Prep coaches still don’t have answers; delay for football could be coming

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It’s safe to say Arkansas prep football coaches and athletic directors are antsy.

After seeing offseason activities halted for 11 weeks because of COVID-19, players have been training under strict guidelines since early June. The individual training includes weight lifting, running and other activities by contact is strictly forbidden.

Typically by now, prep coaches have been able to evaluate players in contact situations during spring drills, summer team camps. Seven-on-seven tournaments also provide valuable reps for offensive skill players. All of that has been eliminated because of the pandemic.

And now, as the first week of scheduled fall camp is supposed to begin, it appears at the very least the start of the season may be delayed. During Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s daily COVID-19 briefing Tuesday, he was asked about contact sports.

“We have given it thought, we have had discussions with the Arkansas Activities Association,” Hutchinson said. “The Department of Health and the Arkansas Activities Association have worked very hard on this. Teams are not allowed to do contact drills.

“In terms of contact sports, we are not ready to move. Hopefully, it will get better. They can train but not engage in contact drills.”

That comment prompted a statement from the AAA later Tuesday afternoon:

“We know there are many questions that we can’t give definitive answers for close-contact team sports on start dates, allowable practice activities for the future, plans for competition venues, etc. We are in communication with the Governor’s Office and Department of Health in efforts to provide answers.”

Without much clarity, there are still some assumptions that can be made based on the traditional calendar and the fact that Hutchinson said earlier this month that contact sports will not be allowed until the state moves into Phase 3 of the CDC guidelines.

If Hutchinson and the Arkansas Department of Health aren’t ready to give the go-ahead at this time and fall camp is supposed to begin next week, it’s easy to assume with the timetable schools wouldn’t be ready to play Week Zero — Friday, Aug. 28.

With the number of cases in Arkansas fluctuating between 500 and 1,000 the past week, it appears the soonest high schools could begin contact drills is mid-August. But will the numbers improve as much as they need to by then to move to Phase 3? Maybe late August?

As much as I know coaches want to begin contact workouts and start the season on time, they know not giving the players enough time to begin contact drills before the season starts will place their safety in jeopardy.

Typically, coaches get two weeks of workouts in before school starts which limits the number of hours players can practice. Those two weeks before school starts is valuable in getting game ready. It also allows coaches time to evaluate players in contact situations.

Normally, of course, they have already seen players during spring practice and team camps. The weeks in August leading up to the season opener still provide heated competition for playing time, but coaches have an idea of who is contending.

Currently there are a lot of high school coaches who have no idea what their depth charts will look like until they see players scrimmaging in practice.

I would think most coaches would want a month to get players into game shape and have a chance to evaluate. All of those factors would lead observers to believe a delay is imminent.

Could that mean pushing back the season to September like Texas is doing with its larger schools and playing into January or cutting some games from the regular-season schedule?

Both would seem to be possibilities at this point.

Now, that other states have acted, the AAA can draw from those examples. Waiting until the last minute may not be the preference of coaches, but when making a decision of this magnitude taking the time is important.

The pandemic is fluid and changes daily. Making a rash decision wouldn’t be wise.

Seeing how the trend looks going into the first of August is a sound move. If it continues to stay the same or rise, the prospects of beginning contact seem slim. Then, a decision can be made on the schedule moving forward.

Other states, including New Mexico and California, have already decided they will not play contact sports this fall. Flipping fall and spring sports is an option, too, although if that were to happen that decision may have to be made already.

What one coach told me he is fearful of is beginning the season only to have it shut down by COVID-19 affecting numerous programs. He assumed if that happened, the season wouldn’t be resumed later.

As we head into the final week of July, we still don’t know much about high school football season, but it appears less and less likely games will begin as scheduled.

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How ‘good players can’t overcome bad coaching’ sums up last few years

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“Good players can’t overcome bad coaching.”
— Bill Belichick, New England Patriots


New England coach Bill Belichick has said it on a few occasions and Arkansas football probably wasn’t on his mind but maybe no better statement applies around the current mess.

It certainly is what has gone on with the Hogs the last eight years in a shocking run of bad coaches.

The talent level is not that bad. It certainly hasn’t been 4-20 quality. The Razorbacks’ level of talent of what is (and has been) on campus the last eight years should have won more than 37% of the games played.

People now talk about the talent level on this team guaranteeing more futility and nothing could be farther from the truth, in my opinion. No, that’s not to even imply they are ready to challenge for the SEC West title but they aren’t that bad.

This team has had little leadership from the top down for those eight years. Even John L. Smith wasn’t going to win 11 games with the talent he inherited but it was good enough they should have won at least seven.

Even Blundering Bert should have won considerably more than what he accomplished. He managed to lose games the thought had to cross your mind at least once he was trying to lose.

If Chad Morris did anything positive it was keeping the redshirt on so many of the better players he acquired. It’s easy to point fingers at the most recent coach but Morris was completely lost from day one.

The staff now at Fayetteville would have put the Hogs in bowl games the last two seasons with the players on the roster. Not exactly a top-tier bowl but they would have at least won half the games.

Yes, coaching makes that big of a difference. Don’t believe it? Out of the eight coaches the Hogs had the last 30 years that left and had any level of success were Ken Hatfield, Houston Nutt and Bobby Petrino … all had limited success.

Morris was the worst because he was the least qualified to ever have the job in the first place.

Don’t start thinking players will go out and play up to 100% of their ability every game. That’s not necessarily a knock on their effort. Coaching is preparation and if players don’t believe (or understand) what they are supposed to being doing they think too much.

The result of over-thinking things results in players being a step or two behind at a level where a half-step will cost you wins.

We heard for two years from players and some assistant coaches about the previous staff’s inability to grasp anything. Some players told me their high school teams were better organized. Assistants told close confidants it was obvious the direction from the top was chaotic, at best.

The result was the players were hesitant. The quarterback position was such a revolving door none of them played to a fraction of their ability. Very seldom has it worked out well with no consistency there.

I’ve seen it with Hall of Fame coaches. The only time Tom Landry won championships was with Roger Staubach winning games, often ignoring the plays Landry sent in.

Too many people misunderstand the X’s and O’s conversation. Some like the old line, “it’s not the X’s and O’s but about the Jimmy’s and Joe’s,” which is accurate but not exactly in the context most people think.

If you don’t put ol’ Jimmy and Joe into the right X and O the result is going to be a disaster.

And the Hogs have been all of that — and maybe a bit more — over the last eight seasons.

Coaching is the reason why, not the talent level.