John and Tommy welcome Nick Mason back in studio to discuss the Razorbacks’ injury problem, Hugh Freeze at the LR Touchdown Club, and WHAT’s YOUR BEEF WEDNESDAY.
No one knows what they don’t know with Hogs now
With Arkansas now four practices into fall camp, you get the idea even Chad Morris and the coaches don’t really know what they don’t know right now.
You can go ahead and read that again. The first time I heard John Mackovic say that when he took over at Texas in 1992 I kinda had to stop and think about it for a second or two.
It’s not uncommon for new coaches to be that way. In the Razorbacks’ case, Morris and his staff has a few spring practices to evaluate. They spent most of their time since getting here hitting the recruiting trail and the results of that are starting to show.
Now comes the season.
Don’t worry about Morris not understanding what he has to do to keep his job and it’s not just recruiting. In fact, not winning games with maybe the best recruiting class in the last couple of decades could be a bigger problem than not recruiting.
Right now — at least in the limited action we see in the first 20 minutes — everybody’s just trying to figure out what they don’t know.
It’s a lot of basic drills, running some of the offense and just trying to get a read on what guys do well and what they can’t do. In case you’re wondering, they’re watching a lot of film at night of the practices for that evaluation.
Saturday’s scrimmage is closed to just about everybody other than probably a handful of high school coaches and players. It’s not a scrimmage to get ready for a game … they have time before the Sept. 1 opener against Eastern Illinois.
No, the scrimmage Saturday is for evaluation in a different setting.
Tuesday’s de-briefing pretty much confirmed this is all about evaluation.
“We did some situational stuff today, and we’ll continue to add some situational things,” Morris said about the Hogs going into full pads Wednesday. “We’ll get out there and see what our young guys have got.
“There’ll be a few periods where we’ll be live, but a lot of it is just learning how to practice in full pads.”
In case you’re wondering that’s almost the normal approach when a completely new staff takes over. Considering the way the offseason conditioning program went with players’ bodies changing, they aren’t going as much off last year’s film as what they see with their own eyes in the spring and now fall.
The guess here is they aren’t even starting to put together a game plan for the season opener. They likely are putting together a working list for a starting lineup, but even that will have a lot of flexibility at most positions.
It’s the nature when change is made.
But don’t lose the faith. That’s worked out well in Razorbacks history at least once.
When Ken Hatfield took over for Lou Holtz for the 1984 season, it was a complete change in just about everything. It was a new attitude, a new direction.
As one longtime observer said, “we’re replaced nonsense with sense.” That was a direct slap at Holtz and all of the shenanigans he had going on.
No one expected a lot from that 1984 team. Brad Taylor was the No. 1 quarterback and he’d never run a wishbone offense in his life. He was a passer, but he was game and finished up his career running the option and taking the hits.
Hatfield and his staff came in from Air Force. They didn’t complain about what many in the media said was a group without a lot of talent. They had better players than they had at Air Force and learned that complaining was a waste of time.
Those old enough tend to forget that because that team went on to a 7-4-1 record.
The similarities are there at the same point in time.
Few give this Razorback team much credit for having players. It’s a change in system as radical as what Hatfield brought in.
The change in attitude has gone from a coaching staff that appeared completely content to waddle around being mediocre and making excuses to a staff that’s all about being positive and glad to be coaching better players than they had last year in many cases, but knowing that winning games is the main priority.
Morris is showing he can get the Hogs competitive in the recruiting game.
Now he just has to show he can be competitive on the field.
Because without those wins, he knows — more than anyone else — he would just be putting together some good recruits for the next coach.
He’s just gotta figure out what he doesn’t know and he’s gotta do it fast.
Which is pretty much the way he does everything.
PHOTOS: Hogs’ Tuesday practice before rains arrived
There was some rainy weather in the Fayetteville area, but it came after the media had to leave the Razorbacks’ practice Tuesday and here are some of the best pictures.
Photos by Andy Hodges | HitThatLine.com
Morris press conference after Tuesday’s practice
Arkansas coach Chad Morris met with the media after Tuesday’s practice and opened with offensive lineman Deion Malone injuring a knee and will miss the entire season.
Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday
John, Tommy and T-Dub touch on another Razorback commit, why Petrino QB’s haven’t worked in the NFL, having a more complex offense and more!
Hyatt’s smooth play may be getting attention
The only quarterback Chad Morris has mentioned as standing out much is redshirt freshman Daulton Hyatt.
Morris has challenged him because nobody is talking much about the Alabama native that has added muscle to a lean frame after spring practice.
“No one is talking about this guy,” Morris said Saturday at Media Day following the first two practices. “So, as I shared with him, I said, ‘No one is talking about you, man. What are you going to do? Are you just going to sit back and give it up here or what? Or are you gonna go compete?’”
At Monday’s practice there was a play that may show a little of what coaches are starting to see from him.
Hyatt fielded a snap from center that was high and to the right with one hand and immediately made the handoff to running back Rakeem Boyd in one motion.
It was almost as if that’s how it was designed.
Here’s the play in pictures:

1. The snap from center

2. Controlling the high snap

3. The handoff to Boyd, who never broke stride
This is one small play, but Morris’ comments may have been a result of seeing plays like this on a consistent basis from Hyatt.
Others may make plays similar, but in the two practices we have been allowed to see a small portion of, none have handled a potentially bad center snap that smoothly.
Which may be why Hyatt has inserted himself into the quarterback picture.
PHOTOS: Quarterback competition Monday
Photos by Andy Hodges | HitThatLine.com
PHOTOS: Best photos from Monday morning’s Razorback practice
Photos by Andy Hodges | HitThatLine.com
Patton on how tight ends fit in new offense
Arkansas tight end Jeremy Patton likes what he sees from all the quarterbacks and really enjoying playing in a wide variety of positions in Chad Morris’ new offense.
Tutt likes flying around in new defensive scheme
Razorbacks defensive back Britto Tutt talked after practice Monday about the new defensive look under coordinator John Chavis, changing sides of the field and more.
Returning kickoffs okay for Warren, but doesn’t like punt returns
Arkansas wide receiver likes returning kickoffs, but isn’t quite so enthusiastic when it comes to bringing back punts as he tells the media after Monday’s practice.













