Arkansas coach Sam Pittman’s complete press conference Monday in advance of game with Mississippi State on Saturday.
O’Gara on predicting Burks’ first touchdown, but not much else on opening weekend
ON HALFTIME: Saturday Down South’s Connor O’Gara predicted Treylon Burks would score the first touchdown Saturday, but the rest of the day wasn’t as good.
OLSON ON HALFTIME: Impact of 15 high school football games in state cancelled
Nate Olson of Scoreboard Central talking with Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis about the problems with playoffs following Covid-19 halting some games.
Oliver on Hogs’ skill players obvious, but needing help on offensive line
ON THE MORNING RUSH: Chuck Oliver of The Fan in Atlanta really liked what he saw from Hogs’ Treylon Burks and Trey Knox, but thinks line needs to improve.
Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Defense the only unit that shows up
Tye & Tommy recap the Game 1 loss to Georgia
ANDY’S NOTES: When it mattered, Hogs’ defense couldn’t stop average offense
The initial knee-jerk reaction on the state of Arkansas football is the defense looked better while the offense is cause for concern after a 37-10 faceplant against Georgia.
Let’s wait until after Mississippi State to start forming any opinions.
The reality is the Razorbacks’ defense was improved for about a quarter until the Bulldogs figured out D’Wan Mathis wasn’t quite ready at quarterback.
After halftime, Kirby Smart and his staff had made the adjustments, but you could see the change starting in the second quarter.
In just the second and third periods, Georgia had 27 first downs while the Hogs managed just 3 (all in the third period). The Dogs had 241 yards of total offense to the Hogs’ 112.
Add in a 91-10 edge in return yards and you have defense and special teams not playing as expected and Georgia wins in a blowout.
The Bulldogs’ offense will finish in the middle of the pack in the SEC and their special teams aren’t anything particularly special. The Hogs’ defense and special teams made them look good.
But it wasn’t realistic to expect the Hogs’ offense to run up and down the field on what will be one of the best defenses in the country, particularly up front.
Arkansas’ defense couldn’t stop an average at best offense struggling at quarterback when it counted the most, particularly in the passing game where the Bulldogs had 266 yards, but 166 of that in the second and third periods.
That’s when the Razorbacks couldn’t get a stop. And Georgia didn’t manage to stop itself.
Now they face an offense that had over 600 yards in passing against an LSU defense that was put together with bailing wire and chewing gum. We’ll find out Saturday night if that’s still better than what the Hogs have.
Mississippi State doesn’t have a defense like Georgia.
The key this week is going to be pretty simple. The Hogs have to score points and keep up with Mike Leach’s offense.
Alabama’s preseason type win
It was strange watching Nick Saban treat the Crimson Tide’s opener like an NFL preseason game, which is exactly what happened in a 38-19 win.
Saban backed off the throttle midway through the third quarter and started playing backups, including highly-touted freshman quarterback Bryce Young.
What he did was get some valuable road game experience for his backups because even though the Tigers got a couple of scores late that game could have been 63-10 if Alabama had kept playing.
Just one interesting observation.
As usual, the Aggies are still the Aggies
Maybe no team has failed to live up to expectations more in the last 45 or so years than Texas A&M.
The latest exhibition of that by the Aggies was a struggle win (17-12) over Vanderbilt … in College Station.
If Jimbo Fisher can’t show that to be just a first-game issue with all of the craziness involved this year in just managing to play games, he’s going to have a problem.
He’s not getting paid $75 million to have the Aggies holding their breath to win a game at home against Vanderbilt.
So, Arkansas State could beat Oklahoma
The truth is, no, that probably wouldn’t happen. Yes, I remember the Red Wolves beating Kansas State at home but that probably wouldn’t happen again, either.
An old saying in the football world is the most improvement a team makes is between the first and second games of the season. The Wildcats certainly did while the Sooners once again hit the wall head-on against a K-State team that shouldn’t have stayed close.
The reality is Oklahoma got comfortable and let up.
How Lincoln Riley handles it will be interesting.
