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…

With Vols not on schedule, can Morris survive oh-16 start?

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When Chad Morris was hired in December 2017 he asked fans to give him a chance as the Arkansas football coach.

“I won’t let you down,” he said at his opening press conference.

Most fans were willing to let 0-8 and 2-10 in his first year slide, but after going backwards from last year, can he survive a OH-and-16 start in SEC games?

At this point some fans are wondering if he can survive Colorado State and San Jose State. But if this team couldn’t do much with opportunities against an Ole Miss team that lost to Memphis last week, where is the league win this year?

More importantly, Saturday’s debacle in Oxford in a 31-17 loss to Ole Miss where the offense failed to produce a single touchdown when it mattered is going to stretch even the most optimistic.

If Morris says, “I get it” at his press conference Monday following two games of complete ineptitude from coaching to players, then it’s proof, indeed, he does NOT get it.

There’s no other explanation.

And, yes, it’s gotten that bad.

The Razorbacks aren’t making progress. No, they’re going backwards.

What in the world is the positive for Morris after a 2-12 start to his tenure in Fayetteville?

Recruiting is one part of it, but if you don’t develop the players you have, well, you end up staring in the face of a start that is going to make the seat upon which Morris sits the hottest we’ve seen in awhile.

It’s even worse than what the fans in Tennessee are dealing with, not that they particularly have time to be worrying about the Hogs right now.

Did Morris ignore what many felt was obvious in going with Ben Hicks over Nick Starkel from the start this season?

Or even not putting the quarterback that put the team in the end zone the most in preseason scrimmages by sitting John Stephen Jones through the first two games?

Against the Rebels, Hicks misfired on two passes that would likely have been scores. That was 14 points … gone.

Remember the final margin was 14 points and that’s not even taking into account any momentum swings those two scores would have provided.

While I have given Morris the benefit of the doubt because people that know far more about college football than me said he was the perfect guy for the job.

Now, in fairness, they didn’t tell me how long it would take for him to be the perfect guy for the job, but he’s headed towards the worst start in the history of Razorback football.

Not just recent history, but the entire history.

There will be people encouraging fans to not over-react … and there is a scenario I might agree with that. Morris isn’t exactly helping his case.

Saturday night, the Hogs looked like a team that hadn’t seen a practice field in the first half against an Ole Miss team that didn’t look particularly imposing until a lack of firepower gave them hope.

By the time Morris went for the Starkel Sparkle to start the second half, it took nearly two quarters for any sort of timing and rhythm to be developed.

By then it was too little too late.

It could be argued this staff has spent considerable time and resources bringing in better players, which they have been fairly successful doing.

But it doesn’t matter if you can’t “coach ’em up,” as Steve Spurrier used to say.

Granted, Morris didn’t inherit a lot of offensive linemen in either numbers or talent. They were some pretty good guys, but simply not that good.

But he also isn’t showing much in the way of improvement.

Or doing anything to earn the trust of the fans he asked for when he was hired.

A 3-11 start to his tenure in Fayetteville is stretching the faith of a lot of Hog fans.

And it was already getting thin.

 

KNWA Video: Morris on frustration after falling to Ole Miss

Video courtesy of KNWA

Arkansas coach Chad Morris talking about not being able to overcome the number of mistakes and the frustration of losing to Rebels on the road Saturday night.

KNWA VIDEO: Starkel after starting second half in loss

Video courtesty of KNWA

Nick Starkel started the second half after Arkansas fell behind Ole Miss on Saturday night and talked about his outing following the 31-17 loss.

KNWA Video: Pool on lack of execution in loss at Ole Miss

Video courtesy of KNWA

Arkansas linebacker Bumper Pool talked after the loss to the Rebels and said the defense simply failed to execute at times.

KNWA Video: Knox on offense ‘shooting ourselves in foot’

Razorbacks wide receiver Trey Knox talked after the 31-17 loss to Ole Miss about the offense “shooting ourselves in the foot” and said he was confident they would get it corrected.

KNWA Video: Curl on fumble, return for Hogs’ touchdown

Video courtesy of KNWA

Razorbacks defensive back Kamren Curl talked after the loss to Ole Miss about the play where he stripped the tight end of the ball, picked it up and managed to make it into the end zone.

Rebels manage to add another score, hang on for win as Hogs sputter

OXFORD, Miss. — Get ready for a quarterback change.

Arkansas sputtered offensively in the first half with Ben Hicks starting his second game, then Nick Starkel came on in the second half, but there was not a whole lot of improvement until it was too late in a 31-17 loss to Ole Miss.

That evens the Razorbacks’ record at 1-1, but kicks off the SEC schedule 0-1 after an 0-8 league record last year and will start to increase the discontent among the Razorback fans.

Hicks was 7-of-16 for 98 yards and no touchdowns in the first half. The offense was simply lacking the ability to get into the end zone.

Starkel came in and didn’t make a lot of improvement in getting into the end zone until just over a minute to play on a 6-yard pass to Koilan Jackson, but it was too little too late.

He finished the night 17-of-24 with that lone touchdown.

