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ESPN reporting emergency meeting of Power 5 commissioners on football

There may not be college football this fall, according to a report at ESPN.com on Sunday about the commissioners of the Power 5 conferences held an emergency meeting on Sunday.

Saturday, the Mid-American Conference cancelled the entire fall season, including football and that touched off the latest round of media predicting it was the first conference to fold amid concerns about the current coronavirus pandemic.

Several sources have indicated to ESPN the Big Ten is ready to pull the plug on everything but want to hear from everybody else before making any announcement.

None are required to follow along and cancel fall sports.

“It doesn’t look good,” one Power 5 athletic director was quoted in the story by ESPN.

The presidents and chancellors of the Pac-12 are scheduled to meet on Tuesday.

Over the past 48 hours, ESPN is reporting “several sources” have said cancelling the football season seems inevitable.

Heather Dinich, Adam Rittenberg and Mark Schlabach contributed to the story at ESPN.com.

SEC shows it wants teams at top to stay there regardless of league balance

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Whether there is a football season or not, the SEC showed in the juggling of schedules Friday they have zero interest in fairness when it comes to college football.

Or any respect for Arkansas.

Commissioner Greg Sankey allegedly didn’t do it. He said the league’s chief financial officer, Mark Womack, was going to be handling the scheduling.

What he didn’t say was the league apparently was going to do everything it could to make sure they had one or maybe even two spots in whatever college football playoff might happen.

It was clear, though, the SEC has zero respect for the Razorbacks. Missouri should feel the same way. If you say it doesn’t matter because they probably won’t play any games then you’re making excuses for the incompetence of the league office.

The league issued the additional two conference opponents for teams and gave the Hogs Georgia and Florida — two teams ranked in the preseason in the Top 10 by everybody — to a schedule that already has Alabama, Auburn, LSU and Texas A&M by default.

For a team that would not have a win in the league since 2016 if not for a miracle finish against Ole Miss in 2017 the league appeared to be more interested in keeping wins for teams expected to be strong than general fairness.

Sankey stood by handing out politically-correct statements while a member institution was basically told they want to further stomp on a program that is on the bottom.

Hogs coach Sam Pittman will be positive about it because there’s not really a whole lot for a head coach to say who has never even been able to hold a practice of any big time college football team.

At least Missouri’s coach had a year of being a head coach in a smaller conference.

Hunter Yurachek still has to deal with Sankey so he probably can’t say publicly what he would like to say about the whole deal. That’s college sports politics.

Which is why Sankey will probably either say nothing or a long-winded press release where he effectively says absolutely nothing.

On a weekend where other issues sorta swallowed up the SEC’s scheduling bias, Sankey can completely dodge the whole issue. That may be why the release came so late Friday afternoon.

Sankey doesn’t have to admit Andrew Hutchinson of HawgBeat.com (who is really the numbers nerd for all of us covering the Hogs) produced a schedule in 24 hours for the entire league that was more balanced.

Yeah, he came up with this using a blank Excel spreadsheet and a little common sense to balance schedules. He’s not some high-priced CFO with a battery of people and computers at his disposal.

That team of geniuses in Birmingham came up with defending national champion LSU getting Missouri and Vanderbilt.

Speaking of the Tigers in Columbia, they should be as upset as Hog fans. They get Alabama and LSU in the whole deal, but then they have Vanderbilt automatically on their schedule, so at least they have that.

Granted, Arkansas’ schedule is bad mainly because they can’t play themselves and have it count. That’s nothing that was caused by the SEC but by the Hogs having incompetent leadership under Jeff Long that dug the deep hole football now finds itself.

It was going to be impossible for the Hogs to avoid getting at least one high-caliber team. Getting two is kinda like kicking a guy when he’s down, which probably shouldn’t be that surprising.

Remember, this juggling of the SEC schedule wasn’t done by Sankey, but the CFO of the entire conference. That’s the guy who oversees the finances for one of the top cash machines in college sports. Feel free to draw your own comparisons.

