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Welcome Back, Kotter

Buzz Killington

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #20 on: August 17, 2021, 10:51:21 AM »
Yaw yaw yaw yaw, yaw yaw, yaw yaw, Wild Boys
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Now I may be an idiot, but there is one thing I am not, sir, and that, sir, is an idiot.

Snaggletiger

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #21 on: August 17, 2021, 11:32:50 AM »
We're having a great week of practice.
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My doctor told me I needed to stop masturbating.  I asked him why, and he said, "because I'm trying to examine you."

wesfau2

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #22 on: August 18, 2021, 12:12:36 PM »


Our defensive back 7 will be the envy of the nation this year.  Pappoe/McClain combined for 216 tackles last year.  Every scout has McCreary pencilled in as an early draft pick.  Smoke Monday and the portal guys round out a robust squad. 
Apropos:

If Auburn’s front seven has Derek Mason feeling “like a kid in a candy shop,”
the Tigers’ secondary must have the first-year defensive coordinator feeling like a mad scientist.

Auburn has an abundance of riches on the back end of its defense for Mason—a defensive backs coach by trade—to experiment with this season, thanks to key returning pieces like Smoke Monday, Roger McCreary, Jaylin Simpson and Nehemiah Pritchett, as well as an infusion of veteran talent plucked from the transfer portal, with the likes of Dreshun Miller, Donovan Kaufman, Bydarrius Knighten and Ro Torrence. It has provided Mason with plenty of options in the secondary this preseason, as he works to install his defensive system and sort out a depth chart ahead of the season opener.

“There’s a lot of opportunity for guys to compete,” Mason said last week. “I’ve told guys, jobs are open. The vacancy sign is up. They want a job? There’s like 68 guys in that room, and there are only so many guys that can get on the field. Put your best stuff on tape and have it be an everyday deal.”

With Auburn’s Sept. 4 opener against Akron less than three weeks away, that vacancy sign is starting to flicker, and some clarity has come to the picture in the defensive backfield.

Two spots in the Tigers’ secondary were all but shored up before the start of fall camp, with Monday and McCreary returning for their second seasons as starters at safety and cornerback, respectively. The other three spots—at safety, corner and nickel—remained wide open at the start of fall camp, but frontrunners have emerged over the course of the team’s first 10 practices.

“It’s so much talent on the back end,” Pritchett said. “Coach Mason has been doing the best job he can at putting the best people in the best spots.”
 Pritchett has been one of those defensive backs vying for the No. 2 corner spot opposite McCreary. Pritchett started all but one game at corner last season, when he was one of the team’s breakout players as a sophomore and led the Tigers with 10 pass-breakups while also giving up one or fewer receptions in eight of the team’s 11 games last season, according to Pro Football Focus analysis.


Pritchett’s main competition for that No. 2 job during fall camp has been Simpson, who earned the starting job in fall camp a year ago, and Torrence, a JUCO transfer who joined the team this offseason. Simpson is looking to recapture that starting job a year after an early-season injury forced him out of the starting lineup and limited him to eight games, mostly as the No. 3 corner. Torrence, meanwhile, aims to make an instant impact in the secondary after earning NJCCC Defensive Player of the Year honors last season, when he allowed only one player to record a catch against him for the season at Hutchinson (Kansas) Community College.


The 6-foot-3, 195-pound Torrence has been “standing out” in practice, according to Pritchett, with one of his crowning moments coming during Saturday’s scrimmage when he made a tackle at the goal line. He also had an interception with the second-team defense earlier in the week during one of the team’s mini scrimmages at the end of the Tigers’ fifth practice, when he picked off a T.J. Finley pass intended for Elijah Canion. Miller, a transfer from West Virginia who led the Mountaineers’ top-ranked pass defense in pass-breakups last year, is “in the mix as well.”


“It’s been a battle,” Pritchett said. “…All of the guys been competing their butts off, but those are the main two. But you can see other people in the mix as well. Other people have been getting reps too, but mainly we’ve been the ones running with the ones and twos.”


The biggest development in fall camp, though, has been at safety. That’s where Knighten, the FCS transfer out of Southeast Missouri State has emerged as the likely starter alongside All-SEC selection Monday.


