Morris seems more inclined to lose his way that just winning games

2

It didn’t take long for the enthusiasm Chad Morris whipped up at his opening press conference to turn into main subject lines for jokes and memes about Arkansas football.

Off the field and in spring practices, his tired clichès have sapped whatever energy he injected in the program and disappeared somewhere in the Colorado night in his second game as the coach.

Since an opening 55-20 win over Eastern Illinois, this program has gone steadily downhill in the product being put on the field and Morris isn’t providing answers, instead talking about development, culture and other stuff.

All that matters is the score on 12 Saturdays in the fall.

Right now that is at an all-time low.

Until someone finally steps up at the quarterback position, Morris has managed to not even be able to get the car running on half of the cylinders, which makes getting into the left lane difficult at best. Forget the hammer down stuff.

Maybe that changes this week with his announcement Monday that redshirt freshman John Stephen Jones will start against Western Kentucky on Saturday in the final Fayetteville game this year.

Highly-touted freshman K.J. Jefferson will also get into the game early … at least that’s what Morris said.

It may be his last hope.

There are a lot of folks who think if the Razorbacks lose and former quarterback Ty Storey hangs a big number on John Chavis’ defense, the housecleaning may start Sunday morning.

For some reason, Morris can’t figure out that talent doesn’t win anything in practice. If they aren’t on the field Saturday, he’s not going to really get much of an idea … mainly because they aren’t facing a high degree of competition. You can’t simulate the game speed.

Chavis, who’s been around the SEC awhile, seems to have been wanting to get some of the freshmen into game situations.

Monday he was as blunt as anybody could be.

“Let’s just tell the truth,” he said. “It was broken when we got here and we haven’t fixed it quick enough.”

He is frustrated.

“Look at Western Kentucky’s roster,” he said. “They’ve got eight or nine redshirt juniors starting for them. We’ve got five or six freshmen that are either starting or playing a lot. That’s 18-year-old versus 22-year-old. That makes a difference.”

He made it clear, though, he’s not offering excuses.

“That’s all I’m going to say because I’m not an excuse-maker,” he said. “It falls on me. I’ve been in college coaching for 42 years and I’ve never stood in front of anybody and made an excuse.

“I’m not going to start today.”

He wants to evaluate some of the younger guys, though … and on the field in a game.

“We’ve got to bring those young guys along because that’s the future,” Chavis said. “That’s where the hope’s going to be. We’ve got to get ’em in the game for them to get better.”

You wonder why Morris hasn’t walked down the hall to ask someone that has been successful in the SEC for more decades than Chad has years in the league.

Would this season be any different if Morris had put Jones or Jefferson out on the field earlier?

We’ll never know because it didn’t happen. Speculate if you wish, but that’s one question we’ll never know the answer to. What we DO know is it couldn’t be worse than the current state of affairs.

Jones, the quarterback who got the team into the end zone the most in fall camp, didn’t see the field until the Alabama game and the third quarter the following week after the wagon had hit the ditch.

Jefferson didn’t see the field until things were ridiculously out of hand last week.

Exactly why Jones and Jefferson didn’t see the field earlier is buried in excuses of inconsistency in practice and a bunch of coach-speak making zero sense since August.

All of which Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock contradicted, saying he got the team in the end zone the most.

That is when you get the idea Morris would almost rather lose doing it his way than win playing the best players.

And, in case you’re wondering, that usually doesn’t end well.

Razorbacks facing Kentucky, Missouri, NC State at quad meet

Arkansas heads to Lexington, Kentucky, for a quad meet where they will face No. 14 Kentucky, No.9 Missouri and No. 7 NC State.

A look at the Razorbacks

The Hogs are coming off a one-week break after falling to No. 6 Auburn 195.5-101.5. Anna Hopkin had a spectacular meet winning all three of her events, breaking the 50 free pool record and making the NCAA B cut in the 50 and 100 free races.

