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Could LSU pull trigger on hiring Freeze as OC?

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LSU finally split up with offensive coordinator Matt Canada this past week and mum has been the word out of Baton Rouge since.

Much of the speculation is that Ed Orgeron would take the easy out and just move Steve Ensminger up, but that’s not giving it too much thought.

I won’t be surprised if he hires former Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze.

Shocked? Don’t be.

When Orgeron was hired one of his first comments when asked about his offensive direction was that he would go to some sort of spread. That didn’t happen.

Canada is a pro-style guy with a lot of pre-snap movement, motion and alignments, but it was all out of a pro system.

In no universe did it ever resemble much of anything that was anything near a spread.

Before you have the same knee-jerk reaction a lot of people do and talk about his NCAA issues at Ole Miss, remember this: He basically was cleared of everything except not keeping a close enough handle on a couple of boosters.

After five years of investigating all the NCAA came up with was that. Because they spent five years in Oxford, they gave him a two-game conference suspension if — and only if — he is the head coach of a school in 2018.

There was no show-cause penalty for Freeze. In fact, the NCAA in the final order against Ole Miss said Freeze did just about everything he could in managing the situation with the exception of the actions of a couple of boosters.

In other words, there is no NCAA issue with Freeze being an offensive coordinator at LSU.

Freeze is available and started a public relations campaign last week, appearing for a very open, honest and intense interview with Clay Travis of Outkick The Show.

Don’t think it can’t happen. Orgeron gave Freeze his first job at the SEC level when he was coaching at Ole Miss and the two have remained fairly close since then.

When Orgeron replaced Les Miles at LSU, Freeze gushed at his weekly press conference about Orgeron. The week before the two played in 2016 was full of praise for each other.

When all of Freeze’s problems surfaced publicly about calling escort services on his university cell phone (the matter had already been known with Freeze’s family and close friends), Orgeron reached out to him, along with Nick Saban, Gus Malzahn, Bret Bielema and many other coaches.

The reason Freeze didn’t have a job at the start of last season was the fact the NCAA was so slow in releasing the final order against the Rebels.

Now that they cleared Freeze, the fact he called some escort services on a school phone isn’t going to stop many folks from hiring him, I don’t care what anybody says.

It shouldn’t be a surprise if Orgeron brings him in as offensive coordinator at LSU and completely turns the offense over to him. He has said repeatedly he should have done that when Orgeron was at Ole Miss.

And if it happens, every other team in the SEC West should be worried.

While Freeze has had issues, scoring points and moving the ball aren’t among them.

It’s kinda scary to imagine his offense with all that talent and a defense like Dave Aranda usually has.

Which is why Arkansas fans should be hoping they promote Ensminger.

Why Kirby just isn’t smart enough yet to beat Nick

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Everyone loves to see the pupil beat the teacher, mainly because it doesn’t happen that often.

Georgia fans are hoping Kirby Smart learned enough to win the National Championship Game on Monday night, even though the Bulldogs are a 3½-4½-point underdog in Las Vegas.

The odds are, though, it will be another Alabama championship.

If Georgia was playing anybody else they would be the favorite, I think. They probably should be. I didn’t think they’d beat Oklahoma, but I over-estimated the Sooners’ defensive ability by about 10 points.

Kirby’s biggest problem is Nick Saban. He might not be smart enough to outfox the old man.

“They don’t make ’em like they used to,” was how Saban answered the question about being run over by his quarterback Jalen Hurts against Clemson on Monday night.

That applies to much more than that.

Saban has never lost to a former assistant. He’s 11-0 against his former employees.

He taught every single one of them a lot of what THEY know about coaching football … maybe everything they know.

But it’s a guaranteed fact he hasn’t taught them everything HE knows.

That is why this game is intriguing. Both teams like to run the ball, so there will be the inevitable predictions about the team that runs the ball best will likely win.

No, this game is going to come down to which team can hit the biggest downfield plays.

Hurts is going to have to be better passing the ball for the Crimson Tide to win.

