Gov. Asa Hutchinson will provide an update to media Tuesday regarding Arkansas’ Covid-19 response, including updating current statistics.
Longtime assistant Dickey talks memories, qualities of former Hogs coach
Former Razorbacks coach Eddie Sutton passed away Saturday and nobody coached with him longer than Arkansas native James Dickey and he joined Tye Richardson, Tommy Craft and Clay Henry (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas on Tuesday morning.
Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Eddie Sutton memories, James Dickey, Would You Rather Tue
Tye & Tommy on some Eddie Sutton memories, former players on their coach, plus Would You Rather Tuesday!
James Dickey, Former Arkansas Asst. Coach to Eddie Sutton, joins The Morning Rush
Former Arkansas Asst. Coach James Dickey, who was a long time assistant coach to the late Eddie Sutton, joined The Morning Rush to discuss Coach Sutton’s legacy. Check out our conversation here!
Sutton taught an ENTIRE state how to fall in love with basketball
It may come as a surprise to you but Eddie Sutton took the Arkansas job in 1974 over the head coaching position at Duke … despite his friends warning him not to come to Fayetteville.
Yes, THAT Duke. Granted it was in the time that the Blue Devils couldn’t get the best players in school because of academic requirements that softened a little shortly after 1974, but that was a school hot after Sutton.
It was Frank Broyles’ salesmanship that landed Sutton. Remember, Broyles was still the football coach at the time and in the first year of being the athletics director. He didn’t want to lose in any sport.
Sutton took the job in Fayetteville with home games played in what was then Barnhill Fieldhouse, which was a half-step above a barn even by 1974 standards. They had 33 wins combined in the last four seasons before his arrival.
He passed away at his home in Tulsa on Saturday from natural causes, according to his family. He was 84 years of age.
He walked into a job where it was truly a small, intimate gathering of good friends to watch the Razorbacks play home games. I remember being at games and actually sitting on the front row because nobody else was there.
At Broyles’ urging, Sutton hit the circuit around the state selling his program. He came to Warren in the spring of 1974 to speak at the all-sports banquet in a gym that had no air conditioning on a hot spring evening.
Somehow the plane delivering him to Warren arrived early and he came over the gym and Sutton went to the football coaches’ offices connected to the gym which is where a 16-year-old proceeded to stroll in and ask for an interview.
I have no idea why it was a little surprising he said sure, grinning in a manner everybody in the state got used to. My first question was about as straightforward as I could come up with and it was, simply, “why did you want to come to Arkansas?”
Granted, it was done because I couldn’t think of anything better, but what followed was a lengthy answer that even a 16-year-old could figure out was Broyles had sold him on it.
That launched a roughly 40-minute discussion where he laid out his plan he had come up with that was based largely on what convinced me at the time he at least was sold on his plan.
Sutton also inherited a media that had never covered a big-time college basketball program. With me, that interview in the only air-conditioned place on a hot spring evening started a run during which over the next 11 seasons, you could literally walk into his office without an appointment and get five minutes or so.
When you called his office you got a return phone call. If you called him at home he would either answer or come to the office and patiently answer any questions.
“I’m going to ask those folks out there a question and I want you to watch how many people hold up their hands,” he said that night in Warren, still smiling. “You’ll know it when I ask the question.”
He was correct about that because it came early and there wasn’t a lot of wasted words before he got to it.
“How many of you have season tickets to Razorback basketball?” Sutton asked after saying he was glad to be invited to Warren.
He was there for free. A lot of coaches then were charging fairly steep fees, including Alabama coach Paul “Bear” Bryant from nearby Fordyce, who wanted a significant appearance fee.
After Sutton asked the question, things got quiet really quick.
One man, longtime booster Sykes Harris, Sr., (one of Broyles’ good friends and golfing buddies), raised his hand. Everybody else suddenly was fascinated by the tables and plates in front of them.
Sutton just smiled again.
“You may want to go ahead and get on the list now because I can guarantee you they are going to be hard to get in just a couple of years,” he said.
Nobody laughed, but a couple of people later after Sutton left headed back to Fayetteville remarked, “I think he actually believes he can win enough games that people will want to come to those games.”
Sutton had a different timeline and an unbelievable confidence in himself. He knew what he could do, got Marvin Delph immediately out of Conway then got Ron Brewer from Westark Community College (now UA-Fort Smith) and Sidney Moncrief from Little Rock Hall and things changed in a hurry.
Within 18 months, Razorback men’s basketball tickets were a hot item. Less than three years later getting one required someone that either had deep pockets or knew the right people.
