
Johni Broome and Tahaad Pettiford on Auburn's Dominant Run, Taking Over the SEC and What It Takes to Win it All

03/07/2025 12:00 PM
Like most hoopers during the holiday season, Johni Broome, Tahaad Pettiford and their Auburn teammates grew up watching college basketball's best at the annual Maui Invitational. Winning it all on national television inside the Lahaina Civic Center during Thanksgiving break was the dream. Last November, it became the Tigers' reality.
After an 18-point comeback win over No. 5 Iowa State and dropping both No. 12 UNC and Memphis by double digits, Auburn walked away trophy in hand and with a lei around head coach Bruce Pearl's neck. That's when National Player of the Year candidate Johni Broome said, "Everybody was like, Yeah, we're legit."
Not just legit but purely dominant. So dominant that they've been the No. 1 team in the country for over two months straight. They've played the strongest strength of schedule in the country while serving up nonstop Ws in a conference that's projected to send 13 teams to the Big Dance. After amassing the nation's most Quad 1 wins (16), the Tigers sit at 27-3 with a season's worth of tests and challenges etched into their résumé.
They've got students pitching tents outside of Neville Arena five minutes after an away game. And the night before the Auburn faithful are let in, you can catch the guys handing out pizzas and sandwiches to their fellow students while Johni and Miles Kelly sneak in a few games of poker.
Bruce Pearl hasn't just returned Auburn to prominence, he's built a spectacle in the SEC. The sheer amount of toilet paper cast across Toomer's Square is more than enough evidence. And just moments after our early February shoot with the team's star forward and eccentric freshman point guard, Jay Bilas walks into the practice gym looking to film one of his iconic 94-foot-long interviews with Johni. Twenty minutes later, the two are walking through the sea of tents in Pearlville. All eyes are rightfully centered on The Plains this season.
Broome falls into more Top 10 rankings than MF Doom's Madvillainy. No. 4 presides over the SEC with an iron fist and has 17 double-doubles on the season. No one has found an answer for his 18.1 points, 10.7 boards and 2.4 blocks a night. The freshman phenom standing to his side is putting on for a long lineage of New Jersey-bred ballers, unafraid of the moment, the challenge and the deep ball on broken-down plays. Alongside the brilliance of Chad Baker-Mazara, Miles Kelly, Denver Jones, Chaney Johnson, Dylan Cardwell and a cast of other contributors, each night is a confirmation that we're looking at one of the best teams to ever step across campus.
"We know the situation we're in. We just try not to dwell on it, focus on it. We just take it day by day," Tahaad says.
For the past two seasons, two-time All-SEC selection Johni Broome has been doing just that. After transferring from Morehead State for his sophomore season, the 6-10 Florida native has been steamrolling the limitations placed upon him ever since he was in high school, now ranking top 10 in the nation in blocks, rebounds and double-doubles.
"I always had that chip on my shoulder, that edge. Growing up, I just had the utmost confidence, because where I’m from you've got to have confidence or you're gonna get eaten alive," Johni said. "I just grew up and I took it wherever it went with me. I went to college, my mindset was to kill whatever was in front of me. And that just carries on today, because the person I'm playing probably had more exposure, had more offers than me. So each and every night I go in looking to dominate."
He led the team in scoring in his first season. He became the program's 18th All-American in his second. The 2024 SEC Tournament MVP catapulted the last few years of momentum into one of the best individual campaigns this collegiate season. Twenty-six and 16 boards at LSU. Against Ohio State: 21 and 20. And twenty-three and 19 against North Carolina. On top of collecting double-doubles like vinyls, he's swatted away four or more shots in four games.
With one of the best players in the nation back for his senior season, Coach Pearl says it was all about empowering his returning players with a "less is more" approach. Instead of going out and collecting as many five-star recruits and transfers as possible, Coach Pearl asked for more from his guys.
Johni's managing more minutes (nearly 29 a night) and starting alongside Dylan for the first time in their careers. And freshman Tahaad Pettiford's dropping haymakers off the bench on a nightly basis. Instead of backfilling the departure of graduate senior Jaylin Williams, Chaney Johnson and Chad Baker-Mazara are finding—and delivering—even more opportunities to shine. The staff was selective when it came to the portal, too, offering the opportunity to win championships instead of promising playing time. SMU transfer Ja'Heim "Turtle" Hudson was more than game. So was Georgia Tech transfer Miles Kelly. "And the pieces fit really nicely together," Coach Pearl said.
The No. 1 team in the country for eight weeks straight knows that everyone is gunning for them. They'll willingly walk into your trap and then take it over, shouts to the BankRoll Fresh song that's blasted after every dub on the road. All the while, the goals remain the same; SEC Championship followed by confetti in March.
