Tom Murphy of the Democrat-Gazette talked with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft about Hogs beating MSU, early preview of game with Auburn.
Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Barry Odom… hire of the year
Tye & Tommy on the defense stepping up, Tom Murphy joins, plus workout advice
Hogs’ stats better than Auburn with two remarkably similar starting games
Arkansas fans are giddy after beating No. 16 Mississippi State on Saturday night … while Auburn was getting drilled by Georgia.
Which is why some of the folks on on The Plains are starting to get a little restless.
Don’t blame the Razorbacks. They didn’t send Gus Malzahn and Chad Morris to Auburn. They voluntarily paid Gus $7 million a year for awhile (with guarantees) to keep him from coming to Arkansas … which some think never was going to happen anyway.
Both teams come into Saturday afternoon’s game with identical 1-1 records, but completely different mindsets among the fans.
Welcome to the SEC where moods and expectations change weekly. It just means more.
But on paper, these two teams have lost to a common opponent (Georgia) and won a game over a similar opponent (Mississippi State and Kentucky) … and the Hogs have BETTER numbers.
The Tigers are struggling, especially on offense and that’s what has their fan base moaning and groaning.
They haven’t been able to run the ball which is what Malzahn and Morris desperately want to do. The Hogs are out-performing them through two games in that area, but it’s not exactly a strong point on either team.
Arkansas has 140 yards combined in the first two games while Auburn has 130 … yes that’s combining both games and just remember that’s what happens when both teams have played Georgia.
The Razorbacks also have more total offense (555-540). Let that sink in for a minute. The Hogs are out-performing Auburn and the offensive coordinator who will gladly take credit for Clemson winning a couple of national championships.
Oh, lest we forget, they also have Malzahn. Many folks in Arkansas still thinks he invented offense. While he’s shown he can win a single game at the big-time college level, Gus can’t seem to win THE game that matters most every year.
At Auburn, Malzahn has beaten Georgia exactly twice in nine tries and one of those was the miracle pass in 2013. He has beaten Alabama three times which means more to some people but is it really worth $7 million a year to more than a few boosters?
That’s their problem, along with their current offensive coordinator who has established an offense that looks remarkably similar to what he had at Arkansas in 2018-19 … and not making it two years.
Morris gets fired in Fayetteville and goes to Auburn. Now the Razorbacks are slightly ahead of the Tigers in offensive production two games into the season.
Still think coaching doesn’t matter?
Auburn may have now passed Texas A&M as the most over-rated team in the SEC. What many talking heads have said the first couple of weeks is the Tigers’ defense is why they are not over-rated.
The Hogs are doing better. While the Tigers’ allegedly top-tier defense has given up an average of 413 yards a game the Hogs have allowed 393.5 per game … and that includes Mike Leach’s Air Raid offense.
In both games, Auburn’s offense has looked more chaotic than Arkansas’ … which includes that opener against Georgia where it looked at times like they came to the line and played a game of musical chairs.
The oddsmakers apparently think the Hogs’ win over State last week was a fluke. They have Auburn as a 16-point favorite, so apparently they are looking at recruiting rankings and not the stats from this year.
Since back in the summer, I’ve said the talent on this Arkansas team wasn’t as bad as the record the last three years or so.
The defense played hard, but not well, in the opener against Georgia and got ripped apart in the third quarter.
Against Mississippi State, they stuck to a solid game plan and made the plays they needed to and the offense did enough to come away with a win nobody expected.
But the biggest thing I’ve been curious about for two years is what happens if this team gets that win that can kick-start a program.
By the numbers from this season, the Hogs and Tigers is a close matchup.
And now we’re all interested to see what Barry Odom cooks up for the Hogs’ defensive plan this week.
What Malzahn said after Auburn completely shut down by Georgia
Auburn coach Gus Malzahn talked with the media about the Bulldogs making the Tigers’ offense completely one-dimensional in 27-6 loss.
Brooks’ early TD interception return probably helped Odom stick to plan
Sam Pittman really couldn’t lose against Mississippi State, but when he got the defensive plan from Barry Odom last Monday he might have thought they could win it.
Nobody else did.
After blowing up the stats against LSU in Baton Rouge last week, Mike Leach really couldn’t win even if he hung half a hundred on Arkansas.
Everybody thought that was going to happen anyway.
