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10/30/22 Auburn Articles


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Bryan Harsin’s latest loss has fans on social media questioning how he survives the weekend

Chris Wallace
4-5 minutes

Bryan Harsin and Auburn were blown out at home on Saturday, losing to Arkansas, 41-27, in a game that was not as close as the final score would indicate.

The loss dropped the Tigers to 3-5 on the season and Harsin is now just 3-10 in his last 13 games.

Speculation has been running rampant for weeks that Harsin could be fired at any time.

One issue, however, is that Auburn still needs a new athletic director.

That search might be just about over, however, as multiple reports have surfaced Saturday indicating that the Tigers are close to hiring Mississippi State AD John Cohen.

If Cohen is hired, it will be interesting to see what impact that has on Harsin’s situation.

What’s clear, however, is that Auburn fans are ready to move on now, and college football fans don’t expect Harsin to last much longer.

Social media was abuzz about Harsin against Saturday, as has been the case most of the season:

If we hire an AD, that stops the bleeding. Hire an AD so we can fire Bryan Harsin

— CoachPrime to Auburn stan account (@Parters_Cops) October 29, 2022

Does Bryan Harsin make it to the Iron Bowl?

— Hang the 1922 Vandy National Championship Banner (@AuricGoldfnger) October 29, 2022

Did Arkansas officially end Bryan Harsin’s time at Auburn?? #WPS pic.twitter.com/zcszZoZyES

— Brendan Fusco (@brendanfooseGO) October 29, 2022

Auburn's football team and fans are being held hostage by Bryan Harsin and the ransom is $15 million.

— An Auburn Man (@GridironTiger) October 29, 2022

Bryan Harsin has set this program back years.

— preds grief counselor (@will_longe) October 29, 2022

Auburn should fire Bryan Harsin before he even gets off of the field.

— Starcode ??️ (@Starcode_10) October 29, 2022

“We are closer than we are further away."

This is what Bryan Harsin said on Wednesday. Closer to what exactly?

— Alex Husting (@AlexHusting) October 29, 2022

Auburn MUST get rid of Bryan Harsin.. 10th loss in last 13 games.. Something has to change very very soon

— Holston Ryan (@HolstonTRyan) October 29, 2022

So this is the week Bryan Harsin is fired?

— Noah (@PrimeNoah24) October 29, 2022

Bryan Harsin is done. Just a matter of when.

— SEC SportsTalk (@JSecTalk) October 29, 2022

The players deserve so much better than Bryan Harsin.

— Scary Tyler Poor ? (@marytylerpoor) October 29, 2022

Feel like this is said every week but I cannot imagine Bryan Harsin is going to be the HC at Auburn at this time tomorrow

— Barstool SEC (@SECBarstool) October 29, 2022

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"Chris Wallace covers college football for Saturday Down South. He has covered college athletics for multiple newspapers and also worked previously for Rivals.com and GolfChannel.com."

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Instant Impressions: Arkansas 41, Auburn 27

Nathan King
6-7 minutes

 

AUBURN, Alabama — Coming off a bye week, at home, with the team it owned its longest active SEC winning streak against, Saturday’s matchup with Arkansas seemed like as good an opportunity as ever for Auburn to regain some mojo and put itself in position to get back in the win column — or at least closely contend to do so.

Instead, Bryan Harsin has now lost to every SEC West team since taking over as Auburn’s head coach — and this one came in an ugly loss at home, likely solidifying the 2022 season as one of the worst in the program’s modern history.

Arkansas wore down the Tigers on the ground and strolled to a 41-27 win in Jordan-Hare Stadium on Saturday afternoon, handing Auburn its fourth straight loss and its seventh loss in its past eight SEC games.

Harsin is now 1-7 in his last eight Power Five games, as Auburn (3-5, 1-4 SEC) may have played its way out of contention for a bowl game.

Here are Auburn Undercover’s immediate takeaways from another dark day for the program under Harsin’s watch. 

Not much to show in Year 2

With the Arkansas loss, Auburn’s longest SEC winning streak (six games) was broken. Of course, the Tigers also saw the same winning streak snapped in their last game against Ole Miss.

Auburn’s longest SEC winning streak is now a tie between Kentucky and Missouri (both three games). The Tigers have lost to every other division opponent at least once under Harsin.

