15.2 F
Fayetteville

Morris’ job? Get Hogs out of bottom-dwellers in SEC

0

If there is any doubts about why Chad Morris is the new Arkansas football coach, just follow the numbers.

Since the SEC expanded in 2012, here are the football records, broken into some groups as the records have shown some interesting trends:

King of the Mountain
1. Alabama, 43-5

Trying to Climb
2. Georgia, 34-14
3. LSU, 31-17
4. Florida, 30-18

Middle of the Road
5. Auburn, 25-23
6. Texas A&M, 25-23
7. Mississippi State, 24-24
8. South Carolina, 24-24
9. Missouri, 23-25
10. Ole Miss, 22-26

Bottom Dwellers
11. Tennessee, 15-33
12. Vanderbilt, 15-33
13. Arkansas, 13-35
14. Kentucky, 12-36

That’s going to be some eye-opening numbers for some folks, but it’s only when enough years have passed that you have a trend.

And that trend for Razorback fans has been excruciating. No one expected the Hogs to be as dominant in the SEC as they were in the old Southwest Conference days, but winning less than Vandy?

Look at how things changed from the pre-expansion years:

King of the Mountain
1. Florida, 124-36

Trying to Climb
2. Tennessee, 107-53
3. Alabama, 103-56-1
4. Georgia, 99-60-1
5. Auburn, 98-60-2
6. LSU, 95-64-1

Middle of the Pack
7. Arkansas, 77-81-2
8. South Carolina, 66-93-1
9. Ole Miss, 60-100
10. Mississippi State, 57-102-1

Bottom Dwellers
11. Kentucky, 45-15
12. Vanderbilt, 25-135

Texas A&M and Missouri have played around .500 since joining the league while kicking Arkansas and Tennessee to the bottom dwellers’ category.

Interestingly, both the Vols and the Hogs are now on their third coach since the expansion season of 2012. Both have been mired in chaos for the last six seasons.

Because of the numbers, when one team rises, one must fall and there’s always a gaggle of teams in the 5-3 to 3-5 range.

Morris’ goal is to have the Hogs higher than that, which will mean he has improved the program beyond what history tells us it does.

CBS finally announces Hogs-Missouri to be on Friday

FAYETTEVILLE — For the fourth year in a row Arkansas’ game against Missouri will be played on the Friday following Thanksgiving.

Kickoff for the game, marketed as the Battle Line Rivalry, will kick off Nov. 23 at 1:30 p.m. on CBS in Columbia, Missouri.

Brad Nessler, Gary Danielson and reporter Jamie Erdahl will have the call of the fifth installment of the Battle Line Rivalry.

That is the primary college football broadcasting team for CBS.

The Razorbacks began annually playing the Tigers in 2014 after Missouri joined the Southeastern Conference in 2012. The two schools have played only nine times with the first meeting coming in 1906.

Four game times are now set for the Razorbacks’ fall schedule with kickoff times set for the team’s first three games.

The Chad Morris era will begin against Eastern Illinois on September 1 inside a newly renovated Razorback Stadium at 3 p.m. on SEC Network.

The Hogs hit the road for the first time the following week with the team’s first-ever trip to Colorado State. The Rams and Hogs will kick at 6:30 p.m. on the CBS Sports Network.

Arkansas returns home to take on North Texas on September 15 at 3 p.m. on SEC Network-Alternate.

Note: Information from Razorback Sports Communications was used in this story.

Fletcher, Cronin playing for Team USA this summer

CARY, N.C. — Less than a week after finishing their 2018 seasons with Arkansas, outfielder Dominic Fletcher and pitcher Matt Cronin will get to continue playing this summer as they will suit up for the Team USA Collegiate National Team starting this week in North Carolina.

Fletcher and Cronin are the 15th and 16th members of the Razorbacks to don the Red, White, and Blue, joining a long list of former and even current Arkansas players to play for the USA Collegiate National Team, including this year’s catcher Grant Koch.

Koch made the roster last year after being invited to training camp at the start of the 2017 summer. He ended up earning a spot and led Team USA in hitting (.372) over the two-month tour, playing in 20 games and starting 12.

Current head coach Dave Van Horn also served time as the manager of the USA Collegiate National Team in the summer of 2014, making trips to the Netherlands and Cuba.

This year, both Fletcher and Cronin were integral parts in Arkansas reaching its ninth College World Series in school history this year and first CWS Finals since 1979.

