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The ‘Starkel Sparkel’ is fifth starting quarterback for Hogs under Morris

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Chad Morris probably wouldn’t say it, but the last 14 games have been a nightmare for a coach that made his bones on the offensive side of the ball.

With the announcement that Nick Starkel will be starting Saturday against Colorado State, he becomes the fifth different guy behind center … and that is likely maddening to Morris.

He won’t say it. Morris doesn’t make excuses. He’s played the hand he was dealt when he came in. It wasn’t his fault the guys he inherited had limited experience because a fifth-year senior ran out of eligibility the year before he got here.

“It wasn’t so much what Ben (Hicks) did or didn’t do; it’s what Nick did,” Morris said Monday in about as talking around it as possible.

Of course, everybody knew from the middle of August that Sparkel SHOULD be starting. Some have wondered why it took him so long.

Maybe it was loyalty to Hicks, who he recruited and coached at SMU. Maybe it was a shot for Hicks coming in and functioning basically as a graduate assistant in a uniform.

“Ben played okay,” offensive coordinator Joe Craddock said. “He missed some throws I wish we had back.”

That last part is the most telling. After the play’s over we all know, including whoever called it and it either works or you want the play back.

What Craddock meant by that was simply Hicks wasn’t getting the job done.

Quite frankly, I don’t know why the coaches didn’t see out of Starkel what most of us saw in limited views of fall camp drills. Granted, we don’t get to see a lot, but you could definitely tell the ball literally jumped off his arm when he threw it.

“The ball came out of his hand quick,” Morris said about Saturday night. “I thought, at that point, you kind of saw Ole Miss back off a little bit and give us some underneath stuff and loosen some things up.”

Hicks was constantly high on his throws, which is usually the result of throwing with your weight distributed on the back part of the delivery instead of stepping into the throw.

Now we find out if Starkel can avoid the syndrome tall quarterbacks usually deal with — inconsistency. Although he’s listed at 6-foot-3, that is off, by his own admission.

“I’m more like 6-5,” he said back on media day in August.

Craddock and Morris have said since the start of fall camp that Starkel had the bigger arm. This has, thus far, played out the way many predicted. More than a couple of folks said Hicks would start and play the first game, Starkel would come in against Ole Miss and be the starter going forward.

That big arm and the playmaking ability is something this team needs IF he can avoid the mistakes.

“He’s able to push the ball down the field a little bit more,” Craddock said. “That may put a little more fear in those DBs that they can’t just stop the run.”

With Hicks, there was too much congestion inside to get much consistency, even against folks like Portland State, who really couldn’t match up and eventually just got hammered down.

Colorado State is better. They beat the Razorbacks last season in the second week of the season with a quarterback change at halftime, followed by a completely embarrassing loss to North Texas in Fayetteville the next week.

That loss was more embarrassing than what the Hogs had in Oxford last Saturday. That was a frustrating loss because the offense simply figured out new ways to screw up in some ways that truly appeared to baffle Morris and Craddock.

Now here we go again.

The biggest difference is going to be if Morris can avoid the second week loss from causing a couple of more disasters like he had last season.

And we’ll see if the “Starkel Sparkel” can save anything for this season, which didn’t have really high expectations to start with.

Morris needs some stability at quarterback or his offense is never going to be able to make any signs of progress.

He’s running out of options.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — Connor O’Gara

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Phil & Tye hit on what they think about the QB situation, Game 2 miscues, plus Connor O’Gara!

Morris on multiple mistakes in loss at Ole Miss on Saturday

Arkansas coach Chad Morris talked at his Monday press conference about the large number of mistakes in the 31-17 loss to the Rebels and looks ahead to game with Colorado State.

Hogs get Saturday night matchup against San Jose State

Arkansas fans will get a full afternoon of tailgating with a 6:30 p.m. start scheduled against San Jose State on September 21 at Razorback Stadium.

That is a doubleheader date for CBS and they picked Notre Dame at Georgia for the prime time 7 p.m. position and Auburn at Texas A&M at 2:30 p.m.

