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NCAA Football History - College Football Team History -
Auburn Tigers History
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS
(9)
1900 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Assoc. Co-Champions
1913 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Assoc. Champions
1919 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Assoc. Champions
1932 Southern Conference Co-Champions
1957 Southeastern Conference Champions
1983 Southeastern Conference Champions
1987 Southeastern Conference Champions
1988 Southeastern Conference Co-Champions
1989 Southeastern Conference Co-Champions
SEC West Division Champions (2)
1997, 2000
CONFERENCE AFFILIATIONS
1891-1894: Independent
1895-1921: Southern Intercollegiate Ath. Assoc.
1922-1932: Southern Conference
1933-Current: Southeastern Conference
No Team: 1943
Auburn Tigers History
The Tradition, History, and Legend
All-America x 11
Jimmy “Red” Phillips made 11 All-America teams
in 1957 before becoming an All-Pro with the Los Angeles
Rams and Minnesota Vikings and leading the NFL in receiving
in 1961.
Aubie
Auburn’s award-winning mascot is a fan favorite for
Tiger fans, both young and old. On the job since 1979, Aubie’s
existence began as a cartoon character drawn by Birmingham
Post-Herald artist Phil Neel in 1959 for a football game
program.
Bacardi Bowl
Auburn’s first bowl trip and the only bowl game to
ever be played outside the United States. Auburn and Villanova
battled to a 7-7 tie in Havana, Cuba on New Year’s
day in 1937. Billy Hitchcock scored the Tigers’ only
touchdown of the game on a 40-yard run.
Beard, Jeff
Garland Washington “Jeff” Beard could generally
be considered the father of modern Auburn athletics. Serving
as athletic director from 1951 through 1972, Beard hired
legendary coach Ralph “Shug” Jordan, increased
the capacity of what is now Jordan-Hare Stadium from 21,500
to 61,500 seats and is responsible for bringing Auburn home
football games with Georgia Tech, Georgia and Tennessee
to campus. His tenure also produced the basketball arena
now named in his honor, the Wilbur Hutsell Track and Field
complex and Sewell Hall. Beard is one of only five Auburn
athletic directors who also didn’t serve as head football
coach.
Bo over the top
The climax to a 23-22 Auburn victory over Alabama in 1982
which broke a nine-year losing skid to the Crimson Tide.
Bo Jackson’s 1-yard leap over the Alabama goal line
capped a 66-yard drive and set the stage for what Auburn
people consider the Tigers’ “coming out”
party in the 1980s.
December 2, 1989
Alabama came to Auburn’s Jordan-Hare Stadium for
the first time in the history of the rivalry. Prior to that,
all games in the series had been played at Birmingham’s
Legion Field since the series was resumed in 1948. A 30-20
Auburn victory settled the score in 1989, but the cross-state
journey for the Tide settled a score which had brewed for
nearly a century in the hearts of Auburn people. Alabama
coach Ray Perkins once said “it won’t happen”.
On Dec. 2, 1989, it did.
The Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry
Auburn and Georgia. It began in Feb. 20, 1892 at Piedmont
Park in Atlanta and has been played virtually every year
since. The Tigers and the Bulldogs have played every year
since 1898, 105 meetings, with the exception of 1943, when
Auburn didn’t field a team due to World War II.
Donahue, Mike
“Iron” Mike Donahue won 99 games in two different
stints as Auburn’s head coach, tying him with Pat
Dye for second on the all-time Auburn victories list. Donahue’s
1913 SIAC championship team not only went undefeated at
8-0, but did not allow a single point to be scored on them.
On the flip side, his 1920 team averaged 42.5 points per
game, despite being shut out twice. During his tenure, 38
players were named as All-Southern Conference.
Don’t Make us go there
For years some of Auburn’s chief rivals — Georgia,
Tennessee, Georgia Tech and Alabama — never made it
to The Plains. Auburn’s “home” games with
those schools were played in Montgomery, Mobile, Columbus
and Birmingham. Athletic Director Jeff Beard changed all
that starting in 1960. The Auburn-Georgia game was played
in Columbus, Athens, Atlanta, Macon or Savannah from 1892
through 1959. In 1960 the Bulldogs finally came to Auburn
and lost, 9-6. From 1906 until 1970 Auburn and Georgia Tech
played in either Atlanta or Birmingham — 53 straight
times in Atlanta — before the Yellow Jackets finally
gave in and came to Auburn to lose 31-7. In a series that
began in 1900, Tennessee finally played at Auburn in 1974,
losing 21-0. In 1989, cross-state rival Alabama made the
trip and left with a 30-20 defeat and dreams of an undefeated
season ended.
