Fans’ frustration level boiling over after Kiffin chooses better job

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Arkansas fans’ frustration level probably went to the stage of boiling over Saturday as Ole Miss announced the hiring of Lane Kiffin.

Hunter Yurachek and his merry band had conversations with Kiffin, but we don’t know how those actually went … or really even if they got to the stage of serious.

Oh, everybody has some sources that know somebody. I’ve had people insist to me they knew people that were related to somebody that knew it was going to be first one, then the other.

Even Houston Dale Nutt has been mentioned along with Butch Davis as the senior candidates.

The actual ones who may still be in the picture are Appalachian State coach Eli Drinkwitz and interim coach Barry Lunney, Jr., who likely will be with the Hogs in some capacity if he wants regardless who’s hired.

The lack of information out there is what has driven Razorback fans to the point of where they are totally, completely and hilariously off the rails as of Saturday night.

Many feel the Board of Trustees blocked the hiring of Kiffin. Others have said there was never an offer on the table for Kiffin. There will be a few that go to their grave believing the Hogs were out-negotiated by Ole Miss.

What actually happened is not known, but reports out of Oxford are saying Kiffin’s deal with the Rebels is for $4 million a year and I’ve been told Arkansas could have topped that.

The fact is right now the Ole Miss job is a better job than the one currently open in Fayetteville.

Yeah, I know, Hog fans tend to assume everyone should share their view, but having been all over the SEC, I can tell you right now that view hasn’t been widely shared for at least the last 10 years.

Believe it or not, today’s world of college football coaches doesn’t mean you throw enough money out there and that’s all it takes. Coaches ain’t starving these days and the track record of success in Fayetteville hasn’t been particularly appealing.

They aren’t going to risk career suicide for a shot at a couple of million bucks. And, yes, I know most reading this would in a second, but coaches look at the roster, what’s there for assistants, attractiveness to recruits and, finally, the money.

At least that’s what several have told me over the last few years.

Right now Arkansas football is mired in a death spiral.

Every coach not already listed as the one expected to be named to a head job somewhere is on the wishlist of Razorback fans.

What started as confusion for the fans has turned into complete chaos. Somehow I still think Yurachek has played this exactly how he wanted all along.

Yeah, I know. Fans will disagree with that, but I didn’t expect anybody to be announced before this weekend at the earliest unless somebody unexpected all of a sudden had an interest in the job.

This is a similar situation Jeff Long found himself in back in 2012 trying to replace Bobby Petrino, who had been fired for a year and a half. Then-current coordinators in the SEC weren’t even interested and Long remembered a love letter from Bret Bielema and found someone trying to get away from having adult supervision.

If there was any doubt, the Arkansas job is not considered a top job. That happens with five head coaches since the end of the 2011 season and the most recent was fired less than two seasons into it.

Razorback football is not even in the Top 100 in winning percentage over that time.

A lot of coaches don’t think you can win in Fayetteville.

Yurachek’s task is to find somebody that might be able to win that’s willing to try.

Arkansas closes chapter on Western Kentucky deal with loss in OT

Arkansas is finally finished with playing Western Kentucky and, hopefully, they won’t be doing any more deals like that anytime soon.

The Razorbacks lost in overtime Saturday night, 86-79, and ended a deal where they paid the Hilltoppers $1.5 million for two basketball games and a football game … and lost all three.

This loss was the final game in that expensive little series and it happened because the Hogs went stone cold from the field in the extra period, hitting just 2-of-7 while Western Kentucky got 23 points from Taveion Hollingsworth.

Arkansas was outscored 13-6 in overtime and committed four of its 16 turnovers in the extra period. The Razorbacks’ loss leaves Auburn as the last unbeaten team in the SEC.

“You can’t play well on the road and in a building that’s full like this and turn the ball over 16 times,” Arkansas coach Eric Musselman said later. “Certainly not happy about tonight.”

Desi Sills led Arkansas with 20 points and Isaiah Joe added 18 on 5-of-14 shooting from the 3-point line.

