63.1 F
Fayetteville

???? Monday Halftime Pod

0

Phil and Tye recap the win, 3 up 3 down segment and SEC news!

Morris recapping win over Tulsa, previewing Vanderbilt

Arkansas coach Chad Morris’ press conference Monday looking back on the 23-0 win over the Golden Hurricane and looks ahead to Saturday’s matchup with the Commodores.

Chavis pleased with shutout win over Golden Hurricane

Razorbacks defensive coordinator John Chavis on Monday was pleased with the win over Tulsa last Saturday, but stressed there were still plenty of areas with room for improvement.

Craddock pleased with Noland’s play Saturday

Hogs offensive coordinator Joe Craddock talked with the media Monday about the play of freshman Connor Noland last weekend against Tulsa and what he sees in Vandy’s defense.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Monday

0

John & Tommy discuss Arkansas’ 23-0 win, interview Tom Murphy, and touch on SEC news!

Razorbacks drop final October match to Alabama on Sunday

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas fell 3-1 to Alabama Sunday afternoon in the team’s final October home match. With the loss, the Hogs are now 9-10 (3-6 SEC).

FINAL
Alabama 3, Arkansas 1 | Box Score
Attendance: 516 | Time: 1:55
Barnhill Arena

#RazorStats
• Stat leaders vs Alabama
o Kills: Kelly O’Brien – 17
o Digs: Okiana Valle – 27
o Blocks: Kelly O’Brien, Ellease Crumpton, Liz Pamphile – 5.0

The Razorbacks dropped the first set 25-22, but rallied and dominated the second set for a 25-18 victory. Arkansas had a late-set rally in the third, but eventually fell 26-24. The Tide put the match away in the fourth, earning a 25-19 win.

Sophomore Hailey Dirrigl and junior Rachel Rippee both recorded double-doubles, with Dirrigl posting 13 kills and 10 digs while Rippee posted 25 assists and 13 digs.

Senior Okiana Valle’s 27 digs gave her 1,666 career digs, the second-most in program history.

Arkansas will return to the court Wednesday at Mississippi State. First serve is set for 7 p.m.

Key players out means it’s next man up for Hogs

1

Chad Morris likes to keep things simple, really.

That’s why we always hear him talk about one game at a time, one day at a time, one practice at a time and one play at a time.

Then there’s always the next man up when somebody goes down and in Saturday’s 23-0 shutout over Tulsa, there were plenty of key players missing.

There was some warning on some like Ty Storey. Others, like offensive tackle Colton Jackson was literally a last-minute decision.

“We get news right before we head from the hotel that Colton (Jackson) had some back spasms,” Morris said after the game. “So he was out. We did not know that until the bus ride over here. We felt like maybe during warmups we could get him back, but he couldn’t go.”

They started Dalton Wagner and there wasn’t much noticeable difference.

“We played fundamentally great,” offensive line leader Hjalte Froholdt said later.

Arkansas offensive lineman Dalton Wagner, fighting to keep a block on Tulsa’s Trevis Gipson, didn’t have a lot of warning before starting Saturday. PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

On the depth chart, Wagner was listed as Brian Wallace’s backup on the right side, but moved over to the left side when Jackson couldn’t go.

“The way you cross train those guys you have to play them in different positions, and they responded,” Morris said.

No change in the game plan and Arkansas ran for 196 yards net. They had 226 total, but 30 yards in losses kept it from being a really good effort. A misfire on a snap and a 10-yard loss by Rakeem Boyd accounted for most of it.

“We challenged out guys up front,” Morris said. “We needed to run the football, they’re a little bit different team than what we’ve seen all year long. Odd stack and they’re fits are a little bit different, but we felt like we could run the football. We put the pressure on our O-line.”

Now they’ve just got to figure a way to keep Boyd upright for an entire game.

Last week he aggravated a back injury. This week he became dehydrated while producing his first-half yardage. Boyd had just three carries early in the third quarter.

His replacements, Chase Hayden and Maleek Williams, just aren’t as good as Boyd. Keeping him in for four full quarters is going to be key over the rest of the season because they don’t have anyone as good as him with Devwah Whaley out after ankle surgery.

Chase Hayden looks for running room against Tulsa last Saturday behind a block from Cheyenne O’Grady, who is dealing with a hand to the face. PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

But the defense stepped up and played the best it has all season. The got six sacks and Tulsa ended up with 42 yards in losses rushing.

Plus they had a goal-line stand at the end to preserve the shutout.

Senior Armon Watts, who’s been around a few years, is finally starting to shine. He won the Crip Hall Award on Saturday, the annual award given to the outstanding senior in the homecoming game.

“I feel honored,” he said later. “I know a lot of greats in the past have gotten it. To have my name mentioned is an honor. I come in every week and push myself and the other guys. It paid off this week and I don’t think there’s a better group that could’ve won today.”

Watts has gotten Morris’ attention, too.

“You know Armon is such an inspiration to young players,” Morris said. “Young players that stick with it. This is a young man that came in here and is just now seeing a lot of success. He could’ve quit, he could’ve transferred, he could’ve moved on; but nope, he loves the Razorbacks and he’s going to stick it out.

“A young man like that, you want the best with him. He’s shared his story with a lot of our young players. I’m proud of him and proud of where he is.”

This game was all positives, which many consider a little surprising. Yes, there were actually some thinking the Hogs were going to struggle in this game.

They really didn’t after the first quarter. Tulsa missed a couple of field goals and had a big play late, but couldn’t get in the end zone because of the defense.

It was a win in a season that’s not going to see a lot of those.

And maybe a big shot of confidence in many different aspects.

That could be the biggest takeaway from this one.

