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Thomas’ selection at No. 4 in NFL Draft gives Pittman another sales tool

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When the New York Giants selected Georgia offensive tackle Andrew Thomas at No. 4 in Thursday night’s draft it didn’t take his position coach, Sam Pittman, long to jump in with congratulations.

Thomas, a surprise selection at that spot. ESPN’s Mel Kiper had him a little lower of the tackles but obviously the Giants saw something.

For Pittman, though, it’s another valuable recruiting tool at Arkansas.

Few other offensive line coaches have put players so high in the NFL and Thomas keeps that number going.

LSU’s Joe Burrow was chosen first by Cincinnati, then Chase Young from Ohio State to the Redskins and another Buckeye, cornerback Jeff Okudah, went third to Detroit.

Interestingly, all three were teammates for a year at Ohio State.

After Thomas, Miami chose Alabama quarterback Tua Tagavola fifth.

The difference in salary from Burrow at No. 1 to Tagavola is an average of $1 million a year and $6 million over the course of the contract. NFL rookie contracts are fixed on a salary cap scale for the first four years.

He will actually make more than Thomas because Florida has no state income tax as opposed to New York.

Burrow will be first pick in tonight’s NFL draft, but Chizik likes Tua

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There’s not a lot of drama in the NFL’s annual cattle auction tonight of who will be the first pick and quarterback taken, but the second quarterback off the board is drawing interest.

“I’ve had five first-round draft pick quarterbacks on my teams through the years,” SEC Network analyst and former Auburn coach Gene Chizik told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas Thursday morning. “Joe Burrow is as impressive as any of them.”

But he does have this feeling that Alabama’s Tua Tagavola would be his choice next ahead of Oregon’s Justin Herbert.

“Tua’s not far behind him,” Chizik said. “Joe’s got the size, the arm, the acumen, the IQ … all of those things. Who’s going to be the better one down the road I just don’t know. If Tua is healthy it’s going to be hard for anybody in this class to have a pro career like he is.”

Unless there is a stunning change Cincinnati will take Ohio native Burrow with the first pick overall. After that things get a little interesting with both Miami at No. 5 and San Diego right behind them looking for a franchise quarterback.

“It would be hard for me with Miami at No. 5 to pass him up. He’s a game-changer. His arm strength, his accuracy, his ability to make quick decisions. He can make things happen when nothing’s there. He throws receivers open. Obviously the health issue is going to be the biggest question mark for him.”

Chizik, who still lives in Auburn, has seen Tagavola and is impressed with one of those intangibles you hear coaches talk about all time.

“Tua’s got the ‘it’ factor,” he said. “Everybody on that football team will follow him like a pied piper. Provided he stays healthy.”

You can listen to ESPN’s coverage of the NFL Draft tonight at ESPN Arkansas 95.3, 96.3, 104.3 and online at HitThatLine.com.

Neighbors’ uncut teleconference on Slocum, variety of subjects Thursday

Arkansas women’s basketball coach Mike Neighbors covered just about everything from finally landing graduate transfer Destiny Slocum to shaving his head and Vic Schaefer leaving Mississippi State for Texas.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Razorbacks that didn’t pan out, Coach Chizik and more!

Tye & Tommy on Razorbacks who didn’t make it in the NFL, coach Gene Chizik, Hog basketball recruits and more!

Sweet 16 voting concludes today in the greatest Razorback football game

Sweet 16 voting concludes today in the Greatest Razorback Football Game of all-time bracket! Now, the match-ups get tougher, and we need your help! Voting in the Ken Hatfield Region is now open! Make sure to submit your votes below!

Click here to view the full bracket!

Next week, we will begin voting with the Elite 8 and the Final Four! Going to be a fun week, determining the Final Four of the Greatest Razorback Football Games of All Time!

Players didn’t ‘have enthusiasm’ for Morris’ approach, Luginbill says

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Chad Morris had a good early pitch when he got the Arkansas job in December 2017 but the players never really bought in and looking back that was clear as a bell his very first day.

ESPN’s Tom Luginbill noticed it from the players, too.

“I just never felt like there was a lot of enthusiasm from the players’ side,” he said told Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas Wednesday afternoon.

Luginbill had known Morris for awhile but he’s had some time to look at the overall. Like some others in the media he really didn’t see it coming.

“I’ve known Chad all the way back to his high school days,” he said on the show. “I think he’s a really good coach … he’s proven that. You don’t go from being the offensive coordinator that’s received a ton of credit for getting Clemson where they are now offensively to all of a sudden take a stupid pill and becoming a bad football coach. That didn’t happen to Chad Morris.”

What Luginbill didn’t say but maybe he noticed was the players’ reaction to Morris in his first team meeting. The video was put up just about everywhere but here it is as released by the UA:

In my rearview mirror the players didn’t look too interested. Since most of the fans and media weren’t really looking for anything negative we didn’t exactly see it.

Hogs basketball coach Eric Musselman said on Ruscin & Zach just before Luginbill about the time he met legendary football coach Paul Brown who said the most crucial part of a meeting is the first three minutes. That’s when the players determine whether they are in or out.

if you subscribe to that the players were out quick.

