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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.

 

Catching up with former Hogs’ star Young, recalling some highlights

B.J. Young hasn’t been keeping up with Arkansas basketball the last year as he’s been playing in Europe, but it’s something he wants to change.

He talked with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft with The Morning Rush on ESPN Arkansas Wednesday morning about that and recapping some of his fondest memories playing for the Razorbacks.

Sweet 16 voting continues in the greatest Razorback football game of all time

Two rounds down and we’re now sitting at the Sweet 16 of the Greatest Razorback Football Game of all-time bracket! Now, the match-ups get tougher, and we need your help! Sweet 16 voting in the Houston Nutt Region is now open! Make sure to submit your votes below!

Click here to view the full bracket!

Tomorrow (Thursday), we will wrap up Sweet 16 voting with the Ken Hatfield Region, and there are some good match ups coming up! Get out there and vote on what you think the Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time!

Martin says he’s still undecided on direction he’s headed for next year

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The popular thought when Arkansas’ baseball season was halted last month was shortstop Casey Martin would be joining teammates Heston Kjerstad and Casey Opitz in going to professional ball after the MLB Draft.

That may still happen, but Martin left a crack there Tuesday on ESPN Arkansas’ Halftime with Phil Elson and Matt Jenkins.

“Honestly I haven’t even made a decision yet,” Martin said. “That’s a big decision. From what I’ve heard they’ve dropped the draft to five rounds now. They decide something one day, then choose something else the next. It’s kinda in the air right now. I have all possibilities locked and loaded.”

Again, that really doesn’t mean anything one way or the other. Everybody has an opinion but the current COVID19 pandemic that has shut everything down has Martin dealing with something new.

“Without baseball you feel lost,” Martin said. “I’m just lost at this point.”

If you’re still playing baseball nearing the end of your junior year in college it’s become a lifestyle more than anything else.

“Honestly I can’t tell you the last time I haven’t been playing baseball around this time,” he said. “There’s probably never been a time since I started baseball.”

Elson, the play-by-play announcer for Hogs’ baseball, asked Martin what area of his game he felt needed work and it produced a remarkably candid response.

“Probably my pitch recognition,” he said. “We all know I struggled with that at times.”

Then it turned into a deep-dive hitting clinic.

“You’ve got to train your eyes,” Martin said. “Obviously you’ve been doing that since you’re little and just playing baseball a whole lot. We’ve got some VCR sets at the field to help train eyes to pick up the spin out of the hand. You look for different slots between the hands turned. Do they hide the ball better … do they not?

“You just go back on video and look at little things. Just keep your head still which goes back to training your eyes. You’ve got to keep your eyes in a locked position and you can’t be looking at every other place. (The pitcher) arm slot is a big deal. There’s usually a little square window and that’s usually the best place where you can pick up the spin out of their hand.

“You’ve just got to continue to train your eyes. It’s a lot easier said than done. Seeing pitches and not swinging is probably the best thing to do.”

The MLB draft is tentatively scheduled for July, but details are on essentially on hold due to the current global health crisis.

Hannahs says transfers should have reason, talking trash to Simmons

Dusty Hannahs only got to play two seasons at Arkansas after starting his career at Texas Tech, but he’s actually a little wary of giving a golden pass for college players to start jumping around.

“There needs to be a reason,” he told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft on ESPN Arkansas’ Morning Rush on Tuesday. “If not it’s just going to turn into the Wild West. Everybody will be leaving after every season and it’ll just be weird.”

Hannahs went to Lubbock out of Pulaski Academy in Little Rock to play for Billy Gillespie and never got to play a game for him. He was fired amidst a myriad of problems from the NCAA to drinking.

“I played my freshman year for one of our assistants, then my sophomore year was Tubby Smith,” Hannahs said. “I knew that whole year I was leaving … it just didn’t feel right.”

He had a reason. The coach he signed on to play for was gone for the season. But Hannahs thinks players need a reason.

“Sometimes stuff happens that just affects your career,” Hannahs said. “When a coach switches, yes you committed to a university but obviously as a student-athlete your primary reason for going to a school most of the time is the coach. Once you lose the coach that’s the time most people look at transferring.

“I don’t agree with players getting to transfer just because they don’t like it.”

Hannahs was also asked about a little dust-up with LSU’s Ben Simmons at Bud Walton back in 2016.

“He kept bumping me during the game,” he said. “We weren’t really talking. I only really talk if a guy starts jabbering, then it’s on … I’ll talk all day. I kept walking to set up a play and he would just put a shoulder in my chest. He wouldn’t move out of the way. After the third time I realized he was doing this on purpose.”

Then Hannahs changed his attitude.

“We get to the free-throw line and I just took it upon myself to just start talking trash. I remember him being from Australia I started saying ‘you wanna put some shrimp on the Barbie, mate?’ and some choice words after that. I can’t really say all the words I said but that was like but that was like the premise of what I said.”

Losing to eventual national champion North Carolina in the 2017 NCAA Tournament is also something that hasn’t gone away.

“I still haven’t watched the game and don’t plan on it,” Hannahs said. “I just remember being so hurt over the calls and how the game felt.”

But he’s not reviewing any film of it.

“It was a tough night for months after that,” Hannahs said. “Even after I moved back to Little Rock in the summer every time I’d think of that game it was a bad thought. I didn’t like the feeling that thought gave me so I tried to block it out.”

Now he’s playing for the Memphis Hustle, the G-league team of the Memphis Grizzlies. He’s had a couple of 10-day contracts and was drawing some interest from other teams.

“When I heard it was a gut punch,” Hannahs said. “I got the word from my agent that another team was going to give me a shot and I was really excited.”

Now he’s in the waiting game caused by the coronavirus.

Along with the rest of us.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — IJ enters his name, Dusty joins and more!

Tye & Tommy on IJ entering his name in the draft, Muss reacts to the class, plus Dusty Hannahs joins the show!

Sweet 16 voting continues in the Paul Eells Region of the greatest Razorback football game of all time bracket

Two rounds down and we’re now sitting at the Sweet 16 of the Greatest Razorback Football Game of all-time bracket! Now, the match-ups get tougher, and we need your help! Sweet 16 voting with the Paul Eells Region is now open! We also have a tiebreaker vote in the Broyles Region! Make sure to submit your votes below!

Click here to view the full bracket!

Tomorrow (Wednesday), we will begin Sweet 16 voting in the Houston Nutt Region, and there are some good match ups coming up! Get out there and vote on what you think the Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time!