Arkansas moved into the lead in the first half on a 3-pointer from Joe at 24-23 but made just two field goals over the last six minutes of the half and trailed the Hilltoppers 33-28 at the break.

The Razorbacks came out firing in the second half by making seven consecutive shots to move into a 44-39 lead.

Neither team separated by more than one possession until the Sills’ wide open 3-pointer at the 1:39 mark to make it a 68-63 lead for Arkansas.

The Hilltoppers mounted a rally with Jared Savage’s 3-pointer with 32 seconds remaining to force overtime.

Neighbors recaps big win over Kansas State on Saturday afternoon

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors talked after the 81-72 win over the Wildcats on Saturday about his team’s solid play and going to 8-1 on the season.

Wildcats’ Mittle on turnovers costly in loss to Razorbacks on Saturday

Kansas State coach Jeff Mittle talked with the media and said his team has struggled with turnovers “even with nobody else in the gym” in the 81-72 loss on Saturday afternoon.

Tolefree, Dungee talking about big days in win over Wildcats

Arkansas players Alexis Tolefree (21 points) and Chelsea Dungee (32 points, 5 rebounds) on getting big 81-72 win over Kansas State at Bud Walton Arena on Saturday.

Does Yurachek have ‘ace in hole’ if reports correct Kiffin picks Rebels?

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The news broke Friday night that Lane Kiffin may not make it to Fayetteville after all because he reportedly is close to finalizing a deal with Ole Miss.

Now what direction does Hunter Yurachek go and does he have an “ace in the hole” like he did with Eric Musselman in the basketball search?

Kiffin has been the hot target for the Arkansas search. Yurachek and Jon Fagg have met with him at least once. Both have probably talked to him several times on the phone.

It’s really been the only name that’s seriously been floated about for the past week. Memphis coach Mike Norvell kinda disappeared, but now the question has come up if Florida State can afford him.

Former Arkansas athletics director John Barnhill always did a masterful job of getting everybody looking one way while he went to what he called his “ace in the hole.”

That’s how Frank Broyles got hired. He wasn’t the popular choice initially. Everybody was focused on Minnesota coach Murray Warmath, who turned Barnhill down.

He knew all along it was probably going to be Broyles. When Yurachek landed Musselman that was my first comparison because, remember, it was supposed to be Kelvin Sampson.

Yurachek may have known all this going in, but he wasn’t saying anything. Fans had to at least think he tried to land what they perceive to be a bigger name than interim coach Barry Lunney, Jr., or Appalachian State coach Eliah Drinkwitz.

We heard Wednesday that Kiffin was out. Then we were told he was back in. Then we heard Lunney was in the mix.

It’s almost enough to ask if Arkansas is trying make the best hire or the biggest name.

There are positives and negatives with every name on the wishlist and the coaches that have been interviewed for the Arkansas opening.

Matt Campbell and Mike Leach apparently weren’t that interested. Both have extensions and raises (although Leach’s has been reported as a standard roll-over he was going to get anyway).

Lunney was a Razorback quarterback and if you’re reading this you probably know his history. He stepped in when Chad Morris was fired November 10. The team responded and played harder.

Quite frankly he appeared more capable of handling an SEC team than Morris ever did.

Drinkwitz has shown he can come in and win 11 games with somebody else’s players. He won two more games against Power 5 teams than Morris did in two years.

He has taken Appalachian State to an 11-1 record in his first season, beating North Carolina and South Carolina on the road.

Let that sink in for a second. He took somebody else’s players and beat a bowl team in the Tar Heels and an SEC team on the road. Now that was an 11-2 team, but he knew enough to not mess it up.

Drinkwitz, who went to Arkansas Tech and had coaching stops at Alma, Springdale and Arkansas State, has shown he can coach teams to win games. The past eight years for Hog fans should show them that does, indeed, matter.

More importantly, he’s done it with somebody else’s players. Several current and former coaches have told me that’s a big indicator.

As usual, though, nothing is perfect in these things.

Just because a coach has had success at another school means he will duplicate that at Arkansas. It’s a unique situation in Fayetteville.

