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???? Tuesday Halftime Pod — Featuring Nikki Chavanelle

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Phil Elson & Tye Richardson discuss Chad Morris/players talking injuries, Get Off My Lawn, and Nikki Chavanelle!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday

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John & Tommy are joined by Tyler Wilson to discuss coffee vs Red Bull, your calls and Would You Rather Tuesday!

Bentonville leaps back into state’s High School Football Poll

Bentonville’s 24-20 win over Fayetteville last Friday night has pushed the Tigers back into the Arkansas High School Football Media Poll at No. 5 in a shakeup after the top two spots.

North Little Rock and Bryant stayed atop the poll while Conway moved up one position to third. Class 6A leader Greenwood is fourth.

After Bentonville is Fayetteville, tied with Bentonville West at No. 6 followed by Class 5A Pulaski Academy, then Fort Smith Northside and Benton.

Class 4A Warren dropped out of the poll with Bentonville leaping back in, but the Lumberjacks are still atop their division poll.

In Class 6A, Greenwood is still on top ahead of Benton, West Memphis, Searcy and Marion.

In 5A it’s Pulaski Academy, Little Rock Christian, Harrison, Texarkana and Little Rock McClellan.

???? Monday Halftime Pod — Featuring Tom Hart

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Phil and Tye discuss the Ole Miss loss, 3 up & 3 down segment, and interview SEC Network’s Tom Hart!

Morris recaps loss to Ole Miss, previews Tulsa game

Arkansas coach Chad Morris gave an update on injured players Ty Storey, Rakeem Boyd, Devwah Whaley and McTelvin Agim and talked about playing Tulsa on homecoming Saturday.

Craddock on direction of offense with key injuries

The offense stalled in the fourth quarter against Ole Miss last week and on Monday, offensive coordinator Joe Craddock talked about that, plus dealing with multiple players injured in the game.

Chavis still working to get defense better after collapse

Razorbacks defensive coordinator John Chavis talked with the media Monday about the problems in the fourth quarter against Ole Miss and looked ahead to game with Golden Hurricane.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Monday

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John, Tommy and Tyler discuss the Ole Miss loss, what to do with the QB situation, plus Tom Murphy!

 

When bad luck isn’t better than no luck at all for Hogs

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In the post-mortem of a crushing 37-33 loss to Ole Miss in Little Rock on Saturday night, it became crystal clear midway through the third quarter, Arkansas had a problem.

When Ty Storey scrambled for 10 yards and a first down on the Hogs’ second play of the fourth quarter, he should have stepped out of bounds after a 9-yard gain when he had the chance.

Storey was decked by Rebels free safety Zedrick Woods and it was pretty clear the Razorbacks suddenly had a full-blown issue on offense.

It became clear Chad Morris’ plan of controlling the game by running the ball was working like a charm on an Ole Miss team with an offense that could light up the scoreboard in a hurry. The best way to stop them was keep them on the bench.

Looking at the big picture, it became crystal clear why the Hogs’ depth chart offensively has the running backs listed where they are.

“That’s what we’re trying to do,” Morris said later. “We had Devwah (Whaley) and Rakeem (Boyd) going. The pace they were going at was very impressive. I hate that they couldn’t finish the game.”

Boyd finished with 109 yards rushing, but left the game for good with what was reported as a back injury after his only carry after the first quarter, a 3-yarder. That was on Arkansas’ second offensive play in the second quarter.

Whaley was welcomed to the party and looked perfectly capable of picking up most of the slack behind Boyd, providing a rushing compliment to Storey and that was good enough for a 33-24 lead with 2:33 left in the third quarter.

That was it, though.

Chase Hayden, who did his best, simply isn’t the threat that Whaley is and he’s not the threat Boyd is.

Yes, the Hogs were down to their third-string running back and a backup quarterback that can’t run more than a couple of yards consistently in a game where keeping the ball on the ground was the plan to keep it out of Ole Miss quarterback Jordan Ta’amu’s hands.

Danged if it didn’t almost work out.

Ta’amu did more damange to the Hogs’ defense than Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa did last week. Ta’amu threw for 387 yards, which the Hogs could have dealt with.

What they couldn’t handle was Ta’amu’s 154 yards on the ground, with runs of 27 and 15 yards in the fourth quarter that that were killers.

“They made some plays on that last drive,” Morris said. “They picked up some key first downs in the second half, which was critical.”

Mobile quarterbacks can beat a defense that covers everything else. No matter how hard defensive coordinators try, a quarterback who can run turns a chicken mess into chicken salad.

“His ability to see the field when the pocket collapses around him, to keep his eyes open
and down the field,” Morris said of Ta’amu. “That’s why he’s one of the top quarterbacks in our league from passing efficiency to running the football.”

