2008 Auburn Tigers football team

2008 Auburn Tigers football
Conference Southeastern Conference
Division Western Division
2008 record 5–7 (2–6 SEC)
Head coach Tommy Tuberville
Offensive coordinator Tony Franklin
Steve Ensminger (Interim)
Offensive scheme Air Raid
Defensive coordinator Paul Rhoads
Base defense 4–3
Home stadium Jordan–Hare Stadium
(Capacity: 87,451)
2008 SEC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Eastern Division
No. 1 Florida x$#   7 1         13 1  
No. 13 Georgia   6 2         10 3  
Vanderbilt   4 4         7 6  
South Carolina   4 4         7 6  
Tennessee   3 5         5 7  
Kentucky   2 6         7 6  
Western Division
No. 6 Alabama x%   8 0         12 2  
No. 14 Ole Miss   5 3         9 4  
LSU   3 5         8 5  
Arkansas   2 6         5 7  
Auburn   2 6         5 7  
Mississippi State   2 6         4 8  
Championship: Florida 31, Alabama 20
  • # BCS National Champion
  • $ BCS representative as conference champion
  • % BCS at-large representative
  • x Division champion/co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2008 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University during 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Tommy Tuberville served his tenth and final season as head coach at Auburn. He was joined by a new defensive coordinator Paul Rhoads and new offensive coordinator Tony Franklin, who attempted to implement his spread offense in a failed effort to correct the Tigers' offensive struggles in 2007. Tuberville fired Franklin six games into the season.

Auburn played a seven-game home schedule at Jordan–Hare Stadium, while traveling to Mountaineer Field in Morgantown, West Virginia for the Tigers' first ever meeting with the West Virginia Mountaineers.[1] The Tennessee Volunteers returned to the Tigers' schedule for the first time since Auburn defeated Tennessee twice in AU's undefeated 2004 season. LSU, Arkansas, and Georgia rounded out Auburn's home conference schedule.

Pre-Season

Rankings

The Tigers entered the season with high expectations, ranked highly by multiple polls in the preseason. The Associated Press Poll placed Auburn at #10[2] while the USA Today Coaches' Poll, a component of the Bowl Championship Series rankings, had Auburn at #11.[3] Other rankings include:

# 7 – Rivals.com[4]
# 8 – Athlon[5]
# 9 – Sports Illustrated[6]
# 9 – CollegeTop25 Consensus[7]
# 10 – ESPN[8]
# 13 – Lindy's[9]
# 14 – CollegeFootballNews/Scout.com[10]

Watchlists and honors

Pre-season All-SEC Teams

Coaches All-SEC 1st Team – DT Sen’Derrick Marks & P Ryan Shoemaker
Coaches All-SEC 2nd Team – RB Ben Tate, OL Tyronne Green, LB Tray Blackmon & DB Jerraud Powers
Coaches All-SEC 3rd Team – DE Antonio Coleman

Schedule

Auburn's schedule consisted of eight Southeastern Conference opponents (four home, four away) and four non-conference opponents. AU meets Tennessee-Martin and West Virginia for the first time. The WVU game, a mid-season inter-conference Thursday night matchup, is the first of a two-game home-and-home series between the two teams. Of the remaining ten opponents that the Tigers have previously faced, Auburn holds the all-time series lead against all but Alabama and LSU. Four opponents — #1 Georgia, LSU, West Virginia and Tennessee — were ranked in both the preseason USA Today and AP Polls. Alabama was also ranked in the AP Poll. Tennessee dropped out of the polls before playing Auburn; however, Vanderbilt would enter the polls by the time the Commodores played Auburn.

