Arkansas coach Mike Anderson met with the media Friday and talked about the SEC opener Saturday against Tennessee.
Barford, Thompson on being ready for SEC opener
Arkansas’ Jaylen Barford and Trey Thompson met with the media Friday to talk about the Razorbacks’ SEC opener against Tennessee on Saturday.
Will we find out about Chavis by Friday night?
With national media now saying Texas A&M defensive coordinator John Chavis will be joining Chad Morris’ staff at Arkansas, everyone is wondering, well, when?
Considering the Aggies meet Wake Forest in the Belk Bowl at noon Friday, he should be free by dark Arkansas time.
When should we expect an announcement? No idea, but you have to think it will be soon after that.
Could Morris trot to midcourt with Chavis in tow during the basketball game with Tennessee on Saturday?
That might be pushing it, but, hey, the Razorback Foundation plane has had a couple of weeks to get cleaned up after the whirlwind of activity from Thanksgiving to the first couple of weeks in December.
By now if Chavis is not the choice everybody is going to be stunned.
But it has given a chance for some in-depth research into Chavis’ numbers.
He’s been a defensive coordinator for 23 years at Tennessee (1995-2008), LSU (2009-14) and Texas A&M since 2015.
Here’s some interesting defensive ranking numbers:
• Three Top 5 defenses (one at Tennessee, two at LSU)
• Seven Top 10 defenses (four with the Vols, three at LSU)
• A total of 15 of his defenses ranked in the Top 25
As many of the Great Unwashed in Razorback Nation point to the fact that none of those were at Texas A&M, consider the circumstances, as one longtime coach told me Thursday.
While Chavis certainly had some great individual performers with the Aggies, the recruiting during his first two years there was focused primarily on the offensive side of the ball.
In 2016, Chavis’ second year at A&M, the Aggies signed just six on the defensive side of the ball. They signed 15 on offense.
Under Kevin Sumlin, A&M’s focus was primarily on the offensive side of the ball. He did sign nine quarterbacks during his six years, including six while Chavis was in College Station.
But even at Texas A&M, his defenses were considerably better than what Arkansas had the last three years, averaging eighth in the SEC. The Hogs’ average finish was at No. 11.
There could be massive improvement in the first year, but expecting something similar to what Larry Grantham did in one year at Mississippi State might be a little much.
He inherited a defense that finished tied for 108th in the nation (tied for 12th in the league) and shot up to No. 9 in the nation this past season.
Can Chavis accomplish that? Probably not, but it is possible.
Remember, Morris is not using the Nick Saban blueprint to redo Razorback football. The guess here is he’s going to use the Clemson approach under Dabo Swinney, who didn’t hire Brent Venables until after his third season.
That was right after the Tigers had given up 70 points to West Virginia in the Orange Bowl. That defense was No. 100 in the nation.
Remember that number because we’ll finish with it.
Venables took the Tigers to No. 74 in his first season, then 29th and led the nation in defense in 2014, his third at Clemson.
Chavis could see a jump like that in his first season. After all, the Hogs finished 74th in Robb Smith’s last season which was, basically two second-half meltdowns away from being a nine-win team.
Now back to that number we said we’d finish with. Morris has said on more than one occasion he thinks Arkansas is where Clemson was when he went there in 2011. He was the offensive coordinator when the Tigers’ defense finished, well, No. 100 in the nation.
Just like the Hogs.
He’s reportedly going to bring in Chavis, who many considered the best defensive coordinator in college football just a couple of years ago.
Now we see if he can get to that level again.
Monk, Williams lead Razorbacks past Grambling
VIDEO FROM KNWA
FAYETTEVILLE — Double-doubles by junior Malica Monk and sophomore Kiara Williams paced Arkansas to a 79-62 win over Grambling State in Bud Walton Arena on Thursday.
The game opened even with Arkansas taking a narrow, 15-11, lead after the first quarter of play. The Razorbacks heated up offensively in the second quarter, opening the frame with a 14-2 run.
That surge led to a 25-12 advantage in the second stanza and the game was never close after that.Arkansas (9-4) wraps up the non-conference season with a perfect 7-0 record at home after the win over the Tigers (3-8).
