Razorbacks coach Eric Musselman met with the media to preview the first game that counts next Tuesday against the Owls … a team he doesn’t know much about.
Whitt on new drills designed to help Hogs eliminate turnovers
Arkansas guard Jimmy Whitt met with the media Thursday afternoon and talked about some of the drills they’ve done using gloves, weighted vests and string among other things.
???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — Bob Holt
Phil & Tye on Joel Klatt’s comments, interview Bob Holt, plus Halftime Homework!
Coaches put Razorbacks at No. 22 to match ranking in media poll
FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas has been ranked No. 22 in the first USA Today coaches poll of the 2019-20 season, announced Thursday.
This marks the first time the Hogs have been ranked in the coaches poll since 2014, and the first time the Razorbacks have started a season ranked since 2002.
The Razorbacks are coming off of a 22-win season in 2018-19, the most wins for the program since the 2011-12 season.
Coach Mike Neighbors and Co. return four of five starters from last year’s team, including Chelsea Dungee, who was named to the SEC’s Preseason First Team by both the media and the coaches.
The Hogs also add talented transfer Amber Ramirez to the lineup after she was forced to sit out last season.
The Razorbacks went unbeaten during their exhibition schedule, beating Pittsburg State, 97-63, and Oklahoma City, 77-62.
The Hogs open their season next Friday at home against New Orleans on Elementary Day. Tip-off is set for 10:30 a.m. in Bud Walton Arena.
Well, Morris said he was ‘a high school coach’ and still coaches like it
You probably can’t blame Chad Morris for being prophetic in December 2017 when he was hired and told everyone he was “just a high school coach.”
He didn’t add he was going to take a shot at turning Arkansas football into the best high school team in the country.
About every question since then he’s spent running laps around an answer that made any sense. That tends to happen with a lot of high school coaches.
Not at the big-time college level.
Some have said Morris convinced athletics director Hunter Yurachek he inherited a team full of players that hadn’t bought into the coaching change and he was going ot have to tear it down completely and rebuild it.
Well, tearing it down is the major accomplishment with a third of a season left in his second year. What is ripping it apart for most fans is he’s showing no signs of hope — or progress — for the future.
It could be said he doesn’t even follow what he says he’s looking for in who plays.
That has become increasingly apparent by playing only quarterbacks who are only consistent in being inconsistent. Meanwhile, Morris has kept the quarterback on the bench who got the team into the end zone the most in fall camp.
Now that August talk only sounds like the high school coach who talks nice in a press conference about the president of the school board’s son who he has no intention of playing.
By skillfully managing to keep an extra year of eligibility for an overwhelming number of freshmen, has Morris sacrificed wins now by selling hope to the fans as his plan?
I’ll be honest. I bought into what a lot of folks who have hired coaches in the past said about Morris being one of the best possible picks to coach here, despite having the only qualifying part of a resume being offensive coordinator at an ACC school.
Don’t talk about Clemson’s success since he left or SMU’s success now. There weren’t a lot of players left from his time at Clemson when the Tigers won the title in 2016 and none on last year’s national championship team.
Only 35 of the scholarship players Morris brought into the Mustangs are still on the roster that is now undefeated and ranked No. 15 in the country, but I’m not real sure how much credit Morris gets for that.
Meanwhile, Morris has taken a team that really should have been 5-7 (at worst) his first season and coached it to a 2-10 record.
This year he’s managed to take a team that should be sitting at 5-3 in a worst-case scenario and has them with a 2-6 record.
Worse, there is absolutely nothing tangible to indicate it’s going to get better.
Unless you want to take a lot of clichè-ridden answers at press conferences.
It was pointed out near the end of his little press gathering Wednesday indoors the Morris and Mississippi State coach Joe Moorhead are the two highest-rated coaches at CoachesHotSeat.com.
“You can’t control what other people say, and that’s the least of my worries,” he said. “My worries are making sure that this football team continues to get better every day.”
For a coach who is becoming more paranoid about anyone seeing anything, that’s about as good as it’s going to get. He once again said he wants to see these freshmen on the field. The coaches talk about the great things they see in practice.
