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Chavanelle on what Stepp meant recruiting top-level wide receivers

Justin Stepp is gone to South Carolina, but Nikki Chavanelle of HawgBeat talked Tuesday afternoon about his impact in recruiting at Arkansas.

Edwards backs out of transfer portal, coming back to Hogs

Linebacker Deon Edwards will be coming back for a sixth year with Arkansas announcing Tuesday he’s withdrawn from the transfer portal after just a few days.

In 2020, Edwards played just six snaps all season … in the last two games of the year.

Most of his playing time has come on special teams where he has 465 snaps compared to just one 47 on defense.

Only three of 19 scholarship seniors from the 2020 season have not announced what they plan to do with the eligibility relief granted by the NCAA in response to the coronavirus pandemic: linebacker Hayden Henry, wide receiver Tyson Morris and kicker A.J. Reed.

Eight players decided to come back for another year: linebacker Grant Morgan, offensive linemen Ty Clary and Myron Cunningham, tight end Blake Kern, running back T.J. Hammonds, wide receiver De’Vion Warren and defensive end Dorian Gerald.

Returning seniors do not count against the 85-man scholarship limit.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Saban adds another title

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Tye & Tommy on Bama winning, Arkansas baseball news, Isaiah Joe’s performance and more!

 

Saban’s ‘ultimate team’ shows rest of SEC Tide not dropping off much

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Alabama’s routine dismantling of Ohio State on Monday night was a message to the rest of the SEC they are still the king of the mountain and not coming down soon.

At least as long as Nick Saban hangs around.

The Crimson Tide’s 52-24 win over the Buckeyes was his seventh national title. It will not be surprising if the adds one or two more to that total before he decides to step down.

Most of the time losing games contributes to whatever health issues that a legendary coach has when he retires. Saban himself has said he’ll think about retiring when he can’t contribute anymore.

Interestingly enough, it was Bear Bryant who told a reporter in 1982, “I can’t coach ’em anymore” a month or so before he retired after winning six national titles. Just so we’re accurate here, Saban has tied Bryant for titles won at Alabama ( won the title coaching LSU).

He doesn’t look like he’s going anywhere soon.

“This is the ultimate team,” he said in the postgame celebration. “They had to overcome and persevere through so much adversity.”

Saban endured LSU’s Greatest Team Ever proclamations last season, then had maybe his best team in the midst of a global pandemic that completely up-ended his carefully-regulated “process.”

It all came together Monday night when Crimson Tide quarterback Mac Jones had the best championship game in history. He beat LSU’s Joe Burrow by a yard passing in a 36-of-45 night with five touchdowns.

Photo by Crimson Tide Photos

“This was a team that was always together,” Saban said later. “They always bought in. This was a great team.”

Every championship coach has his favorite team, for whatever reason. Bryant’s favorite was his 1961 team that was his first.

On a side note to that team, Arkansas played gave them their closest game of the year in the Sugar Bowl in a game the Tide won, 10-3, on a crisp partly cloudy day in New Orleans where the Tide kept the Hogs’ Lance Alworth in check. It seemed Alworth had about a dozen plays where he was tripped up by an ankle tackle or something.

This team, though, is Saban’s favorite … at least until another team comes along, which is probably not going to happen. Like everybody else, Alabama had things nobody ever thought about having to deal with this season.

Saban, though, just did it better than anybody else.

 

Photo by Crimson Tide Photos

No idea about anybody else, but I knew this game was over on the second play of the game when Jones threw a pass to Devonta Smith and he turned what would normally be a minimal gain into a 22-yard play just because he out-ran everybody.

Smith set a playoff record with 215 yards on 12 catches and scored three times. That was just the first half, by the way, because he injured a finger almost immediately in the second half.

“I’ll be alright,” he said after the game.

Considering he will be a first-round draft pick in the NFL Draft in April, that’s good news. It was just a finger that probably won’t affect him much.

Alabama simply dominated Ohio State with an offense that probably could have scored considerably more and a defense that has progressed through the season.

Remember when that was supposed to be the Tide’s weakness this year?

Photo by Crimson Tide Photos

Defensive lineman Christian Barmore, named the MVP on that side of the ball after the game, may have just summed up everything after the game from the Alabama point of view:

“We came to dominate,” he said.

And that’s exactly what the Tide did against an Ohio State team that has now been knocked around three times in national title games against the SEC.

The bad news for the rest of the SEC is this may not be the end of the Tide’s run.

Maybe the biggest question is whether the gap is getting bigger, especially for programs like Arkansas.

Musselman looks ahead to Wednesday’s road matchup with talented LSU

Razorbacks coach Eric Musselman met with the media Monday afternoon on challenges facing “very talented” Tigers’ team on the road.

SDS’ O’Gara looks at championship matchup with Crimson Tide, Buckeyes

Connor O’Gara of Saturday Down South with Halftime’s Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis on ESPN Arkansas about the CFP title game.

Murphy on Musselman finding way to get Jackson comfortable at key time

Democrat-Gazette writer Tom Murphy said earlier Arkansas had to get something productive for Vance Jackson and they did that against Georgia.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Hogs get back in the win column

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Tye & Tommy on the win over UGA, HS athletics in AR maybe changing, Tom Murphy and more!

 

Robinson has surgery on foot, will miss remainder of season, Hogs say

Arkansas freshman Khalen “K.K.” Robinson will miss the remainder of the season after having surgery Sunday to repair a bone fracture in his right foot.

Robinson, a Little Rock native, played in each of the first 11 games before missing the Georgia game Saturday. He scored 29 points (2.6 avg.) and had 11 assists this season.

Against Tennessee on Wednesday night, Robinson played in the first half but it got too difficult by halftime and he didn’t come back out.

“KK came to me at halftime and said he couldn’t go,” Eric Musselman said after the Vols’ game. “His foot was bothering him. Obviously our training staff will get with him. He said it’s been bothering him a little bit since the Red-white game.”

Robinson was in Arkansas’ ninth-ranked 2020 recruiting class that included four in-state prospects. Robinson was the No. 10 point guard in the nation.

Robinson appeared in 11 games for the Razorbacks, averaging 8.4 minutes per game. He was scoring 2.6 points per game on 9-of-21 shooting from the field, 5-of-12 from beyond the arc and 6-of-8 from the free-throw line.

Robinson pulled down 10 rebounds and recorded three steals on the year and recorded 11 assists to just six turnovers for the Hogs.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.