Hogs’ basketball was on the map. In his second season, Sutton had the Hogs in the NCAA Tournament and they blew a 17-point lead in the first round to Wake Forest as key players got in foul trouble and they lost a close one at the end.
His third season removed any doubt Arkansas basketball was back. They reached the Final Four, finished third in the nation a few months after the football team finished third after beating Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl.
Arkansas sports hasn’t been at that level with football and basketball in the same year since.
Sutton showed that, yes, you could win big at a traditional football school if you were fundamentally sound. He stressed defense and believed you HAD to be able to do that and not turn the ball over.
If the players did that, he figured he was good enough to bring them across as winners.
Which he consistently did.
During his first five years he spent as much time coaching the fans as the players. His shows on KATV with Sam Smith, Dave Woodman and Paul Eells were required viewing on Sunday afternoons at 4:30.
Watching one of Sutton’s practice was as educational as talking to him, which happened a couple of times when he would come close enough and start explaining what he was teaching. Before that I didn’t have a clue about how players really SHOULD be playing a man defense with footwork and angles to watch the ball and the man you were supposed to be guarding.
Sutton even came up with the idea of a pep band stuck in a corner of a renovated Barnhill Arena and the director, Jim Robken, ran all over the place firing up the packed house. He even put in one of those noise meters and fans tried to blow it through the top.
It was a deafening noise. Opposing coaches hated playing in Fayetteville with a passion. After games Sutton would often be hoarse from the strain of just communicating over the crowd.
Houston’s Guy Lewis just threw his hands up one night and sat down with his towel.
“My players couldn’t even hear what I was trying to tell them,” he told me a couple of years later in Dallas at the SWC Tournament, recalling the game where the Cougars blew a lead late. He blamed the crowd.
Sutton built a monster that only his successor, Nolan Richardson, has managed to keep consistently fed adequately.
He left for Kentucky in 1985 when he admitted years later he got caught up in the challenge of taking over one of the highest-profile programs in college basketball.
Sutton later admitted his comment about “crawling to Kentucky” was a dumb comment and aimed at Broyles, not the fans. He also said he never should have left Arkansas then. He probably would have left for his alma mater, Oklahoma State, later but that’s one hypothetical piled on top of another one.
What Richardson accomplished in continuing to actually build on the program reached the top of a mountain no one even considered possible two decades before.
But he never would have been here if Sutton hadn’t arrived in Arkansas in the spring of 1974. Deep down his biggest asset was the ability to teach. That extended to fans and, yes, even the media.
He really did teach an ENTIRE state how to love basketball.
Record commitments now could bring about a record number of de-commits
With college football commitments running somewhere north of 600 players right now, we may be looking at a different cycle of recruiting this year — chasing the de-commits.
The bottom line for fans is don’t count too strongly on every commitment. They will change.
In a story at 247Sports.com, the numbers were over double in the first week of May over last year and have probably gone up by now:
As of May 6, there are 627 committed recruits in the current class of rising seniors (class of 2021). As of May 6 of last year, there were 302 committed recruits (class of 2020). As of May 6 two years ago, there were 243. As of May 6 three years ago, there were 299.
Offensive coordinator Kendal Briles admitted as much the other day on a radio show, but it’s also why fans shouldn’t get all worked up right now over verbal commitments from 17-year-old kids.
Things change. If you’re older, think back when you were that age and how often you changed your mind on just about everything.
We’re just shy of about six months before the early signing period and, trust me, there’s going to be a wave of changes … maybe creating chaos for those that follow it closely.
Blame the Covid-19 virus that has completely changed the face of recruiting in all sports. If they didn’t visit a school before the middle of March, they’re committing based on the combination of virtual tours and how good of a salesmen the coaching staff is.
It will be interesting to see the percentage of these commits that land at the school they pledged back in the spring.
Oh, normally there are spring commitments but this year appears to be especially high.
As a coach told me years ago, “when a player makes a commitment is when the real recruiting starts.”
In other words, even the coaches know a verbal commitment isn’t binding and there certainly isn’t a rule against opponents continuing to try and sway them.
The guess is for a lot of schools that are going to feel the economic pinch from the current pandemic. That’s not schools in the Southeastern Conference anytime soon.
As more coaches have discovered technology the guess is a new way of recruiting is coming about. Some schools will have to do it to save money.
Others will see it as a way to extend their reach.
How it works out, though, remains to be seen.
New York’s announcement Sunday clears another hurdle for sports’ return
If you want another sign that we’re probably going to have football starting when it was supposed to, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo gave the green light for New York teams to open facilities.
“Starting today, all the New York professional sports leagues will be able to begin training camps,” Cuomo said during a news conference Sunday.”