Auburn is over-rated maybe as badly as A&M
Despite what you heard from the talking heads all day Saturday, Chad Morris hasn’t exactly made Auburn’s offense any better.
Kentucky was absolutely hosed on a touchdown call that would have made it 14-8, eliminating the pass inerception return Gus Malzahn got so worked up about.
The Wildcats out-gained the Tigers 384-324 on offense, but committed three turnovers that killed them.
As if Gus Malzahn wasn’t goofy enough all by himself, he’s added Morris as the offensive coordinator and alleged caller of offensive plays … and there are people that think that’s going to get them to the top of the SEC West.
It will be somewhat surprising if quarterback Bo Nix is not in the transfer portal by Thanksgiving … that is if Morris is actually in charge of anything on offense.
UP NEXT: Mississippi State goes into Baton Rouge, shocks defending champs
Any questions about Mike Leach’s offense working in the SEC were put to rest Saturday and now after playing the defending national champs they get Arkansas.
The Razorbacks showed against No. 4 Georgia the only way they can play with the big boys is if those other guys don’t show up until halftime.
That’s exactly what the Bulldogs did.
State put up 632 yards of what LSU had left on defense, which is still a couple of notches above what the Razorbacks have with their starting group. Only 9 of that came on the ground.
Think about that for a minute and let the possibilities sink in.
The Hogs didn’t have everybody in their secondary available to play against Georgia, who started a redshirt freshman that can’t play and had to go to a backup who settled things down.
The Hogs are in trouble this week going on the road to Starkville to face a transfer quarterback that put up 623 yards on the defending national champions.
It may take Feleipe Franks until the middle of October to have that many yards for the season.
Leach knew LSU was still strong up front so he basically didn’t even try the running game. If he doesn’t think something’s not going to work, he’s really got going to waste time trying it.
Even if he has preseason All-SEC running back Kylin Hill, who had 34 yards for the entire game. Whatever he was gaining, Costello was losing in sack yardage.
So Leach went to getting the ball to Hill in space and he ended up with 192 yards of total offense after averaging nearly 20 yards on eight catches.
Now Hogs defensive coordinator Barry Odom has to change from a team that likes to run the ball (which they pretty much slowed down early) to a team that is going to just let it fly, especially against a secondary Leach thinks is vulnerable.
Arkansas’ secondary looks to be all of that, with the exception of a play here and there against Georgia after the Bulldogs just sliced and diced the Hogs’ secondary.
If there is any hope for the Hogs going to Starkville it is a letdown by State. It was a game many viewed as a possible win by the Hogs, but now throw all those preseason predictions out the window.
Find a single win on the schedule right now.
Arkansas football is three losses away from tying the all-time record for most consecutive league losses in the SEC with Vanderbilt.
Come up with an excuse for that one.
There really aren’t any more excuses for Hogs’ failures in another blowout
Sam Pittman made a telling comment after the game when he was talking about a complete faceplant by the special teams that could have applied to everything.
“We’ve just got to coach better and execute better,” Pittman said after another blowout, 37-10, in the 20th straight SEC loss for Arkansas.
When the Razorbacks clung to a 7-5 halftime lead that sounds more like a Dave Van Horn score, then pushed it to 10-5 by capitalizing on a Georgia fumble, some folks got their hopes up.
It was crystal clear from the first half the only reason they had any lead is because the fourth-ranked Bulldogs were stumbling over themselves as much as the Hogs’ defense was stopping them.
Oh, there were some bright spots on the defense for Arkansas in the first half and that’s going to get a lot of hopes up for fans and others who’ve spent a lot of the last three seasons making excuses for failure.
In the second quarter, the Hogs managed to have 43 yards of total offense and just four yards of it came on the ground. Rakeem Boyd couldn’t get anything done and it really wasn’t his fault.
Boyd was not a factor, getting just 21 yards on 11 carries. There’s no way to excuse what folks hoped was a drastically improved offensive line failing to open enough of a hole for one of the best running backs in the league to do more than average 1.9 yards a carry.
