Hugh Freeze Mess Predicted To Get Much Worse

Hugh Freeze's legacy at Auburn hangs in the balance as former players have the potential to outshine expectations and challenge his recruiting prowess.

Hugh Freeze’s Auburn exit could end up looking even worse if a few former Tigers pop somewhere else in 2026.

Jackson Arnold is the clearest name in that conversation. Ryan Brown of The Next Round said he thinks Dan Mullen can get more out of Arnold at UNLV, and he didn’t soften the point.

"I think Dan Mullen will unlock Jackson Arnold, and it probably will indict Hugh Freeze more... It will make Hugh Freeze look bad and make Dan Mullen look like a QB whisperer," Brown said on whether Arnold will be a different QB.

That kind of season from Arnold would cut straight at one of the biggest reasons Freeze’s run went sideways: the quarterback situation. If Arnold turns into a real producer in Las Vegas, it would suggest Freeze had a good one and never got the most out of him. And if Auburn’s own QB issues keep dragging on, that only sharpens the comparison.

There is, though, one wrinkle to that story. If Arnold and Byrum Brown both have strong seasons, some of Arnold’s success could get waved away because the Mountain West may be weaker now that the Pac-12 took half the conference’s members.

The other former Tiger with the power to sting Freeze is Cam Coleman, who could be catching passes from Arch Manning in Texas. Eric Singleton Jr. is another name to watch, especially if he thrives in Florida’s offense under Buster Faulkner, with Tramell Jones Jr. potentially taking over at quarterback at some point.

Still, the bigger Auburn storyline may be what happens under Alex Golesh. Freeze recruited, but the results never matched the investment, and the article points to a lack of focus and accountability in 2024 and 2025. The 2023 issues were different, involving Robby Ashford, Cadillac Williams and others.

Golesh has a simpler assignment: win games and help Auburn move on. No current Auburn student has seen a winning season on the gridiron, and two graduating classes have gone through Jordan-Hare Stadium without consistent success. There have been memorable moments, including Cadillac Williams walking onto Pat Dye Field with his arms interlocked with his players before the Texas A&M game in 2022, but the overall slide has been hard to ignore.

That’s why Golesh’s success matters so much to the people around the program. Jimmy Rane and the rest of the booster class are serious about it, and Golesh has to show he’s serious back. Winning has to be part of the deal.

If that happens, and if Arnold, Coleman, Singleton or any other former Tiger breaks out elsewhere, Freeze will have more than enough to answer for.

In Other News...

Auburn Faces A Tense Finish For Coveted Athlete Tae Walden Jr

The race for Tae Walden Jr. is heading into decision time, and the four-star athlete has given recruiters across the SEC and beyond plenty to sweat over. Scheduled to announce his commitment July 1 on the Rivals YouTube channel, Walden has drawn interest from Auburn, LSU, Georgia, Ole Miss and Oregon after standing out as one of the top athletes in the 2027 class.

For Ole Miss, the intrigue is obvious because Walden remains in the mix with some of the sports heavy hitters and has shown the kind of two-way production that keeps staffs coming back. His latest stop was at Oregon, where he met with Dan Lanning, adding another layer to a recruitment that has stayed crowded and competitive as the announcement approaches. [Read more 🡒]

Ole Miss Offense Faces One Massive Test After Lane Kiffins Exit

The Lane Kiffin era is over in Oxford, but the expectations on Ole Miss' offense are not. Pete Golding steps in after running the defense, and he inherits a roster that still has Trinidad Chambliss under center and Kewan Lacy in the backfield, a pairing that gives the Rebels a chance to stay among the SEC's most dangerous units even with a new voice in charge.

Chambliss is coming off a season that put him at the top of the league in passing, and the next step is proving that production can carry over through a coaching change. Golding's biggest challenge is preserving the rhythm and aggressiveness that made this offense work while making the transition feel seamless, because with this much talent in place, anything less than a smooth handoff would be hard to ignore. [Read more 🡒]

Ole Miss Guard Is Suddenly Carrying Bigger Expectations Into This Season

Chris Beard is heading into his fourth season in charge at Ole Miss, and the roster has shifted enough that the Rebels are once again trying to define who will drive them forward. In that setting, sophomore guard Patton Pinkins has become one of the more interesting names to watch, especially with SEC preview season starting to sort teams into tiers and separate the clubs expected to contend from the ones still searching for traction.

Ole Miss has been slotted 12th in the league by CBS Sports analyst Jon Rothstein, which makes the margin for progress feel even smaller. For a team trying to climb, the pressure is on players like Pinkins to turn promise into production and give Beard a steadier foundation as the season approaches. [Read more 🡒]