USC EDGE, former Tiger Romello Height enters transfer portal

A member of Auburn’s 2020 haul, Height is seeking other opportunities following a two-year stay at USC.

A member of Auburn’s 2020 recruiting haul is exploring new opportunities.

[autotag]Romello Height[/autotag], a former four-star EDGE who signed with Auburn during the 2020 recruiting cycle, announced Friday that he is entering the transfer portal after spending two seasons at USC.

He played in nine games in two seasons at Auburn, recording 18 total tackles. His best games in an Auburn uniform took place during the 2021 season against Alabama State and Arkansas when he made four stops each.

His most productive season at USC was in 2023, where he competed in 11 games and recorded 20 tackles. Six of those tackles were for a loss. He recorded a season-high five tackles in the Trojans’ win over Arizona State on Sept. 23. He also recorded two tackles for loss, and recovered a fumble.

Height was a part of Auburn’s 2020 class that ranked No. 8 in the nation and turned out to be the final signing class under former head coach [autotag]Gus Malzahn[/autotag]. He was the No. 16 recruit of Auburn’s 27-member signing class. Several headliners of the class include [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag] and [autotag]Tank Bigsby[/autotag] and several who transferred away from the program such as [autotag]Kobe Hudson[/autotag], [autotag]JJ Pegues[/autotag], and [autotag]LaDarrius Tennison[/autotag].

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Malcolm Johnson Jr. announces transfer destination

The former Auburn wide receiver reveals his transfer destination on Christmas Day.

A former Auburn wide receiver used Christmas Day to reveal his transfer destination.

[autotag]Malcolm Johnson Jr.[/autotag], who played three seasons at Auburn before entering the transfer portal earlier this month, announced Monday that he will transfer to Bowling Green.

Johnson signed with Auburn as a four-star wide receiver for the 2020 class, joining athletes such as [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag], [autotag]Tank Bigsby[/autotag], [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag], and [autotag]Brandon Frazier[/autotag] as members of Auburn’s No. 8 ranked class. He was a four-star recruit according to 247Sports, and was the No. 4 overall prospect from Virginia.

Johnson never became a consistent member of the receiver rotation, as he made just 14 catches for 199 yards and three touchdowns in three seasons on the Plains. The 2023 season was his best, as he recorded 89 yards on six catches. He appeared in five games in 2023, and his most productive game was in Auburn’s season-opening win over UMass, where he caught two passes for 59 yards.

Johnson joined four other Auburn receivers by joining the transfer portal this month. The Tigers will look to revamp the unit and boost production in 2024.

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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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Auburn has a chance to sign its best linebacker class in a decade

Josh Aldridge has assmebled an impressive linebacker class and itsn’t done yet.

On Wednesday Auburn landed its highest-rated commit since 2019 when they successfully flipped five-star linebacker [autotag]Demarcus Riddick[/autotag] from the Georgia Bulldogs.

Riddick is the headliner of Auburn’s 2024 recruiting class and is further proof that [autotag]Hugh Freeze[/autotag] and Co. can now win recruiting battles with Alabama and Georgia, something you have to do if you want to compete in the SEC.

A ton of credit also goes to linebackers coach [autotag]Josh Aldridge[/autotag], who has landed several top targets but his pursuit of Riddick is the most impressive. He had a ton of ground to make up as the previous staff had not yet offered Riddick when he committed to the Bulldogs.

Aldridge quickly extended an offer and after a full-court press, the Tigers pulled off the flip.

He is the second linebacker that Auburn has beaten Georgia for this cycle, just last month they landed four-star linebacker [autotag]Joseph Phillips[/autotag], beating out the Bulldogs for the talented but raw linebacker.

The duo of Riddick and Phillips has made linebacker one of the strengths of Auburn’s 2024 recruiting class and the addition of three-star [autotag]D’Angelo Barber[/autotag] makes it one of Auburn’s best hauls at linebacker in years.

While there is still plenty of time left before any of them can sign, the Tigers haven’t signed three or more high-school linebackers in the same cycle since 2020 when they landed four-star prospects [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag], [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] and [autotag]Desmond Tisdol[/autotag] and three-star [autotag]Romello Height[/autotag].

What separates the 2024 class from that group is that both Riddick (No. 26) and Phillips (No. 132) are top 150 prospects while only Steiner (No. 98) was from the 2020 haul.

The 2019 class, consisting of five-star Pappoe, four-star [autotag]Derick Hall[/autotag] and three-stars Octavious Brothers and Kameron Brown, also has a case as the best in recent history.

As it currently stands, these two classes are extremely similar. Both are headlined by a five-star with a second top prospect who projects more as a pass-rusher but is capable of playing linebacker. With the 2019 class having one more member, it has more depth and is slightly better.

With Auburn not signing any linebackers last year they are in need of a large class, making it likely they will add at least one or two more players and Aldrige has the Tigers in a great spot with two more targets, four-star [autotag]Bradley Shaw[/autotag] and three-star [autotag]Wyatt Simmons[/autotag].

