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A lack of leadership surrounds Hogs football

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Jeff Long probably welcomes his responsibilities with the College Football Playoff committee each week this month.

It gets him out of Arkansas.

Tuesday someone told me Long was the modern-day equivalent of Nero, who is often accused of fiddling while Rome burned back in July of 65 A.D.

While there is no known evidence that Long even knows HOW to fiddle, Nero didn’t do that. For starters, the fiddle wasn’t even invented until the 11th century when the class of musical instruments known as the viol was invented. At least that’s what musical experts believe.

Then there is the fact Nero wasn’t even in Rome during the Great Fire. He was at his villa in Antium, roughly 35 miles from Rome, although he hustled back to blame some Christians for the fire, then executing them.

History does show that Nero was an ineffectual leader in time of crisis.

But the comparison with Long is something many Arkansas fans are thinking right now.

Over Long’s tenure as athletics director it’s appeared his style of leadership is to wait until the bandwagon gets rolling … then throws himself under it.

Many fans like to give him credit for a variety of things that really were going to happen whether he was here or not. Some of the other great things he gets credit for are really smoke and mirrors, some fans believe.

Right now, though, with a football program that has careened off course over the past 12 months, the fan base is looking for someone to take a leadership role and do something.

Instead, Bret Bielema continues to sound more and more like a guy who started off nearly five years ago with a great plan that has never really come together. With almost every press conference he sounds more lost and confused than the last one.

Don’t tell me about that little stretch in 2015 when they finished the season on a hot streak against some unmotivated opposition to reach a staggering 7-5 season, then won in the Liberty Bowl against an overmatched Kansas State team.

That was the high point of Bielema’s run.

Yet, some (mostly Bielema himself) like to point out how close those teams were to something much, much greater.

What nobody points out is they were just as close to total disaster during that time so it all kinda balances itself out, doesn’t it.

As Bill Parcells said about football teams one time, you are what you are.

What Arkansas football has become under Bret Bielema is something very, very average in the best of times.

That is #uncommon for Razorback football, so at least Long got that marketing slogan accurate for football, although it wasn’t the original intent.

In his decade of running things in Arkansas athletics, Long’s leadership has led to one football coach that ran wild for four years with no adult supervision, another one that spent a year auditioning to do standup comedy and hiring a coach with zero experience rebuilding a program or coaching anywhere in the South.

While some will argue there’s more to an athletic department than football which is technically accurate, but literally flat-out wrong.

An entire university in the SEC is defined by the football program (with the notable exceptions of Kentucky, which has basketball, and Vanderbilt, which is on a different academic level than everybody else).

That’s right … the football program is THE most valuable tool for the ENTIRE university.

At Arkansas, some feel it’s been without leadership for about, oh, roughly 10 years or so. The record has gone consistently downhill and is now in the worst shape it’s been since World War II.

Yes, that’s how bad it’s become.

And the person responsible for the leadership is, well, off trying to decide which four teams will play for the national championship.

Normally, that would be a plus.

Instead, many see it as a lack of leadership from the director of athletics at the largest and most high profile business entity in the state.

The general view among a growing number of fans is the leader is fiddling while Razorback football burns to the ground.

It’s Jeff Long’s move, unless those above him make it for him.

Remember, he’s quick to point out that he merely makes recommendations on anything negative, but the final decision is up to the chancellor, president and Board of Trustees. He’s said that about playing games in Little Rock and other matters.

It could be interesting to see what decisions they would make if they decide to suddenly actually become leaders.

Allen on layoff, getting back in shape for LSU

Arkansas quarterback Austin Allen talked with the media Tuesday for the first time in several weeks about preparation for LSU.

Cantrell on fumble, playing against LSU

Arkansas tight end Austin Cantrell talked with the media Tuesday about his fumble against Coastal Carolina and what they’re expecting against LSU.

Lunney on playing in Tiger Stadium in 1993

Arkansas tight ends coach Barry Lunney met with the media Tuesday and talked about playing in Tiger Stadium against LSU in 1993.

Smith on recruiting finds in Louisiana, impact of game

Arkansas wide receivers coach Michael Smith talked with the media Tuesday about recruiting in Louisiana and how LSU game affects those players.

Whaley talking about LSU’s big, athletic defense

Arkansas running back Devwah Whaley met with the media Tuesday and talked about how LSU’s defense compares to Alabama, Auburn.

Bielema tap dances again while fans look for leadership

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Bret Bielema is now reduced to babbling in double-speak about who Arkansas’ quarterback is going to be against LSU on Saturday.

