Former Arkansas wide receiver Drew Morgan Tuesday morning joined Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas about what he took from Rick Jones as he starts his coaching career at Oklahoma high school.
Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Reggie Chaney transfer portal, Drew Morgan joins and more!
Tye & Tommy on Reggie Chaney entering the transfer portal, Drew Morgan joins, plus Would You Rather Tuesday!
Chaney going to transfer portal not surprising, Bordelon says on ‘Halftime’
The news of Reggie Chaney heading to the NCAA’s transfer portal didn’t really shock anybody, Scottie Bordelon of WholeHogSports.com on Monday afternoon told Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis (Halftime) on ESPN Arkansas.
Chaney enters transfer portal, which was probably expected by Musselman
After landing graduate transfer Justin Smith last week, forward Reggie Chaney has apparently entered the NCAA’s transfer portal, according to multiple published reports Monday.
The guess is Eric Musselman probably had an idea this was how things were going to play out as he had 14 players on scholarship for 13 spots.
Chaney, from Tulsa by way of Frisco, Texas, finally decided his up-and-down path at Arkansas was too much down and is the second player to take that route since Jalen Harris transferred to Georgetown earlier.
Chaney started two games during his freshman year, then mixed in seven starts with three games where he didn’t even get into the game.
Chaney’s transfer will leave just three players that have played for the Hogs previously … if Isaiahg Joe foregoes the professional level and comes back to school. The others are Desi Sills and Ethan Henderson.
Arkansas’ roster us currently at the 13-scholarship limit, but if Joe leaves Musselman the option of adding a graduate transfer who could play immediately.
As teams open facilities, NFL prepared, expected, to see positive test results
When the news broke Monday morning that two members of the Dallas Cowboys and Houston Texans had tested positive for covid-19, some people acted surprised.
They shouldn’t have been. There will be more positive tests, just as there will be at the college level as athletes begin returning to campus.
“We fully expect we will have positive cases that will arise,” said Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’s chief medical officer, back in May.
A month ago, NFL chief medical officer Dr. Allen Sills said: “We fully expect that we will have positive cases that arise. … Our challenge is to identify them as quickly as possible and prevent spread to any other participants.” The teams appear to have done that. https://t.co/T18b96Nhtw
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) June 15, 2020
Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek said last month positive results were expected in Fayetteville. They’ve had that.
Now Ezekiel Elliott of the Cowboys has tested positive, but is “feeling fine,” according to his agent. We won’t get more information from players unless they release the information. Privacy laws and stuff.
#Cowboys star RB Ezekiel Elliott is one of the players who has tested positive for the Coronavirus, his agent Rocky Arceneaux confirmed to me. Arceneaux said Elliott is feeling good.
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) June 15, 2020
The virus has started to show increased numbers of positive cases with increased testing capacity although the mortality rate remains very low.
Cook says Pittman ‘absolutely’ right man to take over Razorbacks’ football program
Former Arkansas offensive lineman Brey Cook on Monday morning with Tye Richardson, Tommy Craft and Clay Henry (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas on how he feels Sam Pittman is “absolutely” the right coach for the Hogs.
Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Bielema vs. Razorback Foundation, Brey Cook joins and more!
Playing fast is something Odom hopes comes from all the ‘virtual’ stuff
Barry Odom now has the unique experience of coaching against Arkansas, then becoming the defense coordinator — all in less than a month’s time.
“That was straight … or it seemed like it at the time,” Odom said last week to Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas.
With all going on in the world these days that’s pretty far down the list of weirdness for a lot of people. Like nearly everybody these days, Odom is having to figure things out on the fly with no handbook that’s ever covered everything going on.
He’s really only had the chance to watch the players he’s counting on from afar while they lifted weights and jump up and down. That was, effectively, only two and a half months.
“There were some things we were able to do in our morning workout program and see guys in a change of direction, playing with leverage throughout the drills that we had set up in the weight room in some of those sessions,” Odom said. “It gives us a little feel for what guys do with their speed, their explosion and some of those things.”