Monk got her double-double the hard way with 10 points and 10 assists. It is her first career double-digit assist game and her first career double-double. Williams dropped in 12 points and tied her career-best with 16 boards.
Devin Cosper tallied her 12th game in double figures finishing with a game-high 16 points. Junior Raven Northcross-Baker added 14 points to go with Williams’ 12 points and Monk’s 10 points in the win.
Arkansas was good from distance with 11 made 3-pointers and the Razorbacks outrebounded the Tigers 48-35 in the game.
Notes
• Devin Cosper was in double figures in the first half. It is the third time she has scored in double figures in a half, her 11th double figure game of the year and the 34th of her career.
• Kiara Williams had 13 rebounds at the break and finished tying her career-best with 16 boards. It is the fifth double-digit rebounding game of her career.
• Kiara Williams finished with her second career double-double with 12 points and 16 rebounds.
• Malica Monk had her first career double-double with 10 points and 10 assists. These are the seventh and eighth Razorback double-doubles of the year.
• Arkansas had eight made 3-pointers in the first half and finished with 11 makes from distance. It is the fifth game of the year with double-digit 3-pointers.
• Snapped – Malica Monk’s streak of 19 consecutive free throws was snapped in the first quarter.
• Malica Monk has scored in double figures in all 13 games this season.
• Arkansas held Grambling State’s leading scorer to two points (averages 13.3 ppg).
Up Next
The Razorbacks open Southeastern Conference play on Sunday hosting Ole Miss at 2 p.m. in Bud Walton Arena.
Rutledge: Bielema’s buyout can be released
We will soon know the details of Bret Bielema’s contract buyout, according to a report from the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on Thursday afternoon.
Attorney General Leslie Rutledge issued an opinion earlier Thursday that the University of Arkansas should release a document that outlines a separate agreement with the Razorback Foundation on terms of Bielema’s buyout.
Bielema exercised his right under the Freedom of Information Act to delay release of the document, as the university intended, by asking for an attorney general’s opinion.
The University is closed this week, but it is expected the documents will be provided this evening to those requesting it.
The buyouts generally require monthly payments and offsets in payouts by future employment.
The Democrat-Gazette, the Arkansas Times and others have sought the document to get a firm idea of what it is costing the university athletic department and the private nonprofit Razorback Foundation to pay Bielema, fired after a losing season in his fifth year as Razorback football coach.
ESPN, quoting an anonymous source, has put the figure at $11.8 million.
The agreement specifies that the Razorback Foundation has a separate responsibility and it has claimed exemption from the FOI law.
The buyout clause:

Bielema was fired with a month left in 2017.
Money for the coaches flows from the private foundation, whose income includes payments for premium game tickets, and from the self-supporting athletic department, which shares none of the university’s state appropriations but uses university name and property to make money through ticket sales, TV contracts, merchandising and other means.
The Rutledge opinion, which went to Bielema’s agent, says the document constitutes a personnel record, which is open to public release unless it constitutes an unwarranted invasion of privacy.
It said public interest was “sufficiently strong” in a balancing test against privacy interests to favor disclosure. The opinion notes media attention and says:
“There is a very high level of public interest in documents bearing on the former employee’s departure from the university — a level of interest that is understandable given his prominence and the importance of the matter to the local community.”
With Jones out, Hogs turning to Gasaway?
Star City’s Jax Gasaway has heard from Arkansas.
After Pulaski Academy’s Luke Jones flipped his commitment to Notre Dame earlier this week, Arkansas has reached out to the 6-foot-7, 275-pound three-star lineman, according to Richard Davenport of Recruiting Thursday at WholeHogSports.com.
Both Jones and Gasaway, along with Jonesboro’s Noah Gatlin (already committed to Arkansas) were named to USA Today’s All-Arkansas team on Wednesday.
Some recruiting observers have said they were more impressed with Gasaway at some of the summer camps than Jones, but now it appears the Hogs are interested.
Arkansas’ Dustin Fry reached out to Gasaway via Twitter on Wednesday night and plans to see him when the January contact period begins.
