Auburn Tigers Snapshot Profile: No. 6 Ja’Varrius Johnson

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 veteran wide receiver [autotag]Ja’Varrius Johnson[/autotag]. The senior was Auburn’s leading wide receiver last season and should benefit from Auburn’s reworked passing attack.

Preseason Player Profile

Hometown: Trussville, Alabama

Height: 5-10

Weight: 167

Class in 2023: Senior

247Sports Composite Ranking

Four-Star / No. 10 in Alabama / No. 29 WR

Career Stats

Year G Receptions Yards YPC YPG TDs
2020 1 0 0 0 0 0
2021 12 19 274 14.4 22.8 2
2022 12 26 767 19.0 41.1 3

PFF Grades

Year Offense Receiving Drops Run Blocking
2020 54.9 55.6 60.0
2021 65.4 65.7 50.6 50.7
2022 70.3 73.1 78.4 49.1

Depth Chart Overview

Johnson led Auburn’s wide receivers in every significant category last season and is poised for another big year. The fifth-year senior brings plenty of experience to the table and with Auburn’s addition at the quarterback and other wide receiver spots they should have a much more successful passing attack.

With Johnson’s ability to get open in the slot and Auburn’s expected use of short-quick passes he has a great shot to once again lead Auburn in receptions out of the slot.

Ja’Varrius Johnson’s Photo Gallery

On3 Roundtable highlights Auburn’s playmakers at wide receiver

Who will be the Tigers’ top receiving targets in 2023?

The 2023 edition of the Auburn Tigers will look vastly different.

Auburn’s offense will see notable changes at offensive line and wide receiver. The latter position group was discussed on a recent episode of The On3 Roundtable.

Host J.D. PicKell welcomed Auburn Live’s Justin Hokanson to chat about the Tigers last week. Auburn will have several new faces lining up to catch passes from either [autotag]Robby Ashford[/autotag] or [autotag]Payton Thorne[/autotag] this season thanks to the transfer portal. Players such as [autotag]Jyaire Shorter[/autotag], [autotag]Shane Hooks[/autotag], and [autotag]Nick Mardner[/autotag] will be tall targets for Auburn’s quarterbacks, but the one transfer receiver that Hokanson is most looking forward to watching is FIU transfer [autotag]Rivaldo Fairweather[/autotag].

Fairweather comes to Auburn after reeling in 28 catches for 426 yards and three touchdowns last season at FIU and is poised to help out the Tigers at tight end.

He’s only played football for four or five years of his life, but played basketball, played soccer in high school, super athletic and super raw,” Hokanson said. “That kid’s got NFL potential written all over him. He’s going to be really interesting to see. Is he involved in just the red zone or is he involved all the way up and down the field? He’s a guy that’s going to be a big target.”

Outside of the new transfers, Auburn’s leading receiver from a season ago returns to the roster.

[autotag]Ja’Varrius Johnson[/autotag] caught 26 passes for 493 yards last season for the Tigers. Hokanson believes that Auburn’s fresh receivers will provide relief to Johnson.

“I think there’s a lot to be determined. I don’t know that there will be a premier pass catcher,” Hokanson said. “I feel like you’ve got some guys that can maybe turn into reliable guys across the board but I would probably start with those four.”

According to Pro Football Focus, three of Auburn’s top offensive players reside in the receiving corps.

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Auburn Tigers Snapshot Profile: No. 5 Jay Fair

He is entering his second 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 wide receiver [autotag]Jay Fair[/autotag]. The sophomore saw action in nine games last season but was rarely targeted and is looking to prove himself in the reworked passing attack.

Preseason Player Profile

Hometown: Rockwall, Texas

Height: 5-10

Weight: 186

Class in 2023: Sophomore

247Sports Composite Ranking

Three-Star // No. 87 in Texas // No. 84 WR

Career Stats

Year G Receptions Yards TDs YPC YPG
2022 9 2 34 0 17 3.8

PFF Grades

Year Offense Receiving Drops Run Blocking
2022 58.3 61.6 70.7 39.9

Depth Chart Overview

Fair caught two passes last season but appeared in nine games as a true freshman. However, Auburn brought in [autotag]Caleb Burton III[/autotag] over the offseason and the two will now be battling for reps behind starter [autotag]Ja’Varrius Johnson[/autotag] in the slot.

If Fair can hold off Burton then he has a chance to see his playing time rise significantly as Auburn has not shied away from its desire to heavily rotate at all three wide receiver spots.