At some other schools, it’s about recruiting, recruiting and more recruiting. You develop them a little and try not to over-coach the whole thing.

For the Hogs, it’s about evaluating players who are a good fit, developing them to play the way a coach wants and motivating them to play even above that level for a dozen Saturdays in the fall.

Arkansas has never — and likely will never — consistently been a big winner on the first Wednesday in February. If it’s possible why has it never happened?

Yes, the right coach can win games with the Hogs. That HAS happened in the past.

If you go back the last 60 years, Arkansas has brought in coaches who were the “name coach” and had some limited success. Lou Holtz, Danny Ford, Bobby Petrino, Bret Bielema and Chad Morris didn’t last.

Ken Hatfield and Houston Nutt did.

While Hatfield was a hot prospect, Nutt came in and blew a search committee away in the interview and suddenly Tommy Tuberville wasn’t at the top of the list.

Success at Arkansas historically has come in a unique way and unless Yurachek identifies someone who can figure that out and make it work, well, we’re going to be right back here in a few years.

Which it was interesting to hear Lunney had what was supposed to be a courtesy interview and ended up winning the interview. We can’t say he knocked it out of the park yet, but if he doesn’t get the job at best he got a triple.

By the way, that’s not a prediction … I have no idea.

For now, though, you can expect some kind of news to start leaking over the next 48 hours, which should give SOME direction.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — Arkansas/Texas 1969 50 years ago today

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Phil & Tye on the WKU game, the 1969 Shootout, Yurachek’s process plus former Razorback Mike Boschetti

Leach agrees to extension at Washington State; Kiffin still considered main target

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With Mike Leach agreeing to an extension and a raise that puts him around $4 million a year to stay at Washington State, Arkansas fans are re-focusing their attention … primarily towards Lane Kiffin.

Of course some have believed Kiffin, who still has a Conference USA game to coach for Florida Atlantic this weekend, has been athletics director Hunter Yurachek’s main target all along.

There has been speculation in a wild and wacky week for fans that certain members of the UA’s Board of Trustees weren’t on board with the choice of Kiffin, but it appears they are going to let Yurachek decide, which is his job.

Memphis coach Mike Norvell, who has an American Athletic Conference title game Saturday, has reportedly shown more interest in the opening at Florida State than Fayetteville, but Ole Miss has made a push there after dumping Matt Luke last week.

Sources in the league say Louisiana coach Billy Napier appears to be the frontrunner for the Rebels’ spot.

Some of the pieces started falling in place earlier this week when USC said Clay Helton would be back, eliminating what would have been what many consider the highest-profile position.

Florida State is next in the pecking order, but they may have set their sights on a bigger name than they are actually able to attract for whatever reasons.

Kiffin’s name has been linked as a target for the Seminoles’ spot.

Missouri also has an opening to replace the fired Barry Odom. Arkansas State’s Blake Anderson was considered to be a leading candidate earlier in the week, then a report by FootballScoop.com basically said he wasn’t a big enough name.

The biggest names in Arkansas’ search right now are Kiffin and indications are he’s got to choose between three jobs — the Hogs, Florida State or Ole Miss and when he decides things may start to fall into place.

Leach’s name was highest on the wishlist along with Kiffin for a lot of Hog fans, but with him returning to the Wildcats and Iowa State’s Matt Campbell getting a raise and an extension, that means you move down the list.

But, as we found out in the basketball search that landed Eric Musselman, nobody knows what Yurachek is going to do and there are not the reliable links everybody has seen in the past.

If Kiffin isn’t in the mix, then pick from a list of the names that have been bandied about for a few weeks now.

Or be surprised.

The guess here is we should start to hear more heading into the weekend and we’ll know when the school a coach is leaving starts leaking.

Until then, it appears to be a waiting game for fans.

Musselman looking ahead to Hogs’ game with Western Kentucky on Saturday

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman met with the media Monday and talked about the upcoming game with the Hilltoppers and broke down some of his team’s play.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — What’s going on with Lane Kiffin???

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Phil & Tye on the Lane Train, Bob Holt joins the pod, plus Halftime Homework!