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Does comeback outweigh start in final analysis?

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However they got it, Arkansas’ 38-37 win over Ole Miss on Saturday was still a desperately-needed victory.

There will be those that nitpick every aspect of it, but they won a game they probably had absolutely no right to win.

That counts, too. Despite the fact both teams appeared at times to be auditioning for a Keystone Kops football movie.

And, despite what Bret Bielema said later, it only proved the Razorbacks aren’t the worst team in the SEC West.

That’s it.

“I know you guys get your panties in a wad with me talking about being close,” he said. “But we have been. We were close against A&M. We were close in the fourth quarter against TCU.”

All that can really be said about that is the Hogs were close in 2014 to Alabama and still finished 6-6 in the regular season.

They were close to Mississippi State in 2015 and had a field goal blocked at the end and finished 7-5 in the regular season.

Last season, they were close to beating Missouri and lost to finish the regular season at 7-5.

Bielema may not like it, and he even admitted close only counts in dancing and hand grenades, but that’s just excuses for being mediocre in the past.

The jury is still out on this season. Mathematically, they can still finish with seven wins. If they do it will create a whole slew of other questions, but we’ll cross that bridge when it comes.

The question for fans — and people making bigger decisions — is if the comeback (the largest in school history) outweighs the disastrous start they had.

The only thing they were close to Saturday in Oxford was avoiding a complete disaster.

Yes, the Rebels are that big of a mess.

Teams in their position usually fold up the tent at the first hint of adversity. The Rebels pretty much did that when Hogs safety Santos Ramirez knocked the ball out of tight end Octavius Cooley’s grasp to kill what was looking like another quick Ole Miss scoring drive.

Arkansas took advantage of one of the worst defenses in the history of the SEC and got a couple of quick scores before halftime to cut the lead to 31-21.

Then the Hogs got the ball first in the third quarter and cut the lead to 31-28 and the game was on.

It came down to Connor Limpert kicking a 34-yard field goal at the end for a one-point win over a team that has the worst defense in college football, particularly against the run.

Opponents have averaged 260 yards a game running the ball on the Rebels this season.

Arkansas’ total?

That same 260 yards. Which is the average.

Whey they kept doing goofy stuff with formations and quarterback Cole Kelley faking dribbling while dropping back on a fourth-down play are mystifying, they somehow found a way to win.

So there is that.

But there are still more questions than good answers with this team.

Yes, they did get a win after trailing at halftime, a first under Bielema. They did finally beat a Power 5 opponent for the first time in nearly a year. They were able to kick a field goal at the end to win a game.

You would probably feel better if it was against an SEC team that wasn’t in the depths of misery of the Ole Miss program.

Bielema, tired of all the problems in the second half, changed things up this week.

“it wasn’t anything magical,” he said later. “It was about making plays.”

It was also having the Rebels as the opponent.

With Coastal Carolina coming up next week, they will be 4-5 headed into the final quarter of the season.

Whether you think they’ll make a bowl from that spot or not depends on how you answer the question: Was the comeback bigger than allowing the hole to be dug requiring it?

Limpert field goal gives Hogs first SEC win

Arkansas kicker Connor Limpert drilled a 34-yard field goal with four seconds left in the fourth quarter to give the Razorbacks a 38-37 victory over Ole Miss Saturday afternoon in Oxford, Mississippi.

Hogs land commitment from power forward

Scotty Thurman has spent a lot of time in Las Vegas, but he wasn’t gambling.

He hit on a winner Friday night anyway.

Power forward Reggie Chaney of Findlay Prep, located in Henderson, Nevada, just south of Las Vegas, committed to the Hogs privately Friday night and made it public Saturday, according to Richard Davenport at WholeHogSports.com.

Chaney, 6-8, 230 pounds, chose Arkansas over Texas A&M, TCU, Oklahoma State and Wichita State.

“It just felt right,” he told WholeHogSports.com.

As a junior, he averaged 11.2 points, 7.3 rebounds, 1.3 assists, 1.6 steals and a block a game for the 33-4 Pilots. He and fellow commitment, guard Jordan Phillips, officially visited Fayetteville Sept. 15.

He becomes Arkansas’ sixth commitment for the 2018 class.

Oral commitments are non-binding.

Hankins on how much he appreciated game with Hogs

Central Oklahoma coach Tom Hankins talked after the game about he much appreciated the opportunity for the Bronchos to play the Hogs.

Barford, Macon lead Hogs to win over Bronchos

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas opened exhibition play Friday with a 78-66 win over Central Oklahoma.

Arkansas opened the game on a 7-0 run to grab the early lead, only to be matched by seven straight by the Bronchos, tying the contest at the 14:01 mark of the first half. Senior guard Daryl Macon scored six straight, part of the Razorbacks 8-0 run, to stretch it back out to a 15-7 Arkansas lead.

After missing its first three field goal attempts, Arkansas sank eight of its next 11, including four straight from deep to extend its lead to double-digits. The Bronchos kept interesting y, never letting Arkansas build a lead larger than 13 in the first half. UCO managed to bring Arkansas’ lead to eight, before settling for a 10-point halftime spread.

Senior guard Jaylen Barford led all scorers in the first half, tallying 15 of his 19 points. Macon was the only other player in double-figures by the intermission with 10 of his own. Barford finished the contest with 19 points, a game-high six assists and five rebounds. Macon finished with a game-high 23 points on 7-of-12 shooting, including making all seven free throws.

The Razorbacks opened the second half on a 7-0 run to stretch their lead to 17 at 52-35. Despite the quick start, Arkansas struggled from the floor in the second half, going 11-of-25.

It allowed the Bronchos to keep up. With just over a minute left in the game, UCO cut the Arkansas lead to six at 72-66, before Arkansas scored six straight to close the game out, forcing two late turnovers.

The Razorback defense forced 17 turnovers, as big man Daniel Gafford had a game-high three steals. Gafford finished with eight points in seven rebounds, four offensive, in his first action as a Razorback.

Senior guard Anton Beard was the third Razorback in double figures, as the North Little Rock native finished with 12 points and three assists. The Razorbacks distributed the ball well, totaling 20 assists.

Five Razorbacks brought down at least five boards, as senior forward Trey Thompson led the way with eight and sophomore forward Adrio Bailey tied Gafford with seven. Sophomore guard C.J. Jones posted eight points and tallied five rebounds.

Arkansas returns to action next Friday, as the Razorbacks close out exhibition play against Missouri Western inside Bud Walton Arena at 7 p.m.

Hogs In Exhibitions

  • Arkansas improves to 13-0 in exhibition games under head coach Mike Anderson.
  • The Razorbacks have won those 13 games by an average of 31.1 points.
  • During Anderson’s 15-plus years as a head coach, he is 31-0 all-time in exhibitions.
  • Dating back to a 74-47 victory over Texas A&M Commerce to open the 2004-05 season, Arkansas has won 27 consecutive exhibition games.