After starting 45 games over the last four seasons at SEMO, where he totaled 255 tackles, six interceptions and 18 pass breakups, Knighten has made a seamless transition to Auburn’s defense in fall camp. According to Pritchett, the 6-foot-1, 201-pounder has quickly picked up the defensive playbook and has made an effort to put in extra work off the field to get up to speed.



Given his level of experience, albeit at the FCS level, Knighten and Monday — a three-year contributor for Auburn — have complemented each other well at safety early on.


“I think it’s been by the way of the experience in the room, like, really challenging like everybody,” Mason said. “I think, you know, Smoke needed Bydarrius, OK? And Bydarrius, you know man, needed Smoke. Obviously Bydarrius played at SEMO. He’s played a lot of football games, but I think, you know, practicing at this level and playing with somebody like Smoke who’s played the game, who’s seen it at a high level, who not only talks a big game but plays a big game, too. I think that’s been good for Bydarrius.”


With Knighten emerging at safety, Vanderbilt transfer Donovan Kaufman has been competing with Ladarius Tennison for the starting spot at nickel, while Zion Puckett — another preseason option in the slot — has been seen working primarily at safety in practices. Pritchett, who was atop the depth chart at nickel in the spring, has yet to see time in the slot this fall but said he will likely “sprinkle” in some reps at the position to maintain his familiarity and provide flexibility in the secondary.


Tennison, meanwhile, seemed to be the heir apparent at nickel for Auburn after Christian Tutt’s departure at the end of last season. Then depth concerns forced him to play safety during spring practices, but he has since moved back to the slot after appearing in all 11 games and totaling 21 tackles as a freshman last season. Kaufman, likewise, has shown the ability to play both safety and nickel, and he brings a level of familiarity to Mason’s defense after playing under him at Vanderbilt last season — though his freshman campaign was cut short due to COVID.


There is still plenty of time this preseason for things to get sorted out personnel-wise, but less than two weeks into fall practices, the picture appears to be getting clearer for Mason and the Tigers’ secondary.


“Big things (are coming this season),” Pritchett said. “Big things. As far as Roger, Smoke, Bydarrius, Donovan — there’s so much talent. Coach Mason’s just doing the best he can.”

https://www.al.com/auburnfootball/2021/08/clarity-coming-to-auburns-deep-talented-group-in-secondary.html


Emphasis above my own. 
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Snaggletiger

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #23 on: August 18, 2021, 12:28:24 PM »
It moved
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My doctor told me I needed to stop masturbating.  I asked him why, and he said, "because I'm trying to examine you."

Buzz Killington

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #24 on: August 18, 2021, 01:30:37 PM »
6'3" and 6'1" guys in the secondary? That can't be right.  Dogs and cats living together...
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Now I may be an idiot, but there is one thing I am not, sir, and that, sir, is an idiot.

wesfau2

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #25 on: August 18, 2021, 02:45:17 PM »
6'3" and 6'1" guys in the secondary? That can't be right.  Dogs and cats living together...
And these bits of tid:

he allowed only one player to record a catch against him for the season

After starting 45 games over the last four seasons at SEMO, where he totaled 255 tackles, six interceptions and 18 pass breakups
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You can keep a wooden stake in your trunk
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And Imma keep a bottle of that funk
To get motel parking lot, balcony crunk.

Buzz Killington

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #26 on: August 18, 2021, 02:55:35 PM »
And these bits of tid:

he allowed only one player to record a catch against him for the season

After starting 45 games over the last four seasons at SEMO, where he totaled 255 tackles, six interceptions and 18 pass breakups
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Now I may be an idiot, but there is one thing I am not, sir, and that, sir, is an idiot.

