Football
Auburn To Retire Golden Eagle Tiger Before Georgia Game

  • print
  • email
  • font +
  • font -
  • rss

 
Tiger

Tiger

Nov. 8, 2006

AUBURN - Auburn University officials will retire the school's famed 26-year-old golden eagle Tiger during the Nov. 11 football game against the University of Georgia. The pregame ceremony will begin 25 minutes prior to kickoff.

Officials will also present her successor as War Eagle VII at halftime.

Serving as War Eagle VI, Tiger has represented the university's school spirit since 1986 and has been flying before home football games since 2000. In 2002 she flew during the opening ceremonies of the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, with her flight being seen by millions of television viewers around the world.

Earlier this year AU veterinarians diagnosed a recurring mass on Tiger's right leg as skin cancer. The low-grade but delicately located tumor was surgically removed again in June and was additionally treated with local radiation therapy.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service rescued Tiger in the mid-1980s from an illegal breeding operation in Missouri and placed her briefly in a rehabilitation facility in Kentucky, before transferring her to Auburn. She is now viewed by more than 50,000 children per year during the raptor center's educational programs, not counting spectators each fall at home football games and the millions more watching on television.

In 2005, Tiger was recognized for her contributions to Auburn and to the state of Alabama by being inducted into the Alabama Animal Hall of Fame.

During Tiger's reign as War Eagle VI, the football team has compiled a record of 173-69-4, including undefeated seasons in 1993 and 2004. The team won four Southeastern Conference Championships and six SEC Western Division championships.

University officials at halftime will also present six-year-old golden eagle Nova as the next official Auburn eagle, War Eagle VII. Nova and 11-year-old bald eagle Spirit have been making pre-game flights for three years and five years, respectively.

Nova was born in captivity in the Montgomery Zoo in 1999 and was transferred to Auburn when he was six months old.

The Southeastern Raptor Center's mission is to promote wildlife conservation with the educational use of birds of prey, to rehabilitate ill and injured raptors, and to collaborate in raptor research efforts. The center, part of the College of Veterinary Medicine, treats hundreds of birds of prey annually from species such as bald eagles, golden eagles, peregrine falcons, great horned owls and red-tailed hawks.

All birds used in Auburn's educational programs are non-releasable due to prior injuries or human imprinting. Any bird capable of surviving in the wild must be released, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which permits Auburn to house the birds.

Auburn University is a preeminent land-grant and comprehensive research institution with more than 23,500 students and 6,500 faculty and staff. Ranked among the top 50 public universities nationally, Auburn offers more than 230 undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degree programs.

 

 

Locker Room