Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast: Kopps, Van Horn get awards

Tye & Tommy on the SEC Awards, over/under SEC West FB odds, #NationalWineDay and more!

 

Welcome to wild, wild west for college football with transfers

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While college football coaches are complaining about the new transfer rules starting to affect the sport you can bet they are figuring out how to use it.

Alex Scarbrough at ESPN.com had a great story Monday about how tampering is becoming the new normal in rounding up new players for Power 5 programs.

Don’t misunderstand all the whining and wailing from some quarters, every college coach is watching the transfer portal pretty much the way college basketball has been doing for a while.

“There’s a lot of shady (stuff) going on,” the story quoted one ACC assistant saying.

Welcome to the wild, wild west where the kangaroo court of politicians in Indianapolis have opened the door to happen. At some point in the future they will act surprised it slammed them in the mouth getting kicked in.

“What kind of ferociousness is behind the enforcement if you have people on tape admitting to violations and they’re still actively coaching?” Missouri coach Eli Drinkwich was asking in the story.

It’s a good question.

“You got to win and you got a high-pressure job and you have all these things,” SMU coach Sonny Dykes said. “Then all of a sudden, you look up and you go, ‘Oh, they didn’t punish anybody, and they’re not going to punish me. So why not?'”

For a sport that has a group of politicians at the NCAA dictating to another group that is mostly politicians in the directors of athletics, it’s the makings of something that promises to get really interesting.

Leaders make decisions and lead while politicians form committees, wait until the bandwagon gets rolling downhill, then jump under it. Most athletic directors fall in the latter category.

If you recruit players on another roster, it’s a good bet every single coach in college football would call it disgusting, among other things.

While they sit back and figure out creative ways to do the same thing.

Most of this will happen through players talking to players on other teams. That is not a violation of NCAA rules and happens quite a bit. With social media it’s just a few clicks and you can have a discussion under way.

Even those innocent post-game conversations can be subtle.

“You play a team now and you don’t go shake the coach’s hand on the other side,” North Carolina’s Mack Brown said in the story. “You go shake the great tight end’s hand. ‘Hey, you look great, man. Aw, man, we should have recruited you. Wish you were here.'”

Sam Pittman, though, had some common-sense points he made in the story.

“It’s easy to say that someone tampered if you lose somebody,” he said.

But there is a flip side to it as well.

“If you turn it around,” Pittman said. “You’re going to go get someone from the portal, too.”

Welcome to the new frontier.

Wicklander top player nationally; Wallace gets SEC award

Arkansas pitcher Patrick Wicklander picked up a weekly national honor Monday while freshman Cayden Wallace got an SEC award.

Wicklander was named National Player of the Week by Collegiate Baseball Newspaper after striking out a career-high 11 in six innings against Florida.

Wallace was named the SEC Freshman of the Week for the third time this season after the Hogs swept the Gators for their 10th series win of the year and the outright SEC regular-season title.

Wicklander allowed only one run on three hits and a walk en route to his fifth win of the season as well as his fourth quality start of the year.

He is the third Razorback this season to receive the honor from Collegiate Baseball, joining Matt Goodheart (April 19) and Kevin Kopps (April 26).

Wallace collected three hits, including two homers, and drove in four runs in Thursday’s series opener against the Gators, powering the Razorbacks to a 6-1 win.

The true freshman finished with a team-leading four hits and a team-best four runs scored on the weekend, slashing .400-.538-1.000 in 10 at-bats with two walks.

The Greenbrier native is one of six Arkansas players to earn a weekly honor from the conference this season. He and two-time SEC Co-Pitcher of the Week Kevin Kopps are the only Razorbacks to have taken home an award on multiple occasions this year.

Wallace, Wicklander and the Hogs get back to work this week at the 2021 SEC Baseball Tournament in Hoover, Ala., at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium.

Top-seed Arkansas will play the winner of eight-seed Georgia vs. nine-seed LSU at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 26, on the SEC Network.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

Van Horn named top coach in league, Kopps top pitcher

Arkansas will have to make more room in the trophy case at Baum-Walker Stadium.

Kevin Kopps was named the SEC Pitcher of the Year and Dave Van Horn took home SEC Coach of the Year, the conference announced Monday.

Arkansas covered the ballot from top to bottom, with six others earning awards.

Kopps is 10-0 with a nation-best 0.75 ERA in 60.1 innings of work this season, striking out 97 batters while allowing only five runs on the year. He is the first Arkansas student-athlete to win the league’s Pitcher of the Year award since Nick Schmidt in 2006.

Van Horn, in his 19th season as Arkansas’ head coach, was voted SEC Coach of the Year for the second time in his career. He led the unanimously top-ranked Razorbacks to an outright SEC championship and 22 conference wins in the regular season.

Three Razorbacks were selected as First Team All-SEC honorees, including Robert Moore, Matt Goodheart and Kopps. Christian Franklin and Patrick Wicklander, meanwhile, picked up Second Team All-SEC recognition.

