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Voting continues in Round 2 of the greatest Razorback football game of all time bracket

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The opening round of voting for the greatest Razorback football game of all-time bracket went great! But it’s time to continue the bracket! Today, we open up 2nd round voting in the Paul Eells Region! Make sure to submit your votes below!

Click here to view the full bracket!

Tomorrow (Wednesday), we will have opening round voting for the Nutt Region! Get out there and vote on what you think the Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time!

Razorbacks’ long dry run of failure on punt returns should end with Burks

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It didn’t really dawn on me until one of Andrew Hutchinson’s stat stories at HawgBeat.com got my attention earlier that Arkansas hasn’t had a punt return touchdown since 2011.

Well, technically it was early 2012 when Joe Adams returned a punt against Kansas State in the Cotton Bowl following the 2011 season.

You would think over eight seasons the Razorbacks could have gotten one into the end zone completely by accident. I mean, they let North Texas bring one back in 2018 by faking a fair catch.

That’s one of the examples of the breakdowns in nearly a decade of futility when you really don’t have a special teams coach.

For all of last season the media was not allowed to take pictures or film special teams drills in the first period of practices. The guess was it wasn’t to hide the intricate nature of the jump pass fake punt that blew up spectacularly against Auburn.

I say all that to point out part of what was, in my opinion, the failure of the previous two staffs to really understand what they were doing. Special teams is a full third of the game and I’ve never seen a championship team that was horrible in every phase of special teams.

There’s no home cooking in saying Treylon Burks is going to end that run of failure for the Hogs.

In his first season in Fayetteville, Burks returned a dozen punts for 130 yards, which is a little over a first down on every return. He had a long return of 32 yards against Texas A&M where all the folks in Warren were assuming he was headed to the end zone.

The talented freshman has a unique way of catching the ball over his head instead of like using a basket, size 4XL hands and the speed. He had several returns that could have been big with one block.

Burks has a way of making at least one person miss.

With a full-time special teams coach now in Scott Fountain and it will be interesting to see where the improvements are in that area this year.

One thing that’s for certain is he’s had plenty of time to look at every special teams play from the last several seasons if he wanted to, not just last year.

It’s probably a good guess Burks not getting into the end zone jumped out.

And it’s a stat that probably will change.

XFL may not have lasted long, but some ideas could filter down to college level

While the XFL experiment was halted last week without much warning, ESPN’s Tom Hart told Phil Elson and Matt Jenkins on Halftime some of their innovative experiments might be around awhile.

“I know for a fact (the NFL and colleges) are looking at them,” he said Monday afternoon. “There’s no reason now to watch kickoffs.”

In case you didn’t see it, the XFL lines the two teams up five yards apart on the 30 and 35. Nobody can leave until the ball is caught or hits the ground. It actually turned out to be more interesting than you’d think.

“Such a high percentage of head injuries occur on kickoffs,” Hart said. “Whare your choices?

“You negate it to the point you very seldom get a return and then you’re just talking about wasted time. In this day and age where everybody wants the games to move along that doesn’t make much sense.

“Or you make it safer by putting everybody closer together and you get action. The shame of the season only get halfway was we didn’t get as many data points as we wanted.”

Former Razorback quarterback killed in car crash in Alabama

Tarvaris Jackson showed some potential in a brief time at Arkansas but not enough to keep Matt Jones on the bench, then went to the NFL and had a substantial journeyman career.

Jackson, 36, was killed in a single-car crash in Alabama on Sunday night just south of Montgomery at around 8:50 p.m. when his car left the road, hit a tree and flipped, according to law enforcement officials.

He was drafted in the second round after leaving the Hogs for SWAC member Alabama State. Jackson played for nine seasons in the NFL with Minnesota and Seattle. Jackson spent the 2012 season with the Buffalo Bills, but did not play.

Jackson started 34 games over the course of his career, including 14 for the Seahawks in 2011, and threw for more than 7,200 yards with 39 touchdowns and 35 interceptions. The Montgomery native also won a Super Bowl ring as Russell Wilson’s backup in 2014.

