Report: Former Auburn cornerback JD Rhym to transfer to Big 12 program

According to a report by 247Sports, Rhym is set to reunite with a former Auburn defensive backs coach at his new stop.

A former Auburn defensive back has reportedly found a new home.

According to a report by Matt Zenitz of 247Sports, former Auburn cornerback [autotag]JD Rhym[/autotag] is set to reunite with former safeties coach [autotag]Zac Etheridge[/autotag] at Houston. Rhym joined the transfer portal on April 16 after spending two seasons on the Plains.

Rhym signed with Auburn as a four-star cornerback from Valdosta High School (Georgia) during the 2022 recruiting cycle. He was the No. 16 recruit from Georgia and the No. 20 cornerback in the nation. However, he failed to solidify consistent play at the position. In 16 games, Rhym made 20 stops with one interception and one pass deflection.

Rhym is the second former Auburn defender to find a new home this week reportedly. Former linebacker [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] announced this week that he will be joining Florida State’s roster for his final season of eligibility. Rhym is also one of 22 players from last season’s roster to enter the transfer portal. Out of those 22, 15 have found new homes.

Former Auburn safety Donovan Kaufman reveals transfer destination

According to a report by On3, Kaufman is heading to the ACC.

A former member of Auburn’s secondary has found a new home.

Auburn safety [autotag]Donovan Kaufman[/autotag] entered the transfer portal on Jan. 16, a few days after the departure of former defensive backs coach [autotag]Zac Etheridge[/autotag]. According to a report by On3, Kaufman has announced that he will be transferring to NC State.

Kaufman visited NC State last weekend alongside former teammate [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] according to TheWolfpacker.com.

Kaufman transferred into Auburn’s program from Vanderbilt ahead of the 2021 season and went on to record 109 tackles, two sacks, and two interceptions in three seasons on the Plains. He played in 12 games this season, recording 395 total snaps. He also earned a career-best 4.5 tackles for loss in during the 2023 season.

Before his time at Auburn, he signed with Vanderbilt as a three-star safety from Archbishop Rummel High School in metro New Orleans. He made 15 tackles in eight total games at Vanderbilt in 2020.

Kaufman has one season of eligibility remaining.

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Auburn dubbed a ‘transfer portal winner’ by The Athletic

Auburn has reeled in several notable additions from the transfer portal to fill key areas ahead of the 2024 season.

Auburn’s coaching staff is working hard to fill key areas with transfer portal additions, and are currently succeeding.

The Tigers will have added a talented wide receiver, a sturdy offensive lineman, and several solid defensive additions which should help boost its stock in the upcoming 2024 season. The haul has been impressive so far, and outlets such as The Athletic are taking notice.

Manny Navarro of The Athletic recently revealed his winners and losers from the SEC when it comes to their activity in the transfer portal. At the front of the “winners” list is Auburn. Navarro says the Tigers’ transfer additions have outweighed their departures.

Auburn’s recruiting has been on the uptick since Hugh Freeze took over. The 2024 class ranks No. 8 after the early signing period and the Tigers are also bringing in quality talent in the portal. Among the notable additions are former Georgia State standout receiver [autotag]Robert Lewis[/autotag] (70 catches, 877 yards in 2023), ex-Mississippi State left tackle [autotag]Percy Lewis[/autotag] (seven starts in 2023), former Texas and Minnesota defensive tackle [autotag]Trill Carter[/autotag] (31 career starts), ex-Duke linebacker [autotag]Dorian Mausi[/autotag] (27 starts) and former Texas safety [autotag]Jerrin Thompson[/autotag] (31 starts).

Those pickups outweigh the losses of 2022 starting quarterback [autotag]Robby Ashford[/autotag] (South Carolina) and linebacker [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] and safety [autotag]Donovan Kaufman[/autotag], who both ranked in the top 11 on the team in tackles last season and haven’t found new landing spots yet.

[autotag]Antonio Kite[/autotag] (CB-Alabama), Jerrin Thompson (S-Texas), Percy Lewis (OT-Mississippi State), and [autotag]Rico Walker[/autotag] (TE-Maryland) are the most notable transfer additions for Auburn so far, as they all join the roster as four-star transfers according to 247Sports.

Joining Auburn as “winners” include Ole Miss, Kentucky, and Missouri. Arkansas and Florida were teams who “broke even”, while Alabama, Mississippi State, and Vanderbilt joined the “losers” category.

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Veteran linebacker Cam Riley has entered the transfer portal

Cam Riley has entered the transfer portal after spending four seasons at Auburn.

