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QB merry-go-round continues for Hogs; Miller to have surgery Friday

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For fans expecting a change at quarterback for Arkansas this week, you’ll either get your wishes fulfilled … or go right back to the status quo.

Chad Morris ran in circles around the whole issue Monday.

“I don’t know that right now at this point,” he said. “All options are on the table and we would love to have an opportunity to get some more of our younger guys in at times.”

Which says exactly nothing, staying with the theme of the day for Morris in a press conference where he apparently didn’t make it clear about the status of injured defensive tackle Marcus Miller.

While Morris wasn’t completely clear, some took his statement about Miller’s ACL injury as he HAD surgery Friday. That surgery is scheduled for November 1, according to folks close to Miller.

Everybody pretty much missed it because everybody was focused on the quarterback situation.

And Morris didn’t particularly seem interested in making the picture clear.

“We’ll have a general idea of how we’re going to do the reps in practice, similar to kind of what we did a little bit last week,” Morris said.

Yes, that means Ben Hicks is at least having his name kept in the mix. Along with Nick Starkel, John Stephen Jones and K.J. Jefferson.

“He’ll get some reps in there as well,” Morris said about Hicks.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — Who starts at QB???

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Phil & Tye have a HEATED conversation on the QB situation at Arkansas.

Morris: No quarterback set, chance for ‘November to remember’

Arkansas coach Chad Morris wasn’t naming a quarterback for Saturday’s homecoming game with Mississippi State and said they have a chance for a “November to remember.”

Chavis says defensive effort still there, previews Bulldogs

Razorbacks defensive coordinator John Chavis recapped Saturday’s loss to Alabama and said the players were still giving great effort ahead of homecoming game Saturday against Mississippi State.

Craddock on offensive problems, looking ahead to Mississippi State

Razorbacks offensive coordinator Joe Craddock talked Monday about the offensive problems against Alabama and taking a look at Saturday’s homecoming with the Bulldogs.

It’ll be a morning kickoff for Storey’s return with Western Kentucky

The league office has put Arkansas’ game with Western Kentucky on Nov. 9 will be at 11 a.m. as Ty Storey returns to his original team where he started last season before transferring.

The game will be televised on the SEC Network.

Has Morris managed to redshirt whopping number of highly-touted recruits?

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It looks now like Chad Morris may have had a plan all along and while you may not like it or agree with it, it was something above hope.

Did he want to redshirt most of the 2019 recruiting class that had a lot of playmakers and recruits that have the potential to be difference-makers?

If that was the case, he has managed to get his plan at least to the point of at least accomplishing the goal of saving a year.

A whopping 71 percent of the 25 signees (17) are qualified for a redshirt with four games remaining. Of that number, 10 are assured of a redshirt and one of them has already entered the transfer portal.

Wide receiver T.Q. Jackson and defensive back Jalen Catalon can play in one more game and keep their redshirt. Defensive tackle Marcus Miller can play in half of the remaining games.

Eric Gregory, Beaux Limmer and Brady Latham can play in three of the remaining games.

Quarterback K.J. Jefferson leads a pack of talented high school recruits that can play in all four of the remaining games and still have four years of eligibility left.

Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek leans against a door frame during Chad Morris’ press conference after a 48-7 loss to Alabama on Saturday night. PHOTO BY CRAVEN WHITLOW | HITTHATLINE.COM

That list includes:

• Quarterback K.J. Jefferson
• Running back A’Monte Spivey
• Wide receiver Shamar Nash
• Tight end Hudson Henry
• Offensive lineman Dylan Rathcke
• Offensive lineman Chibueze Nwanna
• Defensive lineman Enoch Jackson
• Defensive lineman Taurean Carter
• Linebacker Zach Zimos
• Defensive back Malik Chavis

Only coaches who have had a plan like this with at least a nod of the head from the folks higher up the food chain even attempt something along these lines.

There have been whispers that started a few months ago that was the plan.