PHOTOS: Our big gallery from Hogs’ win over Tulsa

Arkansas got it’s first win since the opening game of the season Saturday when they shut out Tulsa, 23-0, on homecoming in Fayetteville and here are some of the best in pictures.

Photos by Ted McClenning | HitThatLine.com

Noland not perfect, but impressive in first start

0

Connor Noland found out midweek he would be starting for Arkansas against Tulsa on Saturday.

No problem.

He started with an interception on his first drive, but that was his only turnover and ended up with a steady day leading the Razorbacks to a 23-0 win over the Golden Hurricane before an intimate gathering of 40,128.

All week in practice, Ty Storey was out there. Nobody really knew what the final verdict was going to be after he suffered a concussion against Ole Miss last week.

“We probably had an idea, and we were preparing for it,” Chad Morris said after the win Saturday.

That preparation was for Noland, a highly-touted freshman from Greenwood, to get his first collegiate start.

“He’s probably dreamed of this moment his entire life,” Morris said. “To be able to come out and lead the Hogs to a win, I’m very proud of him.”

Noland tried not to think about it, but it did creep in there.

“I tried not to think about it, but when you grow up watching the Hogs play then get the opportunity be out there on the field with my first start meant a lot to me, so it was a big moment,” Noland said later. “But I just tried to downplay that a little bit and focus on the game.”

That first interception wasn’t due to the moment being too big for Noland. He just made a mistake.

“It’s a game so there’s gonna be mistakes like on that first drive,” Noland said. “I’ve had a lot of experience with just moving on and going to the next play. That was kind of my mindset after it happened, then coach came up to me and patted me on the back and told me to focus on the next play.”

Tulsa strong safety McKinley Whitfield pulls away from Arkansas wide receiver Jared Cornelius after intercepting quarterback Connor Noland in the first quarter Saturday. PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

While it may sound a little strange to some, Morris obviously liked what he saw in Noland after that interception.

“It did not faze him one bit,” Morris said. “That says a lot about a young man that’s a competitor. He’s been in these situations before, you can definitely tell that. First freshman starter in 12 years, to come in in an environment where we are in our program of needing a win.”

Senior offensive lineman Hjalte Froholdt noticed and was impressed.

“For a young guy to be that fresh and enthusiastic about getting back out on the field, it’s extremely impressive,” he said later. “He never froze up or gave you the deer in headlights look and didn’t say anything.”

That’s what we’ve heard about him since fall camp. He appears to have a level of maturity not a lot of freshmen have.

“He was comfortable with himself and said, ‘Well, I threw a pick, but now to the next play,’” Froholdt said. “His mood was still up, he was enthusiastic about the game and it was really good to feel that. He made a mistake, but he understands that and you can’t let it rollover and that was awesome to see from a freshman.”

One of the things Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock try to do is not put any of their quarterbacks in a bad situation. With a true freshman, the running game became key.

“We knew Connor (Noland) was going to have a good day, but we did not want to put the pressure strictly on Connor,” Morris said. “We challenged out guys up front.”

Quarterback Connor Noland reads the options as running back Chase Hayden comes by for a handoff against Tulsa on Saturday in Fayetteville. PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

And Tulsa’s defense had been pretty decent against the run. Arkansas ground out 196 yards rushing and controlled the game (over 35 minutes in time of possession).

“We had a heavy run game plan going in, just, making sure Connor is comfortable back there by not putting him in any bad situations and trying to stay ahead of the chains and not get in any third and long situations,” Froholdt said. “But we had all the confidence in Connor, he can run the ball really well as well so we just put him in situations to do that.

“He did a tremendous job making sure we’re all on the same page whenever we had checks and making sure we check from run to pass or pass to run. We definitely relied on our run game and I’m happy my guys stepped up and played well.”

With that solid performance, you wonder which way Morris will go next week against Vanderbilt. While the Hogs’ offense wasn’t flashy, it was workmanlike.

If there was an issue it was Rakeem Boyd getting 99 yards on 19 carries in the first half and not seeing much action in the second half after a fumble, then two carries that netted just three yards.

“Dehydrated,” was how Morris termed it later.

He fumbled twice. Noland jumped on the first one, but it was on the Hogs’ first play of the second half that Boyd fumbled a second time, losing this one to the Golden Hurricane.

That’s when Arkansas’ defense stepped up. They made the key plays in the second half, delivering defensive coordinator John Chavis his first shutout with the Hogs.

“He was smiling,” defensive lineman McTelvin Agim said later. “He didn’t do any of the crazy antics he did before. He just came up to us and told us he appreciated us. He kept it simple, but you could tell he was joyful.”

That means we may see Chief smiling at the Monday press conference.

Which will be a first. Getting goose eggs on the scoreboard will do that.

And having a freshman quarterback break the losing streak gives this team and fan base a shot of sorely-needed optimism.

“Our players, as we know, have battled all year long,” Morris said. “The outcomes have not gone our way, but these guys continue to fight.

“It says a lot about who we are, it says a lot about our program, and it says a lot our state and it says a lot about what we’re trying to build here.”

With a big recruiting weekend going on, including an official visit from former Clemson quarterback Kelly Bryant, it went well for Morris, who is always recruiting.

“We had a lot of great recruits here today,” Morris said. “I can’t wait to show off Fayetteville tonight to our recruits.”

It wasn’t hard to tell he’s happier doing it after a win.

Morris talking about win over Tulsa on Homecoming

Arkansas coach Chad Morris recapping the win, glad for the players, but they will be back tomorrow getting better.

Noland on first start in 23-0 win over Tulsa on Saturday

Hogs quarterback Connor Noland got his first start Saturday and talked about the win with media afterwards.