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Fayetteville

Arkansas at Tennessee set for 3:15 p.m. on SEC Network

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Arkansas’ Week 7 trip to Tennessee is locked for 3:15 p.m. Central on Saturday, Oct. 11, with SEC Network carrying the broadcast from Neyland Stadium. The SEC announced the time and channel Monday.

The matchup comes after open dates for both teams and marks the 21st meeting in the series. Tennessee leads 13–7, though Arkansas has won the last four, including last fall’s 19–14 result in Fayetteville.

Arkansas (2–3, 0–1 SEC) is regrouping under interim head coach Bobby Petrino after a 56–13 loss to Notre Dame prompted a midseason change and subsequent defensive staff dismissals. Tennessee (4–1) is coming off an overtime road win at Mississippi State.

After surviving in Starkville, Vols coach Josh Heupel pointed to the bye week as a chance to reset.

“We’ve got a chance here with the bye week to heal some guys up, get better, and get ready to get back to work,” Heupel said.

For Arkansas, the game will be Petrino’s first on the sideline as interim coach following Sam Pittman’s dismissal.

Petrino moved quickly, firing defensive coordinator Travis Williams, co-defensive coordinator Marcus Woodson and defensive line coach Deke Adams as part of an overhaul.

The Razorbacks opened with wins over Alabama A&M and Arkansas State before losses to Ole Miss, Memphis and Notre Dame.

Tennessee’s résumé features wins over Syracuse, ETSU, UAB and Mississippi State, with the lone setback a 44–41 loss to Georgia.

The 2024 meeting in Fayetteville hinged on defense and late situational offense.

Arkansas held Tennessee to 332 total yards before backup quarterback Malachi Singleton scored the go-ahead touchdown inside the final two minutes.

That backdrop, plus both teams’ byes, frames a scouting week heavy on corrections.

Petrino has emphasized a back-to-basics approach on that side of the ball. He told reporters Arkansas would get back to the “principles of great defense” as the staff reassignments settle and the roster resets under a new voice.

Heupel, meanwhile, praised his team’s competitiveness after the Mississippi State finish while noting execution issues that surfaced late.

“A lot to clean up … everyone, coaches, players, everybody,” he said in his postgame remarks.

The SEC slotted Arkansas–Tennessee for the mid-afternoon window as part of its Oct. 11 lineup.

The Razorbacks return to Fayetteville for a three-game home stretch after Knoxville, while Tennessee continues a schedule that already includes two one-score outcomes.

Arkansas has not lost to Tennessee since 2007, a streak that has spanned coaching changes on both sidelines and two wins in Knoxville.

The Volunteers still hold the all-time edge and enter with a ranking attached, adding weight to a midseason cross-divisional game that will influence both teams’ trajectories.

Kick is 3:15 p.m. on SEC Network from Neyland Stadium.

3 key takeaways:

• Arkansas at Tennessee kicks at 3:15 p.m. on Oct. 11 on SEC Network.

• It is Bobby Petrino’s first game as Arkansas’ interim head coach after defensive staff changes.

• Josh Heupel said the bye week offers time to heal and improve after the MSU win.

RAZORBACK FOOTBALL

Sat, Aug 30vs Alabama A&MW, 52-7
Sat, Sep 6Arkansas State (LR)W, 56-14
Sat, Sep 13@ Ole MissL, 41-35
Sat, Sep 20@ MemphisL, 32-31
Sat, Sep 27vs Notre DameL, 56-13
Sat, Oct 11@ 12 TennesseeL, 34-31
Sat, Oct 18vs 5 Texas A&ML, 45-42
Sat, Oct 25vs AuburnL, 33-24
Sat, Nov 1vs Mississippi StateL, 38-35
Sat, Nov 15@ LSUL, 23-22
Sat, Nov 22@ TexasL, 52-37
Sat, Nov 29vs Missouri2:30 pm
SECN