"You can't get complacent. You can't get comfortable because each and every night they're coming. We have a target on our backs," Johni said. "Obviously everybody wants to beat the best. We know that, we're aware of that, so we're going to bring it every night. So you better bring it, too."
That sense of confidence stems from each player's belief in the guy next to them. As Johni and Tahaad acknowledge their ranking, they're adamant that the contributions from the entire team are the reason Auburn's enjoying the success they've had.
"I just feel like we have players that don’t get enough recognition," Tahaad says. "We have players that without them, we wouldn’t be in the position that we are now. If they didn’t come here, we might not be No. 1 because of what they do for us. I just feel like their time is going to come, and when it comes, I feel like they’re going to be ready."
Guys like Denver Jones, one of the best defenders in all of college basketball whose name is beyond deserving of being in the Naismith All-Defensive team convo for locking up the opposing team's best bucket-getter. Guys like Miles Kelly, the Tigers' go-to sharpshooter who will pull out the team-wide "Call God" celly after draining a step-back three. Guys like Chad Baker-Mazara, the Dominican Republic native who's posting 13.1 points and 1.2 steals a night and on the Julius Erving Mid-Season Award watch list. Guys like Chaney Johnson who's scored in double digits for five straight games for the first time in the Auburn blue and orange. Guys like Ja'Heim Hudson, Chris Moore and true freshman Jahki Howard coming off the bench, injecting the right amount of energy whenever they check-in.
The roster is loaded with experience between the portal and returning players who experienced last year's SEC Tournament Championship. But the squad isn't built solely off seniority. As one of two true freshmen on the roster getting tick, Pettiford has quickly become one of the most impactful point guards in the nation.
The Jersey native torched Georgia in mid-January for his career-high, 24. He dropped a 21-piece in just his second game of the season, against No. 4 Houston no less. He's fearless in every regard. Pull up the clips from his 20-point performance at Duke if you're curious. Or his bombardment of last-second threes that routinely find the bottom of the net.
"Growing up, to be honest, I always played with older people. So coming in, I kind of expected it to be the same to how it's always been, just being around guys that are more experienced, played the game, played in the tough games. Just having their energy behind me, knowing they had my back in the low times, I feel like that just gives me confidence," Tahaad said. "And without them, I feel like my season wouldn't be going the same as it is now."
Windmills and no-look drop-offs to the post are complimented by 11.3 points, 2.9 assists and nearly a steal a night. He'll skip up court into a pull-up three during the biggest game in SEC history, silencing the crowd with a smile. The 6-1 freshman lives for the road. The entirety of the team does.
"We care about being No. 1 in the nation, but, like, we don’t really feel like that," Johni said. "We’re normal. Every day we come in, having fun. We're just being us. Everybody else sees us as a fun team to be, but we're just acting how we normally act. I think we're just embracing the moment with each other, and instead of feeling pressure to be No. 1, I think we’re just embracing the journey of being No. 1."
If there's anything more certain than Auburn's locks on the No. 1 ranking, it's their commitment to joy while doing it. And they often find it on the road, sitting at 7-0 in SEC play after defeating No. 2 Alabama inside Coleman Coliseum on February 15.
Surrounded by hostilities and the Crimson Tide faithful, the inner state rivalry was turned to a 10 as the first-ever No. 1 vs No. 2 matchup to take place in the SEC. Through the 40-minute battle, the thousands in attendance did everything they could to disrupt Auburn's chemistry. Instead, the Tigers tightened the screws on the brotherhood that they'd constructed, coming together for a 9-point win. As the final buzzer sounded, they reminded everyone why you don't poke the bear, waving goodbye to the opposing fans and doing the Crimson Crane in unison right on the cursive A logo. Even a brown leather belt made an appearance in the locker room.
"Knowing that when we get the chance to come to your spot, dominate and do what we do, I just feel like that just gives us more confidence, more energy that we need," Tahaad said.
In practice, in the film room, on the court, off the court, that's just who they are. At the end of the bench, after a blocked shot, following a top 10 win, "We're like that all the time," Johni says. They know they're cold and they know everyone's watching them enjoy the hell out of the journey, from Tik Toks to the end of the bench. They know they're the favorites, and they know the Maui Invitational isn't the only trophy they want resting in The Plains this season.
"I know this, we can be excited to play, and with the schedule that we still have, we’re gonna lose some games. I get that, but this team’s been ready to play, I think because they got something to prove," Coach Pearl says. "This team’s got a chip on its shoulder. I don’t look at us as where we’re ranked right now in the country. I look at us as who we are, [a] collection of who we are."
Portraits by Diwang Valdez
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