If they add Shaw it will give them three blue-chip linebackers, something they have only twice in the past 10 cycles, the 2020 class and in 2015 when they landed Richard McBryde, Jeff Holland and Darrell Williams. While that class also included three-star Robert Muschamp, it lacked a five-star prospect to compare with Riddick. 

Due to the top-end talent of Riddick and Phillips and the depth of Barber, Auburn’s 2024 class is on the verge of being the best the Tigers have signed in the past 10 cycles, if they can add one or both of Shaw and Simmons then it will jump past the 2019 and 2015 classes and undoubtedly be the best linebacker class in the past decade.

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Auburn Tigers Snapshot Profile: No. 17 Robert Woodyard Jr.

The former top recruit is ready to contribute in just his season 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 linebacker [autotag]Robert Woodyard Jr[/autotag]. The former top recruit was limited last season as he recovered from injury but is now healthy and ready to contribute.

Preseason Player Profile

Hometown: Mobile, Alabama

Height: 6-0

Weight: 234

Class in 2023: Redshirt Freshman

247Sports Composite Ranking

Four-Star / No. 9 in Alabama / No. 13 LB

Career Stats

Year G Tackles TFLs Sacks PDs FFs
2022 4 4 0 0 0 0

PFF Grades

Year Defense Tackling Run Defense Coverage Special Teams
2022 67.5 73.6 65.7 60.0 59.6

Depth Chart Overview

He was Auburn’s top signee in the 2022 recruiting class but was limited to a redshirt as he recovered from an injury. He is now healthy and looks like the player that Auburn was expecting when they flipped him from Alabama.

The duo of [autotag]Austin Keys[/autotag] and [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag] are ahead of him on the Mike linebacker depth chart but Woodyard has the talent to carve out a role for himself, he also got experience on special teams last year and could so again. He will be in the mix to win the starting job in the next couple of seasons after gaining valuable experience in 2023.

Robert Woodyard Jr.’s Photo Gallery

Auburn Tigers Snapshot Profile: No. 12 Austin Keys

The veteran is looking to become an immediate starter for Auburn.

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 transfer linebacker [autotag]Austin Keys[/autotag]. One of two linebackers that Auburn plucked from an SEC West rival, Keys is in a battle to be the starting middle linebacker.

Preseason Player Profile

Hometown: Collins, Mississippi

Height: 6-2

Weight: 245

Previous School: Ole Miss

Class in 2023: Junior

247Sports Composite Ranking

three-Star / No. 21 in Mississippi / No. 32 LB

Career Stats

Year G Tackles TFLs Sacks FFs PDs
2020 (Ole Miss) 4 0 0 0 0 0
2021 (Ole Miss) 6 12 0 0 0 0
2022 (Ole Miss) 13 39 3.5 2.0 1 0

PFF Grades

Year Defense Tackling Run Defense Pass Rush Coverage
2020
2021 85.5 83.4 84.1 65.1 74.5
2022 63.7 58.6 64.3 56.2 63.6

Depth Chart Overview

Keys split time with [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag] as the starting middle linebacker during spring practice but Keys was getting more time at the end. He has plenty of experience after spending the past three seasons at Ole Miss and became an important rotational player last season.

Auburn has several options at middle linebacker with Keys, Steiner and [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] but both Steiner and Riley have struggled to establish themself in past season and Keys has a chance to become an immediate starter.

Austin Keys’ Photo Gallery

Mike Farrell talks Auburn’s ‘interesting’ additions of Jalen McLeod and Larry Nixon III

The College Football analyst is intrigued by Auburn’s LB additions from the transfer portal, and is interested to see how they pan out on the Plains.

When it comes to the transfer portal, Auburn football had just as much success in the spring window as it did in the winter by reeling in seven more players which included two linebackers.

Mike Farrell recently spent time breaking down transfer linebackers, and has listed Auburn’s additions of [autotag]Larry Nixon III[/autotag] from North Texas and [autotag]Jalen McLeod[/autotag] from Appalachian State as “interesting moves.”

Farrell released his choices for the top five interesting linebacker moves of the spring transfer window and has included Nixon and McLeod in the mix. Starting with Nixon, Farrell says that he will have plenty of opportunities to earn playing time this season.

Having totaled 245 tackles, 11.5 tackles for a loss and 6.5 sacks during his time with North Texas, Nixon now brings his productive experience to Auburn. He is part of a revamped linebacking group, being the fourth added by the Tigers during this cycle. While [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] and [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag] are also important returnees at the position, there is plenty of opportunity to earn playing time this fall.

He then mentions McLeod by saying that his production at Appalachian State will provide a quick boost to the position.

McLeod arrives at Auburn in a similar situation as the above-mentioned Larry Nixon. Coming off a season when he finished with 7.5 tackles for a loss and six sacks, his production and playmaking ability will be an immediate valuable asset for the Tigers. However, just like Nixon, he will have to battle with several returning players and other transfers for playing time which will make summer camp very interesting at the position.

