Hogs looking at transfers, but could one here be developed?

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With all this talk about Arkansas looking at potential transfer quarterbacks, you have to wonder how the guys already on the team feel about that.

It’s getting to the point where signing day is more of a starting point than a destination.

Especially with quarterbacks.

Joe Burrow just won a national title at Ohio State after transferring to LSU from Ohio State. Three of the quarterbacks in this year’s playoff games began their college careers somewhere else.

Which makes it reasonable that new Razorbacks coach Sam Pittman and offensive coordinator Kendal Briles are at least expressing interest.

Former Houston quarterback D’Eriq King and Florida’s starting quarterback at the beginning of this past season are the latest names drawing interest. Feleipe Franks is reportedly visiting Fayetteville this weekend, which is a big one in the recruiting world.

King was recruited by Briles to the Cougars and is one of the more highly-regarded signal-callers in this year’s talent relocation. Hog fans are hoping that’s enough to maybe convince him to come to Arkansas.

As for Franks, he is considered to be leaning towards Kansas and Les Miles, who recruited him hard when he was at LSU. He’s also visiting Mississippi State where Mike Leach is now the coach.

We may get a clue how good Pittman and Briles are as recruiters early with the Hogs. Let’s face it, they’re selling blue sky and opportunity at this point.

After back-to-back 10-loss seasons there’s no foundation. With eight different players starting at quarterback over the last two seasons and five of those guys gone, well, there’s not exactly a returning superstar to replace.

The three on the roster now — Jack Lindsey, John Stephen Jones and K.J. Jefferson — haven’t had a lot of development at the collegiate level. That’s code for lack of coaching, by the way.

All three have positives and negatives.There are some that feel looking at possible graduate transfer quarterbacks is a knock on the ones already here.

No, it’s not. The view here is if they’re not winning to compete for a job, you wonder how they’ll compete for wins.

With classes started for the spring semester getting a grad transfer in for spring practice has got to happen sooner rather than later … and they are recruiting some high school quarterbacks.

But unless Pittman and Briles can land a solid transfer, the most interesting thing in spring practice may be how well the ones already here can be developed.

After all, Hog fans have no idea how that could work out based on recent history.

???? Halftime Pod — Big **** Joe, Nikki on Feleipe Franks, Sam Khan Jr. on D’Eriq King and more!

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Phil & Tye on LSU’s season, Nikki updates on Feleipe Franks’ official visit, Sam Khan Jr. on D’Eriq King potentially choosing Arkansas.

Joe’s unselfishness part of slow starts, but Musselman says team better in second half

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman talked Monday about Isaiah Joe’s slow starts lately, but how this team seems to play much better in the second half of games.

Musselman: ‘Depth in college over-rated’ because not as much time required

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman talked Monday about how depth isn’t that important at the college level because they only play 30 games compared to 82 in the NBA with much older players.

MSU’s hiring Leach makes Pittman even more forgettable in critics’ eyes

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If Arkansas’ hiring of Sam Pittman was vanilla, it became a little more so last week.

Mississippi State made one of the splashiest hires of the offseason by replacing Joe Moorhead with Washington State’s Mike Leach.

As you know (unless you live under a rock), Leach is popular among casual fans for his witty and unusual press conferences  that often go viral. He wins enough to be considered successful and has done it in such outposts as Lubbock, Texas and Pullman, Wash.

Now, he brings his shtick to Starkville, Miss, and the Bulldogs faithful couldn’t be more tickled.

It took about a second for fans and media alike to begin to drool over Leach and Lane Kiffin as interstate rivals. The buzz has also already begun for SEC Media Days in August.

There will be media turned away at Birmingham trying to get sound bites from Kiffin, Leach, LSU’s Ed Orgeron and Alabama’s Nick Saban. LSU could be defending national champions.

There will be questions about a Bama comeback, and Leach and Kiffin will be in rare form for sure, as they can rest easy with an 0-0 record.

Then, there’s Pittman.

The career offensive line coach will attract some attention being a new kid on the block and rising through the ranks, but even rookie Missouri coach Eli Drinkwitz, a relative unknown, will get more publicity.

That is  fine with Pittman.

He doesn’t seem to be a guy who cares much about the spotlight. He’s a better speaker than you might think, and I know he commands attention in a living room, but he doesn’t crave the attention like Leach or Kiffin. He would be fine to stand in the corner, and let them flap their gums.

Leach’s bravado seems to give him more credibility. However, he was 6-6 at Wazzu this fall.

