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Pittman’s main point: ‘Embarrassing ourselves and our fans are over’ for Hogs

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While Arkansas fans have another bad officials’ call they’ll wallow around worrying about, many will miss what really was the biggest message.

“The times of us going somewhere and embarrassing ourselves and our fans are over,” Sam Pittman said following the 30-28 loss to Auburn on Saturday night.

Pittman knew the details of the job he talked himself into last December … on the team and with fans.

There are enough things to discuss from Saturday’s loss to give everyone in the state paralysis by analysis which is going to obscure the biggest takeaway which is the Razorbacks can play with just about anybody.

Yes, the Hogs could have won over the Tigers. Probably should have won.

But they didn’t and this game will not fall into the rather large file of close misses that too many fans tend to wallow around looking at in the rearview mirror instead of looking ahead.

The latest entry in the file has a lot of excuses.

Yes, the officials blew the “backwards pass” call

The SEC wasted little time getting an explanation for the call at the end of the game which was — whether you like it or not — is the final decision:

“During the 3rd down play at 0:30 in the 4th quarter, the officials on the field sounded their whistles and blew the play dead as they deemed the passer illegally grounded the ball to conserve time as governed by Rule 7-3-2-f.

“During the subsequent replay review, there is conclusive video evidence that the pass was backwards. However, because recovery of the football was not clearly made in the immediate continuing football action, the ruling on the field was determined to stand under Rule 12-3-2-e-1.”

“I saw the same thing you did,” Pittman said later. “It was a fumble (from the center), then a pass that went 6 yards backwards.”

Arkansas’ Joe Foucha recovered it after a teammate had knocked it backwards again and it bounced off an official’s leg as he was blowing a whistle and waving his arms, which is when everything after that doesn’t really matter.

The guess here there isn’t a single official that’s ever seen that happen in a game before. I’ve never heard of a quarterback throwing a “clock pass” backwards before, much less ever seen it actually happen.

It’s one of those things I would not be surprised to hear has never even been discussed at officials’ meetings before.

Having said all that, it still shouldn’t have happened at the SEC level but it is what it is and was just one of several things that led to the Hogs’ losing that game.

Hogs’ special teams collapsing more critical to loss

The Razorbacks gave up nine points on special teams in the first half that put them off-pace on the scoreboard the rest of the way.

Having a punt blocked for the second time in three games and losing an average greater than a first down on starting position is probably going to get more than a little conversation in the coaches’ meetings.

There really is no excuse.

Most fans won’t agree because they like to be victims of SEC biased officiating but that’s a bigger deal here than a blown officials’ call at the end.

“There were a lot of opportunities where we could have won the football game,” Pittman said. “At the end they had one more play better than ours.”

Hogs’ offense struggling at start … again

Pittman is ready to change just about anything to get the offense to start the game when everybody else does.

“We may have to change the way we warm up or something,” Pittman said. “We’ve got to get a handle on that.”

Arkansas didn’t get points until 6:24 to go in the second quarter.

By then Auburn was up 17-0.

Defense can’t remember how to tackle in first half

The Hogs were arriving, but simply not finishing tackles and the Tigers simply ran the ball in huge chunks, finishing with 187 on the ground.

Of course looking around the world of college football I’m not sure anybody has figured out how to tackle in this season unlike any other.

Ole Miss had over 600 yards and scored 45 points on Alabama on Saturday night … and gave up over 700 yards and lost by double digits.

The tackling across the landscape of college football hasn’t caught up with the games being played. The Hogs really aren’t that much worse than anybody else.

Fans shouldn’t lose sight of Pittman’s bottom line

Arkansas has now shown they are capable of playing with ranked teams.

When you beat No. 16 one week, then manage to have a loss to No. 13 that came down to a blown officials’ call, the Hogs are way ahead of the group that lost 20 straight league games.

Both of those games were on the road, by the way.