And Jake Fromm is going to have to excel against a defense unlike anything he’s seen before. With defensive coordinator Jeremy Pruitt already accepting the job as Tennessee’s new head coach, it’s a safe bet Saban has been involved in the game planning.

Plus, you can bet he’s used some of his consultants to help on this game.

Oh, yes, Saban has long used consultants nobody knows about on his game plans and other things. That is where new things get introduced nobody saw coming.

Everyone is talking about the two defenses in this game, which is understandable when you have the first (Alabama) and fifth (Georgia) best defenses in all of college football in points allowed.

By the numbers, this shouldn’t be a high-scoring game.

But I’m not going to be surprised if it doesn’t get lopsided … in favor of the Crimson Tide.

Oh, they won’t run away with it early. It likely will more closely resemble the Tide’s win over Clemson than the Bulldogs’ double-overtime win over Oklahoma. Remember, Clemson’s defense came into that game third in the nation giving up points.

Alabama knows how to win these games.

And while Kirby learned an awful lot about these games as an assistant for Nick, there’s probably a couple of gaps.

Because you can bet Nick didn’t tech Kirby everything NICK knows.

Which will be the difference.

 

Fassi wins Mexican Amateur for third time in four years

GUADALAJARA, Mexico — Arkansas junior Maria Fassi played to a 10-shot win at the Campeonato Nacional de Aficionadas 2018 in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, on Sunday.

Fassi dominated the four-day event shooting nine-under with scores of 66-71-76-66=279, at the Guadalajara Country Club. It is Fassi’s third title in four years at this event.

Fassi had a solid fall helping the Razorbacks to a No. 3 final ranking after the first semester of the season. She is currently ranked No. 25 by the World Amateur Golf Ranking and is the No. 4 amateur player according to Golfweek.com.

Razorback teammate Dylan Kim finished tied for fourth shooting 75-74-74-72=295 and Cara Gorlei was 27th shooting 83-77-79-73=312 at the event.

The Razorbacks won three of four fall events with Fassi leading the team with wins at the Mason Rudolph Classic and the ANNIKA Intercollegiate. She has a 69.00 season stroke average through four events.

Hogs hoping to end Auburn’s winning streak

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas (11-3, 1-1) looks to get back in the win column Saturday, going to Auburn to face the Tigers, who are riding an SEC-best 11-game winning streak.

The Rundown
Opponent:
 Auburn Tigers (13-1, 1-0)
Date: 
Saturday, Jan. 6
Site: Auburn Arena (Auburn, Ala.)
Tip-off: 5 p.m. CT
TV: ESPNU | WatchESPN
Live Stats: Click Here
SiriusXM Radio: 113/191

The #Fastest40 Facts

• Arkansas debuted in the AP Top 25 Poll on Monday for the first time since March 2015, checking in at No. 22.

• The Razorbacks are 7-1 against Auburn under Coach Anderson, including a 4-0 mark in Auburn Arena.

• Daryl Macon was named SEC Player of the Week on Monday, joining current assistant coach Scotty Thurman as the only Razorback players to ever earn the award twice in a three-week span.

• Dating back to 2015-16, Arkansas is 8-4 in its last 12 SEC road games, including a 6-3 mark last season.

• Following Tuesday’s loss in Starkville, Arkansas’ RPI fell from No. 4 to No. 9 according to the NCAA, while its strength of schedule went from No. 16 to No. 10.

• The Razorbacks posted two AP top-20 wins in a five-game span with wins over No. 14 Minnesota and No. 19 Tennessee. Arkansas has multiple top-20 wins in the same season for the third time under Coach Anderson.

• During the last four seasons, Arkansas ranks second in the SEC in league wins with 35. Auburn ranks 13th in the conference with 17 victories.

• For the first time since the National Championship run in 1994, Arkansas scored 90-plus points in nine of its first 14 games.

• Arkansas is one of three teams in the nation to rank in the top 10 in points per game and assist-to-turnover ratio, joining No. 2 Duke and Creighton.