There are some that will say Arkansas wants to play the best. Several clichés around that, most of them we heard for two years from the previous coach.

Pittman has correctly said the SEC West is the best conference in all of college football. He then adds that’s where Arkansas belongs.

The only way that works out, though, is getting some wins.

Sankey and the SEC made sure that won’t be easy.

Musselman manages to land recruit from Georgia to jump-start recruiting

We all know there is a dead period in the world of college sports in attempting to lure players.

But it’s a free country and recruits can travel to the town a school is in and look around on their own dime, which is what Chance Moore did and Saturday he verbally committed to Arkansas.

It’s just another sign of how good Eric Musselman and his staff are in getting players, particularly good ones. Moore is the fifth straight Top 100 prospect the Razorbacks have either gotten a commitment from or signed.

That hasn’t happened often for the Hogs — if ever.

Moore is a 6-5, 195-pound shooting guard-small forward from Powder Springs (Ga.) McEachern. He reportedly picked Arkansas over Florida, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Alabama, LSU, Auburn, Ole Miss, Clemson, Florida State, Georgetown, Xavier and others.

He is ranked as the 44th-best player in the 2021 class by ESPN, 83rd by 247Sports and 92nd by Rivals.

Moore and his father visited the Arkansas campus this weekend. He had received an offer May 29 and was on a virtual tour two days later.

Maybe the most telling thing is this staff does so well with all that stuff they drove nearly 700 miles one way from an Atlanta suburb to Fayetteville to visit an essentially empty campus.

That’s some strong recruiting, especially in this virtual day and age.

Does Ohio State football players’ statement start wave of similar moves?

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Saturday turned chaotic pretty quick.

While the Mid-American Conference cancelled the football season, many of the knee-jerk media leaped with both feet that it’s a prelude to everybody following along.

Right now it’s all conjecture, but the Big 10 sent out a release that teams could only keep working in helmets and shorts, but the fear media quickly jumped in predicting a full cancellation of the entire year nationwide by the end of next week.

Ohio State’s players made it clear Friday they were comfortable with things and ready to play:

Well, they are the ones taking the risk and apparently the Buckeyes want to have a voice in any decision being made.

It will be interesting to see if other teams across the country follow this.

SEC makes Holt’s joke Thursday on Halftime become reality on Friday

ON HALFTIME: Bob Holt of the Democrat-Gazette made a joke the SEC would do what’s best to put best teams in the playoff … which is what they did.

ESPN’s Biancardi: ‘Class of 2021 will be most under-evaluated class I’ve ever seen’

ON HALFTIME: ESPN national recruiting director Paul Biancardi tells Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis on ESPN Arkansas how coaches haven’t been able to evaluate recruits this year.

SEC shows complete lack of respect for Hogs in schedule, but big guys happy

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Hunter Yurachek and Sam Pittman can’t say anything publicly but the Southeastern Conference just stuck it to Arkansas in the added opponents for the 2020 football season.

In the process, the SEC made it pretty clear the schools they bow down to and the ones they probably would just as soon leave the league in the next round of conference shuffle.

The Razorbacks now get to play No. 4 Georgia in Fayetteville and go to No. 8 Florida. Out of 10 all-SEC games, 60% of those games will be against teams ranked in the Top 13 in the country in preseason polls.

“We now own the most challenging schedule in the history of college football,” was what Yurachek said in a press release late Friday afternoon.

That may or may not be true, but it’s hard to think of anybody playing one tougher.

Pittman said about the only thing he can say.

“The SEC is the best and that’s where Arkansas belongs … with the best,” Pittman said in a release. “We’ve got an incredible opportunity ahead of us as a program.”

Maybe the only other school that can complain as loudly is Missouri, who gets to play Alabama and LSU. The Tigers do get to play in the East, though, which means they get to play Vanderbilt every year.

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey’s comment was hilarious.

“We made every effort to create a schedule that is as competitive as possible,” he said in a press release.

That’s either incompetence or lying … take your pick.

There was no details of the thought process involved in how they came up with “competitive as possible” when the league matched the worst teams in each division with the top of the other side in a year that’s already kicked sideways.