He’s 139-90, but he’s only won two division titles (one in the Big 12 and one in the Pac 12) and is 7-8 in bowl games. But there are some who would place him in the upper echelon of the SEC West elite that includes Alabama’s Nick Saban, Auburn’s Gus Malzahn and Texas A&M’s Jimbo Fisher, who all have won national titles.

And don’t forget about Orgeron who could win his first Monday night.

Leach is a good coach, but as I told some Hogs fans when the Arkansas job was open, Leach is too offensive-minded for me.

His style isn’t set up to win big games, and I’d question how he would line up in the SEC West as this would be the toughest competition his faced as a head coach.

Those questions still abound for me, yet MSU is paying him $5 million. There’s no question most think he’s light years ahead of the ol’ offensive line coach from Oklahoma.

Heck, by most pundits Pittman is ranked last among SEC West coaches and near the bottom of the entire league, maybe only ahead of Vanderbilt’s Derek Mason.

The thing about Pittman is, no one knows what he will do.

There are many that think he is in over his head and his fall will come hard and swift. On the other hand, I think this exactly the kind of situation that Pittman can thrive in.

He seems to be a guy who likes his back against the wall. He’s risen through the ranks to become one of the great offensive line coaches in the country. His success has been a mix of hard work, faith and effective interpersonal communication.

No doubt, he will get this point across to his players that not many expect anything out of him or them. Talk is cheap.

Leach and Kiffin do a lot of talking. To assume they will take the SEC West by storm is a big stretch. They have a mountain to climb just like Pittman.  Trying to dethrone LSU, Alabama and Auburn is unlikely for everyone else.

The way to relevancy is with hard work on the recruiting trail and in the meeting room. Pittman made some noise by hiring a great staff with innovative Kendal Briles leading the offense and former Mizzou head coach Barry Odom heading up the defense.

You couldn’t hear that splash over the hype of Kiffin and now Leach.

That’s fine with Pittman. He’s ready to shock the critics who’s expectations dropped a bit more after Leach’s hiring.

Musselman on wearing sponsors’ logos on shirts; depth no big deal

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman met with the media Monday afternoon and answered social media questions on wearing t-shirts with sponsors’ logos and dismissed depth questions.

???? Halftime Pod — A big Ole Miss win, Z on the Hogs, plus Connor O’Gara on CFP Playoff

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Phil & Tye on the win in Oxford, Matt Zimmerman on the basketball team, plus Connor O’Gara on the CFB Championship!

D1 Baseball puts Razorbacks at No. 7 in national preseason poll

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas has been placed at No. 7 in D1 Baseball’s preseason rankings, making it three top 10 marks so far heading into the 2020 campaign.

It marks the second time in three years the Razorbacks have received a top-10 ranking from the outlet, beginning the 2018 season in fourth. Last year, D1 Baseball put Arkansas at 16th in its first poll.

The Razorbacks are coming off a 46-20 season that produced an SEC West division title and the program’s 10th trip to the College World Series in 2019.

Dave Van Horn, entering his 18th season at the helm of the baseball team, has more appearances in the CWS than any active coach in the nation with eight.

Arkansas returns a number of veterans with experience on the mound, including two-thirds of last year’s rotation in sophomores Connor Noland and Patrick Wicklander.

Noland and Wicklander were among the top freshmen arms in the conference in 2019, as the duo combined for a 4.16 ERA, nine wins, 145 strikeouts and only 51 walks.

Noland was named a Perfect Game Freshman All-American while both garnered SEC All-Freshman honors.

Offensively, the Razorbacks return plenty of firepower, including last year’s top hitter in Matt Goodheart, who finished with a .345 batting average as the team’s designated hitter.

Along with Goodheart, the Hogs bring back two of the top bats in the nation in juniors and preseason All-Americans Heston Kjerstad and Casey Martin. Kjerstad hit .325 or higher in each of his first two seasons, matching his hit total (87) from 2018, while driving in another 51 RBIs to go with 17 home runs.

As for Martin, he hit more home runs (15) and had more RBIs (57) than his freshman season, finishing with 81 hits overall last season.

Arkansas is set to host 32 games at Baum-Walker Stadium this spring, including home SEC series against Alabama, Florida, Texas A&M, Auburn and Georgia.

During the 2019 postseason run, Arkansas saw 93,868 fans pack Baum-Walker Stadium, the most of any ballpark in the country.