• The Razorbacks lead the SEC and rank No. 9 in the nation in assist-to-turnover ratio thanks to 132 assists and just 63 turnovers in the last seven games.

A Win Would

• Give Arkansas a perfect 5-0 record at Auburn Arena under Coach Anderson.

• Send Arkansas to a 15-9 record as a ranked team under Coach Anderson.

• Give Arkansas its 10th win over Auburn in the last 11 meetings dating back to a season sweep of the Tigers during the 2010-11 campaign.

The Best Guards In The Nation

• In the upset win against No. 19 Tennessee, Daryl Macon’s 33 points and Jaylen Barford’s 28 points marked the first time Arkansas has had two 28-point scorers in an SEC game.

• Against current AP Top 25 teams, Barford (22.7) and Macon (22.3) have combined to average 45.0 points per game in three contests.

• Barford is the only player in the SEC to rank in the top three in points per game (3rd) and field goal percentage (3rd).

• Against Tennessee, Daryl Macon became one of six players in program history to record multiple 30-point games against SEC opponents.

Two personal bests wrap up Tennessee diving invite

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Two Razorbacks divers set personal bests on the final day of competition from Knoxville on the platform, as junior Marissa Green and sophomore Caroline Welch each notched career marks.

Green led all three Razorback divers with a score of 211.90, more than 10 points higher than her previous career best.

Green’s effort was enough for a 12th-place finish, her best of the week. Green has two of the top four platform scores on the team this season.

Senior Nicole Gillis wrapped up her strong week with a 14th-place performance, scoring a 209.35.

Gillis finished in the top-15 in all three dives this week with a 10th-place showing on the one-meter and a seventh-place effort on the three-meter.

Welch also recorded a personal best, scoring 181.60 on the platform, 2.75 points higher than her previous best. Welch’s personal best was good for a 20th-place finish in the event.

“For the first meet of the new year, I thought we competed well,” said head coach Neil Harper. “Marissa and Caroline recording personal bests in the platform today is a great start to this semester.”

RESULTS
Wednesday, Jan. 3
1m Prelims
3rd – Schultz (295.10)
6th – Gillis (275.70)
24th – Green (231.60)
33rd – Welch (196.50)

1m Finals
2nd – Schultz (325.70)
7th – Gillis (281.55)

Thursday, Jan. 4
3m Prelims
2nd – Schultz (329.15)
10th – Gillis (296.45)
25th – Green (233.50)
32nd – Welch (203.05)

3m Finals
1st – Schultz (383.40 – SCHOOL RECORD)
7th – Gillis (305.40)

Friday, Jan. 5
Platform Finals
12th – Green (211.90 – PERSONAL BEST)
14th – Gillis (209.35)
20th – Welch (181.60 – PERSONAL BEST)

As the winter invitational season wraps up, the Razorbacks return home for Senior Day next Saturday morning at 10 a.m. at the Arkansas Natatorium, as Arkansas hosts the No. 7 Tennessee Volunteers.

Coming up with a better way to judge defense

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There has never been a time like this in the history of college football.

Offenses are off the charts good and defenses have virtually no chance to stop anyone, unless that defense is from Alabama or Clemson.

All this has led me to look for a better way to truly analyze what success is for a defense in college football. Yardage stats, third-down rates and points per game are all totally flawed stats that can very easily be manipulated to fit your agenda. There has to be a better way.

There is.

The premise is simple: the defense’s job is to keep the other team from scoring touchdowns.

Therefore, a successful defense possession is when you force a punt, stop someone on fourth down, create a turnover or force a field goal attempt.

I believe even if the field goal is made, three points are better then giving up seven so that is a win for the defense in modern day college football.

I have worked this formula out with a few teams from this season. Arkansas’ defense led by Paul Rhoads stopped opponents on offense 61 percent of the time. Alabama has stopped opposing offenses 88 percent of the time by our formula of what success is.

Georgia stopped opponents 87 percent of the time. Oklahoma in the non-defensive Big 12 conference had a defensive stop rate of 73 percent.

