Auburns New Coach Is Already Playing The Pat Dye Card

Deck: As Alex Golesh takes on the monumental task of reviving Auburn's football fortunes, his reliance on past rhetoric may not be enough to overcome the shadow Alabama casts over the Iron Bowl.

Alex Golesh arrives at Auburn with a track record that makes people pay attention. He did the improbable at South Florida, and now he gets handed a job on The Plains that has been begging for a reset.

Auburn has been stuck in its worst stretch since the 1940s, and the Iron Bowl drought has stretched all the way back to right before COVID. Alabama, meanwhile, has kept rolling even after a coaching change.

That’s the backdrop for Golesh’s first season, and it’s why his latest line about beating Alabama drew attention. When asked how long it will take to beat the Crimson Tide again, he reached for a Pat Dye classic and said, "I think 60 minutes.

Maybe overtime." Dye first said that in 1981, when he took over the Tigers, and it became part of the way Auburn changed the tone of the rivalry in the 1980s.

But in this case, the quote feels less like a battle cry and more like a bit of theater. Golesh was apparently prepped by Auburn staffers to use the line, and that kind of reach into the program’s past comes off as forced. It does not sound like the same coach who has built his reputation on something sturdier than slogans.

Golesh put it plainly when he said, "It's not made-up mottos, quotes," Golesh said. "Real, genuine confidence. The only way you build [it] is through preparation."

That’s the version of him Auburn needs. Not a slogan machine.

Not a recycled catchphrase factory. Just a coach trying to turn confidence into something real.

There’s also no escaping the bigger picture around him. Alabama fans have plenty to like about Auburn hiring a coach who could make life harder for one of their other rivals, since Josh Heupel has not been the same since Golesh left Tennessee for South Florida. And from the Crimson Tide side, Kalen DeBoer has support from Greg Byrne, while Golesh is walking into a program that has been a mess of uneven hires, restless boosters, and a fan base that has grown tired of waiting.

The contrast is hard to miss. DeBoer has already won multiple playoff games in his career. Golesh could not even win the Group of Five at South Florida, where last season was supposed to be the Bulls’ year before everything fell apart.

Still, Golesh clearly believes Auburn can be the place where he wins a national championship. That kind of hope is not crazy in the abstract, but recent history around the program says otherwise. Auburn has been spinning its wheels, and Alabama fans are enjoying every second of it.

The Crimson Tide have won the last six Iron Bowls, and that streak sits there like a reminder of what happens when Auburn moves on from a quality coach like Gus Malzahn after a COVID season. Rivalries eventually swing back the other way, and Alabama will lose to Auburn again someday. But borrowing Dye’s words does not make that happen.

Recruiting starts the process. Execution finishes it.

Golesh may try to bring over former South Florida players, and he may find some success in the SEC next season. Even so, the baseline for Auburn is modest: get to a bowl game.

The Tigers are not a College Football Playoff team this year. Alabama is, and the Iron Bowl may be the game it has to win to get there.

Anything can happen in a rivalry this heated. But DeBoer has already shown he can survive the pressure that comes with it, especially when playoff stakes are hanging over the game.

He is not perfect, but he usually gets the job done when it matters. Golesh, on the other hand, has to drag Auburn out of a football culture that feels stuck in the past before any of the bigger dreams become real.

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