Current:Home > MarketsOpinion: If you think Auburn won't fire Hugh Freeze in Year 2, you haven't been paying attention -InvestTomorrow
Opinion: If you think Auburn won't fire Hugh Freeze in Year 2, you haven't been paying attention
View
Date:2025-04-25 23:44:49
The best part about it, the absolute best part about this small town, cutthroat bubble of a world, is Auburn really is The Loveliest Village on the Plains.
But slithering beneath that bucolic setting of genuine community and cooperation, that Norman Rockwell painting of Americana, lies the beast of envy.
Always feeding, never satiated.
“You can feel it every single day,” former Auburn coach Terry Bowden once told me.
Hugh Freeze is feeling it now. Just like Bryan Harsin and Gus Malzahn and Gene Chizik and Tommy Tuberville and, do I really need to continue?
There’s a reason envy is one of the seven deadly sins.
Whatever Alabama can do, we can and should do better. Money is no object, nor are self-humiliation and degradation.
Wasn’t that long ago that Auburn ran off Harsin because tailback Tank Bigsby forgot to stay inbounds to help run out the clock on an upset of You Know Who. In Harsin’s first year.
Not long after that self-inflicted and painful loss, Harsin suddenly wasn’t “a fit” – and vicious rumors about off-field improprieties sprung up on the cesspool of Twitter months before Year 2 began.
Wasn’t that long ago that Auburn ran off the one guy who beat Alabama coach Nick Saban more than any other. Now Malzahn is living the good life in Florida as coach at UCF, or as he says, “living where you vacation.”
Chizik was fired two years after winning a national championship.
Tuberville was fired a year after beating Alabama – the source of Auburn’s never-ending and destructive envy – in six consecutive games.
So if you think Auburn won’t pull the trigger on Freeze after two seasons – or in the middle of Year 2 – you obviously haven’t been following along.
If you think power brokers at Auburn (see: deep-pocket boosters who have run the joint for decades) care about public opinion, or the scorn that comes with so many knee-jerk decisions, you haven’t been following along.
If you think buyout money is an obstacle, let me walk you through a field of green prettier than farmland on the outskirts of the Loveliest Village.
REQUIRED READING:Bowl projections: College football Week 5 brings change to playoff field
OPINION:One missed field goal keeps Georgia's Kirby Smart from being Ohio State's Ryan Day
Auburn paid Tuberville $5.08 million to not coach after the 2008 season.
Auburn paid Chizik $7.5 million to not coach after the 2012 season.
Auburn paid Malzahn $21.45 million to not coach after the 2020 season.
Auburn paid Bryan Harsin $22.25 million to not coach after the 2022 season.
If you think Auburn is going to balk at another $21.125 million to make Freeze go away — according to USA TODAY coaching contract guru Steve Berkowitz — you obviously haven’t been following along.
It's Auburn, where anything that can happen more than likely will.
It really isn’t so much that Freeze has botched the quarterback position (he has), or that he hasn’t been the offensive revelation Auburn expected (he hasn’t). Or that he blamed players, which frankly, I have no problem with ― especially in this age of player earning and free movement.
It’s that once fat-cat boosters believe Alabama is out of reach for (choose your coach), it’s time for change. It doesn’t matter what it costs.
After six wins in Year 1 under Freeze included the unspeakable sin of fourth-and-31 against Alabama, Year 2 began with the joyous departure of Nick Saban from Alabama.
Ding, dong, the witch is dead!
Then the Auburn quarterbacks couldn’t stop throwing the ball to the other team. The Tigers lost to Cal after Payton Thorne threw four interceptions, lost to Arkansas after Thorne and Hank Brown threw four more and lost to Oklahoma last weekend after Thorne threw a pick-six with Auburn leading by three with four minutes remaining.
All three games, all nine interceptions, played out in the Loveliest Village, in front of a loyal, passionate fan base at Jordan-Hare Stadium that begrudgingly accepts the fat-cat booster mechanisms in place because, son of a gun, they just want to beat Aladamnbama.
In that sense, Auburn is not unlike every other major college football program. We don’t want to know what’s in the tailgate casserole, we just know what it tastes like when everything is clicking.
They also see the hard, cold truth of reality when Alabama, four games into the tenure of new coach Kalen DeBoer, is again playing like the best team in college football.
It’s a carousel of self-destruction at Auburn that never stops, the only constant an uncomfortable phone call every few years to super-agent Jimmy Sexton – who, at this point, should be on retainer.
The beast of envy is alive and well in the Loveliest Village on the Plains.
Always feeding, never satiated.
Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X @MattHayesCFB.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- 2024 NFL draft order: Top 18 first-round selections secured after Week 18
- Will TJ Watt play in wild-card game? JJ Watt says Steelers LB has Grade 2 MCL sprain
- Judges in England and Wales are given cautious approval to use AI in writing legal opinions
- NCAA hits former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh with suspension, show-cause for recruiting violations
- Pope calls for universal ban on surrogacy in global roundup of threats to peace and human dignity
- Cowboys kicker Brandon Aubrey has perfect regular season come to end on a block
- Stock market today: Asian stocks decline after Wall Street logs its worst week in the last 10
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- With every strike and counterstrike, Israel, the US and Iran’s allies inch closer to all-out war
Ranking
- Police remove gator from pool in North Carolina town: Watch video of 'arrest'
- Live updates | Fighting near central Gaza hospital prompts medics, patients and others to flee south
- Vietnam’s VinFast to build a $2 billion EV plant in India as part of its global expansion
- Iowa’s Christian conservatives follow their faith when voting, and some say it leads them to Trump
- The Daily Money: Disney+ wants your dollars
- Judith Light and 'Last of Us' actors are first-time winners at Creative Arts Emmy Awards
- Cindy Morgan, 'Caddyshack' star, found dead at 69 after roommate noticed a 'strong odor'
- Timothée Chalamet, Kylie Jenner share passionate smooch at the Golden Globe Awards
Recommendation
Elon Musk’s Daughter Vivian Calls Him “Absolutely Pathetic” and a “Serial Adulterer”
Horoscopes Today, January 7, 2024
You Missed This Mamma Mia Reunion & More Casts at the Golden Globes
CBS News poll on Jan. 6 attack 3 years later: Though most still condemn, Republican disapproval continues to wane
Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
Gyspy Rose Blanchard Reveals Kidnapping Survivor Elizabeth Smart Slid Into Her DMs
Just Crown Elizabeth Debicki Queen of the 2024 Golden Globes Right Now
Raise a Glass to Billie Eilish, Emma Stone and More Stars at 2024 Golden Globes After-Parties