Cunningham makes choice to come back to Hogs for another year

Sam Pittman apparently isn’t recruiting just high school players these days, living up to what he said months ago about wanting several seniors back.

Offensive lineman Myron Cunningham announced Saturday afternoon he’s coming back, similar to what linebacker Grant Morgan announced on Christmas Day.

Part of it is Pittman’s linemen go the NFL. Another part is they are buying into what he’s building at Arkansas.

“If we can keep him another year, we could really up his draft stock even higher,” Pittman said last month. “He’s gotten much bigger and can handle bull rushes better and things of that nature.

“He’s gotten better. If he came back, he’d get a lot better.”

Cunningham probably won’t be the last player and it’s a pretty good bet the coaching staff already knows who’s going to come back for another year and who’s not. The graphics accompanying the Twitter announcements appear to be done by the UA’s graphics team.

He does provide a huge piece to the revolving door that has been the Razorbacks’ offensive line the last few years. Experience is huge and his return may give the Hogs their most experience in the line in a few years.

Arkansas had 19 seniors this past season, three opted out and with two seniors’ announcements they are returning for another year, there could be a steady stream of announcements over the next few days.

Under Pittman, Cunningham bulked up from 290 to 325 pounds this season and drew some preseason attention as a possible NFL Draft prospect, but the reality is he was likely looking at being a third day pick.

Cunningham was one of only two players in the SEC who didn’t miss a single offensive snap this year, as he cemented himself as the Razorbacks’ left tackle.

With this season, plus a spring practice and another season, Cunningham could move up considerably in the draft.

Morgan leads SEC in tackles, announces he’s coming back

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Few single players have embodied what Arkansas fans want in their Razorbacks more than linebacker Grant Morgan and his decision Friday confirmed that.

An original walk-on from Greenwood, Morgan started out on special teams and progressed to this season where he was All-SEC and led the nation in tackles with 111 … before suffering a knee injury against Missouri in the third quarter.

After missing the Alabama game the next week to end the regular season, he finished second nationally behind Troy’s Carlton Martial (113). His 12.3 tackles per game are tied for the most nationally.

Morgan was not asked about coming back for another season in Tuesday’s press conference and most in the media didn’t really expect him to come back as his future plans may include medical school, which wouldn’t surprise anybody.

The guess is Morgan is like what fans want all their Hogs to be like .. they would do just about anything to get one more season of playing when their eligibility is done.

Under a normal season, he could not come back. But with covid-19 changing just about everything in the world, all seniors can come back for another season and everybody was, basically, given an extra year.

Morgan’s return gives the Hogs a powerful 1-2 combination at linebacker with Bumper Pool of experience and leadership.

Barry Odom may be the happiest guy in Northwest Arkansas on this Christmas Day. Having those two back in uniform helps the continued rebuild of a defense that had flashes of success this past season that was balanced with struggles at times.

Morgan is expected to be able to play in the Texas Bowl on New Year’s Eve against TCU in a game that starts at 7 p.m. and will be televised on ESPN in addition to being available here at HitThatLine.com and on ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

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Musselman’s coaching was at win over Wildcats even though he was at home

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Eric Musselman was watching Arkansas’ 85-72 win over Abilene Christian on Tuesday afternoon from his house, but his coaching was on full display.

Associate coach David Patrick was running things on the sideline, but he made it pretty clear later he wasn’t changing much about the Razorbacks.

When the Wildcats cut the Hogs’ lead to 77-68 with 3:27 left there were probably some wondering if Musselman’s unexpected absence was going to be the difference.

“Offensively we made a couple of boo-boo’s there at the end that got them some quick shots,” Patrick said later. “Those things are tough. When you’re up 10 with two minutes to go, the other team has nothing to lose, you’ve really got to control the game.”

Until early Tuesday morning Musselman figured he would be on the sidelines. Then he got the call that someone had been in contact with a person who tested positive for covid-19. It’s why he talked Patrick into leaving a head coaching position at California-Riverside for Fayetteville.

“I’m blessed to have been a head coach before so I wasn’t a rookie, so to speak,” Patrick said. “I didn’t try to do my thing. I tried to do what he stressed to the team.”

Musselman will probably give the credit to the ones who were at the game, but it was his tone set in practices leading up to it and his talking to the team earlier today that showed up in the game.

Abilene Christian was touted as being the toughest non-conference opponent for the Hogs before conference play starts Dec. 30 against Auburn.

The Wildcats got down early and the only time they had hope was really too late.

Sure, there’s credit that goes to Patrick and the other coaches. A lot goes to players, who have completely bought in to Musselman’s coaching, absorbed what they have been teaching and Tuesday evening took it to the court.

It showed from the start they listened to what Musselman had been jumping up and down about since the Central Arkansas game when the Hogs started the game by sleepwalking.

“The lesson after the last game, that coach Muss talked to them about, is you can’t underestimate anybody, and you’ve got to come out swinging,” Patrick said. “The guys took the message from our last game and came out focused.”

That was Musselman’s coaching during the week.

Plus defense, which is what Patrick coaches.

“Our defense in the first half was good,” he said. “It wasn’t as good in the second half.”

Until it had to be.

After Abilene Christian got a 3-pointer to cut the lead to 9 with 3:27 left, the Hogs’ defense went to work.

Over the final stretch, Arkansas gave up just a couple of layups while J.D. Notae hit a big 3-pointer and Moses Moody nailed some clutch free throws.

The Hogs didn’t allow a single point for the final 1:02 of the game.

Going into conference play, the Hogs are undefeated. That’s better than any alternative you can name. I don’t care who the opponent is.

Now the challenge is everybody avoiding the coronavirus (or anybody infected) over the holiday break before they come back for practices immediately after Christmas.

Musselman will have the players ready for what he can control.

It’s the things he can’t that drive everybody crazy.

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