AUBURN, Ala. – The seeds for Auburn’s 1983 SEC championship were planted nearly three years earlier when Pat Dye arrived from Wyoming and implemented a strenuous winter conditioning program early in 1981.
“It was incredibly challenging physically, mentally, emotionally, on every level,” recalled quarterback Randy Campbell to Andy Burcham on the Talking Tigers podcast. “All you thought about was, can you make it through the next day?”
For approximately three dozen players, the answer was no. Those who stayed and endured laid the foundation for Auburn’s excellence in the 1980s.
“He felt like he had to put us through that to separate the people who really wanted to be there and were committed to winning championships from the ones who weren’t,” said Campbell, who ascended the depth chart from 11th-string when he arrived in 1979 to QB1 in 1982 and 1983. “I’m glad there wasn’t a transfer portal back then. We might not have had anybody left.”
Winter workouts served as a warmup for grueling spring practices.
“It was the toughest spring in my 25 years here,” remembered assistant coach Joe Whitt. “There was never another spring like that one. We dug it deep and solid.”
Linebacker Gregg Carr was a freshman in 1981.
"There were no holds barred, it was physical, and it was incredibly mental," Carr said. “What we ended with after four weeks of really just an all-out assault on the football field was a bunch of guys who really believed and bought into what Coach Dye was trying to instill in us.
“We all felt to a man that we had been through something incredibly taxing and physical, and I think it set the groundwork for what was to happen at Auburn over the ensuing several years."