AUBURN, Ala. – Chris Davis was convinced the 2013 Iron Bowl was headed to overtime, even as he stood near the back of the end zone one second away from making history.
“I knew he was going to miss the kick, but I thought it was going to be out of bounds,” Davis recalled, 10 years later. “As it was falling to me, I knew it was going to be short and I was going to be able to field it. The rest is history.”
Davis also made the play before The Play, knocking T.J. Yeldon out of bounds after a 24-yard run on what appeared to be the final play of regulation with Auburn and Alabama tied 28-28.
Anyone who saw it in person or on TV knows what happened next. A video review put one second back on the clock. Auburn called timeout and replaced Ryan Smith with Davis as the Tigers’ returner, his cleats planted barely inbounds.
Leading up to the game, Davis shared on social media his desire to impact the Iron Bowl on special teams after averaging 18.71 yards per punt return during the season, including an 85-yard touchdown in Auburn’s blowout win at Tennessee.
“I wanted to do that since I first got here,” said Davis, a standout kick returner at Woodlawn High School in Birmingham. “For a lot of people back home, that wasn’t anything big to them. They knew I could do that. They’d seen me do that my whole life. For the coaches who gave me the opportunity to do it, it meant a lot to me.”
Two weeks earlier, Auburn’s remarkable turnaround season seemingly crescendoed with the Prayer in Jordan-Hare – Nick Marshall’s deflected 73-yard touchdown pass to Ricardo Louis on fourth-and-18 to give the Tigers a 43-38 win over Georgia.
“I watched that firsthand from the sideline,” Davis said. “I think his play was better than the Kick Six because I was able to sit back and watch it.”
Two weeks later, football fans around the world watched Davis field Alabama’s errant 57-yard field goal, cut to his left and race down the sideline on what is officially listed as a 100-yard missed field goal return.