SECMD18: Keke on Fisher’s toughness, determination

Texas A&M senior defensive lineman Kingsley Keke talked at SEC Media Days in Atlanta about new coach Jimbo Fisher’s drive to get the Aggies to the next level in the SEC West.

SECMD18: Kentucky’s Stoops on getting past being close

Kentucky coach Mark Stoops at Media Days in Atlanta talked about how they are expecting more and how they are tired of being close.

SECMD2018: Fisher on new culture at Texas A&M

New Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher said at SEC Media Days in Atlanta “the time is now” for the Aggies to compete at the highest level in the SEC West.

Sankey taking questions at SEC Media Days opener

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey took questions from the media after his opening remarks to kick off the week in Atlanta at SEC Media Days in Atlanta.

Woods arrested, charged in Fayetteville with DUI

Freshman wide receiver Mike Woods was arrested Friday night and charged Saturday morning for a variety of offenses involving alcohol.

Woods has been charged with suspicion of driving under the influence, minor in possession of alcohol and making an improper turn. All are misdemeanor charges.

Multiple media outlets were reporting a statement from Hogs coach Chad Morris on Saturday:

“We are aware of the incident involving Mike Woods and are gathering information from the proper authorities. We will make a determination regarding his status once we have reviewed all of the information.”

Woods, from Magnolia, Texas, was an early enrollee in January at the UA and saw extensive playing time in the spring.

Click here to see Woods’ arrest report from the Washington County records.

Gates signs free-agent deal with Orioles

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas infielder Jared Gates signed a free agent contract with the Baltimore Orioles on Friday, making him the 10th Razorback to sign a pro contract since the 2018 Major League Baseball (MLB) Draft in June.

Gates is the first non-drafted Razorback to sign a pro contract this summer and second to join the Orioles organization. Right-hander Blaine Knight was picked in the third round by Baltimore in the draft and signed a deal last week.

Hailing from Wichita, Kansas, Gates became a postseason hero for the Razorbacks over the last two years, earning the nickname “Mr. June” after coming up with clutch hits throughout the SEC and NCAA Tournaments.

This year, in just the postseason alone, Gates hit .308, the second-best average on the team, with three home runs and six RBIs.

Over his 16 games in the NCAA Tournament, Gates was one of the best, hitting .291 combined with 16 runs scored and a .365 on-base percentage.

For much of his 2018 season, Gates platooned at first base before becoming the everyday starter for the remaining 15 games. He ended up hitting .241 over 46 games with six long balls and 23 RBIs.

In his two seasons at Arkansas, Gates was a .243 hitter with 62 hits, nine doubles, 12 home runs, 37 RBIs and 28 walks.

Gates was endeared by the Razorback faithful in 2017 when he hit a two-run home run in the eighth inning of the NCAA Regional final against Missouri State, a game that was played well into the morning hours the next day and did not finish until 3 a.m.

In the regional-deciding game later that day, Gates went deep again, hitting his sixth home run of the year and was responsible for two of Arkansas’ five hits.

Gates came to Arkansas prior to the 2017 season after spending two years at Iowa Western Community College where he was a second-team All-America selection and led Iowa Western to the Final Four at the NJCAA World Series.

Reality may not be close to perception for Razorbacks

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In college football, it’s not unusual for perception and reality to seldom collide over the course of a season.

This has been interesting during the summer listening to the speculation about Arkansas what’s expected. Most of it simply isn’t digging very deep.

What kind of offense the Hogs were

Bret Bielema made no secret of his desire to ground-and-pound offensively. He even went with the team in black shoes because it looked more “down in the dirt” than the white shoes where the Razorbacks started 1-2 in 2015 and the black shoes suddenly came back.

That was the perception he tried to establish.

Reality was startling different when you look at the numbers. The numbers show that when Jim Chaney was shouldered out the door so was the running game.

In 2013, the Hogs had 58 percent of their offense on the ground, 54 percent in 2014.

When Dan Enos took over the offense, the rushing game dropped to 42 percent in 2015, then 38 percent and 45 percent.

Yet the perception continued this was a team being built to run the ball, control the clock and impose the Hogs’ will on the other team.

Reality was they were running spread formation plays out of a pro-style set. At times they looked good. Most of the time, though, nothing seemed to look right and it all fell apart towards the end of last season.

Players for Bielema’s offense can’t adapt to new one

This is the biggest mistake people are making.

Bielema recruited fairly decent players for the most part. But they didn’t play HIS style in high school. They played Chad Morris’ style.

It almost appeared Bielema’s style was to get these spread players on campus, bulk ’em up and then be mystified when they couldn’t do what they were wanting to do.

Compound that with players were were quick and faster before getting to Fayetteville now were about a step slower and linemen were a half-step behind making the key block in pass protection.

That’s why Morris’ first move was to get the extra weight off and it’s had an effect. Brian Wallace said in the spring he was now starting to move like he did when he was in high school getting the excess weight off.

Wallace is a great example. He was a four-star offensive tackle in high school, the top-rated offensive tackle in Missouri playing at 305 pounds (he’s 6-6, by the way). The Hogs bulked him up to 340 pounds and then wondered why he couldn’t play like he did before.

Wallace told us in the spring he’s at his best around 315 pounds. It made a difference in the way they looked in basic drills compared to last year.

The perception that Morris has to turn over the roster to fit his style isn’t close to the reality the roster was full of guys that played his style until coming to Arkansas.

For most of the players, especially on offense, is the spring was a refresher course and that’s what we’re hearing about the summer workouts and things are moving much faster.

Add a couple of quarterbacks who spent their high school years basically playing Morris’ identical offense and, well, what we see in August is likely going to be light years ahead of what we saw in March.

