41.7 F
Fayetteville

Yurachek keeping coach search a mystery, which is why we know nothing

1

If nothing else, Arkansas’ search for a new football coach has publicly shown that, well, the circle that knows anything is small and doesn’t tell anyone anything.

Which, of course, leads to wild speculation among a fan base used to more leaks more from a search than a rusted boat. It appears if any big booster says anything, it’s either a wishlist or an outright wild guess.

And, we’re told by people who won’t give any names or locations, the planes being used for all this are owned by individual boosters who do not even live in Arkansas, which means the planes aren’t registered here.

Our own John Nabors may have to tweak his plane-tracking algorithm with this info.

There were people telling me Tuesday the Razorback Foundation was visiting with some higher-dollar donors and, while they weren’t disclosing any names, they were assuring them that paying the coach was not going to be a problem.

Yes, that could put the Hogs into the $6 million range for a coach.

And, no, Mike Leach may not have turned down anything … yet, anyway. One of the hot rumors going around was Leach had wanted in the $5-6 million range, which it was speculated as being out of the budget.

According to some folks Tuesday, that is not accurate. There were some reports that Hunter Yurachek and his band of merry interviewers have recently interviewed Leach.

One old-school type of logic says if a coach is not coaching a conference title game, why not announce it immediately and everybody get to work, but I’ve believed all along there wouldn’t be any sort of announcement until right around the SEC Championship Game this weekend.

Teams do that, by the way, to maximize the publicity, although in today’s world you have to wonder if that’s not a little out-dated.

Following my theory, we have a window from Wednesday-Sunday for the announcement of a coach with a press conference coming next week.

Recruiting for the early signing period got shot down the drain when the last coach was fired. But that doesn’t mean it’s that big of a deal because the new coach will have to recruit the 17 redshirt freshmen already on campus.

Most people tend to miss that. There are 17 freshmen that will still be freshmen next season that are currently in school and available for spring practice with a year of practicing with a college team.

It almost reminds me of when Jimmy Johnson basically got a truckload of draft picks from the Minnesota Vikings and used it to build a team that won three Super Bowls in four years.

No, I’m not saying the Hogs will win national championships with those freshmen, but it gives you one heckuva jumpstart on recruiting without counting against the 25 you can sign.

They’ll still have four years of eligibility, so what is the difference at this point? The new coach will still be able to sign some players, get some transfers and the usual merry-go-round of today’s college athletics.

But I’m hearing the UA is willing to spend the type money necessary to meet todays ridiculous market with a pool for assistants to get some big names.

Now, don’t ask me for the names without churning up a bunch that everybody else is throwing out there. I don’t know and haven’t heard from anyone in a position to know.

The truth is we’ll probably get an indication from the school the coach is leaving because they tend to not be particularly concerned abount covering for Arkansas once they find out their coach is leaving.

With the most recent hiring (men’s basketball coach Eric Musselman), the leaks came from Nevada, not anybody in Fayetteville.

The guess here is the same thing happens with the football search.

Whitt paces Razorbacks to 8-0 with 69-61 win over Austin Peay

FAYETTEVIILE — Jimmy Whitt, Jr., scored 17 points while Isaiah Joe and Mason Jones each added 16 to lead Arkansas to a 69-61 victory over Austin Peay Tuesday night at Bud Walton Arena.

With the win, the Razorbacks improved to 8-0 for just the 12th time in 97 years of basketball and the first time since 1997-98.

Both teams shot the ball well. Arkansas made 47.8 percent of its field goals, shot 39.1 percent from 3-point range — its best since the season opener — and made 16-of-18 at the free throw line.

Austin Peay shot 41.5 percent from the field, 31.6 from 3-point range and was 11-of-13 at the line.

The Razorbacks forced 21 turnovers but committed 20. Arkansas entered the game seventh in the NCAA in forcing turnovers and led the SEC in committing the fewest turnovers.

The difference in the game came down to a 9-0 Arkansas run late in the first half (4:47) to give the Hogs a lead it would keep the rest of the game. Ethan Henderson helped spark that run by throwing down a dunk

Terry Taylor led the Governors with 20 points. Antwuan Butler added 11 and Jordyn Adams 10. Eli Abaev pulled down a game-high 11 rebounds to help Austin Peay out-rebounds the Razorbacks 30-27.

Arkansas hits the road for the second time this year to face Western Kentucky on Saturday (Dec. 7). Tip-off is set for 6:30 pm and the game will be telecast on CBS Sports Network.

FIRST HALF: Arkansas 34-Austin Peay 30

• The game was tied 7-7 before Jalen Harris hit a 3-pointer at the top of the key at 14:29.

• Arkansas went on a scoring drought after that. Harris then broke another tie (13-13) with a 3-pointer at 8:02.

• The game was tied, 18-18, until Mason Jones made an acrobatic layup with 5:47 to give Arkansas a lead it would not relinquish.

• Ethan Henderson came off the bench with Austin Peay on the free throw line. The Govs made two and Arkansas went down one (17-16). Henderson provided a spark during a 9-0 run — putting the Hogs up 25-18 — with a dunk, three blocks and three rebounds.