Jay Fair’s Photo Gallery

Hugh Freeze is looking for the next ‘alpha’ in his receiving group to step up

Freeze coached many great receivers during his time at Ole Miss, and wants to do the same at Auburn.

Auburn head coach [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag] has shared his desire to build an improved quarterback room over spring practice and summer workouts. One way to do that is by making sure that the winning quarterback has plenty of talent on the receiving end of his passes.

The receiving corps is another area that Freeze addressed early on in his first spring practice as the Tigers’ head coach. Freeze feels that he has the talent to make his quarterbacks successful, but he is looking for that one receiver to step up and take on the “leader of the pack” role.

In his years at Ole Miss, Freeze had the likes of D.K. Metcalf, Laquon Treadwell, and A.J. Brown grace his roster, thus making his passing game one of the best in the nation. Freeze says that he hopes to find that type of talent and leadership within his current group of receivers.

“We always felt like we had a good matchup or two that in our system if they got the right look on their field that they had the capability of winning that one-on-one battle,” Freeze said of his receivers at Ole Miss. “We’ve got to get to that point (at Auburn). Are we there yet? I don’t know. But we certainly have to get there.”

There are certainly many athletes that could be that “alpha” on this year’s roster. [autotag]Koy Moore[/autotag], [autotag]Camden Brown[/autotag], [autotag]Landen King[/autotag], and [autotag]Ja’varrius Johnson[/autotag] return from last season’s roster, and Auburn has added Cincinnati transfer [autotag]Nick Mardner[/autotag] into the mix as well.

Auburn will continue spring practice on select dates throughout March and will conclude matters during the annual A-Day game on April 8.

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Oklahoma State wide receiver transfer Bryson Green to visit Auburn

Green was one of their top receivers last season.

Auburn is continuing to work the transfer portal and is getting a big visitor on Friday. Oklahoma State transfer wide receiver [autotag]Bryson Green[/autotag] will be visiting the Tigers on Friday, according to a report by Jeffrey Lee of Auburn Live.

Green was one of the Cowboy’s top receivers last season, catching 36 passes for 584 yards and five touchdowns. The 6-foot-1, 205-pound wide receiver has two seasons of eligibility remaining.

A former three-star recruit he has emerged as a top target in the portal since he entered on Jan. 5 and is also being heavily pursued by Ole Miss. and is expected to visit them this weekend.

The Tigers are looking to help a wide receiver room that has to produce more in 2023. Auburn’s top receiver last season was [autotag]Ja’Varrius Johnson[/autotag], who caught just 26 passes for 493 yards and three touchdowns. They also hosted Georgia State transfer [autotag]Jamari Thrash[/autotag] on Thursday.

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Auburn offers former Michigan WR Andrel Anthony

Auburn is looking to add to their impressive transfer class.

[autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag] knows Auburn’s roster needs instant-impact players and the best place for those players is in the transfer portal. The Tigers are looking to add a wide receiver from the portal and on Thursday they extended an offer to former Michigan wide receiver [autotag]Andrel Anthony[/autotag].

The 6-foot-2, 190-pound wideout spent the past two seasons at Michigan and entered the portal on Jan. 4. He has quickly emerged as one of the top portal targets and already has over a dozen scholarship offers.

His best season was in 2021 when he caught 12 passes for 248 yards and three touchdowns in 11 games. His production took a step back in 2022, when he caught seven passes for 80 yards and one touchdown.

The Tiger’s top pass catcher last season was [autotag]Ja’Varrius Johnson[/autotag] who caught just 26 passes for 493 yards and three touchdowns.

Anthony isn’t the only transfer receiver Auburn is targeting, former Georgia State wideout [autotag]Jamari Thrash[/autotag] was scheduled to visit Auburn on Thursday.

The Tigers have done a great job addressing their needs in the portal so far, they have landed two of the top offensive tackles in the portal in [autotag]Gunner Britton[/autotag] and [autotag]Dillon Wade[/autotag]. They have also added former FIU tight end [autotag]Rivaldo Fairweather[/autotag] and former Vanderbilt pass-rusher [autotag]Elijah McAllister[/autotag].

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Auburn set to host former Mississippi State wide receiver Rara Thomas

The Eufaula native reeled in 62 catches for 878 yards in two seasons at Mississippi State.

We are in the early stages of transfer portal season, and Auburn is already set to receive a visitor.

Rara Thomas, who spent two seasons catching passes from Will Rogers at Mississippi State, will visit the Plains this weekend according to Jason Caldwell of Auburn Undercover. Auburn will be his first visit, he also is expected to visit Alabama and Georgia as well.

