Phil & Tye hit on Game 1, Get Off My Lawn, plus Nikki Chavanelle joins the pod!
Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday
John & Tommy discuss Game 1, fans’ reactions, interview Tom Murphy and more!
When analyzing Hogs’ first game like it’s the last is a fool’s errand
Everybody has an opinion on Monday mornings these days.
And I do mean everybody. From nice little ladies at the grocery store to people I’m reasonably certain have no clue if the ball is blown up or stuffed.
And, yes, I’m buying the “plain vanilla” argument Chad Morris made at his press conference Monday. I said that in the first quarter Saturday because it was obvious, especially on defense.
Why would he not?
Arguments have been attempted at me about “generating enthusiasm” among the Lunatic Fringe, which is not something I particularly agree is correct. My main argument is it would have made no difference and the bi-polar student section would have left around halftime anyway.
That’s the trend just about everywhere in college football these days. Shoot, Nick Saban has even taken to the microphone in Tuscaloosa to chastise Alabama students for leaving … or not even showing up.
Every single game is on television these days and why a lot of the modern-day needs of comfort make it difficult to sit on a narrow piece of metal facing the afternoon sun, squeezed in like sardines in a can.
Remember, the lower half of the east and west stands are basically the same thing that seated 42,000 and was increased to 46,000 by making the space a little more narrow.
A lot of us old-timers remember when you could pack the stadium with a winning team … or even an exciting losing one. Those times are long gone and most of it has to do with the availability to watch the game at home.
Besides, it was the first game and when you’re coming off 2-10, have over 50 freshmen on the roster and more questions than answers, all you want to do is make sure everybody can do the basic stuff at least semi-correctly.
It appeared everybody was more interesting in not making a mistake than making a play, which does make a little sense when you’re coming off last year.
You just wanted a win for a group of guys that basically had never played a game together.
Still, some folks want to project an entire season off one game.
It’s a fool’s errand.
Besides, I can’t think of very many teams that had much going on if they play their best in the first game of the year. Last year’s win over Eastern Illinois is a prime example.
And in the paranoid world that surrounds college football coaching these days, I can almost guarantee you it’s very valid when Morris said he didn’t want to show Ole Miss much.
My guess is the Hogs showed about 10 percent of the playbook on offense and maybe half that on defense.
As one coach told me a few years ago, “we don’t even practice most of our stuff when we bring in officials because they have the biggest mouths of all.”
That means, simply, they don’t trust anybody.
Now you can jump up and down all you want about that not being fair to the fans or Morris should have wanted to make a statement to unite everybody, but it doesn’t matter.
Morris has a bigger problem than how badly he beat Portland State in game one, namely can he get his first SEC win in game two … on the road.
Many of the Hog fans have gone ahead and jumped off the bandwagon … after the first week of the season. Mainly because, of course, they know the ball is blown up, not stuffed, and that makes them an expert.
We’ll have a better idea in about a month.
Looking back at best photos from Hogs’ win over Vikings
PHOTOS BY TED McCLENNING, WENDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM
Morris puts close opening win behind; looks ahead to Ole Miss
Arkansas coach Chad Morris talked with the media Monday recapping the 20-13 win over Portland State last week and previewing the SEC opener against Ole Miss this week.
Chavis on how defense played hard in win over Vikings
Razorbacks defensive coordinator John Chavis talked Monday about how the defense played as hard as he’s seen here and knows the challenge of another running quarterback this week.
Craddock says Starkel didn’t do enough to over-take Hicks
Arkansas offensive coordinator Joe Craddock talked Monday about how Ben Hicks didn’t have that bad of a game and backup Nick Starkel didn’t do anything to take over the starting spot for SEC opener against Ole Miss.
Just accept Hogs got a win, then move ahead to important game
First things first, Chad Morris really doesn’t care what the fans think about how big Arkansas’ margin of victory was over lightly-regarded Portland State on Saturday.
He ain’t paid based on point spreads.
But his future does rest on this season and this game pointed out some of the negatives we heard from people throughout fall camp. A couple with more than a passing knowledge of football have said this team won’t be much better than last year … if that.
They should know better. Razorback fans should really be able to remember a worse situation. Anybody recall Toledo in 2015?
That team waddled behind a coach that got a ridiculous raise off a 6-6 season to a 1-3 start, went 7-2 the rest of the way and fans were convinced things were back on track until the following year when the wagon wobbled a bit in Columbia, Mo., in the last game of the season and careened off into a ditch in Charlotte, N.C.
The wagon broke apart over the following year, leaving a bunch of uninspired players that quit on a coach who didn’t do things the way they wanted and you have the current situation.
In looking at the game twice with no distractions, that was, in many respects, the Beanie Bowl against a team they didn’t see every day. Morris called that game a glorified game of moving on and off the field.
At least that’s what it appeared Morris wanted to do. The offense looked extremely basic and more like less than what was installed last season, but the guess is that was intentional.
Same goes for the defense, which did look vastly improved. We heard all through camp about how they were much better at creating turnovers and we saw that against the Vikings with three interceptions and six sacks … all with some pretty basic sets and the occasional blitz just to give Ole Miss something to think about.
In retrospect, did anybody think Morris was going to open everything up against Portland State? Especially with an early SEC opener the next week?
The Hogs squandered chances to make this a score somewhere between 35-6 and 51-6. The score at the end was one of those things that simply happens in football … too many people trying to make a play and the wrong guy DOES make the play.
This could have been Morris simply wanting to get a win and some teaching film.
We’ve heard from highly successful coaches for nearly a century about the most improvement a team usually makes in a season is from the first game to the second.
