'We've got a foolproof system' to prevent teams from getting signals, Gus Malzahn says
http://www.al.com/auburnfootball/index.ssf/2014/09/weve_got_a_foolproof_system_to.html#incart_story_packageJoel A. Erickson | jerickson@al.com By Joel A. Erickson | jerickson@al.com
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on September 29, 2014 at 9:15 PM, updated September 29, 2014 at 9:49 PM
AUBURN, Alabama -- The art of deciphering an opponent's signals has been a hot topic the past couple of weeks, ever since Kansas State's Bill Snyder told ESPN he thought Auburn was getting the Wildcats' signals in Manhattan.
Snyder made it clear that he doesn't think reading signals is stealing, but the topic has persisted, enough that Sports Illustrated briefly examined the topic on Monday.
An Auburn fan asked Gus Malzahn on Tiger Talk Monday night if the coach felt the play cards, signs and signals his team uses are safe.
"I'll tell you this, I believe we've got a foolproof system," Malzahn said. "We've got the colors and the signals and all that."
Offensive coordinator Rhett Lashlee chooses the images on the play cards Auburn's quarterbacks hold up, which come from a wide range of pop culture references, along with other signals the players use on the field.
The point, beyond disguising Auburn's signals, is to make it something the players can instantly recognize.
Malzahn himself isn't even sure how some of the images use tie into his play calls.
"Coach Lashlee and the young guys are very creative," Malzahn said. "I couldn't tell you what half of them mean, just once I call the play, it's right."
With so many former assistant coaches and people who've come in contact with the offense in nine years at the college level, the cards, which have four images on each of them, help the Tigers keep other teams from getting a heads-up on what Malzahn wants to run.
"We've been doing this for a while, trying to disguise the signals and disguise things and all that," Malzahn said. "We think we've got a foolproof system."