Auburn's Cox finally gets shot after rocky start
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Posted 10:08PM on Tuesday, August 16, 2005
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) Brandon Cox's Auburn career nearly crashed and burned long before he stepped on the field.<br>
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The Tigers' new starting quarterback was driving back to campus before his freshman season on a summer evening in 2002 when he fell asleep at the wheel and ran off the road. He woke up in a hospital bed with a concussion, but his troubles were just beginning.<br>
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A muscle disorder flared up, leading to severe double vision and drained energy and causing him to leave the team and return home to Trussville.<br>
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``I got to the point where I was just aggravated,'' Cox said. ``I wasn't able to practice. I was here to play football and I didn't have the energy to do it. The best thing for me was to go home and get better.''<br>
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Cox rejoined the team that December and was redshirted in 2003. Now the former Alabama Mr. Football is preparing for his first season as the Tigers' starter.<br>
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After that ordeal, maybe replacing Southeastern Conference offensive player of the year Jason Campbell doesn't seem so tough.<br>
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The 6-foot-2, 202-pound lefthander won the job in spring practice, easily beating out redshirt freshmen Calvin Booker and Blake Field.<br>
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``I think Brandon Cox is going to be a heck of a college quarterback,'' coach Tommy Tuberville said. ``He's going to make a name for himself.''<br>
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Cox, a sophomore, is still taking medication for the muscle disorder, which he had attempted to wean off that summer before his freshman season.<br>
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The experience gave him a little preparation for the spotlight placed on major college quarterbacks and what it's like to be a hot topic on the rumor mill.<br>
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Say, did you hear the one about Cox leaving the team to enter drug rehab in Atlanta? Well, he heard it.<br>
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``I'd never really been in the spotlight with rumors like that,'' Cox said. ``That's part of being in the SEC and part of being the quarterback.''<br>
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Cox's other stints in the spotlight have come from seven games in relief of Campbell last season and twice playing in the spring game.<br>
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Last season, he completed 22 of 34 passes for 357 yards and four touchdowns. He didn't play again after going 0-for-3 with a pair of interceptions in blowout wins over Arkansas and Kentucky.<br>
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Offensive coordinator Al Borges said he thinks some fans' doubts about Cox's ability to start in the SEC were unfounded but familiar.<br>
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``When I came here, there were a lot of people that didn't have a very high opinion of (Campbell's) ability to play football,'' Borges said. ``Since I've been here, just like Jason, I've never seen any signs of that (in Cox). All I've seen is a kid progress every day at a pretty solid pace.<br>
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``He seems very solid intellectually. All those preconceived notions about him have never raised their ugly head since I've been here.''<br>
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A four-year starter at Hewitt-Trussville, Cox set a state record with a 68.7 percent career completion rate and was widely considered one of the nation's top quarterback prospects.<br>
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He knows from watching Campbell's maturation process that he'll have to endure the heat not just from opposing defenses but also from fans.<br>
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``Just from learning (by) what Jason went through, I know it doesn't matter who you are, you're going to have criticism,'' Cox said. ``I expect that. I know it's going to come. I just have to block it out and overcome it and just go out there and prove what I can do.''<br>
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Center Steven Ross said Cox has the right mental makeup for the job.<br>
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``I think he'll be fine,'' Ross said. ``He's not a cocky kid. He's not a real meek kid. He's got a good head on his shoulders. He's a bright kid and he's got great athletic ability.''<br>
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The schedule also works in Cox's favor. Auburn's first five games are at home. Cox finally gets his starting shot Sept. 3 against Georgia Tech.<br>
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``It's been a long road,'' he said. ``It's been a dream of mine ever since I was little and to finally be in this spot is a dream come true.''<br>
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(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)