Fletcher hit .288 (77-for-267) for his sophomore season with 27 extra-base hits, including 10 home runs, 49 RBIs, and was named to the SEC All-Defensive Team.

He also became the first Razorback to hit 10 or more home runs in his first two years since Rodney Nye hit 15 and 20 long balls, respectively, in 1998 and 1999.

As for Cronin, the southpaw from Navarre, Florida, couldn’t have asked for a better sophomore year with the Hogs as he broke the Arkansas single-season record for saves, notching 14 in 25 appearances, breaking the previous record of 13 set by Colby Suggs in 2013.

Cronin’s 14 saves were good for second-most in the SEC and 14th in the nation.

This year, Team USA is led by LSU coach Paul Mainieri and began its schedule on June 27 against the Coastal Plain League Select.

The team is currently in the midst of a five-game series with Chinese-Taipei, which concludes today in Cary, North Carolina.

Fletcher made his first appearance with the team last night, going 1-for-3 at the plate in the 4-2 victory.

Team USA will play Japan in a five-game series (July 3-8) next in five different locations across Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina as part of the 42nd USA vs. Japan Collegiate All-Star Series.

Then, the team will finish the summer in Havana, Cuba, for the 7th Annual USA vs. Cuba International Friendship Series (July 10-14).

Fletcher and Cronin are two of 11 SEC players on the 24-man roster, including Daniel Cabrera (LSU), Tanner Burns (Auburn), Parker Caracci (Ole Miss), John Doxakis (Texas A&M), Zack Hess (LSU), Will Holland (Auburn), Braden Shewmake (Texas A&M), Zack Thompson (Kentucky), and Zach Watson (LSU).

Through The Years: Razorbacks On Team USA
RHP Darrell Ackerfelds (1984)
INF Jeff King (1985)
RHP Doug Bennett (1990)
RHP Philip Stidham (1990)
RHP Nick Schmidt (2006)
INF Logan Forsythe (2007)
INF Andy Wilkins (2009)
RHP D.J. Baxendale (2011)
INF Dominic Ficociello (2011)
INF Matt Reynolds (2011)
RHP Ryne Stanek (2011, 2012)
RHP Trey Killian (2014)
RHP Zach Jackson (2015)
C Grant Koch (2017)
OF Dominic Fletcher (2018)
LHP Matt Cronin (2018)

Offense determines Hogs’ place in West pecking order

0

Since coming to the Southeastern Conference in 1992, Arkansas hasn’t won a single conference football title.

Let that sink in for a bit. They won the West in 1995 in a season that could not be called dominant, represented the West in the SEC Championship Game in 2003 because Alabama was on probation and won it outright in 2006, but losing the last three games kinda soured everybody on that year.

The Hogs were co-champions in 1998, Houston Nutt’s first season, but lost to Mississippi State to give the Bulldogs their only trip to the title game.

When I said on the radio in 2009 that expecting Arkansas to be at the top every year was a pipe dream, I was roundly criticized. My argument at the time was the Hogs are in the SEC West where you could win 10 games and still finish third in your own division.

Crazy was the nicest thing I was called.

Then came 2010 and 2011. Arkansas won 10 games in 2010 and tied LSU in 2010 for second place, but finished third among West teams in the final polls after the bowl games. That’s also, by the way, the only time the Hogs have finished ahead of Alabama in the West since Nick Saban arrived in 2007.

In 2011, they won 11 games (counting the Cotton Bowl), but still finished third in the SEC West with a fifth-place finish in the nation in the final polls.

Being in college football’s strongest division is the problem. It’s not revenue … the UA was 14th in college sports revenue in 2017. Pretty good until you realize it’s only fifth in the SEC West, ahead of only the Mississippi schools.

Only one football coach has lasted 10 years (which is a lifetime these days in college football) and that was Houston Nutt, who is only recently becoming slightly less polarizing than he was during his last years as coach.

His record of 75-48 overall is good enough to be fourth of Razorback coaches all time in terms of winning percentage and second in wins behind only Frank Broyles.

Bobby Petrino over-achieved for four seasons based on the recruiting he did, but the final two years of 21-5 probably wasn’t going to continue at that level. Graduation took a significant number of the playmakers on that high-flying offense and the quality wasn’t there behind them.

So where should Arkansas be every year in the SEC West’s pecking order?

History shows us they won’t be Alabama. Since coming into the league, the Hogs are 7-19 against the Crimson Tide, including an 11-year losing streak where they’ve only been within one score at the end twice.

