‘Auburn is like a safe haven’: Takeo Spikes on influx of Georgia talent to the Plains

Takeo Spikes is just one of many Auburn stars to come from the state of Georgia.

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[Editor’s note: This article is part of the series “Talking with Takeo,” in which Auburn Wire looks back at Tigers legend Takeo Spikes’ early life, playing under Friday night lights, his recruitment, years at Auburn, favorite college moments, the Bryan Harsin hire, being passed on by the Falcons, his NFL career and much more. Come back each Wednesday for another installment. The series is part of a partnership between our colleagues at Campus Lore and the NFLPA.]

For as long as anyone can remember, Auburn has gone into the state of Georgia and landed some of the Peach State’s biggest players.

The list is quite astonishing. Derrick Brown, Tray Blackmon, Montravius Adams, Carl Lawson, Owen Pappoe. That’s half of Auburn’s highest-ranked signees of all time. They all hail from Georgia.

So too, does Takeo Spikes, who left Sandersville, Georgia, for the Plains in 1995 after finding the environment welcoming.

“Auburn is like a safe haven,” Spikes told Auburn Wire. “And speaking from my experience, the campus, the little town of Auburn, the school makes up the town. There’s so many people there who actually care.”

Auburn linebacker Takeo Spikes makes a tackle during the 1997 Florida game. (USA TODAY Sports)

Although Auburn isn’t a large city, the negative recruitment that Spikes heard of “you’re in the middle of nowhere” made no sense to him.

“Even though you come from different places, some guys come from bigger cities. Some guys come from smaller cities. They found a way to be able to say, ‘Look,’ other people talk about, ‘if you come here, there’s nothing to do.’

Toomer’s Corner is alive with activity after No. 6 Auburn beat No. 1 Alabama, 26-14, at Jordan-Hare Stadium on Nov. 25, 2017. (Adam Hagy-USA TODAY Sports)

“What else are you going to be doing if you go to any other school? That was their (Auburn coaches) way of neutralizing that.”

Nothing to do? Well, we are quite certain that the student-athletes arriving from all over can find myriad activities, but as Spikes points out, the life of a student-athlete doesn’t include much free time.

Instead, Spikes tells potential recruits that once you arrive in Auburn, the whole town rallies around you.

“One thing that we can promise you is, the whole community will get behind you in your academics and the entire community will get behind you in football and also on a personal level with just life,” he said.

“So I think not only did they talk that, but they made you feel that as you were having the conversation. So that’s what made it so easy to be able to go there.”

The trip from some parts of Georgia to Auburn can be extremely short, including in talent-rich Columbus. The state capital, Atlanta, is just an hour and a half up I-85. The close proximity leads to a large portion of the Auburn student body coming from Georgia and one of the most vicious rivalries in college football between the Tigers and Georgia Bulldogs.

Auburn defensive lineman Maurice Swain Jr. tackles Georgia Bulldogs running back Sony Michel during the second half at Sanford Stadium on Nov. 12, 2016. (Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports)

So close, in fact, that Spikes has an idea for consideration.

“So technically, I know it’s in Alabama, but we really can be claiming it could be the west side of Georgia.”

We aren’t sure how Auburn fans would feel about switching states, but as long as the talent keeps arriving on the Plains, we’ll continue to enjoy watching some of Georgia’s heroes spurn the red and black for orange and navy blue.

Takeo Spikes’ podcast takes you behind the stories of professional athletes

Takeo Spikes’ podcast Behind The Mask takes you inside the stories and minds of some of the greatest athletes of all-time.

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[Editor’s note: This article is part of the series “Talking with Takeo,” in which Auburn Wire looks back at Tigers legend Takeo Spikes’ early life, playing under Friday night lights, his recruitment, years at Auburn, favorite college moments, the Bryan Harsin hire, being passed on by the Falcons, his NFL career and much more. Come back each Wednesday for another installment. The series is part of a partnership between our colleagues at Campus Lore and the NFLPA.]

Takeo Spikes loves telling stories. It doesn’t matter if the subject centers around his childhood, playing career, off-the-field endeavors or whatever. The man enjoys talking about people and places that have impacted him.

So it should be no surprise that he now has a podcast. The former Auburn and NFL linebacker hosts “Behind The Mask,” where former players such as Terrell Owens and Landon Collins discuss their backgrounds, careers and inspirations.

“The podcast is stemmed off of my book, which is ‘Behind The Mask,’ and volume one is dedicated to linebackers,” Spikes told Auburn Wire. “I wanted to tell my story of everything that I’ve been through, but I got an idea. I was like, ‘Why not highlight and share some of the other greatest linebackers that ever played the game and just share their story of how did they become great? What was their defining moment?’ And so that’s what I did.”

The podcast, which centers around current topics in the NFL, is also a place to learn more about some of the best football players of all time — anything from childhood to parenthood to what it was like to make a living playing in the NFL. Nothing is off limits, and the conversations can go into deeply personal subjects.

Takeo Spikes
Cincinnati Bengals linebacker Takeo Spikes focuses before the snap during a game against the Chicago Bears on Oct. 21, 2001. (Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports)

“It was a way for me to bring guys on, to create an environment, to allow them to become open in a vulnerable way,” Spikes said. “And that’s the form that it took on. So we bring on guests every week. And we talk about different aspects.

