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Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Friday

Live at Hardees, John and Tommy hit on the tough topics like Arkansas as a basketball school, best RB’s in SEC and grape jelly on sausage biscuits.

After a long while, Nick Mason finally rejoins the program.

To relief of most, football season is finally starting

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Arkansas fans haven’t had much of a summer to kick back, relax and just enjoy some downtime before another season.

The magical run of the Razorbacks in the College World Series brought fans to July, SEC Media Days in the middle of the month kicked things off and now, about two weeks later, football practice is starting.

Along with it more of a semblance of what I consider football weather. Maybe it’s remembering two-a-days in the sweltering heat and humidity of Southeast Arkansas high school football, but THAT is football weather.

If you were lucky you needed long sleeves by the end of the season.

Razorback fans had a June filled with emotional swings, going from the height of excitement to the depths of despair in the length of time it took a high foul ball in Omaha to fall harmlessly to the ground in the middle of three players.

That is emotionally draining.

Add to that the fourth football coach in 10 years and folks are just now starting to ramp up some enthusiasm for the season that will now accelerate to the Sept. 1 opening against Eastern Illinois.

It will be a month of predictions, guesses, hopes and fears all wrapped into about 27 days.

The truth is none of knows. We may think we know, but we don’t really even know what we don’t know at this point.

But that’s part of the fun, right?

A record recruiting year

As of this writing, the Hogs are ranked No. 21 in the country in the 247Sports.com composite recruiting rankings.

The number of top 500 players Arkansas has committed is the second highest in school history and those who were questioning Chad Morris and his staff’s ability to recruit are having to re-think that now.

Now they aren’t all signed, sealed and delivered just yet, but this staff is doing it differently.

“This staff is more aggressive in recruiting,” tight ends coach Barry Lunney said this week.

If you’ve paid attention to Razorback football, that is as clear of a statement as anything that’s ever been said. No one ever accused Bobby Petrino of being a great or aggressive recruiting, John L. Smith was insignificant and Bret Bielema started off dazed and confused, which turned to bewilderment as the entire landscape of the recruiting game was changing as he was coming to a league he knew nothing about.

Morris goes hard and fast at everything.

And it’s paying off with just a few months to go before the first signing date.

High school coaches have done pretty well moving up

Since Morris’ hiring in December, there have been a few in the national media taking shots at his comments about being a high school coach.

Well, there have been a few, including one who took his high school system all the way into coaching immortality.

In 1931, a high school turned to one of their own and 24-year-old Paul Brown did things his way, creating a lot of what is now considered standard practice in football.

That was where the coach calling offensive plays by shuttling players in with the new play started. He emphasized quickness over strength and over, recruiting players from within the school and he invented something many considered baffling — a playbook.

His last six years, they lost one game, took six state titles and outscored opponents 2,393-168.

He left for Ohio State, where he took a playbook, focused on quickness and even adopted the 40-yard dash as a means of measuring speed of football players.

They improved the first year, going 8-1-1 and won the national title their second year, then World War II interrupted everying, Brown ended up in professional football and pretty much created the foundation of the game played today from junior high to the NFL.

High school coaches can move up the ladder, but only special ones are successful. Art Briles and Gus Malzahn may be the two most recent ones to do it successfully.

We’ll find out if Morris gets added to the list.

Players report with team-wide reduced body fat

FAYETTEVILLE — Head coach Chad Morris welcomed his football team back to campus Thursday with The BIG Weigh-In.

The weight check serves as the start of fall camp for the Razorbacks, who will hit the field for the first time Friday at 6 p.m.

The beginning of fall camp brings a close to a summer that saw numerous Hogs transform their bodies thanks to strength coach Trumain Carroll and his staff. Several players saw their body fat percentages shrink while adding muscle and weight while becoming more explosive.

Some of the biggest improvements of the summer:

McTelvin Agim – The big D-lineman made a big jump over the summer, literally, seeing his broad jump increase 10 inches.

Kamren Curl – The sophomore is making the move to safety and taking a bulked up frame with him, he checked in at an even 200 pounds on Thursday afternoon.

Johnny Gibson Jr. – One of many offensive linemen to transform over the summer, Gibson dropped his weight to 319 thanks in part to dropping his body fat by 3.5%.

Dre Greenlaw – One of the defense’s leaders dropped his body fat percentage from 12.6% to 9.2%.

Cole Kelley – The QB checked in at 255 on Thursday and added some explosion over the summer, increasing his broad jump by a full foot.

Jalen Merrick – The junior shed nearly 30 pounds and 3.0% body fat over the summer and checks in at 316 heading into camp.