It’s painful to throw anything from the last five years into the calculations because that was a mistake made hiring Bret Bielema that was boneheaded from the start. At Arkansas, you can’t hire a coach off the resume.

That’s never worked.

Danny Ford had a resume better than Bielema and that only lasted five years. The two coaches with the best head coaching resumes hired by the Razorbacks in the last 60 years were the worst hires over that time.

Let that sink in and it tells you it takes a different type of individual to win at Arkansas.

And nobody has won consistently without a gimmicky offense or defense.

Lou Holtz ran the Veer, which was about as gimmicky as things got in the mid-1970’s. Hatfield’s Flexbone scared the daylights out of some of the best coaches in the business. Nutt started with a fairly traditional offense, but Keith Burn’s defense was anything but that.

Then there were the Matt Jones’ years where even Nutt didn’t know what was going to happen with the offense half the time because Matt didn’t know after the ball was snapped how it was going to play out.

With Darren McFadden, Felix Jones and Peyton Hillis, plus maybe as good of offensive linemen at one time, the running game gashed everybody for an 18-9 run over two seasons.

Petrino was all about the offense, probably to the detriment of the defense.

There are reasons to believe a change might be in order.

Chad Morris comes in as one of the best offensive minds in college football. He basically took the nuts and bolts from Gus Malzahn’s offense and has added some wrinkles that have been successful everywhere he’s been.

For the record, Malzahn’s offense is nothing more than a collection of things in various offenses done out of a Dutch Meyer spread formation from the 1930’s. That made Davey O’Brien a Heisman winner (he was the shortest quarterback to ever win the award, a full three inches shorter than Doug Flutie and five inches shorter than Baker Mayfield).

Myer’s book in the late 1950’s that was the first published on the spread. Coaches adapted the single wing to it in the 1990’s and that was what Malzahn inherited in his first head coaching job at Hughes.

Hugh Wyatt had an article published in a coaching magazine in 1998 about his “Wildcat Package” for his high school team in Washington, where he moved a running back to take a direct center snap and run similar to what Malzahn started doing shortly thereafter.

“I think Gus Malzahn has selective memory,” Wyatt said in a book on offense published in 2010 talking about Malzahn’s creation of the offense.

“Hugh Wyatt,” Malzahn said in 2010 when asked about where he got the Wildcat. “I’ve heard that name. Well, I’m sure I got it from somewhere. I just couldn’t tell you where.”

Morris has put his own spins on it, incorporating the tight end heavily into the offense when he was at Clemson and had the talent at that position.

Now the good news is Bielema didn’t recruit players familiar with his style of ground-and-pound offense, which is why the last two years was more chuck-and-duck, as Buddy Ryan would call it, considering that’s what Austin Allen did most of the time.

Bielema recruited players more familiar with Morris’ style of offense, bulked ’em up, slowed ’em down and then waddled around confused as to why it wasn’t working.

At Arkansas, history shows offense wins the fans. Oh, some will use the old line that defense wins championships and, while it may be true, you better score at least 30 points a game these days if you want to win.

Morris’ offense will do that.

And a newly-energized John Chavis probably has a few tricks up his sleeve for the defense, which will be better than recent years. Oh, not a national championship-type defense, but better than recent years.

It’s a combination that could work at Arkansas. It has in the past, even without a coordinator the caliber of Chavis.

Offense has determined the Hogs’ place in the SEC West considerably more often than the defense since 1992. It’s a league that has a razor thin margin between winning and losing because everybody can move the ball and sometime you just have to outscore the other guy.

Don’t believe it? The Hogs had three games last year where one defensive stop would have won the game. Do that and we’re still watching Bert waddle around Razorback Stadium. They would have finished 7-6 or 8-5 (depending on the bowl outcome) and we’re still arguing.

You don’t think Chavis is worth one more stop per game for the Hogs?

The guess here it’s going to work better quicker for the Hogs than anybody’s thinking right now.

Hogs have fared well in this spot against Aggies before

0

Right now Arkansas fans are seeing every glass as half-empty.

Coming within one strike of winning a national baseball championship has brought out years of frustration for a fan base that almost expects to get close to a title, but never there.

That’s not the case with the Texas Aggies.

At A&M, they expect to win a national title. Every year.

After all, they are the largest school in the Southeastern Conference with a huge and fanatically loyal fan base. Former coach Jackie Sherrill told me one time they had more alumni making over $100,000 a year than the rest of the SEC combined.

That’s how they raised the money to rebuild Kyle Field to over 102,000 capacity in near-record time.