CCTAU

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #27 on: August 18, 2021, 02:57:38 PM »
At that size, if he has anywhere near that success in the SEC, he will be a top ten pick. Unheard of.
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Five statements of WISDOM
1. You cannot legislate the poor into prosperity, by legislating the wealth out of prosperity.
2. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving.
3. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else.
4. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it.
5. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that my dear friends, is the beginning of the end of any nation.

wesfau2

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #28 on: August 18, 2021, 03:10:17 PM »
At that size, if he has anywhere near that success in the SEC, he will be a top ten pick. Unheard of.
You know that's right!
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You can keep a wooden stake in your trunk
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To get motel parking lot, balcony crunk.

wesfau2

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #29 on: August 18, 2021, 03:23:38 PM »
Doubly apropos:

I have descended into college football's Grand Canyon. I have stood in its Alps. I have gazed at its ocean sunset. I have attended a game at Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn, Ala. And I've been changed forever.

Cam Newton hasn't been the only person to be overwhelmed by the passion to be found inside Auburn's Jordan-Hare Stadium. A dozen years ago this weekend, the Syracuse Orange got a taste of the place . . . and at least one Central New York sportswriter assigned to cover that game has never forgotten his visit to the "Loveliest Village On The Plains."


Syracuse, N.Y. — It'll be 12 years ago this very weekend that I wrote the only column in my career that drew responses from all seven continents … including, yes, Antarctica.


And to this day, hand to God, I still receive periodic correspondence from Auburn football followers, updating me on their Tigers while offering dinner invitations and/or lodging and/or rounds of golf when next I return to eastern Alabama.


In these next few weeks, the Syracuse University Orange will play host to the two most intriguing teams on its 2014 home schedule — Louisville on Oct. 3 and defending national champion Florida State on Oct. 11.


And so, with those Cardinals and Seminoles in mind, I've been thinking again how the Carrier Dome might feel if it could become a kind of northern-based Jordan-Hare Stadium, the college football cathedral I visited when SU played in it (and lost in triple-overtime) on Sept. 28, 2002.


With those thoughts in my head, I find myself closing my eyes and re-imagining an experience I'll not soon forget, an experience I shared when I wrote the following column that was inspired 12 years ago this very weekend …


I have descended into college football's Grand Canyon. I have stood in its Alps. I have gazed at its ocean sunset. I have done all of these things and I've been changed forever.


I knew, of course, that we were different up here in Central New York. I understood that autumn Saturdays in our burg have never been given over to any kind of serious sporting fervor. I've accepted for a good, long while that a fair amount of our citizens regularly choose to pick apples or seal driveways rather than head to the Carrier Dome to watch the Syracuse University Orangemen at play.


But, Lord have mercy on our college football souls, I've come to realize we're not merely quirky in these parts. And we're not just overly particular. No, having attended a game in Auburn, Ala. — which is like going to Mass in Rome — I'm convinced that, by comparison, we're as dead as the flying wedge.


"Let me tell you something," said Paul Pasqualoni, the SU coach who can recognize bedlam when he is forced to shout above it. "Being in that stadium with all those people — the noise level, the atmosphere — was exciting. It was a lot of fun. To me, it was just spectacular being there."


He was speaking of Jordan-Hare Stadium, where four days earlier his club had lost to the Auburn Tigers 37-34 in an environment that was equal parts Woodstock, Mardi Gras, New Year's Eve and Madonna's last wedding. And the Crimson Tide boys, those rascals from the other side of the state, weren't even in town, to say nothing of the Bulldogs, Gators or Razorbacks.


Nah, it was just the Orangemen, a non-league bunch from somewhere up north … with a losing record yet. But it didn't matter. This, because the cherished Tigers were on the other side, and that was enough for those Alabama locals to respond the way the French did when Patton's army showed up in Paris.


"I missed my wife's birthday so I could cheer on my beloved alma mater against Syracuse," Brent Miller wrote in an e-mail addressed to me following the three-overtime affair. "But you know what? I would have been there if our opponent had been the state of New York's worst high school team."


"Country, God and college football are usually our top three passions," e-mailed another Auburn guy, Steve Fleming. "But not always in that order."


"I grew up in Denver in a family with season tickets to the Broncos games," e-mailed yet another believer, Rick Pavek. "I call Auburn home now and, take my word for this, Broncomania is nothing like Tigermania."


The point is, with the Orangemen returning to the gray Dome that is so often lifeless to play Big East Conference foe Pittsburgh on Saturday, it's clear that somebody's not getting it. Either the Auburn faithful — and people like them in Knoxville and South Bend and Lincoln and Gainesville and Columbus and Austin and elsewhere — are far too crazed, or we're way too cool.


