Nick Mason joins John & Tommy to discuss Arkansas basketball, game days in Fayetteville, Would You Rather Tuesdays and more!
Ramsey one of Hogs making plays, not getting stats
Defensive end Randy Ramsey isn’t exactly putting up eye-popping numbers for Arkansas’ rapidly-improving defense.
And, yes, that defense is improving. It’s rated 12th in the SEC this week. Vanderbilt is No. 11 and the numbers are very similar.
Ramsey has been a big part of that improvement.
“One guy that gets lost in the shuffle is what Randy Ramsey did for us,” defensive coordinator John Chavis said Monday of his play against Tulsa. “You aren’t going to see a tremendous amount of stats but he was, in my opinion, one of the more dominating players.”
Most 4-3 base defenses (like the Hogs) relies on certain players doing little more than tying up blockers and that’s what Ramsey did a lot of Saturday.
Dre Greenlaw and De’Jon Harris combined for 24 tackles (and Greenlaw had a sack) while McTelvin Agim is looking more and more like the five-star recruit ouf of Hope he was a few years ago when recruited.
“Since I’ve been here, he probably had his best game, there’s no question about that, and he’s got the potential to be even better,” Chavis said. “Not that he’s been loafing, but I think he played harder than he had all year, and that’s important to understand, that you’ve got to strain.”
And Agim is doing it all over the defensive line. At one point, he was lined up at noseguard and he was around the Tulsa center before he could even wave at him going by.
“I think Sosa’s taken on that role and has done a really good job of being able to play inside, play outside and just to play at a high level,” Morris said of Agim. “I really feel like his biggest and best years to come are going to be more on the inside, but he provides a threat on that outside for us.”
The defense has progressed every week. In a league where only Mississippi State is in the top 10 nationally, the Hogs aren’t close to reaching that level, yet, but the steady improvement has been noticeable in a lot of small ways.
Like cornerback Ryan Pulley, who was suspended for the first series after getting ejected against Ole Miss.
Pulley responded with his third interception of the season and another one he broke up and a couple of tackles.
“He responded well to everything that’s gone on,” Morris said. “For him to continue to improve says a lot about his talent, his ability. He’s got a great future in this game.”
Morris doesn’t put up with a lot of silly yapping and antics from his players.
Ask cornerback Nate Dalton, who’s major accomplishment this season has been as a cover guy on special teams, where he picked up a personal foul penalty and Morris sent him immediately to the dressing room.
“We’re not about that,” Morris said rather directly immediately after the game.
When asked on three separate occasions Monday, Morris, repeated, “he won’t be around this week.”
That’s a level of discipline that hasn’t been around in awhile.
“We’ve got a standard and I’m not going to deviate,” Morris said.
On a team where coaches preach improvement every single play, there was a big advancement Saturday that Chavis talked about.
In the third quarter, the Hogs allowed the Golden Hurricane just 12 net yards on 18 plays.
“That’s probably the best quarter of football that we have played,” Chavis said Monday.
He didn’t have to add that’s not the best he’s expecting this year.
If you’ve been paying attention, the expectation is always for more.
Which is why this defense is getting better each week.
Pflugerville safety commit talks about Razorbacks
NLR holds onto top spot; Lumberjacks back at No. 9 overall
North Little Rock was the unanimous choice of the state’s media as the No. 1 team headed into the final regular-season games after Week 8.
The Charging Wildcats, now 8-0, garnered every vote in the state’s overall Top 10. Bryant remained in second and Conway third with Class 6A Greenwood holding steady at No. 4 and Bentonville fifth.
In a three-way tie, Fayetteville, Bentonville West and Class 5A Pulaski Academy have a logjame there followed by Class 4A Warren at No. 9 and Class 6A West Memphis appearing in the poll for the first time at No. 10.
| HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL RANKINGS | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Last year's final Arkansas High School Football poll as voted by a panel of state media. The new poll will be released Sunday night! | ||||
| OVERALL | Record | Pts | Prv | |
| 1. | Bryant (20) | 13-0 | 200 | 1 |
| 2. | North Little Rock | 8-5 | 168 | 9 |
| 3. | Bentonville | 11-1 | 138 | 2 |
| 4. | Pulaski Academy | 12-2 | 133 | 7 |
| 5. | Searcy | 12-1 | 112 | 10 |
| 6. | Benton | 9-4 | 70 | 6 |
| 7. | Joe T. Robinson | 14-1 | 54 | — |
| 8. | Bentonville West | 7-5 | 45 | — |
| 9. | Little Rock Christian | 13-1 | 38 | 3 |
| 10. | Harrison | 11-1 | 32 | 4 |
| Others receiving votes: Greenwood 27, Conway 24, Harding Academy 22, Shiloh Christian 10, Fordyce 8, Springdale Har-Ber 8, Fayetteville 6, Morrilton 3, LR Catholic 2. | ||||
| CLASS 7A | ||||
| 1. | Bryant (20) | 13-0 | 100 | 1 |
| 2. | North Little Rock | 8-5 | 78 | 4 |
| 3. | Bentonville | 11-1 | 60 | 2 |
| 4. | Bentonville West | 7-5 | 32 | — |
| 5. | Conway | 8-4 | 21 | 3 |
| Others receiving votes: Springdale Har-Ber 5, Fayetteville 4. | ||||
| CLASS 6A | ||||
| 1. | Searcy (20) | 12-1 | 100 | 3 |
| 2. | Benton | 9-4 | 79 | 2 |
| 3. | Greenwood | 10-2 | 61 | 1 |
| 4. | West Memphis | 7-2 | 32 | 4 |
| 5. | Jonesboro | 8-4 | 21 | 5 |
| Others receiving votes: Lake Hamilton 7. | ||||
| CLASS 5A | ||||
| 1. | Pulaski Academy (20) | 12-2 | 100 | 3 |
| 2. | Little Rock Christian | 13-1 | 75 | 1 |
| 3. | Harrison | 11-1 | 60 | 2 |
| 4. | Morrilton | 8-5 | 41 | — |
| 5. | Valley View | 10-1 | 12 | 4 |
| Others receiving votes: White Hall 10, Wynne 1, Vilonia 1. | ||||
| CLASS 4A | ||||
| 1. | Joe T. Robinson (20) | 14-1 | 100 | 2 |
| 2. | Shiloh Christian | 14-1 | 77 | 3 |
| 3. | Ozark | 12-2 | 37 | 5 |
| 4. | Arkadelphia | 11-2 | 36 | 1 |
| 5. | Crossett | 9-4 | 28 | — |
| Others receiving votes: Nashville 20, Jonesboro Westside 2. | ||||
| CLASS 3A | ||||
| 1. | Harding Academy (20) | 15-0 | 100 | 2 |
| 2. | Osceola | 12-2 | 80 | 3 |
| 3. | Prescott | 11-3 | 57 | 4 |
| 4. | Camden Harmony Grove | 11-3 | 38 | — |
| 5. | Rison | 11-2 | 16 | 1 |
| Others receiving votes: Melbourne 5, Booneville 2, Hoxie 2. | ||||
| CLASS 2A | ||||
| 1. | Fordyce (20) | 13-2 | 100 | 3 |
| 2. | Junction City | 11-2 | 80 | 1 |
| 3. | Gurdon | 10-4 | 46 | — |
| 4. | Salem | 10-2 | 31 | 5 |
| 5. | Des Arc | 9-3 | 20 | 4 |
| Others receiving votes: Hazen 17, Foreman 4, Magnet Cove 1, Carlisle 1. | ||||
???? Monday Halftime Pod
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
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
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.

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.

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.