Nixon and McLeod are among the seven valuable additions to Auburn’s roster from the spring window of the portal. Quarterback [autotag]Payton Thorne[/autotag], offensive lineman [autotag]Jaden Muskrat[/autotag], and wide receiver [autotag]Jyaire Shorter[/autotag] brings Auburn’s transfer haul to 21 total members, which is second in the nation behind Colorado.

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Desmond Tisdol finds new home with AAC program

Tisdol becomes the 10th former Tiger to find a new home since the end of last season.

Former Auburn linebacker [autotag]Desmond Tisdol[/autotag] has become the 10th player from last season’s roster to find a new home.

Tisdol announced Thursday that he will transfer to Florida Atlantic, which sets him up to be reunited with former Auburn special teams coordinator, Roc Bellantoni, who was named the defensive coordinator for the new-look staff at FAU under head coach Tom Herman.

Tisdol had a limited role with the Tigers during his three-year stint, as he recorded just 16 tackles in six appearances since the 2020 season. Last season was his most productive season, where he made 12 stops.

Tisdol was a member of Gus Malzahn’s final signing class in 2020. The class has since broken apart, as a majority of the class has transferred to other programs.

Out of Auburn’s 27 signees from 2020, only 10 remain on the Tigers’ roster. Several key members of the class include Ladarius Tennison and JJ Pegues, who are currently at Ole Miss, and Kobe Hudson, who has since reunited at UCF with Malzahn. [autotag]Tank Bigsby[/autotag] was the headliner of the class, and names such as [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag], [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag], and [autotag]Killian Zierer[/autotag] remain on the roster.

Tisdol is the second former Tiger to find a new home this week, joining defensive lineman [autotag]Jeffrey M’Ba[/autotag], who announced his commitment to Purdue.

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Where Tank Bigsby ranks among Auburn running back legends

How does Tank Bigsby’s career at Auburn stack up with the likes of Bo Jackson, Cadillac Williams, and Joe Cribbs?

A great Auburn career has come to a close, as running back [autotag]Tank Bigsby[/autotag] is preparing for the next stop in his football journey by declaring for the NFL Draft.

Bigsby committed to Auburn as a member of the 2020 recruiting class on Aug. 9, 2019. He was the No. 40 overall prospect of the 2020 cycle and was the No. 4 overall running back out of Callaway High School in Hogansville. He was the top recruit in Auburn’s haul, which was No. 8 overall. He joined the likes of [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag], [autotag]Kobe Hudson[/autotag], and [autotag]Cam Riley[/autotag] in signing with Auburn during the 2020 recruiting cycle.

He would go on to become the signature back from 2020-22, accumulating 2,903 yards and 25 touchdowns during his three-year career. His best season was in 2021, when he rushed for 1,099 yards and 10 touchdowns.

Auburn is known for producing great running backs, so where do Bigsby’s career numbers rank among those who built upon the legacy of RBU? Let’s take a look.

These rankings are composite and are based on rushing yards, rushing touchdowns, and how high they were picked in the NFL Draft.

Robby Ashford receives interesting assessment from teammate

Linebacker Wesley Steiner was asked about the quarterback situation during Tuesday’s media availability, where he gave a fascinating description of Robby Ashford.

If you were to ask three people to give their opinions on who wins Auburn’s starting quarterback job this fall, you would receive three different answers.

Head coach Bryan Harsin has shared his assessment of the quarterbacks, but we have yet to hear fellow players’ thoughts on the situation.

That changed Tuesday when linebacker [autotag]Wesley Steiner[/autotag] took the podium to speak with the media following practice.

Steiner was asked to give his take on the quarterback situation from the perspective of a player that has to defend all three candidates every day at fall practice. He said that all three have been great, but there’s one quarterback in particular that causes Steiner personal fits.

“Robby (Ashford) is a pain in the butt, I’m not going to lie,” Steiner said, comparing Ashford to former Auburn quarterback Bo Nix. “A lot of times your defenses are designed to handle ten players because you normally don’t expect the quarterback to scramble. A quarterback creates extra gaps in the run game. Robby has definitely just been a problem and it has put me on high alert every time he’s in the game since there’s a good chance he might scramble out and extend plays.”

Steiner says that the reason Ashford is such a problem for opposing defenses is that he is super quick, just like last season’s starter.

“That was one thing with Bo Nix where it’s like once he gets moving, you’re turning at an angle on him because you don’t expect him to be so fast,” Steiner said. “Robby to me moves just as quickly. I remember in one practice I ran right by him and I felt the wind running past my ear. He’s fast.”

Steiner did not reveal his top choice, or provide any secret intel from within the program as to who is the front runner to win the job. But he did share his thoughts on who has been the biggest thorn in his side this postseason.

“The one I hate the most is Robby (Ashford) because he runs a lot.”

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