Veteran Auburn linebacker [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] has entered the transfer portal. While the portal closed on Jan. 3, Riley is a graduate transfer and can enter at any time.

Riley spent four seasons on the Plains after signing with them as a four-star recruit in the 2020 cycle. He made 120 tackles, 8.0 tackles for loss, 2.5 sacks, and defended two passes in 46 games. His most productive season was 2022, when he started seven games and made a career-high 65 tackles and 3.5 tackles for loss in 11 appearances.

He is the 14th Auburn player to enter the portal this offseason and the first linebacker. Auburn has already added one linebacker from the transfer portal in former Duke player Dorian Mausi.

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Pair of Auburn defenders enter portal as grad transfers

Auburn losing a pair of key defenders to the transfer portal.

According to reports, two members of the Auburn defense officially entered the transfer portal Tuesday afternoon, as Cam Riley and Donovan Kaufman announced their intentions to search for new opportunities in 2024.

Riley, who came to Auburn as a member of the Tigers 2020 class, has seen action each of the last four seasons on the Plains to amass a combined 120 tackles, eight TFL, and 2.5 sacks.

The linebacker has however played more of a prominent role for Auburn’s defense across the last two seasons, which has included 97 tackles, seven TFL, and 2.5 sacks during that span, as well as 32 tackles, 3.5 TFL, and 2.5 sacks in 2023.

As for Kaufman, the former Vanderbilt transfer has been a prominent name in the Tigers secondary across each of the last three seasons, which has included a combined 109 tackles, eight TFLs, two sacks, two INTs, six FFs, and one FR. Kaufman has also ranked top five in the SEC in forced fumbles twice (2021 and 2023) and is coming off a season in which he had 37 tackles, 4.5 TFL, one sack, one INT, and two FF.

Both Riley and Kaufman are now in the portal as graduate transfers.

Malcolm Johnson Jr. announces transfer destination

The former Auburn wide receiver reveals his transfer destination on Christmas Day.

A former Auburn wide receiver used Christmas Day to reveal his transfer destination.

[autotag]Malcolm Johnson Jr.[/autotag], who played three seasons at Auburn before entering the transfer portal earlier this month, announced Monday that he will transfer to Bowling Green.

Johnson signed with Auburn as a four-star wide receiver for the 2020 class, joining athletes such as [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag], [autotag]Tank Bigsby[/autotag], [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag], and [autotag]Brandon Frazier[/autotag] as members of Auburn’s No. 8 ranked class. He was a four-star recruit according to 247Sports, and was the No. 4 overall prospect from Virginia.

Johnson never became a consistent member of the receiver rotation, as he made just 14 catches for 199 yards and three touchdowns in three seasons on the Plains. The 2023 season was his best, as he recorded 89 yards on six catches. He appeared in five games in 2023, and his most productive game was in Auburn’s season-opening win over UMass, where he caught two passes for 59 yards.

Johnson joined four other Auburn receivers by joining the transfer portal this month. The Tigers will look to revamp the unit and boost production in 2024.

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Eugene Asante named SEC co-defensive Player of the Week

The Auburn linebacker has been named the SEC co-defensive player of the week after his 12 tackle performance at Cal on Saturday.

For the second week in a row, an Auburn Tiger has been named an All-SEC player of the week.

Linebacker [autotag]Eugene Asante [/autotag] was named SEC co-defensive player of the week on Monday after his 12 tackle, one sack performance in Auburn’s 14-10 road win over Cal in week two.

Asante’s 12 tackles were not only the most by an Auburn defender on Saturday, but they also tied for the most among all SEC defenders in week two.

Asante saw limited game action in his first year on the Plains in 2022 after transferring from North Carolina. The playing time was so limited that he even requested former head coach [autotag]Bryan Harsin[/autotag] to let him play on the scout team defense so he could get reps in.

https://x.com/jeff_shearer/status/1700779385467568390?s=20

In 2023, Asante has blossomed into a star, leading the Tigers in tackles in both games. His 18 total tackles on the season are currently tied for sixth in the conference.

The junior spoke about how he’s been able to be successful despite periodic playing time after Auburn’s win on Saturday.

“In the midst of chaos, there’s opportunity, we are our brother’s keeper,” Asante said. “Not being frustrated, not being disappointed but just going out there with a positive mindset and playing play after play.”

Asante elaborated further when talking to the media on Monday after winning the award, going into his experience losing his father and how he hopes to have made him proud.