It’s not the first indicator — but a pretty big one — that we’re going to have sports sooner rather than later. New York was one of the harder-hit states in the Covid-19 crisis, but hospitalizations and deaths have been trending downward.
Last week was a flurry of positive signs sports was coming back.
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson issued the state guidelines that include being able to use a ball in summer workouts. Then the NCAA followed by leaving it up to the teams but as far as they were concerned teams could come back June 1.
The Southeastern Conference said schools could have players back on campus for the so-called “voluntary” workouts starting June 8.
Fans will have to wait a little bit longer to find out if they are going to be allowed in the stadiums to see the games, although Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek has said he’s planning to have a full house for the opening football game against Nevada on Sept. 5.
Based on the situation today, that seems like a fantasy. Not playing the games, but having a full stadium.
Who knows what things will look like in 90 days, considering how far it’s progressed the last 60 days when all sports had been cancelled and a lot of the nation suddenly out of work.
As the testing increases the positive results go up (some of which are false positives), but the hospitalizations and deaths continues to decrease.
The other part is positive results are increasingly coming from people who stayed inside, not those outside while the hospitalizations and deaths are primarily elderly and people with prior existing conditions of some type.
Covid-19 is probably not going away unless it just disappears somewhat along the lines of the SARS virus a few years ago. As the temperatures increase it’s going to be interesting to see what happens with the numbers.
Reports of a vaccine are now targeting the fall at some point, which could be as high as 60 percent effective (if it’s equivalent to the most successful viral respiratory vaccine ever created).
Treatments are becoming better as doctors learn more about it and get a handle on treating the virus. It will continue to improve.
As always, people should listen to their doctor and if they they might be at risk for getting sick, make your decision based on that. It’s an individual decision.
But there is likely going to be football starting on time.
“It’s a return to normalcy,” Cuomo said Sunday. “So we are working and encouraging all sports teams to start their training camps as soon as possible. And we’ll work with them to make sure that can happen.”
If New York is doing it you can rest assured states with lower numbers are going to do whatever they can to get sports back.
Even in Arkansas.
A dozen things you may – or may not – have known about Eddie Sutton
Former Arkansas coach Eddie Sutton passed away peacefully at his home in Tulsa on Saturday of natural causes and comments have flowed through the night and into Sunday morning about the former coach.
Over at Inside Fort Smith, they have a dozen items you may not be aware of from former Tulsa radio host John Erling, who runs a non-profit organization that has interviews and documentaries on prominent Oklahomans.
Erling put together a collection including some of the state’s biggest names including Sutton, who played and coached at Oklahoma State, including a pair of Final Four trips.
Maybe the one that will interest Razorback fans the most is his regret over his comment about “crawling” to Kentucky for the job coaching the Wildcats.
Sutton never intended to knock the fans or the university in his comments … but it came off that way to a lot of them.
“All my life I have made some dumb comments, but that was the worst,” Sutton said in the interview with Erling. “When I made that comment it wasn’t about the fans because Arkansas fans are the best. There are none better than those people because they are very loyal and they had been certainly good to be.
“When I made that comment it was directed at Frank (Broyles), and it was misinterpreted by a lot of Arkansans. I have lived that down because every chance I’ve ever had I’ve tried to correct that because it was a very uncalled for react.”
Things didn’t work out well with the Wildcats and Sutton regretted it later, despite patching things up with Frank Broyles.
“Knowing everything I know, I probably would have never left Arkansas,” Sutton told Erling.
Legendary former coach Sutton passes away in Tulsa at age of 84
Just a couple of months after being selected for the Naismith Hall of Fame, former Arkansas coach Eddie Sutton passed away Saturday in Tulsa, according to a report from the Tulsa World.
He was 84 years old and his family confirmed the death to the newspaper.
Despite being in failing health the last few years, Sutton had participated in a Zoom meeting with some of his former Razorback players and staff members. He also attended games in Fayetteville this past season, including the Red-White game and the SEC matchup with Kentucky, one of the schools he coached in a long career.
Sutton coached for 37 seasons at Creighton, Arkansas, Kentucky, Oklahoma State and San Francisco, compiling an 806-326 record (11th in NCAA), three Final Four appearances (Arkansas and Oklahoma State), nine regular-season conference titles, three-time national coach of the year and eight conference coach of the year honors.
It was Sutton who first put the Hogs consistently on the map in college basketball taking them to their first Final Four of the modern era in 1978 with Sidney Moncrief, Ron Brewer and Marvin Delph forming The Triplets.
Florida media icon Martin ‘a Feleipe fan,’ urgency needed to fix college football
Florida media icon Buddy Martin is very familiar with Arkansas transfer quarterback Feleipe Franks, who started his career with the Gators.
