- Final0CAL
AFA42
3642
36 - Final1GT
FRES28
4028
40 - Final2USF
ORE21
5621
56 - Final3UK
FSU35
2835
28 - Final4IND
OKST33
4933
49 - Final OTOT5CLEM
AUB20
2320
23 - Final6UTAH
NAVY35
3235
32 - Final7MEM
FAU27
4427
44 - Final8USM
CIN21
3121
31 - Final9NEV
UNM0
230
23 - Final10UCLA
BYU16
1716
17 - Final11BSU
ECU38
4138
41 - Final12PUR
CMU51
4851
48 - Final13ASU
TEX34
5234
52 - Final14BC
MSU24
2124
21 - Final15TCU
HOU20
1320
13 - Final16MD
ORST14
2114
21 - Final17CONN
WAKE10
2410
24 - Final18UCF
MSST3
103
10 - Final19PSU
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1724
17 - Final20ALA
COLO30
2430
24 - Final21WIS
TENN17
2117
21 - Final22MIZZ
ARK38
738
7 - Final23MICH
FLA41
3541
35 - Final24TTU
UVA31
2831
28 - Final25ILL
USC17
4917
49 - Final26HAW
UGA10
4110
41 - Final27WVU
OKLA48
2848
28 - Final28KU
VT24
2124
21 - Final29RUTG
BALL52
3052
30 - Final30BGSU
TLSA7
637
63 - Final31LSU
OSU38
2438
24
Final/OT
7:30 PM ET, December 31, 2007
Georgia Dome, ATLANTA, GA
Top Performers
Passing: B. Cox (AUB) - 211 YDS, 1 INT
Rushing: C. Spiller (CLEM) - 8 CAR, 112 YDS, 1 TD
Receiving: M. Fannin (AUB) - 5 REC, 53 YDS, 1 TD
ATLANTA (AP) -- The last play of Auburn's 2007 season should give the Tigers good reason to look forward to the start of 2008.
Freshman quarterback Kodi Burns, receiving an expanded role in Auburn's new spread offense, scored on a 7-yard run in overtime to give the Tigers a 23-20 victory over Clemson in the Chick-fil-A Bowl on Monday night.
![]() | |
| Joe Paterno | 23 |
| Bobby Bowden | 20 |
| Mack Brown | 10 |
| Phillip Fulmer | 7 |
| Steve Spurrier | 7 |
| Tommy Tuberville | 7 |
| Frank Beamer | 6 |
Burns, who shared snaps with senior starter Brandon Cox, threw a 22-yard touchdown pass to Mario Fannin in the third quarter and led Auburn with 69 yards rushing on 13 carries.
Just like that, Auburn may have found its next starting quarterback.
"He'll go in as No. 1," Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville said. "He's earned that. He's a gamer. You look at him on the sideline and he looks like a third- or fourth-year player."
After Mark Buchholz kicked a 25-yard field goal on Clemson's opening possession of overtime, Burns scored on a spinning run on a third-and-3 play.
Burns said the winning run may have been his most challenging, right from the snap from center Jason Bosley.
"It was real low," Burns said. "Bos was perfect all night. That was the only low one."
Burns remembered advice from new offensive coordinator Tony Franklin, who instituted the new offense in bowl practice after he was hired Dec. 12.
"Like Coach Franklin said, there's never a bad snap, so you have to keep driving and make the play," Burns said. "It kind of bounced at the same time I got it.
"You know, when I picked it up, I'm not so sure if that didn't throw the defense off a little bit. They didn't know what was going on. It was a low snap so I kind of disappeared."
Burns said blocks from his line and tailback Brad Lester cleared his path to the end zone.
"The difference in the game was Kodi coming in and keeping them off-balance," Tuberville said.
Cox ran for a first down on a fourth-and-1 play from the 16 to keep Auburn's overtime possession alive.
Auburn (9-4) gained 423 yards on 90 plays -- a winning performance in the debut of the new scheme.
"It was tough," Burns said of picking up the new offense after the regular season. "It was a whole new philosophy of coaching the quarterback position, but we worked hard."
Clemson's defense looked tired in the fourth quarter after keeping pace with the no-huddle attack. The pace was even tiring for Tuberville.
"I can't remember the last time we had 90 snaps in a game," Tuberville said. "I got tired of watching it. I know they got tired of playing."
While Auburn prospered with its two-quarterback attack, Clemson (9-4) struggled with junior quarterback Cullen Harper, who was only 14-for-33 passing for 104 yards. Clemson was held to 12 first downs and 293 yards.
Harper had arthroscopic surgery on his passing shoulder after the regular season. He tried to stay loose by throwing behind the Clemson bench between possessions, but Clemson coach Tommy Bowden said he didn't think the surgery was a factor in the poor passing numbers.