Dye, Pat
Patrick Fain Dye won 99 games and four Southeastern Conference
championships in 12 years as Auburn’s head coach,
but perhaps he will be remembered most for bringing Auburn’s
“home” game with Alabama to the Auburn campus
on Dec. 2, 1989, a 30-20 Tiger victory. Under his leadership
as athletic director, Auburn football facilities were elevated
to some of the finest in the nation with additions to Jordan-Hare
Stadium increasing the seating capacity to 85,214 and 70
luxury suites.
Eleven and Ohhhhh!!!!!
In 1993, first-year coach Terry Bowden directed Auburn
to its first undefeated, 11-win season while the Tigers
suffered through the first year of NCAA imposed sanctions
which kept AU off television and out of the bowl scene.
The 11 wins in 1993 were the opening act of a 20-game winning
streak which would set the Auburn record for consecutive
victories.
The Entrance
The Auburn team began a new tradition in 2000, entering
the field from the middle of the south end zone through
a cloud of smoke.
Flight of Tiger
For the first time in 2000, Auburn’s golden eagle,
Tiger, took to the air. The flight, which occurs during
the pregame routine, quickly became a fan favorite. Approximately
10 minutes prior to the start of the game, Tiger flies from
the upper deck, circles the field and lands in the middle
of the field. The routine is a result of training with Joe
Shelnutt of the Southeastern Raptor Center.
Hare, Cliff
Cliff Hare was a member of Auburn’s first football
team who went on to serve as chair of the Auburn Faculty
Athletic Committee. Auburn’s football stadium is named
for the longtime professor and dean of the School of Chemistry.
He served as president of the Southern Conference before
the formation of the Southeastern Conference.
Heisman, John
The legendary coach for which college football’s
top honor is named coached at Auburn from 1895-99, posting
a 12-4-2 record. Auburn is the only school where John Heisman
coached to have a Heisman Trophy winner. Heisman left Auburn
for Clemson and then Georgia Tech, where he lost 10 of 15
meetings with Auburn.
Heisman Trophy
Auburn has two. Pat Sullivan won the coveted award in 1971.
Bo Jackson did the same in 1985.
Jordan, Ralph
Over the years no name has been more synonymous with Auburn
football than Ralph “Shug” Jordan. The all-time
winningest football coach at Auburn, Jordan won 176 games
over a 25-year career on The Plains. A four-time Southeastern
Conference coach of the year, he was also named national
coach of the year in 1957 after leading Auburn to its only
current football national championship.
Jordan-Hare Stadium
Auburn’s showcase football stadium which seats 86,063
with 70 luxury suites located between the lower level and
upper deck on the East side of the stadium. The stadium
was dedicated Nov. 30, 1939 with 7,500 seats that are now
incorporated into the West stands. Ten years later 14,000
more seats were added and the stadium was named Cliff Hare
Stadium, although only 12 home games were played there over
that 10-year span. Additional seats were added in 1955,
1960 and 1970. The West upper deck was completed in 1980
and the East upper deck and suites were finished for the
1987 season. The facility was renamed Jordan-Hare Stadium
in 1973.
Lovelace Museum
Auburn’s showcase of a rich athletic history is located
off the lobby area of the Auburn Athletic Complex. Opened
in April 1996, the John B. Lovelace Museum and Hall of Honor
features displays and interactive exhibits which takes visitors
from the training table to the Olympic games with Auburn
athletes past and present. The museum is open during regular
business hours, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays and during
most campus Auburn athletic events. Admission is free.
Lupton, Frank
Frank Lupton, a halfback and captain of the 1892 football
squad, scored the first touchdown and kicked the first conversion
in Auburn football history in a 10-0 Auburn victory over
Georgia on Feb. 20, 1892.
Nicknames
There is only one ... Tigers. The is no such thing as an
Auburn War Eagle, an Auburn Plainsman or Plainsmen or an
Auburn Lady Tiger. It is simply Tigers. “War Eagle”
is a battle cry.
Nix-to-Sanders
With starting quarterback Stan White lying in pain on the
turf of Jordan-Hare Stadium and Auburn’s undefeated
season hanging in the balance against Alabama in 1993, sophomore
quarterback Patrick Nix was summoned to the huddle to face
a 4th-and-15 at the Alabama 35-yard line with Auburn trailing
14-5 and 6:09 left on the third quarter clock. Offensive
coordinator Tommy Bowden relayed the call to the sidelines
and “278Z Takeoff” would become a part of Auburn
football lore. Nix, without a chance to loosen up, hung
the ball up and receiver Frank Sanders pulled it down for
a touchdown. Auburn went on to win 22-14.
Outland Trophy
Auburn players have won two. Zeke Smith won the first in
1958, Tracy Rocker the second in 1988. Rocker made it a
clean sweep in 1988 by also winning the Lombardi Award.
