How Musselman re-shuffles deck most interesting aspect against Vols

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After Arkansas’ loss to Missouri on Saturday, Eric Musselman was as dejected in the postgame process as he’s been and he wasn’t hiding from it.

Now he goes on the road to face a Top 10 team in Tennessee and how the Razorbacks respond Wednesday night will be interesting.

“When you look at their ranking and who they’ve beat, it’s for sure the best team that we’ve played this year,” Musselman said Monday afternoon.

Coming off the worst game the Hogs have played all year, what is most intriguing is to see how they respond against their best opponent.

Missed layups against Missouri was maybe the biggest head-scratcher. Hitting just 3-of-23 on layups is the type stat that drives coaches crazy and for hyper guys like Musselman it’s worse.

The biggest cause may have been unforced errors on basic technique. That’s even weird to type because the basic layup is something most youth-league players execute fairly decently.

“Yes, I have addressed technique, yes, I have addressed knock off the degree-of-difficulty layups,” he said Monday.

And it’s been pretty basic stuff and he’s given his staff pretty clear directions on where the focus should be.

“Knock off the euro-steps, knock off the spin, come to a two-foot jump stop and put the ball in the hole,” Musselman said. “Go old school on your finishes around the rim.”

It wasn’t a case of the Tigers blocking shots. A lot of those blown layups were clean looks.

“Missouri only had one blocked shot,” he said Monday. “That’s one more than I had in the game. I’m not sure why you miss layups if they had one blocked shot.”

The problem wasn’t new. It finally showed up in full force Saturday. Musselman may not admit it but he probably figured it was going to happen at some point.

“It’s been a problem with this team all year, our shots around the rim,” he said. “It’s not just one game. It got magnified in one game.

“When you get an offensive rebound and there’s three guys with their arms up, you don’t try to shoot through six arms, and you pass the ball out and you spray it around for a quick three.”

The bottom line, basically, is the players can’t play selfish.

“I’ve sent a lot of text messages, a lot of phone calls, some individual meetings with guys face-to-face,” Musselman said. “Our shot selection has got to improve and us sharing the basketball has got to improve. And it’s not one guy.”

There’s no way to know how much losing Justin Smith affected this team. At times on offense, they looked lost. Smith may have been more of a stabilizing force than we thought, particularly on offense.

It’s a chance for somebody to earn more playing time if they can do something with the minutes Smith was playing.

“Everybody wants an opportunity, everybody thinks they’re real good, so go do something,” Musselman said.

Vance Jackson is one player that leaps immediately to mind.

“We do need Vance to rebound the ball and defend for us,” Musselman said. “Get loose balls. Get rebounds. Certainly from a three-point shooting, if he misses one or if he misses eight, I still feel like he’s a great, great shooter.”

Now he’s got to show that in a game and it’s just one part of the puzzle Musselman has been working on since the Missouri game ended.

For the Hogs, it may simply come down to players figuring out a way to win more matchups.

“Right now, we don’t have quite enough guys that are beating their initial defender to create a scoring opportunity for a teammate,” Musselman said.

How they figure out a way to do that better against the Vols is going to be interesting.

CBS’ Dodd on Hogs’ Odom drawing interest from Texas, which fans expected

Dennis Dodd of CBS Sports went to college at Missouri with Barry Odom and was on Halftime about drawing interest from bigger programs lately.

Trusting the Process interviewing local Arkansas media debuts Friday

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Every week Tye will interview a local Arkansas media member. They will share their life journeys, career stops, life lessons and more … plus we will have some fun on the way.

 

Guiton joins Razorbacks staff to replace Stepp with wide receivers

Sam Pittman has added Kenny Guiton to the Arkansas staff as the new wide receivers coach replacing Justin Stepp, who joined Shane Beamer’s staff at South Carolina.

The announcement was made by the Razorbacks on Tuesday afternoon after multiple reports said he was going to be the choice Monday.

Guiton heads to Fayetteville after spending the 2020 season on staff at Colorado State. The Rams played four games this past fall with one of Guiton’s receivers, Dante Wright, finishing second in the Mountain West with 105 yards per game.

Wright also averaged 15.8 yards per catch with teammate Trey McBride averaging 15 yards per catch.

Prior to joining Colorado State, Guiton spent one year coaching the wide receivers at Louisiana Tech (2019) and two seasons leading the wide receivers at Houston (2017-18).

With the Bulldogs in 2019, he tutored one of the best receiving corps in Conference USA with the team posting the fourth-best passing offense in the league.

He developed Adrian Hardy and Malik Stanley into All-Conference USA honorable mention performers with Hardy catching 42 passes for 534 yards and Stanley catching 40 passes for a team-high 649 yards.

With the Cougars he worked with a pair of the most explosive offenses in the nation and worked with Arkansas offensive coordinator Kendal Briles in 2018 when Briles served as Houston’s offensive coordinator.

The 2018 Cougars ranked fifth nationally in scoring (43.9 ppg) and seventh nationally in total offense (512.5 ypg). Houston scored 30+ points in all 12 regular season games and 40+ in 10 of those games.

Marquez Stevenson, one of Guiton’s receivers, earned All-American Athletic Conference in 2018 after catching 75 passes for 1,019 yards. Steven Dunbar earned the same honor in 2017 after catching 76 passes for 1,070 yards and three touchdowns.

A fast-rising coach in the industry, Guiton was a two-time team captain at Ohio State before beginning his coaching career in 2015 at Houston as a graduate assistant on Tom Herman’s staff.