The Hogs were a double-digit underdog, didn’t start playing offense for the first quarter and a half and still lost at the end on a bad call.

That’s why Pittman basically told the fans (and reportedly his team) they aren’t going to get pushed around by anybody.

Fans will probably wallow around complaining about what happened against the Tigers that the team had no control over.

It will be more interesting to see how the coaches and players adjust what they can control.

Pittman told final pass wasn’t backwards, had strong message after game

Arkansas coach Sam Pittman said officials told him the backwards pass really wasn’t backwards also told his team “the times of us going somewhere and embarrassing ourselves and our fans are over.”

Razorbacks’ Catalon recapping narrow loss to Auburn, what he saw on last play

Arkansas safety Jalen Catalon said they thought the spike at the end of the loss to Auburn was actually a backwards pass they recovered.

Hogs’ Smith: ‘We feel like we let one get away’ in late loss to Auburn on Saturday

Arkansas running back Trelon Smith (81 yards on 21 carries, 6 catches for 78 yards) disappointed about letting game “get away” in loss.

Carlson kicks field goal with 7 seconds left to give Tigers undeserved win

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4Q :07: Auburn’s Anders Carlson kicks a 39-yard field goal that barely sneaks in after officials blow a backwards clock play that should have been a fumble recovered by the Hogs. Auburn 30, Arkansas 28

4Q 5:29: Arkansas has battled all the way back and is now in front of Auburn after a 30-yard pass from Feleipe Franks to a De’Vion Warren, who had gotten behind the Tigers’ defense. A.J. Reed added the extra point and the Hogs have their first lead of the day. Arkansas 28, Auburn 27

4Q 11:37: Arkansas squanders a Red Zone opportunity and has to settle for a 23-yard field goal by A.J. Reed after pulling Feleipe Franks for freshman Malik Hornsby and the Tigers stuffed him on two straight runs. Auburn 27, Arkansas 21

4Q 14:51: Auburn quarterback Bo Nix finds an answer in speedy wide receiver Anthony Schwartz for a 17-yard score with 14:51 to play and the Tigers open a nine-point advantage. Auburn 27, Arkansas 18

3Q 4:14: Running back Trelon Smith converted key third downs for Arkansas and made the plays necessary to spark a 13-play, 85-yard drive but can’t convert yet another 2-point conversion and Auburn clings to a slim lead. Smith, filling in for Rakeem Boyd who was injured last week, has 69 yards rushing and has added another 64 on pass receptions (mostly runs after the catch). Auburn 20, Arkansas 18


Unless something dramatic changes in the second half, for Arkansas to get a second straight win, the offense is going to have to get some momentum.

Auburn leads at halftime, 20-12, as Feleipe Franks struggled early to get any consistency before finally seeming to get it together late in the second quarter.

The Razorbacks’ defense has been assaulted by the Tigers’ running game for 215 yards in the first half while the offense struggled as Trelon Smith started for the injured Rakeem Boyd (who did not make the trip to Auburn).

Arkansas had just 55 on the ground, but finally managed to start moving the ball through the air as Franks was 12-of-17 for 148 yards and two touchdowns in the first half.

The special teams continued to only be special at consistently making mistakes. The second blocked punt in three games led to Auburn’s first score and a dropped snap on an extra point now means the Hogs will have to juggle the scoreboard in the second half


2Q :38: After the Hogs get a score, Auburn answers with a six-play, 57-yard drive using big passing plays to eat up chunks of yardage before the defense stiffense and Anders Carlson kicks a 25-yard field goal. Auburn 20, Arkansas 12

2Q 2:15: The Hogs’ offense makes you wonder where it’s been all day as the defense gets another midfield stop, then Feleipe Franks finishes off a 75-yard drive in six plays that used just two minutes. Trey Knox couldn’t haul in a 2-point pass on the back line of the end zone. Auburn 17, Arkansas 12