Jonathan Nance – The Razorbacks’ deep threat from a year ago has added muscle to his speedy frame, tipping the scales at 190 without losing a step.

La’Michael Pettway – The big wide receiver’s summer work pushed his body fat percentage down to a minuscule 7.1%.

Santos Ramirez – The senior dropped his body fat percentage to a razor thin 3.7% and upped his broad jump an impressive seven inches.

Randy Ramsey – The speedy rush end bulked up to 234 pounds.

Ty Storey – The body fat percentage for the QB fell to just 10.9% over the summer.

Brian Wallace – The O-lineman lost a few pounds over the summer but saw his body fat percentage fall 5.0%, which means there’s a lot more muscle on that 6-6 frame heading into his senior season.

Devwah Whaley – The junior running back shrunk his body fat by 4.5% and pushed his broad jump out by eight inches.

Neighbors sets Hogs’ non-conference basketball schedule

FAYETTEVILLE — A 14-game non-conference schedule featuring teams from the Pac-12, Big 12, ACC and Big Ten highlight an exciting start to Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors’ second season at the helm of his alma mater in 2018-19.

This season’s home opponents include Northwestern State who tips off the season with the Razorbacks’ annual Elementary Day game. Arizona State and Nebraska also make appearances in Bud Walton Arena this season.

Both teams advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament a year ago. Arkansas also hosts Oral Roberts, Tennessee Tech, Prairie View A&M and Jackson State before the start of Southeastern Conference play.

The Razorbacks have some challenging road games as well with trips to UT-Arlington, Iowa State as part of the Big 12/SEC Challenge, Abilene Christian and Tulsa this fall.

Arkansas will also take part in a Thanksgiving weekend tournament in Nashville, Tennessee, facing Wisconsin, Pittsburgh and host Tennessee State.

Top Five Reasons To Come To Razorback Women’s Basketball Games

• Mike Neighbors and the Razorbacks return four of the five starters from last season and are loaded with talent for 2018-19.

• Arkansas returns its leading scorer, Malica Monk, and top rebounder, Kiara Williams, and welcomes five newcomers this season.

• Arkansas hosts Alabama, Auburn, Georgia, Mississippi State, Missouri, Ole Miss, South Carolina, and Texas A&M. Five of those teams advanced to the NCAA Tournament with Mississippi State reaching the Final Four. A sixth, Alabama, played into the WNIT Quarterfinals a year ago.

• Teams from the Pac-12 and Big Ten, along with the Southland, Summit, Ohio Valley and Southwestern Athletic Conference travel to Bud Walton Arena this season.

• Forty-one winning seasons including eight in a row, in the Basketball Palace of Mid-America.

The SEC

The 2019 Southeastern Conference home-and-away opponents for Arkansas have been released. The home schedule includes games with Alabama, Auburn, Mississippi State, South Carolina and Vanderbilt.

Arkansas will travel to Florida, Kentucky, LSU, Tennessee and Texas A&M. The Razorbacks have home-and-away series with Missouri, Georgia and Ole Miss in 2019.

Dates and times for the 2018-19 SEC schedule will be released later this fall.

Seven of the Razorbacks’ 13 SEC opponents reached the NCAA Tournament last year with an eighth team taking part in the WNIT tournament. Mississippi State, who reached the Final Four for the second consecutive season, faces Arkansas in Bud Walton Arena in 2019.

South Carolina, who won the 2018 NCAA Championship and reached the quarterfinals a year ago, is also a home opponent this season.

The Schedule

Day Date Opponent Arena Site
Thursday Nov. 1 Exhibition (TBA) Bud Walton Arena Fayetteville
Friday Nov. 9 Northwestern State Bud Walton Arena Fayetteville
Wednesday Nov. 14 UT-Arlington College Park Center Arlington, Texas
Sunday Nov. 18 Arizona State Bud Walton Arena Fayetteville
Friday Nov. 23 Tennessee State ! Gentry Center Nashville, Tenn.
Saturday Nov. 24 Pittsburgh ! Gentry Center Nashville, Tenn.
Sunday Nov. 25 Wisconsin ! Gentry Center Nashville, Tenn.
Wednesday Nov. 28 Oral Roberts Bud Walton Arena Fayetteville
Sunday Dec. 2 Iowa State # Hilton Coliseum Ames, Iowa
Tuesday Dec. 4 Tennessee Tech Bud Walton Arena Fayetteville
Saturday Dec. 8 Abilene Christian Moody Coliseum Abilene, Texas
Sunday Dec. 16 Prairie View A&M Bud Walton Arena Fayetteville
Tuesday Dec. 18 Nebraska Bud Walton Arena Fayetteville
Thursday Dec. 20 Tulsa Reynolds Center Tulsa, Okla.
Sunday Dec. 30 Jackson State Bud Walton Arena Fayetteville
Wed.-Sun. March 6-10 SEC Championship Greenville, S.C.
Monday March 18 NCAA Selection Show ESPN 6 p.m.
Fri.-Mon. March 22-25 Campus Sites TBA TBA
Fri.-Mon. March 29-April 1 NCAA Regional Championships Albany, Chicago, Greensboro, Portland TBA
Friday April 5 NCAA Semifinals Tampa, Fla.
Sunday April 7 NCAA Championship Tampa, Fla.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Thursday

