AUBURN, Ala. – It’s a matter of trust.
To perfect the precision needed to properly snap, hold and kick requires hundreds of hours of practice, but beyond the mechanics of doing it over and over – until you can’t get it wrong – it all comes down to trust.
“I think it’s the bond,” said Anders Carlson, who ranks second in Auburn history with 72 field goals and third with 164 extra points. “The connection off the field, hanging out and growing together. I think that’s what makes a great team, having a tight-knit group.”
Long snapper Jacob Quattlebaum snaps to holder Oscar Chapman, who positions the ball, laces facing the goalpost, for Carlson to kick. The entire operation takes a tidy 1.3 seconds.
“It all comes back to having confidence in not just yourself and your abilities, but the guys you’re working with,” Quattlebaum said. “We’re very close in and out of the locker room, and on and off the field.”
The specialists get together each week for dinner after repeatedly refining their individual skills during practice.
“This year? Thousands of times,” Quattlebaum said. “Oscar and I will go over to the side. Reps with Anders? Probably a couple hundred live reps. When you have a two-hour practice and defense and offense are working on schemes, I’m fine turning those small things with Oscar.”