Auburn hauled in what felt like a banner recruiting class during the winter of 2010. The Tigers signed a consensus top-10 class with a whopping 44 commitments, highlighted by five-star tailback Michael Dyer, five-star athlete Trovon Reed and four-star wide receivers Antonio Goodwin and Shaun Kitchens.

Four years later, Dyer, Goodwin and Kitchens have all departed the program due to off-the-field troubles. Reed is now a senior and a disappointment, even after a position change.

Dyer rose to stardom during his freshman season at Auburn, living up to his billing as one of the nation’s top recruits. Things spiraled out-of-control, however, just months after he helped the Tigers to the 2010 national championship.

He’s since been kicked off two teams, and spent time at Arkansas Baptist College — a small four-year school that also offers two-year degrees. It was there that Dyer experienced what its president, and former San Jose State head coach Fitz Hill, calls “human rehabilitation.” Dyer is now at Louisville, out to clean up his image, along with his current head coach Bobby Petrino.

One of the contributing reasons to Dyer’s exit from the Plains is that he reportedly owned the weapon used to hold victims of a home robbery at gunpoint. Two of the three Auburn players involved with the robbery?

Goodwin and Kitchens.

Two touted wideouts — both top-30 players from the state of Georgia — arrived at Auburn with plenty of expectations. Those expectations soon turned to shattered dreams as the two partook in a home invasion, leaving Goodwin charged with first-degree robbery and Kitchens awaiting his trial.

A Lee County judge this summer sentenced Goodwin, now 21, to 15 years in prison for his role in the incident. Goodwin and Kitchens had been smoking synthetic marijuana that night, according to Goodwin’s attorney. According to an Associated Press report, Goodwin stood silently during his sentencing, but did offer an apology.

“I want to apologize for my action and my poor judgment,” Goodwin told the AP. “In the time I was at home, I had time to think about it and I’ve become a better person and a better decision-maker.”

Meanwhile, Reed made the move to cornerback from his previous position of wide receiver during the 2014 season. A four-year starter at receiver, the Thibodaux, La., native recorded just 39 career catches. After a disappointing 2013 campaign in which he caught just nine passes in 14 games, Reed appeared more comfortable at his new defensive back spot this season.

Still, his career never quite lived up to the expectation after being the top prospect from the state of Louisiana.