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Has the beginning of the end started for Morris’ tenure with Hogs?

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Maybe the biggest thing Chad Morris had in offering any degree of hope for Arkansas fans was his ability to get big-name recruits headed to Fayetteville to bail out a program headed down like the Titanic.

Now he’s starting to sound like the band playing as the boat headed to the bottom of the Atlantic.

“We’ve got to keep developing the guys that we have, we’ve got to continue to recruit and
we’ve got to go back to work, one day at a time,” he said Saturday after getting trampled by Auburn.

He either doesn’t get it or doesn’t know what to do about it. That’s not good for a coach less than two years into a massive rebuilding project.

With the news Sunday he’s now lost a third highly-regarded commitment, the Razorbacks have fallen to No. 44 overall in the 247Sports.com composite rankings.

And that is a big-time problem.

Oh, and it’s really not helping his cause that one of the quarterbacks that transferred out after the first season is undefeated as a starter and coming to play the Hogs in November.

Are we seeing the beginning of the end for Morris at Arkansas?

“We’ve just got to go back to work and make some plays,” he said Saturday in more of what is becoming a tired mantra that apparently is making a lot of fans want to puke.

Morris’ explanations are starting to sound like excuses. It would be one thing if there was any glimmer of hope, but apparently he doesn’t want to put some youngsters in because he’s afraid of failure.

That sounds more like a high school coach talking than an SEC coach. Does Morris understand he’s in a league where, as former defensive coordinator and interim coach Joe Kines said, “they’ll slit your throat and drink the blood?”

Coaching mistakes turned what should have been a 5-7 season last year into a 2-10 record and sitting at 2-5 this year instead of 5-2.

Now THAT is a problem for Morris.

“We’ve just got to go back to work,” he said repeatedly Saturday.

When you hear that it conjures up visions of a coach that is treading deep water and somehow gets the idea that if he just keeps paddling in the same position he’s going to figure out where dry land is.

The last coach kept talking about “being close” and was still singing that song in his farewell press conference.

Does Morris have a team that has no confidence in the coaching staff and that is filtering down to recruits? Why else would a highly-regarded committed player suddenly open his recruiting back up right after an official visit?

As the Hogs head out of town this weekend to play the No. 1 team in the country, Morris better start figuring it out. Right now the only thing he’s figured out is how to be in the deepest dive in program history.

But at least he’s saved the redshirts on some fairly talented freshmen. He’s kept some redshirt freshmen from being thrown to the wolves.

Will the next coach send him a thank you message?

Musselman covers good, bad in Hogs’ win over Little Rock on Sunday

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman talked after the 79-64 win over the Trojans about what he liked, what needs improvement and the unveiling of Nolan Richardson Court.

Joe, Cylla recapping Hogs’ 79-64 win over Little Rock on Sunday

Razorbacks players Isaiah Joe (25 points) and Jeantal Cylla (13 points) talked with the media after downing the Trojans in the exhibition opener Sunday.

Walker on Trojans’ poor free-throw shooting, playing against Hogs

Little Rock coach (and former Razorback) Darrell Walker talked after Sunday’s exhibition game about the honor of being back for unveiling of Nolan Richardson Court.

Richardson on being honored with naming of court at Bud Walton Arena

Former Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson talked with the media at halftime of the exhibition game with Little Rock on Sunday about the honors he has received in retirement.

Auburn’s 51-10 win over Hogs points out glaring talent gap Morris faces

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If you think all of the problems with Arkansas football is in the coaching, Saturday’s 51-10 loss to No. 11 Auburn raises the alternative.

It may be as glaring of a talent differential as anything seen with the Razorbacks in modern history.

Especially on the offensive and defensive interior.

When Hogs tackle Dalton Wagner was knocked backwards into running back Rakeem Boyd to blow up a sweep that should have gotten your attention.

The Tigers’ seniors and juniors just simply overwhelmed Arkansas’ linemen … on both sides of the ball. The best comparison that comes to mind is watching a junior varsity team with 9th and 10th graders playing a state championship-caliber team.