2Q 6:24: Arkansas finally gets some offense going, moving 65 yards in eight plays, ending with Feleipe Franks throwing an 8-yard scoring pass to Mike Woods in the back of the end zone. The special teams managed to blow an extra point, dropping the snap from center. Auburn 17, Arkansas 6

2Q 9:26: Bo Nix scores on a 15-yard designed keeper and Auburn has it’s best offensive drive. Auburn 17, Arkansas 0

1Q :36: D.J. Williams scampered 41 yards down the left sideline as the defense can’t tackle him but then Auburn’s offense bogs down before Anderson Carlson kicks a 47-yard field goal and the Hogs finally conclude a first quarter of struggling. Auburn 10, Arkansas 0

1Q 4:32: Hogs’ special teams gives up the second blocked punt in three games as George Caratan has one blocked by Jordyn Peters and recovered by Barton Lester in the end zone for the first score. Auburn 7, Arkansas 0


Arkansas and Auburn off to an ugly start in the rain as the two teams are about as evenly-matched early in the first quarter as the stats indicated.

The problem with the Razorbacks is getting backed into starting every drive near their own goal, which is not good with the weather conditions.

The passing game is being used much more than most people expected as Trelon Smith for the Hogs and Tank Bigsby for the Tigers have ripped off some runs, but not consistently.

Franks twice has been sacked when he should have taken off with the ball as the Hogs’ offense is mis-firing (going 3-and-out twice).


Oh, the crew on SEC Nation on Saturday morning before the games is complimentary of what Arkansas did, but they aren’t believing.

“You don’t go from losing 20 straight in the SEC to winning two in a row,” analyst Roman Harper said in picking the Tigers to get a win.

None had anything negative to say … they just aren’t buying into what the Hogs did and obviously are still buying into the Gus Malzahn-Chad Morris hype.

Tim Tebow and Jordan Rodgers also picked Auburn to win today.

You can listen to all of the pregame and the game online at HitThatLine.

The broadcast is available on ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain.

Don’t forget Razorback Reaction after the game … win or lose.

PETE’S PICKS: Arkansas will find way to win Saturday against Gus, Chad

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What can be said that hasn’t been said already? Arkansas ended an SEC losing streak, and, oddly enough, every team outside of Mississippi State rejoiced.

Why? Arkansas winning is good for the conference. It removes the twin brother with Vanderbilt complex from the SEC when the fans of other conferences lay claim to why theirs is the best, it gives strength to the schedules, and we have simply become the lovable losers.

Parody is good. Winning is great. Ending the weekly football Saturday mulligrubs is the best.

We have all had a week to enjoy the upset over the Bulldogs; however, there is now another foe yet to conquer.

And, despite good team player speak, there may be a little extra enthusiasm coming from the locker room.

Yes, I wasn’t going to mention Chad Morris by name, but the enticement of search engine results pulling up yours truly was just too much to pass.

Someone asked me what would be the best strategy for victory this game, and my reply was simple: Someone start the rumor Ty Storey will be in Jordan-Hare Stadium on Saturday.

Old, dimpled, Chad will be so busy hiding and-or touching up his resume he will be unable to focus on a single down. Of course, given his offense’s performance against Georgia, our concern may not be too high.

Yes, I am taking Auburn too lightly, but I also downplayed the longevity of Crocs as a fashion trend, yet here we are.

And Gus Malzahn … Well, do we really need to rehash the manipulation he pulled with his last consideration in taking the job as the head Hog in Fayetteville?

The word from fans at the local Waffle House is his wife still carries the offered contract in her purse.

This brings us to Sam Pittman. A man who is not worried about who is wearing their visor and chomping their gum on the other sideline, nor is he concerned with who is drinking yet another Red Bull in the booth.

Pittman just wants to win, and no so does each and every player donning a Razorback on their helmet.

Let’s let it abide and get to the possibilities.

