Tye and Evan talk with CD about Week 10 of the NFL Fantasy Football season!
Tye and Evan talk with CD about Week 10 of the NFL Fantasy Football season!
Perhaps nothing showed the ineptitude of the Decade of Darkness surrounding Arkansas sports was when someone let others start changing the Razorback brand.
Apparently someone didn’t pay attention to the fact that when Nike starts monkeying around with uniform design and changing stuff, it never works out well.
Jeff Long, in his apparent determination to destroy as much as possible around the history of Arkansas athletics, had the football teams in some of the ugliest uniforms ever designed, introduced the front-facing Hog logo and even allowed various sports to wear gray and black uniforms.
Every so-called anthracite piece of apparel with the Razorback logo should be burned. Those black uniforms could be used to start the fire.
My question has always been why some geniuses over-think things when you have one of the most unique and recognizable brands in sports with a color scheme that works?
“You are absolutely right,” Hogs radio announcer Chuck Barrett told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas on Friday morning from Gainesville. “That’s just one of the reasons, I’ll confess, that I hate the forward-facing Hog.”
It’s similar to the Dallas Cowboys changing their star, the New York Yankees messing with the pinstripes or Alabama running onto the field in something other than red or white.
Even Sam Pittman admitted in his press conference Thursday the classic Razorback is the one he prefers on his shirts. In typical Pittman fashion, though, he sort of shrugged it off, saying, “I’ll put on what they give me for free and rock it.”
That last part of was Pittman being Pittman.
If you’ve paid attention the last few years the horrendous anthracite has disappeared from the football field for a few years now. Chad Morris played around with white helmets a couple of times, but that even looked strange.
You do not change the way your brand looks if you’ve got a good one.
“You’ve already got the most recognizable logo in college sports, why would you want to change it?” Barrett asked. “That’s stupid.”
Yes, Chuck, it is.
But apparently there are some that want to look at a game on television and have to figure out what team is playing. That’s even more stupid.
It was the original (and really only) general manager the Dallas Cowboys ever had, Tex Schramm, who designed one of the most recognizable looks in all of sports by trotting people out on the field at Texas Stadium in different looks and watching on a television monitor.
“That’s where most of your fans see you,” Schramm said in 1983 after changing the road uniforms of the Cowboys, tweaking the colors … to look better on television.
It may be one of the smartest sports decisions I’ve ever seen. In a stadium there may be 100,000 people looking at you but on television even lower level teams have many more than that watch an ESPN+ on their computer or phone.
“Every one of those forward-facing logos looks exactly alike,” Barrett said Friday morning, an observation I noted on statewide radio when it was introduced. “You just substitute colors and names.
“We were never called Arkansas State before the front-facing logos.”
That has happened since Long allowed that logo to be used.
“A couple of times they’ve put that Red Wolf up there that looks EXACTLY like our forward-facing logo,” Barrett said. “They get them confused. Hey, you don’t see any Alabama or Florida front-facing logos, do you?”
Hunter Yurachek has seemingly spent three years fixing problems you’d think he wouldn’t have to address taking over a Power 5 program. Especially one with the most unique and recognizable brand in sports.
“At some point you’ve got to stand up for what your tradition has been about,” Barrett said. “We’re not the only one. We’ve let — and other schools have let — Nike come in and change a little bit too much.
“When they start messing with the logo they’ve gone too far.”
He’s absolutely right.
And it’s something that can be fixed … even before the whole soft drink issue.
Longtime Gators play-by-play announce Mick Hubert on Halftime with Phil Elson on Hogs quarterback Feleipe Franks getting back for game.
Tye & Tommy on who steps up tomorrow, best Hog logo, Chuck joins and more!
Arkansas’ Southeastern Conference slate has officially been released, the league office announced today.
The Hogs will tip off the new conference season on Thursday, Dec. 31, when they will travel to Kentucky to face the Wildcats, who are ranked 11th in the AP’s Preseason Poll.
The last time the two teams met, Arkansas scored 103 points, a then-SEC program record for points in a game, in front of 5,638 Razorback fans, the most at a home game since January of 2011.
Following the opener, Arkansas will welcome rival Missouri (Jan. 3) to Bud Walton Arena for the first home game of the 2021 SEC Season. Arkansas beat Missouri early last season at home, the Hogs’ first win in the series since 2016. Arkansas will then head to Tennessee (Jan. 7).
After the trip to Knoxville, the Razorbacks will host Texas A&M (Jan. 10), who the Hogs once again knocked out of the SEC Tournament in dramatic fashion.
The Aggies are currently ranked one spot ahead of Arkansas in the AP’s Preseason Poll, sitting at 13. Florida (Jan. 14) will then come to the Hill to make it two straight at home for the Hogs.
After the two-game homestand, the Hogs will go on the road twice, both times playing on Monday.
Arkansas is headed to the AP’s Preseason No. 1 first, as the Razorbacks will take on South Carolina (Jan. 18) in Colonial Life Arena. After a week off, Arkansas will resume play the next Monday at Georgia (Jan. 25).
Vanderbilt (Jan. 28) will come to Fayetteville to start the Hogs’ two-game homestand.
