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No desperation for Hogs, Morris, despite historically rocky beginning

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Whether you want to hear it or not, Chad Morris keeps telling fans he’s trying to build a program at Arkansas and he never expected it to be a fast or easy process.

It’s a good bet he didn’t think he’d be sitting at 4-13 at roughly the halfway point of his second season, but he’s not losing sight of here he’s trying to go.

By the way, that’s the worst start for a coach in program history, but Morris didn’t exactly inherit a situation poised for immediate success.

“We have to keep pushing this program forward,” Morris said on his radio show Wednesday evening.

Don’t misunderstand all of this. Morris wants to get wins as badly as any fan and he knows that’s the ultimate thing that will measure his tenure.

By the same token, you might as well settle in and wait for it to play out because he’s not going anywhere anytime soon, despite what message boards and fans may think is best.

Morris doesn’t appear to be distracted by it. Seeing him on his daily runs around campus with director of operations Randy Ross is always a positive sign. At least fans aren’t running over the curb trying to get at him.

It appears he has this team focused on at least talking about fixing the details.

Listening to quarterback Nick Starkel talk about how his interception against Texas A&M started bad when the play blew up, then got worse with him being injured was just one sign.

“You practice one way the whole week always getting it,” he said after practice Tuesday. “You’re always getting a look, always getting guys blocked where we have [Rakeem Boyd] running wide open.”

The problem was, the Aggies kinda threw a wrench into the whole thing.

“We get in the game and the guy kinda plays in between us so the shovel pass turns into a real throw with the guy on him,” Starkel said. “I’ve just got to know sometimes they get us. Sometimes they beat us on a play. I’ve got to throw the ball away. I’ve got to do a better job of throwing the ball away or holding onto it and just run out there. Protect points in the red zone.”

It’s a point the coaches have been hammering into the quarterbacks for awhile. The problem is the only real way to “get it” is experience it in a game.

Fans want to blame the coaches, but there is no way to simulate an actual game. Before you say they should practice what to do when it all goes sideways, remember there’s only a limited number of hours they can practice every day.

In case you don’t know, they can only have 17 hours a week on a game week, plus three hours for the game. The days of scrimmaging and having to turn the lights on are gone.

Experience is a tough teacher. You get the test first, then the lesson.

“Every possession has got to end with a kick,” Starkel said. “We’ve always got to reserve the right to punt, and also we’re not bad playing with a field goal instead of an interception.”

It’s frustrating for fans. They blame the coach, the quarterback and the athletic director in the time-honored Razorback tradition.

Morris either doesn’t pay attention or isn’t letting a soul know he does.

And he’s not losing sight of his goals, which is for a program, not a single game. He’s said a couple of times the game against A&M was the best since he’s been here, despite it being a loss.

“We’ve set the bar,” he said on his radio show this week. “Now nothing less than that is acceptable.”

Now he’s got to figure out how to get a win with that.

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A healthier Razorback team has quiet confidence coming off bye week

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Teams playing their first game coming off a week off are, well, all over the place.

Some come out like a ball of fire, others come out and nosedive into the ground.

Exactly which way an Arkansas team desperate for an SEC win goes against Kentucky on the road Saturday night is a coin flip. Take your pick because there’s not exactly any compelling reason to go either way.

But, at least after Tuesday’s practice, there was a quiet confidence among the players.

“It’s never make a game bigger than it is is kind of my mantra, my mentality,” quarterback Nick Starkel said.

Some fans want a team that resembles a junior high team jumping up and down with excitement. You can go back to Frank Broyles’ teams in the 1960’s and he played it down because he felt it took something out of the team in warmups that would be better in the game.

Players that are confident in their assignments and focused tend to not look like they need a drug test before the game.

That sounded more like the angle from the players Tuesday.

“We’re ready,” defensive tackle McTelvin Agim said. “We had a tough outing against Texas A&M and we know how good we can play now. It’s basically time to put it into four quarters and maybe more if it comes down to it.”

Nobody is taking the Wildcats for granted.

Both teams are 2-3, but Kentucky has had a gut-wrenching loss to a Florida team that lost it’s starting quarterback early, then came back and roared past them.

They’ve lost two games since then and it’s a good bet Mark Stoops will say after the season that loss to the Gators carried into two losses, then injuries happened.

“We know they are an SEC opponent,” defensive end Jamario Bell said. “We watched them on film. They had a lot of great success last year and they are coming in with an attitude about just like we are.”

Getting a lot of the walking wounded back on the practice field has helped with the level of enthusiasm.

Starkel is just glad to get Trey Knox and Treylon Burks back on the field at the same time. Knox missed the Texas A&M game with a hip pointer and Burks was in concussion protocol for the loss to San Jose State.

“It really opens it up,” Starkel said about having the pair of freshmen playmakers back. “You can see those guys make the safeties kind of respect them and respect the vertical pass game a lot more.”

You keep wondering when it’s all going to come together for this team for four quarters. Everybody has seen flashes of greatness, but it hasn’t come together for a complete game yet.

The players know it.

“I don’t know about [Kentucky], but I know we’re bringing it all,” defensive back Montaric Brown said. “We’re putting our heart out there. We’re playing our all. We need that win.”

Kentucky needs one, too, but playing desperate probably won’t work. Staying within themselves might work a little better.

” I’m taking them pretty hard,” running back Rakeem Boyd said about the losses. “I’m learning something from every loss. I take every loss we had and look what I did and see what I could have done better. You know what I mean. So there are a few things each and every game.”

And this team knows how close they’ve been. It should be 4-1 at a minimum.

“There are about three games we should have won if we had just left it on the field,” Boyd said.

We’ll see if they can carry the good things through for four full quarters, but it is a road game.

“They’re gonna have home field advantage,” Starkel said. “We take that as we’ve got to bring our own energy. We’ve got to create our own plays. Nobody’s going to go out there and bring some other energy for us.

“It’s really about us when we go to a place like that, especially at night.”

While a lot of fans are jumping up and down, there’s no sense of panic on this team. They do have a quiet confidence … or so it appears.

We’ll see how it translates on the field.

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