Tigers make up ground

Arkansas went up 14-3 early in the second quarter on two straight long touchdown drives, though the Tigers were able to make up some ground and keep things close at halftime.

Keionte Scott looked to have doomed Auburn’s possession by letting a punt roll past him, giving the Hogs a whopping 76 yards on the kick. But Robby Ashford scrambled for 34 yards on third down from his own 11-yard line to spark the drive, then Bigsby capped things with a 41-yard touchdown scamper, sprung by a nice block from freshman tight end Micah Riley-Ducker.

With the long touchdown, Bigsby passed Kerryon Johnson for 11th on Auburn’s all-time rushing list.

Arkansas looked as if it was about to go up 21-10 the next drive, when KJ Jefferson hooked up with Matt Landers for a 56-yard pickup inside the 10-yard line. But Auburn got a red-zone stop and forced a field goal.

The Hogs only got a field goal out of their final three drives of the first half, with Jefferson missing on five of his last eight passes in the second quarter. Auburn, meanwhile, had a nicely executed, 47-second drive before the half, with Ashford completing three passes for 58 yards to set up a chip-shot field goal to make it 17-13.

But can't close out drives

Auburn’s offense was by no means inept; some of its successes from the Ole Miss game certainly carried over. But the issue was with closing out drives, not moving the ball.

Five of the Tigers’ first eight drives entered Arkansas territory, but Auburn came away with only 13 points. That trend continued immediately out of the gates at halftime, when it looked as if Auburn might drive right down the field and take the lead.

It went 13 plays inside Arkansas’ 30-yard line, but just like the opening drive of the game, Robby Ashford was sacked and the field-goal was pushed back. Only this time, instead of Anders Carlson missing — which he did from 46 yards out in the first quarter — his 52-yard attempt was blocked.

Arkansas, meanwhile, scored every time it got some momentum going on a possession. The Razorbacks entered Auburn territory seven times and scored on all of them.

Auburn was outscored 24-14 the rest of the way after it had the ball in Arkansas territory early in the third quarter. Auburn scored on a short Jarquez Hunter touchdown with 4 seconds left in the game.

Rocket applies the dagger

Arkansas was dominating the third quarter, but a 51-yard punt by Oscar Chapman was downed at Arkansas’ 6-yard line, seemingly giving the Tigers a chance to stay in the game with a stop and, presumably, decent field position.

Instead, SEC leading rusher Rocket Sanders found an opening on the left side and burst for a 76-yard pickup, being dragged down in the red zone by Zion Puckett. The Razorbacks found the end zone with a third-and-goal touchdown by Rashod Dubinion to put Sam Pittman’s team up 31-13 toward the end of the third quarter.

Arkansas easily drove down the field at the start of the fourth quarter, too, eating up a whopping 7:35 of clock. The Hogs scored touchdowns on three straight drives to open the second half: 64, 94 and 84 yards.

Against the SEC's worst run defense, Arkansas ran for 290 yards and four touchdowns. Auburn has now given up 26 rushing scores this season, and has allowed 1,033 rushing yards over its past three games.

Other notes

Ashford had his most efficient passing performance of the season — 24-of-33 for 285 yards and a touchdown. Auburn also didn't have a turnover for the first time since the Missouri game in Week 4, but sacks and other setbacks in opposing territory kept the Tigers from finding much consistency in terms of scoring.

Ashford was also Auburn's leading rusher with 87 yards. Bigsby had his 41-yard touchdown, but had only 22 yards on his 10 other carries, as Auburn's offensive line struggled once again. 

6COMMENTS

The Tigers' defense has now given up 40 points in a game four times this year, the most in a season in program history. 

Auburn Undercover will update this story. Check back for additional information.

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Auburn targeting Mississippi State's John Cohen as AD

Updated: Oct. 29, 2022, 2:38 p.m.|Published: Oct. 29, 2022, 1:59 p.m.
4-5 minutes

  1. Auburn Football

Auburn finalizing deal to make Mississippi State’s John Cohen next AD

Joe Moorhead, John Cohen

Mississippi State athletic director John Cohen, left, hands new head football coach Joe Moorhead a traditional cowbell during an NCAA college football news conference, Thursday, Nov. 30, 2017, in Starkville, Miss. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)AP

Auburn is closing in on its next athletic director after nearly a two-month search and it is someone with a deep knowledge of the Southeastern Conference.