“It’s surreal, to be honest with you. I’m grateful to God that I didn’t give up on myself. When I first got here, my dad passed away in February, I had to go through spring ball battling a whole lot of things and as a young man in this world, you need your father. It was a hard thing losing him because he was my best friend. So just to experience being the SEC Player of the Week, I’m just praying I made him proud.”

It looks as if head coach [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag] is going to turn Asante fully loose next week, as his week three depth chart lists Asante as the starting weak side linebacker ahead of the struggling [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag].

Eugene Asante will look to continue his great stretch of play when Auburn hosts Samford on Saturday at 7:00 PM CT.

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Brian’s Column: Auburn needs its linebackers to play better in week two

The Auburn Tigers run defense struggled in week one. This week they go up against a Cal team that had 357 rushing yards a week ago.

The Auburn Tigers are coming off a great 59-14 win over UMass in their home opener last Saturday. The offense was efficient, the special teams nearly broke multiple returns, and the defense was solid enough.

That defense relied heavily on their talent and size against the UMass Minutemen. While that worked against an inferior team, Auburn’s defense, specifically the linebackers, is going to have to play more fundamentally sound football if they hope to move to 2-0 after the dust settles on Saturday.

That means the quintet of [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag], [autotag]Jack Levant[/autotag], [autotag]Robert Woodyard Jr.[/autotag], [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag], and [autotag]Larry Nixon III[/autotag] are going to have to step up against a Cal running attack that just gashed North Texas for 357 yards on the ground.

So what went so wrong for this group in week one and how do they fix it?

It all starts with knowing and staying with your assignments in order to avoid runs like this.

This run by UMass quarterback [autotag]Taisun Phommachanh[/autotag] is one of those plays Auburn defensive coordinator Ron Roberts will want to show to his team once and then burn.

The minutemen run a simple counter. Defensive end #33 [autotag]Mosiah Nasili-Kite[/autotag] gets sucked into the misdirection, creating a need for the filling linebacker, #13 [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag], to keep outside contain.

Instead of doing that, Riley shoots the c-gap, leaving him in no man’s land next to Nasili-Kite.

That leaves cornerback [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag] out on an island with Phommachanh, a matchup which the UMass quarterback wins with ease. From there, bad angles by the aforementioned Riley and weakside linebacker, #6 [autotag]Austin Keys[/autotag], allow Phommachanh to rumble for 31 yards.

Being out of position was a common theme for Auburn’s linebackers, even on simple play designs.

UMass runs a simple inside concept here, with the offensive line blocking straight up before the left guard comes off his double to the second level.

Again, [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] shoots the wrong gap, taking himself out of the play almost immediately.

Austin Keys is late to recognize the run, allowing UMass guard Marcellus Anderson to serve him up a fresh pancake. After Keys goes to the ground, Auburn is left with nobody on the outside, allowing running back [autotag]Kay’Ron Lynch-Adams[/autotag] to pick up a long gain.

Key’s and Riley weren’t the only Auburn linebackers that struggled in the opener.

The Tigers lose contain again on this run play, as [autotag]Elijah McAllister[/autotag] cheats too far inside, allowing [autotag]Kay’Ron Lynch-Adams[/autotag] to bounce his run outside for another large gain.

Again, the job of containment is passed on to a member of the secondary. Although cornerback [autotag]D.J James[/autotag] is a good tackler for his position and makes a nice read, he takes a bad angle and Lynch-Adams has an easy first down.

Bad reads, blown assignments, and missed tackles simply cannot happen often against a good Cal rushing attack. Auburn can’t rely on it’s speed to make up mistakes, as Cal running back [autotag]Jaydn Ott[/autotag] may be the best player on the field on Saturday.

The key for Auburn to win this game is simple.

The run defense just has to be decent enough to hold Cal to one or two big plays. If Jaydn Ott has green grass in front of him, he’s going to back up his trash talk and make the Tigers pay.

Saturday’s game should be a ton of fun, and it kicks off at 9:30 p.m. CT on ESPN.

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Auburn Tigers Snapshot Profile: No. 30 Larry Nixon III

The productive veteran is looking to make an impact in his one season on the Plains.

Going into the 2023 football season, Auburn Wire will be looking at each scholarship player listed on the Tigers’ roster.

Over the preseason, each profile will cover where the player is from, how recruiting websites rated them coming out of high school, and what role they will play for [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag] in his first season on the Plains.

Up next is transfer linebacker [autotag]Larry Nixon III[/autotag]. The veteran from North Texas brings a wealth of experience and production to the room and will look to make an impact in his one season on the Plains.

