APAuburn was shockingly bad on offense last Saturday in a 28-10 loss to Mississippi State. Okay, so the Tigers were shockingly bad on defense too, but when you have -2 passing yards in the first half, that’s going to get noticed. As it turns out, that wasn’t just a matter of good defense on MSU’s part.
Per the Dispatch, Bulldogs defensive back Corey Broomfield and linebacker Cam Lawrence said they knew Auburn’s offensive play calls before the ball was snapped:
“We do a great job of preparing and we knew what the play was before they ever ran them,” Broomfield said. “That’s not a joke. We knew what they were doing, where the ball was going and who was getting it before the ball was snapped.*”
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“It makes our job as coaches so much easier when Cam Lawrence is signaling over his head every time they were calling a pass,” MSU co-defensive coordinator/linebackers coach Geoff Collins said Monday.
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“My teammates and I got into his head and that’s one thing I’m going to do every game if you’re on offense against me,” Lawrence said Saturday. “He would call out the signals and I’d tell everybody what the play was and he’d get that confused look in his face.”
Well, that would explain a lot. Quarterback Kiehl Frazier looked lost and almost nothing worked for the Tigers.
Your rebuttal, Gene Chizik?
“I’m not aware. We can rectify that problem.”
Auburn will have to. Big, bad Louisiana-Monroe comes to The Plains this Saturday, and I don’t think this country is ready for another “United We Stand” video.
(*Pro tip: stop yelling “Run the dive!” from the sidelines)