

The atmosphere at Auburn has completely changed under new head coach Alex Golesh, and honestly, it sounds like the “vacation” is officially over. After a pretty rough few years with Hugh Freeze at the helm, where things felt a bit inconsistent and, let’s be real, the results on the field weren’t great. the Tigers had three back-to-back losing seasons under Hugh Ball. Now, as Auburn wrapped up their first spring practice, Auburn linebacker Xavier Watkins finally sees what a high-stakes program should look like.
“It’s different. Obviously, y’all can tell — the music when y’all first got in here. It’s different. There’s more structure and leadership. It’s not where they’re asking – they’re demanding greatness,” the Auburn Tigers linebacker said after his first spring practice on what stood out about new head honcho Alex Golesh. “They demand it where you’re gonna show up and do your job every day, and that’s the type of stuff that we need as a team.
Watch What’s Trending Now!
Last year, we shouldn’t have to feel like we can just walk in here and just — no, you’ve got to come do your job every day and prove yourself. Nobody’s job is guaranteed, so that’s the biggest thing he emphasized in the first practice. We’re gonna make sure we compete every day.”
Thought this quote from Xavier Atkins stood out today when he was asked about what practice is like under Alex Golesh pic.twitter.com/la6eYZ6sNk
— Peter Rauterkus (@peter_rauterkus) March 17, 2026
The message was clear as day: if you aren’t here to work your tail off every single second, you’re in the wrong place. Atkins mentioned that under the old regime, it felt like some guys could just “walk in” and assume they had a spot, but Golesh has deleted that entitlement mindset entirely. Now he demands greatness from each and every player, and everybody needs to earn their due every day until the season starts, unlike Hugh’s regime. Looks like meritocracy is the only ticket.
The Auburn Tigers officially kicked off the Alex Golesh era today. Because it was freezing and slippery outside, the team moved things indoors to the Woltosz Football Performance Center. The biggest takeaway from day one of the Golesh era is this injection of structure and accountability. Mind you, even when he was coaching at G5, he was running a strict strike system.
It starts with a very basic, non-football theme. He truly believes that how you handle the little things, like being on time for breakfast or keeping your locker clean is exactly how you’ll handle a big game. In his strike system, if a player racks up five strikes for minor slip-ups, they’re heading to his office for a serious accountability talk right after the practice wraps. He even has players do up-downs in front of the whole team when they mess up because he wants them to feel the weight of letting their teammates down. He expects to run the same system here.
One of the reasons his last year’s USF Bulls team’s chemistry was at its pinnacle is because of his player-led culture. He has this unique rule, making guys from different position groups sit together at lunch to learn each other’s life stories. He figures if you actually know the guy next to you, you’re going to play a lot harder for him when things get ugly.
Alex Golesh is all about ‘preach what you practice.’ He even keeps himself accountability. He’s the first to admit when he calls a bad play or messes up a practice schedule. That’s going to be the standard at Auburn from now on. No wonder Alex Golesh took the 1-10 South Florida team to 9-3 within just 3 years. Their first winning season since 2017.
The Auburn Tigers expect a much better season with him in Year 1 than they had during Hugh Freeze’s three-year stretch. Why? He pairs his discipline with an ultra-fast, ‘go-go-go’ offense. His reputation as a genius, explosive play-caller has always preceded him, even before he got the head coach gig. When he was the OC at Tennessee in 2022, his unit led the entire country in scoring (47.3 PPG) and total offense (538.1 YPG).
He doubled down at USF. He led the nation in plays per game (82.1) and produced the program’s first-ever 3,000-yard passer and 1,000-yard receiver in the same season. By 2025, his USF offense was ranked No. 2 nationally in total yards, averaging about 488.7 yards per game.
The real question is, can he turn the fruit of his labor into a Year 1 playoff run in a brutal conference like the SEC?
The year 1 expectations for Alex Golesh
The thing Alex Golesh did when he set his foot at Plains was go-all out on the portal, and for good reason. He brought about 39 new transfers to flush out any lingering bad habits and replace them with guys who are desperate to win.
Even though the offense is getting a total makeover, Golesh was smart enough to keep the defensive coordinator, DJ Durkin. This gave guys like Atkins a reason to stay at Auburn instead of leaving through the transfer portal. That’s a big reason why their best defensive playmaker Xavier Atkins stayed still in the first place. It means the defense can keep playing the aggressive style they’re used to while the rest of the program catches up to Golesh’s new high-speed standards.
Since he brought his star quarterback, Byrum Brown, and 10 other transfers from South Florida, the expectation is that the offense should click immediately. If he can turn Auburn into a team that’s fun to watch again and snag 8 or 9 wins. It’ll be considered a success.
Even though he got a late start, Golesh has already jumped Auburn up about 40 spots in the national rankings, landing a class in the top 30-40 range. The goal for this first year is to prove to the top recruits in the South that Auburn is a place where you can play fast and put up huge numbers. If they do so, it’s only a matter of years before they play a playoff game at Jordan-Hare Stadium.