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Players trickling back to Fayetteville while Pittman trying to drop weight

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With things shut down around Fayetteville, Sam Pittman is starting to see some of his players trickling back into town as he is walking more, but still managing to eat because he likes to eat.

“Since I’ve been the head coach I’ve lost about 12, maybe 15 pounds,” Pittman told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas Wednesday morning. “I’ve only got about 100 to go.”

Fans see Pittman walking around the campus with his defensive coordinator Barry Odom on their daily conversations that both seem to be enjoying.

“Barry and I walk and I have such a fun time with that, people driving by, honking and I get to wave at them,” Pittman said.

Former offensive tackle Dan Skipper was on the show earlier in the morning and the guys recorded a question from him asking Pittman “how the diet is going during quarantine.”

Pittman laughed.

“He could have picked up the phone and called,” Pittman said. “I now he’ll walk his big behind in the office soon and I’ll get him back. I told the guys the other day I’ve ate so much salad if those scales don’t turn around a little bit as I’m eating salad I’m going to Popeyes or somewhere and eat me one of those sandwiches. See if that changes my diet plan up a little bit.”

Pittman said it’s not a stress-eating thing, either.

“I’m pretty much an eater eater for a long time,” he said. “I’m a head coach now. I’ve got to eat a little better … I may be on TV a little more or something like that. I’m working at it. Last time I checked I didn’t see ol’ Danny in GQ magazine, either, so we’re about even.”

Pittman knows some of the players are starting to filter back into Fayetteville.

“Early about 90, 95 percent of the team was gone,” he said. “Our sports medicine guy Dave was telling me 35 percent — well, that may be high — 30 percent of the team is starting to trickle back.”

While you can count on Pittman bringing toughness back to a program that has gone downhill in that area the last few years, he’s not worrying about the break being that big of a problem.

“They are in constant contact which translates into accountability,” Pittman said. “We send out three different workouts. One is with weights, one is with bands and one is with body. We’ve got a plan to fit everybody’s needs.”

There are more players that will be coming back to Fayetteville over the next couple of months. Some are bored being back at home and others are just itching to get out.

Quarterback Feleipe Franks has managed to get some throwing and catching in with teammates.

Maybe the biggest part of what Pittman is looking to restore is the physicality that sort of dwindled away, particularly in the trenches.

“You can’t play the game if you don’t like being physical,” Pittman said. “It has to feel good to you. The only way I know how to do it is practice it. When you knock the heck out of somebody and it feels incredibly awesome, you get that feeling and you want to do it again.

“We have to get our team to be the same way.”

That’s what many Razorback fans are wanting to see.

Elite 8 voting continues in Houston Nutt Region of greatest Razorback game

Elite 8 voting continues today in the Greatest Razorback Football Game of all-time bracket! Now your votes count more than ever, because these Elite 8 match-ups are tough, and feature some of the greatest games in Arkansas football history. But which one is the greatest? Voting in the Houston Nutt is now open! Make sure to submit your votes below!

Click here to view the full bracket!

Tomorrow (Thursday), Elite 8 voting will be conclude with voting in the Ken Hatfield Region! Get out there and vote on what you think the Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time!

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Winning again, Ryan Mallett and The Bad Boys

Tye & Tommy on old players being frustrated with the football program, Ryan Mallett joins the show and more!

Mallett enjoying outdoors, looking forward to coaching at Mountain Home

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Coaching was something Ryan Mallett has been interested in and when Mountain Home had an opening it was the perfect fit for the former Arkansas quarterback who is building a house near there.

“It’s kinda in my blood … it runs in my family,” Mallett told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas Tuesday morning. “I get to be around the game I love. As far as being over here since me and my fiancee are building a house over here anyway a job came open and the coach that got hired I had a few connections to him so I called him and said I’d get certified and whatever I had to do.

“He said he’d love to have me so we got everything done.”

Mallett was a sociology major mainly because his options were limited after transferring from Michigan in 2008.

“Only three of my 32 credits transferred so that was the only major I could even do to be eligible the year after I sat out,” Mallett said. “It was just what I had to do.”

It will be Mallett’s first coaching gig so he doesn’t really have a coaching style yet but everybody will know he’s around the Bombers.

“I yell a lot,” he said. “A lot of it is encouragement, but I’m loud. I’m just going to do whatever the head coach asks me to do. That’s what I’m here for.”

Mallett was animated quite a bit in his two seasons at Arkansas but moreso in 2009 because he felt he had to be that way.

“That first year I was just like let’s go, let’s get go and I think they saw that the last year so I didn’t have to be like that as much,” Mallett said. “I didn’t have to be rah-rah, I could calm down, handle my business and everybody else could be calm. It really helped me to sit down and look at that stuff with the coaches.”

It paid off that second year with the Razorbacks losing only to Alabama and Auburn in the regular season before a Sugar Bowl loss to Ohio State.

Mallett threw costly interceptions late against the Crimson Tide and the Buckeyes that killed any comeback attempts.

He was asked about those.

“Which one?” he said laughing. “The Alabama game was more of a fluke. I was trying to throw the ball out of bounds and just didn’t get enough on it. Against Ohio State I was doing what I was supposed to against the blitz and they dropped a defensive tackle out that they hadn’t done all year so that was a scheme thing. But I’d take the Alabama one back.”

The one against Alabama, though, is one he’d like to have back.

“If we’d won that game we wouldn’t have been in the Sugar Bowl, we’d been playing for the national championship,” Mallett said, although he’s forgetting the loss to Cam Newton and Auburn that would have still been a major hill to get over.