Listen, down there in eastern Alabama they pass out full-color, high-gloss, 22-by-17-inch, two-sided, fold-out pamphlets titled, "The 2002 Guide To Game Day At Auburn University." And on Page 2 of each can be found the announcement that nobody is allowed to begin tailgating until 4 p.m. the day before the game.


"You can't be anything but envious," said Jake Crouthamel, the Syracuse athletic director who was a wide-eyed witness to all of the SU-Auburn doings. "You can't be anything but envious when you have that kind of support. I mean, there were 84,000 people in the seats. And the RVs and house trailers were lined up five miles outside of town.


"When you talk about the epitome of what the college football experience is all about … that's it. Auburn is the epitome. You couldn't possibly be unaware of the spectacle, even if you were trying to be unaware."


The orange-clad zealots, who are in their seats fully 30 minutes prior to kickoff, thunder through choreographed cheers. The band, which is saluted upon its arrival by the big house with a standing ovation, blares. The PA system, which continuously blasts the sounds of a growling tiger, pipes in songs by the Dixie Chicks and interviews with the Auburn coaches.


Before the game, there is the great Tiger Walk during which the Auburn players march along Donahue Street through thousands of people, some of whom weep, and into the stadium. After the game, there is the mass papering of famous Toomer's Corner downtown. And between all of that, a golden eagle circles the place before landing on the field to a deafening roar.


And us? Um, let's see. We can't fill 49,000 seats. We debate, ad nauseam, standing-vs.-sitting in the Dome. We give our tickets to takers at the door who had to be schooled in the art of courtliness. We regularly vacate the joint long before the final gun. We allow, thanks to a good-idea-gone-bad, a bunch of vulgar louts planted in a thing called "The O-Zone" to chant phrases you'd never say in front of Mom at the dinner table.


In other words to compare our college football experience to that of Auburn (and a lot of other places) is to compare a skillet of beans to a plate of Chilean sea bass. And while that might sound harsh, it doesn't make the words any less true.


Believe me on this. Please. I have descended into college football's Grand Canyon. I have stood in its Alps. I have gazed at its ocean sunset. I have attended a game at Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn, Ala. And I've been changed forever.

https://www.syracuse.com/poliquin/2014/09/carrier_dome_needs_a_bit_of_football_oomph_on_the_order_of_auburns_jordan-hare_s.html
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You can keep a wooden stake in your trunk
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And Imma keep a bottle of that funk
To get motel parking lot, balcony crunk.

Snaggletiger

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #30 on: August 18, 2021, 03:41:34 PM »
Damn it.  It moved again.  Look I have a brief due Friday for a hearing next week.  I can't be sporting Auburn wood all day.
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My doctor told me I needed to stop masturbating.  I asked him why, and he said, "because I'm trying to examine you."

wesfau2

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #31 on: August 18, 2021, 03:51:30 PM »
Damn it.  It moved again.  Look I have a brief due Friday for a hearing next week.  I can't be sporting Auburn wood all day.
I suggest some manual relief while re-viewing the Camback.
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You can keep a wooden stake in your trunk
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And Imma keep a bottle of that funk
To get motel parking lot, balcony crunk.

Snaggletiger

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #32 on: August 18, 2021, 04:43:14 PM »
I suggest some manual relief while re-viewing the Camback.
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My doctor told me I needed to stop masturbating.  I asked him why, and he said, "because I'm trying to examine you."

Saniflush

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #33 on: August 19, 2021, 09:07:14 AM »
If he would have finished his statement with "I have even seen a grown man pleasure a camel" I would give it top marks.
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"Hey my friends are the ones that wanted to eat at that shitty hole in the wall that only served bread and wine.  What kind of brick and mud business model is that.  Stick to the cart if that's all you're going to serve.  Then that dude came in with like 12 other people, and some of them weren't even wearing shoes, and the restaurant sat them right across from us. It was gross, and they were all stinky and dirty.  Then dude starts talking about eating his body and drinking his blood...I almost lost it.  That's the last supper I'll ever have there, and I hope he dies a horrible death."

