This year, next week’s games not promised putting schedule together

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To be honest, until the news last week Mark Womack in the SEC’s offices was going to be putting together the jigsaw puzzle the league’s football schedule has become I had forgotten about him.

Sorry, Mark, but then again I didn’t think about Greg Sankey much, either, until he was tabbed to replace Mike Slive a few years ago.

Now he’s got to juggle 28 different people offering him all sorts of advice on what additions to the teams’ schedules with more options than anyone could guess.

He’s probably not in a big hurry to get it finalized, either.

“It gives great conversation on afternoon shows for a while, does it not?” Sankey asked on Paul Finebaum’s show last Friday.

In another words, keeping the league where it just means more in the headlines with an interesting conversation point.

Which is why the initial rumors that teams would play the next two crossover teams in their rotation would be the logical choice. It gets really complicated because the league doesn’t like giving one team the appearance of back-to-back home advantages, either.

That’s about as close to being fair to everyone as Womack could possibly get, although Razorbacks athletics director Hunter Yurachek has reminded him the last time they found a game they could win in the league (Ole Miss in 2017).

For Arkansas that would be a road trip to play Georgia and getting South Carolina at home, which probably is about as good as it’s going to get.

Sam Pittman probably wouldn’t admit it, but going back to Athens at least gives him a leg up on planning. He and some of his staff know details of the highly-regarded Bulldogs few others would know.

Of course that doesn’t mean the Hogs still wouldn’t be an overwhelming underdog in that matchup but it is an interesting storyline.

That’s probably going to be the ultimate determining factor in the schedule-making process during all this.

In a year where everything is different, the television networks will likely try to maximize matchups when they finally kick off Sept. 26. Usually they try and put together the biggest games towards the end of the schedule.

In a year unlike any other, nobody can look ahead because next week’s game are not promised to anyone.

Joe gets Hogs off to hot August start with announcement he’s coming back

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Isaiah Joe’s announcement Saturday likely is the result that quite simply Eric Musselman convinced the junior from Fort Smith his coaching staff can get him better.

Arkansas fans shouldn’t particularly over-think the why, but just be glad Joe will be back.

“This has definitely been [a decision] not to be rushed,” Joe said on the social media post.

No sightings of Musselman doing cartwheels in front of the basketball center have been reported but it wouldn’t exactly be that surprising.

“We are so excited to have Isaiah back,” Musselman said in a release. “He received incredible feedback from the NBA and got valuable experience with NBA interviews. We know how hard of a decision this was for Isaiah and his family. Zai’s goal is to have a long NBA career and we can’t wait to continue helping him reach his dream.”

Joe made a school record 113 shots behind the 3-point line and everybody figured he would be gone this year. A knee injury in the middle of SEC play slowed him down a little and his NBA projections put him on the fringe of being drafted.

While Musselman made it clear he was giving Joe and his family feedback, you can bet at some point in the conversations he may have just simply told him his staff can help him make a significant jump.

Joe’s return makes this one of the most promising rosters for the Hogs — at least on paper — they’ve had in awhile.

Only three of the 13 scholarship players have played (Joe, Ethan Henderson and Desi Sills) but the talent coming includes a highly-regard recruiting class with four highly-touted freshmen.

And expectations are already starting to climb.

Billy Ray: ‘Once you’re a Hog, you’re a Hog, dawg … c’mon,’ on Morning Rush

Billy Ray Smith, Jr., may be living in California after retiring from the NFL but the lifelong Razorback has no problem keeping up with what’s going on back in Fayetteville.

“Once you’re a Hog, you’re a Hog, dawg … c’mon,” he said while laughing Friday morning with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas.

Busch Light Apple Morning Rush Podcast — 10 game SEC schedule, Billy Ray Smith and more!

Tye & Tommy on the 10 game SEC conference schedule, talk with Billy Ray Smith Jr., and remember Paul Eells!

Thurman on transition from Hogs to coaching high school players at Parkview

After his first season coaching Little Rock Parkview, former Razorback Scotty Thurman talked with Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis (Halftime) on ESPN Arkansas about the contrasts coaching college players and high school.

Torres says on Halftime that Saban may be last of dying breed for coaches

Fox Sports podcaster Aaron Torres told Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis (Halftime) on ESPN Arkansas on Friday afternoon Alabama’s Nick Saban may be last of hardcore brand of coaches.

Former Hog Defensive Lineman Billy Ray Smith, Jr. joins The Morning Rush

Former Razorback defensive lineman Billy Ray Smith, Jr. had a great conversation with Tye and Tommy, as they discussed his time with the Razorbacks, and his thoughts on if the SWC was a tougher conference than the SEC. Check it out now!