“The coaching staff, Chad, were always very engaged,” Luginbill said. “It was important to them and they truly believed they were going to turn the thing around.

“I don’t know if the players ever looked at it that way.”

They didn’t. Some in that video were gone before the following summer via the transfer portal or they just weren’t going to play for Morris, who may have tried to jump in the left lane and put the hammer down when he should have left the cruise control at the limit for a few miles.

“When you look at the philosophical differences of what Bret Bielema was going to be on offense and what Chad Morris is, you don’t just wave a magic wand and have that change overnight,” Morris said. “The problem is he didn’t need to change it overnight. They just needed to show they were making progress and instead they regressed. I don’t think any coach can survive something like that.”

What Luginbill didn’t say is that it too often appeared Morris thought he had more time, which was a lack of experience at the big-time college level.

He was hired by an inexperienced interim athletics director that jumped into the deep end of the pool.

Combine that with either not listening to people experienced at the SEC level or having anyone that had a clue, he failed miserably at the political side and the full-time boss didn’t have anything on the line when Morris didn’t win games.

It should have been apparent he didn’t have the talent to win at the SEC level and he probably knew it. Morris thought he could recruit his way out of the problem and said as much on numerous occasions.

“You’re in a conference if you don’t have great players on defense it’s hard to survive,” Luginbill said. “Right now Arkansas is not going to have a defensive front like Auburn or an Alabama or an LSU … even Texas A&M as of late. That’s always going to be a challenge playing in the SEC West.”

Having a rotating door at the quarterback spot was another problem and graduate transfer Feleipe Franks may help with that … but not alone.

“Can he bring some offensive linemen with him?” Luginbill asked. “Sam Pittman’s an offensive line guy and if you watched Arkansas the last two years that was the core of the problem was up front, particularly on the offensive side of the ball.”

Franks may discover it would have helped him bringing some of Florida’s linemen with him, but he can still be a positive for the Hogs, he feels.

“He’s bringing some stability,” Luginbill said. That’s the one thing that position has not had at Arkansas is some stability and hopefully that’s something that will permeate throughout the locker room.”

Oh, and just be patient taking care of the small things which is something Morris never could seem to get over to any of the eight guys who started over the two-year debacle.

“Sometimes just the sheer factor of getting first downs is something that can create such confidence,” he said. “Forget about touchdowns and field goals … just get a first down, then getting the next first down. Arkansas had a LOT of trouble with that a year ago.”

Not only did Luginbill not see a buy-in with the coaches but the quarterback position as well.

“I don’t think anybody on that team trusted whoever it was that was going to take the snaps,” he said. “You weren’t seeing success, you weren’t seeing progress and you weren’t moving the ball up and down the field.

“Whoever it is needs to prove they can be a consistent factor of positive momentum of moving the football.”

Morris couldn’t figure out how to motivate players which ultimately proved to be his undoing.

Early appearances are at least that has changed with Pittman coming in.

Luginbill agrees teams can actually start Aug. 1 and things will work

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ESPN’s Tom Luginbill agrees with Sam Pittman that starting Aug. 1 will work out for college football after the extensive shutdown for the COVID-19 pandemic.

And he thinks things will be fine. It actually is what used to be the norm.

Luginbill told Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas Wednesday afternoon he agreed with what Pittman said on the show last week about making an Aug. 1 start date work.

“Absolutely,” he said. “I agree with coach Pittman 100 percent.”

He also pointed out a story where Iowa State coach Matt Campbell said it works out just fine.

“To paraphrase, he said, hey, listen, I played and coached at Mount Union (Division III),” Luginbill said “We barely had a weight room, we didn’t have summer school, guys weren’t sticking around year-round and you know what? We showed up on the first week of August, in four weeks played our first game and we won a whole lot of national championships. He goes, I’m used to that. Anything above that is bells and whistles to me.”

Exactly. With all the hand-wringing and wailing going on these days over the immediate future of college football, nobody knows anything for certain but that is exactly why there are all these wild models for what SHOULD happen.

Luginbill played college football in the 1990’s at three different places and it was a little different then.

“Not everybody stayed all summer,” he said. “You didn’t have your whole team there working out and this and that. You had spring football, everybody went their separate ways.

“You’re supposed to do your at-home workouts, the coach would check on you now and then we showed up in August, practiced for four weeks and you played.”

Until some paranoid control-freak coach decided to almost make it mandatory for players to stay in school all summer that’s the way it always was.

“It was good football then and it’ll be good football now,” Luginbill said.

It may have been one of the most rational arguments made during this whole upside-down spring across the globe.

The bottom line is coaches and media may WANT a definitive schedule now but that’s jumping the gun. There’s not going to be anything from the experts who want an 18-month random trial before agreeing the sky is blue on days when it’s not raining.

Luginbill isn’t concerned about the later-than-normal start date.

“There’s too many resources at play here, too many ways — not only virtually but through technology and all these things we have at our disposal that we didn’t have 20 years ago that could make this thing flawless for every team starting Aug. 1 if they had to,” he said.