Date Time Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
August 30 6:00 PM Louisiana–Monroe* No. 11 Jordan–Hare StadiumAuburn, AL PPV W 34–0   87,451
September 6 11:30 AM Southern Miss* No. 10 Jordan–Hare Stadium • Auburn, AL Raycom W 27–13   87,451
September 13 6:00 PM at Mississippi State No. 9 Davis Wade StadiumStarkville, MS ESPN2[14] W 3–2   52,911
September 20 6:45 PM No. 6 LSU No. 9 Jordan–Hare Stadium • Auburn, AL (Tiger Bowl) ESPN[14] L 21–26   87,451
September 27 2:30 PM Tennessee No. 16 Jordan–Hare Stadium • Auburn, AL CBS W 14–12   87,451
October 4 5:00 PM at No. 19 Vanderbilt No. 14 Vanderbilt StadiumNashville, TN ESPN L 13–14   39,773
October 11 4:00 PM Arkansas No. 23 Jordan–Hare Stadium • Auburn, AL PPV L 22–25   85,782
October 23 6:30 PM at West Virginia* Mountaineer FieldMorgantown, WV ESPN[14] L 17–34   60,765
November 1 11:30 AM at Ole Miss Vaught–Hemingway StadiumOxford, MS Raycom L 7–17   57,324
November 8 1:30 PM Tennessee–Martin*dagger Jordan–Hare Stadium • Auburn, AL W 37–20   85,365
November 15 11:30 AM No. 12 Georgia Jordan–Hare Stadium • Auburn, AL (Deep South's Oldest Rivalry) Raycom Sports L 13–17   87,451
November 29 2:30 PM at No. 1 Alabama Bryant–Denny StadiumTuscaloosa, AL (Iron Bowl) CBS L 0–36   92,138
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming. #Rankings from Coaches' Poll released prior to game. All times are in Central Time.

Game summaries

Louisiana-Monroe

Auburn's first possession only picked up 1 first down, but the punt put UL-Monroe in bad field position. On the first play, Auburn Defensive End Antonio Coleman made a huge hit on UL-Monroe's quarterback, forcing a fumble on the UL-Monroe 9-yard line, and the Defense picked it up and took it back for the Auburn Tigers' first touchdown. A few possessions later, Auburn Receiver and Punt Returner Robert Dunn returned a UL-Monroe punt for a TD with 0:04 left in the 1st Quarter. At halftime, Auburn had a 17–0 lead after a Wes Byrum field goal. On the opening kickoff of the 3rd quarter, UL-Monroe fumbled the ball and Auburn recovered, leading to a TD run from Brad Lester. Another field goal from Byrum would make the score 27–0 going into the 4th Quarter. Kodi Burns had left the game with a cut in his leg, so Chris Todd played the rest of the game. Later in the 4th, Todd would lead Auburn down the field with an excellent and suddenly effective passing game, ending in a 3-yard Touchdown pass to Chris Slaughter to seal the victory. It was the first shutout for Auburn since a 27–0 wins over Arkansas State on November 4, 2006. It was also the first time Auburn had scored on Offense, Defense, and Special Teams since the 2003 73–7 beating of UL-Monroe. Auburn finished with 406 yards of offense, 321 Rushing yards and 85 passing yards. Auburn picked up 19 first downs while UL-Monroe picked up 12.

1 2 3 4 Total
LA-Monroe 0 0 0 0 0
Auburn 14 3 10 7 34

Southern Miss

Southern Miss returned to the Plains for the first time since the 1993 perfect season. Prior to that meeting, the Tigers had lost consecutive 1-point losses to Southern Miss, then quarterbacked by Brett Favre.

Despite impressive offensive numbers in their opening game where Southern Mississippi put up 633 yards (427 rushing) in a 51–21 win over Louisiana-Lafayette, Larry Fedora's team did not have an answer for Auburn's tough defense. The Tigers won 27–13, improving their lead in the series all-time to 17–5.[15]

1 2 3 4 Total
Southern Miss 0 0 6 7 13
Auburn 0 14 10 3 27

Mississippi State

1 2 3 4 Total
Auburn 0 3 0 0 3
Mississippi State 0 0 0 2 2

LSU

1 2 3 4 Total
LSU 3 0 14 9 26
Auburn 0 14 0 7 21

Tennessee

1 2 3 4 Total
Tennessee 0 6 0 6 12
Auburn 7 7 0 0 14

Vanderbilt

1 2 3 4 Total
Auburn 13 0 0 0 13
Vanderbilt 0 7 7 0 14

Arkansas

1 2 3 4 Total
Arkansas 3 7 6 9 25
Auburn 7 6 7 2 22

West Virginia

1 2 3 4 Total
Auburn 3 14 0 0 17
West Virginia 0 10 10 14 34

Ole Miss

1 2 3 4 Total
Auburn 0 0 7 0 7
Ole Miss 0 10 0 7 17

Tennessee-Martin

1 2 3 4 Total
Tennessee-Martin 7 6 7 0 20
Auburn 13 7 7 10 37

Georgia

1 2 3 4 Total
Georgia 0 7 3 7 17
Auburn 6 0 0 7 13

Alabama

1 2 3 4 Total
Auburn 0 0 0 0 0
Alabama 3 7 19 7 36

Coaching staff

Name Position Years
at AU*
Alma mater (Year) Note
Tommy Tuberville Head Coach 9 Southern Arkansas University (1976) Resigned following the season. Replaced Mike Leach as