To a certain extent that’s the hand Chad Morris is trying to play in the SEC West.

Oh, sure, there are questions about the coaching. It’s starting to be a valid question about the mess at quarterback Morris has somehow not been able to figure out for two seasons now.

Morris doesnt want to put freshman K.J. Jefferson or redshirt freshman John Stephen Jones on the field in what would amount to a no-win situation.

A valid argument can be made for that.

Don’t throw Bo Nix at Auburn or some of these other freshmen quarterbacks that have had success recently. They were playing with four and five-year offensive linemen and others.

Which brings up the whole problem with the Razorbacks. The previous regime basically quit bringing in or developing linemen on both sides of the ball in SEC-type numbers about 2015.

It has had a ripple effect throughout the rest of the team. Let’s face it, if you’re not very good inside the box, you’re going to have a heckuva time being good outside of it.

You simply can’t develop the linemen that quickly, especially on offense.

And if you think play-calling is going to make that big of a difference you’re wrong. That’s the most over-rated part of football that fans think is such a big deal.

“We’s just got to executive better,” Morris said in the post-mortem Saturday.

That’s coach-speak for, well, the other team was simply better. Calling the right plays doesn’t count for squat if it’s not executed correctly or the other tam has the talent to just blow the play up before it can get going.

“We ran a lot of RPO’s today,” Morris said. “We gotta make sure we execute them right.”

For a fan base that is exhausted with mediocrity that has lapsed into futility, they want somebody to blame. Patience is in short supply, along with an increasing lack of interest.

Saturday’s ticket distribution was 54,619 and quite a few of those didn’t bother showing up. The rain early didn’t help and the dark cloud hanging over the problem probably sealed the deal for a lot of fans who had other things to do and a television that worked.

This was a physical mismatch combined with ridiculously poor timing for the Hogs. The Tigers were coming off a bye week following their loss to Florida and were completely prepared.

It wasn’t so much the Razorbacks weren’t prepared as they simply couldn’t do anything about it.

“We knew they were very big and physical up front,” Morris said.

And fast. Morris has talked about how they’ve got to get more speed and you either have it or you’re chasing it and the Hogs were chasing Saturday.

Yeah, there may be coaching issues, but it’s anybody’s guess how much of that is caused by the talent gap.

Remember, the last time Auburn had lines with this much experience and the talent, the Hogs put 43 points on the board and still got beat by 22 with The Great Playmaker in charge.

Great coaching doesn’t beat better talent very often. That will be on display again next week against Alabama.

That’s not good news but it’s playing the hand you’ve got.

“The young men in the locker room are gonna stay in the fight,” Morris said Saturday. “The only thing you can do is go back to work. You keep developing and you recruit.

“I knew the league was tough. We’d played against some of these teams. But I keep saying it’s not who we play, it’s how we play.”

Which, I guess, is about all he could say Saturday.

Morris on team having to go back to work after loss to Auburn

Arkansas coach Chad Morris said his team can only “go back to work” after a 51-10 loss to the Tigers with yet another fourth-quarter collapse.

Hicks, Agim recapping Arkansas’ loss to Auburn on Saturday

Razorbacks quarterback Ben Hicks and defensive tackle McTelvin Agim talked about the strength of the Tigers, plays during the 51-10 loss on Saturday.

Knox, Pool recapping Razorbacks’ loss to Tigers on Saturday

Razorbacks wide receiver Trey Knox and linebacker Bumper Pool talked after the 51-10 loss to No. 11 Auburn on Saturday.

Hogs collapse again in fourth quarter, but not close in loss

Arkansas had another collapse in the fourth quarter against Auburn on Saturday as the No. 11 Tigers put 20 points on the board to run away with a 51-10 win, dropping the Hogs to 2-5 on the season (0-4 in the SEC).

McFadden on being named to football foundation Hall of Fame

Former Arkansas running back Darren McFadden met with the media regarding his upcoming induction into the National Football Foundation’s Hall of Fame,