“Phantom of Union Springs”
Jimmy Hitchcock was Auburn’s first football All-American.
The “Phantom of Union Springs” was also a baseball
All-American who later returned to coach and hold a position
on the Auburn University Board of Trustees. Auburn’s
baseball facility, Hitchcock Field at Plainsman Park, is
named in honor of Jimmy and Billy Hitchcock, brothers who
made a lasting impact on Auburn.
Picked off
Those who witnessed Auburn’s 30-26 victory over LSU
in 1994 saw one of the most bizarre finishes ever to a college
football game. With LSU leading 23-9 going into the fourth
quarter, Auburn safety Ken Alvis picked off an LSU pass
and rambled 42 yards for a touchdown. Before the final horn
had sounded Fred Smith followed suit for 32 yards and a
score, then Brian Robinson returned yet another pickoff
for a 41-yard TD. In all, the Tigers intercepted five LSU
passes in the fourth quarter to keep a 14-game winning streak
alive.
Piedmont Park
The site of the first Auburn football game on Feb. 20,
1892 in Atlanta. Auburn defeated Georgia, 10-0, in that
game, kicking off the oldest rivalry in the South. The Auburn
and Georgia athletic departments held a joint ceremony at
Piedmont Park on February 20, 1992 to kick off the 100-year
anniversary of football at both universities.
Petrie, Dr. George
Dr. George Petrie, a faculty member in the Agricultural
and Mechanical College in 1892, organized and was the coach
of Auburn’s first football team.
“Punt Bama Punt”
Maybe the most famous and easily the most talked about
Auburn-Alabama football game. Trailing 16-0 heading into
the fourth quarter in the 1972 contest, Auburn got a field
goal from Gardner Jett. Then lightning struck — twice.
Bill Newton blocked an Alabama punt and David Langner returned
it 25 yards for an Auburn touchdown. Three minutes later
Newton blocked another punt and Langner ran 20 yards for
the score.
Retired Jerseys
There are only three at Auburn; Pat Sullivan’s 7,
Terry Beasley’s 88 and Bo Jackson’s 34. Sullivan
and Beasley’s jerseys were retired following Sullivan’s
1971 Heisman Trophy season and Jackson’s jersey was
retired as part of Auburn’s football centennial celebration
in 1992.
Sullivan-to-Beasley
Auburn’s most prolific passing combination. From
1969 to 1971 Pat Sullivan and Terry Beasley connected for
more than 2,500 passing yards and nearly 30 touchdowns.
Thirty-one years after the end of their careers, both Sullivan
and Beasley still hold Auburn’s career passing and
receiving records, respectively.
Tiger
The name of Auburn’s golden eagle mascot. Not to
be confused with “Tigers”, which is the correct
and only nickname for Auburn athletic teams.
Tiger Walk
An Auburn tradition which began in the early 1960s when
Auburn players would walk from Sewell Hall to the football
stadium and fans would line Donahue Drive to wish them well.
Over the years the Tiger Walk has grown into a major part
of game day at Auburn, so much so that it is listed on the
players’ game weekend itinerary. The largest Tiger
Walk is believed to have taken place prior to the 1989 Alabama
game when more than 20,000 well wishers lined the street.
Every Tiger Walk prior to home games draws thousands and
over the last couple of years the Tiger Walk has become
a standard as Auburn football players enter stadiums on
the road. Tiger Walk is two hours before kickoff for every
game.
Toomer’s Corner
The center of town, where the Auburn University campus
meets the City of Auburn. Toomer’s Corner, where College
Street intersects Magnolia Avenue, has long been the gathering
place for Auburn athletic celebrations. After any football
win, and significant victories in other sports, Auburn students
and citizens alike join forces to “roll” the
trees (and anything else that doesn’t move) at Toomer’s
Corner with toilet tissue. Celebrations after significant
football victories can go on for hours and leave the heart
of town looking like a blizzard passed through.
Toomer’s Drug Store
An Auburn landmark at the corner of College and Magnolia
reputed to serve the best lemonade in the country. It is
Auburn legend that John Heisman used to frequent Toomer’s
Drugs for a taste of the now famous lemonade.
Walkons
Auburn has a long and storied past of football walkons
who have gone on to very successful football careers. One
success story belongs to former All-Pro defensive end Kevin
Greene. After being cut once, Greene walked on at Auburn
a second time and made the team. He went on to play 15 seasons
in the NFL.
“War Eagle”
Auburn’s battle cry, not Auburn’s nickname.
There are several legends concerning the origin of the War
Eagle battle cry, dating back to 1864 and the Civil War
at the Battle of the Wilderness in Virginia.
Auburn
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