Auburn releases depth chart for TransPerfect Music City Bowl

Auburn is lacking depth at several spots for the Music City Bowl.

After a couple of weeks off, Auburn football is set to return to action on Dec. 30 when they play Maryland in the TransPerfect Music City Bowl.

Auburn’s roster will look quite different from the last time they took the field after 12 players have entered the transfer portal and others have opted out to prepare for the NFL draft.

Perhaps the biggest change comes at the wide receiver position where the Tigers have lost [autotag]Ja’Varrius Johnson[/autotag], [autotag]Omari Kelly[/autotag], [autotag]Jyaire Shorter[/autotag], and [autotag]Malcolm Johnson Jr.[/autotag] to the portal, and are now only listing two positions after having three all season.

Some key opt-outs include starting cornerbacks [autotag]D.J. James[/autotag] and [autotag]Nehemiah Pritchett[/autotag] and starting defensive tackle [autotag]Marcus Harris[/autotag], all of whome [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag] said he does not expect to play.

One player who hopes to play is starting safety [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag], who has already accepted his invitation to the Senior Bowl. He has been battling a hamstring injury and his health will determine if he is able to play in the game, Freeze said.

Here is a look at the full depth chart for Auburn’s final game of the 2023 season.

D.J. James expected to opt out of the Music City Bowl

Auburn cornerback is expected to opt out of the Music City Bowl against Maryland later this month to focus on the NFL Draft.

The Auburn Tigers have lost their first player due to opt-out.

Standout cornerback [autotag]D.J James[/autotag] has decided to withdraw from the Music City Bowl against Maryland to focus on the upcoming NFL Draft.

The senior has played his final game as a Tiger but has accepted an invite to the Reese’s Senior Bowl, where he will join teammates [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag] and [autotag]Nehemiah Pritchett[/autotag] for the game in February.

James is coming off a signature season for the Tigers in which he earned an 83.8 PFF coverage grade. That grade was good enough for ninth in all of FBS.

After transferring from Oregon to Auburn in 2022, James tallied 75 total tackles for the Tigers, intercepting 3 passes and officially defending 17 passes.

He was a major reason [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag]’s team is bowl-eligible this season, as himself and safety [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag] led an Auburn secondary that finished 33rd in FBS in opponent passing yards per game (206.9)

Auburn’s top coverage corner is likely a Day 2 Draft pick according to most sources. While he likely won’t be selected as high as former teammate and 2022 Tennessee Titans draft pick [autotag]Roger McCreary[/autotag], James has should join McCreary, [autotag]Jamel Dean[/autotag], [autotag]Carlton Davis[/autotag], and [autotag]Jonathan Jones[/autotag], as former Tiger cornerbacks playing large roles in the NFL.

NFLDraftBuzz.com has James slotted as the No. 17 cornerback on their draft board, while Pro Football Network ranks the senior just inside of their top 60 overall.

While many people may remember James’ time as a Tiger unfairly due to his final play with the team, he was undoubtedly the best cornerback on the roster during his time with the team and arguably their best player.

Auburn will miss him dearly when they take on a pass-heavy Maryland attack led by Taulia Tagovailoa, the brother of former Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa.

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Pro Football Network projects D.J. James to be a second round selection

James could be the first Tiger taken in the 2024 NFL draft according to Pro Football Network.

The 2024 NFL draft is still five months away, but it is never too early to discuss the possibility of which Auburn Tigers will head to the league next.

According to a mock draft from Pro Football Network, the first Tiger that could be taken in the 2024 NFL draft is cornerback [autotag]D.J. James[/autotag]. James has been a valuable asset to the Auburn defense in two seasons and could be a great piece to an NFL franchise.

Which team is projected to take James? The mock draft simulator from Pro Football Network forecasts the Dallas Cowboys as the winner. The draft field has not been set yet, but Pro Football Network believes that James and the Cowboys could pair up with the No. 60 overall selection.