Why Arkansas will win:

We said it last week, and we’ll say it again: confidence on the defensive side of the ball. Barry Odom and the defense managed to run a rush three-drop eight all game against Mississippi State’s talented offense. They will scheme very well against Auburn’s struggling offense.

The offensive backfield is due. Rakeem Boyd has the need to shine to improve his draft stock while sophomore Trelon Smith showed flares of solid potential. Attacking Auburn’s front will open up the much needed passing lanes for quarterback Feleipe Franks.

Speaking of Franks, he is finding open receivers with pretty throws. He will have a fantastic game leading the offense to four touchdowns.

Why Auburn will win:

The Tigers offense struggled mightily against Georgia’s impressive defense; however, they will get back to the form they showed against Kentucky.

Malzahn and Morris both carry chips on their shoulders, and whether anyone wants to admit it from within the public land grant, enough rumor mill speculation has leaked their true feelings.

The Tigers will play up for their coaching staff.

Honestly, I do not feel like coming up with a third option promoting success for Auburn. Giving them two positive remarks up to this point has already increased my calcium carbonate consumption tenfold.

Final Thoughts:

I want to thank each of you for supporting me in my quest to not be the lowest-read opinion piece writer in the SEC West. Thanks, 12 for sharing it.

I would also like to extend my appreciate to the Hogs for breaking not only the SEC losing streak but for also shutting up those lovely cowbells last Saturday.

Most likely this will be a low scoring game with defense being the key for both teams.

Seriously, if the Razorbacks equipment managers are reading this, please, please, please put the name “Storey” on the back of each jersey. Lame? Yes. Memorable? Yes. Priceless? Absolutely.

Arkansas has motivation, new drive and energy, and the taste of winning clinging to their tusks. They want this more than any Razorbacks team since the slide started under Bret Bielema.

Now “turn that dam jukebox on!”

Arkansas 24 – 17.

Be certain to listen to the game Saturday at 3 p.m. at HitThatLine.com and on the air at ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

SEC Picks for Week 6

(4) Florida at (21) Texas A&M: Florida is what some would call mildly hot while the Aggies look to bounce back from a blowout loss at Alabama. The Gators confidence carries them through this one. Florida by 22.

Missouri at (17) LSU: Does anyone feel sorry for Missouri yet? Yeah, neither do we, nor does LSU as they have their own agenda. Tigers by 24.

South Carolina at Vanderbilt [SLOPFEST OF THE WEEK]: The two “Least in the East” square off in what will no doubt be an instant classic. Sarcasm aside, Vandy somehow makes this close but falls apart at the end. Gamecocks by 18.

(14) Tennessee at (3) Georgia: Tennessee being ranked initially surprised me, but retaining the ranking going into the third game of the season did not, mostly due to the quality of their first two opponents. This week they travel to Athens, and the validity of their ranking will be put to the test. Bulldogs by 24.

Arkansas at (13) Auburn: So Chad Morris’ players are taking it personally on behalf of their offensive coordinator. Arkansas has said it is just another ballgame. Let’s hope the Hogs are wrong because as of late “another ballgame” has equated to “another loss.” Arkansas by 7.

(2) Alabama at Ole Miss: Ole Miss loves to upset Alabama, and some have mentioned they have the potential to do it again this season to help kickstart Lane Kiffin’s career in Oxford. Fear not, Tide fans, as this one is in the bag. Alabama by 30.

Mississippi State at Kentucky: Early in the season both of these teams were surprisingly ranked in the Top 25. State probably deserved the Week 5 respect after defeating LSU while Kentucky was probably over-hyped. The Bulldogs falling out of the spotlight is a slap in the face to Arkansas, but I digress. Mississippi State by 3.

Karma, you’ve been mean to me all week. Please let my prediction for a victory this week not be a curse.

Find me on Twitter: @PeterMorganWPS

Go HOGS!!!

ANDY’S PICKS: Pittman pushing Hogs will Auburn scrambling … everywhere

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One of the biggest indicators of how crazy this football season has been is in the third week of a delayed season Arkansas has hope and Auburn is scrambling.