Storey was doing that for the Hogs before he was knocked out of the game. He wasn’t as spectacular as Ta’amu, but he did have 73 yards rushing. That tied him with Whaley for the second-leading rusher on the night for Arkansas.

To his credit, Morris wasn’t using the injuries as an excuse.

“I’m not here to make an excuse,” he said. “We would love to have those guys out there. I think that Rakeem (Boyd) was on pace to have another career night. Devwah (Whaley) as well.”

Coaches won’t use injuries as an excuse, but losing those three guys was the reason the offense wasn’t as effective in the fourth quarter.

You wonder what Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock will do this week in those three spots.

Is it time for Connor Noland to get a start if Storey can’t go?

It’s become clear Cole Kelley is good on certain packages. He can get you some hard-earned short yardage into the middle. He can even throw a pass when the defense doesn’t expect it.

But he can’t run this offense very well.

Hayden is in the same spot at running back. Nobody knows what’s up with T.J. Hammonds, who didn’t see the field again Saturday night.

With Tulsa the next opponent, there will be plenty of questions for the coaches to come up with an answer to.

But hopefully they can have some good luck, which coaches despise talking about, but it does play a role.

Because Saturday night bad luck was far worse than no luck at all.

Hogs’ Fall World Series moved to Tuesday for start

FAYETTEVILLE — The 2018 Razorback Baseball Fall World Series will get underway Tuesday at Baum Stadium as the baseball team nears the end of its fall workout season.

Originally scheduled as a best-of-five series, bad weather forecasted for Monday has forced the series to become a best-of-three starting on Tuesday.

The intrasquad games will split the roster into two teams (Cardinal, White). Games one and two will go nine innings, while game three, if necessary, will go seven innings. First pitch for game one is set for 1 p.m. on Tuesday at Baum Stadium.

Arkansas was the national runner-up from a year ago, its second national runner-up finish in school history and returns 14 letterwinners from the 2018 squad.

Coach Dave Van Horn enters his 17th season at the helm of the baseball team and is coming off his best season as the head Hog as he guided the Razorbacks to their ninth College World Series appearance and seventh of his career.

Making up the Cardinal team for this year’s fall series are eight veterans and 14 newcomers.

Redshirt junior starting pitcher Isaiah Campbell and junior closer Matt Cronin headline the pitching staff, however, both will be held out after throwing in both of Arkansas’ fall exhibitions against Wichita State and Little Rock over the last two weeks.

Sophomores Kole Ramage and Angus Denton, along with junior Jacob Kostyshock will shore up the Cardinal pitching staff for this week.

Ramage and Kostyshock both saw considerable time on the mound during the exhibition games, combining for just one run allowed over six innings and striking out 11.

Last Friday at Little Rock, Ramage struck out a team-high four batters in two innings of work while allowing only one hit and one walk.

Offensively, the Cardinal team is led by All-SEC junior outfielder Dominic Fletcher, infielder Jack Kenley, and catcher Zack Plunkett. Fletcher hit .288 with 10 home runs and 49 RBIs a year ago and was named to the SEC All-Defense Team.

In the College World Series, Fletcher was Arkansas’ hottest hitter, going 9-for-26 (.346) at the plate with two home runs and eight RBIs.

He ended the year with a second-straight double-digit home run total becoming the first Razorback since Rodney Nye (1998-99) to hit 10 or more home runs in his first two seasons.

On the White team, a strong offense litters the roster including Jordan McFarland, Casey Opitz, Heston Kjerstad and Casey Martin.

Martin and Kjerstad, who were the Razorbacks top two hitters a year ago and named Freshman All-Americans, return as, arguably, the nation’s best hitting duo as both combined for a .339 average, 27 home runs, and 107 RBIs last year and set Arkansas freshman records for hits, home runs and total bases.

Opitz is coming off a strong fall exhibition series where he went 4-for-9 (.444) at the plate with three of those hits coming on Friday at Little Rock.

Last year, Opitz only appeared in 19 games but hit .222 with two of his six hits going for extra bases and is expected to be one of Arkansas’ top utility players in 2019.

On the mound for the White team, righties Caleb Bolden, Zebulon Vermillion, Kevin Kopps, and Cody Scroggins lead the way.

Kopps, who is coming off season-ending Tommy John surgery last year, pitched one inning against the Trojans on Friday, striking out two while walking one on 13 pitches.

2018 Fall World Series Schedule

Game 1 – Tuesday, Oct. 16 at 1 p.m.
Game 2 – Thursday, Oct. 18 at 4 p.m.
Game 3 – Friday, Oct. 19 at 3 p.m. (if necessary) (7 inning game)

Morris thanks fans, recaps close loss to Ole Miss

Arkansas coach Chad Morris met with the media after the 37-33 loss to the Rebels on Saturday night at War Memorial Stadium.