Houston went 13-1 and 9-4 in his first two seasons before following Herman, his former offensive coordinator at Ohio State, to Texas as a quality control for the Longhorns for four months. He quickly returned to H-Town on Major Applewhite’s staff as the Cougars’ wide receivers coach.

Guiton helped Houston to four-straight bowl games during his time, including a 2015 Chi-fil-a Peach Bowl victory over No. 9 Florida State, and saw the Cougars have at least one 1,000-yard receiver each season.

Guiton was a student-athlete for the Buckeyes 2009-13 playing in 22 games as a quarterback. As a senior, he started two games and played in eight total completing 69% of his passes and tossing 14 touchdowns for the 12-2 Buckeyes.

He had a brief stint with the Buffalo Bills before joining the LA Kiss of the Arena Football League for the 2014 season.

Guiton is a 2013 graduate of Ohio State where he earned his degree in Family Resource Management.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

By reading social media breadcrumbs, apparently Odom staying put

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In a day and age where personnel announcements are often made on social media, that’s the platform apparently being used to decide if someone’s staying.

After the reports Monday that Arkansas defensive coordinator Barry Odom was on the short list to join Steve Sarkisian at Texas, some fans were concerned.

Dennis Dodd at CBSSports.com first reported the news about Odom and that former Longhorns defensive coordinator Will Muschamp had turned down the job. He may be waiting on another SEC head coaching position to get fired from because that’s turned fairly lucrative for him after payouts at Florida and South Carolina.

Now if you read between the lines of social media posts by the Razorbacks, you get the idea Odom’s not going anywhere.

Not exactly clear, which requires following the breadcrumbs like Joe Foucha’s tweet.

Then incoming freshman and early enrollee Jermaine Hamilton-Jordan had a few tweets.

And Foucha responded.

There also had been rumblings that strength and conditioning coach Jamil Walker might leave, but that apparently isn’t happening, either.

Now the question is if it cost anything to get Odom to stay.

Chavanelle on coaching shuffle with Stepp leaving, Odom a target at Texas

HawgBeat’s Nikki Chavanelle on wide receivers coach Justin Stepp leaving Arkansas for South Carolina, interest from Longhorns in Barry Odom.

Gasaway has questions about Tennessee’s shooting before Hogs’ game

ESPN’s John Gasaway thinks shooting is a possible weakness with the Vols as Arkansas faces them in Knoxville on Wednesday night, he told Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis on Halftime Tuesday afternoon on ESPN Arkansas.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – 2020 continues in 2021 for Hog fans

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Tye & Tommy on the Barry Odom rumors, Burlsworth Trophy, Heisman tonight and more!

 

As college football world turns, moving targets involve Pittman’s staff

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Sam Pittman won three games his first season at Arkansas (probably could have won three other games for a variety of reasons) and that was done with a coaching staff that apparently some folks want to raid.

First, wide receivers coach Justin Stepp is apparently going to South Carolina. That probably involves a chance to return home more than anything else … those things happen.

Now there are reports Razorbacks defensive coordinator Barry Odom is a target for Steve Sarkisian at Texas.

In a whirlwind of activity over the weekend, the Longhorns fired Tom Herman and hired Sarkisian, Alabama’s offensive coordinator, in just a few hours. That means they probably had the second deal done before they pulled the trigger on paying off nearly $30 million of buyouts to unload a coaching staff.

As an aside, if you think that is a big number at the University of Texas, you really don’t know much about how things work at Austin. They have boosters that can write the check by themselves and never blink.

Odom is one name mentioned for the job after Will Muschamp said he wasn’t interested. He was previously the defensive coordinator under Mack Brown, so he might not be interested in doing that again after being a head coach at two schools in the SEC.

Why would Odom be interested in listening (as multiple reports indicate he would) is simply because, well, it’s Texas. Hog fans hate to hear that, but it is a blue-blood program in the world of college football square in the middle of one of the largest hot beds of top-level talent in the country every year. Most years it would be THE biggest.

Citing sources close to Odom, Horns247.com said it will not be easy for the Longhorns to land him. They reported his family enjoys living in Northwest Arkansas and his sons are playing football here.

Colorado State wide receivers coach Kenny Guiton is being reported as the replacement for Stepp and there are also reports offensive coordinator Kendal Briles may be drawing interest, but that has not been confirmed.

Odom reportedly was drawing interest from Ed Orgeron at LSU for the defensive coordinator position there after they paid Bo Pellini about $5 million to leave after one season, but the Texas talk has dimmed that dramatically.

At Arkansas, Odom is making $1.3 million a year after getting a $100,000 pay raise after turning down a defensive coordinator role at another SEC school before he ever coached a game here.

In a year that’s seen revenues drop dramatically, how much deeper the Hogs can dig to get Odom a raise is anybody’s guess.

But the interest is there, which means those outside of Arkansas have taken notice of what he accomplished in just one season.

Now it’s up to Pittman’s recruiting skills to keep not just players on the roster, but his top-level assistant coaches as well.

He hasn’t really had key players enter the transfer portal that’s seeing some fairly big names at big-time programs come in. Oklahoma wide receiver Charleston Rambo, who has started 24 games over the last two seasons, put his name in to leave Monday.

Dawson not really sure where Jackson is while Smith sidelined with injury

Hawgs Illustrated’s Dudley Dawson was wondering Monday afternoon on Halftime where Vance Jackson is while Justin Smith is out.