• Arkansas made 4-of-its-last-5 shots from the field, but Austin Peay made its last three as the Razorbacks took a 34-30 into the locker room.

• Mason Jones led the Hogs with 10 first-half points. Isaiah Joe finished with nine, including a 4-point play late in the half.

• Arkansas shot 57.1 percent from the field in the first half – the best percentage of any half by the Hogs this season – and made 54.5 percent (6-of-11) from 3-point range.

SECOND HALF: Like the first half … Arkansas won the period by four points

• Austin Peay struck first in the second half, to make it a two-point game, but that is as close as the Governors would get.

• Arkansas got a dunk by Jimmy Whitt at 4:37 for the Razorbacks’ first double-digit lead (59-49).

• Arkansas led by as many as 13 in the second half – thanks to a 7-0 run – after a Desi Sills 3-pointer at 2:08.

• Arkansas was 12-of-13 at the charity stripe in the second half, compared to 3-of-4 by Austin Peay.

Game notes

• Arkansas’ starting lineup was Jimmy Whitt (G) – Isaiah Joe (G) – Desi Sills (G) – Mason Jones (G) – Adrio Bailey (F) for the seventh time this season.

• Arkansas lost the tip for the third time this season.

• For just the second time this season, Arkansas did not score first.

• Arkansas has led at the half in all eight games and has only trailed once in the second half this season – once for 20 seconds at Georgia Tech.

• For the fifth time this season, Jimmy Whitt Jr. scored Arkansas; first points (17:57). Arkansas is 5-0 when Whitt scores the Razorbacks’ first points. Arkansas is 3-0 when Whitt is the team’s leading scorer.

• Arkansas is 5-0 all-time versus Austin Peay.

• Isaiah Joe finished with six rebounds. He has had at least five boards five times this season. He only had 5+ rebounds in 34 games last season.

Musselman says team will have to play better in road game Saturday

Razorbacks coach Eric Musselman said after Tuesday night’s 69-61 win over Austin Peay that they will have to play a lot better Saturday against Western Kentucky.

Joe, Jones on too many turnovers and improving Henderson in win

Arkansas’ Isaiah Joe (16 points, 6 rebounds) and Mason Jones (16 points, 6 turnovers) on giving ball away too much, energy sophomore Ethan Henderson showed in beating Austin Peay.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — w/ Nikki Chavanelle & Kevin McPherson

0

Phil & Tye on John Daly’s comments concerning Lane Kiffin, Nikki on the coaching search, plus Kevin on the basketball team!

Alabama’s potential slide another reason this hire has to be right

3

We may have started to see the first cracks in Alabama football since Nick Saban finally got to his second season in 2008 and it’s just one more reason Hunter Yurachek has to get his hire right.

No, that doesn’t mean the Hogs are ready to challenge for the top spot but it might see some shuffling in the power structure and the Tide may be more reachable … soon.

With a sad fall into the pit of hell the Razorbacks find themselves now, Yurachek has to find somebody to just (as Cowboys’ owner Jerry Jones said about his team) “win a damn football game.”

After falling to Auburn last Saturday in a game where Saban was completely, hilariously, out-coached in embarrassing fashion, several people (including former Saban assistants) say Alabama is falling.

“They aren’t going to be as good next year,” that assistant said Sunday evening.

When you are 7-29 for the last three seasons and one of the worst programs in the country, you have to wonder just how attractive the Hogs’ job is right now. If you think you’re going hit a sitting coach at a title contender, well, you’re just wrong.

If Yurachek gets this wrong, you may be looking at another decade where being 6-6 a December trip to Shreveport would be cause for a celebration.

The only two coaches that have popped on the list that have ever won a game in the SEC are Lane Kiffin and Hugh Freeze.

Baggage is something Arkansas is probably going to have to deal with regardless who the final choice is. Fans don’t like it hearing it, but that’s what you get when you have a 1-23 league record over the last three seasons.

Freeze’s baggage is pretty clear and I’m not entirely sure the SEC wouldn’t block Arkansas from hiring him. Kiffin’s “baggage” is something I’m still trying to figure out what everybody is talking about.

Most of the stuff I’ve seen or heard about regarding Kiffin is ridiculous. Don’t throw stuff out about him being a party animal and that stuff. I don’t care.

Yes, Saban more or less kicked him out of Tuscaloosa between college football playoff games. You can bet your bottom dollar Saban wasn’t worried about the Crimson Tide’s offense or Kiffin would have been there.

Alabama’s loss to Clemson in the title game wasn’t due to a lack of offensive production. It was more what Tigers quarterback Deshaun Watson did.

Kiffin had a head coaching position. Yes, he was going to have to do some things to get ready for that job and Saban knew that from the start. He and Kiffin had a strange relationship anyway.

Some have tried to point out that USC athletics director Pat Haden, a pompous jerk on his best day, fired Kiffin after USC lost to Arizona State, their second league loss of the 2013 season.

The truth is that was an ego contest and Haden won. Kiffin had dealt with the NCAA issues, a loss of 30 scholarships, and still won games … including a 10-win season when the Trojans were banned from postseason play.