“TJack… you will be missed. Praying for your family…Love you man,” Wilson wrote on Twitter on Monday morning.

Jackson was released by the Seahawks in 2016. He was arrested in Florida later that year for allegedly pulling a gun on his wife, though the charges were later dropped.

Jackson then decided to retire from the NFL, and move to coaching. He spent the 2018 season as a quality control assistant at his alma mater before joining Tennessee State as its quarterbacks coach in 2019.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Transfer rule pushed back, Kevin McPherson and more!

Tye & Tommy on the football unit most affected, transfer rule pushed back, Masters throwbacks and more!

Voting continues in Round 2 of the greatest Razorback football game of all time bracket

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The opening round of voting for the greatest Razorback football game of all-time bracket went great! But it’s time to continue the bracket! Today, we open up 2nd round voting in the Broyles Region! Make sure to submit your votes below!

Click here to view the full bracket!

Tomorrow (Tuesday), we will have opening round voting for the Paul Eells Region! Get out there and vote on what you think the Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time!

Hogs playing in Little Rock still bad idea regardless how good talks going

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During a time when no games are being played, the talk turned to Arkansas playing football games in Little Rock a little early this year and the bottom line is it’s just talk.

Razorbacks athletic director Hunter Yurachek said the politically correct things he has to say and everybody with War Memorial Stadium did likewise.

The best-case scenario happened, which was everybody had a nice conversation.

With no games to be played in Little Rock this year for the first time in several decades, that’s all anybody has left to do is talk about getting the Missouri game there in 2021.

It shouldn’t be played there. The Hogs should have quit playing there over 40 years ago when I first suggested it in a column. War Memorial was a dump then and now it’s still a dump with a fresh coat of paint in places and new carpet that is still a disorganized and dysfunctional facility.

Oh, don’t think for a second I don’t understand the arguments to continue playing there (and I have some really good, longtime friends that are on that side), it’s just something I don’t agree with.

The tradition of Arkansas football is too often confused. If they marketed it correctly and quit all this waffling around with goofy alternate logos and stuff they have the most unique brand in all of college athletics. Playing in Little Rock should be just some fond memories.

Just like driving autos with the crank to roll windows up and down, a limited number of FM radio stations, no cell phones and before personal computers were even invented.

Going to Razorback games in War Memorial quit being a cultural experience several years ago. Part of it is the decline of the team.

Since 2011 the Hogs haven’t won a game of any significance there. They stumbled around against Samford and pulled out a 31-21 win in 2013 then beat Alcorn State (2016) and Florida A&M (2017)

The record is 3-7 in the last seven games played there and 0-4 against SEC teams since beating Mississippi State there in 2011. Yes, the Hogs haven’t won a league game in that stadium since 2011.

But the biggest part of the whole deal is the stadium can’t afford to upgrade to the requirements of football in this day and age. Even Razorback Stadium is going to have to do some upgrading, in my opinion.

Yes, the percentage of season ticket renewals are up … that’s people renewing from a 33 percent renewal last. What I want to see is how the overall number of season tickets sold compares to the last decade.

In 2019, there was a 33 percent renewal of season tickets from 2018. Now there’s a 77 percent renewal of THAT low number. From an accounting perspective that’s still a number that’s going down in overall tickets sold.

But back to Little Rock. This isn’t a criticism of the Central Arkansas area or comparing the two general areas. Nope, not getting into that debate. I don’t believe it will cost donations, either, because the folks writing the checks that matter have egos that won’t let them quit writing the check in spite of what they may say.

War Memorial, bless it’s ancient heart, has parking issues, operational issues and technical issues (although the scoreboard did function for most of the Hogs’ game with Missouri last November).

They still have a bleacher capacity for 45,000 or so that is now 55,000 because the didn’t add that many seats, but squeezed everybody in a little tighter. People tell me it’s the most uncomfortable place they’ve ever tried to watch a game … including most high school stadiums.