Yet, players like running back A’Monte Spivey, tight end Hudson Henry and quarterback K.J. Jefferson haven’t seen the field and are assured of a redshirt season.
“Some of our younger guys, they’re just slowly learning the system and learning what we’re asking of them,” Morris said. “They’ve got some really good players ahead of them, so they’ve just got to wait their turn and be ready when that opportunity happens.”
Seriously. That’s what he said.
Let’s see now, Morris is publicly saying now he’s playing guys that are “really good” ahead of these freshmen who are really good and the future and he can’t beat San Jose State?
Like Spivey, who Morris said Wednesday “is electric with the ball in his hands.”
Fans have to take Morris’ word on it because none have seen him on the field.
But maybe the most disturbing dysfunction of Morris’ Razorbacks is the quarterback position where there has been zero development that anybody has seen.
“We’re getting guys kind of going through reps like we’ve been doing the last several weeks, so that’s kind of where we’re at with it,” Morris said about the quarterback position.
If that statement is true, he’s doing the same thing over and over and somehow expecting a different result. Most know what that’s defining.
If it’s not true, fans will make up their own minds.
Morris needs a win Saturday against the Bulldogs. Maybe more than in any one game in modern memory for a Razorback coach.
For some that won’t be enough. With three win possibilities left (State, Western Kentucky and Missouri), you would think Morris has to get at least two of them to have any shot at keeping his job.
But for others he’s already proven he’s exactly what he said he was when hired.
“Just a high school coach.”
Neighbors embracing Razorbacks’ ranking by media in first poll of year
Razorbacks coach Mike Neighbors talked after the 77-63 final exhibition game win over Oklahoma City on Wednesday night about embracing the No. 22 ranking in the AP earlier in the day.
Klatt: Arkansas might be the worst team in the country
The Arkansas Razorbacks have not received much love from the national media this season. Why would they?
This team is bad. Real bad… A narrow win over Portland State, plus an embarrassing loss to San Jose State helps give validation to those who wish to make snarky comments about the Hogs.
You know the phrase “all publicity is good publicity.” Not sure if that applies here.
In an interview with Colin Cowherd on The Herd Wednesday, Fox Sports’s Joel Klatt roasted Chad Morris’ football team.
"Arkansas might be the worst team in the country."
– @joelklatt on @TheHerd pic.twitter.com/GaV2Hh3Txz
— Tye Richardson ???? (@TyeSportsRadio) October 30, 2019
Razorback fans had fun with this quote. Sarcasm and apathy is flowing through the veins of Hog fanatics all across the United States. Here are some of the better responses to Klatt’s harsh words.
Hammer . . . Down? https://t.co/eBQ5AgB693
— Jesse Gibson (@JesseJGibson) October 31, 2019
Just shoot me and get it over with ???? https://t.co/XCxYZNP3hj
— Zeb Jenkins (@zubEjankins) October 31, 2019
I’ve quit watching them. It genuinely hurts my quality of life. I’ll begin watching them in football next year. “Clean slate” In my mentality https://t.co/v8gFnUMmVm
— Jackson Hogan (@jaxnhogan) October 31, 2019
Klatt has bashed SEC teams before. He’s quite notorious for it actually. I don’t think Arkansas is the worst team in the country; that title belongs to Rutgers.
Beat Mississippi State at home this weekend so loudmouths like Klatt won’t have anything to chirp about for a while. Lose… and continue to face the pain that you are the laughingstock of the SEC. Not a flattering thought.
Check out the full interview here: Joel Klatt on The Herd
Happy Wednesday buddies.
Morris still not naming quarterback, staying focused on Razorbacks
Arkansas coach Chad Morris said before Wednesday’s practice that he hasn’t settled on a quarterback he’s focused on what his team is doing.
???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — Bill King
Phil & Tye on John Stephen and K.J. first team reps, World Series Game 7, Bill King, etc
Dungee, Ramirez on Hogs’ win over talented Oklahoma City team
Arkansas Chelsea Dungee (31 points, 6 rebounds) and Amber Ramirez (15 points 6 rebounds) after downing the Stars, 77-63, in the final exhibition game Wednesday night.










