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Holt on offensive line, Franks’ named one of four captains for Hogs this week

Democrat-Gazette writer Bob Holt on what he’s seen in the fall camp and Feleipe Franks stabilizing the quarterback position for Hogs.

RECRUITING THURSDAY: Davenport on Hogs making virtual recruiting work

Richard Davenport of the Democrat-Gazette on The Morning Rush about how Sam Pittman and the Hogs are dealing with the new world of recruiting.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast: What legacy do seniors want to leave?

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Tye & Tommy on the seniors’ legacy, Tom Murphy joins, plus if men can wear jerseys…

 

Murphy expecting two quarterbacks from Georgia plus media reaction to B1G

Democrat-Gazette’s Tom Murphy on expecting Bulldogs to go with both quarterbacks in opener, then talked Thursday morning with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas about how some have reacted to the Big Ten reversal.

SIGHTS & SOUNDS: Razorbacks’ practice Wednesday before starting game prep

Arkansas will be starting preparation Friday for the season opener against Georgia and this is footage from Wednesday’s practice.

Basketball practices can start Monday, games Nov. 25, per vote by NCAA

While we don’t know the dates and opponents for Arkansas basketball, we now know they will start practice Monday (12 hours a week) and games can start Nov. 25.

There was a clue the Razorbacks had an idea it was coming.

Over the last couple of weeks, discussions had centered around waiting until the Nov. 21-25 range to begin the season.

NCAA senior vice president of basketball Dan Gavitt said last week on a webinar with athletic directors and other college sports officials that Nov. 25 was under consideration due to campuses around the country ending their fall semesters.

“By Thanksgiving week, the date of Nov. 25, 76% of all Division-I schools will have either finished their fall semester completely or released the general student body for in-person instruction,” Gavitt said on the webinar.

With general students home for the entire month of December and the early part of January, it provides at least a six-week window for the college basketball season to get underway.

The opening day of the 1920-21 season will be Nov. 25 (the day before Thanksgiving), which is just 15 days behind the original start date.

The schedule will be four fewer games than the originally-scheduled 31 games and they must play at least 13 regular-season games to be eligible for postseason NCAA tournament play.

Practices can start with 12 hours a week, beginning Monday (Sept. 21) and there will not be any scrimmages against another team or exhibition games this season.

This date will allow the Hogs to start putting together the schedule, including a tournament in Las Vegas less than a week before the new start date that could be moved back.

Did Big Ten ultimately fear Tom Mars, lawsuits, more than virus issues?

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It was not without more than a passing interest that the decision by the Big Ten on Tuesday to do a U-turn on college football came a few weeks after lawsuit talk started.

And Tom Mars got involved. The Rogers-based attorney who is basically undefeated, untied and unscored on in dealing with the NCAA and these things.

“They didn’t want discovery in these lawsuits,” Bill King of Nashville Sports Radio told Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis (Halftime) on ESPN Arkansas on Wednesday morning. “They didn’t want somebody looking under the hood here.

“They are hiding behind medical items and the betterment of the student-athlete.”

I’m inclined to go along with King. When Mars got involved following lawsuits from Nebraska and Ohio State folks, the act of the B1G suddenly finding new information is laughable at best.

“They knew way back in the spring they weren’t playing and they expected everybody else to crumble,” King said. “Their grand plan failed. Then lawsuits sprung up and people want answers.

“People want to know specifically Big Ten protocols. There are rules when it comes to a so-called vote. They never voted and I’m convinced of that.”

Mars was going to find out. Nobody wanted Mars snooping around. In my opinion, they were more afraid of what he might find (and goodness knows what nobody has thought to ask about he might find) and they hustled to find a way to play.

“It scared them into succumbing,” King said. “I don’t think this group of clowns was missing a darned thing.”

Most college presidents, especially in the B1G, don’t wake up every morning thinking about college football and whether the coach has figured out a way to move the ball against Ohio State’s defense.

“This is a big sham,” King said.

The Big Ten is starting nearly a month (Oct. 24) after the SEC kicks things off next weekend and will play a shorter schedule, hoping they can figure out a way to get into the College Football Playoff.

As things move forwardly rapidly with the coronavirus medical advancements, they are counting on that to continue and hoping for a little luck.

With eight games in eight weeks they have no wiggle room to move games around.

Somebody will have some positive tests, but whether that’s enough to shut things down is anybody’s guess and there is absolutely no way to predict where treatments, testing or anything else with the virus will be in five weeks.

But, for now at least, the Big Ten has gotten itself into the conversation. Expect the Pac 12 to join that plan any day now, which could at least given them a shot at playing the Rose Bowl in some form.

Don’t listen to their reasons, though.

The real reason is they were more scared of Mars and other lawyers than they are of the virus … and I don’t care what they say.

And, as everything else in college sports, when you don’t know what you don’t know, it’s always a safe bet somebody doesn’t want you to know.

Which is the real bottom line in this decision.

Henry on Pittman coaching offensive line to be more physical in workouts

Clay Henry of WholeHogSports watched the offensive line in drills and talked about how Sam Pittman is urging them to be much more physical.