They want a national title NOW. The Aggies have spent $16.2 million over the last seven years for guys to NOT coach there anymore.

Razorback fans will point out the $12 million or so Bret Bielema is being paid not to coach in Fayetteville, but the Hogs didn’t give Chad Morris a 10-year deal at $7.5 milion a year … all of it guaranteed and in College Station they don’t pay it out over time. Both Mike Sherman and Kevin Sumlin got their complete buyout in less than a month.

But don’t despair, Hog fans. Texas A&M’s history on these things isn’t great and Arkansas is a big reason why. Shoot, the Aggies haven’t won any kind of national title in football since over two years before the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor.

The Hogs have ruined some big years for A&M.

In 1975, the Aggies rolled into Little Rock in December undefeated. Frank Broyles wanted to move either the Texas game or Texas A&M to the end of the schedule for competitive purposes. He used his always great relationship with ABC and talked Emory Bellard into moving the game there after Darrell Royal said no.

Arkansas won the game, 31-6 and the Aggies ended up finishing 11th in the nation after rolling into Little Rock ranked second. The Hogs’ win threw the Southwest Conference into a three-way tie for the title, but A&M had arrogantly declined to get into a bowl triad with the Sugar Bowl and Bluebonnet Bowl.

Since it was Cotton or Bust in College Station, they ended up in Memphis’ Liberty Bowl against USC, where they lost, 20-0. Bellard, was coaching Mississippi State by the end of 1978 after walking away from the mess at A&M in midseason that year.

Before the 1982 season, the Aggies hired Sherrill from Pittsburgh, where he had won 83 percent of his games over five seasons. After coming to College Station, he won just 65 percent of his games there and stepped down when the NCAA came calling, although they never found Jackie guilty of anything.

Most of his problems at A&M were with Arkansas. He won only two of six matchups with Ken Hatfield. Mention Hatfield to Jackie and he almost has to excuse himself to go be sick. The Aggies never finished higher than sixth.

R.C. Slocum was next and he lasted the longest — 14 seasons — but never finished higher than seventh and retired after the 2002 season so they could hire Dennis Franchione from Alabama, who had just gone 10-3 but didn’t want to deal the NCAA sanctions coming down.

When Franchione went to the Tuscaloosa airport to go interview in College Station, Paul Bryant, Jr., met him and told him if he got on the airplane, don’t come back. He didn’t and was fired after a five-year record of 32-28.

Then was Mike Sherman followed by Sumlin, and neither achieved the level of success Aggie fans expected. Sumlin set the bar ridiculously high for himself with an 11-2 record, finishing fifth in the last polls, beating Alabama and just missing a title with close losses to Florida and LSU.

He never got close to that again at the end of a season.

Now it’s Fisher’s turn.

Like Sherrill in 1982, he comes in as the high-priced coach who had a big-time record in another conference. Remember, Sherrill was the first coach to get over $100,000 a year with that contract and he was the Aggies’ second choice.

Bo Schembechler of Michigan came close. He visited A&M chairman Bum Bright in Dallas, but backed out of a deal after he got home to Ann Arbor. Dallas Cowboys personnel guy Gil Brandt was the chief dealmaker in college football back then and he got the job for his friend Sherrill.

By the way, either of those are the two guys I would want on my side in a fight. They would either pay the other guys off or talk ’em out of it.

Jimbo was the first choice in College Station. It wasn’t a big secret he would entertain offers to leave Tallahassee. Everybody on the planet thought he was going to be in Baton Rouge in 2015 before backing out and giving Les Miles a few more games before getting fired.

A&M fans are expecting results immediately. Whether that’s realistic or not is anybody’s guess.

Arkansas hasn’t beaten the Aggies since Bobby flew through the handlebars on the road to Elkins.

Right now, the Hogs are tied for their longest losing streak in history against A&M. The last time Arkansas lost six in a row to the Aggies was 1938-43.

There is some similarity to Sherrill taking over. High-priced coach, big-time league (back then the SWC was on a level with the SEC and had more speed).

The Hogs changed coaches after Sherrill’s second year, bringing in Hatfield, who at the time had only succeeded at Air Force with a gimmick offense (yes, that’s what a lot of folks thought at the time).

Hatfield’s gimmick offense produced four wins in six tries. Then Petrino’s gimmick offense won three in a row before Smiley and Bert couldn’t figure out how to beat the Aggies.

History says this series has always been tight. Even the last five seasons featured three overtime losses where Bielema seemed to invent new ways to lose to the Aggies.