Snaggletiger

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #34 on: August 19, 2021, 10:04:01 AM »



Pritchett’s main competition for that No. 2 job during fall camp has been Simpson, who earned the starting job in fall camp a year ago, and Torrence, a JUCO transfer who joined the team this offseason. Simpson is looking to recapture that starting job a year after an early-season injury forced him out of the starting lineup and limited him to eight games, mostly as the No. 3 corner. Torrence, meanwhile, aims to make an instant impact in the secondary after earning NJCCC Defensive Player of the Year honors last season, when he allowed only one player to record a catch against him for the season at Hutchinson (Kansas) Community College.


The 6-foot-3, 195-pound Torrence has been “standing out” in practice, according to Pritchett, with one of his crowning moments coming during Saturday’s scrimmage when he made a tackle at the goal line. He also had an interception with the second-team defense earlier in the week during one of the team’s mini scrimmages at the end of the Tigers’ fifth practice, when he picked off a T.J. Finley pass intended for Elijah Canion. Miller, a transfer from West Virginia who led the Mountaineers’ top-ranked pass defense in pass-breakups last year, is “in the mix as well.”



Here's you some Ro Torrence

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My doctor told me I needed to stop masturbating.  I asked him why, and he said, "because I'm trying to examine you."

wesfau2

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #35 on: August 19, 2021, 11:09:16 AM »
Here's you some Ro Torrence


Sporting the Carlos Rogers #14, no less.
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You can keep a wooden stake in your trunk
On the off-chance that the fairy tales ain't bunk
And Imma keep a bottle of that funk
To get motel parking lot, balcony crunk.

WiregrassTiger

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #36 on: August 19, 2021, 01:36:09 PM »
Apropos:

If Auburn’s front seven has Derek Mason feeling “like a kid in a candy shop,”
the Tigers’ secondary must have the first-year defensive coordinator feeling like a mad scientist.

Auburn has an abundance of riches on the back end of its defense for Mason—a defensive backs coach by trade—to experiment with this season, thanks to key returning pieces like Smoke Monday, Roger McCreary, Jaylin Simpson and Nehemiah Pritchett, as well as an infusion of veteran talent plucked from the transfer portal, with the likes of Dreshun Miller, Donovan Kaufman, Bydarrius Knighten and Ro Torrence. It has provided Mason with plenty of options in the secondary this preseason, as he works to install his defensive system and sort out a depth chart ahead of the season opener.

“There’s a lot of opportunity for guys to compete,” Mason said last week. “I’ve told guys, jobs are open. The vacancy sign is up. They want a job? There’s like 68 guys in that room, and there are only so many guys that can get on the field. Put your best stuff on tape and have it be an everyday deal.”

With Auburn’s Sept. 4 opener against Akron less than three weeks away, that vacancy sign is starting to flicker, and some clarity has come to the picture in the defensive backfield.

Two spots in the Tigers’ secondary were all but shored up before the start of fall camp, with Monday and McCreary returning for their second seasons as starters at safety and cornerback, respectively. The other three spots—at safety, corner and nickel—remained wide open at the start of fall camp, but frontrunners have emerged over the course of the team’s first 10 practices.

“It’s so much talent on the back end,” Pritchett said. “Coach Mason has been doing the best job he can at putting the best people in the best spots.”
 Pritchett has been one of those defensive backs vying for the No. 2 corner spot opposite McCreary. Pritchett started all but one game at corner last season, when he was one of the team’s breakout players as a sophomore and led the Tigers with 10 pass-breakups while also giving up one or fewer receptions in eight of the team’s 11 games last season, according to Pro Football Focus analysis.


Pritchett’s main competition for that No. 2 job during fall camp has been Simpson, who earned the starting job in fall camp a year ago, and Torrence, a JUCO transfer who joined the team this offseason. Simpson is looking to recapture that starting job a year after an early-season injury forced him out of the starting lineup and limited him to eight games, mostly as the No. 3 corner. Torrence, meanwhile, aims to make an instant impact in the secondary after earning NJCCC Defensive Player of the Year honors last season, when he allowed only one player to record a catch against him for the season at Hutchinson (Kansas) Community College.