Auburn has zeroed in on Mississippi State athletic director John Cohen and is working to finalize a deal to make him the school’s 16th all-time AD, a source with knowledge of the situation confirmed to AL.com. ESPN’s Pete Thamel first reported news of Auburn pursuing Cohen.

Cohen would replace Allen Greene, who stepped down as Auburn’s athletics director at the end of August. In the two months since, the Tigers have had two people oversee the athletics department. Chief operating officer Marcy Girton served as acting AD for 12 days before university president Dr. Chris Roberts named executive associate AD for compliance Rich McGlynn as the Tigers’ interim AD.

Prior to entering the administration side of athletics in 2016, Cohen spent 25 years as a college baseball coach, including eight years as head coach at Mississippi State, where he led the Bulldogs to five postseason appearances, including three Super Regional berths and a College World Series runner-up finish in 2013. Before arriving at Mississippi State, Cohen was head coach at Kentucky for five seasons, and prior to that was an assistant coach at Florida.

Cohen would be the second consecutive Mississippi State athletics director to leave Starkville, Miss., for another SEC job. His predecessor, Scott Stricklin, left Mississippi State to become Florida’s AD in 2016.

Since taking over Mississippi State’s athletics department, Cohen has been responsible for the hiring of 12 head coaches across the Bulldogs’ athletics programs. Among those were Mike Leach, who took over as football coach prior to the 2020 season, and former New Mexico State men’s basketball coach Chris Jans, who was named the Bulldogs’ head coach in March.

One of Cohen’s first and most crucial decisions as Auburn’s athletics director will be to determine the fate of head football coach Bryan Harsin, who is in just his second season with the Tigers but has been under immense scrutiny since his first season ended with a five-game losing streak and a 6-7 overall record. That was followed by an offseason of upheaval, both with the roster (19 transfers out of the program) and coaching staff (including changes at offensive, defensive and special teams coordinators), that led into a February university-run inquiry into Harsin’s handling of the program.

Harsin emerged relatively unscathed, and he challenged skeptics to “watch” Auburn’s on-field product this season. He hasn’t delivered on that, though, as Auburn is just 3-4 on the season and 1-3 in SEC play, as the Tigers have a losing record during Harsin’s tenure.

John Talty is the sports editor and SEC Insider for Alabama Media Group. He is the bestselling author of “The Leadership Secrets of Nick Saban: How Alabama’s Coach Became the Greatest Ever.”

Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.

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Scarbinsky: Auburn football’s a loser again, but is hope on the horizon?

Published: Oct. 30, 2022, 5:45 a.m.
2 minutes

This is an opinion column.

There may be hope for Auburn yet. Not on the football field, where this helpless season and the hopeless tenure of an overmatched coach can’t end soon enough, but behind closed doors, where decisions that shape the future are made.

As AL.com has reported, it appears that Auburn is one step closer to saying good riddance to Bryan Harsin and his arrogance and hello, please save us to John Cohen and his experience as athletics director.

So there is a light at the end of this tunnel.

On Harsin, the less said, the better after Arkansas 41, Auburn 27. Anyone who engaged in or endorsed his hiring should not be permitted within three football fields of the next one. A fourth straight loss dropped the Tigers to 3-5 this year and 3-10 in their last 13 games. The last Auburn coach to suffer through a worse stretch: Shug Jordan lost the last four games of his first season in 1951 and went 2-8 in 1952 for a 2-12 period of darkness before the dawn.

At this point, let me apologize to the Jordan family for mentioning the beloved, salt-of-the-earth Shug in the same breath as the haughty Harsin. One has his name on the stadium because he embodied what it means to be an Auburn man. The other has been the antithesis, and he shouldn’t be allowed to darken that doorway for one more Saturday.

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Joseph Goodman: For Auburn, the horror of rock bottom is here

Updated: Oct. 29, 2022, 7:06 p.m.|Published: Oct. 29, 2022, 4:43 p.m.
5-6 minutes

Auburn football is a tomb of the tedious in these days before Halloween.

Boring. Without. Signifying nothing. Devoid even of sound, but the cause of all fury.