John, Tommy and Tyler tackle the recruiting dynamic of the new staff, hit on the Urban Meyer news and more!

Tommy also caught up with former Arkansas QB and current TE’s coach Barry Lunney Jr.

Razorbacks’ recruiting run continues with 4-star CB

Arkansas’ historic recruiting run in July continued Wednesday with the commitment of four-star cornerback Adoni Otey of Murfreesboro, Tennessee, on Twitter:

Adonis Otey ???? CLAMP❌CREW on Twitter

All Glory to God ????‼️

Otey is the ninth public commitment in July and fourth since Saturday and it likely brought smiles all around the Smith Center as the news made the rounds.

The 6-0, 180-pounder chose the Hogs over an offer list that included Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Florida State, Michigan, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Louisville, and many others.

He  was recruited to Fayetteville by position coach Mark Smith and defensive coordinator John Chavis.

NCAA rules allow prospects to contact coaches (but not the other way around) and Otey and his father reportedly spent most of Wednesday morning on the phone with Smith, who helped seal the deal on the commitment.

Otey’s commitment moved the Hogs up in the 247Sports.com composite recruiting rankings to No. 22 with more room to move up as he is just the 16th commitment. Rules allow schools to sign 25.

More importantly, he is the fifth four-star commitment for the 2019 class.

Morris’ vision drew Ross to Arkansas from Dallas

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Randy Ross spent 17 years coaching in the Southeastern Conference.

He loved it. Winning a national championship as part of Gene Stallings’ staff at Alabama in 1993 gave him a taste for winning in a league that has always been around the top of the powers in college football.

When Chad Morris was named the Razorbacks’ coach in December, Ross didn’t waste much time debating joining him in Fayetteville. He had been at Southern Methodist for 11 years, the last three with Morris.

“The three years with Chad were the most fun I’d had being in administration,” Ross said Wednesday, just a couple of days before players start reporting and the pace of life picks up dramatically.

“I believe in what he’s doing,” he said. “It was a chance to get back in the SEC.”

Ross went to work for Stallings at Alabama in 1990, spent four years on the sidelines and then moved into administrative roles until Nick Saban was hired in 2007 and basically cleaned house.

“I may have been a little naive, but I never thought I’d leave Alabama,” he said. “Retiring there was the plan, we got fired and redirected, but I’ve still got great friends there.”

Phil Bennett was at SMU when he went to Dallas and the Mustangs were still battling the effects of rebuilding after a two-year death sentence in 1987-88. That lasted a year until Bennett got fired and in came June Jones, hot off a stretch that put Hawaii in the Sugar Bowl after the 2007 season.

“It was seven years with June and we really enjoyed Dallas,” Ross said.

Then came Morris and Ross, like nearly everyone who’s been around Morris, bought in totally.

“He’s a visionary,” Ross said. “He has a plan for everything from recruiting, facilities and everything. I felt he plans and goals would work at a school that could support that.

“Plus, he’s the most consistent coach I’ve been around.”

Ross has always felt Arkansas could support that vision.

“When I was at Alabama, we came here seven times and once in Little Rock,” Ross said. “I always enjoyed coming up here. The fans are very passionate, the facilities are great and the pieces are here for success.”

With some in the media critical of Morris coming to Arkansas from SMU, their knock on the hire has been, well, he didn’t have highly-ranked recruiting classes there so he couldn’t do it at Arkansas.

Maybe nobody is in a better position to compare the two schools, although Ross didn’t want it to be critical of SMU’s policies because he obviously still has a lot of respect for the school.

“You can’t compare the two,” he said. “It’s hard for a non-Power 5 school to get the same players you can get being in the SEC, but SMU is an academic school. Aside from the entrance requirements, the academic competition is very different.

“Players trying to keep up with students that have these SAT scores very high is tough. They do give athletes a little leeway to get in, but if you have an athlete that can’t keep up with these high-performing students in the classroom, the teacher isn’t going to slow up the class for one student.”

While going through the Smith Center for the interview, workers are everywhere with drop cloths and construction going on almost non-stop. Ross is the man making sure it’s all getting done.

