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If Malzahn still main target, who’s the ace in the hole?

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Frank Broyles learned how to hire coaches at Arkansas from one of the true masters of the business in John Barnhill.

Oh, Barnhill had his misses. Otis Douglas in 1950 was the worst fit for the Razorbacks before Bret Bielema. Both were good coaches, but not good fits here.

That “fit” is probably the most important thing in hiring the next Hogs coach.

For what it’s worth, I’ve been told Julie Cromer Peoples is simply the “point” person but the process has been going on for several weeks and representatives of coaches have been talking to someone representing Arkansas.

To believe she’s making the final decision on this is probably not correct, based on what we’ve been told.

But back to Barney and Broyles.

Barnhill always went through the biggest names. Shoot, before he hired Broyles in 1958 Minnesota’s Murray Warmath, one of the biggest names in the business at the time, was the showcase being floated.

When Warmath showed little interest, Barney turned to his “ace in the hole,” Broyles, who was just completing his first season at Missouri.

At the time Broyles wasn’t exactly the hottest name in coaching. He had spent years as Bobby Dodd’s top assistant at Georgia Tech and had only one year of experience in Missouri where his team had just gone 5-4-1 in a season.

Barnhill figured it would be a good fit.

When Broyles the AD basically fired Broyles the coach in 1976, Barry Switzer wasn’t leaving Oklahoma where he was battling his way through a “down” year of 9-2-1 and wasn’t interested.

So, Broyles turned to his “ace in the hole,” hiring Lou Holtz, who he had spoken to earlier after hearing that he was not happy coaching in the NFL.

When Holtz left after the 1983 season, he put in the obligatory calls to Switzer and Fred Akers, the coach at Texas by then. They declined, so he turned to his “ace in the hole,” Ken Hatfield at Air Force just ahead of Jimmy Johnson, then coaching at Oklahoma State.

Now we fast-forward to today where Arkansas is back in the search for a coach after the failed Bielema experiment that netted an average of less than six wins a year over his five-year period.

Auburn’s Gus Malzahn is the showcase name floating around out there.

Some thought when the Tigers beat Alabama in the Iron Bowl on Saturday that took him out of the running.

Nope. I still think he’s the first choice for whoever is handling things, although I don’t think anybody has actually talked with Malzahn directly.

There are some up in arms over hurting recruiting by dragging things out, but the truth is every time there’s a coaching change and it’s not simply a matter of moving someone up on the current staff, recruiting falls off.

Texas dropped all the way to No. 25 last year after having to wait until after conference championship weekend to hire Tom Herman. Now? They are sitting at No. 2 in the 247Sports.com’s composite class rankings.

You can’t worry about one year’s recruiting cycle in hiring a new coach. When Alabama hired Nick Saban back in January of 2007 after the NFL season ended, the Tide finished all the way down to No. 12.

Forget about this recruiting cycle. It wasn’t going to be anything special if Bielema had stayed, in my opinion.

But what happens if Auburn beats Georgia on Saturday and gets into the College Football Playoff? Do you wait until possibly the second week of January to hire a coach?

If I thought I could get a coach in the national championship game, I would, but nobody is asking me how to handle it.

One thing I do believe, though, is nobody’s going to wait unless they are given complete assurances from Malzahn that he’s coming regardless of the outcome of the game. If you get a positive there, then you wait.

And there are some who feel that is exactly what Arkansas is waiting to hear from Malzahn’s camp, but they aren’t expecting an answer until after Saturday.

But if he says no, is Memphis coach Mike Norvell the modern day version of the “ace in the hole?”

There are some that believe he should be the No. 1 choice, even ahead of Malzahn. His offense is entertaining to watch. The Tigers hung 70 on East Carolina last weekend and it could have been 100.

Now they play Central Florida this weekend in the AAC championship game in Orlando where, interestingly, nobody is expecting either coach to be at their respective school next season.