A look at the Wildcats

The No. 14 Wildcats lost to No. 8 Texas 172-127 in its most recent meet and moved to 4-1 overall. Kentucky had outstanding performances from sophomore Kyndal Knight who outperformed the women’s 3-meter springboard field for the third straight time this season finishing in first place with 343.95 points.

A look at the Wolfpack

Swimming at home at the Casey Aquatic Center last week, the No. 7 Wolfpack outscored South Carolina 197-100 in their first dual meet of the season. Sophomore Kylee Alons won all three of her events qualifying for the NCAA B cuts for two events and led the Wolfpack women in scoring.

A look at the Tigers

The No. 9 Mizzou swimming and diving team faced Missouri State Nov. 2 winning 160-73. The Tigers set three pool records in the sweep over the Bears with freshman Meredith Rees and sophomores Allison Bloebaum and Megan Keil all making their marks.

Season notes

Auburn Meet: The Razorbacks were led by senior Anna Hopkin and Sophomore Peyton Palsha, last year’s top two swimmers for Arkansas.

Palsha took two top three finishes in both distance events. In the 1,000 free, the sophomore finished third with a time of 10:06.91. Palsha also finished in second place in the 500 free with a time of 4:57.06.

Hopkin registered three victories, sweeping the 50 free (22.28), 100 free (48.96) and 100 fly (55.06).

Stanford Meet: Anna Hopkin was the highlight of the meet taking first in both the 50 (22.21) and 100 (49.08) freestyle, while achieving the fastest split time in the country in the 200 medley.

The Razorbacks ended the dual meet with 11 podium finishes and look to continue improving.

Hogs open season with a W: No. 19 Arkansas opened the season with a sweep against Little Rock 161-121 at the HPER Natatorium.

The Razorbacks won all 16 events and had 32 podium finishes, with amazing contribution from every member of the squad.

Red vs. White Meet: The Razorbacks made their mark during the Red vs. White meet. Rookie diver Josephine Matalone and veteran swimmers Anna Hopkin and Lexi Ljunggren set the bar high for the season with impressive performances.

Morris finally figures out future is now for Hogs at quarterback position

1

For a change of pace, Chad Morris decided to not try and keep Western Kentucky in complete suspense over who will be lining up behind center in Arkansas’ final game in Fayetteville on Saturday.

“We’ll start John Stephen Jones this week,” he said right off the bat in his Monday press conference.

There is an argument to be made by some that maybe he’s still not getting it right and true freshman K.J. Jefferson should be starting, but the guess is he’ll be in the game sooner rather than later.

“You felt the lift on the sidelines — I know I did — when they went in,” Morris said about the pair in the 30-point blowout loss to Mississippi State last week.

It was offensive coordinator Joe Craddock that kinda created a question by accident Monday.

“Both of them possess the ability the run a little bit better than the other guys,” Craddock said. “That’s something we’ve always had in our offense is a guy that extend a play with his feet and also have a quarterback run or two mixed in.”

That’s the offensive coordinator admitting it’s taken this coaching staff 21 games over most of two seasons to find one to do that.

If it’s that big a part of the offense why did it take this long to put somebody in that can do it?

“We’ll come up with a good plan to make sure they’re both comfortable with what we’re doing and making sure that they can execute the offense as a high level,” Craddock said.

PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

Both Jones and Jefferson were 50 percent on scoring possessions against the Bulldogs. Each got just two possessions, which wasn’t their fault.

The Hogs’ defense didn’t appear to have a whole lot of interest in tackling anybody and that allowed Mississippi State to just control things with the run game. They dominated the time of possession, 40:09-19:51 … yes, nearly three full quarters of the game.

Getting both in the game from the start will generate a buzz this entire program desperately needs.

But it does just add to what is appearing like a completely disorganized coaching staff, starting with Morris.

More than one person has asked why it took this long to figure all this out.