Preseason Player Profile

Hometown: Fort Worth, Texas

Height: 6-1

Weight: 231

Previous School: North Texas

Class in 2023: Senior

247Sports Composite Ranking

Two-Star / No. 358 in Texas / No. 160 LB

Career Stats

Year G Tackles TFLs Sacks PDs FFs
2018 (North Texas) 0
2019 (North Texas) 10 17 0 0 1 1
2020 (North Texas) 8 53 6.5 3.0 0 1
2021 (North Texas) 10 70 2.5 1.5 1 0
2022 (North Texas) 12 105 2.5 1.0 0 0

PFF Grades

Year Defense Tackling Run Defense Pass Rush Coverage Special Teams
2019 81.7 71.9 71.5 53.8 87.7 85.7
2020 58.6 39.1 61.0 69.8 54.3 64.2
2021 58.8 50.0 58.2 81.0 51.9 72.2
2022 67.1 64.2 73.7 78.9 55.8 62.6

Depth Chart Overview

Nixon appeared in 40 games over the past four seasons for the Mean Green and was named to the Conference USA First-Team last season before entering the transfer portal and that experience will be invaluable to have in the heart of the defense which will feature several newcomers.

He is battling [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] for the starting Will spot and regardless of who wins, they should both play plenty of snaps and be key contributors. Auburn was looking to improve its depth at line linebacker, allowing the Tigers to rotate and keep their players fresh and Nixon will let them do just that.

Larry Nixon III’s Photo Gallery

Auburn has a chance to sign its best linebacker class in a decade

Josh Aldridge has assmebled an impressive linebacker class and itsn’t done yet.

On Wednesday Auburn landed its highest-rated commit since 2019 when they successfully flipped five-star linebacker [autotag]Demarcus Riddick[/autotag] from the Georgia Bulldogs.

Riddick is the headliner of Auburn’s 2024 recruiting class and is further proof that [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag] and Co. can now win recruiting battles with Alabama and Georgia, something you have to do if you want to compete in the SEC.

A ton of credit also goes to linebackers coach [autotag]Josh Aldridge[/autotag], who has landed several top targets but his pursuit of Riddick is the most impressive. He had a ton of ground to make up as the previous staff had not yet offered Riddick when he committed to the Bulldogs.

Aldridge quickly extended an offer and after a full-court press, the Tigers pulled off the flip.

He is the second linebacker that Auburn has beaten Georgia for this cycle, just last month they landed four-star linebacker [autotag]Joseph Phillips[/autotag], beating out the Bulldogs for the talented but raw linebacker.

The duo of Riddick and Phillips has made linebacker one of the strengths of Auburn’s 2024 recruiting class and the addition of three-star [autotag]D’Angelo Barber[/autotag] makes it one of Auburn’s best hauls at linebacker in years.

While there is still plenty of time left before any of them can sign, the Tigers haven’t signed three or more high-school linebackers in the same cycle since 2020 when they landed four-star prospects [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag], [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] and [autotag]Desmond Tisdol[/autotag] and three-star [autotag]Romello Height[/autotag].

What separates the 2024 class from that group is that both Riddick (No. 26) and Phillips (No. 132) are top 150 prospects while only Steiner (No. 98) was from the 2020 haul.

The 2019 class, consisting of five-star Pappoe, four-star [autotag]Derick Hall[/autotag] and three-stars Octavious Brothers and Kameron Brown, also has a case as the best in recent history.

As it currently stands, these two classes are extremely similar. Both are headlined by a five-star with a second top prospect who projects more as a pass-rusher but is capable of playing linebacker. With the 2019 class having one more member, it has more depth and is slightly better.

With Auburn not signing any linebackers last year they are in need of a large class, making it likely they will add at least one or two more players and Aldrige has the Tigers in a great spot with two more targets, four-star [autotag]Bradley Shaw[/autotag] and three-star [autotag]Wyatt Simmons[/autotag].

If they add Shaw it will give them three blue-chip linebackers, something they have only twice in the past 10 cycles, the 2020 class and in 2015 when they landed Richard McBryde, Jeff Holland and Darrell Williams. While that class also included three-star Robert Muschamp, it lacked a five-star prospect to compare with Riddick. 

Due to the top-end talent of Riddick and Phillips and the depth of Barber, Auburn’s 2024 class is on the verge of being the best the Tigers have signed in the past 10 cycles, if they can add one or both of Shaw and Simmons then it will jump past the 2019 and 2015 classes and undoubtedly be the best linebacker class in the past decade.

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