Texas Tech head coach following 2009 season

Tony Franklin Offensive Coordinator, Quarterbacks 0 Murray State University (1979; M.S., 1989) Fired after week 6 of the season. He was not replaced.
Zachary Crocker Offensive line 9 University of Georgia (1983)
Eddie Gran Running backs, Special teams 9 California Lutheran (1987)
Steve Ensminger Tight ends 5 Louisiana State University (1982)
Greg Knox Wide receivers, Recruiting Coordinator 9 Northeastern State (1986), Northeastern State (1990)
Paul Rhoads Defensive coordinator, secondary 0 Missouri Western (1989), Utah State (1991) Became Iowa State head coach following the season.
Don Dunn Defensive tackles 9 East Tennessee State (1976), Union College (1980)
Terry Price Defensive ends 9 Texas A&M (1992) Joined Rhoads at Iowa State initially,

but was hired by Ole Miss before 2009 season began.

James Willis Linebackers 2 Auburn University (2003)

*Entering season

Depth chart

Starters and backups.[16]

Defense
CB
Jerraud Powers
Ryan Williams
CB
Aairon Savage
Walter McFadden
Offense
WR
James Swinton
Chris Slaughter
Charles Olatunji
WR
Robert Dunn
Terrell Zachery
LT LG C RG RT
Lee Ziemba Tyronne Green Jason Bosley Chaz Ramsey Ryan Pugh
Jared Cooper Kyle Coulahan Ryan Pugh Byron Isom Mike Berry
Andrew McCain Bart Eddins Bart Eddins
WR
Rodgeriqus Smith
Montez Billings
Quindarius Carr
WR
Tim Hawthorne
Mario Fannin
QB
Chris Todd
Kodi Burns
Neil Caudle
RB
Ben Tate
Brad Lester
Tristan Davis
Special Teams
PK Wes Byrum
PK Morgan Hull
P Ryan Shoemaker
P Clinton Durst
KR Tristan Davis
PR Robert Dunn

Rankings

Ranking Movement
Poll Pre Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 3 Wk 4 Wk 5 Wk 6 Wk 7 Wk 8 Wk 9 Wk 10 Wk 11 Wk 12 Wk 13 Wk 14 Final
AP 10 9 9 10 15 13 20 NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR
Coaches 11 10 9 9 16 14 23 NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR
Harris Not released 13 NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR
BCS Not released NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR

Statistics

Team

Team Opp
Scoring 208 216
  Points per Game 17.3 18.0
First Downs 198 204
  Rushing 102 85
  Passing 82 101
  Penalty 14 18
Total Offense 3635 3813
  Total Plays 810 777
  Avg per Play 4.5 4.9
  Avg per Game 302.9 317.8
Fumbles-Lost 23–13 20–7
Penalties-Yards 74–568 59–500
  Avg per Game 47.3 41.7
Team Opp
Punts-Yards 78-3212 81-3264
  Avg per Punt 41.2 40.3
Time of Possession/Game 30:12 29:48
3rd Down Conversions 65/189 49/171
4th Down Conversions 5/12 8/17
Touchdowns Scored 25 27
Field Goals-Attempts 11–20 11–20
PAT-Attempts 23–25 19–22
Attendance 608,402 301,911
  Games/Avg per Game 7/86,915 5/60,382