Pittman will finally get something like spring practice but it will be in August

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Sam Pittman may get what could help a first-year coach who didn’t even get a spring practice with his team, which is probably what August practices will be.

The announcement Thursday from the SEC that it would an all-league schedule this year starting three weeks later than normal pretty much guaranteed that.

So much for Pittman getting a warm-up game before jumping square into a game in the toughest league in the country where Arkansas hasn’t won a game during Hunter Yurachek’s time as athletics director.

“I have reminded Mark Womack of the last time we won an SEC game,” Yurachek said Thursday afternoon.

Womack is the SEC official charged with trying to invent a schedule less than two months before the first game that satisfies 14 different coaches and 14 different athletics directors while keeping the cash coming from the television networks.

“It could get contentious,” Yurachek said at one point.

The media didn’t get to talk to Pittman following the announcement about the season. He’s just glad to know there IS a plan with some sort of date that actually has a shot of holding up.

Right now he probably doesn’t really care who that opening game Sept. 26 is against, although it might make for some interesting storyline to have Pittman’s first game be on the road against Georgia, the team where he coached the offensive line into one of the best in the country.

Nobody has said it, but it’s probably a safe bet the televised matchups are going to play a role as Womack puts it together. It will be one home game and one road game and the pool of potential teams in the East includes the Bulldogs, Florida, South Carolina, Vanderbilt and Kentucky.

Womack is really in a no-win position. Somebody’s not going to be happy.

“It’s never going to happen,” Yurachek said of everybody being happy. “I trust that Mark Womack will do a great job in putting our schedule together.”

Don’t get bogged down by the details. Pittman doesn’t care. In his released statement, there really was just one part that mattered:

“Our staff is already working on plans to get our team ready to go. Our entire program is excited to know we’re going to play football starting September 26.”

With the official fall camp practices still starting next week, Yurachek said the coaches and players won’t be pushed to cram a missed spring practice along with normal fall camp schedules into three weeks before game preparations begin.

Now they have the entire month of August for Pittman to effectively have something close to those missed 15 practices in the spring.

Key takeaways from Yurachek’s press conference

• Cancel those plans for playing Missouri at Arrowhead Stadium. That game will likely be played in Columbia, Mo., now.

• The same thing applies for the Southwest Classic. A&M wants out of that deal badly and Yurachek has admitted it will probably be in College Station. It’s also clear he wants next year’s game in Fayetteville.

• The hits keep coming for Pittman in his first year. He likely won’t have any recruits on campus the rest of the year. “I don’t see recruiting opening up any time during football season,” Yurachek said. “I think if the dead period is extended through December, you’ll see the early signing period moved past the first of the year.”

• The Hogs currently have one player in quarantine, according to Yurachek, who said on a couple of occasions how well the players have done following the guidelines.

Complete Yurachek press conference on 10-game, conference-only schedule

Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek is now about 90% certain there’s going to be a college football season that will start Sept. 26, he said in press conference Thursday afternoon.

Yurachek’s comments on SEC’s plan for delayed 10-game football season

We will have the complete video of Yurachek’s press conference at the conclusion here on HitThatLine.com

In response to the SEC’s announcement of a 10-game conference-only schedule and moving everything back a couple of weeks due to the coronavirus, athletics director Hunter Yurachek released a statement:

“Throughout this process, we have worked collectively and diligently as a conference to pursue the opportunity for student-athletes to compete in their respective sports, while maintaining the health, safety and wellbeing of student-athletes, coaches, staff members and fans. Overwhelmingly, our student-athletes at the University of Arkansas have indicated that they want an opportunity to compete. The thoughtful plan announced today by the SEC will allow us to push back the start of the football season, while also providing the ultimate flexibility to accommodate a 10-game conference schedule. There are still many details to be worked out, but this is a positive first step in allowing us to work toward a return to competition in a safe and appropriate manner.”

A revised schedule for the 2020 football season will be announced at a later date following approval by the Conference’s athletics directors.

The 10-game schedule will include one mid-season open date for each school and an open date on Dec. 12 for all schools.

The decision to limit competition to Conference-only schedules and rescheduling of the SEC Championship Game is based on the need for maximum flexibility in making any necessary scheduling adjustments while reacting to developments around the pandemic and continued advice from medical professionals.

In the coming weeks, Razorback football season ticket holders and Razorback Foundation members will receive additional information related to various aspects of the 2020 football season, including plans for approved capacity, procedures for games at Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium, as well as updated ticket and related contribution details.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.