellen Mond, Texas A&M

RB          Rakeem Boyd, Arkansas

Isaiah Spiller, Texas A&M

AP          Derek Stingley, LSU

DEFENSE

DL          Kobie Whiteside, Missouri

Malik Herring, Georgia

Aaron Sterling, South Carolina

Dayo Odeyingbo, Vanderbilt

LB          Henry To’o To’o, Tennessee

Monty Rice, Georgia

Erroll Thompson, Mississippi State*

Nakobe Dean, Georgia*

Ventrell Miller, Florida*

DB        Kaiir Elam, Florida

Eric Stokes, Georgia

Demani Richardson, Texas A&M

Tyree Gillespie, Missouri*

Marco Wilson, Florida*

Israel Mukuamu, South Carolina*

SPECIAL TEAMS

PK          Cade York, LSU

P            Jake Camarda, Georgia

RS          Jerrion Ealy, Ole Miss

Third Team Preseason All-SEC

OFFENSE

TE          Arik Gilbert, LSU

OL          Carson Green, Texas A&M

Kenyon Green, Texas A&M

Evan Neal, Alabama

Dan Moore, Texas A&M

C            Landon Dickerson, Alabama

WR        Seth Williams, Auburn

Elijah Moore, Ole Miss

QB         Bo Nix, Auburn

RB          Jerrion Ealy, Ole Miss

Larry Rountree, Missouri

AP          Jerrion Ealy, Ole Miss*

Kadarius Toney, Florida*

Christian Tutt, Auburn*

DEFENSE

DL          Zachary Carter, Florida

Josh Paschal, Kentucky

Kobe Jones, Mississippi State

Glen Logan, LSU

LB          Boogie Watson, Kentucky

Dimitri Moore, Vanderbilt

Nolan Smith, Georgia*

Ernest Jones, South Carolina*

Andre Mintze, Vanderbilt*

DB         Jaycee Horn, South Carolina

Bryce Thompson, Tennessee

Yusuf Corker, Kentucky

Christian Tutt, Auburn*

Josh Jobe, Alabama*

SPECIAL TEAMS

PK          Evan McPherson, Florida

P            Mac Brown, Ole Miss

RS          Christian Tutt, Auburn

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.”

Chad Morris challenging Bo Nix to ‘make the game slow down’

The new offensive coordinator is working with Bo Nix to slow the game down in his sophomore season.

Making the jump from high school to college football is a major one and, for many reasons, Bo Nix handled it well as a freshman as Auburn’s starting quarterback in 2019.

Now, new offensive coordinator Chad Morris is hoping to help Nix take his game to another level.

“I have challenged him in this offseason to see if we can’t make the game slow down even more than what it did towards the end of last year,’ Morris said. “All of the great quarterbacks I have coached, that is one of the big characteristics and traits that they have was that the game slowed down. They anticipated the throws. They anticipated the windows coming open.”

In 2019, Nix threw for 2,542 yards and 16 touchdowns to just six interceptions while also rushing for seven more scores. At home, he threw no interceptions but struggled at times with his accuracy, completing just 57.6% of his pass attempts.

MORE: Bo Nix listed as off-the-radar Heisman Trophy candidate

Morris has seen improvement from the quarterback this fall.

“I think he has done a good job with in 12 practices,” Morris said. “It goes back to the communication and dialogue we have back and forth. I ask him every day after practice, ‘What did you see today?’ He is really beginning to see it well. It looks like the game is slowing down for him.

“Now what we have got to do is we have put so much install in over the 12 or 13 practices that we have had, we will eventually start narrowing things down, but I?have been pleased with him. Bo is like a coach on the field. When things break down Bo is usually really good when those things happen. He is able to make plays with his feet.

“I have been pleased with him and we have a long way to go. I asked him when I first got here, ‘Do you want to be good or do you want to be great?’ Obviously he said he wants to be great. He wants to be one of the best that has ever played. I said, ‘Okay, it is going to take a lot of work and I am going to remind you of this many days when I?am chewing on you pretty good.’ He has done a good job to this point. We have a long way to go.”

CBS Sports (again) ranks Auburn as overrated in preseason polls

Auburn starts the season at No. 11 in the Associated Press Poll.

There are at least two writers at CBS Sports that thinks the Auburn Tigers are overrated heading into the 2020 college football season.

After stating that Gus Malzahn’s team was overrated in the AP Top 25 at No. 11 when the first poll comes out, the outlet doubled down in its predictions and season preview piece on Tuesday.