“I’m a Feleipe fan,” Martin said Friday to Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas. “I remember when he threw two or three picks and he tried to beat people with his arm and he was brutalized by some fans.”
The rough times in a 4-7 season (they lost a game due to a hurricane) turned around to a 10-3 record in 2018 and Franks was a big part of that.
“There was a moment for him when they actually booed him and from that moment on he took over that team,” Martin said. “Then he was on the way to having what looked like a good season (2019) before he got hurt.”
That led him to transfer from Florida. Sam Pittman and Kendal Briles got him to Arkansas and Martin, who has seen and talked with Franks more than everybody else in Fayetteville, thinks it’s a good move.
“You’ve got a real winner in the guy,” Martin said. “Sometimes he makes some bad reads, but he can literally put the ball down the field 70 yards. In the right system he’s going to do well.
He got Steve Spurrier’s attention early with his size and athleticism.
“Spurrier told me one time when he saw Feleipe that he wished he’d had a guy 6-5, 245, that could play quarterback when he was at Florida,” Martin said. “I think Feleipe will do well.”
Dealing with the pandemic in Florida
Martin is pretty sure we’ll have football this year, particularly in the South because, well, it has to be.
“We all down here (in Florida) just like you do in Arkansas, we’re gonna WILL a football season,” Martin said Friday afternoon to Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas. “It’s going to have to be one … one way or another.”
Buddy has seen just about everything in his decades of covering sports in Florida and around the country. Like some of us other old-timers, we lived through polio, the Asian Flu, the Hong Kong Flu and several other things that mostly made folks sick and, in some cases, killed them.
Football probably won’t be the same now, but with television you can do things differently and people still get their fix.
You can’t be foolish about it,” Martin said. “What we’re dealing with here is this pandemic is horrible and those of us that have been around long enough to know we’ve been through some things similar to this, but nothing quite like this.
In an area of the country where the SEC has a marketing slogan of “It Just Means More,” and Martin knows that full well.
“You talk about the mental health of people in the SEC and having football is necessary,” he said. “And I mean that seriously because quite a few people, that is what they live for. It means more is certainly true and I know in Arkansas you’ve got a new coach, you’re excited about Feleipe and you should be.”
Martin, who has covered the Gators for years, grew up in Ocala, less than an hour from Gainesville. He’s authored best-selling books on former Florida coaches Steve Spurrier and Urban Meyer.
“I live in the part of Florida where it is still the south,” he said. “Football is so important to what we do … our lifestyle. We’re kind of excited. I think there’s a way to do this, but who knows? We could show up and an outbreak happen and everybody says hold up.”
The SEC announced Friday players could return to “voluntary” workouts on the schools’ campuses … if it’s in line with state rules and regulations. The NCAA had given their approval along the same manner on Wednesday.
Martin also thinks the coronavirus is something we’re going to have to deal with.
“It’s a fact of life,” Martin said. “Coronavirus is here and I’m more cautious. I’ve been in self-quarantine for 60 days. I’m very cautious. We’re going to have to live with it.
“It’s like war. I would not like to lose a single person, but we’re going to see some victims. You’re losing ’em quicker. Every day somebody gets victimized by coronavirus.”
An opportunity to fix college football
A big part of the health crisis is the uncertainty surrounding college football with scheduling and teams trying to figure out what to do.
“It’s time to maybe also fix college football,” Martin said. “There’s some things that need to be fixed. There are things that can be done. These cupcake games have got to go away.”
Yes, he’s well aware how important those big-money games are to the FBC schools.
“The big story is going to have to be the Power 5 teams,” Martin said. “They’ve got to get their act polished up. Get rid of the cupcake games and expand the playoffs. Some of the people running college football are archaic.”
Don’t talk about the existing contracts with the College Football Playoff that limits the playoffs to just four teams for a few more years.
In the world of sports, contracts are the starting point of negotiations to change or re-do them.
“Contracts can be broken,” Martin said. “There are things that can be done. Do something about it. Nothing in the contract says the schedule has to be like they say. There are ways to do this.”
Some folks haven’t been paying attention. College athletics isn’t about the players … or the fans.
“This is about money,” Martin said. “Right now money is king. We’re going to be losing entire programs … some of the colleges, too. This is an emergency. They’ve got to do something about it now.”
One way to do that is clean up the schedules and get rid of the rent-a-wins so many teams play. Nobody wants to watch that on television and, whether fans want to admit it or not, that is what drives the bus these days.
Urgency is the key, Martin said.
“They’ve got to fix it now,” he said. “If they don’t, well, that’s just stupid.”