“It was tough sledding in there,” Pittman said about Boyd trying to run inside. “He was going to have to make his own.”
That’s coach-speak for the offensive line wasn’t able to block the Bulldogs’ highly-touted defensive front. Nobody expected them to blow Georgia (or anybody else) off the ball but you figured they might at least get a crease or two.
When it didn’t happen it made life a lot harder on quarterback Feleipe Franks, who didn’t have a big day (19-of-36 with two interceptions for 200 yards and one touchdown).
In a way it wasn’t that bad considering the difficulty quarterbacks usually have trying to complete passes from a horizontal position or with really large, angry, people running full-tilt at you.
Again, the offensive line couldn’t block anybody.
The defense really didn’t play great, either, after the first quarter when you have to wonder if quarterback D’Wan Mathis ever fully recovered from nearly being decapitated in the first quarter by a legal hit from linebacker Bumper Pool.
“Not for sure if we didn’t get wore down a little in the second half,” Pittman said later. “Those plays we were making in the first half seemed like we might have been a half-step behind in the second half and they got a little bit stronger and were breaking some tackles.”
Don’t use the corona virus and lack of spring practice and altered conditioning as an excuse. Georgia had the same problem. Kirby Smart’s staff made better adjustments at halftime, opened up the offense a little more and everything changed.
Maybe the biggest problem with the defense in the second half was a lack of any help from the offense.
Georgia kept the Hogs backed up near their own goal and, bless their hearts, the offense couldn’t do much to flip the field.
Again, no excuses from Pittman, who had a view similar to mine in that situation because the offense shouldn’t be looking behind them from their own 10-yard-line.
“”You also have 90 yards of free space,” he said. “We need to get the ball out of there. We cannot keep doing that to our defense. We have to be better on offense to help ’em.”
Special teams was expected to be drastically improved and that didn’t work out, either.
“We didn’t play well,” Pittman said. That was an understatement.
The Bulldogs ended up with 148 yards on punt and kickoff returns plus blocked a punt before the ball got from punter George Caratan’s hands on the drop to his foot.
Pittman was somewhere between mystified and ticked-off later on how that could even happen.
“The guy just ran right in the middle of our wedge and blocked the punt,” he said, scratching his head. “From what I saw they had two guys run in the A gap into our wedge and blocked the punt.”
That’s not supposed to happen, which is why there are three guys standing in front of the punter.
“They really dented the integrity of the shield (wedge) and that’s where the punt block came from,” Pittman said.
Ultimately, it all led to nothing much changing. Don’t give me that nit-picky stuff.
When you get beat at home by 27 points you have problems and I don’t care if it was the No. 4 team in the country.
Missouri at least stayed within 19 of second-ranked Alabama at home and Vanderbilt went on the road and scared the daylights out of Texas A&M in a 17-12 loss.
Now this program is just three losses away from tying the Commodores for the longest streak of futility in the SEC (23 in a row).
Let that sink in for a moment.
There are no more acceptable excuses for the failure of Arkansas football. Don’t give me a bunch of nit-picking about this looked better and that looked better because the Hogs still got beat by 27 points.
Pittman isn’t offering any. He gave the usual coach-speak after the game, which is what he has to do these days to avoid hurting any tender feelings … publicly.
Privately, he and this staff are probably much more blunt and direct.
Now the fans need to quit making excuses for failure.
Pittman disappointed following Hogs’ 37-10 loss to Georgia in season opener
Arkansas coach Sam Pittman’s complete postgame press conference following a game where the Hogs led throughout the first half.
Franks on Razorbacks’ offense struggling against one of top defenses in country
Razorbacks quarterback Feleipe Franks with the media after struggling against Georgia’s highly-rated defenses in season opener.
Catalon re-capping Hogs’ opening-day loss to Georgia from defensive side
Arkansas safety Jalen Catalon with the media after the Razorbacks saw a halftime lead disappear in a 37-10 loss to the No. 4 Bulldogs on Saturday.