Tom Fornelli writes:

Auburn: There’s a negative connotation that comes with the word overrated, but to be clear, I don’t think Auburn’s going to be bad. I’m just not part of the group who believes it to be a top-10 team. I have serious concerns about the team’s offensive line and how it will hold up in a 10-game SEC schedule that won’t allow it many chances to breathe. That line will also be tasked with protecting Bo Nix, a quarterback who already comes with plenty of accuracy issues. I’m not sure he’ll be able to improve upon them if he’s under a lot of pressure. These offensive concerns limit Auburn’s overall ceiling.

Understandable. A remake of the offensive line is a major worry for the Tigers heading into the season but, for Jerry Palm, another writer for CBS Sports, he sees the season going a much different way for Malzahn, predicting that Auburn will be one of the last two teams out of the College Football Playoff.

Who will be right and who will be wrong? We shall start to see on Saturday, Sept. 26 as the Tigers host Kentucky in Jordan-Hare Stadium.

 

Watch: Chad Morris mic’ed up during Auburn’s second scrimmage

The Auburn offensive coordinator was mic’ed up during the Tigers scrimmage on Saturday.

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Have you ever wanted to know what coaches and players are saying to each other during a scrimmage or even during a game? Here is your chance.

Auburn offensive coordinator Chad Morris was mic’ed up during the Tigers second scrimmage on Saturday in Jordan-Hare Stadium and some good stuff came out of it.

Auburn WR Anthony Schwartz completely focused on football

The speedy wide receiver is positive that the Auburn offense will light it up in 2020.

For some time, it seemed that Anthony Schwartz would choose to go after a track career and drop football to completely focus on that. Now, it is the complete opposite.

On Friday, the Auburn wide receiver said that after his track season got cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it sort of put a kink in his plans and that playing for the Tigers on the gridiron is now his focus.

“When everything got canceled, that kind of just put my mind towards football, trying to improve on football,” Schwartz said. “Being able to hone in on my craft, I feel like football is the way for me. I feel like football is the way for me and I feel like I’m locked in 100% for football for the future.”

There’s good reason why Schwartz would have been okay picking to go the track route. He was part of the gold medal-winning USA team in the 4×100 meter relay at the World U20 Championships in 2018 and earned the silver in the 100 meter.

Yet his speed is even more apparent on the football field where he can continually outrace defensive backs for long touchdowns. Against Texas A&M last season, he took a reverse toss and hit a hole that … well … didn’t look like it was smart to hit and then he was gone.

He finished the season with 41 catches for 440 yards and a touchdown while rushing for two more scores. In Chad Morris’ offenses in 2020, Schwartz feels as if he will be even more productive, spending the time learning the new playbook and working with his quarterback.

“I feel like we’re a completely different offense. I can’t go into detail, but just know it’s not the normal Auburn offense. It’s going to be something completely different.

“Really in the offseason, I worked on becoming a complete receiver — able to run every route in the route tree, being able to catch the ball,” Schwartz said. “That’s most of the stuff that I worked on. Then, over the summer, just trying to get back into it with Bo, getting back into the playbook, getting back into the whole offense in shape and just getting ready to have a big season this year.”

Is Auburn overrated in the preseason AP Top 25 rankings? CBS Sports thinks so

CBS Sports thinks the Tigers are overrated at No. 11 in the preseason AP poll.

Preseason polls, whether you love them or hate them, have officially arrived. This year’s preseason AP Top 25 poll ranks the Auburn Tigers at No. 11 and Tom Fornelli of CBS Sports dislikes this.

Why? Because Fornelli once declared Texas A&M as overrated going into this football season, but then he contradicted himself by telling the world that Texas A&M is actually a darkhorse this upcoming season.

So now he’s here to make things right.

Before I finish typing this I have to laugh. Here is the only reason Fornelli cites why he believes Auburn is overrated:

He has more faith in Kellen Mond than Bo Nix.

Nix’s accuracy throwing the ball last season was a real concern to me, and I’m not sure those problems can get ironed out over an unusual offseason that did not include spring practice. Chad Morris is taking over the offense, and while Morris is a creative thinker who knows how to use his personnel, he’s also a coach who likes to throw the ball.

With all due respect to Kellen Mond, this is a lazy comparison that should not even be made. The lack of practice is a concern, but that affects everybody.

Hey Tom, look up Seth Williams, Anthony Schwartz, Eli Stove, Caylin Newton, JJ Pegues, and John Samuel Shenker.

Come back to us then.

Texas Football Bowl Projections: Longhorns in Citrus Bowl against Auburn

If the regular season is going to be different, so is bowl season. 247Sports has tried to predict what bowl games will look like in 2020.

College football is going to look different this season, with only three out of the five Power Five conferences scheduled to play its season in the fall. The Big 12 is joined by the ACC and SEC in playing football, beginning in September.

