39.1 F
Fayetteville

The beginning of the end of the Gus Malzahn Era at Auburn

3

If Gus Malzahn used his flirtation or perceived flirtation with Arkansas last year to cash in at Auburn, that plan has backfired and his future at the school is iffy at best.

What a difference a year makes, huh? Especially in the SEC.

After Malzahn’s Tigers beat Georgia and Alabama in 2017, new Auburn president Steve Leath awarded the Fort Smith native with a $49 million contract over seven years with 75 percent guaranteed.

With the Tigers enjoying success to close the regular season and with Arkansas apparently ready to offer Malzahn eye-popping money after firing Bret Bielema, Leath backed up the Brinks truck to Malzahn’s front door.

However, Leath started feeling immediate regret as the Tigers lost a rematch to Georgia in the SEC Championship Game, and then lost to Central Florida in the Peach Bowl.

Auburn started the 2018 season ranked No. 9 in the preseason Top 25 poll, and a Week 1 win against Washington was a good sign.

However, the season took a sharp dive when Auburn, who was favored in its first nine games, squandered an 11-point lead to LSU at home; lost 23-9 at Mississippi State and three-touchdown underdog Tennessee upset the Tigers 30-24 at Auburn.

Then there was a 27-10 rout at Georgia and the loss at the Crimson Tide.

Finishing 7-5 with that collapse was enough to prompt Leath to reportedly schedule a meeting with Malzahn Sunday giving him an ultimatum of reducing his $32.1 million buyout along with other stipulations to keep his job.

That’s an unprecedented move in the world of college football. Reports suggest Malzahn will accept the compromise.

In effect, Leath just heated up Malzahn’s seat sending a message that if there is not a significant improvement next year, he will be fired. That’s a humbling meeting in more ways than one.

It’s like getting called into your boss’s office and written up while also taking a pay cut. Not good.

So, Malzahn, the former Arkansas offensive coordinator, has been scolded by his boss and has lost millions, and there are reports that he is at odds with members of his coaching staff. He needs to do some patching up — and quick — or a year from now, he will be unemployed.

When he agreed to the deal, I predicted he’d be fired in less than three years. Auburn’s boosters and administration are delusional.

Malzahn’s teams have won a National Title and enjoyed a measure of success.

However, the standard on The Plains is beat Alabama every year (even though no team rarely does with regularity) and play for a National Championship.

There were boosters calling for Malzahn’s head last year before he finished the regular season with a bang.

They were out again after he lost the two postseason games. Not many coaches would want to deal with that criticism or could live up to those high of standards so it was easy to predict a quick end.

The consolation for Malzahn had been the monstrous buyout. He knew if he was fired hastily he’d walk away with a huge payday.

That is now most likely gone.

What I would love to know is if Malzahn wishes he’d have taken the Arkansas job. Like I said then, he would have been given at least four years or maybe five to rebuild the Hogs and would have been paid well to do it — job security and a big paycheck.

But I am not sure if the coach was ever even serious about the UA offer. Was it just another one of super-agent Jimmy Sexton’s schemes to up the ante? I think so.

I think after surveying the landscape, Malzahn surmised it would be a tougher job at Arkansas with more risk of not meeting the standards, even though they are lower, than taking a huge raise and taking a chance that his tenure would end in a firing, maybe sooner t than later.

Or maybe as some suggest that Malzahn’s ego is so large that he thought his Auburn teams would contend for the National Title for the remaining years of his deal.

Whatever the case, it doesn’t look like he will be at Auburn much longer, whether he is asked to leave or skips town to another job. Many in Arkansas will be following this saga closely.

Neighbors on facing No. 23 Iowa State in SEC-Big 12 Challenge

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors met with the media Friday to talk about the matchup with the ranked Cyclones on Sunday that will be a big test against a much-taller team.

???? Friday Halftime Pod — featuring Brooks Ellis

0

Phil & Tye hit on the 2018 season, FOMO Friday and interview Brooks Ellis!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Friday

0

John & Tommy discuss Chad Morris’ postseason press conference, interview Raymond House, and Fenceman Picks!

Bailey, Joe preview Saturday’s matchup with FIU on Saturday

Arkansas players Adrio Bailey and Isaiah Joe met with the media Thursday afternoon and talked about the matchup with the Panthers at Bud Walton Arena.

???? Thursday Halftime Pod — featuring Bob Holt

0

Phil and Tye compare Arkansas baseball to football, interview Bob Holt, You Spent What and more!

Morris staying course after stumbling start, which is good thing

1

Chad Morris finds himself in the same position many big-name coaches have, basically finishing a demolition started by somebody else so he can start rebuilding.

That rebuilding started this week, by the way.

At a season review press conference Monday he compared it to growing bamboo where it takes awhile to see what’s going on before you have growth.

To me it’s more like taking over a development project others kept trying to patch for 10 years and realizing you’ve got to tear it down and build from scratch.

Morris has been here before. SMU started 2-10 in 2015 after the previous coach had effectively ran the program into the ground before leaving.

“When you go through years like this, you understand the outside doesn’t see the growth going on within the program,” he said, noting his SMU experience is helping now.

Other coaches have taken the rebuild path. Lou Holtz went 0-11 at South Carolina his first year there. Bear Bryant was 1-9 his first year at Texas A&M (and ran off over 100 players in the process, which you could do in 1954).

Tom Landry was 0-11-1 his first year in Dallas, then 3-10-1, advancing to 5-8-1 in 1962 when most of the town wanted him fired. Owner Clint Murchison responded with a stunning 10-year guaranteed contract.