Fans often lose sight of that. So do some of the so-called experts, who live in the moment without thinking a whole lot about the overall picture of the future.
The Razorbacks won’t play the same way against an Ole Miss team that maybe looked worse than the Hogs in their loss to Memphis.
Redshirt freshman Matt Corral was 9-of-19 (with an interception) in their opener for 93 yards. Ben Hicks was 14-of-29 (no interceptions, but some notable drops).
The guess here is Morris feels that stuff is something that can be fixed and seemed fairly confident it will be. You get the idea he’s more directly involved with the offense this year.
In the end, though, this is all going to sort itself out over the course of the next month.
By October we’ll know whether it’s enough to keep fans interested for the final two months or if Eric Musselman gets the spotlight before practices start.
But basing any longterm assessments on what we saw Saturday is jumping the gun.
It was a win, just accept it and move on.
A few other SEC teams would do that gladly today.
Hogs get win over Portland State, but obviously not big enough
A little over an hour after Arkansas finally subdued pesky Portland State, a fan wandered down Razorback Road outside the stadium screaming obscenities to the skies.
He was alone and completely exasperated with a 20-13 win that had some folks squirming in their seats. Alcohol may or may not have been a contributing factor for this fan, but may have helped.
That fan may have been alone on his walk, but there are many that share the sentiment.
It took a late interception by defensive back Joe Foucha with 11 seconds left to finally decide things. Even that wasn’t handled the way Chad Morris wanted it.
“I was about to tackle him,” Morris said later.
Foucha returned the interception 20 yards, but Morris wanted him on the ground. By that point, he was just wanting a win and to get out of there.
“We work that, but I guess we don’t work it enough,” he said, shaking his head. “He knows.”
Correcting mistakes after a win is an easier task than following a loss.
And Morris wasn’t apologizing.
“Never will I ever apologize for winning,” he said. “There is no such thing as a bad win. You win and you correct. Now, you may not have played as well as you wanted to play — and we didn’t — but we won and we’re going to be able to use this win to make corrections.”
Look around the SEC on Saturday. The best conference in college football looked like just an average league.
Think Missouri, Tennessee or Ole Miss wouldn’t trade places with the Razorbacks’ result on Saturday?
They lost, in order, to Wyoming, Georgia State and Memphis. South Carolina also lost to North Carolina as Mack Brown debuts with the Tar Heels getting a win.
Yeah, let that sink in for a few minutes.
In hindsight, expecting the offensive execution to be in midseason form starting off with 11 different starters than last year’s opener was probably not realistic.
But it was exasperating … even to Morris, who admitted the offense didn’t play well. The numbers (395 yards of offense, 204 of that on the ground).
Ben Hicks started and had sparks where you saw why he won the starting job, but there were some missed reads, especially taking deep shots. Fans want to blame play-calling, but it was missed reads.
Morris took the blame, but said it will be fixed.
Blown chances in the red zone is what drove fans crazy and they missed three chances at touchdowns, including one after an interception by Kamren Curl that set them up at the Portland State 18 with 2:46 left in the first half.
In trotted Nick Starkel at quarterback and three plays later he threw an interception across the middle, completely missing an open receiver.
“It was really frustrating,” Morris said. “It was disappointing we couldn’t come away with some type of points.”
The defense got the ball back, though, with 49 seconds left. Starkel came in again, found Trey Knox for a 38-yard completion, hit a couple of additional passes, including one to Rakeem Boyd, who scooted out of bounds as the clock ran out.
“We thought we managed our time outs as well as we could have to get the ball back and we got down the field and then there was a miscommunication,” Morris said. “That was completely on me.”
Morris won’t be dwelling on those mistakes, though. He will work to get them fixed, but the bottom line to this win was a defense that showed a ton of improvement.
The Hogs gave up one touchdown when the Vikings simply made a play late, but held Portland State to 75 yards rushing (most of it scrambles by the quarterback) and 230 total.
And they got three turnovers, which is what defensive coordinator John Chavis wants every game. Last year the Hogs got five interceptions in 12 games. They picked off three in this one.
Oh, and they had six sacks and just missed twice that many.
“Just relentless effort, getting to the ball, full tilt,” said defensive tackle McTelvin Agim, who had a couple of the sacks. “That was what I was trying to do. Sometimes you are going to miss tackles. You can’t rely on your teammates to just make tackles all the time. Sometimes you just got to make sure he’s down, so that’s basically what we were doing.”
It’s the offense, though, that had fans jumping up and down.
“We moved the ball well, we just didn’t punch it in the end zone enough,” Hicks said later.
Hicks is the starter and will be against the Rebels, who will likely be reeling after losing to Memphis on Saturday and it probably won’t be a week of fun in Oxford.
“We just have to score points, especially when our defense gets turnovers like that,” he said. “You have to make teams pay for turning the ball over.”
He didn’t turn the ball over a single time. Starkel had that interception, which was the only turnover for the Hogs on the day.
There won’t be a quarterback issue this week.
“Ben is going to start next week,” Morris said.
Yeah, there’s going to be complaining and moaning about this team and the armchair experts and media folks will predict doom and gloom for the year.
But, as Morris said, they are 1-0.
And there are a few SEC teams that would like to be there that, well, aren’t.
Morris on team not playing well, but he’ll take opening win
Arkansas coach Chad Morris wasn’t particularly pleased with his team’s play, noting mistakes, but on a day when several SEC teams were upset, he’ll take any win.
Hicks, Curl, Harris on positives in win over Portland State
Razorbacks quarterback Ben Hicks, defensive back Kamren Curl and linebacker De’Jon Harris talked after the 20-13 win over the Vikings about the good … and noting improvement needed.