Did Morris tell athletics director Hunter Yurachek over a year ago that many of the holdovers from the Bret Bielema era hadn’t bought into the new way of doing things and he was going to have to clear out the riff-raff and build Arkansas football from the ground up?

Coaches so rarely attempt something like that it was kinda hard to imagine one having the fortitude to pull it off. If he didn’t have to win immediately it’s likely Morris wouldn’t have done it exactly that way.

Or was that the deal he negotiated back in December 2017?

Morris and this coaching staff hasn’t exactly acted like one that thought it was on the hot seat.

And, in case you were wondering, there are a good number of second-year coaches struggling at their positions this year.

Jeremy Pruitt seems to have finally at least broken the fall at Tennessee. Scott Frost at Nebraska is still in a downward spiral. Chip Kelly at UCLA may have the Bruins heading back around on an upward swing.

The Razorbacks have the roughest stretch of their schedule in the rear-view mirror and if Morris is going to at least show signs of progress, he’s got one-third of the season left to do it.

Only LSU in a few weeks is a game you look at and say, “no way” right now. Okay, some of you bailed on things back at the end of September, but maybe none of us knew the plan then.

We’ll find out over the final month of the season if this coaching staff has actually been able to develop the young talent. Again, we have no idea about those guys.

Morris is in the second year of a five-year contract and may have had a five-year plan all along. And, remember, when Yurachek was asked about Morris’ hiring when he got the job, he heartily and without reservation supported it.

It may not be the way a lot of fans would have done it (or wanted it done).

That’s not relevant.

It’s apparent that may have been Morris’ plan all along.

Now he’s just got to figure out a way to take advantage of pulling off a roster juggling act through the first two-thirds of the season.

 

Is Morris getting to most interesting part of plan we don’t know about?

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Through the first two-thirds of a season that is shaping up to be another historic failure, it’s looked as though Chad Morris has been afraid of having success.

Or else he thinks he knows how to do things better than a lot of other folks.

The questions all start at the quarterback position on offense, which has been a revolving door for two seasons now. Five different people have started and three of them aren’t on the team anymore.

The logic back in August at least made sense. Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock apparently invoked some sort of logic that experience would be better than the quarterback they both said — repeatedly — got the team into the end zone in fall camp scrimmages.

Which is why that quarterback didn’t see the field in a game until October 26.

You wonder if they kept expecting the mistakes to go away with more experience from Ben Hicks and Nick Starkel. The only thing that appeared to improve was hitting defensive backs with more precision.

John Stephen Jones might not have all the measurables or even look like an SEC quarterback out there, but it became clear Saturday night against the No. 1 team in the country he knows how to play football better than either one of them.

“The moment was not too big for him,” Morris said in yet another post-mortem after getting throttled again by the Crimson Tide. “He did some really good things and just his spark, his confidence on the sidelines and when he would step into the huddle with those guys, I was proud of how he responded tonight.”

It became pretty clear, though, there were some packages that limited what they were going to try with Jones.

“We started putting in a few packages this week, I practiced those a little bit, and I was ready to go in,” Jones said later.

Jones at least does have a clue how to run an option. Hicks has shown he’s really only capable of running when the pocket collapses and he takes off on a scramble up the middle. Starkel looks like a lost stork when he tries it.

The biggest problems have looked all year like they are slow to make bad decisions.

“We’ve got to go back and study why we’re making some bad decisions with the football,” Morris said Saturday night.

Too often it looks like Morris is afraid to try something to win the game. Now, to be fair, I don’t think Morris is trying to tank games.

But either he knows something the rest of us don’t and hasn’t got a clue what to do.

What Morris might know the rest of us don’t is that the numbers in the win-loss column don’t matter … this year. Nobody can afford three straight years of abject failure.

Did Morris tell athletics director Hunter Yurachek shortly after being hired he was going to have to basically burn the thing to the ground and rebuild literally from the ground up?

More importantly, did Yurachek agree to that?