The start I’ve seen parallels with is the 1989 Dallas Cowboys. Jerry Jones had bought the team and Jimmy Johnson coached it to 1-15. It was hard to find anybody in Dallas then that wanted them to still be around in 1990.

In the fourth year the Cowboys won the first of three Super Bowls in a four-year period.

What happened at Arkansas is not out of the realm of normal in these situations, but the lunatic fringe of the fan base isn’t hearing any of that. Add a few internet sociopaths, fans of other teams, trolling the Hog fans to stir things up and, well, there’s a lot of noise.

Morris and his staff is ignoring it. They are too politically correct to say it, but they don’t care what your opinion is of how they’re doing it.

“We didn’t finish, we didn’t finish,” Morris lamented Monday. “I think the loss against Ole Miss took the wind out of our sales.”

That one, coming on the heels of collapses against Colorado State and North Texas, made it yet another game the Hogs should have won … but didn’t. It’s also something he really isn’t comfortable with, either.

“I don’t want to admit that,” he said. “I think it took some wind out.”

But, still, the team didn’t quit at that point. They beat Tulsa and put up 31 points in a loss to Vanderbilt.

“Our guys continued to fight,” he said.

Ask LSU. The Tigers had players falling down to keep from scoring and giving the ball back to the Hogs in the final five minutes of the game where they clung to a 24-17 lead.

“You come out here and you’ve got the No. 7-ranked team in the country on the ropes with five and a half minutes to play,” Morris said.

After that the Hogs went through the motions. Morris threw a fit after a loss to Mississippi State, then just wanted to get out of the finale against Missouri without losing any key people.

There will be new faces on the roster, but probably not on the coaching staff. The staff hit the road recruiting after the Missouri game and Thursday night were expected to be in front of former Clemson quarterback Kelly Bryant for the final pitch to the highly-touted graduate transfer.

And some old faces leaving for a wide variety of reasons.

“We expect somewhere getting upwards of 29 new faces in here,” Morris said. “We’ve had some that have chosen to move on, and we want to wish them the best. If we can help them in any way, we’ll be more than happy to.”

Stability with the coaching staff was assured earlier this week when defensive coordinator John Chavis exercised his option for two more years and that was a key move for Morris.

“We’ve got to continue to have more improvement,” Morris said. “Continuity is so much a part of success. They understand defensively what we’re doing and what we’re trying to do.

“We didn’t get to everything we wanted to do this year defensively, and that’s understandable. We didn’t progress at the rate we wanted to.”

It wasn’t at the rate anybody else wanted, either, but it’s the way these things work.

And could be the foundation for bigger things.

Anderson encourages fans to see exciting game with FIU

The Panthers like to get up and down the floor and so do the Razorbacks and Mike Anderson said Tuesday it would be a great game for the fans with both teams playing fast.

Morris wraps up train wreck first season, what’s ahead going forward

Arkansas coach Chad Morris met with the media for the first time since the loss at Missouri and wrapped up the struggles of his first season while looking ahead to recruiting, personnel.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Thursday

0

John & Tommy are joined by Tyler Wilson to talk John Chavis’ tenure, Connor Noland, and interview Richard Davenport!

Razorbacks shut down Oral Roberts’ long-range attack

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas picked up it’s fifth win of the season behind three players in double figures with a 74-61 victory over Oral Roberts in Bud Walton Arena on Wednesday.

The Razorbacks (5-2) opened the game on a 9-0 run holding ORU (3-4) without a basket until the 6:25 mark of the first quarter.

Arkansas went 4-for-6 with one 3-point field goal taking a lead they would not surrender. The Razorbacks led by as many as 17 points with 2:10 to play in the first half before taking a 15-point, 38-23, advantage into the locker room at the break.

ORU’s offense came to life in the second half with the Golden Eagles outscoring Arkansas in the final frame.

Arkansas, however, was able to hold ORU to just five made 3-point field goals, well below their season-average of nearly 10 makes from distance per contest.

Redshirt sophomore Chelsea Dungee scored 21 points, her third game with 20+ this season, and went 7-for-7 from the free throw line.

Dungee paced Arkansas to its best performance of the year from the charity stripe as the Razorbacks hit 24-of-29 attempts.

Junior Malica Monk had a season-high 17 points with five field goals and a 7-for-8 night at the line while senior Malica Monk was in double digits for the sixth time this year with 12 points. Junior Kiara Williams led Arkansas on the boards grabbing 11 rebounds.

Notes

• Arkansas Starters: Alexis Tolefree, Malica Monk, Kiara Williams, Jailyn Mason, Chelsea Dungee.
• Series Record: Arkansas leads 21-9 and is 16-2 in Fayetteville.
• Arkansas held ORU to 11 first quarter points – a season low for an opponent this year.
• Arkansas’ 15-point halftime lead (38-23) is the second-best of the season.
• The Razorbacks forced ORU into 12 first half turnovers. Arkansas’ opponents have had double-digit miscues in every game this season. ORU finished with 19 turnovers in the game.
• Chelsea Dungee has scored in double figures in every game this year. Dungee has posted 20+ points three times this season.
• Malica Monk has had double-digits six times and Jailyn Mason three times.
• Arkansas has more made free throws than its opponent in five games and has tied opponents once.
• Tonight’s 18-15 third quarter performance is just the third time Arkansas has outscored opponents in that period.
• ORU entered the game averaging 9.7 made 3-point field goals per game. They made just five in the game.
• Kiara Williams had double figure rebounds for the second time this season.

Up Next

Arkansas takes part in the Big 12/SEC Challenge facing No. 23 Iowa State in Ames, Iowa, on Sunday.

The Razorbacks return home hosting Tennessee Tech on Dec. 4, followed by a road contest at Abilene Christian Dec. 8.