Scores by quarter

1 2 3 4 Total
Auburn 63 68 41 36 208
Opponents 16 60 72 68 216

Offense

Rushing

Name GP-GS Att Gain Loss Net Avg TD Long Avg/G
Ben Tate 12–2 159 718 54 664 4.2 3 49 55.3
Kodi Burns 10–7 98 532 121 411 4.2 5 58 41.1
Brad Lester 11–8 80 314 25 289 3.6 2 19 26.3
Mario Fannin 12–3 54 255 17 238 4.4 1 35 19.8
Eric Smith 12–1 21 98 15 83 4.0 0 19 6.9
Tristan Davis 10–4 8 44 0 44 5.5 1 13 4.4
Neil Caudle 2–0 1 4 0 4 4.0 0 4 2.0
Tim Hawthorne 12–1 1 3 0 3 3.0 0 3 0.2
Robert Dunn 12–4 3 6 7 −1 −0.3 0 6 −0.1
Montez Billings 11–11 2 0 7 −7 −3.5 0 0 −0.6
TEAM 7- 9 0 15 −15 −1.7 0 0 −2.1
Chris Todd 7–5 33 47 110 −63 −1.9 0 12 −9.0
Total 12 469 2021 371 1650 3.5 12 58 137.5
Opponents 12 408 1962 295 1667 4.1 7 63 138.9

Passing

Name GP-GS Effic Cmp-Att-Int Pct Yds TD Lng Avg/G
Kodi Burns 10–7 97.65 94–179–7 52.5 1050 2 52 105.0
Chris Todd 7–5 106.64 86–156–6 55.1 903 5 58 129.0
Neil Caudle 2–0 133.76 4–5–0 80.0 32 0 16 16.0
TEAM 7- 0.00 0–1–0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0
Robert Dunn 12–4 0.00 0-0-0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0
Total 12 102.01 184–341–13 54.0 1985 7 58 165.4
Opponents 12 113.81 199–369–11 53.9 2146 19 44 178.8

Receiving

Name GP-GS No. Yds Avg TD Long Avg/G
R. Smith 12–9 30 332 11.1 1 33 27.7
Montez Billings 11–11 24 277 11.5 0 31 25.2
Mario Fannin 12–3 20 223 11.1 2 52 18.6
Tommy Trott 11–2 20 201 10.1 0 33 18.3
Robert Dunn 12–4 18 193 10.7 2 29 16.1
Chris Slaughter 8–1 15 179 11.9 1 42 22.4
Ben Tate 12–2 15 90 6.0 0 27 7.5
Tim Hawthorne 12–1 8 203 25.4 0 58 16.9
Brad Lester 11–8 7 37 5.3 1 16 3.4
Quindarius Carr 11–0 6 63 10.5 0 28 5.7
Derek Winter 8–0 4 27 6.8 0 11 3.4
Gabe McKenzie 12–1 3 33 11.0 0 21 2.8
Darvin Adams 10–0 3 18 6.0 0 9 1.8
Tristan Davis 10–4 2 42 21.0 0 22 4.2
Terrell Zachery 12–0 2 24 12.0 0 17 2.0
C. Olatunji 2–0 2 23 11.5 0 16 11.5
James Swinton 9–1 2 14 7.0 0 10 1.6
Eric Smith 12–1 2 3 1.5 0 2 0.2
John Douglas 3–1 1 3 3.0 0 3 1.0
Total 12 184 1985 10.8 7 58 165.4
Opponents 12 199 2146 10.8 19 44 178.8

Defense

Name GP-GS Tackles Sacks Pass Defense Fumbles Blkd
Kick
Saf
Solo Ast Total TFL-Yds No-Yds Int-Yds BrUp QBH Rcv-Yds FF
Jerraud Powers 2–2 9 5 14 1–0 1 1
Antonio Coleman 2–2 6 5 11 3.0–15 2.0–13 3 1
Merrill Johnson 2–2 5 4 9 1.0–6 1.0–6 1 1
Neiko Thorpe 2–0 6 2 8 2 1
Zac Etheridge 2–2 4 4 8 1–0
Craig Stevens 2–2 5 2 7 1 1–6
Chris Evans 2–0 3 4 7 3
Josh Bynes 2–0 1 6 7
Mike McNeil 2–2 2 4 6
S. Marks 2–2 5 1 6 3.5–10 1
Michael Goggans 2–2 5 1 6 1.0–2 1 1–9
Tray Blackmon 2–2 3 2 5 1.0–2 1.0–2 1
Courtney Harden 2–0 5 5 1
Walter McFadden 2–2 4 1 5 1.0–5 1
Mike Blanc 2–2 2 2 4 0.5–0
D'Antoine Hood 2–0 2 2 4
Gabe McKenzie 2–0 3 1 4
Zach Clayton 2–0 3 3 3.0–10 1.0–6
Mike Slade 2–0 3 3
Tez Doolittle 2–0 2 1 3 1.0–4
Drew Cole 2–0 1 2 3
Antoine Carter 2–0 2 1 3 1
Jake Ricks 2–0 1 1 2 1.0–4
Darvin Adams 2–0 1 1 2
Kodi Burns 2–1 1 1
Spencer Pybus 1–0 1 1 1–0
Eric Smith 2–1 1 1
Robert Shiver 2–0 1 1
R. Smith 2–1 1 1
Total 2 80 60 140 16–58 5–27 2–0 9 9 3–15 3
Opponents 2 84 64 148 10–31 2–8 2–17 5 13 3–0 4

