COLUMN: Oklahoma Football's failures deserve scrutiny
By Nathan Deal | Sports Reporter | January 6The Big 12 champion Oklahoma Sooners were clearly the better team in this year’s edition of the Sugar Bowl.
The Big 12 champion Oklahoma Sooners were clearly the better team in this year’s edition of the Sugar Bowl.
On the same day that the Auburn defensive line was dealt the blow of losing Carl Lawson to the NFL Draft, their offensive counterparts received some better news.
Playing with a 7-0 lead in the second quarter and in prime position to get another stop against one of the nation's most explosive offenses, all the Auburn defense had to do was stop No. 7 Oklahoma from converting on 3rd-and-22.
Look beyond the 1,123 yards and seven scores, and you'll find a family man.
When defensive linemen Montravius Adams and Carl Lawson arrived on Auburn’s campus in 2013, they were the headlining recruits for a program in disarray.
The end of the 2016 regular season was not a pretty one for Gus Malzahn's Auburn Tigers.
No. 14 Auburn could be heading to the Sugar Bowl.
Down 53-39 to Indiana after three quarters, it appeared that Auburn was heading toward its second-consecutive non-conference loss after its loss to West Virginia on Thursday.
Auburn's defense kept it in the game against Alabama, but the top-ranked Crimson Tide eventually wore them down.
Kevin Steele is no stranger to the Iron Bowl.