Make it stop, please, this forever place between the living and the dead that Auburn now occupies like a ghoul as it free-falls downward into the dungeons of the SEC West. What did we learn about Auburn on Saturday that we didn’t already know? Arkansas’ 41-27 victory proved that even a perpetual bottom-feeder of this league can suddenly walk into Jordan-Hare Stadium and embarrass the Tigers.

Former Auburn quarterback Bo Nix went 6-0 combined against Ole Miss and Arkansas in his three years on The Plains. In back to back games, Auburn lost to both. Mississippi State is next up, and then it’s Texas A&M.

Those used to be easy wins for Auburn. Now the games don’t even matter and it’s still October.

RELATED: Auburn throttled by Arkansas in fourth straight loss

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It can’t get any worse than this. That is the only ray of sunshine anyone at Auburn has left to offer its fans after what was witnessed on Saturday — that and maybe the future of the quarterback position. Robby Ashford had a decent game, throwing for 285 yards and a touchdown in addition to his excellent rushing, but yet his team still had no chance.

Auburn’s defense is a rotting pit of sacrificial decay. Arkansas had 520 yards of offense, and quarterback KJ Jefferson looked like Cam Newton.

They used to throw toilet paper into trees here after victories. By the fourth quarter, I wanted to wrap my head in Charmin like a mummy.

Bring me back from the dark side when it’s 2023.

What is life without hope? What is existence without meaning? In the SEC, it is Vanderbilt football always. For at least a little while longer it will be Auburn, too. That’s the state of Auburn while the school plays out this nightmare of naught. It hurts, but there is pain now so there will be no poison tomorrow. That is my hope anyway.

For now, though, there are only the final days of a terrible mistake. A zombie walks the sidelines of Jordan-Hare Stadium where the ghosts of greatness linger in sadness, and the zombie’s name is Bryan Harsin. In the role of Auburn football coach, he is a dead man walking.

“Physically, we just got beat,” Harsin said.

Fire the guy already.

Allow Auburn to wipe its memory clean of these last two years. Harsin had his introductory news conference on Christmas Eve. Release this shadow of a coach on All Hallows’ Eve.

“How would I summarize the season so far?” Harsin said when asked that very question.

“Yeah,” he said.

He did not answer, as usual. He did, however, change out of his Auburn-branded apparel before his postgame news conference, so that was good to see.

The good teams of the SEC run headlong into November with dreams of playing for a national championship. At Auburn, a headless team without life drags itself aimlessly towards nothingness and worse, the bottom of the SEC West standings.

Auburn’s only win in its last eight conference games was against Missouri. The Tigers are 3-13 since the loss last season to Texas A&M. It’s so bad. Arkansas 41, Auburn 27 was like witnessing the slow torture of friend. Oh, the horror. Even Colonel Kurtz had a plan, though. This is a new dimension of nope.

Harsin was asked what was wrong with his team.

“We can’t put our finger on it,” he said before deciding it was as simple as Auburn “not playing good football.”

We have passed through the event horizon, and where we are going you do not want eyes.

Courageously proud, the Auburn fan base remains resilient and strong, but even the loyalists had seen enough against Arkansas. The upper decks were thin at the beginning, and then empty by the end of the third quarter. Auburn trailed 17-13 at the end of the first half, but allowed 21 straight points after the break.

Thankfully, there are signs that the struggle of this exercise in self-harm are coming to an end. During the game, there were reports that Auburn was finally making progress in its search for a new director of athletics. John Cohen, the current AD at Mississippi State, is the name, and, having been raised in Tuscaloosa, he should be well familiar with Auburn.

Did he grow up an Alabama fan?

It’s a frightening thought, but nothing could be scarier than Auburn’s current reality.

Joseph Goodman is a columnist for the Alabama Media Group, and author of “We Want Bama: A season of hope and the making of Nick Saban’s ‘ultimate team’”. You can find him on Twitter @JoeGoodmanJr.

If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.

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Auburn’s defensive decline continues in 41-27 loss to Arkansas

Published: Oct. 29, 2022, 5:47 p.m.
5-6 minutes

Bryan Harsin took umbrage with a question asked after Auburn’s latest defensive letdown, but like the on-field product, Harsin’s defensive effort left something to be desired.

After Auburn’s 41-27 loss to Arkansas, in which his defense surrendered 200-plus rushing yards for the third straight week and 40-plus points for the fourth time in the last six games, Harsin was asked to what he would attribute the Tigers’ defensive regression to this season. After all, strong defenses have been a calling card for the program in recent years, with the unit often putting the team on its back through some offensive valleys.

