Former Auburn LB announces transfer destination

After spending four seasons on the Plains, Cam Riley will play his final eligible season in the ACC.

Former Auburn linebacker Cam Riley entered the transfer portal in the latter stages of the winter window on Jan. 16. His original plan was to follow fellow Auburn teammate [autotag]Donovan Kaufman[/autotag] to NC State, but he changed gears during the spring window and became a free agent once again.

Wednesday, Riley announced that he has found a new home. He will remain in the ACC but transfer to defending conference champion Florida State. Early predictions pointed to Riley reuniting with former Auburn head coach Gus Malzahn at UCF, but the tone switched in the days leading up to his ultimate commitment to Florida State.

In four seasons on the Plains, Riley totaled 119 tackles with two pass deflections. His junior season in 2022 was his most notable as he recorded 65 tackles with 3.5 for loss and a pass deflection. His production dipped in 2023 as his snap count decreased from 477 to 311, which resulted in Riley recording 34 fewer tackles.

Riley was the first linebacker to join the transfer portal with [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag] following suit during the spring window. A total of 22 players from last season’s roster entered the transfer portal, with 15 finding new homes. Among those who have found new homes include QB Robby Ashford (South Carolina), TE Tyler Fromm (Georgia Southern), and WR Jay Fair (USC).

Riley has one season of eligibility remaining.

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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Auburn defensive back Donovan Kaufman enters the transfer portal

Donovan Kaufman made 109 tackles and forced eight turnovers in his three seasons on the Plains.

Auburn has lost another member of its secondary with [autotag]Donovan Kaufman[/autotag] electing to enter the transfer portal as a graduate transfer.

The veteran spent one season at Vanderbilt before following Derek Mason to Auburn ahead of the 2021 season. In his three seasons on the Plains, he spent time at both safety and nickel, appearing in 32 total games.

The New Orleans native totaled 109 tackles, 8.0 tackles for loss, 2.0 sacks, six pass breakups, two interceptions and six forced fumbles.

He is the third Auburn defensive back to enter the portal this offseason, joining safeties Marquise Gilbert and Austin Ausberry. The Tigers are set to return just one starting member in the secondary after D.J. James, Nehemiah Pritchett, Zion Puckett, and Jaylin Simpson all declared for ther 2024 NFL draft.

Auburn landed veteran safety [autotag]Jerrin Thompson[/autotag] from the transfer portal on Monday.

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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.

Auburn offers veteran Vanderbilt defensive end Nate Clifton

The veteran defensive end is coming off of the best season of his career.

[autotag]Donovan Kaufman[/autotag] and [autotag]Elijah McAllister[/autotag] both became impact players for Auburn after starting their careers at Vanderbilt and the Tigers are looking to land another former Commodore from the transfer portal.

The Tigers extended an offer to [autotag]Nate Clifton[/autotag] on Monday after the veteran defensive end entered the transfer portal. He spent five seasons with Vanderbilt and was one of their top defensive players last season, making 30 tackles, 5.5 sacks, 7.5 tackles for loss and one interception.

The 6-foot-5, 280-pounder started 37 games for Vanderbilt and will have one season of eligibility at his next school. He finished his time as a Commodore with 93 tackles, 7.5 sacks, 12.5 tackles for loss, one interception and three defended passes.

He is coming off of the best season of his career and has become a hot commodity in the portal with Indianam USC and Washington having also offered him.

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Brian’s Column: How Auburn’s secondary can stop LSU

Brian’s Column: Man coverage is the key to taking down LSU

The Auburn Tigers secondary has been one of the best units in the nation this year. The LSU Tigers passing attack has arguably been THE best air unit in the nation this season.

Something has got to give on Saturday.

Auburn’s hopes of upsetting LSU on the road for the second consecutive time rely on many factors, but if [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag] and Co. can stop [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] and his two NFL-ready receivers, the rest should fall into place.

It’s a tall task for Auburn’s back four, as LSU averages nearly 40 points per game this season, almost entirely on the heels of the air raid.

