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Fayetteville

Caldwell ready to get out of house, back on field

Razorbacks defensive ends coach Steve Caldwell talked with the media Monday at the media golf tournament that his wife has been ready for him to be out of the house for awhile now.

Scott ready to get back to practice with tackles

Defensive tackles coach John Scott is ready to return to the practice field with the players after the long break for the coaches after spring practice ends.

Recruiting rush continues with 3 commits Saturday

Arkansas has shot up the recruiting rankings with three solid commitments Saturday, just a day after the Hogs’ Woo Pignic Friday that was, by all accounts, a success.

That may be an understatement after Saturday. Coach Chad Morris and the assistant coaches’ hard work on the recruiting trail is starting to pay dividends.

The commitments included two players from Texas and one from Warren and there is another Lumberjack everyone is waiting on a decision from.

The Hogs shot up the 247Sports.com composite ranking list to 28th in the country and 10th in the SEC, ahead of Florida, Kentucky, Vanderbilt and Missouri. They were No. 49 nationally and 13th in the SEC previously.

And the steady climb in the rankings (they were in the high 70’s a few months ago) is as much on quality of commitments more than the quantity.

The three commitments Saturday made it 14 total for the Hogs, which is far below the numbers of most of the other SEC schools.

First to commit was Fort Bend Travis, Texas, linebacker Zach Zimos:

Zach Zimos on Twitter

WPS #Family

Next to commit was Pflugerville, Texas, free safety Myles Brooks:

???????? on Twitter

110% committed????proud to be apart of the family. @coachmarksmith @coachchadmorris @GJKinne @tpaschal3 @_kbolden ????

The last Saturday commitment was Warren defensive tackle Marcus Miller:

marcus miller on Twitter

WPS #Family

Miller was one of two Lumberjacks in town Friday along with wide receiver Treylon Burks, who has not committed yet.

A previous version of this story listed Zach Zimos’ school as Lake Travis in the Austin, Texas, area. It has been corrected to Fort Bend Travis, Texas, in the Houston area.

Hogs keep rolling recruiting, landing Oklahoma DE

Arkansas’ gung-ho recruiting may be starting to pay dividends as yet another highly recruited defensive end committed to the Hogs on Thursday.

Oklahoma City Putnam City defensive end Collin Clay (6-5, 255) announced on Twitter his commitment to the Razorbacks over his final five of Arkansas, Georgia, Oklahoma State, TCU and Oregon.

COLLIN CLAY. on Twitter

My story isn’t over???? “Be Your Great” #WPS #HammerDown

The sixth defensive commit (fourth defensive end) also had offers from Florida, Georgia, Oregon, Oklahoma State, Michigan, North Carolina, TCU, Iowa State, Minnesota, Colorado, Duke, Tulsa and others.

Clay is either a four-star or three-star recruit, depending on which ranking service you want to go by. ESPN and 247Sports have him listed as a very high three-star while Rivals rates him as a four-star.

Performances during a senior season can push players’ rankings higher. The Oklahoman has him ranked the sixth best player in the state.

Once again, tight ends coach Barry Lunney, Jr., and defensive ends coach Steve Caldwell showed their recruiting strength getting Clay’s commitment, which is when the real recruiting starts.

Clay made his first unofficial trip to Fayetteville in April of 2017. He returned for another unofficial visit in February of 2018 and then made an official visit with the Hogs on the weekend of April 13.

Clay is expected back on the Hill for this Friday’s ‘Woo Pignic.’

Hogs’ Froholdt named to watch list for Wuerffel Tropy

FORT WALTON BEACH, Fla. — Senior offensive lineman Hjalte Froholdt has been named as one of 106 players from the Football Bowl Subdivision on the Wuerffel Trophy Watch List.

Earlier this week, Froholdt was named to the Outland Trophy watch list and was tabbed as a preseason All-SEC Second Team member as voted on by media in attendance at SEC Media Days last week.

Froholdt was the second-highest graded guard in the SEC at 85.8 last season, earning a spot on Pro Football Focus’ All-SEC first team. He started all 12 games at left guard in 2017 to run his streak to 25 straight dating back to last season.

Froholdt played 89.2 percent of the team’s offensive snaps and didn’t allow a sack across 388 snaps in pass protection.

The Wuerffel Trophy, known as “College Football’s Premier Award for Community Service,” is presented annually in Fort Walton Beach.

Named after 1996 Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Danny Wuerffel from the University of Florida, the Wuerffel Trophy is awarded to the FBS player that best combines exemplary community service with athletic and academic achievement.

Don’t compare Chad with recent Hogs’ coaches

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In a summer filled with sports talk shows talking about Arkansas football from just about every vantage point, the fallback seems to be comparing new coach Chad Morris with previous coaches.

Yeah, the same talking heads that said Bret Bielema was a great hire when it was clear from the get-go that it wasn’t are trying to compare Morris to every coach the Razorbacks have had over the last 10 years.

Don’t start the Bielema justification talk again. He was a bad fit and when he was hired a former athletic director told me he didn’t think it was going to work because he had never coached outside his “mentor circle.”

At the time I had to ask what that was. As it was explained to me, Bielema had never worked for a single solitary soul who wasn’t part of the Hayden Fry coaching tree.

His only bosses had been Fry, Bill Snyder at Kansas State (who served under Fry for 13 seasons at North Texas and Iowa) and Barry Alvarez (eight years under Fry at Iowa).

That system was the only one he knew and, while it may work slightly better than average in the Big 10, it produced zero national championships and was a complete reversal from what worked in the Southeastern Conference.