Scott Frost is reportedly the main target at Nebraska (is Bret Bielema the ace in the hole there?) and Norvell’s name has been mentioned for several jobs.

We won’t know until Saturday.

But you have to wonder if Arkansas’ ace is Norvell.

Neighbors on trying to find way to start faster

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors wants his team to get off to faster starts, but he’s still trying to figure out how to do it.

Barford leads Razorbacks to easy win over UConn

PORTLAND, Ore. — All the attention will be on the amount of points Arkansas dropped on Connecticut. It got out of hand because of how good the Razorbacks were on defense.

“I thought we had fun playing defense,” Arkansas coach Mike Anderson said. “And that’s what I stressed with our guys coming out early and setting a defensive tone.”

Jaylen Barford scored 16 of his 24 points in the first half, and Arkansas used a huge second-half run to rout Connecticut 102-67 on Sunday in the consolation bracket of the PK80 Invitational.

The Razorbacks (5-1) rebounded nicely from being overwhelmed by North Carolina in the semifinals on Friday.

Arkansas led 45-31 at halftime and blew away the Huskies in the second half thanks to a 19-0 run that gave the Razorbacks a 72-41 lead.

The Razorbacks topped 100 points for the second time this season after scoring 101 in a win over Bucknell.

So while they had fun with all the points being scored, it was predicated by an excellent defensive effort.

“It’s amazing how you do that (on defense) what takes place on offense,” Anderson said. “If your defense is really solid and good and you’re making shots, a lot of good things take place.”

Barford was a spectator for a big chunk of the second half. His 24 points came in just 28 minutes. He was 9 of 12 shooting, including 4 of 5 on 3-pointers. He was the leader of a tremendous shooting performance by the Razorbacks, hitting 60 percent for the game and 65 percent in the second half. Arkansas was 11 of 19 on 3-pointers.

Daryl Macon added 16 points after leaving Friday’s game against North Carolina early due to an ankle injury, and C.J. Jones had 19 points.

Jalen Adams added 16 for the Huskies (4-2), but very little went UConn’s way two days after watching Michigan State run away in the second half for a 77-57 victory. Terry Larrier added 18 points, but left late in the second half with an apparent right leg injury after landing awkwardly. Larrier limped off with 5:45 left.

It was the most lopsided loss for the Huskies since a 40-point loss to Syracuse early in the 1977 season.

“At the end of the day you’ve got to get stops. You don’t get stops, you don’t get in transition, everything gets difficult for us,” UConn coach Kevin Ollie said. “If you look at the game, if you break down tape, we got plenty of shots in the first half that we can make.”

While Arkansas played well for most of the first half, the Razorbacks were dominant the final 20 minutes. After cutting the Arkansas lead to 12 with 15 minutes remaining, the Huskies missed eight straight shots and watched the Razorbacks turn the game into a laugher. Arkansas made 10 straight shots at one point of the second half, the streak finally snapping when Jones’ 3-point attempt from the wing rimmed out with four minutes remaining.

Macon left Friday’s loss to North Carolina early with a leg injury, missing most of the second half. Arkansas coach Mike Anderson was unsure the severity of Macon’s injury but he looked just fine against the Huskies, making 5 of 9 shots and playing 26 minutes.

“I’m in pain right now but I didn’t feel anything during the game,” Macon said.

The Huskies must be more consistent with their 3-point shooting. UConn was 7 of 26 from deep — 26.9 percent. The Huskies started the day shooting just 29.5 percent on 3s this season, including a 0-for-10 performance in the second half against Oregon in the tournament opener.

It’s not often that UConn gets blown out that badly. The last time the Huskies lost by more than 30 points was 2014 when they were handed an 81-48 setback by Louisville.

The Razorbacks stay on the road playing at Houston on Saturday.

Venables’ name pops up in talk about Hogs’ opening

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It really was a just a matter of time before Clemson defensive coordinator Brent Venables’ name surfaced in the rumor mill around Arkansas’ coaching vacancy.