So how can Auburn hold LSU in check?

Defensive coordinator [autotag]Ron Roberts[/autotag] needs to deploy cover one defense early and often.

Auburn was very good against Brock Bowers and the UGA passing attack last week through the first three quarters mainly because of their hybrid cover-one scheme.

DJ James took away the outside, while STAR safety [autotag]Donovan Kaufman[/autotag] manned-up [autotag]Brock Bowers[/autotag], leaving safety Jaylin Simpson to roam and make plays like this.

Auburn’s back end help up for the most part in man, allowing Simpson to elevate the defense as a “center fielder”.

When the Tigers switched to zone, Auburn’s best defender was forced into more of a bail out role.

Simpson covers two open receivers on this play, ultimately breaking up the pass and bailing Auburn out of a blown coverage.

No offence to [autotag]Carson Beck[/autotag] but LSU quarterback [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] makes the Tigers pay for this 100 times out of 100, just ask Missouri.

Not only is Auburn better suited at running man, but LSU is worse against it.

One of LSU’s losses this year came against the Florida State Seminoles who run one of the highest percentages of man coverage in the country.

In that game, LSU scored just 24 points. Quarterback [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] threw for 347 yards, but about a third of those came on an long catch-and-run on the games first play and a garbage time touchdown.

LSU still hit the big plays, but they struggled in between the 20’s. That is how Auburn can take them down this week.

DJ James and the rest of the corners have to make Nabers and Thomas Jr. work for every bit of separation. If the defensive line can help get some pressure, Auburn has a good chance to win this game.

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Auburn adjusts depth chart for Week 5 after injuries

Auburn has announced its depth chart for their matchup with Georgia.

Auburn has revealed its depth chart for its Week 5 game against the Georgia Bulldogs and has once again made some slight changes due to an injury.

With [autotag]Keionte Scott[/autotag] still out, Auburn has named a new starter at both star and punt returner. [autotag]Donovan Kaufman[/autotag] has been elevated to starter at star and [autotag]J.D. Rhym[/autotag] is now listed as his backup.

While [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag] was listed as the top punt returner last week, [autotag]Koy Moore[/autotag] was used and has been put as the starter for this week with Simpson as his backup.

Here is a look at the full depth chart ahead of Auburn’s game against Georgia Saturday.

Instant Analysis: Auburn gains late momentum, steals win from California

A late touchdown followed by an interception secures Auburn’s west coast trip with a victory over California.

Auburn’s California dream almost ended in a nightmare.

In a game plagued by turnovers and poor offensive play, Auburn caught momentum late and rode it to victory. A late touchdown followed by an interception in the final two minutes lifts Auburn to a 14-10 win over California late Saturday night.

Auburn (2-0) trailed 10-7 with 6:31 remaining in the game before quarterback Payton Thorne connected with tight end [autotag]Rivaldo Fairweather[/autotag] for a touchdown pass to give the Tigers the lead. Later in the quarter, California (1-1) forced and recovered a fumble which gave them one final opportunity to steal a win. However, [autotag]DJ James[/autotag] picked off Steven Jackson’s pass in the end zone with 1:44 remaining to secure the victory.

“A win is a win” head coach [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag] said following the game on the ESPN broadcast.

Auburn’s first drive set the tone for the evening. On 3rd down, quarterback [autotag]Payton Thorne[/autotag] fumbled the football before stepping out of bounds. California’s Jackson Sirmon recovered the fumble with 13:33 remaining in the 1st quarter to give the Bears great field position at the Auburn 35-yard line.

Cal would respond by converting a seven-play drive into three points. Michael Luckhurst nailed a 39-yard field goal to give the Bears the 3-0 lead with 9:42 remaining in the first.

The quarter would end with Auburn obtaining three drives. Two ended on punts, and one would end on a fumble. The Tigers managed to gain just 32 yards of offense in the first quarter, trailing 3-0.