It was especially rich to hear whining from one media member who was highly critical of Arkansas for firing Bret Bielema at the end of the Missouri game in 2017.

Besides, exactly what do any of those things have to do with whether he can coach or not?

Kiffin has proven he can coach … at the SEC level.

While some are holding out hope for Iowa State’s Matt Campbell, apparently some are having selective amnesia remembering a Big 10 coach that came to Fayetteville with what some considered an impressive resume. The Cyclones are in the Big 12 … located smack in the middle of Big 10 country and resemble that conference more. Maybe he’s the answer. Maybe not.

It just means more in the SEC and the coach better know how to coach in this league or that losing streak is going to continue. Maybe Mike Norvell can handle it. Maybe not.

Norvell has never built anything, but has done quite well not letting Memphis drop after Justin Fuente built a program from the ruins.

Hog fans tend to think because a coach has success in another league that will automatically carry over to the situation in Fayetteville. Maybe it will … maybe it won’t.

By the way, the same argument carries over to Mike Leach, who reportedly has said he has an interest in the Arkansas opening. I’ll have to see his act work in the SEC before I buy into him.

I’m not sure in today’s world and as far down the rabbit hole Razorback football finds itself these days if there’s anybody who would be a slam dunk.

Fans won’t be completely united behind whoever the final choice is. That’s been the case with every hiring for the Hogs in the last 60 years.

Don’t believe it?

When Lou Holtz was hired in 1976, some wanted Barry Switzer or Fred Akers. Neither were interested, but that didn’t seem to register with some folks.

Ken Hatfield had a faction of people that wanted Jimmy Johnson to be hired in 1984. Tommy Tuberville had a large number of folks pushing him for the job in 1998.

Nothing has changed.

Except that whoever is chosen better be able to win some games … quickly.

It’s only the entire football program teetering on the decision.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — Plane Tracking SZN plus Dan Wolken

0

Phil and Tye on fans tracking the planes, Dan Wolken on the Arkansas job, and more!

Musselman on Yurachek’s hiring style, previewing Austin Peay

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman talked about his hiring process with athletics director Hunter Yurachek as the search for a new football coach continues.

FLAVOR OF DAY: Latest rumors Sunday center on Florida Atlantic’s Kiffin

0

Three years after getting kicked out of the Nick Saban rehab center for coaches a week before graduation, could Lane Kiffin find his way back into the SEC, courtesy of Arkansas?

That was the hottest of rumors Sunday, right behind the one about Iowa State coach Matt Campbell being tempted with a lot of money and he still said no thanks.

To be fair a couple of trusted sources told us over a week ago that Campbell had declined interest and apparently reinforced that over the weekend.

Sunday, there were twitter reports chasing a plane from Springdale Airport to Boca Raton, Florida, and back. Unless it was a a quick jaunt for a Florida late lunch, the chances for coincidence are small.

Kiffin, 44, would be an interesting choice by athletics director Hunter Yurachek to replace Chad Morris as the Razorbacks’ football coach. Morris was fired November 10.

It will mark a return to Fayetteville for Kiffin, who was a toddler when his father, legendary defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin, was the defensive coordinator for Lou Holtz during a time the Hogs went 30-5-1.

Kiffin’s first head coaching job was with the Oakland Raiders at age 31. He was fired after 20 games, publicly called a liar by Al Davis. By then an aging Davis bore a remarkable resemblance to The Emperor in Star Wars … and was acting a lot like him.

Don’t consider that anything to be worried about. Davis called everybody that disagreed with him the last 50 years before his death in 2011 a liar. It’s a list that includes nearly every NFL commissioner, several Hall of Fame coaches and general managers, including Tex Schramm of the Dallas Cowboys.

It didn’t work out for Kiffin, who made his name as Pete Carroll’s offensive coordinator during USC’s last glory days from 2001-04.

Kiffin was hired to replace Phillip Fulmer at Tennessee in 2009 and came within a blocked field goal at the end of beating Alabama during Nick Saban’s first national championship season.

He guided the Vols to a 7-5 record (4-4 in the SEC) before falling to No. 12 Virginia Tech in the Chick-fil-A Bowl.

But he left after a year to return to USC, compiling a 28-15 record. The Trojans never finished lower than third in the Pac 12 South and won a division title in his second season, going 10-2.

Then he was fired with the team at 3-2 on the year by athletics director Pat Haden after the team returned from a road trip loss at Arizona State. He was called off the team bus on the runway and fired.

Saban brought him to Tuscaloosa where he served as offensive coordinator for three seasons, winning a national championship and two playoff appearances before he accepted the job at Florida Atlantic.

He was encouraged to leave for Boca Raton a week before the national championship game against Clemson by Saban after the Crimson Tide’s offense struggled in the semifinal win over Washington.

Obviously there is no word on Kiffin other than rumors, but there are multiple reports and sources are saying it’s their impression that he met with Arkansas officials Sunday.

The Owls won the Conference USA East title with a 9-3 overall record this season (7-1 in the conference). They will be hosting Alabama-Birmingham on Saturday in the CUSA title game.

Kiffin took FAU to an 11-3 record his first season, winning East division and a bowl game.