Fayetteville has an issue in that area, too, which is why I think they are going to have to put in a lot of chairback seats with cupholders to entice fans back into the stadium. Wins alone isn’t going to do it.

All that changed in 2014 when the SEC Network came into being and every single game is now on television. People have spent thousands of dollars creating their personal gameday experience … in their own house. It’s more comfortable there than fighting traffic and squeezing into some aluminum seats and rolling the dice on who’s around you.

But War Memorial’s biggest problem is it really doesn’t matter if Yurachek, the governor or even a straw poll of fans is taken. The SEC has to sign off on it.

It was the league that nixed the spring game being cancelled before the ongoing global health crisis did it. In hindsight they could have waited a few weeks and never had to deal with the whole decision.

Nobody else plays games away from their home stadium. They can’t use it as a recruiting advantage anymore. About the best anybody can do these days is wave at recruits if nobody’s paying close attention.

That is, by the way, how Yurachek can tell the truth about acknowledging War Memorial without having to make a decision. It is, ultimately, a league decision and they’ve already shot down the spring game being played there.

Who knows what they’ll say about playing there next year.

We don’t even know if there will be football this year.

Listen to replay of Razorbacks’ 2015 win over LSU in Baton Rouge at 2 p.m.

Arkansas running back Alex Collins ran for 148 yards and scored a pair of touchdowns in a surprising 31-14 win over No. 9 LSU in Baton Rouge and you can listen to it at 2 p.m. at HitThatLine.com or ESPN Arkansas. CLICK HERE 

NCAA may be close to opening door to limited free agency for players

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While the rest of the sports world is paralyzed by the ongoing global health crisis, the NCAA is moving right along with plans that could provide a college version of limited free agency for players, according to a story at ESPN.com.

It’s not official yet, but the NCAA Divsion I Council is going to discuss a one-time transfer permitted to players on April 24 and vote on it May 20.

Yes, while the rest of the world is crawling along the kangeroo court that rules college sports and usually is slower than a nail is moving at breakneck speed.

According to the story by Jeff Borzello:

There are currently 746 Division I men’s basketball players in the transfer portal, 181 of them classified as graduate transfers. That means 565 players have entered the portal with the expectation of sitting out the 2020-21 season, in accordance with previous NCAA transfer regulations. If a change is enacted that would allow first-time transfers to play immediately at their next school, and it’s put into effect for next season, most of those 746 players would be able to play right away.

That could change just about everything. The details of this will be the most intereting part because there could be a team make almost wholesale changes from the end of one season to the start of the next.

It’s a good bet that happens May 20.

The other way that may be moving faster than anyone expected is some form of payment to players for their “name, image and likeness.”

The NCAA vice president for Division 1 had a video released via Twitter on that Friday:

https://twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1YqJDELjdZDxV

“I think there may be some who are actually surprised, candidly, at how far these recommendations are going and how robust they are,” Lennon said.

But there won’t be a pay-for-play setup.

“You need to have the right parameters to make sure that it is not a pay-for-play model, that we don’t create an employer-employee relationship, that we protect the integrity of the recruiting process,” Lennon said.

Take that however you want.

The most interesting part of these two changes under consideration by the NCAA is not each rule independent of the other but that they are even being mentioned at the same time.

Or they could just save a lot of time and check with Alabama for football, Kentucky in men’s basketball and just go ahead and adopt their recommendations.

That’s usually how these things are enforced anyway.

Musselman lands grad transfer guard from Northern Kentucky

Eric Musselman has landed a graduate transfer in the middle of this global health crisis when Northern Kentucky guard Jalen Tate announced via Twitter his intention to come to Fayetteville.

Tate, 6-6, 170, averaged 13.9 points, 5.4 rebounds and 3.6 assists per game with the Norse. He was named the MVP of the Horizon League Tournament after averaging 19.3 points per contest through three games.

He is the second grad transfer Musselman has landed after Vance Jackson from New Mexico committed to the Razorbacks less than 48 hours after putting his name in the transfer portal.