Surely both of them knew the public relations fallout that would result from that.

Oh, I hear constantly that this booster or that one is going to stop writing checks if Morris doesn’t win their own specific number of games, including one in the SEC.

No, they won’t. Their egos won’t let them quit writing those checks.

It might be a case where writing those checks gives them a chance to bend Yurachek’s ear occasionally and vent their frustrations. That’s been the case for 60 or 70 years.

But it usually doesn’t give them a vote unless they are in a position where they get to do that. All of that’s done in Little Rock by people who really have a lot of other factors to consider.

Could that be the reason we get the same explanations after the same results without a lot of changes?

These last four games could give some insight.

After a signing class that produced some pretty good results, 10 of them have stayed on the bench. Another seven still have that redshirt available after seeing limited time in a game or two.

That might just be the biggest indicator that Morris pitched a plan to Yurachek that he got the go-ahead to implement.

But we won’t know until after Thanksgiving.

Hog Reaction: Alabama

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Phil, Tye, and callers on the 48-7 loss to Alabama

Sooner or later, Morris is going to have to answer to folks that matter

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It’s clear after the 48-7 debacle in Tuscaloosa on Saturday night there is an issue with Arkansas’ football program that starts maybe even above Chad Morris’ level.

In case you’re wondering, the game was nowhere nearly as close as that final score indicates. Yes, that’s how bad things have gotten.

What is becoming crystal clear is that winning football games for the Razorbacks is not a high priority at the very, very top.

Sorry, that’s not personal. There are some very intelligent folks at that level, but they need to just come out and say their main interest isn’t whether 22 players that attend classes in Fayetteville can win a football game or not.

Nobody else is going to say it, but Morris is clearly over his head. I was wrong. I bought into what a lot of people who have made a living that said Morris was ready for the SEC.

Hey, nobody said they were getting paid to be right with their free opinions.

But hiring an admitted “high school coach” that had never coached a game in the SEC to head up a program in the most competitive division of the best conference in all of college football was a mistake.

Have we reached the point to where the folks who make that decision either do it or just admit they fouled up replacing the previous coach, it’s burned to the ground and time to bring in somebody that knows what they’re doing at this level?

Or do you give Morris the final four games of the season to save himself?

Go ahead and giggle, but this team could get bowl eligible. Okay, they could finish with a 5-7 record, which would match his level of progress at SMU.

Two-thirds of the way through a second season that has now seen Morris start five different quarterbacks, he either can’t develop one or even recognize one he inherits.

Charleston’s Ty Storey, who was either run off or left of his own accord (take your pick on your favorite version), is 5-2 as a starter at Western Kentucky this year.

It’s a legitimate question to ask if Morris really knows how to recognize or develop a quarterback at this level.

The thing people at every level say is you figure out what you feel is the best you got and stick with him through thick and thin. Having a flavor of the week seldom turns into wins.

No, nobody expected the Hogs to win against the Crimson Tide, even with them starting a backup quarterback.

But they didn’t expect the starting quarterback to be Nick Starkel with three interceptions and whiffing on a good snap from center. All of that led to 24 of Alabama’s points.

Throw in a bad decision by Nathan Parodi to catch a kickoff and step out of bounds at the 2 leading to another score and there’s 31 of the Tide’s 48 points.

The defense didn’t play well enough to win the game, but it wouldn’t have been as bad as it was if the offense hadn’t quit setting them up on a short field repeatedly in the first half.

But all of that leads to the questions about Morris and if he understands the problem or has a clue how to fix it.

Let’s face it, Arkansas has never been a consistent Top 20 finishing in recruiting and has only been successful in the history of the program with coaches who can develop average players to a better level and have them over-achieving.

On top of that, you have to be able to motivate a team and put them in position to win games.

Right now Morris is failing on all of the important questions.

And you get the idea he better get it fixed … fast.

Sooner or later, the folks that matter will start to care. Or get tired of getting the same questions whenever they go in public.

The guess is those questions have started.