Arkansas’ schedule is built for success

Thank you, Michigan, for cancelling the home-and-home series. None of the Razorbacks’ non-conference opponents should be favored when they play.

Certainly not Colorado State, who has one of the most inexperienced teams in college football this year.

The Hogs should start the year 3-0. It’ll get a little dicey from there.

A road trip to Auburn may not be as bad as it seems. They open in Atlanta against Washington, then played Alabama State and LSU the week before Arkansas hits town. Gus Malzahn is going to have to do a heckuva job keeping the Tigers up for two of those big games, then the Hogs.

After Auburn comes Texas A&M and new coach Jimbo Fisher. It’s the Aggies.

Arkansas has shown they can play with A&M with three of the last five games going to overtime before the Hogs collapsed.

After a home date with Alabama the next week, the Hogs will play three straight games against teams they should beat in Ole Miss, Tulsa and Vanderbilt.

Then they get a week off before the LSU game while the Tigers play Alabama. The next week they get Mississippi State a week after they play Alabama. Either way those games turn out, a letdown can be expected.

History tells us teams do not play that well after being rolled by the Crimson Tide. Right now I’m not willing to put either of those games in the L column.

Then Arkansas finishes against Missouri where new offensive coordinator Derek Dooley is replacing one of the highest-flying offenses in the league with a pro-style passing game.

We’ll know how well that’s working before that game comes up, but teams going from a wide open spread to a pro-style usually don’t put up points like they did before and it’s almost always a struggle.

I put that game in the W column, along with four nonconference games, Ole Miss and Vandy. There’s seven wins.

Auburn, Texas A&M, LSU and Mississippi State are wildcards right now, in my opinion.

Reality will be how the Hogs do in those four games.

The perception about this team is it’s going to struggle to be bowl eligible, which means winning six games.

The reality is some breaks could put this team at nine or 10 wins on the season.

And, in case you’re wondering, that’s still not the level Morris keeps talking about when he says this team is a long way from reaching.

He’s talking higher than that.

Hogs to be featured on SEC Network takeover Aug. 2

For the fourth consecutive year, the SEC Network is turning the keys over to the teams, as all 14 Southeastern Conference schools will schedule network programming for a two-week stretch this summer with Arkansas taking over on August 2.

Beginning Monday, July 23, each school will exclusively program a full 24 hours on SEC Network with their picks of classic games, films, ESPN originals, school-produced content and more.

The Razorbacks’ day will feature the Hogs’ run to the men’s basketball national title in 1994 with the national semifinal against Arizona and Duke in the national championship.

The SEC Network documentary 40 Minutes of Hell.

During the SEC Network Takeover, each of the 14 SEC member institutions has the opportunity to create an entire day filled with its greatest moments, iconic victories and university fanfare, including NCAA Championships, SEC Storied films, school PSAs and more. Each school’s appointed date and programming sample can be found below:

2018 SEC Network Takeover Schedule

Georgia – Monday, July 23
• 2018 NCAA Indoor and Outdoor Track and Field Championships
• 2017 SEC Football Championship
• Kirby Smart All Access SEC Championship
• 2018 Rose Bowl
• Road to the Roses program

Alabama – Tuesday, July 24
• 2018 Sugar Bowl
• CFP National Championship Game

Missouri – Wednesday, July 25
• 2008 Alamo Bowl
• WBB: 2018 Missouri vs. South Carolina
• MBB: 2018 Missouri vs. Kentucky

Tennessee – Thursday, July 26
• 1998 Women’s Basketball Championship
• Tennessee vs. Florida Football (1998)

Texas A&M – Friday, July 27
• 2018 Men’s Basketball game vs. Kentucky
• 2018 SEC Swimming & Diving Championships
• 2011 Women’s Basketball Championship
• 1986 Cotton Bowl vs. Auburn

Ole Miss – Saturday, July 28
• 1997 Motor City Bowl
• 2018 SEC Baseball Championship
• SEC Inside: SEC Baseball Tournament
• 2018 Football vs. Miss. St

Kentucky – Sunday, July 29
• 2018 SEC Men’s Basketball Championship
• 2017 MBB: Kentucky vs. WVU (Big 12/SEC Challenge)
• 2017 Football vs. Tennessee

Vanderbilt – Monday, July 30
• 2014 College World Series
• 2018 NCAA Bowling Championship
• 2018 SEC Women’s Tennis Championship

South Carolina – Tuesday, July 31
• 2011 College World Series
• 2018 Outback Bowl vs. Michigan
• 2018 MBB vs. Kentucky
• 2018 WBB Miss. St vs. South Carolina

LSU – Wednesday, August 1
• Highlights from the SEC Baseball Tournament
• LSU vs. Florida
• LSU vs. Arkansas
• 2017 LSU vs. Texas A&M
• SEC Storied: Maravich

Arkansas – Thursday, August 2
1993-94 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship Semifinal vs. Arizona
1993-94 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship vs. Duke
SEC Storied: 40 Minutes of Hell

Auburn – Friday, August 3
• 2017 Iron Bowl
• 2018 SEC Men’s Golf Championship
• SEC Storied: Rowdy

Mississippi State – Saturday, August 4
• 2018 SEC Men’s Tennis Championship
• 2017 WBB Semifinal vs. UConn
• 2017 Taxslayer Bowl vs. Louisville
• 2018 Baseball Super Regional vs. Vanderbilt

Florida – Sunday, August 5
• 2007 Men’s Basketball Championship
• Women’s Gymnastics vs. Oklahoma
• 2018 SEC Outdoor T&F Championships
• 2008 BCS Championship vs. Ohio State