“With the way things are changing, you’ve almost got to have a shovel in the ground 365 days a year,” Ross said. “As the staff has grown, we’re just doing some renovating on what was already a great facility and trying to get everybody situated.”

And there’s always the over-riding importance Morris wants for Arkansas football these days.

“It’s all about recruiting,” Ross said. “This staff is fanatical about the recruiting and everything we do is geared towards that.”

Even Ross. He makes sure everything is working on recruiting weekends and answers any questions the players or their families may have.

On game days, Ross is responsible for everything on the back end coming together. He is responsible for basically getting the team to the hotel and to the stadium on time.

“You have to prepare for anything,” he said.

During the games and at practices, you can see Ross close enough to the action to keep his old coaching instincts fed, but he’s not there to coach.

“When I first got out I missed it bad,” he said. “You always have it in your blood. In my role now, I think it’s a benefit for our staff to have someone who knows what they go through and can represent them when we are talking about getting things done.”

Every year makes not coaching a little easier.

“But as you get older the less you want to go back. I had someone tell me one time to write down everything you didn’t like about coaching and look at it every once in awhile,” he said with a laugh. “Everyone can remember the things they like, but it’s good to look at what you didn’t like.”

Now, though, at Arkansas it may be Chad Morris’ vision, but Ross is the one who makes sure it’s happening.

“My goal every day is to make sure what (Morris) wants done gets done,” he said. “No matter what, inside and outside make sure it’s running like Chad Morris wants every day.”

It’s all part of building a winning program and Ross has been part of getting a national championship program put together and winning at a high level.

And that’s what he and Morris are wanting to build in Fayetteville.

 

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Wednesday

Former Arkansas QB Tyler Wilson joins John & Tommy to discuss adjusting an offense to your personnel, the question of the offense being better in 2018 and more!

Tommy also caught up with new OC Joe Craddock.

Hogs moving up in recruiting ranks and it could get better

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For Arkansas, the targets on their recruiting board are starting to commit, which is moving the Hogs up in the rankings.

It’s caused a hectic few days here in the final off-weekend some of us will see for awhile. That’s not a complaint, by the way, but with the major holidays at the end of the year falling on weekdays, there won’t be much downtime until May at the earliest. Another baseball run could push any down time to July, which isn’t the worst tradeoff.

Treylon Burks’ commitment Monday happened as the Razorback coaches were getting ready to hit the golf course at Paradise Valley in Fayetteville for the coaches and media outing that Chad Morris is bringing back — with enthusiasm as he talked from the podium about how much he liked the idea.

When you see coaches looking at their phones, then talking to each other and dancing around like they just discovered a snake it’s a good bet something good in recruiting just happened.

And it had.

Burks was a high-interest target for this new coaching staff almost from the first week they were on the job. I’ve joked with some of the coaches they spend more time in Warren, my hometown, than I do lately.

There are still some they want. The feeling from the guys who follow the recruiting season much closer than I do is many of those guys will be committing to the Hogs soon.

Which will push the Hogs’ ranking even higher. The problem is even if they get into the Top 20 they still might be last in the SEC West, which is more a sign of how things have ramped up in that division than anything else.

Morris’ first signing class back in February didn’t rank that high, mostly because he only had a couple of weeks before the early signing date.

Some dismissed him as ever being able to recruit in the SEC. Don’t judge his recruiting on what he and his staff did at SMU. With the lofty entrance requirements there for players he couldn’t sign a Top 20 class if he had them lined up to come play there.

And if anything, this staff has shown a willingness — no, maybe a fondness — to attack recruiting unlike anything seen around Fayetteville since Frank Broyles’ heyday.

It’s starting to pay off.

Now the real recruiting starts. These days when players commit, that’s when the recruiting really ramps up. Coaches turn it up trying to lock down the players who have committed to them.

Some in the SEC West are just about out of scholarships. After an agonizing few months for Razorback fans watching the recruiting rankings, the Hogs are now in the Top 25 with plenty of upward movement available (they only have 15 commitments).

The ranking will go higher. How high depends on how good the players are they get.

We were told by the guys who follow recruiting for a living their guess was the Hogs would finish in the Top 25 when it was all said and done. That looks realistic now.

But we’re just a few days away from practices starting for real. Coaches can coach. The season is just over a month away.

Media day will be in Fayetteville this weekend, the day after the first practice of the fall camp on Friday.

Expect more news on future Razorbacks coming over the next days and weeks.

And the guess here is much of it will be good.

Craddock on Hogs’ offense as fall practice starts

Razorbacks offensive coordinator Joe Craddock talked with the media Monday about the new offense at the media golf tournament as fall practice starts this week.