Thomas, who signed with Mississippi State from Eufaula High School, caught 62 passes for 878 yards and 12 touchdowns in two seasons at Mississippi State. He did most of his damage this season, catching 44 passes for 626 yards and seven touchdowns. He was the Bulldogs’ leading receiver in yards and was second on the team in touchdown receptions behind Caleb Ducking, who caught eight touchdowns this season.

Thomas did not receive much interest from Power Five programs as a high school recruit, as Mississippi State and South Carolina were the only major programs to offer. But his success at Mississippi State may aid him in draft stock. He was the No. 28 overall prospect from the state of Alabama for the 2021 cycle.

Auburn needs help in the receiving department, and Thomas would give the Tigers a boost. Auburn’s highest-graded receiver according to Pro Football Focus was [autotag]Ja’Varrius Johnson[/autotag], who graded at 70.3 and caught just 26 passes despite being targeted 45 times.

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Instant Analysis: Auburn throttled by Alabama 49-27 in Iron Bowl

Alabama scored touchdowns on five of their seven first-half drives to take control of the game.

After taking an early lead Auburn was unable to keep up with Alabama in the 2022 Iron Bowl, falling 49-27 to the Crimson Tide Saturday.

Auburn has now lost its last six games inside Bryant-Denny Stadium and none of them were decided by less than double digits. With the loss, Auburn failed to automatically qualify for a bowl game and will need help to keep playing.

Auburn (5-7, 2-6 SEC) took an early 7-0 lead thanks to two big runs by [autotag]Robby Ashford[/autotag]. He scrambled for 25 yards early in the drive and took a designed carry 24 yards around the right side of the line for his first touchdown.

He finished with 121 yards and two touchdowns on 17 carries. Auburn’s ground game had another strong performance, the Tigers averaged 7.4 yards per carry and finished with 318 yards rushing.

[autotag]Jarquez Hunter[/autotag] rushed for over 100 yards for the third consecutive game, finishing with 134 yards on just 11 carries.

Auburn may have opened the scoring but Alabama quickly took command of the game, they scored on their next three possessions to take a 21-7 lead at the start of the second quarter.

The Tigers were unable to get pressure on Bryce Young and the reigning Heisman winner picked apart Auburn’s defense. He completed 20-of-30 passes for 343 yards and three touchdowns. He added 48 yards and one score with his legs.

Auburn did not fold though, the Tigers responded with a 10-play, 76-yard drive to stop the bleeding. Ashford capped it off with a beautiful 20-yard pass to [autotag]Ja’Varrius Johnson[/autotag] to make it a 21-14 deficit.

Despite averaging 6.2 yards per play, Auburn’s two turnovers prevented the Tigers from keeping up with Alabama, who scored touchdowns on five of their seven drives to start the game and averaged 8.1 yards per play.

Auburn held Alabama to 14 points in the second half but was unable to take advantage of the opportunity. They scored on their first two drives of the second half but it was too little too late as that made it a 42-24 game with 12 minutes to play.

The Tigers had one last chance when [autotag]Owen Pappoe[/autotag] picked off Young with 6:36 left to play and Auburn trailing 42-24. They once again showed their fight, converting on fourth down, and [autotag]Alex McPherson[/autotag] made a 39-yard field goal to cut it to a 42-27 game with 2:08 to play.

Auburn’s 27 points are the most they have scored in Tuscaloosa since scoring 44 in 2014. The Tigers were unable to recover the ensuing onside kick and Alabama added on one last touchdown to make it a 49-27 game.

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Instant Analysis: Auburn rallies but falls to Mississippi State 39-33 in overtime

Auburn fought hard but was unable to overcome a tough start to the game.

Auburn erased a 21-point deficit Saturday night against the Mississippi State Bulldogs but was unable to hold on as they fell to the Bulldogs 39-33 in overtime.

The Tigers rallied from down 24-6 at halftime and scored 27 second-half points to force overtime but after Anders Carlson missed a 38-yard field goal the Bulldogs’ Jo’quavious Marks ran it in from the 5-yard line to hand Auburn their fifth straight loss.

The Tigers managed just 109 yards in the first half but the ground game came alive in the second half as they clawed their way back into the game.

The comeback started with the Tiger’s defense forcing a Mississippi State punt on their first drive of the half but a bobbled snap gave the Tigers the ball deep in the Bulldog’s territory.

Facing second-and-14, [autotag]Robby Ashford[/autotag] scrambled for the 20-yard touchdown to give Auburn their first touchdown of the game and make it a 24-12 Mississippi State lead.