 

Elite 8 continues in the Paul Eells Region of the greatest Razorback football game of all time bracket

Elite 8 voting continues today in the Greatest Razorback Football Game of all-time bracket! Now your votes count more than ever, because these Elite 8 match-ups are tough, and feature some of the greatest games in Arkansas football history. But which one is the greatest? Voting in the Paul Eells is now open! Make sure to submit your votes below!

Click here to view the full bracket!

Tomorrow (Wednesday), Elite 8 voting will be opened up for the Houston Nutt Region! Get out there and vote on what you think the Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time!

Destiny finally brings Neighbors, Slocum together for Razorbacks

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Okay, it’s a little cheesy to work destiny into a headline with graduate transfer Destiny Slocum finally getting to play for Mike Neighbors, who’s been trying to get her on his team for years.

“I’ve wanted to play for him for a really long time,” Slocum told Phil Elson and Matt Jenkins (Halftime) on ESPN Arkansas Monday afternoon.

Neighbors first tried to recruit her to play for him at Washington when Slocum was in high school. He went to every single game she played one year and she chose Maryland and the Big 10.

When she left Maryland after one year, he tried to get her at Arkansas, but she went back to the left coast for Oregon State and the Pac 12.

The third time proved to be the charm, but it was the result of his recruiting twice before, which is the way things go in college athletics these days. Relationships are more important than ever because you may get a second (or even third) shot.

Neighbors didn’t waste a lot of time when her name officially showed up in the transfer portal.

“When I saw his name pop up on my phone it was a moment I needed to hear from him,” Slocum said.

Neither one was too worried that it hadn’t worked out in the previous attempts.

“The stars never really aligned before,” Slocum said. “This time they did it align and we might be able to cherish it even more this way. We always had this really good relationship and I don’t think that ever fades.”

During the current slowdown of everything around the globe, Slocum is finding ways to work outside in Corvalis, Oregon. All the gyms are closed and it rains a lot there so it gets a little tricky at times.

“It’s been interesting,” she said. “It’s weird to not have any gyms open. Having to rely on outdoors. It’s a little difficult.”

Now she comes in with a year to play and brings a lot of experience from two Power 5 conferences and postseason experience.

“We hold ourselves accountable and it trickles down to everybody else,” Slocum said. “I know how good this team is. I just want to join them in helping us to get to the best place possible.”

Hog fans are just hoping that place is a long run in the NCAA Tournament.

Wolfenbarger commits to Razorbacks over some of top teams in nation

Mike Neighbors got the best 2021 player in Arkansas to stay home when Fort Smith Northside’s Jersey Wolfenbarger committed to Fayetteville and it’s a really big one.

Wolfenbarger, who has grown nearly a foot, made the announcement on Twitter on Monday afternoon:

She is the first commitment for the 2021 class.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Arkansas players drafted, Travis Swanson joins and more!

Tye & Tommy on the Razorback players signing NFL deals, Travis Swanson joins the show and more!

Softness of past couple of seasons will change quick for Hogs, Swanson says

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One of the biggest accusations against Arkansas the past couple of season by media and fans or anyone else paying attention was just an overall softness that seemed to filter down from the top.

Former Razorback All-American center Travis Swanson noticed it, too. It was a process that started when Sam Pittman left Bret Bielema’s staff to join Kirby Smart with Georgia.

That led to two seasons with the equivalent of an NFL grad assistant followed by a good guy who didn’t have a clue how to coach SEC-caliber linemen.

That will all change with Pittman, Swanson feels … and already has started. The Hogs may not win the West, but they probably won’t be called soft.

“That’s not going to be tolerated,” he told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas Monday morning. “A couple of guys on the team, talking to them, that message has been received.”

Swanson only had one season with Pittman (2013), but “I wish he’d been around for all my time.”

With his academics at the point he only had to take one class his final season, he spent a lot of time at the football center working out and just talking with Pittman about life, football and throwing out ideas.

“I remember being at the facility three to four hours before I needed to,” Swanson said. “Going up to his office and talking about life, things not related to football, things he picked up, ideas I had picked up. Gee, honestly, it feels like last week.”

It’s all part of getting players, which is not exactly the biggest thing, either.

“When they come out of high school just a shell of what you’re going to be,” Swanson said. “It’s up to the coaches. There’s really two sides to this whole thing. Recruiting is only half of the battle. It means nothing if you can’t develop them.

“It goes back to what I’ve said — it’s development, the personal side with you. He knows how to recruit. He knows what he’s doing and how to tie it all together. You can sense how genuine coaches are. You’re going to do anything to not let him down. It’s one of the biggest factors with him.”

At least through an unprecedented amount of chaos since taking the job last December, Pittman appears to be making strides in the recruiting area.

When Swanson watched the Hogs stumble through another disastrous season last year and Chad Morris was finally kicked to the curb in November, he had an idea. He got some other former players on board and a letter was sent supporting Pittman.

“When I saw the news, read headlines, I sat back in my chair and thought about what does Arkansas need?” he said. “You need somebody to recruit … all the other resources are here. It made a bunch of sense to me and others guys I knew. Initially it was something we believed he deserved and got fans talking about something and believe in it.”

It made a difference as athletics director Hunter Yurachek actually read the letter and was smart enough to be impressed with it.

At that point, Arkansas had reportedly been rebuffed by some names that would produce bigger headlines, but maybe not bring what is actually needed with the program.

“I know what this guy can do and excited to see how they do,” Swanson said. “Whenever this storm does pass excited for the Hogs to get back out there.”

Which really should be a shot of good news to start the week for Razorback fans.