“He just told me he was going to come see me as soon as recruiting opens back up,” Gasaway told Davenport.
The NCAA contact period which allows college coaches to visit prospects off campus began Nov. 26. The dead period started Dec. 18 and will run through Jan. 11. The contact period resumes the next day.
Gasaway has 11 scholarship offers from schools like Arkansas State, Louisiana Tech, Texas State, Marshall, Louisiana- Monroe and Air Force. He was named to the first team Arkansas Democrat-Gazette All-Arkansas Preps team on Sunday.
Nutt going into Cotton Bowl’s Hall of Fame
Former Arkansas and Ole Miss coach Houston Nutt will be inducted into the Cotton Bowl Hall of Fame in May.
The exact date has not been finalized.
Nutt led the Razorbacks to Cotton Bowl appearances in 2000 and 2002, including a 27-6 win over Texas in 2000, in which Arkansas became the first team to ever hold the Longhorns to negative rushing yards in a game.
Arkansas also appeared in the 2008 Cotton Bowl, but Nutt did not coach in the game.
Nutt is one of five coaches to lead more than one school to the bowl. He also took Ole Miss to back-to-back Cotton Bowls in 2009-10 against Texas Tech and Oklahoma State, winning both.
The former coach and current college football analyst led Arkansas to 75 wins in 10 seasons and an appearance in the 2006 Southeastern Conference Championship Game.
Nutt will be the sixth Arkansas player or coach inducted into the bowl’s Hall of Fame, joining Frank Broyles, Lance Alworth, Fred Marshall, Jim Williams and Loyd Phillips.
The 2018 Cotton Bowl Hall of Fame class:
• Arkansas-Ole Miss coach Houston Nutt
• Texas A&M linebacker Quentin Coryatt
• USC coach John Robinson
• Penn State running back-linebacker Wally Triplett
• Texas running back Ricky Williams
• Oklahoma safety Roy Williams
Would Morris actually consider Trooper Taylor?
Until Chad Morris officially announces a coaching staff, there’s going to be one rumor after another.
That’s the nature of the world of college football these days.
Wednesday, the latest rumor on the defense wasn’t surrounding John Chavis as defensive coordinator. By now it would be a surprise if that doesn’t happen.
No, this one was Arkansas State secondary coach Trooper Taylor might be one of Morris’ choices to fill out the defensive staff.
Seriously. The folks throwing this one out are convinced it’s a real possibility. Excuse me, but I’ll have to see this one before believing it.
Taylor has been named several times on lists of the top recruiters in college football. That was mostly during his tenures at Auburn, Oklahoma State and Tennessee.
He sorta deflected that in an interview with AuburnUndercover.com in a 2016 story before he returned to Auburn with Arkansas State:
“I was named a ‘top 25 recruiter’ a couple times, but I never signed a single kid on my own. If I was recruiting a running back, and the running back coach was awful, do you think I could recruit a running back to my school? No. It takes a village. You might get credit because he’s in your area or he mentions your name a lot. But I can promise you this: It took all of us.”
The truth is, though, the only way this makes sense is for his recruiting ability.
Other than running around waving a towel and wearing his hat backwards (which should never be done by any male over the age of 6) there doesn’t appear to be a reason to bring him to Fayetteville.
Don’t listen to all the stuff about NCAA investigations and all that. Yes, it happened at Auburn in 2012, but no wrongdoing was uncovered. Whether they keep an eye on him or not, well, the group in that Kangaroo Court are the only ones that can answer that.
That shouldn’t even be an issue, although there will many in the Great Unwashed in the Razorback Nation that throw that one out there because they refuse to believe otherwise.
No, I don’t think it will happen simply because it would be shocking for anybody with the Hogs to hire anybody from ASU.
Whether it’s been done before I don’t know. I can’t remember anyone going straight from Jonesboro to Fayetteville. Houston Nutt was an assistant there for a year, but that was five years before taking over the wide receivers for Jack Crowe and 13 years before he got the head coaching job.
Would Morris actually hire Taylor?