The Bulldog’s next punt was not much better as they punted it just 13 yards, giving Auburn the ball at the Mississippi State 35.

Ashford once again made sure Auburn capitalized on the chance, taking the designed run 18 yards for his second rushing touchdown of the game. The touchdown made it a 24-19 game with 4:18 left in the third quarter.

He finished the game with 108 yards rushing, two touchdowns, and a crucial two-point conversion.

After the teams traded punts, [autotag]Tank Bigsby[/autotag] made his presence known with a 41-yard touchdown run that gave Auburn a 25-24 lead with 6:36 left to play in the game.

The score erased a 24-3 first-half deficit and it looked like [autotag]Cadillac Williams[/autotag] was going to open his head coaching career with a win.

However, the Bulldogs were not done yet, they marched down the field on their first scoring drive of the half and retook the lead 30-25 with 3:49 left to play.

As they did throughout the second half Auburn fought back. With the Tigers facing 3rd-and-nine, Ashford hit [autotag]Ja’Varrius Johnson[/autotag] for a 24-yard gain and Auburn was in business.

After a defensive holding gave Auburn a crucial first down, Ashford took a designed run to the Mississippi State 8-yard line, and [autotag]Jarquez Hunter[/autotag] punched it in to give Auburn the 33-30 lead after Ashford converted the two-point conversion.

Mississippi State was not done though. A facemask penalty on the kickoff gave the Bulldogs the ball at the 50-yard line with 56 seconds to play.

Mississippi State’s kicker was up to the challenge and drilled the 48-yard field goal to tie it up.

The Bulldogs pulled out the trickery on the ensuing kick-off and drilled an Auburn returner and recovered the ball to give them a chance to win in regulation.

As expected with a team led by a former running back and with an offensive line coach calling plays the Tigers leaned on the ground game, rushing for 256 yards and all four of their touchdowns. They ran the ball 46 times compared to 22 passes.

Ashford’s 109 yards and two touchdowns led the way but Bigsby added 89 yards and one score on 13 carries while Hunter had 54 yards and a score of his own on 12 carries.

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Instant Analysis: Auburn drops fourth straight game, falls to Arkansas 41-27

Auburn was unable to keep up in the second half, getting out-scored 24-14 by the Razorbacks.

Auburn was able to keep it close in the first half but the Arkansas Razorbacks pulled away in the third quarter to win 41-27 in Jordan-Hare Stadium.

With their fourth straight loss, Auburn (3-5, 1-4 SEC) has now lost to every SEC West team under [autotag]Bryan Harsin[/autotag] and does not have an active winning streak against any of their divisional rivals.

The Tigers had a solid start to the game, forcing a three-and-out on defense and marching into [autotag]Anders Carlson[/autotag]’s range on their first drive, however, he missed the 46-yard attempt. After a Razorbacks fumble on their ensuing drive, he got a second attempt and nailed it, giving Auburn a 3-0 lead to start the game.

The lead would not last as the Razorbacks marched down the field and made sure to finish their drive with a touchdown, taking a 7-3 lead with 3:10 left in the first quarter.

The Razorback’s success in the red zone was the difference in the game, they scored four touchdowns in their first five trips to build the commanding 31-13 lead. Auburn scored once in their first two trips, a 24-yard field goal.

With Auburn trailing 14-3 in the second quarter, [autotag]Tank Bigsby[/autotag] and [autotag]Robby Ashford[/autotag] were able to get Auburn back in the game with their legs. Ashford ran for 31 yards and a few plays later Bigsby ripped off a 41-yard touchdown run to make it a 14-10 game and bring Jordan-Hare Stadium alive.

The Tigers were unable to carry this momentum into the second half, Auburn moved the ball to open the second half but stalled and was forced to attempt a 52-yard field goal, which was blocked.

The Razorbacks took advantage of the opportunity, going on a nine-play, 64-yard touchdown drive and taking a 24-13 lead.

As has been the case all season, Auburn’s offense had no answers in the second half. They did not record a first down on either of their next two drives and the defense once again got worn down.

The Razorbacks scored touchdowns on their first three touchdowns of the half to pull away 38-13 and secure their first win over Auburn since 2015. They finally found success on the ground in the second half, rushing for 220 yards after managing just 70 yards in the first half.

The Tiger’s two scoring drives of the half came when the game was well in hand for Arkansas. With Ashford finding [autotag]Camden Brown[/autotag] for a nine-yard touchdown and [autotag]Jarquez Hunter[/autotag] punching it in with 4 seconds left to make it a 41-27 Arkansas win.

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