And the Tigers are playing a game of musical chairs on the defensive side while the offense is getting exposed with the combination of Gus Malzahn and Chad Morris.

The result is about what you expect from a couple of high school coaches who have convinced themselves they know what they are doing.

Auburn bears a remarkable look of the Razorbacks on offense from 2018-19. Few in Arkansas are really surprised.

Meanwhile, Malzahn — the prodigal son who doesn’t love the Hogs the way some fans wish he did — has put together an SEC record remarkably similar to that of Houston Nutt’s time at Arkansas.

It’s okay if you didn’t see that coming … I didn’t, either. They both averaged between seven and eight wins a season. Remember, Auburn is supposed to be a place where you can recruit much better players.

Morris has done very little at the collegiate level unless he was working for Dabo Swinney at Clemson, which got better offensively (and winning) after he left. Yes, he helped recruit Deshaun Watson, but only coached him in a handful of games for one year due to injuries.

Since Malzahn has been at Auburn he has ridden a defense when he was winning and struggled when the defense wasn’t playing at a championship level.

Considering the way the Tigers struggled in the opener against Kentucky and were blown out by Georgia last week, the fact they are a 14-point favorite over the Hogs is a little mystifying.

The stats are remarkably similar against a common opponent (Georgia). They each won a game over an opponent in the middle of the pack in their own division.

Most people are betting on the recruiting rankings and the reputation of the coaches. That’s not a knock on Sam Pittman because he doesn’t have a reputation after just two games as a head coach.

Although that is skyrocketing up while Malzahn may be on the cusp of an extremely hot seat in the third week of the season. He’s got his buddy, Morris, right there with him.

With the excitement after the Hogs shut down Mississippi State last week, it would be impossible to ignore the chance of a letdown.

“A lot of expectations probably have been amped up a little bit,” Pittman said Thursday afternoon.

That’s not just fans, by the way. The coaches are turning it up, too.

“We’ve probably even been a little bit harder on them this week than maybe what we were the last two weeks,” Pittman said. “The expectations are the same, but we’ve probably been a little bit harder on strain, finish, transition.”

The only way Arkansas blows this game is by listening to the celebration after finally getting an SEC win. Pittman didn’t put it this way but you get the idea his opinion is that didn’t mean anything if you turn around and get blown up at Auburn.

Pittman, Kendal Briles and Barry Odom don’t have the same reputation among most observers as the Tigers’ coaching staff.

But they just might be better.

And it’s why I think Arkansas wins.

Hogs 24, Auburn 14


Okay, I took a shot two weeks ago and got behind. Peter Morgan then did the copycat thing last week so no ground to be made up with my upset pick of Ole Miss over Kentucky. I’m sitting at 11-3, one game back of Peter.


Florida (-6.5) at Texas A&M

Aggies still the most over-rated team in the league (Auburn may be passing them soon, however), but the Aggies are getting restless. They didn’t pay Jimbo Fisher $75 million to be 1-1 with a struggle win over Vanderbilt. Wonder what they’ll think at 1-2?

Florida 31, Texas A&M 17


LSU (-14.5) at Missouri

Moving the game to Columbia, Mo., really won’t have much impact on this one. If anything it will help LSU to stay focused being on the road.

LSU 41, Missouri 20


South Carolina (-13.5) at Vanderbilt

Somebody will finally get a win this year in this one and the guess is it will be the Gamecocks. Derek Mason is going backwards with the Commodores.

South Carolina 28, Vanderbilt 17


Tennessee at Georgia (-12.5)

If there’s a crack in the Bulldogs it will start to show in this game. That’s allowing, of course, the Vols are for real this year as a lot of folks think. I’m still not convinced they are.