He is considered in some circles as the best assistant coach in college football these days and it’s kinda hard to argue with that.

He’s coached defenses that have played in back-to-back national championship games and won the last one, although it could be argued the defense didn’t exactly slow Alabama down that much in either game.

Barrett Sallee at CBSSports.com placed Venables’ name into the mix along with one we’ve heard numerous times in the past couple of weeks: Mike Norvell at Memphis:

Sources tell CBS Sports that Venables impressed many people tied to Arkansas when he was in Little Rock, Arkansas, receiving the 2016 Broyles Award given to the nation’s top assistant coach. His ability to consistently produce top-tier defenses in conjunction with Clemson’s high-octane, no-huddle offense is a trait that would translate well to an Arkansas program that recognizes the need to be more innovative offensively after Bielema’s more traditional approach never found sustained success.

We’ve heard from folks that Auburn coach Gus Malzahn is still the No. 1 target. Venables offers no quicker hiring options as the Tigers are poised to be in the College Football Playoff if they get past Miami in the ACC Championship game Saturday night.

Plus there’s still that question about whether Venables, who has turned down overtures on other head coaching jobs, is even interested in being a head coach.

“I love my job. I love the simplicity of it,” Venables said in a story with the Charleston Post and Courier in 2014. “I’m not going to be defined by a title or any kind of stature or pay. I just want to make sure I’m somewhere successful and got a quality family life.”

In a teleconference Sunday before the title game, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said nobody’s brought it up to him.

“We are 100 percent focused on Miami. I don’t know anything about that and I never get too worried or focused on any of that stuff,” Swinney said. “There are a million rumors and whatever. Our focus, Brent’s focus is on — I promise you — getting ready for Miami.”

He did say, however, it’s his policy to help his assistants get head jobs if they want them.

“I’ve always had a policy of if guys have opportunities somewhere down the road that they think is good for them, that’s great,” Swinney said. “But nobody’s sitting around worrying about any of that stuff. Everybody’s focused on trying to beat Miami this week. That’s it.”

 

Barford leads Razorbacks’ win over Huskies at PK80

PORTLAND, Ore. — Jaylen Barford scored 16 of his 24 points in the first half, and Arkansas used a huge second-half run to rout Connecticut 102-67 on Sunday in the consolation bracket of the PK80 Invitational.

The Razorbacks (5-1) rebounded nicely from being overwhelmed by North Carolina in the semifinals on Friday.

Arkansas led 45-31 at halftime and blew away the Huskies in the second half thanks to a 19-0 run that gave the Razorbacks a 72-41 lead.

The Razorbacks topped 100 points for the second time this season after scoring 101 in a win over Bucknell.

Barford was a spectator for a big chunk of the second half. His 24 points came in just 28 minutes.

He was 9-of-12 shooting, including 4-of-5 on 3-pointers. He was the leader of a tremendous shooting performance by the Razorbacks, hitting 60 percent for the game and 65 percent in the second half. Arkansas was 11-of-19 on 3-pointers.

Daryl Macon added 16 points after leaving Friday’s game against North Carolina early due to a leg injury, and C.J. Jones had 19 points.

Jalen Adams added 16 for the Huskies (4-2), but very little went UConn’s way two days after watching Michigan State run away in the second half for a 77-57 victory.

Terry Larrier added 18 points, but left late in the second half with an apparent right leg injury after landing awkwardly. Larrier limped off with 5:45 left.

While Arkansas played well for most of the first half, the Razorbacks were dominant the final 20 minutes.

After cutting the Arkansas lead to 12 with 15 minutes remaining, the Huskies missed eight straight shots and watched the Razorbacks turn the game into a laugher.

Arkansas made 10 straight shots at one point of the second half, the streak finally snapping when Jones’ 3-point attempt from the wing rimmed out with four minutes remaining.