In two seasons at Auburn, James has recorded 75 tackles with three interceptions and 18 pass deflections. Mixing in his three-year career at Oregon, James recorded 147 tackles and five interceptions over a five-year collegiate career.

The 2024 NFL draft is slated to begin Thursday, Apr. 25 in Detroit, Michigan.

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Jaylin Simpson becomes third Auburn DB to accept Senior Bowl invitation

He joins D.J. James and Nehemiah Pritchett as Auburn defensive backs to accept their invitation to the 20224 Reese’s Senior Bowl.

After his best season as an Auburn Tiger, safety [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag] has accepted an invitation to the 2024 Reese’s Senior Bowl.

It was Simpson’s first season playing safety for the Tigers after he spent his first four seasons at cornerback. The change quickly paid off as he led Auburn with four interceptions and was named first-team All-SEC by the Associated Press and second-team by the league’s coaches.

In addition to his four interceptions, he made 36 tackles, 1.5 tackles for loss, broke up four passes and recovered one fumble. He finished the regular season with a Pro Football Focus grade of 78.3, the fourth highest on Auburn’s defense.

Simpson is the third member of Auburn’s secondary to accept an invite to the Senior Bowl and will join starting cornerbacks [autotag]D.J. James[/autotag] and [autotag]Nehemiah Pritchett[/autotag] at the event in Mobile.

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Nehemiah Pritchett is the 2nd Auburn DB to accept Senior Bowl invitation

Nehemiah Pritchett and D.J. James will both attend the event.

Auburn corner [autotag]Nehemiah Pritchett[/autotag] has accepted his invitation to the 2024 Reese’s Senior Bowl, the event announced Wednesday night.

He is the second Tigers to confirm their participation in the event, joining fellow cornerback [autotag]D.J. James[/autotag]. Pritchett, a Jackson, Alabama native, is a three-year starter at corner for the Tigers and has appeared in 50 games in his four seasons on the Plains.

Injuries have limited him to eight games this season but has made 18 tackles, picked off one pass and defended two more. In 221 coverage snaps, he has allowed just 10 receptions for 117 yards according to Pro Football Focus.

The 2024 Reese’s Senior Bowl takes place in Mobile with the game in Hancock Whitney Stadium. The game will be on Feb. 3, 2024, and will be shown on the NFL Network.

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Auburn CB D.J. James accepts Senior Bowl invitation

D.J. James has been one of the best cornerbacks in the country and will get a chance to boost his draft stock at the 2024 Reese’s Senior Bowl.

One of Auburn’s top players is set to participate in the 2024 Reese’s Senior Bowl. Auburn cornerback [autotag]D.J. James[/autotag] accepted his invitation to the prestigious event on Wednesday, it was his second year earning an invitation.

James has been one of the country’s top cornerbacks since transferring to Auburn from Oregon ahead of last season. He has the ninth-best coverage grade (90.0) among all defensive backs in the country according to Pro Football Focus. He has allowed just 29 receptions in 324 coverage snaps.

The Mobile, Alabama, native leads the team with 8 pass breakups and is second with two interceptions.

It will be a return to home for James, as the Senior Bowl takes place in Mobile with the game in Hancock Whitney Stadium. The game will be on Feb. 3, 2024, and will be shown on the NFL Network.

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Johnny Football 2.0? Johnny Manziel sees himself in Conner Weigman

Can Auburn slow down Texas A&M’s QB on Saturday?

The Auburn Tigers travel to College Station on Saturday to face off with Texas A&M in their SEC opener. They will also face their toughest opposing quarterback to date in Conner Weigman.

Weigman has passed for 909 yards through three games, which is the fourth-highest among SEC quarterbacks behind Vanderbilt’s AJ Swann, LSU‘s Jayden Daniels, and South Carolina’s Spencer Rattler. He also has a QBR of 164.53, which is top five in the SEC.

He has caught the attention of a former Texas Aggie quarterback, who says that he doing a great job of leading the team.

During the broadcast of Texas A&M’s 45-3 win over ULM last Saturday, Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Manziel was asked to share his thoughts on Weigman’s play. He used the time to praise the Aggies signal caller.

