The Auburn Plainsman 01.21.16 issue

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The Auburn Plainsman A Spirit That Is Not Afraid

Thursday, January 21, 2016 Vol. 123, Issue 16, 12 Pages

First copy is free. Additional copies 50 cents per issue.

Sports

Bringing basketball back

dakota sumpter / photo editor

Auburn’s victory over Kentucky could mark turning point for the program Auburn fans storm the court after Auburn’s win over the Kentucky Wildcats in Auburn Arena on Jan. 16.

Sam Butler Sports editor

While Auburn Arena exploded with all the sound and fury of a celebration-deprived fanbase desperate for a marquee win on Saturday, Jan.16, Bruce Pearl, the passionate and spirited leader of the Tigers, stood unusually still on the side of the court, silently savoring the scene in front of him. “I wanted to see that special celebration,” Pearl said. “I didn’t want to be in the middle of it ‘cause I’d get killed, but I wanted to watch it, and I wanted to see those guys enjoy themselves.” His team had just knocked off Kentucky, the perennial national powerhouse that hadn’t lost to Auburn since Jan. 11, 2000. The Tigers came

into the game having lost three games in a row by especially ugly margins, and only the bravest would’ve chosen Auburn to pull the upset against the Wildcats. But somehow, Auburn — down three rotation players and on the tail end of a nasty losing streak, as well as being a 12-point underdog — was able to right the ship and flip the script on Kentucky. As impressive as the win is, what might be more notable is how Pearl’s been able to take a cold, lifeless program and defibrillate it back to life. When Pearl was hired less than two years ago, the Auburn basketball program was in a state of

flux. Tony Barbee, the previous coach, had been underwhelming in his tenure, limping to a 49-75 record in his four years at the helm. The Tigers had finished with a winning record just four times since the turn of the century. During the Barbee era, the average attendance at Auburn Arena never reached more than just over 6,500, and that came in 2011 when Auburn went 14-3 at home en route to a 15-16 season. But when the news broke that Pearl was hired, a jolt of energy was sent coursing through the veins of the program, stirring to life the aspirations and excitement that were long-gone. From the moment Pearl stepped on campus,

his exuberant personality resonated profoundly. As soon as he got off his plane at the Auburn University Regional Airport, he jumped into a waiting throng of fans on the tarmac, whipping them into a frenzy. His personality alone had enough power to reel in recruits, but a stellar résumé from his time at Tennessee and Wisconsin-Milwaukee only helped. But it would take time to bring Auburn back. The talent still wasn’t there. The attention to basketball still wasn’t there, and it wouldn’t be for a while. After all, Auburn, in the heart of the SEC, is primarily a football town.

» See Victory, 9

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