Maybe more puzzling is the curious way Morris has mismanaged the entire redshirt thing with a few players, notably offensive lineman Brady Latham and defensive back Jalen Catalon. The pair has played 12 snaps this year, primarily kneel-downs at the end of games.

No, seriously.

“We don’t want to burn a guy’s redshirt just to get a few snaps in,” Morris said after the Auburn game.

Which means he either was ill-informed about the amount of playing time, forgot about it or simply can’t manage it.

Latham had one snap against Colorado State and the last three offensive plays against Mississippi State and Alabama.

Exactly how that could happen is a mystery and, in true fashion, Morris will continue lapping the question with clichè-ridden answers.

It sounds like he either doesn’t know how it happened or he has basically spent a year getting paid millions learning how to evaluate and develop players for the SEC level.

Based on his handling of the quarterback situation, you might tend to lean a little to that last one.

Now Jones will start this week. Yes, the quarterback who both Morris and Craddock said in fall camp put the team into the end zone the most isn’t starting until November 9.

“The moment has not been too big for him,” Morris said about Jones. “I’ve watched him from high school and to where he is now and just his development.”

Jefferson physically has looked the part of an SEC quarterback since he stepped on campus. Other coaches around the league are almost drooling over the possibility he puts his name into the transfer portal.

“We will play KJ as well and continue to develop him,” Morris said.

Apparently, it’s taken Morris from August to the second week of November to figure out what players have been saying all along:

The future is now.

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

0

Phil & Tye on the MSU game, John Stephen Jones starting, interview Connor O’Gara and more!

Joe named to second team by SEC’s coaches on Monday

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Arkansas sophomore Isaiah Joe was voted to the coaches’ 2019-20 preseason All-SEC second team, it was announced today by the league office.

Joe, who was named second team All-SEC last season as well as preseason second team All-SEC by the media, is one of the top returning scorers in the SEC.

The Fort Smith product averaged 13.85 points per game last season and ranks third among returning players in the league trailing Ole Miss’ Breein Tyree (17.91 ppg) and Texas A&M’s Savion Flagg (13.88 ppg).

Joe is one of 20 candidates for the Jerry West Shooting Guard of the Year Award after he set several records by making 113 3-pointers last season, setting an Arkansas single-season mark and tying an SEC freshman record.

His 113 triples were the fourth-most ever by an NCAA freshman in a season and his 3.32 3-pointers made per game set an SEC single-season record by a freshman.

Joe additionally led the SEC in 3-point field goal percentage, becoming just the fourth SEC freshman to accomplish the feat.

Joe not only made a name for himself on the offensive end, but he ranked 10th in the SEC in steals (1.50), led the Razorbacks by taking 27 charges and recorded 110 deflections.

Arkansas is embarking on its 97th season of basketball — and the first with Eric Musselman as Razorback head coach — on Tuesday, Nov. 5 versus Rice.

Tip-off Is set for 7 p.m. at Bud Walton Arena.

2019-20 Coaches Preseason All-SEC Team

First team All-SEC

Kira Lewis Jr. – Alabama
Kerry Blackshear – Florida
Andrew Nembhard – Florida
Anthony Edwards – Georgia
Ashton Hagans – Kentucky
Skylar Mays – LSU
Breein Tyree – Ole Miss
Reggie Perry – Mississippi State
A.J. Lawson – South Carolina

Second team All-SEC

Isaiah Joe – Arkansas
Austin Wiley – Auburn
Tyrese Maxey – Kentucky
EJ Montgomery – Kentucky
Javonte Smart – LSU
Devontae Shuler – Ole Miss
Jeremiah Tilmon Jr. – Missouri
Jordan Bowden – Tennessee
Lamonté Turner – Tennessee
Savion Flagg – Texas A&M
Aaron Nesmith – Vanderbilt

Morris announces Jones, Jefferson will be QBs against Hilltoppers

Arkansas coach Chad Morris announced Monday that redshirt freshman John Stephen Jones will start at quarterback Saturday with true freshman K.J. Jefferson also playing.