The Razorbacks wrapped up the 2019 season with a 33-7 home record, the second-straight year Arkansas has totaled 30 or more wins at home.

The 2020 slate kicks off with Eastern Illinois for the second-straight season, beginning on Friday, Feb. 14, at 3 p.m. at Baum-Walker Stadium.

2020 preseason rankings

Perfect Game – No. 4
D1 Baseball – No. 7
Collegiate Baseball – No. 9

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Johnson becomes latest Hogs’ connection selected for Pro Football Hall of Fame

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When Jerry Jones brought Jimmy Johnson to Dallas nearly 31 years ago, he was about the only one that would admit he wanted him.

Nobody at the time could envision both of them would be in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

When Dave Baker, the president of the Hall of Fame, walked on the set of Fox’s halftime show during the NFC playoff game Sunday night he made the announcement Johnson was being inducted as a coach.

Johnson is now the fourth former Razorback selected for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The others are Lance Alworth, Dan Hampton and Jones.

It was Johnson who recruited and coached Hampton for two years with the Hogs.

Johnson, for the first time in the roughly 47 years I’ve known him, got red-eyed with emotion.

And, yes, in case you’re wondering, I first met Johnson when he was coming through my hometown of Warren in the spring of 1973. He stopped to talk to Lumberjacks coach John McGregor, who hollered across the locker room to me to find a film on a game played in the fall of 1972.

Johnson had just been hired as defensive coordinator of the Razorbacks by Frank Broyles during the worst three-year stretch of his tenure. He was trying to find players anywhere.

The biggest difference back then was the coaches were driving their own cars and hoping there was a gas reimbursement when they got back to Fayetteville.

He was climbing the coaching ladder and probably had no idea at that time of the meteoric rise his career would take a little about a decade later.

Johnson was one of the senior captains on the undefeated 1964 Razorback team that got a version of the national championship, the only one in school history. He was a smallish lineman that got by on quickness and made the key defensive stops against Nebraska in the Cotton Bowl to secure the undefeated season.

None of that mattered when he came to Dallas at the end of February 1989.

Jones had proclaimed he was worth several first-round draft choices alone in replacing Tom Landry, who was too stubborn to leave and probably over-stayed his usefulness with the Cowboys by about five years or so.

Yeah, he did. I was there and had seen it first-hand from 1982.

Johnson came in and cut Hall of Fame lineman Randy White. About a month after coming to Dallas he fired another Hall of Famer in personnel director Gil Brandt, who had hosted Johnson in the Dallas Cowboys suite at the Super Bowl a few weeks earlier in Miami.

But what Johnson got was the No. 1 draft choice in Troy Aikman to go with another Hall of Famer in wide receiver Michael Irvin (who suddenly became a different player under his old college coach).

He brought discipline and accountability to the Cowboys, which had been sorely lacking under Landry. The team had become a clown show where the owner didn’t like the coach and ordered he be fired a couple of years previously … but the general manager was more intimidated by the coach and gave him a million-dollar new contract instead.

When Jones basically bounced into the press conference that he was buying the team, he created a ton of pressure for Johnson, who was trying to be as low profile as possible in the situation of replacing Landry.

Fans suddenly took out their dislike for Jones on Johnson, who just went about re-making an entire franchise. There were rough spots with Jones, but it was mainly a pair of egos clashing over who should be getting most of the credit as the team improved year by year.

When it all came together with Super Bowls in 1992 and 1993, things boiled over and Johnson was ready to leave and Jones was willing to pay several million dollars to help make that happen.

Maybe the most impressive thing about Johnson coming to the NFL in his five years in Dallas, though, was his ability to change himself and adapt to the professional game. He actually thought in 1990 he wanted to trade Aikman and go with Steve Walsh, but Jones said that wasn’t going to happen.

Johnson, who got a degree at Arkansas in industrial psychology, put that to use and became Aikman’s best friend. Their relationship changed because Johnson changed.

He saw he needed to make some changes and did what he had to do to win games.

After leaving Dallas in the spring of 1994, Johnson worked at Fox a few years before going to the Miami Dolphins where he never was able to duplicate his Cowboys’ success.

Johnson has worked as a studio analyst with Fox since retiring from the Dolphins after the 1999 season because, he said, he was “burned out.”

His NFL career was just nine seasons. The record wasn’t that impressive, but what he did was show the entire league you could trade in draft choices just like a commodity.

Oh, and you could build a championship football team out of rubble in less than five years.