Two coaches that under-achieved have been replaced with guys expected to win. Fisher’s expected to win big immediately. Morris has a little more breathing room.

But, oh, the final caveat here?

Morris graduated from Texas A&M.

When the Aggies fired Sumlin in December, they immediately went after Fisher. Morris apparently didn’t even get a nod in his direction from his alma mater.

It will mean something to Morris.

Whether he admits it or not.

Arkansas earns record 16th place in Directors Cup

FAYETTEVILLE — A national championship runner-up finish at the College World Series capped a remarkable year for Arkansas, earning a record 16th-place finish in the Directors Cup standings.

Arkansas once again earned a spot among the nation’s top intercollegiate athletics programs, finishing with 870.5 points in the rankings released on Saturday by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of America (NACDA).

Arkansas finished in the top 25 for the ninth time in the past 11 years and in the top 20 for only the seventh time since the Directors’ Cup program began 25 years ago.

The Directors’ Cup tracks the nation’s most successful intercollegiate athletics programs for their on-field performances throughout the year.

The No. 16 national finish tied a program record for a combined University of Arkansas intercollegiate athletics program.

A total of 14 Razorback sports scored in this year’s competition resulting in the second-best Directors’ Cup point total (870.5) in school history. Arkansas scored a school record 912.5 points in finishing No. 16 in 2014-15.

Why blame anyone for Hogs’ second-game loss?

0

Webster’s has a couple of primary definitions of fans where it relates to sports:

  1. An enthusiastic devotee (as of a sport or a performing art) usually as a spectator
  2. An ardent admirer or enthusiast (as of a celebrity or a pursuit)

There’s no mention about sanity or political correctness in there. You won’t get any lectures on political correctness from this corner. Few would accuse me of being very familiar with that term.

But the backlash from some fans attaching blame to any of the players for not catching a foul ball in the second game of the College World Series has gotten to the level of ridiculous.

There are, quite honestly, arguments to be made on more than one front on that particular play. It was a play that wasn’t made. Nobody dropped the ball. Let’s be a little clearer and just flat-out say you’re blaming players for not making a spectacular play.

There was nothing routine about the foul down the right-field line that Eric Cole, Jared Gates and Carson Shaddy couldn’t haul in.

It’s easy to watch on television or in person and say any of the three could have gotten the ball, but, as Dave Van Horn said later, it was in no-man’s land. That wasn’t the only missed foul ball in the series. It’s not like there were three Hogs standing between first and third and the ball fell in between all of them.

On those things, any of the three players chasing the ball could have caught it. It would have been a highlight-reel catch. None of them caught it, though.

And the guess here there’s not a Razorback fan in existence that feels worse about it than one of those players.

Other stories have highlighted failed moments in the sports history of the Razorbacks. For some, it IS the tradition — getting close but never getting over the hump.

The only unquestioned national championship in one of the revenue-producing sports the Hogs have ever won was the basketball title in 1994. We’re not going to argue the football title some writers took back from Alabama and gave to Arkansas after the 1964 season.

For whatever reason, the golden ring often seems to be close enough to touch for Razorback fans, but they never are able to grab it and hold it.

That has led to an interesting scenario in Arkansas athletics. While many fans simply want affirmation about the Hogs over objective information, it’s also a matter of who gets the credit … or blame.

Football has always had a particular pecking order for the blame game:

  1. Head coach
  2. Quarterback
  3. Athletics director

Don’t ask me why. I didn’t invent it, but I remember in 1967 when Frank Broyles was ready to be run out of the state after a 4-5-1 season and some of the old men in the pool hall in Warren thought John Barnhill, who was winding down his longtime role as athletics director, should be driving the car.

But that’s football. In other sports, there aren’t as many armchair experts, but they tend to come out of the woodwork when the Hogs have a shot at a championship.

Folks wanting to shove Van Horn aside aren’t even worth listening to, in my opinion. It would be like listening to me talk about brain surgery … aside from suspecting the general area of the direction to aim for, I’m clueless.

And in baseball, remember, there are only 11 scholarships that are broken into halves, fourths and all sorts of combinations. Yes, 11 total scholarships, so baseball coaches have to be accountants as much as anything. We heard in the past week that may be under review by the NCAA, but it’s been in place until now.

What Van Horn has done in taking over what Norm DeBriyn built is nothing short of first rate. All that’s missing is a title and winning the baseball title is as tough as any other big time college sport.

The Hogs were close this time. They couldn’t quite make THE play to close the deal on a championship they probably didn’t earn.