The weekly SEC Network triple-header will feature LSU at Vanderbilt or Tennessee at Florida in the first game of the day, Kentucky at Mississippi State or South Carolina at Missouri in the afternoon window and San Jose State at Arkansas in primetime.

SEC television schedule for Saturday, September 21:

  • LSU at Vanderbilt, 11 a.m. on ESPN or ESPN2 or SEC Network*
  • Tennessee at Florida, 11 a.m. on ESPN or ESPN2 or SEC Network*
  • Southern Mississippi at Alabama, 11 a.m. CT on ESPN or ESPN2*
  • California at Ole Miss, 11 a.m. on ESPNU
  • Auburn at Texas A&M, 2:30 p.m. on CBS
  • Kentucky at Mississippi State, 3 p.m. on SEC Network or SEC Network Alternate*
  • South Carolina at Missouri, 3 p.m. on SEC Network or SEC Network Alternate*
  • San Jose State at Arkansas, 6:30 p.m. on SEC Network
  • Notre Dame at Georgia, 7 p.m. on CBS

Craddock on Starkel taking over as starter for Hogs at QB

Razorbacks offensive coordinator Joe Craddock talked Monday about the decision to replace Ben Hicks at quarterback with Nick Starkel and “cleaning up one or two of the mistakes” from Ole Miss loss.

Chavis on facing Colorado State, mistakes made against Rebs

Razorbacks defensive coordinator John Chavis talked Monday about the problems against Ole Miss last week and looked ahead to rematch with the Rams in Fayetteville.

Razorbacks to play Sooners, Cowboys in fall exhibitions

FAYETTEVILLE — Dave Van Horn announced with a press release Monday a pair of fall exhibition games against neighbors in the Big 12 for Arkansas baseball.

The Razorbacks will play Oklahoma on Friday, Sept. 20 in Baum-Walker Stadium.

The team will also hit the road for its other game when it goes to Stillwater, Oklahoma, to play Oklahoma State on Saturday, Oct. 12.

Both games will not count toward the team’s 56-game regular season schedule due to the rule changes announced by the NCAA in 2018.

2019 Fall Exhibition Schedule

Sept. 20: vs. Oklahoma (7:30 p.m.)
Oct. 12: at Oklahoma State (Noon)

The game at Baum-Walker Stadium with the Sooners will be free admission and last 14 innings. Seating throughout the stadium will be first-come, first-serve and parking will be free. The Hog Pen will also be open for seating.

Light concessions will be available via cash only and fans will also be allowed to bring in outside food and beverages with the exception of alcohol.

No coolers will be allowed in the main seating bowl, but will be allowed in the Hog Pen.

Arkansas’ game in Stillwater with Oklahoma State will also be free admission and be held inside Allie P. Reynolds Stadium. It will also last 14 innings.

A member of the Big 12 conference, Oklahoma has faced Arkansas on 25 previous occasions, but not since 2012 in a midweek contest.

Arkansas is 14-11 all time against the Sooners and have faced them three of the last six times in the NCAA Tournament. OU is coached by Skip Johnson, who will begin his third season with the Sooners in 2020.

The Hogs and Cowboys have been frequent opponents over the last few years, splitting four games over the last five years, dating back to the 2015 NCAA Regional in Stillwater, Oklahoma.

Oklahoma State is coached by Josh Holliday, who is entering his eighth season as head coach.

All fall practices through the month of September and October at Baum-Walker Stadium are open to the public.

The dates for the annual Fall World Series will be announced at a later time.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Monday

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John & Tommy are joined by Clay Henry to discuss the Ole Miss loss, plus callers react to the defeat.

Will going to the ‘Starkel Sparkel’ end Morris’ game of QB Roulette?

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Based on most of what I’ve seen around, there are a lot of folks ready for Chad Morris to just go ahead and put the Razorback offense into what they hope is the “Starkel Sparkel.”

Graduate transfer Nick Starkel replaced another graduate transfer, Ben Hicks, in the second half of a 31-17 loss to Ole Miss on Saturday night and a lot of people felt it was considerably past time.