But he’s seen a change in the players. If nothing else his scouting of the Razorbacks started before Thanksgiving last year and he at least had a little different perspective coming in.
“Jamele Walker, our head strength coach, and coach (Ed) Ellis put together a plan that physically transformed our team from the time we started in January until we cut loose in March as drastic and dramatic as I’ve ever seen,” Odom said. “Those guys are really, really good.”
Since then it’s all been looking at a computer screen and talking to the players that way. At least the players have convinced him they’ve stayed interested.
“One of the things I respect about our team is they’re hungry,” he said. “They’re hungry for knowledge. They are excited about the opportunity we have in front of us.”
It’s given the coaches an idea of which players are ready to step into a leadership role.
“Everything we’ve rolled out for them and asked them to do they’ve done it,” Odom said. “We’ve had guys that have stepped up their leadership, mostly through example, and some vocal.”
All of the coaches have talked about needing to play faster, which comes from knowing what they are supposed to be doing.
“I’m excited to get them on the field to see the amount of information they’ve retained … when the ball is snapped how fast they go apply it,” Odom said.
He “thinks” the speed of the defense is going to be better than it has been … and that has been a glaring issue the last couple of seasons.
“I want to caution that only means we’ve got the ability to run fast in areas,” Odom said. “But if you don’t know what you’re doing defensively through what your scheme is then your speed is null and void.”
The virtual instruction has maybe given the coaches more time to instruct and free them to focus on implementing that when they finally start working out with coaches and doing walk-throughs. That is tentatively set for the middle of July.
“We’ve got to be good teachers,” Odom said.
All of that is why Pittman’s first staff may be the most important put together. Not only is it their first year working together but the covid-19 pandemic and everything else going on makes this all new territory for everybody.
“He went out and got the guys he wanted,” Odom said about Pittman putting together a staff. “He decided how he wanted to build the staff. He knew the type of teachers, leaders and mentors he wanted to get here and he went out and got ’em. That says a lot about him.”
And probably no other coach talks to Pittman as much as Odom does on their walks. But apparently they are still timing them although whether it’s at the speed Odom said is probably open for a second opinion.
“The pace is so fast it’s hard to keep good conversation,” he said. “We passed people here in the last couple of days because our pace is so fast. People that have trained, they’re on a mission training for some great marathon coming up I’m sure and we’re just blowing by ’em. It’s hard to have great long conversations when you’re so focused on the pace of the walk.”
Then, of course, you get the idea he’s got one game circled … whether Odom will admit it or not. The Missouri game after Thanksgiving in Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City will be big for him.
“Everybody uses motivation in different ways,” he said. “I’ve got plenty of motivation to lead this team for them to have success.”
That’s his coachspeak way of stomping around answering a question in June about a game in November.
But it will be big for him.
Lazy Bielema’s lawsuit seeking reward for Long’s arrogant incompetence
With Bret Bielema’s lawsuit against the Razorback Foundation on Friday we apparently are going to find out how contracts are simply the starting point for negotiations when they are broken.
The fact of the matter is this has been coming for awhile and I raised the question last year after Mike Anderson was fired and landed the St. John’s job a month later.
What’s probably going to result in all this is a settlement.
The guess here is the Foundation is willing to pay for the mistake of hiring an incompetent buffoon but not for one too lazy to go get another job.
Bielema’s argument is essentially he’s only qualified to be a head coach at the collegiate level and as lazy as Butch Jones, who was fired at Tennessee because he didn’t win enough games a few weeks before the axe fell in Fayetteville.
Jones entered the Nick Saban Rehab program for coaches with Alabama for minimum wage while Bielema took the volunteer role with the New England Patriots.
The argument could be made they are both lazier than Chad Morris. Seriously.
Morris didn’t win an SEC game and was fired less than two seasons into his time at Arkansas. A couple of months later he landed the offensive coordinator job at Auburn for $745,000 a year, which is then knocked off what he’s owed from the Foundation.