The resulting 21-14 win by the Razorbacks in Starkville was the biggest upset in the league Saturday, but Pittman kept dropping hints all last week he was probably more confident than the fans or the media.
He knew what Odom’s plan was and it wasn’t developed by looking at the Bulldogs’ win over the Tigers last week. Leach’s offense really hasn’t changed much in over 20 years.
“We had watched a couple of games from last year and teams that had success on them,” he said of going back and looking at Washington State film, where Leach had coached the last eight seasons. “It’s easy to find.”
The Cougars were 6-7 last year so they didn’t have to look far, but the key has always been to rush two or three and drop everybody else into a zone.
That goes against the aggressive nature of most defensive coaches, including Odom.
“Barry said, ‘this is what I want to do,'” Pittman said. “Just keep reminding me to be patient.”
That was just part of the puzzle. Odom had to sell it to the players because the defense was going to have to be disciplined in coverage.
“All week the kids believed we could rally around the ball and make tackles and for the most part tonight that’s exactly what we did,” Pittman said.
But patience was the key word defensively for this game. Odom wanted to cut out big chunk plays and make the Bulldogs slowly dink-and-dunk their way downfield. That usually tests the patience of an offense like Leach’s.
It also meant he was going to have to get an almost fanatical effort from his defense. He ended up getting every bit of that and it paid off on the opening drive of the game.
State quarterback K.J. Costello, who had 623 yards against LSU last week, had worked downfield to the Arkansas 31 where he tried to force a pass and he threw it right to Hogs defensive back Greg Brooks, Jr., who grabbed and set sail for 69 yards down the left sideline and the opening score of the game.
“We talked about it all day,” Pittman said. “We said, hey he’s going to get impatient and hopefully he’ll throw us some.”
Brooks had his touchdown return and Joe Foucha made a big return, picking off two passes.
But it was the interception and return that may have convinced Odom he had the right plan and it also got a chuckle from Pittman later.
“Brooks probably helped him not get out of it,” he said. “(Odom) said just keep reminding me. It was a great game plan.
“It looked good on Monday. We thought we could execute it and all that, then put a little twist in it here and there. Barry’s really got those guys playing hard.”
All of that finally paid off Saturday night as the Hogs won the turnover battle, 4-2, had three interceptions and some eye-popping defensive stats.
Linebackers Bumper Pool (20) and Grant Morgan (15) had the most tackles with defensive back Jalen Catalon right behind them (13).
The linebackers were supposed to be a big question mark going into the season, but Pool and Morgan are playing with an almost fanatical urgency.
It was a key part of stopping State twice on fourth down plays. That was huge and was a direct result of the Hogs’ defense swarming to the ball like Odom wanted.
The offense did enough to win. Quarterback Feleipe Franks’ experience and arm strength showed through. He found De’Vion Warren and Hudson Henry so open no defender was in the same zip code and he delivered strikes that got there before anybody could react.
But maybe the key part was the Hogs overcame in-game adversity and figured out how to win.
When the offense loses the top running back and wide receiver early in the game, offensive coordinator Kendal Briles had to adjust and he did.
The defense also lost cornerback Montaric Brown early but redshirt freshman Hudson Clark came in and seemed to make the loss not that noticeable.
“We had a meeting this morning and Barry and Sam Carter (the cornerbacks coach) were going to play him regardless if somebody got hurt or not,” Pittman said. “They said he’d earned playing time and was playing really good and I agree with them.”
There were some negatives and they will be discussed over the next week, but for now fans don’t want to hear that.
Arkansas’ first SEC win since 2017 doesn’t call for a lot of nit-picking the fine points of what needs to be improved.
For now, the Hogs finally have a win in the SEC. They avoided any losing streak records and a different outcome Saturday night would have tied them for the most futility in the SEC West.
Mississippi State will get to the keep that record a little while longer.
Pittman after Hogs snap SEC losing streak beat No. 16 Mississippi State
Arkansas coach Sam Pittman was staying pretty even after a surprising 21-14 win over the Bulldogs a week after they shocked LSU.
Pool after Razorbacks snapping 20-game SEC losing streak with surprising win
Bumper Pool said after win over 16th-ranked Mississippi State the Hogs would celebrate for 12 hours, then get ready for Auburn.
Franks on offense doing enough to get upset victory over Mississippi State
Arkansas quarterback Feleipe Franks with the media following the 21-14 win over the No. 16 Bulldogs on Saturday night in Starkville.
