The 1961 Auburn Tigers football team was an American football team that represented Auburn University as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) during the 1961 college football season. In their 11th year under head coach Ralph "Shug" Jordan, the Tigers compiled a 6–4 record (3–4 in conference games), finished in seventh place in the SEC, and outscored opponents by a total of 174 to 137. It was the Tigers' 70th overall and 28th season as a member of the SEC.[1]
The team's statistical leaders included Bobby Hunt (703 passing yards, 1,051 yards of total offense), Larry Rawson (448 rushing yards), and Dave Edwards (372 receiving yards).[2]
The Tigers gained an average of 243.7 yards per game (143.6 rushing, 100.1 passing).[15] On defense, they gave up 144.3 rushing yards and 79.7 passing yards per game.[2]
The offense was led by senior quarterback Bobby Hunt who completed 54 of 118 passes (45.8%) for 703 yards with two touchdowns, eight interceptions, and an 87.8 quarterback rating.[2] Hunt also ranked second in rushing (247 yards) and pass interceptions (three). He led the team with 1,050 yards of total offense; he finished his Auburn career with 2,279 yards of total offense, third best in Auburn history to that date.[15] Hunt and kicking specialist Woody Woodall tied for the team's scoring lead with 36 points each.[15] After the season, head coach Jordan said, "I don't know what we'd have done without [Hunt]."[15]
The rushing defense was led by sophomore fullback Larry Rawson (448 yards, 121 carries, 3.7-yard average), Bobby Hunt (347 yards, 101 carries, 3.4-yard average), Don Machen (187 yards, 38 carries, 4.9-yard average), Jimmy Burson (187 yards, 44 carries, 4.3-yard average), and Larry Laster (187 yards, 44 carries, 4.4-yard average).[2]
The team's leading receivers were Dave Edwards (372 yards, 25 receptions) and Bobby Foret (131 yards, 10 receptions).[2]
Bo Davis was the team's punter, kicking 55 times for 2,034 yards, an average of 36.9 yards per punt.[15]
^2009 Auburn Football Media Guide(PDF). Auburn, Alabama: Auburn Media Relations Office. 2009. p. 188. Archived from the original(PDF) on October 6, 2014. Retrieved December 19, 2012.