It took Auburn several drives to return the favor, but they managed to record a turnover of their own in the 2nd quarter. Auburn’s [autotag]Jalen McLeod[/autotag] tackled Cal’s Isaiah Ifanse, and the football was stripped away by [autotag]Donovan Kaufman[/autotag]. Kaufman would recover the fumble at the California 17-yard line to give Auburn a new set of downs with 13:01 remaining in the first half.

Like California in the first quarter, Auburn turned a fumble into a score. On the third play of the drive, Thorne connected with [autotag]Jay Fair[/autotag] for the second time this season for a score. This time, Thorne dialed up a 13-yard strike to Fair to give Auburn the 7-3 lead with 11:50 in the 2nd quarter.

The trend continued later in the quarter, as California turned another turnover into points. Damari Alston fumbled the football with 7:20 remaining in the quarter to, unfortunately, end a positive drive at that point. Running back Jadyn Ott rushed for a 14-yard score to push the Bears ahead, 10-7.

Thorne was responsible for Auburn’s third turnover of the game. California’s Nohl Williams picked off Thorne with less than two minutes remaining in the first half to set up the Bears’ final drive of the 2nd quarter. The Bears planned to end the half by kicking a last-second field goal. However, a holding penalty erased the kick, forcing the Bears to try one last play from scrimmage. California quarterback Steven Jackson V threw a desperation pass to the end zone, which landed in the hands of Jaylin Simpson. He returned the pick to the Auburn 25-yard line to cap the first half.

The Tigers gained just 99 yards of total offense in the first half while committing three turnovers. Auburn had just four first downs and converted 1-of-6 third down opportunities. Defensively, the Tigers allowed 129 yards of offense and created two turnovers.

The third quarter featured less action than the previous two. California needed two possessions to set themselves up for a scoring opportunity. The Bears began a nine-play drive with 5:57, which ended in a missed 42-yard field goal to keep the score 10-7 heading into the 4th quarter.

After several frustrating drives that resulted in zero points, Auburn found the end zone again with 6:31 remaining in the 4th quarter. Thorne tossed his second touchdown pass of the game to tight end Rivaldo Fairweather to push Auburn ahead, 14-10. The play was set up by a pass interference call on the Bears two plays prior.

Turnovers woes continued for Auburn on its next possession. Hunter fumbled on the Tigers’ second play from scrimmaged, and it was recovered by Cal’s Ricky Correia for the fourth turnover of the game.

However, that turnover did not plague Auburn as others had done before. On the sixth play of California’s ensuing drive, DJ James picked off Jackson in the end zone to regain possession.

Auburn finished behind California in total yards, 273-230. The Tigers also had fewer first downs than California, and ran 23 fewer plays. Those stats go in-line with the time of possession battle, which Auburn lost by nearly 10 minutes (34:48 for California opposed to 25:12 for Auburn).

Thorne completed 9-of-14 passes for 94 yards and two touchdowns with one interception. Fairweather hauled in three passes for 39 yards and a score. In his return to action, Jarquez Hunter rushed for 53 yards on 11 carries.

Auburn returns to Jordan-Hare Stadium next Saturday to face Samford. Kickoff is scheduled for 6 p.m. CT.

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Instant Analysis: The Freeze era debuts with dominating win over UMass

Auburn cruises to a 59-14 win over the UMass Minutemen to begin the season, 1-0.

The Hugh Freeze era has gotten off to an incredible start, as he has led the Auburn Tigers to a gigantic win to kick off the 2023 season.

Auburn (1-0) outgains UMass (1-1) 495-301 in the yards department, including a 289-140 discrepancy in the run game to win, 59-14.

The Tigers took a 17-7 lead into the second quarter but would proceed to score 21 points in both the 2nd and 3rd quarters to pull away from the Minutemen in the season-opener.