He was the assistant head coach for Phillip Fulmer at Tennessee from 2004-07. He did play defensive back in college at Baylor and coaches the secondary over in Jonesboro.
In case you’re not aware of it, Chavis was the defensive coordinator on that staff.
And, naturally, these days that’s enough of a connection to get a good rumor going.
Or is it more that just a rumor?
Barnes on loss to strong Razorbacks’ team
Callfornia State-Bakersfield coach Rod Barnes, who previously coached at Ole Miss, talks about the loss to Arkansas on Wednesday night.
Anderson talks about team overcoming sluggish start
Arkansas coach Mike Anderson talked with the media after the Razorbacks’ blowout win over Cal State-Bakersfield on Wednesday night.
Barford, Macon pace Hogs to blowout over CSU
FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas used a second-half run Wednesday to cruise past Cal State-Bakersfield, 95-68, in its final game before conference play.
The 27-point win is Arkansas’ sixth by 25 or more points this season, as the Razorbacks eclipsed the 90-point mark for the eighth time in 12 games.
Arkansas’ leader in dunks Daniel Gafford, electrified a toasty Bud Walton Arena early, as the freshman forward slammed home the Razorbacks’ first two baskets of the game, including an alley-oop dunk in transition.
After trailing 3-0, Arkansas would score 10 straight to claim a 10-3 lead.
Arkansas would lead by as many as 11 in the first half, but the Roadrunners would claw back before the break and tie the contest at 38-38.
The Razorbacks would score the final four points of the half to take a 42-38 lead into the locker room. It is the 10th time in 12 games that Arkansas has led its opponent at half this season.
Senior Dustin Thomas recorded his first double-figure scoring effort of the season, leading the Razorbacks with 10 points and five rebounds in the first half. It is just the fifth time as a Razorback that Thomas has scored 10-plus points in a game.
After just one made basket and five total points in the first half, senior guard Daryl Macon hit Arkansas’ first two shot attempts of the second half, both from deep, to stretch Arkansas’ lead back to 10.
Following a Bakersfield basket, senior guard Anton Beard would duplicate Macon’s run, hitting back-to-back, wide-open three-pointers. This was all part of a 14-2 run to open the second half that gave the Razorbacks a 56-40 lead.
Arkansas would maintain a lead that hovered around 12, before senior guard Jaylen Barford took over. Barford would score 12 points, including eight straight, as part of a 16-2 run by the Razorbacks to give Arkansas an 80-55 lead.
Barford would finish with a game-high 19 points, while Macon scored 16 points and tied his career high with eight of Arkansas’ 15 assists. Beard finished with 15 points and freshman Darious Hall tallied 14. Gafford pulled down a season-high 12 rebounds to go along with six points.
Arkansas’ ball security continues to be a key for the Razorbacks. Arkansas turned the ball over just nine times Wednesday, improving its streak to five straight games with less than 10 turnovers.
Next up for Arkansas is the 19th-ranked Tennessee Volunteers, as the Razorbacks open conference play on Saturday against the Vols in a noon tip-off in a sold-out Bud Walton Arena.
Game Notes
• Arkansas has a 10-game winning streak in Bud Walton Arena, dating back to last year.
• The Razorbacks have a season-long five-game winning streak.
• Arkansas has won 21 consecutive non-conference games in Bud Walton Arena.
• The win gives Arkansas seven straight wins in Bud Walton Arena (7-0) to start the season for the fifth time in seven seasons under Mike Anderson.
• In seven games in Bud Walton Arena this year, the Razorbacks are 7-0 with a +179 scoring margin, including a +123 scoring margin in the first half.
• For the first time since the National Championship run in 1994, Arkansas has scored 90-plus points in eight of its first 12 games.
• The Razorbacks have five straight games with fewer than 10 turnovers for the first time in the last 20 years.
• During the Mike Anderson era, Arkansas is 115-7 in games it led at the half, including 30 consecutive victories.
• Arkansas is 10-0 this year when Daniel Gafford records at least one dunk. He has 28 dunks, which is more than six teams in the SEC.