“That’s one of the things that I try to pride myself on by having my podcast show is when I bring guys on, we have certain locker room talk. Or we have a talk as if it’s just you and I, and we’re talking about fatherhood, we talk about business ventures that you’re in. And what have you learned? What have you taken from the game that has made you more valuable from an intellectual property standpoint? And it’s going to make you more sustainable as years go by, even after you’re not going to play again. And that’s the best way to be able to sum up ‘Behind The Mask.'”

Yet it isn’t just football players who have appeared on Spikes’ podcast. Finding that all athletes have the same kind of stories about struggles and dedication during trials and tribulations, the guests are as varied as the topics that are approached on the show.

“We’ve had Olympians on, Olympian bobsledder Aja Evans; Olympic bronze medalist in the 110-meter hurdle, Kristi Castlin; Justin Gatlin, gold medal winner. So we’ve had guys from all aspects, celebrities who come on and take about 20 to 30 minutes, and they really just shared their defining moment of how did they become the person that they are today.”

Takeo Spikes greets fans during the Auburn-Georgia game at Jordan-Hare Stadium on Nov 14, 2015. (Shanna Lockwood-USA TODAY Sports)

It’s just another example of Spikes continuing to contribute to the discussion of what it takes to be an athlete at the top of a sport.

“It’s a real show.”

You can check out Takeo Spikes’ podcast by clicking here

Even 24 years later, Auburn’s last-second victory over LSU in Baton Rouge still ‘epic’

Auburn and LSU battled each other for 60 minutes in hot and humid Baton Rouge in 1997 with the visiting Tigers coming out victorious.

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[Editor’s note: This article is part of the series “Talking with Takeo,” in which Auburn Wire looks back at Tigers legend Takeo Spikes’ early life, playing under Friday night lights, his recruitment, years at Auburn, favorite college moments, the Bryan Harsin hire, being passed on by the Falcons, his NFL career and much more. Come back each Wednesday for another installment. The series is part of a partnership between our colleagues at Campus Lore and the NFLPA.]

Ever have a live caged tiger growl just a couple of feet from you? Takeo Spikes has. That was one of the surprising moments of his life when he started to take the field at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge prior to the 1995 matchup between Auburn and LSU.

“You walk out of the locker room, you see this damn big a– tiger LSU got right by our locker room and I’m thinking, ‘Lord, I’m about to be eaten before the game starts,'” Spikes told Auburn Wire while admitting, “intimidation factor, great move.”

LSU mascot Mike the Tiger is seen on the field at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, before a 2013 game between LSU and Furman. (AP Photo/Jonathan Bachman)

The Bayou Bengals got the best of the Tigers on that September night in 1995, but two years later, the two teams faced off in what turned out to be one of the greatest games in the series.

“Listen, man, that game was epic,” Spikes said.

The weather was hot and humid on Sept. 20, 1997, and the Tigers were facing another intimidating factor in LSU running back Cecil “The Diesel” Collins. Auburn was ranked No. 12 in the nation, and LSU was No. 10.

“We get out on the field and I’m like, ‘Who in the hell is this dude Cecil ‘The Diesel’ Collins?'” Spikes said. “He ran for near 200 yards. LSU ran for 400 yards that night, and they still lost.”

Cecil Collins, Takeo Spikes
LSU running back Cecil Collins runs from the pursuit of Auburn linebacker Takeo Spikes on Sept. 20, 1997 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. (AP Photo/Bill Haber)

The exact figures are 232 rushing yards and two touchdowns for Collins and 377 net yards for LSU that day. The Tigers needed more than that to counter struggling quarterback Herb Tyler, who completed just 6-of-21 passes for 115 yards and a score while being intercepted twice, including once by Spikes.

The most crucial moment for the linebacker came on the final play as LSU lined up for a 64-yard, potential game-tying field goal just 30 seconds after Auburn running back Rusty Williams capped off one of the most clutch drives of the season with a 1-yard touchdown run to put the Tigers up, 31-28.

“I remember having an interception, 15 tackles and blocked the kick at the end of the game to sustain the win against LSU,” Spikes said.

Takeo Spikes
Auburn linebacker Takeo Spikes heads down the sideline after intercepting a pass from LSU quarterback Herb Tyler on Sept. 20, 1997. Spikes is chased by LSU wide receiver Tyrone Frazier. (AP Photo/Bill Haber)

That game certainly has entered the lore of great Auburn-LSU matchups, especially in the minds of Spikes and other players that were on the field that night. You can watch a complete replay of the game below.

“One of the best games, and I even talked to even a lot of the guys who played at LSU at the time, Booger McFarland, Ryan Clark. So talking to those guys man, we talk about that game because that experience is on another level. Like one of the best places that you ever can play in.”

Auburn made Tiger Stadium its home away from home again two years later in a 41-7 blowout of host LSU. Tommy Tuberville, coaches and Auburn players lit cigars and smoked them on the field to celebrate. Auburn has yet to win in Baton Rouge since that night, Sept. 18, 1999.

Playing in environments like that inspired Spikes, and for him, road games were a blast.

“I personally liked playing on the road because I feed it off for the crowd and everything,” he said.

Spikes and Auburn shut up the crowd of more than 80,000 that night in Tiger Stadium in a game no one will soon forget.