Read more Auburn football: Instant analysis: Auburn throttled by Arkansas for fourth consecutive loss

Auburn finalizing deal to make Mississippi State’s John Cohen next AD

Rewinding Auburn’s 41-27 loss to Arkansas

“In comparison to everybody else?” Harsin bristled. “And all the other teams that we didn’t coach when we were here? That were here?”

It was pointed out that even last year’s team, when Harsin was in his first as Auburn’s head coach, featured a solid defense, though Harsin interjected before the follow-up could be finished. Auburn was 27th nationally in scoring defense in 2021, top-30 in rushing defense (and 21st in fewest yards allowed per carry), ranked top-25 in defensive red-zone touchdown percentage and was 36th nationally in third-down defense.

Whether Harsin wants to acknowledge the comparison, the fact of the matter is Auburn’s defense has seen an overall sharp decline this season. Saturday’s loss to Arkansas was just the latest example, as the Razorbacks rushed for 286 yards and four touchdowns, averaged 7.2 yards per play and 6.8 sack-adjusted rushing yards per carry while becoming the third consecutive opponent to score at least 40 points against the Tigers.

It’s the first time in program history that Auburn has surrendered 40-plus points in four games in a single season, and Saturday’s loss marked the first time the Tigers have ever given up 40-plus in three consecutive games. The only other seasons with three total games of allowing 40-plus points were 1948, 2011 and 2012.

“They really walked in here, put 40 on us, and walked out,” defensive lineman Colby Wooden said. “I’ve never had that happen in my time here. It’s a difficult thing to digest, but you have to look in the mirror. Kudos to them; they were the better team today. Point-blank, period.”

When Harsin tried to pinpoint the biggest issues that have led to the Tigers’ defensive decline, he brought up missed tackles (of which there were many, again, against the Razorbacks), an inability to stop the run, as well as Auburn’s struggles getting off the field on third downs. Arkansas converted 8-of-14 (57.1 percent) third-down attempts at Jordan-Hare Stadium. That’s the highest third-down conversion rate the Tigers have allowed at home under Harsin, and it’s the second straight game the program has allowed its opponent to convert more than 50 percent of its third-down tries; Ole Miss converted 12-of-19 (63.2 percent) of its third-down opportunities against Auburn two weeks ago.

“That’s not what we want,” Harsin said.

The most glaring deficiency for Auburn’s defense, though, has been stopping the run — which was further highlighted against Arkansas, which entered the game with a top-10 rushing attack and propensity for running the ball as often as the option-based service academies.

The Razorbacks racked up 286 rushing yards total (and 304 sack-adjusted yards running the ball). Raheim Sanders paced the Razorbacks on the ground, running for 171 yards on 16 carries. Much of that came on a devastating 76-yard run in the third quarter after Auburn pinned Arkansas at its own 6-yard line.

“It’s very frustrating,” edge defender Derick Hall said. “You know, we’ll go back and watch the tape. We’ll see what we mess up. I just know game after game, we gift them a lot of things — whether it be penalties or one guy getting out of his gap or anything like that. Today, the defense didn’t have the best game, and it starts with me. I don’t think I played to my best standard. We’ll go back and see what we have to do to get better tomorrow.”

Saturday marked the first time since 2012 that Auburn has surrendered 200-plus rushing yards in three consecutive games. That season, it was Ole Miss, Vanderbilt and Texas A&M; this year, the culprits were Georgia, Ole Miss and Arkansas.

Auburn has now allowed 264.8 rushing yards per game against six Power 5 opponents this season — a mark that is among the worst in the nation. A once-proud defense is left reeling.

“It’s not good,” Harsin said. “I see the same thing you see. It’s not good…. It just comes back to we’ve got to do a better job. If we had the answers for that, we wouldn’t have 1,000 yards and 13 touchdowns (allowed on the ground the last three games). But that’s not a good stat. And that’s not something that’s going to help us. Obviously, it hasn’t, and it’s something we’ve got to fix.”

Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.

If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.

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4 hours ago, aubiefifty said:

Scarbinsky: Auburn football’s a loser again, but is hope on the horizon?

Published: Oct. 30, 2022, 5:45 a.m.
2 minutes

This is an opinion column.

