Springdale native and former Arkansas tight end Ben Cleveland talked with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas on Wednesday morning about the last time the Hogs beat Alabama … in double overtime in 2006.
Busch Light Apple Morning Rush Podcast — Isaiah Joe impact, pay cuts, plus Kevin McPherson
Tye & Tommy on Isaiah Joe not being at the first workout, pay cuts in CFB, Kevin McPherson and more!
McPherson says Joe ‘has one foot on each side of fence’ on decision
Arkansas basketball fans have been buzzing since practices started earlier this week because Isaiah Joe hasn’t been there, fueling the idea he’s leaving for the NBA.
Hogville.net’s Kevin McPherson told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas on Wednesday that Joe, a 6-5 shooting guard from Fort Smith Northside, is straddling the fence.
The Razorbacks returned to practice this week and have released a couple of practice videos on Twitter, but that’s all anyone has seen.
Class of 2024 on the floor pic.twitter.com/K1nwDrw0TD
— Arkansas Razorbacks Basketball ? (@RazorbackMBB) July 21, 2020
We also got our first look at some newcomers and current players dunking.
? @moses_moody3 ? pic.twitter.com/V69aEMTHh7
— Arkansas Razorbacks Basketball ? (@RazorbackMBB) July 21, 2020
The ongoing drama will be decided by Aug. 3 because that’s when he has to come down on one side of the fence or the other.
Former Razorback TE Ben Cleveland joins The Morning Rush
Former Razorback TE Ben Cleveland joins The Morning Rush to discuss his time with Arkansas, if farming or practice is more difficult, rap music, and just how good was “The Springdale 5.” All that and more, check it out now!
Legal guesswork by Bielema’s attorneys drags Yurachek’s name into suit
Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek got dragged into the latest round of written exchanges between lawyers as Bret Bielema’s attorney said he has been in cahoots with the Razorback Foundation all along.
The lawsuit said:
“Considering the incestuous relationship between the Athletics Department and the Foundation, it is inconceivable that the Foundation would have stopped making monthly buyout payments and threatened Coach Bielema with a multi-million dollar lawsuit unless Mr. Yurachek was either the architect of that plan or unequivocally expressed his support for it.”
Okay, but unless the attorney has someone ready to step up and testify to that in court it’s just legal speculation to muddy the waters in a lawsuit that is destined for some kind of settlement.
“Of course I’ve had conversations with Scott Varady and the Razorback Foundation,” Yurachek said in his virtual press conference last week, “but this is a contract that was executed by the Razorback Foundation and was guaranteed by the Razorback Foundation.”
Somehow, none of this is really that surprising. Julie Cromer Peoples hauled off and jumped in over her head when Jeff Long was fired.
She promptly showed she wasn’t very good at handling a firing and it’s on Joseph Steinmetz allowing her to hire the new football coach.
When the Foundation figured out Bielema was trying to get some experience (and a Super Bowl ring) with the New England Patriots instead of getting a real job they quit paying him, which is a standard business maneuver.
Naturally, though, Bielema’s attorneys haven’t had to produce an answer to why the coach had a room behind a bar on Dickson St. and blew off meeting recruits to fly off on gambling trips.
That is just part of the reason the program took a two-year nosedive which led to Bielema getting fired for simply being lazy and completely incompetent.
Exactly why Bielema was only able to get the equivalent of a graduate assistant’s job with the Patriots after being a head coach in the SEC is rather mind-boggling. He at least won more than his successor … who got a job making $750,000 a month after getting fired.
We probably haven’t heard the end of this and there may be some interesting revelations now that Bielema’s lawyers appear to be taking wild guesses in their filings.
And it may just all go away in a settlement.
No Joe could mean something … or it may mean absolutely nothing
The only thing we know for certain about Isaiah Joe’s absence from Arkansas’ first basketball practice is that he wasn’t there, according to a report by Bob Holt at WholeHogSports.com on Tuesday.
Mike Cawood from the sports communications office told Holt that Joe was “still exploring his NBA dream,” which wasn’t particularly surprising.
Naturally, speculation will run rampant now as we basically have little else to guess about for the next couple of weeks.
Joe, a 6-5 shooter from Fort Smith Northside, has until Aug. 3 to make a decision about whether to come back for another year with the Hogs or declare himself available for the NBA Draft.
It’s easy to guess his absence from the first practice is a guess that he’s gone.
The flip side to that is, well, Joe has shown over the last couple of years missing the first day of practice probably isn’t going to affect him a whole lot.
Busch Light Apple Morning Rush Podcast — Sports Positives, Arkansas QB room, Tyler Wilson, and more!
Tye & Tommy on the sports positives, the QB room in Fayetteville, Tyler Wilson, plus Would You Rather Tuesday!
Players should have say in playing if we expect them to handle NIL
It’s almost reached the point where you wonder if some of the fear mongers in the media that think college football should be cancelled think the players should have a voice at all.
After all, they are the same ones who are pushing paying the players.
“There’s a lot of people out there in the national media that are basically lobbying,” said Tom Murphy of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on Tuesday morning with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas. “‘Oh, it’s too dangerous, too risky, to play football.’ These are the same people who are arguing vociferously for name-image-likeness … for giving athletes every advantage.
“I also think there should be some advantage for athletes, but if you think the athletes are smart enough to make money and profit off their image, do that wisely and all, then they are smart enough to make decisions for themselves about playing football.”
That may confuse some of the fear mongers who simply refuse to look at “the science,” which really is just interpreting the numbers like the “experts” that are the medical equivalent of weathermen.
“I don’t think you can have it both ways,” Murphy said.
He’s right about that, especially when players have been back on their campuses for several weeks now. Not one player has died or even been seriously ill.
The numbers show healthy kids under the age of 25 are at virtually zero risk. Yes, I’m well aware everyone worries about spreading it, but they aren’t close enough to people at risk until they get away from the football facility and then they are like everybody else.
If they aren’t responsible enough to follow the rules, that’s an issue for coaches and administrators to handle, but so far it is not something anyone has heard about.
In the Arkansas, any person testing positive in any kind of physical condition has a 99% chance of living. The long-term effects right now are guesses at best, but limited to people with pre-existing conditions being damaged.
“If they can have a voice on those matters, they can have a voice on this matter (playing),” said Craft at one point.
This isn’t everybody, of course. But the knee-jerks who only look at positive test results without actually looking at the details want to shut everything down.
Vaccines only reduce deaths and symptoms, which is how the efficiency of one is determined.
“There is some in the national media who, because of their agenda, think it’s too dangerous but want [the players] to have all their rights in other ways,” Murphy said. “You can’t think of them as children that can’t make good decisions about covid and have it the other way on other issues.”
With the players, athletics director Hunter Yurachek noted last week how much they’ve noticed the players improving off-the-field with social distancing, wearing masks and things like that.
Playing is not just a decision for administrators.
The players should have a say, too.
Chavanelle on high school delayed starts affect recruiting for college teams
HawgBeat.com’s Nikki Chavanelle on how seasons getting pushed back could affect the world of recruiting for college football in an already chaotic year with Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis (Halftime) on ESPN Arkansas Tuesday afternoon.
Wilson looking forward to seeing Briles’ offense on field for Hogs this year
Former Arkansas quarterback Tyler Wilson told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas that he’s always liked what Kendal Briles’ offenses have done.










