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Kevin ScAUbinski Today

Snaggletiger

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Kevin ScAUbinski Today
« on: September 20, 2011, 10:17:08 AM »
Pretty straightforward stuff and sentiments shared by many.

BIRMINGHAM, Alabama - There comes a time in every successful head coach's life when he has to stop writing books and filming TV commercials and start getting serious.

He has to say "Enough is enough" and "Not on my watch" and "Never again," and the more tough-talking cliches, the better.

He has to do what a lot of other successful coaches have done when the going got tough.

He has to find a scapegoat and fire him.

Fortunately for Ted Roof, it's not that time for Gene Chizik at Au­burn, at least not yet, not three games into the season, but the clock is ticking faster than Clemson freshman Sammy Watkins racing through Chizik's defense.

It is Chizik's defense, isn't it?

He is the head coach, isn't he?

He earned a shot at becoming a head coach through his quality work as a defensive coordinator, didn't he?

Yes, yes and yes.

So if Roof's unit can't put a stop to something before the season ends -- the explosive plays in the running and passing game, the third-down conversions, the missed tackles, busted assignments and overall horror-movie bleeding -- the buck should stop with Chizik.

He could then take responsibility for this historically and hysterically bad Auburn defense in the traditional way. By passing the buck and replacing Roof.

You know. Like Tommy Tuberville would.

Kevin Scarbinsky is a columnist for The Birmingham News. His column is published on Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday.Tuberville moved up through the coaching ranks on the defensive side of the ball, but when his Auburn defense went bad, he had no problem changing coordinators. After the 2001 season, after Auburn surrendered 103 points in one three-game span, Tuberville relieved John Lovett of his duties and hired Chizik.

It should be noted that Chizik's first Auburn defense gave up 102 points in one three-game stretch, though two of those games went to overtime.

Through three games this season, in the third year of the Chizik-Roof tandem, the Tigers have allowed 110 points, all of them in regulation.

How bad is this Auburn defense? It's so bad, it's been on the field for more snaps than any other defense in the Football Bowl Subdivision.

Utah State, Mississippi State and Clemson - which are not to be confused with Nebraska 1995, Florida 1996 and Oregon 2010 -- have combined to run 273 plays in the first three games. That's a tongue-dragging average of 91 snaps a start.

Auburn's inability to get off the field has inspired a suggestion that the Tigers should simply stop punting and kicking off. Go for it on every fourth down. Onside kick every kickoff.

As outrageous as that sounds, would it be any more unsound than punting and kicking off and continuing to send out a defense that does nothing well except make game-saving tackles at the 1-inch line?

This Auburn defense is so bad, it's not out of the question that the Tigers could set a national record for most yards allowed per game.

The 1993 Maryland defense set the record by giving up 553 yards a game during an 11-game season. The 2011 Auburn defense has surrendered 534.33 yards a game, and that average is likely to jump considerably after Steve Spurrier and especially Bobby Petrino get through with the Tigers.

Who gained the most yards (566) and scored the most points (43) on Auburn's 2010 national champions? The same team that scored the most points (44) on Chizik's first Auburn team in 2009. Arkansas.

What did Chizik do to Petrino during their one season together at Auburn in 2002? Run over his dog?

Chizik has rebuilt Auburn by putting together a strong staff, letting it work and keeping it together. But the defense, with some memorable exceptions, just hasn't worked for three years.

At what point does continuity become a form of insanity?

Something has to change at Auburn. It's up to Chizik to recognize what, or who, and make it happen.

 

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Saniflush

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Re: Kevin ScAUbinski Today
« Reply #1 on: September 20, 2011, 10:20:00 AM »
I'm lost because Roof's defenses everywhere he has been before here were not this bad.
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Buzz Killington

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Re: Kevin ScAUbinski Today
« Reply #2 on: September 20, 2011, 10:21:20 AM »
I'm lost because Roof's defenses everywhere he has been before here were not this bad.

The combination of "bend but don't break" and "play aggressively and cause turnovers" are like oil and water.
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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.