Yes, apparently it has come to that. It actually looks and sounds like a program run by a guy wearing shorts and flip-flops to work.

He was asked on more than one occasion about who the starter will be and he didn’t have an answer he could settle on … or would settle on.

You can hear the complete press conference here.

Apparently he thinks it matters to LSU.

“Anything that could be a strategic advantage for us, whether it’s the quarterback or how much T.J. (Hammonds) is gonna play or whether or not we’ve done certain things with him, (it’s) better staying in-house and showing up on Saturdays,” he said Monday at his press conference.

Uh, Bret, the Tigers really don’t care who you put at quarterback. Playing a cat-and-mouse game with who you’re going to start under center is hilariously silly.

The truth is he probably doesn’t know.

In over 40 years of doing this whenever a coach starts tap-dancing on who’s going to play quarterback he’s flailing like a drowning man who’s already gone under once.

Bielema is starting to sound like a buffoon in press conferences lately. Monday, at times it sounded like Kelley might be the starter, then he mentioned Allen being able to start and finally he wrapped it up by indicating it might be Kelley again.

Again, Bret it won’t matter.

LSU just finished beating up Alabama everywhere but on the scoreboard. The Tigers held Alabama to just 116 yards rushing for the entire game. The Crimson Tide had 106 on Arkansas in the first quarter.

No, LSU does not care one iota which quarterback is under center. Defensive coordinator Dave Aranda and his defensive line coach, Pete Jenkins (one of the great defensive game planners of all time), are going to do the same thing they’ve been doing lately.

There are a small group of Razorback fans who point to 2014 and 2015 as examples of the Hogs playing well against the Tigers, which are true. But things have changed in Baton Rouge.

And Fayetteville

Les Miles had a tendency to let losses to Alabama get him down and it was reflected in his team’s play.

Ed Orgeron doesn’t care. Aranda and Jenkins don’t care who the opponent is or the personnel they are facing because the game plan is basically the same every single week.

And this Arkansas team couldn’t block LSU’s second team and most of the third team.

Yet Bielema somehow thinks playing these little games will somehow help his team. It would invoke more respect if he just stepped up to the mic and announced a starter.

Instead he tap-danced his way through another press conference where he expressed confidence in both Cole Kelley and Austin Allen.

Offensive coordinator Dan Enos said whoever is the most healthy and gives the Hogs the best chance to win will get the majority of the reps.

Okay. We didn’t realize that.

At Monday’s press conference, it sounded for the most part like a head coach going through the motions of a season that is heading towards the ditch in a hurry.

Oh, they are 4-5, but it’s two points away from being 2-7, which would qualify as a nine-alarm dumpster fire. Instead it’s just your garden variety three-alarm fire.

And the future doesn’t look bright.

LSU is this week. They just got through holding Alabama to under 300 yards of total offense while putting up 306 yards of offense on that Tide defense.

After that is Mississippi State.

They are 7-2 overall and will probably be 7-3 when they come to Fayetteville in a couple of weeks after playing Alabama this week.

Then comes Missouri, who somehow seems to have righted their ship a little and can score points in bunches.

While Bielema is babbling on in Johnny Sunshine coach-speak while looking like a coach ready to go on vacation in shorts and flip-flops (seriously, that’s how he showed up at Monday’s press conference), the fan base wouldn’t particularly mind if he went ahead and left … now if not sooner.

He has lost the Razorback fan base. While the shorts and flip-flops were kinda cute to some fans five years ago, now it just looks like a guy making millions cruising his way to the finish line.

It’s a time where leadership is needed to pull football — the most visible marketing tool the University of Arkansas has — out of the misery it has become.

Yes, misery with back-to-back wins that leave nobody feeling positive about the direction of the program.

And fans wondering where the leadership is.

Enos knows Tigers’ defense will be tall task for Hogs

Arkansas offensive coordinator Dan Enos talks about the quality of LSU’s defense the Hogs will face Saturday.

Bielema talks about close win, looks ahead to LSU

Arkansas coach Bret Bielema talked with the media Monday about the narrow win over Coastal Carolina and looks ahead to LSU.

Bielema on Kelley’s injury to toe, called very minor

In the second part of Bret Bielema’s time with the media Monday he talked about quarterback Cole Kelley in a boot on a minor toe injury.

Rhoads on LSU’s tall, physical athletic wide receivers

Razorbacks defensive coordinator Paul Rhoads expects LSU’s tall, athletic receivers to be physical and pose matchup problems.