If the regular season is going to be different, so is bowl season. Right now, there will be 54 fewer FBS teams to choose from at the end of the season. 26 of those are from the Big Ten and Pac-12.

247Sports has tried to predict what bowl games will look like, even during a crazy season.

We’re trying something out of the ordinary at 247Sports and imagining an unprecedented 2020 bowl season with wholesale changes, including but not limited to tie-in alterations and a couple of games being moved to the spring. No one is college football right now how bowl season will play out this fall, so we’ll give it a shot:

In 247Sports’ projections, Texas will be heading east to Orlando to face off against the Auburn Tigers in the Citrus Bowl. Formerly known as the Capital One Bowl, the matchup is traditionally between Big Ten and SEC teams. With the Big Ten’s season canceled, the Longhorns will step in as a representative.

Texas and Auburn have played each other eight times with the latest in 1987. Legendary head coaches have faced off against each other, with Darrell K. Royal and Ralph “Shrug” Jordan in 1974 and Fred Akers and Pat Dye in 1983 and 1984.

As for the possible 2020 contest, it would be another coach’s duel between Tom Herman and Guz Malzhan. The two are both in need of a good season to continue the stints at their respective schools.

The quarterback matchup would also raise eyebrows, with senior Sam Ehlinger going against sophomore Bo Nix. Wanting to lead their teams to something greater than the Citrus Bowl, Ehlinger and Nix would provide offensive explosions through the game.

Related: ESPN predicts Longhorns season using win probability

Here is what 247Sports had to say about Texas and Auburn squaring off:

The Big 12’s potential runner-up against a quality opponent from the SEC? Here’s a rarity pitting two respected programs. Ironically, the Longhorns and Tigers have met once before in a Florida-based bowl game, that coming in 1974 (Gator in Jacksonville). This would be an important game for both head coaches, too. There’s some sense of pressure surrounding Tom Herman and Gus Malzahn this fall as preseason contenders.

As for the rest of the Big 12, 247Sports has five other teams making a bowl game.

  • TCU vs Florida State in the Holiday Bowl
  • Kansas State vs Mississippi State in the Liberty Bowl
  • Iowa State vs Virginia Tech in the Camping World Bowl
  • Oklahoma State vs Tennessee in the Alamo Bowl
  • Oklahoma vs Alabama in the Rose Bowl (College Football semifinal)

The Sooners would once again represent the Big 12 in the College Football playoff. However, Alabama would beat Oklahoma for the second time in three years.

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Wait, WHAT? PFF ranks Auburn’s Bo Nix as 95th best quarterback in country

This seems a little low for a quarterback who led the Tigers to nine wins as a true freshman last season.

Winning the SEC Offensive Freshman of the Year in 2019 certainly didn’t impress the people over at Pro Football Focus it seems.

In their annual ranking of all 130 starting quarterbacks in college football, Bo Nix comes in at an extremely low 95th.

Their reasoning?

Nix may have won SEC Freshman of the Year, but he really didn’t play like it. When kept clean, Nix earned a 69.2 passing grade, which ranked 107th among 130 FBS quarterbacks. As said in the PFF College Magazine, he struggled to move the ball on schemed plays and has suspect downfield accuracy. Nix may have been a five-star recruit and the No. 1-ranked dual-threat quarterback coming out of high school, but we just haven’t seen enough from him to make us believe he will ever live up to that hype.

Okay then. Let’s state the ways in which they are wrong. First, yes, Nix had some accuracy issues but, as a true freshman, still put 2,542 passing yards and 16 touchdowns to just six interceptions (none at home) and rushed for seven scores himself, helping the Tigers defeat Pac-12 champion Oregon in his collegiate debut and Alabama to keep the Crimson Tide out of the playoffs.

One wonders if these guys watched the Tigers games when putting together this ranking because he is behind some very suspect quarterbacks on this list.

Let’s just hope Nix sees this and uses it as fuel for this upcoming season.

Auburn QB Bo Nix: Players ‘are safer playing a football season’

The Auburn quarterback tweeted out his support for a 2020 college football season.

Count Bo Nix as one person who thinks a college football season should happen this fall.

On Monday evening, the Auburn quarterback took to Twitter to join in the We Want To Play movement that so many college football players and coaches have joined over the past 24 hours.

Many other stars of the game including Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence and Ohio State’s Justin Fields have shared the same message and hashtag. Alabama quarterback Mac Jones also joined in, tweeting out a message in support of having a college football season.

On Monday, it was reported that the Big Ten has decided to cancel its 2020 season while the Mountain West confirmed that its season was canceled.