“He looks great. I think he’s growing every week. I think with each week that goes on, he is going to continue to get more comfortable and will continue to go out there and sling it. For the quarterback position especially, I see a little of myself in him out there. He is doing a really good job of leading the team. He’s definitely got a fan in me, and it is fun to watch.”

Weigman is not exactly like Manziel, as he has rushed for just 69 yards ahead of Saturday’s game. But Weigman has the confidence to lead the Aggies to several wins in 2023.

How will he stack up against Auburn’s defense? In order to find success, Weigman will need to find ways to avoid [autotag]Eugene Asante[/autotag], [autotag]Mosiah Nosili-Kite[/autotag], and [autotag]Marcus Harris[/autotag]. The trio has combined to force 16 pressures with 10 hurries. In the secondary, [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag] and [autotag]D.J. James[/autotag] lead the team in coverage grades. Simpson has three interceptions while James has allowed opposing receivers to make seven catches in 13 attempts. Both players allow less than 10 yards per catch.

Weigman will square off with the Tiger defense on Saturday morning at 11 a.m. CT.

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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DJ James included in Bednarik Award watchlist

The Bednarik Award is given to the best defensive player in College Football each season.

The secondary will be one of the most experienced units the Auburn Tigers will exhibit this season, and one of its top players is being considered to win one of the nation’s top individual awards.

[autotag]D.J. James[/autotag] proved to be one of Auburn’s top defenders in his debut season with the Tigers in 2022. He made 37 stops and recorded one interception, which was returned for a touchdown in Auburn’s win over Western Kentucky last November. He graded out at 82.3 according to Pro Football Focus, which is the 10th highest among returning cornerbacks.

James is expected to have another great season in 2023, which is why the Maxwell Football Club has included him in their preseason watchlist for the Chuck Bednarik Award. The award has been given to the nation’s top defensive player every season since 1994.

This marks the second watchlist that James has been a part of ahead of the season. He is also a member of the Bronko Nagurski Trophy watchlist, which is voted on by the Football Writers Association of America.

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Auburn’s secondary is back, and stronger than ever

Auburn’s secondary has a chip on its shoulder heading into the 2023 season.

Everywhere you look, it seems that each position group has been upgraded thanks to the transfer portal. However, there is one group that will return most of its experienced players.

The defensive backfield at Auburn will have the most “homegrown” players heading into the 2023 season as players such as [autotag]Nehemiah Pritchett[/autotag], [autotag]Zion Puckett[/autotag], [autotag]Keionte Scott[/autotag], [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag], and [autotag]D.J. James[/autotag] return. In fact, four of those five previously named players are among the Auburn defense’s top returning players.

Although this unit is the most experienced, they are still learning new things ahead of the season. Auburn’s secondary welcomes the new strategies and ideas set forth by defensive coordinator [autotag]Ron Roberts[/autotag] and secondary coach [autotag]Wesley McGriff[/autotag] to go along with the familiar style of safeties coach [autotag]Zac Etheridge[/autotag].

When it comes to McGriff and Etheridge, defensive back Keionte Scott compares their relationship to one of the NBA’s best duos of all time, Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal.

“Chemistry, They’ve got chemistry already,” Scott said. “You’ve got an old-school coach with more old-school tradition and you’ve got a new-school coach. Being able to merge those together — it’s crazy to see it sometimes.”

The unit appears to be meshing well with the new style, but what does that mean for expectations? Scott says that the transition has been easy, as the expectations for Auburn are considered to be low.

“Everyone knows we have one of the top groups in the country. Just being able to go to practice knowing that we’re not nowhere, we’re not anybody, we’re not ranked in the country, we’re not anything… Offensive coordinators around the country are going to know,” Scott said. “We just want to live in that. We want to let everyone know that there’s not going to be a person you can pick on in our DB group.”

Auburn’s projected rotation in the defensive backfield combined to make 248 stops last season and accounted for four interceptions.

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