Auburn’s offensive line is the most important key against Georgia

How will Auburn’s offensive line look on Saturday?

Georgia has dominated opponents in the trenches so far this season.

The Bulldogs have been able to impose their will both offensively and defensively at the line of scrimmage. It’s a major area of concern for Auburn, who does not have the most stable pass protection, as well as a lack of an elite pass rush, especially with one of their best pass rushers currently out with an injury (TD Moultry).

B-Wil of The War Rapport joined the Locked on Auburn Podcast with Zac Blackerby to talk about how the offensive line might have taken a small step backwards in the game against LSU.

B-Wil: Up until the LSU game, our offensive line had played qualitatively better than it had last season. The LSU game may have been an outlier for the o-line because we were calling plays that forced Nix to do things he hasn’t done so far this season. He was running around making plays instead of from the pocket. We still run block very well. I’m still not too down on our offensive line, but we saw a lot more pressure against LSU than we had in the previous weeks.

If Auburn is going to survive against Georgia this weekend, the offensive line will need to hold up for the occasional Bo Nix explosive play. Not for the entire game, because nobody can hold Georgia’s front forever, but for the occasional play to bring some momentum into offensive drives. The Bulldogs have been fantastic in both run stopping and pass defense this season. However, this may be the most hostile environment they play in all season. Auburn can’t afford to take sacks and stall out against a team that can overwhelm you at the line of scrimmage. The offensive line bringing their best game is key for Auburn’s success this Saturday.

[listicle id=24731]

Contact/Follow us @theauburnwire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. 

A win at LSU is crucial for Auburn’s season

If Auburn can’t win at LSU, bowl eligibility comes into question.

Auburn’s next stretch of five games is brutal.

Four of Auburn’s next five opponents are inside the top 15, and the only team that isn’t ranked (LSU) has beaten Auburn at home 10 games straight. If Auburn can’t break the cigar curse this weekend, there are some serious questions about whether or not the Tigers can make a bowl game this season, especially with mystery surrounding the quarterback position.

Here is Auburn’s remaining schedule.

  • At LSU
  • Vs No. 2 Georgia
  • At No. 8 Arkansas
  • Vs No. 12 Ole Miss
  • At No. 15 Texas A&M
  • Vs Mississippi State
  • At South Carolina
  • Vs No. 1 Alabama

If Auburn can’t beat LSU, there might only be two wins left on the schedule (MSU and South Carolina). Auburn is going to have to upset someone to get to six wins.

Mike G and C Dub of The War Rapport joined Zac Blackerby on the “Locked on Auburn podcast” to talk about what this future stretch of games could look like for the Tigers.

I think in any reasonable scenario fans should be happy with a 2-2 split over the next month. But I still think all of those games are winnable right now. It just all depends on how we look at LSU. It depends on who plays quarterback and then what kind of game plan we employ.

This weekend, we find out about this team’s culture, and how badly this team wants to win.

[listicle id=24301]

Contact/Follow us @theauburnwire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion.

Auburn’s new offensive scheme takes pressure off their weakest unit

How much can Mike Bobo and his new scheme help improve the offensive line play?

Death. Taxes. Auburn fans talking about how the offense is going to get better.

Over the past two seasons, expectations of Auburn’s offense have been squandered by offensive line play. Last season, it might have been the unit that put the final nail in Gus Malzahn’s coffin. Offenses can’t run the ball without an offensive line. Quarterbacks can’t have time to throw the ball deep without an offensive line. So how does Mike Bobo and his new scheme help improve the offensive line play?

Mike G of the War Rapport joined Zac Blackerby with the Locked on Auburn podcast to talk about how much the offensive line will benefit from this new Mike Bobo scheme.

“I expect to see a scheme that helps (the offensive line) out quite a bit this year,” Mike G said on Locked On Auburn. “A scheme that is not dependent on slow developing, run play-action plays, they’ll get the ball out of the quarterbacks hands. The scheme will take a little bit of pressure off of these guys. And then in games one, two, and four (Akron, Alabama State, Georgia State), i expect that we will see some new guys rotating into the lineup. Hopefully Auburn is in a position where they can see some new guys in action and then find out what kind of depth they have at offensive line. In the past when, say, a left tackle has gotten injured, Auburn has had a merry-go-round at that spot, taking guys out of their natural position, instead of actually letting the backup left tackle step in. I’m looking forward to seeing more depth because we’ve been one guy deep on offensive line since 2017.

[listicle id=19462]

Contact/Follow us @theauburnwire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion.