Cam Newton’s got NFL blood

He might be the biggest wild card in this years draft, but Cam Newton has some relatives who got a taste of the National Football League. Continue reading

Auburn’s Cam Newton headed to Redskins?

He won the Heisman, now he could be working down the street from the White House. Auburn star Cam Newton is projected as a possible solution to the Redskins traditional quarterback problems. Continue reading

Warren Moon makes racist comments to defend Cam Newton

The only black quarterback inducted into the Hall of Fame has come to the defense of Cam Newton. Continue reading…

Auburn coach calls HBO report one-sided, pure garbage

Gene Chizik tried to defends his tarnished football program a day after HBO Sports claimed the program’s boosters paid players. Continue reading…

Panthers waiting to decide No. 1 pick

Carolina is on the clock with the No. 1 pick in the 2011 NFL Draft, but they’re in no hurry to lock up their pick. New coach Ron Rivera tells Continue reading…

Auburn’s Toomer Corner trees get good news?

Officials have new hope for the 130-year-old trees at Toomer’s Corner Continue reading…

Toomer’s Corner alleged tree killer in court this week

Harvey Updyke Jr., the guy who police claim dropped the weed killer on the Toomer’s Corner trees remains free on bond Continue reading…

Report: Cam Newton had knowledge of dad’s NCAA rules violations

An Alabama sports radio host claims to have heard recordings that tie former Auburn QB Cam Newton into his dad’s cheating scandal Continue reading…

Browns to meet with Auburn’s Cam Newton

Browns President Mike Holmgren plans to talk with Auburn’s Cam Newton, Washington’s Jake Locker and Arkansas Ryan Mallett Continue reading…

Auburn Toomer’s Corner accused tree killer living in car

If you kill trees made famous in sports, you might end up homeless and taking baths in streams of water, thats what is apparently happening to the guy who killed the trees at Toomer’s Corner. Continue reading…

Alabama beefing up security, worried about Auburn fans?

The University of Alabama says they are not stepping up security in the event of retaliation, but students say they have noticed the recent addition of lights and video surveillance. Continue reading…

Auburn’s trees to go through several death cycles

Experts say the trees have almost no chance of survival given how long the poison has been running through the roots. Continue reading…

Auburn’s Toomer Corner will be poisoned for 7 years

It’s the audio everyone wants to hear. One man admitting he poisoned the trees at Toomer’s Corner. “I went to Auburn, Alabama.. I poisoned the two Toomer’s Trees.. I put Spike 80 DF in them.” Spike 80DF. A product most of us had never heard of until this week. “It’s not a widely used product,” says Herbicide Specialist Stephen Enloe. “You won’t be able to go to your local box store and buy it.” But you can find it online. A five-pound bag costs as much as <!–more Continue reading…–>$350.  We found a version of the herbicide called Spike 20P in Pell City at the St. Clair Farmer’s Co-Operative. It costs $75 a container and has a very clear warning against applying it on trees. It has the same active ingredient as Spike 80DF. Spike 20p is applied directly onto soil in pellet form where Spike 80DF is first mixed with water. Dow Agrosciences makes both products. We spoke with spokesperson Garry Hamlin by phone. “It’s generally not available in retail outlets so whoever did this apparently knew exactly what he was looking for and where to find it.” That person also knew it would might crush the spirits of Tiger fans everywhere, but the Auburn nation appears to be growing stronger out of this tragedy. “The Auburn spirit will continue to live on in the hearts of Auburn men and women,” AU VP Debbie Shaw told reporters Thursday. That herbicide will continue on, too, at Toomer’s Corner. “It’s persistent in the soil for about 7 years,” says Horticulturist Gary Keever. — ABC 33 Birmingham

Federal investigators involved in Auburn tree poisoning

Federal authorities are involved in the investigation of the poisoning of trees at Toomer’s Corner in Auburn. Continue reading…

Source: NCAA still investigating Auburn’s recruitment of Cam Newton

According to people with reason to know, the NCAA is still conducting an active investigation into Auburn’s recruitment of Cam Newton. Continue reading…

Cam Newton gets largest endorsement deal ever given to incoming NFL rookie

Former Auburn University Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Cam Newton has signed a shoe and apparel deal with Under Armour. Continue reading…

Carolina Panthers could handle No. 1 pick Fairley

Taking Auburn junior Nick Fairley with the No. 1 pick would give the Panthers an impact player on the inside for the first time since Kris Jenkins left after the 2007 season. Continue reading

Lawyer: Cam Newton’s dad didn’t watch BCS title game in stadium

He didn’t get a ticket from Auburn, but the controversial father of Tigers quarterback Cam Newton did find a way into University of Phoenix Stadium for the BCS championship game Monday night. Cecil Newton, who was accused by the NCAA of shopping his son to Mississippi State, is supposed to have “limited access” to Auburn’s football program.
With that in mind, Auburn Athletic Director Jay Jacobs told reporters before Monday’s game that by “was mutually agreed upon” the elder Newton would not be in attendance. But a photo by the Opelika-Auburn News taken after the game appeared to show Cam hugging his father.  So did the elder Newton watch the game from the stands? Perhaps not.
Adding a new wrinkle to the strange story, Cecil Newton’s attorney, George Lawson, told USA Today that his client did not attend the game but entered the stadium afterward to congratulate his son. Lawson didn’t know when Cecil Newton arrived or whether he had purchased a ticket.   — Huntsville Times

BCS 2012 National Championship Odds

Odds to win the 2012 BCS National Championship

Oklahoma                                 7/2

Alabama                                   15/2

Florida State                              10/1

Boise State                               12/1

LSU                                          12/1

Oregon                                      14/1

Florida                                      15/1

Where is your school listed? CLICK HERE for the rest of the 2012 BCS National Championship odds

Auburn coach helps with $2.4 million in exposure value

While Oregon Head Coach Chip Kelly appeared more frequently during ESPN’s telecast of the BCS National Championship Game last night, it was victorious Auburn Coach Gene Chizik and his well-placed Under Armour logos taking advantage with nearly $1.8 million of in-broadcast exposure value for the apparel brand

BCS ratings down across the board

ESPN’s Auburn-Oregon title game Monday drew 15.3% of U.S. TV households — down 11% from last year’s Alabama-Texas game and the lowest title game rating in six years.

Auburn star Cam Newton’s dad lied about not attending BCS title game?

Auburn did not provide a ticket for Cam Newton’s father to attend Monday’s national championship game, a university official said Tuesday. A newspaper has a photo that may show Newton embracing his father after the BCS win against Oregon

Auburn gives football coach $600k bonus

Auburn University’s win in college football’s national title game earned coach Gene Chizik – $600,000 in contract bonuses…

Auburn, Oregon didn’t use many teenagers

Teenagers are everywhere in college—everywhere except the field at the football national-title game. Just two of the 44 offensive and defensive starters in Monday’s Auburn-Oregon showdown were under the age of 20, both on the Auburn side: sophomore tight end Philip Lutzenkirchen and redshirt freshman defensive end Nosa Eguae (both 19). Because of redshirts and junior-college transfers, the average age of both teams was beyond the drinking age: 21 years, 273 days for Auburn and 22 years, 20 days for Oregon. — Wall Street Journal

Auburn has biggest disparity in racial graduation rates among bowl teams

Among all the bowl teams this season, Auburn has the highest disparity in the graduation rates between Continue reading

Auburn ranked low in NCAA’s most important academic measurement

Auburn’s top-ranked football team, which is preparing to play Oregon in Glendale, Ariz., for the national title on Monday, has tumbled in the N.C.A.A.’s most important academic measurement to No. 85 from No. 4 among the 120 major college football programs. Continue reading

BCS could have record low TV ratings?

The BCS’ computer algorithms and tarot cards managed to produce what could prove to be a historically less-than-mediagenic lineup. In ESPN’s own ongoing, scientific polling of the U.S. population’s favorite college football teams, only two BCS teams Continue reading

Auburn’s Cam Newton could land with Vikings?

With Tavaris Jackson unsigned for next season, you can bet that Vikings GM Rick Spielman has been busy looking at all the quarterback prospects in next year’s draft. Auburn’s Heisman winner Cam Newton, according to scouts, has been pegged in the middle of the first round, from spots 8 through 20, and that could put him in play for the Vikings. QB Ryan Mallet of Arkansas has been projected in the same area of the first round. Everyone’s top quarterback choice is Stanford’s Andrew Luck, with Christian Ponder of Florida State at the bottom of the first round. — Fox Sports

Auburn’s Cam Newton best in SEC history

Auburn’s Cam Newton is the best player to ever grace the Southeastern Conference. Heresy, I know, coming from the league of Herschel and Bo. And hypocritical, sure, one year after Superman left the building. But Newton has become something no one thought possible. A combination of all three. Gene Chizik has been fighting it all season. The Auburn coach gives in to hyperbole as often as Bill Belichick cracks a smile. However, after his quarterback threw for almost 300 first-half yards in Saturday’s SEC Championship Game, accounted for six touchdowns and generally looked like one of those Electric Football players that spins ’round and ’round but never goes down, he had this to say: “I can say this – well, we have one game left, so he can’t get too big of a head with one game left – but he’s probably the best football player I’ve ever seen,” Chizik said. Chizik saw first-hand Vince Young at his absolute best at Texas (before he became better at shoulder-pad tossing). He didn’t face Tim Tebow, but he must have seen the highlights. He was at Florida during the early 1980s, so he knew what Herschel and Bo could do.
“If you look over a 13-game span, I’ve never seen anything like it, to be honest with you,” Chizik said. “It’s running the ball. It’s throwing the ball.” Newton is the only SEC player to ever run for 1,000 yards and throw for 2,000 in a single season. He’s accounted for 49 touchdowns, good for second all-time. — Huntsville Times

Auburn won’t let Cam Newton talk to CBS

Expect plenty of rhetoric about Cam Newton during the Southeastern Conference championship game Saturday on CBS, but nothing from Newton himself. The network says Auburn coach Gene Chizik refused to make Newton available to network analysts for the customary pre-game chat. — Houston Chronicle

Alabama fires employee over Cam Newton songs

Alabama fired a part-time employee Monday for playing unauthorized music through the public address system at Bryant-Denny Stadium before the 75th Iron Bowl. The school did not release the person’s name, who was held accountable for playing songs such as “Take The Money And Run” and “Son of a Preacher Man” after Auburn quarterback Cam Newton appeared on the field for pregame warmups. Newton’s father, Cecil Newton, has been accused of shopping his son around to at least one university in what has been described as a pay-for-play scheme. Cecil is a pastor at a pastor Holy Zion Center of Deliverance in Newman, Ga. — Tuscaloosa News

Cam Newton scandal could cost Auburn coach money

An NCAA investigation of academic fraud allegations and possible NCAA rules violations involving Auburn quarterback Cam Newton could have long-term ramifications for the Tigers program. It also could have financial implications for Auburn coach Gene Chizik, according to a USA TODAY examination of his contract. Chizik’s total compensation for this season was set at $2.25 million. With his team’s record at 11-0, he is still in contention for his maximum of $1.3 million in athletically related bonuses. He also could get $150,000 based on the team’s academic performance. However, Auburn can suspend one or both of the nearly $60,000 payments it makes monthly to Chizik for personal endorsement rights and TV, radio and personal appearances “in the event an investigation is instituted by Auburn, the SEC or the NCAA into alleged major rules violations involving Coach and/or the football program,” the contract says.  — USA Today

Cam Newton scandal helps Auburn deliver HUGE ratings

The off-field accusations against Auburn star Cam Newton delivered for CBS. Its coverage of the Tigers’ win vs. Georgia drew a 5.4 overnight rating, translating into 5.4% of households in the 56 urban markets measured for overnights. Only one college football game this season — ESPN’s Boise State-Virginia Tech opener — had a higher overnight. While CBS’ game announcers Gary Danielson and Verne Lundquist largely avoided opining on accusations against Newton that include academic cheating and having sought money while being recruited out of junior college, CBS’ Danielson said Newton is “the most valuable guy I’ve seen for his team” partly because he’s surrounded by few players that seem “draftable” for the NFL. Ho-hum. Danielson could have at least nibbled more on Newton’s situation — it’s a pretty big story. — USA Today

Lane Kiffin says Cam Newton didn’t ask for money while he was coaching at Tennessee

As Tennessee’s coach, Lane Kiffin recruited Cam Newton when the Florida transfer was playing in junior college. Kiffin, hired by USC in January, said the quarterback and his father made an unofficial visit to Knoxville. “We didn’t offer him a scholarship, which doesn’t make me look very smart, but we did talk to him,” Kiffin said Wednesday. “We just went in a different direction. He was a very exciting player that wasn’t necessarily a perfect system fit for what we were doing, but we knew he would be great in other systems.” The controversy surrounding Newton, a Heisman Trophy frontrunner, began last week. ESPN and the New York Times reported that a former Mississippi State player said a person claiming to represent the Newton family had sought money from the school to land the quarterback. Asked if the Newtons, or someone claiming to represent the family, ever said money would be required for Tennessee to sign Newton, Kiffin said, “No.” LA Times

Las Vegas stops taking bets on SEC football game over cheating report

Some Las Vegas sports books have stopped taking bets on this week’s football game between Auburn University and the University of Georgia amid uncertainty about the status of Tigers quarterback Cam Newton. Newton, a leading Heisman Trophy candidate, wouldn’t comment yesterday on a Fox Sports report that he had three instances of academic cheating while at the University of Florida in 2007 and 2008. Later yesterday, ESPN reported that Newton and his father had separate phone conversations with a Mississippi State recruiter acknowledging his college choice would be part of a play-for-pay plan. Jay Rood, sports book director at the MGM Mirage in Las Vegas, said the the Nov. 13 Auburn-Georgia game was taken off the board when increased betting on the Bulldogs was spotted. – Bloomberg

Auburn QB Cam Newton leak violated federal laws?

Florida coach Urban Meyer has denied being the source for a FoxSports.com story alleging academic cheating by Auburn QB Cam Newton during his time at Florida. Whoever leaked the info, however, could face legal repercussions. According to The Buckley Amendment, a university or institution cannot release confidential information without the consent of the student. According to the FoxSports.com story, Newton allegedly had three different instances of academic cheating during his two years at Florida. The story said Newton faced expulsion at UF before leaving the school after the fall 2008 semester (although, this story says it’s unlikely Newton would have been expelled). “We can’t comment on federally protected student records,” UF spokesman Steve McClain said. It’s unclear who the source for the story was, but UF seems the likely place to start looking. — Orlando Sentinel