But does Morris?

Is he really ready to play this little game once again? Last year was a revolving door at times, but now it may appear to be more like roulette.

“We’re just going to step back from tonight, get in there tomorrow and re-evalute things and make a decision that’s what’s best for this football team,” he said after the loss.

So, that means you’re not settled on a quarterback after you thought you were, right?

“I didn’t say that,” Morris said. “I said we’d go back and re-evaluate and see and we’ll make a decision at that point.”

It’s almost like Morris doesn’t want to believe his own lyin’ eyes. He wanted to get back to Fayetteville and look at the video … and I’m assuming that’s to simply confirm what he already saw.

Morris may want to take a breath because it’s probably past time to name a permanent starter and ride with him — good or bad — and tell everybody that’s the way it is. This isn’t a high school program where the coach can play little public relations games and have it work out well.

“We’re just going to step back from tonight,” he said later, “get in there tomorrow, re-evalute things and make a decision that’s best for this football team.”

Which is coachspeak for either not having a clue what he wants to do or is torn between deciding what to do.

Neither are exactly inspiring to a fan base that has passed restless and is now in full-blown worry.

Don’t ask me what the criteria is because I don’t have a clue. We’ve heard since spring they are looking for consistency and the quarterback that can put the team in the end zone the most often.

In scrimmages, Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock told us that was John Stephen Jones, but he hasn’t done anything the past two weeks but go through pregame warmups and keep Jack Lindsey company on the sidelines.

If what we have been told is accurate, wouldn’t we at least see Jones for a series or two?

Everybody has followed Morris’ lead on this whole quarterback thing and there is nothing to indicate it’s anybody even under consideration other than the two guys we’ve seen in the first two games.

But, as I say a lot, we don’t know what we don’t know.

Based on what we’ve been told, it would have been logical to see Jones in a game. Is this a case of falling in love with somebody’s arm, ignoring whether he can get the team in the end zone or not?

There is another problem Morris may be on the verge of finding out the hard way.

Playing the Quarterback Roulette seldom works out well for coaches. It’s usually the coach that ends up with the bullet to the head.

For now, though, he’s trying to avoid a repeat situation with Colorado State, who will show up in Fayetteville before about 45,000 people on what is likely to be another hot day.

“A year ago this happened to us and we let one team beat us a few times,” Morris said. “It’s all about a response.”

Exactly who will be leading that response is still up for debate … apparently.

Turns out, some folks can’t remember how Wild Hog lined up

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When Rakeem Boyd lined up in the Wild Hog formation Saturday night against Ole Miss, social media, well, basically blew up because apparently a lot of geniuses couldn’t remember to count.

That includes the broadcast team that felt Boyd was lined up too deep.

But obviously Chad Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock had gone through the old game films because they had the spacing almost exactly where it was in 2006 and 2007?

Fortunately we have YouTube these days and the ability for screen grabs to actually do the comparisons.

Here is Darren McFadden from the 2007 game against LSU (he had a pretty fair game there for those that don’t remember):


The ball, as you can see is on the LSU 16-yard line while McFadden is between the 22 and 23-yard line … maybe actually a few inches DEEPER than Boyd was against the Rebels on Saturday night.


Hogs center Ty Clary is over the ball, which is on the 43-yard line while Boyd is standing squarely on the 49.

It’s not a stretch that Boyd was actually closer than McFadden … at least on this one alignment.

No, it wasn’t the alignment that was the problem as the Hogs dropped their SEC opener, 31-17. It seldom is, just as play-calling is the most over-rated thing in football … play execution is what makes plays work, not schemes.

You might argue that’s too deep for Boyd, but that’s not the argument that was being made ad nauseum Saturday night. The comparison was being made to the Wild Hog from 2006-07 and “not even being able to line up right.”

Turns out, that argument is not an accurate one at all.

Hog Reaction: Ole Miss

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John, Tye and callers react to the Rebels 31-17 victory over the Razorbacks…