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Multiple people accuse Auburn coach Bryan Harsin of having 'dysfunctional' program

AUBURN, Ala. — In his first season as Auburn football coach, Bryan Harsin created a divisive culture in which relationships with certain players were neglected and staff members felt ignored, according to multiple people with direct knowledge of the inner workings of the program.

Those people were granted anonymity by The Montgomery Advertiser, part of the USA TODAY Network, out of fear of repercussions from Harsin or others at Auburn.

The inside view of the program during Harsin's short tenure with the Tigers, which began last season when he was hired after seven seasons at Boise State, has come under the microscope.

On Friday, Auburn president Jay Gogue said during a board of trustees meeting, "There’s been a lot of rumors and a lot of allegations made about our football program, and I just want you to know that we’re involved and trying to separate fact from fiction and we’ll keep you posted and make the appropriate decisions at the right time."

Harsin, 45, told ESPN.com on Thursday night that he is Auburn's head coach and operating in that capacity.

“All the issues in the (Auburn) program have to do with the head coach,” one person told The Advertiser. “He treated players and coaches poorly. He couldn’t empathize with players. He wasn’t genuine. And he ran off many of his best players.”

The person described Harsin's program as "toxic" and "dysfunctional."

The opinion of Harsin among players is split. Some adamantly came to his defense on social media Friday, while others described a coach who fails to "understand kids that come from nothing," as graduating safety Smoke Monday posted.

"Harsin is a hell of a coach that wants to win," Monday, who has entered the NFL draft, posted on Instagram. "... he truly don't understand kids that come from nothing, kids that come from the hood ... but as kids we try our best to out grow where we came from but we need people that didn't grow up the way we grew up to help us."

Auburn did not respond to a request for comment from The Advertiser on Friday.

The player discourse began with an Instagram post Friday morning by defensive lineman Lee Hunter, who transferred to Central Florida. It read in part: "The reason I chose to leave Auburn (was) because we got treated like we wasn't good enough (broken heart emoji) and like dogs (broken heart emoji) ... coach harsin has the true mindset for a winner but has a terrible mindset as a person."

A current player, who spoke to The Advertiser on the condition of anonymity Friday, said in a direct message that "we don't get treated like dogs" and that the rift is because some players are "just not used to his mentality."

"Don't believe the things you see," edge Derick Hall tweeted Friday. "@CoachHarsin Works Harder Than No Other Man To Put This Program In The Best Position To Be Successful ... Great Man Of Character Who Loves This Team!"

'I don't think he has true empathy'

A surprising 19 Auburn players have entered the transfer portal since the end of the season - a large number for a Power Five program that operates in the SEC, the nation's most competitive football conference.

Multiple people said Harsin would not speak to players he didn’t like when he wanted them out of the program. He would cut off correspondence with the player and family members. Position coaches were tasked with telling players they should leave the program.

Auburn head coach Bryan Harsin talks to an official during the first half of an NCAA college football game against South Carolina, Saturday, Nov. 20, 2021, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Sean Rayford)
Auburn head coach Bryan Harsin talks to an official during the first half of an NCAA college football game against South Carolina, Saturday, Nov. 20, 2021, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Sean Rayford)

"He's going to send somebody else to do the dirty work," one person said.

Another person recalled one instance of a player texting Harsin to apologize for a poor performance in a game. The player asked for guidance on how he could improve. Harsin did not reply. Instead, he had the player’s position coach call the player to tell him he needed to leave the program, the person said.

"There are sometimes players that are going through personal things that (Harsin) knows about, and he doesn't have empathy for those situations," one person said. "Whether it be a kid from a single-parent family, or a kid who's going through struggles in life. I don't think he has true empathy for kids."

"How do you expect a young man to grow when you don't even talk to them," another person said, "or if you talk down to them, or if you tell them to get out of your office?"

Harsin hated the concept of name, image and likeness and made that clear to players, according to one person. Another added that Harsin was particularly critical of players from low-income families who received money from NIL deals because he thought they lost their focus on football.

'I'm the Auburn coach'

Harsin had considerable coaching turnover through his first season, which ended with a 6-7 record. It marked the program's first losing season since 2012. After a 6-2 start, Auburn lost its last five games.

Derek Mason, who was hired as defensive coordinator at the start of Harsin's tenure, left after one season for the same position at Oklahoma State. Mike Bobo was fired after one season as offensive coordinator. Bobo's replacement, Austin Davis, resigned after 43 days. Defensive line coach Nick Eason left for Clemson in early January.

Harsin was often quick to dismiss input from assistants, according to some people close to the program. Four games into the season, he fired Cornelius Williams, a young and respected receivers coach from Alabama who had stints at Troy, South Alabama, North Alabama, Jacksonville State and UAB.

. That decision removed a coach from the staff who connected well with players — something Harsin couldn't afford to lose.

"(Williams) did nothing but did his damn job," one person said. "He had a great relationship with the players."

Harsin replaced him by promoting offensive analyst Eric Kiesau, who was an assistant coach for Harsin at Boise State. When Mason left for Oklahoma State in January, Harsin promoted linebackers coach Jeff Schmedding, another former Boise State assistant.

During his remarks Thursday, Harsin said "any attack on my character is (expletive)" and that he is isn't planning on leaving.

"I'm the Auburn coach, and that's how I'm operating every day," Harsin said. "I want this thing to work, and I've told our players and told everybody else there is no Plan B."

Follow Bennett Durando on Twitter @BennettDurando

This article originally appeared on Montgomery Advertiser: Bryan Harsin's Auburn football program 'toxic' and 'dysfunctional'