A-Day and a time for new beginnings
For many programs across the country, this year’s spring game will have no particular significance.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Auburn Plainsman's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
183 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
For many programs across the country, this year’s spring game will have no particular significance.
For the first time in school history, Auburn gymnastics has qualified for nationals in consecutive seasons.
The Auburn men's golf team found itself in an unusual position at the FarmLinks Match Play on Saturday. The Tigers have been a top-10 team nearly all fall and spring, but this weekend, they were the underdogs.
In years past, preseason scrimmages have gone a long way in determining the outcome of Auburn’s quarterback competition.
After an indoor track season that was dominated by Auburn's sprinters and jumpers, it was the distance runners who showed off in the outdoor season's opening meet.
Having defeated South Carolina twice previously this season, the Auburn equestrian team knew exactly what to expect when it was matched with the Gamecocks in the first round of the SEC Championship.
Michael Johnson, the leader of the Auburn men's golf team, recorded one of his best rounds ever on Saturday to vault the team — and himself — to the top of the leaderboard at the Schenkel Invitational.
Auburn's second round at Forest Heights Country Club did more than vault the Tigers from near the bottom of the leaderboard to a lead at the Schenkel Invitational. Instead, it erased parts of the program's record book.
Auburn had to wait a long 10 days to discover its fate in the NCAA Tournament. After slipping into the field of 64 teams, it took less than a half for the Tigers to prove they belonged.
Despite a strong round from sophomore Ben Schlottman, Auburn finished near the bottom of the pack on the first day of the Schenkel Invitational.
A year after winning only three SEC games, the Auburn women’s basketball team is going to play on the sport’s biggest stage for the first time since 2009.
One round wouldn't have been enough for Auburn on Saturday at the Southwood Golf Course, but two was.
Michelle Atherley saved her best performance for the brightest lights.
After a disappointing finish to its home tournament earlier this week, Auburn did not start off how it wanted to back on the road.
Auburn saved its worst for last.
Peyton Barber was thrust into the national spotlight at the NFL Combine on Feb. 24, but the reason had nothing to do with his 40-yard dash time, vertical leap or broad jump.
As Auburn’s golfers stood off the side of the 18th green watching the completion of the third and final round of the Tiger Invitational, there were no smiles or high-fives.
The 17th hole on the Grand National Lakes Course has not been kind to Ben Schlottman in the past, most notably when he double bogeyed and bogeyed the hole in his two rounds at last summer’s Barbasol Championship on his way to missing the cut by two strokes.
Former Auburn running back and Heisman Trophy finalist Tre Mason was arrested and charged with two misdemeanors and two traffic violations on Saturday near his home in Florida.
Just as Auburn men's golf coach Nick Clinard predicted last week, the familiarity with Grand National Lakes Course and comfort of being at home has served the Tigers well, at least through one day.