You can’t compare Morris to Bielema. While Morris certainly has some mentors, he’s worked under various coaches, including helping lay the foundation at Clemson, which HAS won a national championship.

You can’t compare Morris to Bobby Petrino. Public relations was not something Petrino ever acted like he cared about or was remotely interested in. While he won some games he only did about as well as Houston Nutt in the SEC. More importantly he didn’t appear to have as much interest in recruiting as he did riding motorcycles.

Morris might compare in some ways to Nutt, but that was in the beginning stages of change in college football where recruiting became a game within the game and offenses were changing with the benefit of new rules.

No, Morris really doesn’t compare with those guys, but it has nothing to do with his offensive reputation.

Jimmy Johnson told me one time a football coach at any level is more of a psychologist than anything else. He said it came into play in recruiting as well as managing assistants, bosses, boosters and the players.

You get the impression Morris knows people. He’s the ultimate glass half-full type of guy. Ken Hatfield was like that.

The big knock on Morris was he didn’t exactly have highly-ranked recruiting classes at SMU and he didn’t win a ton of games in his three years there.

That’s simply not fair. Recruiting at SMU after 1985 was like trying to be a boxer with one arm strapped behind your back. It’s not an easy school to get into. Unlike some other places (Stanford and Vanderbilt) they don’t give much leeway for athletes.

Plus, he inherited a mess. For a program placed in NCAA purgatory for two years in 1987-88) — in a blatant case of selective enforcement — football wasn’t a priority to the powers that be in the school.

The Mustangs hadn’t won more than six games in a season since the death penalty until 2009 and still haven’t won more than eight. It was always a tough place to get elite football players to unless you were willing to live in the gray area of the rules.

Yes, they crossed that line to the dark side on occasion, but no more than many other big time schools recruiting players in Texas during that wild period.

This is Morris’ first time as a head coach in the world of big time college football.

Why does he have a shot at succeeding where so many have fallen either just short or got stuck in the mud?

He has attacked recruiting like no one has in the modern era. That was always Frank Broyles’ strongest area of expertise. He could get good players … maybe not the best, but he got really good players.

He also got the best assistant coaches and let them do their thing. Fry, Barry Switzer, Johnson, Johnny Majors, Joe Gibbs, Raymond Berry … the list is really impressive.

Morris got John Chavis to Arkansas and he’s almost like a completely new man, totally buying into Morris. Chavis has been the top defensive coordinator in the country at various times over his long career and it’s a good bet he hasn’t forgotten how to do it.

But, like with Broyles, it is always recruiting. The Hogs will be hosting a barbecue for recruits this week and it appears the number coming in may be huge.

By all reports, Morris and the Razorback staff scored huge points at the Texas High School Coaching Association annual get-together in the past week.

It’s recruiting, recruiting, recruiting.

Like other championship-caliber coaches, Morris is ALWAYS recruiting. He knows the size of the platform he has at Arkansas being in the SEC. He uses it at every opportunity to send a message to potential players.

Nick Saban has that, too. So does Dabo Swinney at Clemson. Bobby Bowden at Florida State told his staff every year “signing those four and five-stars doesn’t mean you’ll win a national championship, but I can guarantee you we won’t if we don’t sign ’em.”

Morris isn’t at that level … yet. Saban didn’t have a No. 1 class until his sixth year in Tuscaloosa, but he was in the top five by his second year.

In the 247Sports.com composite recruiting rankings, the Hogs have finished in the Top 20 once (Petrino’s 2009 class).

Right now getting to No. 16 would be the Hogs’ best recruiting class ever since they started keeping score (and creating a season within the sport).

And they would still be seventh in the SEC West rankings.

That’s the hill Morris is climbing. He is attacking it from the left lane, with the hammer down and wide open.

Which is something no other coach has done.

Bielema lands new gig with Patriots … doing something

News broke Tuesday afternoon that former Arkansas coach Bret Bielema has a new job, but a job title that is basically wide open.

Be honest, “consultant to the head coach” really doesn’t say much of anything, does it?

Christopher Price, a reporter with BostonSportsJournal.com caught it in the New England Patriots media guide that came out Tuesday:

Christopher Price on Twitter

One other thing? Every other coach gets a bio in the media guide. Not Bielema. That’s the only mention of him in the media guide–one line. https://t.co/Xt5rxA2U3G

Bielema has spent much of the spring already working with the team. ESPN reported that he spent time working with New England’s special-teams unit this spring.

Patriots coach Bill Belichick, who talks to the media only as required by the NFL office, dodged the whole issue when , which probably doesn’t surprise anyone.

There’s a reason the Patriots are the most button-down, secretive team in the NFL and it’s because that’s how Belichick likes it.

“We have a good staff. We have a lot of great people,” Belichick  “I’m very fortunate to be working with a lot of talented people and they all help me a lot. They all do a great job — our support people, our coaching staff, scouting staff, all the other people in video, training, equipment and so forth, operations. We have a real good support staff and they all do a critical job as part of our success. Glad we have them.”

That’s about as artful of a dodge as one can have to a direct question about what Bielema was doing with the team in the off-season workouts.

So, after firing Jeff Long and Bielema last year, Arkansas has seen one buyout eliminated (Long actually got considerably more as the athletics director at Kansas) and the other will be reduced (unless Bret is working for free).

It may be awhile before we know how much the buyout to Bielema has been reduced.

 

Van Horn’s summer update on Razorback baseball

After coming close to a national title at the College World Series, Hogs coach Dave Van Horn has been busy recruiting and putting the pieces together for next season.