The only possible storylines in the matchups are having Pittman face the team where he coached the last four years in the Bulldogs while projected starting quarterback Feleipe Franks will return to Gainesville against the Gators.

As usual, the league’s bias in favor of the teams at the top gave Alabama games against Missouri and Kentucky while defending national champion LSU picks up Missouri and Vanderbilt.

Maybe as much as the bias towards the teams at the top is the league sticking it to the guys struggling.

It does let Sankey and the guys at the mother ship in Birmingham not worry about those annoying calls from Tuscaloosa, Baton Rouge, Athens or Gainesville.

They made it pretty clear they really don’t care about the ones from Fayetteville.

The dates will be announced later.

Here is the complete list of additional games for everybody in the SEC:

2020 SEC NON-DIVISIONAL OPPONENTS

ALABAMA
Previously scheduled: vs. Georgia, at Tennessee
Added opponents: vs. Kentucky, at Missouri

ARKANSAS
Previously scheduled: vs. Tennessee, at Missouri
Added opponents: vs. Georgia, at Florida

AUBURN
Previously scheduled: vs. Kentucky, at Georgia
Added opponents: vs. Tennessee, at South Carolina

FLORIDA
Previously scheduled: vs. LSU, at Ole Miss
Added opponents: vs. Arkansas, at Texas A&M

GEORGIA
Previously scheduled: vs. Auburn, at Alabama
Added opponents: vs. Mississippi State, at Arkansas

KENTUCKY
Previously scheduled: vs. Mississippi State, at Auburn
Added opponents: vs. Ole Miss, at Alabama

LSU
Previously scheduled: vs. South Carolina, at Florida
Added opponents: vs. Missouri, at Vanderbilt

OLE MISS
Previously scheduled: vs. Florida, at Vanderbilt
Added opponents: vs. South Carolina, at Kentucky

MISSISSIPPI STATE
Previously scheduled: vs. Missouri, at Kentucky
Added opponents: vs. Vanderbilt, at Georgia

MISSOURI
Previously scheduled: vs. Arkansas, at Mississippi State
Added opponents: vs. Alabama, at LSU

SOUTH CAROLINA
Previously scheduled: vs. Texas A&M, at LSU
Added opponents: vs. Auburn, at Ole Miss

TENNESSEE
Previously scheduled: vs. Alabama, at Arkansas
Added opponents: vs. Texas A&M, at Auburn

TEXAS A&M
Previously scheduled: vs. Vanderbilt, at South Carolina
Added opponents: vs. Florida, at Tennessee

VANDERBILT
Previously scheduled: vs. Ole Miss, at Texas A&M
Added opponents: vs. LSU, at Mississippi State

New SEC football schedule could equal zero wins for Razorbacks

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The best bet for Arkansas fans now is that Covid-19 cancels the college football season. That may be the only way Arkansas doesn’t finish winless.

The SEC announced last month it was playing a 10-game, conference-only schedule in light of the pandemic. Friday, the schedules were officially released and Arkansas was dealt a low blow with the additions of a home game against Georgia and trip to Florida. Both teams are picked to challenge for the SEC East crown.

It was a cruel and unusual trick to play on the Hogs, who are trying to climb back from rock bottom with new coach Sam Pittman. I’ll let my esteemed colleague Andy Hodges pontificate on how the SEC did the Hogs dirty.

So, now Arkansas will not open with quality mid-major Nevada, at Notre Dame or at home against Sun Belt Conference foe Louisiana-Monroe, who shocked Arkansas at War Memorial Stadium in 2012.

Now Arkansas will play SEC East teams Tennessee (who was originally scheduled), the Bulldogs and Gators.

This would be a tough schedule for a team loaded with returning starters coming off a national championship let alone a team who has endured two of the worst seasons in its school history with a new coach and no spring practice to implement schemes or evaluate talent. Talk about dire straits.