Georgia 31, Tennessee 10


Alabama (-23.5) at Ole Miss

Let’s be honest, a part of you would love for the Rebels to pull off another upset over Nick Saban and the Crimson Tide. But you aren’t sure it will happen … because it won’t.

Alabama 49, Ole Miss 14


Mississippi State (+3) at Kentucky

Just when Mark Stoops thought he had it turned around and rolling in Lexington, 2020 happens and the Wildcats can’t figure out how to win. The Bulldogs had their eye-opener last week against Arkansas.

Mississippi State 31, Kentucky 21

Auburn’s offense doesn’t have a clue in dry weather, much less rain

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As just a little added twist to an already crazy year in college football, Hurricane Delta could play a small role in Arkansas’ trip to Auburn on Saturday.

But the weather won’t cause as many problems for the Tigers as having an offensive coordinator that just can’t seem to move the ball.

Auburn quarterback Bo Nix can’t read a defense because he doesn’t know what to read.

As Jordan Rodgers pointed out on the SEC Network this week, it is obvious Auburn has removed the option of the quarterback looking, then making any changes. Any of that sound familiar to Hog fans?

Poor Auburn. With a pair of high school coaches who have told each other how great they are for over a decade, they now have to win games in the SEC without a defense that can cover up a multitude of problems on the other side.

Rain doesn’t affect that one way or the other.

If the storm follows latest tracking models, most of the really heavy stuff will go north of Auburn that is stuck down in the southeast corner of Alabama.

There will probably be a little rain but lightning could delay things.

Regardless of rain drops falling that creates the popular misconception you have to run the ball in a football game, I’ve found the exact opposite to be the case.

Unless you have an offensive line that can just physically move people out of the way where running backs go straight ahead it’s easier to pass (unless you have a runner like Gale Sayers, who was the greatest wet weather running back in the history of football).

It was the legendary quarterback Johnny Unitas that pointed it out to me in 1984 at an International Harvester dealer in Springdale where he was doing some public relations work.

“My receiver knows where he’s going and as long as I know where he’s going to be throwing it usually isn’t a problem,” he said. “The defensive back has to react and that’s who ends up doing most of the slipping and sliding.”

Most of that depends on the quarterback and whether he can throw a wet ball or not. Some can like Joe Montana. He didn’t really care because he threw with the laces.

On the other hand, Troy Aikman couldn’t. He struggled with sweat on the ball during preseason and September games. When Mark Stepnoski was injured, then left in free agency, the Cowboys went with Frank Cornish at center, which was a size and blocking upgrade.

Except sweat poured off him and particularly on his backside. Aikman didn’t throw with the laces on the ball and Cornish was soaking it on the routine center-quarterback exchange. They battled the problem for a few years then got Stepnoski back.

For Arkansas the guess is Kendal Briles may come up with an offensive plan as good as what Barry Odom did last week against Mississippi State on defense.

We obviously don’t know, but Feleipe Franks can probably throw pretty well in the rain. He has big hands (the key) and, being from Florida, he’s thrown in these conditions before.

Plus Auburn’s got problems all over the defense, especially at the linebacker position with new guys. You don’t attack that by trying to run at them because they can probably handle a guy running at them with the ball.

You put them in matchup mismatches with disguised pass routes and personnel changes that cause multiple issues in the passing game.

Briles showed a few times last week he’s perfectly capable of that. The Hogs had De’Vion Warren and Hudson Henry so wide open it was frightening for some fans the throw and catch went somewhat smooth.

Yeah, everybody (except maybe Mike Leach) talks all time in the SEC about being able to run the ball, but to win the last decade or so you better be able to throw the ball and put points on the board.

And the Tigers are relying on Chad Morris for that now.

Auburn announcer on what he’s looking for in Saturday’s game with Hogs

Tigers radio announcer Andy Beachum on game with rain, how Auburn responds after being drubbed by Georgia last week.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Can this team handle success?

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Tye & Tommy on this team’s success, Eddie in Clarksville calls in, and score predictions for the game!