Three days later, Arkansas will host Auburn at Bud Walton Arena (Jan. 31).
Mike Neighbors’ squad will then rotate home and road games, traveling to Missouri (Feb. 4), hosting Mississippi State (Feb. 11), who is ranked No. 6 in the AP Preseason Poll, and then traveling to face A&M (Feb. 14) for the second time. The Hogs will then host Ole Miss (Feb. 18).
Similar to the end of last season, Arkansas will be the road team in two straight games before ending the season in front of its fans at the Palace.
Arkansas will first travel to LSU (Feb. 21), followed by a trip to Auburn (Feb. 25), which will be the second matchup between the teams in 2021. Arkansas will close the SEC schedule, and the regular season, with a home battle against Alabama (Feb. 28).
The SEC Tournament, which will be played at Bon Secours Wellness Arena in Greenville, S.C. for the fourth time, will begin on Wednesday March 3.
2021 SEC Schedule:
Thursday, Dec. 31 – @ Kentucky
Sunday, Jan. 3 – Missouri
Thursday, Jan. 7 – @ Tennessee
Sunday, Jan. 10 – Texas A&M
Thursday, Jan. 14 – Florida
Monday, Jan. 18 – @ South Carolina
Monday, Jan. 25 – @ Georgia
Thursday, Jan. 28 – Vanderbilt
Sunday, Jan. 31 – Auburn
Thursday, Feb. 4 – @ Missouri
Thursday, Feb. 11 – Mississippi State
Sunday, Feb. 14 – @ Texas A&M
Thursday, Feb. 18 – Ole Miss
Sunday, Feb. 21 – @ LSU
Thursday, Feb. 25 – @ Auburn
Sunday, Feb. 28 – Alabama
Tip times and TV designations will be announced at a later date.
Hogs coach Eric Musselman wasn’t happy with the defense played in the 103-67 win by the Red team in the Red-White game Thursday night.
Razorbacks guard J.D. Notae got hot after a slow start and ended up hitting 7-of-11 3-point shots, getting 24 points and five assists in the second half on his way to a big 30-point night.
Justin Smith (22 points, 6 assists) on hitting three 3-point shots in first appearance as a Razorback in front of a live crowd in 103-67 Red win.
Before a crowd of 2,023 students the Red defeated the White, 103-67, Thursday evening at Bud Walton Arena.
The Red team only committed six turnovers while dishing out 27 assists on 39 made baskets, including 16 3-pointers.
On the other side, the White squad committed 19 turnovers and was just 7-of-20 from beyond the arc.
J.D. Notae led all scorers with 30 points — six playing most of the first half with the White and 24 in the second half playing with the Red.
Desi Sills, who also split time, scored 24 including 11 on 5-of-8 shooting with the Red and 13 points in the second half with the White, making 3-of-4 from the field and 6-of-6 at the line.

Justin Smith and Moses Moody, seeing all their action with the Red, scored 22 points and 21 points, respectively. Smith drained 9-of-11 from the field, including 3-of-3 from 3-point range. The graduate senior also had six assists. Moody added six rebounds and four assists.
Jalen Tate, also playing a full game with the Red, had a team-best eight assists with 11 points.
Khalen Robinson, playing with the White all night, scored 18 points on 8-of-11 shooting. Vance Jackson Jr., who played half with the White and half with the Red, scored 15 points.
Freshman Davonte Davis led all players with eight rebounds while fellow rookie Jaylin Williams pulled down six.
The night started with a slam dunk contest. Davis won. Also participating were Moody, Ethan Henderson and Smith.

First Quarter: Red 17-14
• Red won the tip and Moses Moody made the first basket.
• Red jumped out to a 6-0 start.
• Khalen Robinson hit back-to-back baskets for White to tie the game at 10-10. Davonte Davis stole the ensuing inbounds pass and Brandon Kimble converted the layup for a 12-10 White lead.
• Red, behind Desi Sills’ quarter-best nine points, regained the momentum to help Red lead 17-14 to end the quarter.
Second Quarter: Red won 24-17 … led 41-31 at half
• Vance Jackson was 3-for-3, including 2-for-2 from 3-point range to lead White with nine points in the quarter.
• Justin Smith was 5-of-5 shooting, including a pair of 3’s, to lead the Red with eight points in the quarter.
Third Quarter: Red won 31-22 … led 72-53 through third quarter
• Desi Sills scored 11 of his team’s 22 points.
• Red was led by JD Notae with nine, followed by Justin Smith and Moses Moody, each with seven.
Fourth Quarter: Red won 31-14 … final was 103-67
• Red opened the quarter on a 13-0 run, thanks to a pair s 3’s by JD Notae.
• Notae outscored the White team in the quarter, 15-to-14. Notae was 5-of-7 from 3-point range.
Arkansas opens the season versus Mississippi Valley State on Nov. 25 (Wednesday) at Bud Walton Arena.
Hogs coach Sam Pittman is handling Covid-19 pretty well at his house and said Thursday Barry Odom will handle team against Gators.
HitThatLine.com is the website for ESPN Arkansas. Listen at 99.5 in Fayetteville, 95.3 FM in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 FM in Hot Springs and 104.3 FM in Harrison.
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