Rebels running back Scottie Phillips gashed the Arkansas defense for 143 yards and two touchdowns, a lot of it in the fourth quarter.

On the other hand, the Hogs couldn’t run the ball, getting just 61 net yards all night. Rakeem Boyd had 67 yards, but disappeared with the Arkansas running game in the second half.

It will be an interesting week.

4Q-1:21: Koilan Jackson hauls in a 6-yard scoring pass from Nick Starkel to make it a little closer as Starkel leads a seven-play, 81-yard drive against an Ole Miss defense that was just looking to not give up a huge play.

Ole Miss 31, Hogs 17

4Q-6:03: Scottie Phillips breaks free for a 26-yard scoring run to put the dagger into the Hogs. The gap is too big to overcome.

Ole Miss 31, Hogs 10

4Q-11:09: Ole Miss quarterback Matt Corral answered Arkansas’ score with a 46-yard scoring pass to Elijah Moore after a quick five-play, 74-yard drive to open a two-touchdown edge.

Ole Miss 24, Hogs 10

4Q-13:31: Kamren Curl forced a fumble on a 5-yard run by Ole Miss’ Octavius Cooley, then picks it up and avoids tacklers for a 69-yard touchdown return and Hogs have life.

Ole Miss 17, Hogs 10

3Q-2:33: After coming on a blitz untouched, Hogs’ linebacker Zach Williams grabbed Matt Corral’s facemask to give the Rebels new life and they scored on a 1-yard run to open a two-touchdown lead.

Ole Miss 17, Hogs 3

Nick Starkel started the second half for Arkansas against Ole Miss, but had a three-and-out to open, then a nine-play, 44-yard drive ended a yard short.

He had hit a key pass to Trey Knox, then an apparent penalty against Ole Miss after a first down catch by C.J. O’Grady was moved back to fourth-and-1 with no penalty and Rakeem Boyd was stuffed short of the marker.

Connor Limpert hooked a 43-yard field goal attempt 50 seconds left in the first half after Arkansas had moved downfield on a miracle pass from Ben Hicks to Trey Knox.

The Razorbacks’ offense has sputtered like an old car running half the cylinders with some bad gas as Hicks has overthrown two passes that likely would have been scoring plays and both have allowed Ole Miss to keep momentum.

At the half, Ole Miss has put up 240 yards while holding the Hogs to just 137 with just 38 yards on the ground as the Rebels are crashing inside, shutting down the run game and getting consistent pressure on Hicks.

2Q-2:24: Luke Logan hits a 33-yard field goal as Ole Miss’ offense works to hit the outside and if Hogs’ defense doesn’t do better setting the edge, it’s going to be a long night.

Ole Miss 10, Hogs 3

2Q-8;19: Connor Limpert bounces a field goal off the left upright to get the Hogs on the scoreboard after a no-call on a defensive holding or pass interference call as C.J. O’Grady was turning upfield.

Ole Miss 7, Hogs 3

1Q-8:41: Ole Miss gets on the board first on a 2-yard pass from quarterback Matt Corral to Elijah Davis to cap a 13-play, 85-yard drive, taking advantage of a big missed tackle by cornerback Jarques McClellion on Davis earlier.

Ole Miss 7, Arkansas 0

Arkansas won the coin toss and deferred to the second half, then stopped Ole Miss without a first down as things are under way in Oxford.

The 10 things to know about Hogs’ matchup with Ole Miss

Some information from Razorback Sports Communications

Arkansas begins SEC play at Ole Miss on Saturday at 6:30 p.m. in Oxford, Mississippi.

You can hear the game on ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

In addition, you can listen locally to the live broadcast of the game online at HitThatLine.com.

The Arkansas GameDay pregame show begins at 1:30 p.m.

The game will be broadcast on SEC Network, as well as the ESPN app. Here are 10 things to know about the game before kick off.

1. It will be the 66th meeting between the two schools on the gridiron, with the Razorbacks holding a 36-26-1 edge in the all-time series.

The series is tied at 6-6 in games played in Oxford. Each of the last four games against the Rebels have been decided by six points or less, with the last two contests in Oxford finishing as one-point games.

Saturday’s game against the Rebels will be the earliest SEC opener for both teams since 2014 and is the first time the two teams have opened conference play against each other.

Joe Foucha PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

2. The Razorback defense made it a point of emphasis since the beginning of the spring to create more turnovers, with the goal of at least three per practice.

In 2018, Arkansas produced 13 takeaways, with five interceptions. Entering the 2019 campaign, no active member of the roster had a collegiate interception to his name.

After Saturday, three Razorbacks could claim that distinction as Kamren Curl, Joe Foucha and Jarques McClellion all picked off passes against Portland State.

Curl recorded the first interception of the season in the second quarter, while McClellion’s INT in the third frame set up a Rakeem Boyd touchdown. Foucha’s pick in the fourth quarter allowed Arkansas to run out the clock in victory formation for a 1-0 start to the season.

Kamren Curl PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

3. Junior safety Kamren Curl’s presence was felt all over the field in Saturday’s season opener against the Vikings. Curl recorded the first interception of the season for the Razorbacks, the first of his career, in the second quarter to put Arkansas in the red zone.