Bielema cites interviewing for head coaching spots at Michigan State and Colorado as proof he’s pursued other jobs. Apparently he feels he’s over-qualified for anything below being a head coach at the collegiate level.
Whether he actually WANTED those two jobs or not is something that could be uncovered in depositions and legal stuff that goes on in these deals.
It started with Jeff Long’s overblown ego negotiating a contract without adult supervision he was never going to have to cash.
That’s exactly what happened. When the Razorbacks beat Texas in the Texas Bowl down in Houston the official party later fueled a need to somehow give Bielema a contract extension that doomed the program.
Long had hired a coach that had a resume built on the success of others and managed to convince some folks it was a home run hire. At the time I said on the air it was worst hire for the Hogs since Otis Douglas in 1950.
Ensuing events trumped Bielema’s hire, but nobody ever accused Morris of being lazy. Neither had a clue what they were doing at the SEC level or even how to go about it.
Bielema waddled around in flip-flops and outfits that looked more like pajamas than coachimg attire, blew off visiting recruits and their families while spending so much time on Dickson St. he had a private room behind a place down there.
Morris just kept running (literally) in circles spouting cliches and hoping something would change. Either that or he assumed he had more time.
Jones apparently accepted a job at Maryland as associate head coach and tight ends coach when Mike Locksley got the job but did a U-turn and stayed at Alabama, getting promoted to the role of special assistant.
This mess Razorback football finds itself in should be dumped in the lap of Long. Most of his insecurities were wrapped in arrogance to mask incompetence. That happened because people higher up the pecking order let it happen.
Bielema wallowed around and basically got the NFL equivalent of a volunteer position with the New England Patriots for NFL minimum wage, mainly because he had a pretty good check coming from Arkansas. He collected close to $5 million of his $12 million severance.
The truth is they probably should have just stopped paying him sooner.
Whether that was the thought process or not is pure speculation, but there’s going to have to be some NFL teams open up some books. Coaches may have to give explanations.
The lawsuit Bielema filed Friday in Washington County could lead down some interesting paths. When you have at least two NFL teams involved and at least SEC teams that’s what we will probably get.
Bielema’s lawsuit may let some facts out that could prove to be interesting
Bret Bielema came to Arkansas in December 2012 with a resume built on the simply not running what somebody else built into a ditch and is now trying to get paid for basically quitting on the job.
Now he’s gotten attorney Tom Mars on his side and they have sued the Razorback Foundation in Washington County for $7.7 million, the remainder of his buyout due.
And may open the door for an ugly battle that could drag out for awhile with depositions, claims and counter-claims for awhile.
If they don’t reach a settlement out of court.
Bielema is currently the linebackers coach for the New York Giants after being a bargain-basement coach for New England for a couple of seasons.
The Foundation’s attorney, Marshall Ney, sent a response Friday afternoon to 40/29 News in Fayetteville:
“What I can share at this point before digesting the entire document is that the Foundation previously demanded that Bret Bielema return the $4,555,833.29 that had been paid to him prior to the Foundation’s discovery of his multiple material breaches of the agreement. It appears that Bielema filed suit in order to avoid being sued.”
The original contract stipulated the matter be litigated in Washington County, which is why the lawsuit was filed there
Exactly what comes out it will be interesting, but also in the lawsuit is using fired Tennessee coach Butch Davis’ job with Alabama as a comparison, according to Pete Thamel at Yahoo Sports:
Razorback Foundation president Scott Varady reportedly believed Bielema’s $150,000 salary as the Patriots defensive line coach — incidentally the maximum he was reportedly allowed to make without it coming out of his Arkansas checks — was below the market value of such a job and that Bielema was breaching the agreement.
In addressing those allegations, Bielema’s lawyers cited former Tennessee head coach Butch Jones, who was fired just a few weeks before Bielema. Bielema pointed to his salary being far larger than Jones’ corresponding income as an analyst and assistant at Alabama, with no complaint from Tennessee.
So, let’s start counting now. There are now multiple SEC and NFL teams involved in the lawsuit.













