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WATCH: Bryan Harsin avoids questions on future at Auburn

SimonGibbs_UserImageby:Simon Gibbs02/10/22

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Michael Wade/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Auburn head coach Bryan Harsin, whose future with the Tigers looks cloudy at best, avoided media all day in Birmingham, using the back entrance to sneak into the SEC’s coaches-only meeting and refusing to answer questions about his future on the way out.

After Harsin snuck past the media using a side door at the SEC headquarters in Birmingham, media quickly gathered near the back door to ask the Auburn coach questions as he left the meeting. Local television station WVTM13 captured his exit on video, which saw Harsin scurry quickly to his ride to the airport, keeping his mouth shut and not answering questions such as, “do you plan on being the head coach at Auburn next season?”

In the video above, the only thing Harsin is heard saying is, “excuse me, guys,” as he tries to get through the flood of media members asking questions on his way out.

Auburn releases statement, outlines next step in Bryan Harsin saga

Auburn head coach Bryan Harsin continues to maintain his position that he is the man to lead the Tigers back to college football prominence.

As for the Auburn brass — they still don’t believe they have the adequate information to make such a claim. In the meantime, the university will seek out that critical information, according to a statement released Monday morning.

“The Auburn administration is judiciously collecting information from a variety of perspectives, including our student-athletes, and moving swiftly to understand any issues in accordance with university policies and procedures,” Auburn said in a release. “Decisions regarding the future of Auburn and its athletics programs, as always, are made in the interests of our great university and in fairness to all concerned. We do not make institutional decisions based on social media posts or media headlines.

The aforementioned media headlines in the past week have chalked up a second year for Harsin as an unlikely scenario. Reports surfaced that Auburn was looking to move on from Harsin after just one year at the helm, but the university could be looking for information to justify letting him go for-cause, which would relieve Auburn from having to honor a substantial buyout clause. Justin Hokanson of Auburn Live first broke the story on Thursday, Jan. 4, when he reported that “people in positions of power” were making their cases to Auburn officials to relieve Harsin on Thursday.

Harsin, who was hired on Dec. 22, 2020, had the Tigers ranked as high as No. 12 in the AP Top 25 poll this year, but Auburn limped to the finish line, losing all four of its final regular-season games to Texas A&M, Mississippi State, South Carolina and Alabama. In total, Harsin amassed a 6-7 season in 2021 before his abrupt firing. Auburn finished the season bowl-eligible, but it lost to Houston, 17-13, in the Birmingham Bowl.

Harsin’s initial staff consisted of Mike Bobo at offensive coordinator and Derek Mason at defensive coordinator, neither of whom Auburn kept heading into Harsin’s second year with the program. A couple of Harsin’s assistant coaches left the program, too.

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Bobo was fired after a disappointing offensive campaign, and he was replaced by Seattle Seahawks quarterbacks coach Austin Davis, who had never before served as an offensive coordinator in his career. One month after his hiring, Davis stepped down, a decision he said was “100 percent based on personal reasons” in a statement.

Mason, on the other hand, left Auburn, citing similar personal reasons. He then accepted the same role as defensive coordinator at Oklahoma State less than a week after stepping down.

By season’s end, roughly 20 Auburn players had entered the NCAA Transfer Portal after one season with Harsin, potentially adding to the narrative.

Auburn president Jay Gogue addressed the rumors of Harsin’s future on Friday, stating that the Tigers are still working through the validity of various claims.

“There have been a lot of rumors and speculation about our football program. I just want you to know we’re involved in trying to separate fact from fiction,” Gogue said of Harsin’s future, via ESPN’s Chris Low. “We’ll keep you posted and make the appropriate decision at the right time.”

If Auburn decides to move on from Harsin after one season at the helm, the university will owe Harsin $18.3 million of his remaining salary. Of that money, half of it ($9.15 million) would be due in 30 days, while the other half would be paid out in quarterly payments over the next year. Should the university fire him for-cause, it would be void of having to pay; however, Harsin would likely fight for that negated salary in a lawsuit.