GAMEDAY BLOG: Arkansas manages to close out 21-14 win over MSU
The streak is over.
Arkansas managed to hang on in Starkville on Saturday night for a 21-14 win to break a 20-game losing streak in the SEC.
Can Arkansas figure out how to win a game?
They go into the fourth quarter in Starkville with a 21-14 lead, but Mississippi State is driving and continuing to gain ground in small chunks, but keep the chains moving.
The Bulldogs have the ball in Arkansas territory starting the final quarter.
The biggest question may be if the defense can get at least one stop.
Hudson Henry got wide open and Feleipe Franks delivered a 12-yard pass to complete a scoring drive to open the second half and give Arkansas a 21-7 lead, but Mississippi State answered quickly.
It was Henry’s first touchdown with the Razorbacks.
It’s a good bet Barry Odom got ahold of some film of Mississippi State coach Mike Leach’s problems against Washington when he was coaching at Washington State.
It’s pretty simple. Rush three, drop eight into coverage and get the guy with the ball on ground by cutting his feet out from under him.
That’s exactly what Arkansas did in the first half to take a 14-7 lead into halftime that probably should have been considerably more.
The Razorbacks had just one turnover, Feleipe Franks managed the game at quarterback and Trelon Smith stepped up when Rakeem Boyd was injured and left the field.
But the key has been the defensive game plan that was executed perfectly in the first half.
The Bulldogs had 163 passing yards and 206 overall but they weren’t able to get the big plays like they did against LSU.
If there is reason for Hog fans to be concerned it’s Boyd, wide receiver Treylon Burks and Grant Morgan being dinged.
No statuses available yet on any of them.
After getting stopped near the Mississippi State goal, the defense (that is playing lights-out) got a stop and Feleipe Franks looked like he did at times at Florida.
With Rakeem Boyd in the medical tent, the Hogs drove 69 yards in eight plays with Franks finding De’Vion Warren without a defender in the same zip code for a 19-yard scoring play.
Arkansas goes back on top of the 16th-ranked Bulldogs, 14-7.
The Hogs decided to go with redshirt freshman K.J. Jefferson in the red zone against Mississippi State after moving it downfield and he couldn’t produce points.
On fourth-and-goal from the 2, Jefferson tried the middle and ended up fumbling, giving it back to the Bulldogs.
In what was thought to be a high-scoring affair, it’s starting off bumpy, but the Hogs’ offense has managed to get to 100 yards … but couldn’t convert in the Red Zone.
It’s 7-7 with 10:29 to go in the second quarter as State takes over.
But Mississippi State answered on the next series, going 76 yards in 14 plays with Dillon Johnson scoring on a fourth-and-1 from the 6 to cut the lead to 21-14.
The Hogs’ defense did make the Bulldogs use 7:21 of the third quarter on the drive.
Now the Arkansas offense has to answer or this is going to get interesting quickly.
Mississippi State has held onto the ball for nearly the entire first quarter as Arkansas’ offense may finally get on the field for the first time with less than four minutes to go in the period.
Razorbacks defensive coordinator Barry Odom has gone with a zone pass protection and the Bulldogs have just hit crossing routes and converted a pair of fourth-down runs.
Quarterback K.J. Costello scrambled out of the pocket and found JaVonta Payton in the back of the end zone for a 17-yard scoring play with 3:59 to play in the first quarter, tying the game at 7-7.
Arkansas’ defense made a big play early as Greg Brooks hauled in a pass thrown directly to him by Mississippi State’s K.J. Costello, returning it 69 yards for a score.
The Bulldogs took the opening kickoff and managed to get 39 yards, including getting a break when running back Kylin Hill appeared to fumble and the Razorbacks’ Bumper Pool jumped on it.
Review apparently didn’t think it saw enough evidence to call it a fumble, then Costello tried one of the crossing routes that had been working for State and completely missed anybody in a maroon jersey.
Brooks made the catch and was untouched down the left sideline for the score and a 7-0 lead with 3:16 gone in the first quarter.
Here’s 10 things you need to know before Arkansas GameDay starts at 1:30
Arkansas hits the road for the first time in 2020 when they travel to face No. 16 Mississippi State on Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
The game will be broadcast on SEC Network Alternate and the ESPN app.
You can listen live HERE at HitThatLine.com and ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.
• 1:30 p.m.: Arkansas GameDay with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft.
