HOGS-PORTLAND STATE
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PHOTOS BY TED McCLENNING, WENDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM
PHOTOS BY TED McCLENNING, WENDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Razorbacks defensive tackle McTelvin Agim and running back Rakeem Boyd talked about needing to fix mistakes, then turn attention to SEC opener against Ole Miss on the road.
Portland State added a late touchdown and had a drive to pull out a win at the end, but Arkansas’ defense came through for a 20-13 win in the opener at Razorback Stadium.
4Q-10:44: The offense got close, but stalled deep into Portland State territory before settling for a 25-yard field goal by Connor Limpert.
Hogs 20, Portland State 6
3Q-2:20: After nearly two full quarters of pretty ugly offense, the Hogs finally got moving behind Ben Hicks with running back Rakeem Boyd carrying the load late in a 67-yard, 12-play drive that ended on his 2-yard run. Limpert kicked the PAT for a two-score lead.
Hogs 17, Portland State 6
Arkansas struggles offensively as they squander a pair of opportunities in the second quarter and bog down moving the ball, but hold a 10-6 lead at halftime.
Nick Starkel replaced Ben Hicks at quarterback late in the period and promptly threw an interception to end one drive, then couldn’t get into the end zone on the final possession of the half.
2Q-14:07: Portland State ended the first period getting a fresh set of downs and ended up with a 47-yard field goal by Cody Williams to cut into the lead after an 11-play, 45-yard drive.
Hogs 10, Portland State 6
1Q-3:26: Arkansas’ defense stops Vikings without a first down, then move 64 yards in 10 plays with running back Devwah Whaley getting the first score of the season on a 1-yard run and Limpert’s extra point runs the lead to 10-3.
Hogs 10, Portland State 3
1Q-9:40: Hogs answer opening field goal with one from Connor Limpert, from 34 yards as Ben Hicks completes 3-of-5, including a 12-yarder to freshman Treylon Burks and an 8-yarder to Mike Woods.
Portland State 3, Hogs 3
1Q-13:09: Portland State gets on the board first with a 50-yard field goal by Cody Williams, taking the opening kickoff, getting a penalty and moving 42 yards in six plays, primarily on a 22-yard scramble by quarterback Davis Alexander.
Portland State 3, Hogs 0
It’s early in the first quarter as Arkansas has kicked off the 2019 season against Portland State at Razorback Stadium.
FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas volleyball secured a pair of victories on Friday on the opening day of the Arkansas Classic.
The Razorbacks recorded straight set wins over Northwestern State earlier in the day before taking down Little Rock in front of a rocking crowd at Barnhill Arena.
The Razorbacks have one more match this weekend and will face Montana State on Saturday morning. After the Classic, Arkansas will hit the road to the west coast, headed to the SDSU/USD Challenge hosted by San Diego State.
Quick Hits
Stat Leaders vs Northwestern State
Kills: Liz Pamphile, Jillian Gillen – 9
Digs: Klaire Trainor – 11
Notables
Senior Rachel Rippee led all players with 18 assists.
The Razorbacks led for the entirety of the first and third sets.
Arkansas is now 4-0 all-time against Northwestern State.
Junior Liz Pamphile led the Razorback offense with nine kills to the tune of a .412 hitting percentage against the Demons.
Junior Hailey Dirrigl finished with a team high .625 hitting percentage through the first two sets after taking the bench due to an ankle injury.
Freshmen Jillian Gillen and Maggie Cartwright both earned a start against NSU, combining for 15 kills. Gillen also added six digs and three block assists to her collegiate debut.
In total, five Hogs saw the court for the first time since arriving at Arkansas, including junior transfer Devyn Wheeler who contributed three kills, and redshirt-freshman Maylin Garret to recorded six kills in 10 attempts.
Arkansas limited Northwestern State to an .084 hitting percentage, thanks in part to an overall team effort on the defensive front.
Junior Klaire Trainor led the Hogs with 11 digs, but three others recorded six or more digs in the win: Rachel Rippee (8), Jillian Gillen (6), and Gracie Ryan (6).
FINAL
Arkansas 3, Little Rock 0 (25-20, 25-21, 25-12)
Attendance: 767 | Time: 1:21
Barnhill Arena
Quick Hits
Stat Leaders vs Little Rock
Kills: Jillian Gillen – 13
Digs: Savannah Downing, Maggie Cartwright – 10
Double-Doubles: Maggie Cartwright (10 kills, 10 digs)
Notables
Junior Devyn Wheeler recorded eight kills with a .727 hitting percentage.
Arkansas held Little Rock to a .022 hitting percentage over three sets.
Gillen stayed hot throughout day one of the Arkansas Classic, helping lift the Razorbacks to a sweep of in-state opponent Little Rock.
Gillen accounted for 35 of the Hogs’ 100 attacks in the victory, recording 13 kills behind a .286 hitting percentage.
Arkansas saw impressive performances from two other newcomers as well, as Cartwright played a balanced game and recorded the first double-double of the season with 10 kills and 10 digs.
Wheeler was the most efficient Hog of the day, and when combined with her .727 hitting percentage, the trio swung a striking .353 at the net.
Pamphile remained reliable on the defensive side of the ball, putting up five blocks for Arkansas. Gillen, Cartwright, and redshirt sophomore Maia Stripp also recorded multiple blocks in the win.
Arkansas controlled the pace of the entire match, never giving up the lead and keeping the Trojans at bay as to never even tie the score again after a 9-9 set score in the first.
The Razorbacks led by as many as 15 points in the final set, thanks to a kill by Gillen with an assist from freshman Abbigail McGee.
The Razorbacks will return to Barnhill on Saturday morning for an 11 a.m. match against Montana State (1-1).
Admission is free to all fans, parking is limited and fans are encouraged to park in Baum East down Razorback Road and take advantage of the shuttle service.
Shuttles will begin to transport fans from Baum East to Barnhill Arena starting at 9 a.m. Saturday morning.
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