Special teams

Name Punting Kickoffs
No. Yds Avg Long TB FC I20 Blkd No. Yds Avg TB OB
Clinton Durst 70 2947 42.1 58 4 22 18 1
Ryan Shoemaker 7 248 35.4 51 0 1 2 0
Wes Byrum 26 1681 64.7 1 3
Morgan Hull 22 1377 62.6 3 2
Total 78 3212 41.2 58 4 23 20 1 48 3058 63.7 4 5
Opponents 81 3264 40.3 59 7 24 25 0 50 3087 61.7 7 3
Name Punt Returns Kick Returns
No. Yds Avg TD Long No. Yds Avg TD Long
Robert Dunn 7 171 24.4 1 66
Marion Fannin 1 24 24.0 0 24
P. Pierre-Louis 1 18 18.0 0 18
Tristan Davis 1 14 14.0 0 14
Total 7 171 24.4 1 66 3 56 18.7 0 24
Opponents 4 17 4.2 0 9 10 212 21.2 0 30

[17]

References

  1. "2007 Auburn Football Media Guide – History". Auburn Athletic Department. Archived from the original on November 28, 2007. Retrieved December 14, 2007.
  2. "2008 NCAA Football Rankings – Preseason". AP. August 16, 2008. Archived from the original on August 19, 2008. Retrieved August 17, 2008.
  3. "2008 NCAA Football Rankings – Preseason". USA Today. August 1, 2008. Retrieved August 17, 2008.
  4. "Rivals.com 2008 Preseason Top 120 Countdown". rivals.com. Archived from the original on September 13, 2008. Retrieved August 23, 2008.
  5. "Preseason Top 25 - AthlonSports.com". Athlon Sports. Archived from the original on August 4, 2008. Retrieved August 23, 2008.
  6. Mandel, Stewart (May 1, 2008). "College Football Power Rankings". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on September 17, 2008. Retrieved August 23, 2008.
  7. "Consensus 2008 Pre-Season Rankings". CollegeTop25.com. Retrieved August 23, 2008.
  8. Schlabach, Mark (June 25, 2008). "Bulldogs back at No. 1 in updated Top 25". ESPN. Archived from the original on September 14, 2008. Retrieved August 23, 2008.
  9. "Bulldogs top 2008 Lindy's preseason Top 25". Lindy's Sports. May 30, 2008. Archived from the original on September 15, 2008. Retrieved August 23, 2008.
  10. "CFN 2008 Pre-Preseason Rankings Top 25". CollegeFootballNews. January 15, 2008. Archived from the original on August 12, 2008. Retrieved August 23, 2008.
  11. 1 2 3 "Sen'Derrick Marks Named To Walter Camp Award Watch List". Auburn Athletic Department. August 18, 2008. Archived from the original on September 29, 2008. Retrieved August 22, 2008.
  12. "Antonio Coleman And Sen'Derrick Marks Named To Bronko Nagurski Trophy Watch List". Auburn Athletic Department. May 12, 2008. Archived from the original on September 29, 2008. Retrieved August 22, 2008.
  13. "Jason Bosley Named To Rimington Trophy Watch List". Auburn Athletic Department. May 7, 2008. Archived from the original on September 29, 2008. Retrieved August 22, 2008.
  14. 1 2 3 "2008 Major College Football National TV Schedule". Associate Press. August 1, 2008. Retrieved August 17, 2008.
  15. Auburn vs Southern Mississippi record
  16. "Auburn Tigers Preview 2008 – Depth Chart". April 11, 2008. Retrieved August 1, 2011.
  17. "Auburn Cumulative Season Statistics". Auburn Athletic Department. Archived from the original on September 14, 2008. Retrieved September 7, 2008.
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