Auburn got on the board first at the 11:28 mark in the first quarter. USF transfer [autotag]Brian Battie[/autotag] returned the opening kick to the Auburn 38-yard line from seven yards deep in the endzone. The drive ended with a two-yard rush by [autotag]Damari Alston[/autotag], capping off an 11-play, 62-yard drive.

In the Tigers’ first drive, quarterback [autotag]Payton Thorne[/autotag] completed 1-of-3 passes for nine yards and rushed for 16 more. Alston rushed for 25 yards and Battie gained nine yards on one carry.

The Minutemen answered on the ensuing drive by tying the game at 7-7 with 7:20 remaining in the quarter. UMass quarterback Taisun Phommachanh scored on a 1-yard rush to close out an 8-play, 89-yard drive. Phommachanh rushed for 50 yards on the drive, while Kay’ron Lynch-Adams rushed for 26 yards.

The Tigers’ second drive would see the season debut of Robby Ashford, who subbed in at quarterback for three plays, where he completed a pass for four yards and rushed for eight more. The drive would stall out, however, as Auburn was forced to kick a field goal. [autotag]Alex McPherson[/autotag]’s 37-yard attempt was true, thus extending Auburn’s lead to 10-7 with 2:11 remaining in the first quarter.

After forcing UMass to punt, returner [autotag]Keionte Scott[/autotag] set Auburn up in a great field position with a 56-yard return to the UMass 16-yard line. The drive was short-lived, as Ashford checked into the game to score on the opening play of the 2nd quarter on a 10-yard rush to extend Auburn’s lead to 17-7.

Ashford’s momentum carried into the next drive. He entered the game on the final three plays of Auburn’s next possession and rushed one yard into the endzone for his second score of the game to advance Auburn’s lead to 24-7 with 10:11 in the first half.

His third score of the game would come in the Tigers’ next possession. Auburn increased its lead to 31-7 thanks to a four-yard rush by Ashford to cap a five-play, 35-yard drive.

The Tigers ended the first half with 237 net yards. Thorne completed 9-of-16 passes for 112 yards. Ashford rushed for 36 yards on six carries, scoring three times. Auburn’s leading rusher was Alston, who carried the ball eight times for 43 yards. [autotag]Jay Fair[/autotag] reeled in four catches for 27 yards, while [autotag]Shane Hooks[/autotag] led in overall receiving yards with 41 yards on two catches.

Defensively, [autotag]Eugene Asante[/autotag] led the way with five tackles. [autotag]Donovan Kaufman[/autotag], [autotag]Marcus Harris[/autotag], and [autotag]Elijah McAllister[/autotag] each recorded a sack while Asante and freshman [autotag]Keldric Faulk[/autotag] teamed up to record another.

The second half began with a bang as [autotag]Jaylin Simpson[/autotag] picked off Phommachanh on the second play of the third quarter. Simpson returned the interception 50 yards for a Tigers touchdown, increasing Auburn’s lead to 38-7 with 14:43 remaining in the quarter.

Auburn quickly scored on its first true possession in the second half. The Tigers needed just one play and 10 seconds for Thorne to connect with Fair from 29 yards out for the first touchdown pass of his Auburn career to move the lead to 45-7.

Freshman [autotag]Jeremiah Cobb[/autotag] broke onto the scene later in the quarter by taking his second-ever college carry 42 yards for an Auburn touchdown to move the lead to 52-7 with 5:25 in the third.

Two of Auburn’s three touchdowns in the third quarter lasted just one play. Auburn ran just six plays in the quarter.

UMass got off one final punch in the 4th quarter. Minutemen quarterback Carlos Davis connected with Anthony Simpson for 58 yards to cut into Auburn’s lead, 52-14, with 8:50 remaining in the game.

[autotag]Sean Jackson[/autotag] became the fourth rusher to put points on the board. His 45-yard rush with 7:02 to go in the game pushed Auburn’s lead to 59-14.

The Tigers (1-0) will make the trip out west next weekend to face Cal at California Memorial Stadium. Kickoff is set for 9:30 p.m. CT and can be seen on ESPN.

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