The 6-foot-3, 195-pound Torrence has been “standing out” in practice, according to Pritchett, with one of his crowning moments coming during Saturday’s scrimmage when he made a tackle at the goal line. He also had an interception with the second-team defense earlier in the week during one of the team’s mini scrimmages at the end of the Tigers’ fifth practice, when he picked off a T.J. Finley pass intended for Elijah Canion. Miller, a transfer from West Virginia who led the Mountaineers’ top-ranked pass defense in pass-breakups last year, is “in the mix as well.”


“It’s been a battle,” Pritchett said. “…All of the guys been competing their butts off, but those are the main two. But you can see other people in the mix as well. Other people have been getting reps too, but mainly we’ve been the ones running with the ones and twos.”


The biggest development in fall camp, though, has been at safety. That’s where Knighten, the FCS transfer out of Southeast Missouri State has emerged as the likely starter alongside All-SEC selection Monday.


After starting 45 games over the last four seasons at SEMO, where he totaled 255 tackles, six interceptions and 18 pass breakups, Knighten has made a seamless transition to Auburn’s defense in fall camp. According to Pritchett, the 6-foot-1, 201-pounder has quickly picked up the defensive playbook and has made an effort to put in extra work off the field to get up to speed.



Given his level of experience, albeit at the FCS level, Knighten and Monday — a three-year contributor for Auburn — have complemented each other well at safety early on.


“I think it’s been by the way of the experience in the room, like, really challenging like everybody,” Mason said. “I think, you know, Smoke needed Bydarrius, OK? And Bydarrius, you know man, needed Smoke. Obviously Bydarrius played at SEMO. He’s played a lot of football games, but I think, you know, practicing at this level and playing with somebody like Smoke who’s played the game, who’s seen it at a high level, who not only talks a big game but plays a big game, too. I think that’s been good for Bydarrius.”


With Knighten emerging at safety, Vanderbilt transfer Donovan Kaufman has been competing with Ladarius Tennison for the starting spot at nickel, while Zion Puckett — another preseason option in the slot — has been seen working primarily at safety in practices. Pritchett, who was atop the depth chart at nickel in the spring, has yet to see time in the slot this fall but said he will likely “sprinkle” in some reps at the position to maintain his familiarity and provide flexibility in the secondary.


Tennison, meanwhile, seemed to be the heir apparent at nickel for Auburn after Christian Tutt’s departure at the end of last season. Then depth concerns forced him to play safety during spring practices, but he has since moved back to the slot after appearing in all 11 games and totaling 21 tackles as a freshman last season. Kaufman, likewise, has shown the ability to play both safety and nickel, and he brings a level of familiarity to Mason’s defense after playing under him at Vanderbilt last season — though his freshman campaign was cut short due to COVID.


There is still plenty of time this preseason for things to get sorted out personnel-wise, but less than two weeks into fall practices, the picture appears to be getting clearer for Mason and the Tigers’ secondary.


“Big things (are coming this season),” Pritchett said. “Big things. As far as Roger, Smoke, Bydarrius, Donovan — there’s so much talent. Coach Mason’s just doing the best he can.”

https://www.al.com/auburnfootball/2021/08/clarity-coming-to-auburns-deep-talented-group-in-secondary.html


Emphasis above my own.
What kind of narcissistic fuck would reply to their own post? Oh, I see.
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GH2001

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #37 on: August 22, 2021, 12:48:57 PM »
6'3" and 6'1" guys in the secondary? That can't be right.  Dogs and cats living together...
Judgement Day 
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WDE

Snaggletiger

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #38 on: August 26, 2021, 10:41:56 AM »
Two full grown men, Derick Hall and Brodaciousness Hamm, buttin' heads in practice.  Who is ready for some Auburn football?    

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My doctor told me I needed to stop masturbating.  I asked him why, and he said, "because I'm trying to examine you."

WiregrassTiger

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Re: Welcome Back, Kotter
« Reply #39 on: August 26, 2021, 04:52:19 PM »
Two full grown men, Derick Hall and Brodaciousness Hamm, buttin' heads in practice.  Who is ready for some Auburn football?   


I’ll put my head up your butt, fag.
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