What about John Chavis as Texas A&M last year? Apparently, he’s coming to Arkansas, so how about his team last year in College Station? Chavis’ group had a 74{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707} defensive stop rate.

So what are my takeaways?

Defense still wins championships and it isn’t close. You can win a bunch of games with a stop rate in the mid-70’s, but if you want to make the playoff, you have to be closer to 90 percent.

Also, the scale looks to me a lot like the academic grading scale we are all used to seeing which makes it easy to read. Arkansas had a D- defense last season. That feels about right to me.

Texas A&M had a C level defense. That is pretty much in line with their results last year.

It probably isn’t perfect, but for me, it makes the picture a lot clearer of what defensive success is in modern day college football when it seems like the first team to 40 is going to win almost all of the time.

Two advance to 3-meter finals; Schultz takes crown

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Freshman Brooke Schultz won the three-meter springboard title on Thursday at the Tennessee Diving Invitational, scoring a school record 383.40 to capture the crown.

It marks the third time in her freshman campaign that the Fayetteville native has broken the school record on the 3m. Overall, it is her fifth school record this season, breaking the 1m two times.

Schultz is the only diver to finish in the top-two of the 1m and 3m dive this week at the Tennessee Diving Invite, after recording a second-place finish in Wednesday’s 1m finals with a score of 325.70.

Of her eight 3m six-dive performances this season, Schultz has yet to finish outside of the top two, recording seven first-place finishes. Of her 16 six-dive efforts this season, Schultz has 13 first-place showings, having never finished outside the top three.

Senior Nicole Gillis also advanced to the 3m finals with Schultz, scoring a 296.45 in prelims to finish 10th. In the finals, she scored a 305.40 to improve three spots, finishing seventh.

“The three-meter was a great event for us with Nicole scoring over 300 points again and Brooke breaking her own school record with the win,” said head coach Neil Harper. “The platform event will be a challenge tomorrow but a good test, as we look to finish the invite strong.”

In the prelims, junior Marissa Green finished 25th, scoring a 233.50, while sophomore Caroline Welch finished 32nd with a score of 203.05.

The final day of competition from Knoxville will begin tomorrow at 10 a.m. with the platform.

SCHEDULE AND RESULTS
Wednesday, Jan. 3
1m Prelims
3rd – Schultz (295.10)
6th – Gillis (275.70)
24th – Green (231.60)
33rd – Welch (196.50)

1m Finals
2nd – Schultz (325.70)
7th – Gillis (281.55)

Thursday, Jan. 4
3m Prelims
2nd – Schultz (329.15)
10th – Gillis (296.45)
25th – Green (233.50)
32nd – Welch (203.05)

3m Finals
1st – Schultz (383.40 – SCHOOL RECORD)
7th – Gillis (305.40)

Friday, Jan. 5
Platform Finals – 10:00 a.m.

Examining the impact of Daniel Gafford

Examining the impact of Daniel Gafford

Daniel Gafford is arguably the most exciting freshman to watch in the SEC this season.

He has been integral in the Razorbacks’ 11-3 start and No. 22 national ranking.

Many draft boards have started to look at Gafford as a potential first round pick with his play and his measurables as well as his upside.

If he does indeed declare and keep his name in the draft in the spring, it will be disappointing for fans but it should also be solace that Arkansas can now recruit one-and-dones and point to Gafford as an example.

Let’s say he declares but doesn’t get the grade he wants and decides to stay. It’s almost a virtual lock that he will be a lottery pick in 2019. He’d basically be taking the Bobby Portis route.

Not only that, but Arkansas would make the NCAA Tournament next season for the third consecutive year for the first time since 2006-08.

Gafford, paired with the talented interior pieces they are bringing in with the 2018 crop, could make the 2018-19 Hogs one of, if not the SEC favorite.

By coming back, he could also vault his name into becoming one of the top 25 players in the history of the program. His freshman year will end up rivaling anybody that has ever put on the uniform.