Cayden Wallace was named to Freshman All-SEC Team. Moore and Peyton Pallette earned spots on the Newcomer All-SEC Team.

Arkansas placed three student-athletes on the conference’s All-Defensive Team, including Moore, Franklin and Kopps.

Pitcher of the Year
Kevin Kopps, Arkansas

Coach of the Year
Dave Van Horn, Arkansas

First Team All-SEC
2B: Robert Moore, Arkansas
DH/UT: Matt Goodheart, Arkansas
RP: Kevin Kopps, Arkansas

Second Team All-SEC
OF: Christian Franklin, Arkansas
SP: Patrick Wicklander, Arkansas

Freshman All-SEC Team
Cayden Wallace, Arkansas

Newcomer All-SEC Team
Robert Moore, Arkansas
Peyton Pallette, Arkansas

SEC All-Defensive Team
2B: Robert Moore, Arkansas
OF: Christian Franklin, Arkansas
P: Kevin Kopps, Arkansas

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

O’Gara on Nix may be ready to break out in QB battle with Morris gone

Chad Morris is gone from Auburn and history says that means Bo Nix could have huge year as Connor O’Gara and Halftime crew discussed on ESPN Arkansas on Monday afternoon.

Pittman on welcoming host of new players moving in over weekend

Arkansas coach Sam Pittman talked Monday morning on The Morning Rush at Lost Springs in Rogers about new players coming in and more.

Briles, Odom at Lost Springs on how far ahead of last year Hogs are

Last year, new Razorback coaches Kendal Briles and Barry Odom didn’t get started until June and it’s different with spring drills.

They talked about that from Lost Springs Country Club in Rogers for the Arkansas Baptist Children’s Home and Family Ministries Golf Classic and who’s the better golfer on The Morning Rush with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast: Hogs sweep Gators

Tye and Tommy are LIVE today at Lost Springs Country Club in Rogers for the Arkansas Baptist Children’s Home and Family Ministries Golf Classic.

The guys recap the Hogs’ domination over the Gators, their initial thoughts on the SEC Tournament this week, plus hear from Sam Pittman, Kendal Briles, and Barry Odom, who are all participating in the Golf Classic!

Burks is 17th on Kiper’s Top 25 rankings, not in McShay’s first round

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We’re not to what former Florida (and South Carolina) coach Steve Spurrier called “talking season,” but it’s not too early for listings.

In college football, there’s a list that usually involves some sort of subjective analysis for just about everything and ESPN’s Mel Kiper has his early list of the top 25 players for this season.

Arkansas junior Treylon Burks is ranked No. 17. It goes without saying no player from Warren has ever been ranked that high at any point in time of any sort of pro football ranking system.

Here’s what Kiper had to say about Burks:

A big receiver with good speed who has played almost exclusively out of the slot in two seasons for the Razorbacks. Of his 51 catches last season, 38 came when he was lined up in the slot, and all seven of his touchdowns were from the slot. I want to see Arkansas diversify Burks’ routes and give him more shots on deep balls. He’s a fun player to watch.

In other rankings, ESPN’s Todd McShay has his first round mock draft for 2022 and Burks is not one of the two wide receivers from the SEC he projects in the first round.

All rookie contracts are fixed by collective bargaining with the players association and this past draft saw first round contracts drop dramatically after Trevor Lawrence’s $36.8 million deal ($24.2 million signing bonus).

The last pick in the first round was $11.2 million in contract value with a $5.5 million signing bonus.

Draft choices in 2022 will see a slight increase and while the salary cap is expected to increase most of that money will not go into the rookie pool that is fixed by the league and the players’ association.

In case you’re wondering, the disparity between Kiper’s ratings and McShay’s draft is nothing new. None of the major mock drafts have Burks being picked in the first round right now.

Nobody gets it right every year, players drop out and new ones come in so don’t get too worked up over this.

Webb arrested for public intoxication Saturday night on Dickson

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Apparently fans weren’t the only ones celebrating Arkansas’ series sweep over Florida this past weekend as outfielder Braydon Webb got arrested at closing time.

Police reported that Webb was arrested near Yancey’s hot dog stand on Dickson Street just after 2 a.m., according to a story Sunday at NWAHomePage.com.

Reportedly Webb tried to cut in line, then got mad, pushed a table and broke a mobile credit card reader and owner Cody Yancey popped him, then tried to hold him for the cops.

Webb was arrested and booked at Washington County jail on a public intoxication charge before being released on a $200 bond just after 8:30 Sunday morning with a June 24 court date.

Webb was released from jail on a $200 bond just after 8:30 Sunday morning. His court date is scheduled for June 24th.

“We are aware of the incident involving Braydon Webb and are gathering information from the proper authorities,” Arkansas baseball coach Dave Van Horn said in a released statement. “We will make a determination regarding his status once we have reviewed all of the information.”

In other words, Webb has a rather uncomfortable meeting that has either happened or will happen with Van Horn.

Webb started 22 games this season and had a .179 batting average with five homers and 11 RBI.