There may be hope for Auburn yet. Not on the football field, where this helpless season and the hopeless tenure of an overmatched coach can’t end soon enough, but behind closed doors, where decisions that shape the future are made.

As AL.com has reported, it appears that Auburn is one step closer to saying good riddance to Bryan Harsin and his arrogance and hello, please save us to John Cohen and his experience as athletics director.

So there is a light at the end of this tunnel.

On Harsin, the less said, the better after Arkansas 41, Auburn 27. Anyone who engaged in or endorsed his hiring should not be permitted within three football fields of the next one. A fourth straight loss dropped the Tigers to 3-5 this year and 3-10 in their last 13 games. The last Auburn coach to suffer through a worse stretch: Shug Jordan lost the last four games of his first season in 1951 and went 2-8 in 1952 for a 2-12 period of darkness before the dawn.

At this point, let me apologize to the Jordan family for mentioning the beloved, salt-of-the-earth Shug in the same breath as the haughty Harsin. One has his name on the stadium because he embodied what it means to be an Auburn man. The other has been the antithesis, and he shouldn’t be allowed to darken that doorway for one more Saturday.

If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.

Harsin cant recruit but he makes for that by not being able to coach either.....

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16 minutes ago, DKW 86 said:

Harsin cant recruit but he makes for that by not being able to coach either.....

i saw some colorful fall pics of mentone and thought of you bro. cheaha seems to be underwhelming because we did not get enough rain.

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8 hours ago, aubiefifty said:

Bryan Harsin’s latest loss has fans on social media questioning how he survives the weekend

Chris Wallace
4-5 minutes

Bryan Harsin and Auburn were blown out at home on Saturday, losing to Arkansas, 41-27, in a game that was not as close as the final score would indicate.

The loss dropped the Tigers to 3-5 on the season and Harsin is now just 3-10 in his last 13 games.

Speculation has been running rampant for weeks that Harsin could be fired at any time.

One issue, however, is that Auburn still needs a new athletic director.

That search might be just about over, however, as multiple reports have surfaced Saturday indicating that the Tigers are close to hiring Mississippi State AD John Cohen.

If Cohen is hired, it will be interesting to see what impact that has on Harsin’s situation.

What’s clear, however, is that Auburn fans are ready to move on now, and college football fans don’t expect Harsin to last much longer.

Social media was abuzz about Harsin against Saturday, as has been the case most of the season:

If we hire an AD, that stops the bleeding. Hire an AD so we can fire Bryan Harsin

— CoachPrime to Auburn stan account (@Parters_Cops) October 29, 2022

Does Bryan Harsin make it to the Iron Bowl?

— Hang the 1922 Vandy National Championship Banner (@AuricGoldfnger) October 29, 2022

Did Arkansas officially end Bryan Harsin’s time at Auburn?? #WPS pic.twitter.com/zcszZoZyES

— Brendan Fusco (@brendanfooseGO) October 29, 2022

Auburn's football team and fans are being held hostage by Bryan Harsin and the ransom is $15 million.

— An Auburn Man (@GridironTiger) October 29, 2022

Bryan Harsin has set this program back years.

— preds grief counselor (@will_longe) October 29, 2022

Auburn should fire Bryan Harsin before he even gets off of the field.

— Starcode ??️ (@Starcode_10) October 29, 2022

“We are closer than we are further away."

This is what Bryan Harsin said on Wednesday. Closer to what exactly?

— Alex Husting (@AlexHusting) October 29, 2022

Auburn MUST get rid of Bryan Harsin.. 10th loss in last 13 games.. Something has to change very very soon

— Holston Ryan (@HolstonTRyan) October 29, 2022

So this is the week Bryan Harsin is fired?

— Noah (@PrimeNoah24) October 29, 2022

Bryan Harsin is done. Just a matter of when.

— SEC SportsTalk (@JSecTalk) October 29, 2022

The players deserve so much better than Bryan Harsin.

— Scary Tyler Poor ? (@marytylerpoor) October 29, 2022

Feel like this is said every week but I cannot imagine Bryan Harsin is going to be the HC at Auburn at this time tomorrow

— Barstool SEC (@SECBarstool) October 29, 2022

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He survives because who's going to fire him? Our AD? The Board of Trustees? Bueller?

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