• 3:30 p.m.: Pregame show from Starville from the Learfield/IMG Radio Network.
• 6:30 p.m.: Hogs-Mississippi State with Chuck Barrett and Quinn Grovey.
10 things to know before kickoff
1. Arkansas is coming off a 37-10 defeat to No. 4 Georgia in the 2020 season-opener but did lead 7-5 at halftime. The Razorbacks struck first in the opening quarter when senior QB Feleipe Franks found sophomore wide receiver Treylon Burks for a 49-yard touchdown toss.
2. Burks had a game to remember and recorded career-highs of seven catches and 102 receiving against the Bulldogs in Week 1. Three of his receptions on the day eclipsed 20 yards, including a 49-yard career-long grab for his first career touchdown. Last year, Burks finished second among SEC freshman averaging 16.4 yards per catch on 29 receptions.
The first of many trips to the EZ for @TreylonBurks ? pic.twitter.com/rCle29vOWM
— Arkansas Razorback Football (@RazorbackFB) September 27, 2020
3. Franks made his Arkansas debut after grad transferring in the offseason from Florida, where he served as the starter from 2017-19.
The Crawfordsville, Fla., product completed 19-of-36 passes for 200 yards and a touchdown while chipping in 13 yards on the ground.
He engineered a seven-play, 91-yard touchdown drive in the first quarter that was Arkansas’ first 90+ yard scoring drive since 2018 against Vanderbilt.
4. The linebacker duo of senior Grant Morgan and junior Bumper Pool were the two leading tackles for defensive coordinator Barry Odom’s unit, combining for 24 stops against Georgia.
Morgan, a native of Greenwood, made his first career start while appearing in his 37th consecutive game, and totaled a career-high 13 tackles with ten coming in the first half. The team’s second-leading tackler a season ago, Pool picked up where he left off, recording 11 tackles, 0.5 sacks and 1.0 tackle for loss with a pass breakup.
The pair teamed up for a crucial four-and-one stop in the second quarter, forcing a turnover on downs by wrapping up UGA running back Zamir White for no gain at the Arkansas 24-yard line.
5. The Razorback secondary forced Georgia into two turnovers by generating an interception and a fumble.
Redshirt junior defensive back Montaric Brown picked off the second pass of his career when Georgia was threatening inside the red zone.
Redshirt freshman defensive back Jalen Catalon forced a fumble which was scooped up by true freshman defensive back Myles Slusher for a seven-yard return.
6. Nine different Hogs made their first career start last weekend including De’Vion Warren (WR), Beaux Limmer (RG), Brady Latham (LG), Isaiah Nichols (DT), Julius Coates (DE), Grant Morgan (LB), Jalen Catalon (S), Simeon Blair (S) and Jonathan Marshall (DT).
7. Razorback players selected four seniors in Boyd, Franks, Marshall and LB Grant Morgan to serve as team captains for the 2020 campaign.
8. This weekend’s matchup against No. 16 Mississippi State is the first of three Arkansas matchups this year to pit two first-year SEC head coaches against one another.
Arkansas’ Sam Pittman is in his first year as an FBS head coach, while the Bulldogs’ Mike Leach is starting his first year in Starkville, and his 19th year as a head coach after previously guiding Texas Tech and Washington State.
Later this season, Pittman and the Hogs will also take on first-year SEC head coaches Lane Kiffin (Ole Miss) and Eli Drinkwitz (Missouri).
9. Despite meeting just twice before 1992, the Razorbacks and Bulldogs have met every year for the last 29 seasons, with Arkansas holding a 16-13-1 all-time series edge.
The series is deadlocked at 7-7 when games are played in the Magnolia State. Arkansas’ last win in the series was a 58-42 triumph on Nov. 18, 2016, in Starkville.
The year’s meeting marks the first time since a Sept. 30, 1939 meeting in Memphis, that the two have not squared off in November. The Razorbacks have won all three overtime games against Mississippi State, with the last a 38-31 double overtime thriller in 2010.
10. According to the latest edition of the AP Poll (Sept. 27), eight of Arkansas’ 10 opponents this year are ranked inside the top 25.
For the first time in school history, the Razorbacks are facing back-to-back ranked teams to begin the season.
Pittman was also the first head coach in school history to take on a ranked opponent in his first game. In both 2014 and 2016, Arkansas faced eight ranked teams, finished 7-6 and made bowl appearances.