Re: Kevin ScAUbinski Today
« Reply #3 on: September 20, 2011, 10:23:11 AM »
I'm lost because Roof's defenses everywhere he has been before here were not this bad.

Agreed.  And you can't tell me he had more talent at Duke and Minnesota than we do.
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Snaggletiger

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Re: Kevin ScAUbinski Today
« Reply #4 on: September 20, 2011, 10:27:40 AM »
I don't think we'll ever know the answer to the question of how much, if any, control or influence Chizik has over the defense.  Does he let his coordinators do their thing and just make decisions on the big picture?  Or is he involved and hands on?   
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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."

Re: Kevin ScAUbinski Today
« Reply #5 on: September 20, 2011, 11:25:30 AM »
Agreed.  And you can't tell me he had more talent at Duke and Minnesota than we do.

Well he didn't have to contend with Utah State there.
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JR4AU

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Re: Kevin ScAUbinski Today
« Reply #6 on: September 20, 2011, 11:36:40 AM »
I don't think we'll ever know the answer to the question of how much, if any, control or influence Chizik has over the defense.  Does he let his coordinators do their thing and just make decisions on the big picture?  Or is he involved and hands on?   

The HC is responsible for every aspect of play on a football team...ultimately.  Except in the case of Gene Chizik.  He's only responsible for the bad.  Malzahn runs the offense.  He's autonomous. 

Actually, Chizik is ultimately responsible for it all.  Bad punts?  Chizik's responsibility.  WR's can't catch?  Chizik.  Gatorade mixed too weak?  Chiz.  Seriously.  But, he hires people to head up different aspects.  Is he a defensive guy?  Yep.  I honestly believe he lets Malzahn run the offense, but you can bet on this...in weekly game plannking meetings, the CEO, Chizik, will tell give Malzahn guidance and even orders that he must follow depending on the situation and plan.  Same on defense.  But he runs neither.    According to the AU website...he doesn't even coach a position.  Roof Coaches LBs, Pelton DL, Lolley and Thigpen coach DBs.  Chiz, like many Def. minded HCs takes the true CEO approach, and doesn't micromanage.  He lets his coaches coach.  He schedules practice segments, he monitors the flow of practice, he has the authority to deviate from any plan.   There's NOTHING  in Chizik's defensive history to indicate he's the architect of this defense.  Honestly, I've never looked at Roof's, but most say he was good at previous stops, but he's never had a stop in the SEC.  Other conferences play a different style of defense.  Maybe he's in over his head.  Maybe, as I heard suggested yesterday on the radio, the offense gets preferential treatment in pulling athletes, or in practice time. 

Whatever the case, it's time for Chiz to step in.     It's time for him to micromanage the defense.  He needs to jump in and figure out where the disconnect is.  Young and inexperienced isn't an excuse for getting completely run over time and time again.  Is this defense loaded with 5 star studs?  No, but they are 3 and 4 star players that were recruited by other SEC schools.  We have enough talent to play passable defense.  Maybe there's a talent situation or weakness we fans aren't aware of.  Maybe it's a situation that's new to the coaches.  Coaches call each other and bat ideas around all the time.   Make a call, get some unbiased advice...something.  Chizik needs to get more involved in fixing it.  And it can be fixed, or at least shored up.  Most of the defects are fundamentals.  That's coaching.  I don't know if Lolley and Thigpen are coaching this new method of playing man and not turning for the ball.  Seems like when I saw Lolley speak at a coaching clinic he showed video of them doing drills coaching them to turn and break on the ball, but I may be wrong, or they may have changed it. 

At any rate, whatever it is we're doing, it's not working.  Dye, on Finebaum yesterday, wrote it off to youth and inexperience.  I normally defer to a coaches opinion, and I'm certain that factors in, but youth and inexperience usually creates mistakes that result in big plays, not continuously being out of position, taking bad angles, and missing tackles.   

It has to be corrected, and it is ultimately up to Chizik to get it done, whether that's doing it himself by coaching the coaches he has, or finding a defensive staff that can get it right.  Obviously, at this time, his only choice is to make the necessary corrections himself.   
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