“We already owned the nation’s strongest 2020 football schedule and with these additions to our SEC-only schedule, we now own the most challenging schedule in the history of college football,” Hogs athletic director Hunter Yurachek said via social media Friday afternoon. “As Razorbacks we have never backed down from a challenge, this year will be no different. Our focus remains on the growth of our program and supporting Coach Sam Pittman and our football student-athletes as they embrace this extraordinary opportunity.”

That may be the most “glass-half-full” quote I’ve ever seen, but truth be told, Yurachek can’t be happy. Where’s Kentucky and Vanderbilt for Pete’s sake?

For now, it’s the reality Pittman and company have to deal with.

If Arkansas was going to enter a hopeless season, Pittman is the guy to do it with. We knew, or at least those of us who are realistic knew, Arkansas’ ceiling was probably three or four wins and maybe playing competitively in a few losses.

That would be a major accomplishment compared to the dumpster fire that was the Chad Morris Era. It would possibly lead to momentum for 2021 as somehow Pittman continues to land talented recruits. That unexpected stellar performance needs a column of its own soon.

On the low end of things maybe two wins. But, still with the hope of a new regime.

What Pittman needs to guard against now is that a dreadful record and several blowout losses against a stacked schedule doesn’t set the program back five years.

How he will do that is the same way he has navigated the obstacles that have already arisen — with positivity and reassurance.

By all accounts, Arkansas players and recruits have bought into what Pittman is selling as a program on the rise. His stock in my eyes really took off when he hired talented offensive coordinator Kendal Briles and defensive coordinator Barry Odom, the former Missouri head coach.

Those two moves along with the great recruiting have gone hand-in-hand in setting the tone.

Before Covid, I was leaning more toward three or four wins with a late-season run because the roster does have some talent, especially on offense and Pittman’s ability to coach the offensive line, which has been a major disaster recently.

You have to figure if Pittman could pull some strings on the line, senior running back Rakeem Boyd could have a monster season.

He’s already being recognized on preseason watch lists despite the fact that it is a common fact he’s had little help up front. When you couple in the fact that former Gators quarterback Feleipe Franks is under center with talented sophomores Trey Knox and Treylon Burks to pass to, that could cause optimism that wins over Ole Miss, Missouri, Mississippi State and ULM are possible.

A good debut against Nevada pushes the win potential more. You’d also have to hope that a beleaguered defense led by linebackers Bumper Pool and Grant Morgan could step it up.

So, who can Arkansas beat on the revised schedule?

Well, Arkansas won’t be favored in any game. A lot depends on how the schedule falls. With new coaches, Ole Miss, Mississippi State and Missouri seem like the best bets, but if the Hogs are 0-9 heading to Columbia, Missouri, to play Missouri in December that probably gives the Tigers the edge.

However, Mizzou has its own problems drawing LSU and Alabama on the revised schedule.

The gap between Mizzou, Ole Miss and Mississippi State isn’t as far as some may think. Arkansas just has to make sure they keep perspective and play well against the West teams who will be picked near the bottom.

Tennessee is real wild card. They have struggled, but some expect them to have a breakout season.

If Arkansas doesn’t go 0-10, Pittman needs to be commended because a whole bunch of media members have already penciled in that mark.

If the worst does happen, Pittman needs to shrug it off and hopefully start anew with a more realistic schedule next season when Rice, Georgia Southern and Arkansas-Pine Bluff are added.

League releases testing, safety, guidelines but no schedule … yet

Although it could be announced later on Friday or over the weekend for the long news cycle, the Southeastern Conference hasn’t released a football schedule, but they did issue guidelines.

“Our health experts have guided us though each stage of preparation for the safe return of activity and, together with the medical staffs embedded within our athletics programs, we will continue to monitor developments around the virus and evolve our plan to meet the health needs of our student-athletes,” commissioner Greg Sankey said in a press release.

Here are the key items in the release:

Testing

• The SEC will coordinate centralized testing through a third-party provider to ensure consistency in surveillance and pre-competition testing. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is the current standard testing method for the COVID-19 virus. Alternative testing methods may be considered if sufficient data develops to support those methods.