"I really don't think it was," Bowden said. "It was such a minor surgery and he was back so quickly. I don't think there was any carry-over from that.
"I just think he didn't play well and Auburn had something to do with that but there were some things we did to self-destruct, too."
Auburn (No. 23 BCS, No. 22 AP) denied No. 15 Clemson its first 10-win season since 1990.
C.J. Spiller had eight carries for 112 yards for Clemson, including an 83-yard touchdown run. James Davis had 23 carries for 72 yards and a touchdown.
Clemson linebacker Cortney Vincent said the loss was "heartbreaking."
"We played until the end and I'm proud of our team," said Vincent, who didn't start but came in the game on the second series. His status had been in question following a DUI arrest on Dec. 9.
Spiller's long run was the only offensive highlight of the first half for Clemson.
On a second-down play from the Clemson 17 early in the second quarter, Spiller appeared to be stopped at the line by Auburn's Josh Thompson and Quentin Groves. But Spiller bounced out to his left, turned the corner and suddenly had open field down the Clemson sideline. Spiller stayed a step ahead of Auburn cornerback Jonathan Wilhite as he watched on the Georgia Dome video board.
"I was looking at the guy close behind me and sped up to get the touchdown," Spiller said. "It was a great feeling."
The 83-yard run was the longest in a bowl game in Clemson history, the longest in any Chick-fil-A Bowl game and the longest for Clemson in any game since an 89-yard run by Derrick Witherspoon against Maryland on Oct. 30, 1993.
Auburn opened the second half with a 10-play, 78-yard touchdown drive. On third and 7 from the Auburn 22, Burns scrambled to his right before passing to Mario Fannin, who ran past Clemson linebacker Josh Miller for the touchdown and a 10-7 lead.
A 20-yard run by Spiller helped set up a 22-yard field goal by Mark Buchholz on the first play of the fourth quarter for a 10-10 tie.
The tie held until the only turnover of the game.
A pass by Cox was deflected by cornerback Crezdon Butler and intercepted by defensive tackle Rashaad Jackson at the Auburn 32.
Clemson took advantage. Harper passed to Aaron Kelly for 27 yards to the 4. Davis scored on a fourth-down plunge from the 1 to give Clemson a 17-10 lead.
Auburn answered with a 70-yard touchdown drive. A 15-yard run by Burns to the 1 set up a touchdown run by Ben Tate on the next play for a 17-17 tie.
SPONSORED HEADLINES
Bowl Overview
It was over when... Kodi Burns sprinted for a 7-yard touchdown to carry Auburn over Clemson in overtime.
Gameball goes to... Burns, who connected on a 22-yard TD pass in addition to his game-winning run.
Stat of the game... 16-5. Auburn moved to 16-5 in its last 21 games decided by seven points or less.
Team Stat Comparison
| CLEM | AUB | |
|---|---|---|
| 1st Downs | 12 | 24 |
| Total Yards | 293 | 423 |
| Passing | 104 | 233 |
| Rushing | 189 | 190 |
| Penalties | 1-5 | 6-40 |
| 3rd Down Conversions | 5-19 | 7-19 |
| 4th Down Conversions | 2-2 | 1-2 |
| Turnovers | 0 | 1 |
| Possession | 29:14 | 30:46 |
Scoring Summary
| FIRST QUARTER | CLEM | AUB | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | FG | 08:54 | Wes Byrum 36 Yd Drive: 11 plays, 58 yds, 4:16 | 0 | 3 |
| SECOND QUARTER | CLEM | AUB | |||
![]() | TD | 13:14 | C.J. Spiller 83 Yd Run (Mark Buchholz Kick) Drive: 2 plays, 88 yds, :56 | 7 | 3 |
| THIRD QUARTER | CLEM | AUB | |||
![]() | TD | 11:33 | Mario Fannin 22 Yd Pass From Kodi Burns (Wes Byrum Kick) Drive: 10 plays, 78 yds, 3:27 | 7 | 10 |
| FOURTH QUARTER | CLEM | AUB | |||
![]() | FG | 14:58 | Mark Buchholz 22 Yd Drive: 11 plays, 37 yds, 5:20 | 10 | 10 |
![]() | TD | 11:24 | James Davis 1 Yd Run (Mark Buchholz Kick) Drive: 7 plays, 32 yds, 2:22 | 17 | 10 |
![]() | TD | 08:27 | Ben Tate 1 Yd Run (Wes Byrum Kick) Drive: 11 plays, 70 yds, 2:51 | 17 | 17 |
| OVERTIME | CLEM | AUB | |||
![]() | FG | Mark Buchholz 25 Yd | 20 | 17 | |
![]() | TD | Kodi Burns 7 Yd Run | 20 | 23 | |







