Auburn’s offense is getting a lot of its preseason buzz from one name: Byrum Brown.
The quarterback arrived from USF earlier this year and has quickly become the center of attention on the Plains, bringing with him the kind of dual-threat production that made him stand out with the Bulls. He is also following head coach Alex Golesh to Auburn, and ESPN’s Bill Connelly thinks Brown could change the entire feel of the Tigers’ attack.
“If quarterback Byrum Brown is as good as I think he is -- and I think he's really, really good -- then the Auburn offense should play at a top-40 level for the first time since 2019,” he said. “Brown is a dynamite dual threat who should get plenty of help from backs Jeremiah Cobb, Bryson Washington (Baylor) and Nykahi Davenport (USF) and a quartet of former USF receivers: Keshaun Singleton, Christian Neptune, Jeremiah Koger and Chas Nimrod.”
That kind of praise has already pushed Brown into some heavyweight company. He’s been compared to Auburn legend Cam Newton, another transfer who came from outside the Power Four and spent only one season on the Plains. Brown is also starting to pick up some Heisman talk, though matching Newton’s undefeated run and Heisman season is a massive climb.
With the hype has come the other side of the coin: scrutiny. Brown’s throwing motion has become a talking point for critics online, and the noise has gotten loud enough that Golesh has already addressed it, basically telling everyone to wait and see.
The biggest swing factor may be up front. Connelly pointed to Auburn’s offensive line as a potential problem area, especially with so much turnover.
“As with plenty of other transfer-heavy attacks, I'm not sure if the line will hold up,” he said. “Last year's top five linemen are gone, and Golesh will be asking a majority of nine transfers to come through and play as a cohesive unit. But unless the line craters, the rest of Golesh's explosive and up-tempo attack should produce solid improvement.”
That concern is hard to ignore after last season, when Jackson Arnold took more sacks than any other SEC quarterback while he was starting. Brown can create plays with his legs and escape trouble when things break down, but that only goes so far if the protection doesn’t hold.
For now, Auburn’s offense sits in the familiar space between big expectations and real uncertainty. Brown has brought hope, hype and plenty of debate with him, but the answer to what this group really is won’t come from projections. It will come once the season starts and the Tigers actually take the field.
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For Auburn fans, the appeal is easy to understand: Johnson has kept finding ways to stay relevant at the next level, whether it was in brief NBA minutes or longer stretches in Long Island. The Nets are still giving him runway, too, with Johnson set to take part in Brooklyns summer-league team events next month. What he can do with that opportunity will matter, because these kinds of roster spots are often less about arrival than about proving there is still another step to take. [Read more 🡒]