He also recorded two sacks, both solo, during Portland State’s second and fourth drives of the game. He finished the contest with five tackles, four unassisted stops, for his 12th career game of five or more tackles.

Pro Football Focus (PFF) rated him as Arkansas’ top defender on Saturday with an overall grade of 83.2, including coverage and QB pressure marks of 84.9 and 81.0, respectively, all career-bests from the outlet.

4. Senior defensive tackle McTelvin “Sosa” Agim moved from defensive end and didn’t miss a beat on Saturday, racking up a team-high six tackles, two for loss, including two sacks against Portland State.

It was the second time in his career he’s recorded 2.0 sacks in a game, doing so against Tulsa (10/20) on homecoming last season. He’s the first Razorback since Trey Flowers (2012-13) to produce a game with 2.0 or more sacks in back-to-back seasons.

Agim now has 11.5 sacks over his collegiate career, moving him within 5.0 sacks of cracking the career sacks top-10 at Arkansas. His total of 25 tackles for loss puts him eight away from writing his name into the Arkansas record books at 10th on the school’s career list.

He is one of three in the conference with 2.0 sacks after week one.

Hayden Henry PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

5. The Arkansas defense served up some sack lunches on Saturday, posting 6.0 sacks among five players against the Vikings.

McTelvin Agim and Kamren Curl paced the team with 2.0 each, while Hayden Henry (1.0), Gabe Richardson (0.5) and Jamario Bell (0.5) all joined in on the fun on the scoresheet.

Agim was involved in three of the team’s sacks, reaching 6.0 for the first time since playing Tulsa last year, tying for the third-most under a Chad Morris-coached team. Curl and Agim’s combination 4.0 sacks marked the first time two Razorbacks piled up 4.0 in game since 2014, when Taiwan Johnson (2.5) and Darius Philon (1.5) against Nicholls State.

Arkansas is one of eight schools in the country with 6.0 or more sacks after the first week of competition.

Rakeem Boyd PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

6. Junior running back Rakeem Boyd put together a strong showing in the season-opening victory over Portland State.

The Houston, Texas, native tallied 114 rushing yards on 18 carries, while also reeling in three receptions for 22 yards for a total of 136 all-purpose yards in the contest.

It was his highest rushing yard total since arriving on the Hill from Independence CC and the second-most combined yardage day behind a 145-yard performance against Ole Miss in 2018 that featured 109 rushing yards on seven first-quarter carries.

Boyd’s 114 yards vs. PSU was the first time he’s rushed for over 100 yards in a non-conference game and the fourth time as a Razorback to go over 100 yards in a game on the ground.

He is one of 29 Arkansas running backs all time to record four 100+ yard rushing performances while playing for the school, joining senior teammate Devwah Whaley.

Boyd’s 100-yard game on Saturday gave Arkansas its 36th consecutive season with at least one 100-yard rusher.

Ben Hicks PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

7. Senior Ben Hicks was named the starting quarterback by head coach Chad Morris on Aug. 26 after transferring from SMU after the 2018 season.

Hicks began his collegiate career with Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock, earning Honorable Mention Freshman All-American (Campus Insiders), an Athlon Sports All-AAC fourth team member, earned various weekly awards and set the school’s single-season and career touchdowns records.

Hicks left SMU as the all-time leader in passing yards (9,081), total offense (8,977), touchdown passes (71), touchdowns responsible for (74), completions (718) and 300-yard passing games (12).

He kicked off his Razorback career with a 14-for-29 line, throwing for 143 yards, while connecting with seven different receivers. Hicks was the first graduate transfer quarterback to start for the Razorbacks since Ryan Mallett in 2009.

PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

8. Arkansas trotted out an entirely new starting 11 on offense from the previous year’s season opener on Saturday against Portland State.

Nine of the first game starters in 2018 have exhausted their time in an Arkansas uniform, while left guard Kirby Adcock and running back Devwah Whaley return to this year’s squad. Of the 132 starting spots on offense last year, only 57 were filled by returning student-athletes.

It was the first time in at least 30 years Arkansas has had an entirely new starting lineup on the offensive side of the ball.

Trey Knox PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

9. The Razorbacks started three true freshmen in the 2019 opener, two on offense in wide receivers Treylon Burks and Trey Knox, and the other on defense in defensive back Greg Brooks Jr.

A total of 11 freshmen saw playing time against the Vikings, combining for four catches and 90 yards, as well as a tackle and a quarterback hurry on defense.

Last season, 27 starting spots went to freshmen.

Connor Limpert PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

10. Senior kicker Connor Limpert picked up where he left off last season, connecting on two field goals against Portland State on Saturday.

The left-footed kicker nailed attempts from 34 and 25 yards in the first and fourth quarters, respectively, to help propel the Razorbacks to a 1-0 start to the season.

The Lou Groza Award semifinalist is now tied for eighth in career field goals made with 29, matching the feats set by Greg Horne (att. 53) from 1983-86 and Bill McClard (att. 46) from 1969-71 in fewer attempts, reaching the mark in 35 tries.