• In the sport of football, student-athletes and others in direct contact with the program will receive a PCR surveillance test at least twice weekly during competition, typically six days and three days prior to competition. The Task Force recommends exploring alternative testing methods that will accommodate a third test, in addition to the two required PCR tests, that will provide for the reliability and rapid response necessary for diagnostic testing in a timeframe closer to competition.

• In the sports of volleyball and soccer, student-athletes and others in direct contact with the program will receive a PCR surveillance test at least twice weekly during competition, with one to occur three days prior to the first competition of the week. The Task Force recommends exploring alternative testing methods that will accommodate a third test, in addition to the two required PCR tests, that will provide for the reliability and rapid response necessary for diagnostic testing in a timeframe closer to the first competition of the week.

• In the sport of cross country, student-athletes and others in direct contact with the program will receive a PCR surveillance test at least once per week during competition, with that test to occur three days prior to each competition.

Masking

• In football, volleyball and soccer, all coaches, staff and non-competing personnel will be required to wear face coverings on the sideline and physical distancing will be employed to the extent possible.

• In cross country, competing student-athletes are required to wear a face covering at the starting line, which may be removed when proper distancing has been achieved.  Coaches and staff associated with cross country competition are expected to utilize social distancing to the extent possible and will be required to wear a face covering during pre- and post-competition.

Other notes

• Each institution is required to designate a COVID-19 Protocol Oversight Officer who will be responsible for education and ensuring compliance with the SEC’s COVID-19 management requirements.

• The SEC announced in July that student-athletes in all sports who elect to not participate in intercollegiate athletics during the fall 2020 academic semester because of health and/or safety concerns related to COVID-19 will continue to have their scholarships honored by their university and will remain in good standing with their team.

• The full SEC Return to Activity and Medical Guidance Task Force Requirements for COVID-19 Management of Fall Sports can be found HERE.

It’s walking, folks, not playing football so Pittman can’t evaluate players now

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It appeared during a roughly 45-minute video press conference Thursday a lot of folks are expecting Sam Pittman to project how good his players are without really seeing them play … or practice.

“Guys, I hate to be vague [but] you guys realize we’ve been walking,” he said at one point. “I could name the guys that are doing really well mentally and all that but it’s really hard to figure out who can play good and who can’t because we’re in a walkthrough with no pads.”

Everybody looks good in shorts without even helmets.

And, while Pittman has seen film on players and even tried to recruit some of them when he was at Georgia, he has no idea what kind of player they are now.

What he can’t (and won’t) say to anyone is he has no idea how they will respond to this coaching staff and the new way of doing things.

On the other hand, I will say without hesitation this is the first time the majority of these players have had a college coach that has actually coached winners before and they actually believe him.

While Pittman has never been a head coach, he is becoming pretty good at talking around things without saying a whole lot, especially when it comes to individual players. That’s not particularly a negative, especially in a year that often resembles some sort of alternative universe.

He does sound fairly confident he knows who his quarterback is going to be, though.

By the time he got around to backtracking during the press conference to indicate Feleipe Franks wasn’t the official starter yet it wasn’t that hard to figure out everybody else’s chances were kinda thin.

He mentioned just about everybody’s name but he pointed out he hasn’t seen them throwing passes yet.

And why it’s mostly about knowing WHAT to do because the offense is a little different.

“Kendal Briles’ offense is not that hard to learn,” he said. “It’s just fast. You have to know the in’s and out’s of everything because he’s gonna snap the football and you need to understand where you’re supposed to go because it’s gonna happen pretty fast.”

But back to Franks, who Pittman has seen throw passes in SEC games and, as he pointed out, has taken a team to a bowl game win on New Year’s Day.

While he hasn’t coached a single game, he has managed to come off with a unique way of handling a press conference, but with a refreshing twist — he does it without the tired old clichés.

We’ve heard them for a couple of years, usually more in a single press conference than wins the entire time.

And he still hasn’t gotten one single real practice with a new team.

So, no, he’s not going to go in-depth on a lot of individuals right now.