Football
Hogs’ Sam Pittman signs new contract, possibly through 2027
On the heels of Arkansas’ most successful season in a decade, Sam Pittman has signed a new contract.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — On the heels of Arkansas’ most successful season on the football field in a decade, Sam Pittman has signed a new contract.
His base compensation increases and it extends through 2027 based on on-field success.
The new five-year agreement began retroactively on Jan. 1 and is effective through Dec. 31, 2026. The agreement would be extended an additional year, through 2027, if Pittman leads Arkansas to seven wins in any one season (inclusive of a bowl game against a Power 5 or Top 25 team) during the term of the contract.
“Coach Pittman and his staff have done a tremendous job quickly restoring the pride and belief in our football program,” athletics director Hunter Yurachek said in a press release. “There is no doubt, Coach Pittman has proven to be the right man to lead our football team.”
Terms of the new deal raise Pittman’s base salary to $5 million annually with compensation escalators based on the number of wins per season and incentive bonuses based on postseason success.
“Arkansas is where I want to be, this is my dream job,” Pittman said. “I am so grateful for our University and Hunter for believing in me, our coaches and staff and the program we’re building. We are all excited to continue to build on what we’ve done and continue to make our fans and the whole state of Arkansas proud of our football team.”
In just his first two seasons, Pittman has put the Hogs back on the national scene.
The Razorbacks won eight games combined in the three seasons prior to Pittman’s arrival before winning nine games in 2021, including an Outback Bowl victory over Penn State, for the program’s most wins in a decade.
The Hogs finished the season ranked No. 21 in the Associated Press Poll and No. 20 in the USA Today Coaches’ Poll, ending the season ranked for the first time since 2011.
The Hogs started the 2021 season 4-0 and rose to No. 8 in the Associated Press poll early in the season — the team’s highest ranking since 2011 — and later set a program first by being ranked in consecutive College Football Playoff rankings after the Razorbacks beat No. 17 Mississippi State.
For the first time in history, the Hogs also captured all three of the program’s trophy games, beating No. 7 Texas A&M in the Southwest Classic, winning at LSU to recapture the Golden Boot and topping Missouri in the season finale to earn the Battle Line Rivalry trophy.
Pittman and the Hogs entered the postseason with eight wins, the most regular season victories at Arkansas since 2011, before adding a fourth trophy to the case with a 24-10 win over the Nittany Lions in Tampa, Fla. at the Outback Bowl.
Pittman’s players have also been in the spotlight over the last two seasons. Linebacker Grant Morgan became the first Razorback in history to win the Burlsworth Trophy, given annually to the nation’s best player who started his career as a walk-on, and just the 16th Hog ever to earn Walter Camp Football Foundation All-America honors.
Earlier this spring, Treylon Burks became the first Arkansas player to be selected in the first round of the NFL Draft since 2018 when Pittman protégé Frank Ragnow was taken 20th overall. Burks went 16th overall to Tennessee after being named a first team All-SEC wide receiver.
Montaric Brown earned All-SEC first team honors this past season before being selected by the Jacksonville Jaguars. Burks and Brown were joined by John Ridgeway (Dallas Cowboys) to give the Hogs their most players selected in the NFL Draft since 2019.
Pittman’s program has also proven to be strong on the recruiting trail. The Razorbacks have hauled in consecutive Top 30 classes while also finding impact players in the transfer portal.
This past fall, freshmen running backs Raheim Sanders and AJ Green along with wide receiver Ketron Jackson and defensive back Jayden Johnson all made significant contributions with Sanders being one of four Hogs to eclipse 500 yards rushing.
The 2021 team also featured five impact players from the transfer portal, including Ridgeway.
Arkansas hosts seven games in Fayetteville for the first time ever this fall, beginning with Cincinnati at 2:30 p.m. on ESPN on Saturday, Sept. 3.
The Razorbacks jump into conference play the following week against South Carolina at 11 a.m. on ESPN. A home date against Missouri State at 6 p.m. on Sept. 17 on ESPN+-ECN+ wraps up a three-game stretch at home to start the year.
Razorback Stadium will also host Alabama (Oct. 1), Liberty (Nov. 5), LSU (Nov. 12) and Ole Miss (Nov. 19).