Chavis takes full responsibility for problems on Razorbacks’ defense

Razorbacks defensive coordinator John Chavis talked Monday about how this staff inherited something “already broken” and they haven’t gotten it fixed fast enough.

Craddock on decision for starting quarterback, facing Storey

Arkansas offensive coordinator Joe Craddock talked Monday about the decision to start John Stephen Jones at quarterback and facing former quarterback Ty Storey.

Hogs set to open season against Rice on Tuesday night

Listen: ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home and HitThatLine.com
Who: Rice Owls
What: 2019-20 Season Opener – Arkansas Home Opener – Eric Musselman debut as Arkansas head coach
When: Tuesday – Nov. 5, 2019 – 7 p.m.
Where: Bud Walton Arena – Fayetteville, Ark.

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas will open the 2019-20 season and the Eric Musselman era on Tuesday when the Razorbacks host one of their oldest rivals, Rice.

Tip-off at Bud Walton Arena is set for 7 p.m. and the game.

Versus Rice

• Rice is one of Arkansas’ oldest rivals. In fact, the Owls are one of three teams on this year’s schedule that Arkansas played in its first season of basketball (1923-24) along with Texas A&M and TCU.

• The Arkansas and Rice rivalry dates back to the Razorbacks’ first season of basketball, 1923-24. The two squads played twice that year — both at Rice and it was Arkansas’ second-to-last series of the year.

• Arkansas owns a 102-41 advantage in the series, including a 54-11 mark in games played in Fayetteville.

• Arkansas has won 15 straight in the series and 40 of the last 43. Rice is one of three teams Arkansas has beaten at least 100 times along with TCU (104) and Texas A&M (103).

• With 143 games played, Rice is Arkansas’ fourth-most common opponent. The leaders being Texas A&M (158; 102-56), Texas (155; 87-68), SMU (155; 96-59), Rice (143; 102-41), Baylor (143; 95-48) and TCU (142; 104-38).

• However, the Razorbacks and Owls have only played once since Arkansas left the Southwest Conference to join the SEC for the 1991-92 season. That lone meeting was on Dec. 17, 2005 in Little Rock, a game Arkansas won 80-61.

Arkansas in openers

• Arkansas opens its 97th season of basketball in 2019-20 and the first under head coach Eric Musselman.

• Arkansas is 77-19 all-time in season openers and has opened the year in the win column in 45 of the last 48 seasons.

• The Razorbacks have won 44 straight home openers, including a 26-0 record in openers inside Bud Walton Arena.

• The Razorbacks had a streak of 23 consecutive season openers end last year with an overtime loss to Texas in the ESPN Armed Forces Classic in El Paso.

• Eric Musselman is 4-0 in both home and season openers. Over the last three seasons, his season opener was also his home opener. In his first year as a collegiate head coach, Nevada opened the season with a win in Hawaii and returned to Reno to win its home opener.

November to remember

• For the first time ever, Arkansas will play seven games in the month of November this season. Also, Nov. 5 is the earliest Arkansas has opened a season.

• Arkansas has played as many as six times in the month on 10 occasions.

• Arkansas is 119-40 (.748) all-time in the month of November.

• Arkansas did not play in the month of November until the 1969-70 season and only played seven total games in the month over the next 10 years.

• Arkansas has played at least once in November dating back to the 1993-94 championship season when they beat Murray State, 93-62, on Nov. 29.

Isaiah Joe on Jerry West Shooting Guard of the Year watch list

• Arkansas sophomore Isaiah Joe was named to the 2020 Jerry West Shooting Guard of the Year Award watch list, the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame announced today.

• FANS CAN VOTE FOR THEIR FAVORITE PLAYER AT: http://www.hoophallawards.com/men/vote.php