A lack of getting bat on ball was the reason this team didn’t win a championship. Baseball tends to even things out and very few championships are stolen by a team that doesn’t deserve it.

Arkansas had a shot to win a national championship it probably didn’t earn because no one can say they earned the runs they got in the first two games. It was more a case of Oregon State blunders than anything the Hogs did.

Plus, let’s not forget, this team had a chance to bring home the title in the third game and couldn’t get enough hits (or Oregon State errors) to push across a single run.

In the end, the better team actually won the title. For Razorback fans, the hurt will linger awhile.

But it’s not one single player’s fault.

Missed chance biggest blown title shot in Hogs’ history

0

Razorback fans can be excused for awhile if they refuse to see the glass half-full again.

In the span of about 10 minutes Wednesday night in Omaha, Arkansas managed to go from the height of anticipation to the depth of despair.

A misplayed foul ball will join some other unexplained missed chances in Hogs’ history. In the fine fashion of Arkansas history, that also includes some officiating goofs that enter into the discussion, too.

No, Perry Costello wasn’t behind the plate for either game, but there will be enough of a wandering strike zone and other things to cause Hog fans to add onto the misery.

Since most Arkansas fans weren’t around (well, some of you weren’t alive) the last time they played for the national baseball title, this one was similar in some respects.

That year, when Norm DeBriyn got the Hogs to the College World Series for the first time, saw the Hogs lose in the championship game to Cal State-Fullerton. There was no Razorback Baseball Network on the radio back then and the game wasn’t on television, so it was hard keeping up with what was going on.

The Razorbacks appeared to be in good shape for the final game when legendary coach Augie Garrido had to go with a pitcher that wasn’t their ace, but he came through.

Arkansas hit at least 10 shots “as hard as you can hit a baseball,” Kevin McReynolds maintains all these years later. “But they all went straight to a Cal State-Fullerton guy.”

Still, they weren’t within a strike of winning a title.

Some like to compare it to Reggie Fish’s inexplicable attempt to catch a punt  in the SEC Championship game against Florida in 2006 at the 5 when the Hogs were getting some momentum. It rolled into the end zone where the Gators fell on it for a score.

Nah, that one isn’t close to that foul ball no-catch Wednesday night. Even if the Hogs had won that game there’s no guarantee they would have even BEEN in the national championship game.

Others are comparing it to the Tennessee football game in 1998 when Clint Stoerner dropped the ball, the Vols recovered and went in for the winning score.

Not really. If Arkansas wins that game, there’s still no guarantee they would play for a national title because they would have had to beat Mississippi State the next week and Tennessee again in the SEC Championship game.

Some will throw out the NCAA Midwest Regional championship game in 1979 when two officials (college basketball only had two in a game back then) didn’t see U.S. Reed get tripped and Indiana State made it to the Final Four.

But there’s no guarantee the Hogs would have made it to the championship game there.

Well, you can look at the 1977 game against Texas when the officials didn’t see an obvious face mask call on Ron Calcagni that killed a Hogs’ scoring threat, but there’s no guarantee there, either. Earl Campbell broke free late, Texas won, but lost in the Cotton Bowl to Notre Dame while the Hogs went on to finish No. 3 in the nation.

The closest thing you can actually place anywhere near this category is the 1969 Big Shootout when Texas got a long run by quarterback James Street on the first play of the fourth quarter, Hogs’ linebacker Mike Boschetti was clipped and none of the officials (all from the state of Texas) could see it.

Of course, Arkansas lost 15-14, but even a win there didn’t guarantee a championship. They still had to play Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl as the Irish were breaking their decades-long tradition of skipping the bowl season. They were good back then every year.

Nope, this one may be the closest the Hogs have ever come to winning a title and seeing it slipping away.

From this corner, it’s the same result that would have happened in 1994 if Scotty Thurman’s 3-point attempt against Duke clanged off the rim instead of going in.

But it didn’t.

That foul ball popup fell slap in the middle of three Razorback defenders. No one single player is to blame, although there will be a lot of fans quick to place it somewhere. For some, there always has to be a scapegoat.

Dave Van Horn was right when he said it was just baseball. But the ball probably should have been caught.

Instead, it fell to the ground.

And with it, the best chance at a national championship that got away in Razorback history.

Van Horn, players talking about loss to Beavers

PHOTO BY JAMIE VARNELL
Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn joined by players Heston Kjerstad, Grant Koch and Carson Shaddy after Oregon State won the national championship over the Hogs, 5-0.