He’s right

What Musselman learned from great football coaches has helped preparations

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Eric Musselman learned something when he was a younster from maybe the greatest football coach of all time that has obviously made a huge impact with the early success he’s had in basketball.

Paul Brown is the only coach in history to win championships at the high school, college and professional level. He invented an awful lot of what you see in the game today (face masks, radio in the quarterbacks’ helmets, using game film, quizzes for players on the playbook, practice squads and the draw play).

He also founded two professional football teams in the same state and won titles in two different leagues.

And Musselman got something when his dad, Bill, was coaching in the old American Basketball Association (think red, white and blue basketballs).

“One day I came home from school and there was a guy sitting at our dinner table by the name of Paul Brown,” Musselman told Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns in their show on ESPN Arkansas on Wednesday afternoon. “My dad had asked him to come over because Paul Brown was retired and living in San Diego.”

The meeting was for a very specific reason.

“My dad had a meeting with Paul Brown about your very first team meeting,” Musselman said. “I remember coach Paul Brown saying in the first three minutes your team is going to determine if they’re going to buy into you. That little lesson has stuck with me.”

In hindsight if you remember the video of former coach Chad Morris’ first meeting with his team the lesson Musselman learned at a young age held true.

It obviously makes a difference and it was a big part of why he turned to football when he was fired by Golden State in 2004.

“I was lucky enough the Oakland Raiders let me come into their building,” Musselman said. “Michael Lombardi, who was the GM at the time, allowed me to have an office there. I would go in and watch NBA film then I would go watch some of the Raiders practices. I sat in on the NFL Draft with Michael Lombardi and learned as much as I could.”

Then he went to watch Jon Gruden at Tampa Bay.

“I spent time there on the practice field trying to watch some of the things they did,” Musselman said. “A lot of things we do from a game prep on game night is actually stolen from a lot of the stuff Jon Gruden did in his two-minute offense or Red Zone offense and stuff.”

The football angle was something else passed down from his dad, who was known in basketball as a coach who’s teams were always prepared.

“My dad originally played college football and his first job was as a football coach, not a basketball coach,” Musselman said. “I’ve tried to study as many football coaches as I possibly can because of the organizational skills of a football coach.”

And Bill Musselman took some of that football organization into the basketball world.

But Eric has spent time around some basketball coaches noted for being into the minute details.

“I’ve been around so many great coaches,” he said Wednesday. “I worked for Chuck Daly who was an incredible preparation guy. I worked for Hubie Brown and he’s the most meticulous guy I’ve worked for. Mike Fratello overly detailed and Doc Rivers. I’ve been around some great coaches to learn from.”

And that list included maybe the greatest football coach of all time.

Former Baylor quarterback calls Briles’ offense ‘controlled chaos’ for players

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Fans may not understand the details of offensive coordinator Kendal Briles’ new offense, but he knows and the players — especially quarterbacks — are going to love it.

At least that’s what Briles’ former quarterback Seth Russell told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft on The Morning Rush on Wednesday morning.

“Being a part of it you kinda consider it controlled chaos,” said Russell, who played quarterback at Baylor for five years while Briles was there. “There’s a lot of intricate parts and pieces when you dive into it.”

But it’s an offense the players seem to understand all that’s going on.

“Whenever you’re watching it it’s so exciting and being inside of it, it’s a tornado, a hailstorm,” Russell said. “Just amazing play after play, going deep, running the ball. You just never know what’s going to happen. Being a part of it was a chaotic sense in itself but everything was very controlled from the inside.”

That’s like most offenses these days. Russell said Briles knows the offense his father Art created and had success with at Houston and Baylor … and he wants his players to trust it.

“Early on they gave me a lot of freedom to adjust and audible,” Smith said. “I came to the sideline one series after I’d changed a couple of plays and he sat down beside me and said, ‘hey, Seth, trust the system … trust us, play football and quit thinking … just do what we need to do ’cause it’s proven time and time again that we’ve been successful with what we’ve been calling.'”

It’s part of what he said is a “quarterback friendly” offense.

“It’s going to be bigger plays,” Russell said. “We consider our short (passing) game our run game. A three to five-yard gain is a good run. Being able to execute on the run-pass option is big. It all starts with the quarterback putting the ball where it needs to be, making good, productive plays.”

Briles and his offense are big reasons the Razorbacks are getting into the conversation on some highly-rated quarterbacks, even after getting four-star Malik Hornsby in this latest recruiting cycle.

“It’s one of those systems you drool over,” Russell said about quarterbacks.

The offense is designed to maximize the quarterback.

“I don’t think any quarterback out there just wants to hand the ball off 75-80 percent of the time,” Russell said. “(Quarterbacks) want to throw the ball deep. They want to make big plays, put up big numbers. They want to win Maxwell Awards, win national championships. They want to be the face of the university and that’s exactly what type of system KB brings to Arkansas. It’s a highly sought-after system that quarterbacks want to be a part of.”

Russell also covered a lot of ground on Briles. He should know, having spent five seasons (including a redshirt year) in Waco. He was the next guy up when Bryce Petty graduated, but injuries de-railed his career.