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Winning at Ole Miss a must to stay at least mediocre

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Saturday’s game against Ole Miss down in Oxford may be bigger than just one game or one season.

There is a case to be made that it’s a turning point for Arkansas’ entire football program, which has been steadily trending downward since 2011.

That was the last year the Razorbacks finished the season in the Top 5.

Just a couple of months later, athletics director Jeff Long placed himself in charge of the football program, whether he wants to admit it or not.

Interestingly enough, that’s when the trek towards mediocrity began in earnest. By 2015 it was so in place people were actually buying into a 7-5 regular season being a measure of success.

Few realized that, well, apparently that was the new standard for the program. There didn’t appear to be any urgency about getting better.

That was not what Frank Broyles envisioned when he brought Arkansas to the SEC back in 1992.

“There was only one thing Frank Broyles and I agreed on,” former coach Jack Crowe said this week from Birmingham where he spends his days hanging out with Alabama-Birmingham coach Bill Clark as they rebuild that program.

Crowe was there when the Razorbacks made the switch from the Southwest Conference to the SEC, a league where they would, as Joe Kines said at the time, “slit your throat and drink the blood.”

“What Frank and I agreed on was we couldn’t let going to the SEC change the expectations,” Crowe said.

In those days, winning seven games in a season meant you didn’t have the greatest job security in the world with Razorback fans.

Now, with an athletic director who only “wants” to win (but not at all costs, as he said in Little Rock in September), seven wins appears to be the Holy Grail of a season for Razorback football that is careening wildly toward one of those drop-offs in the Boston Mountains.

While mathematically still possible, you can’t find three people in the whole state who actually believe that’s a possibility. That includes the players and coaches on the current team, by the way, if they’d tell you the truth.

At Arkansas, winning doesn’t appear to be that big of a deal to the powers that be in Fayetteville.

“The SEC is quite different now than when Arkansas joined because of the economic model,” Crowe said. “It’s more like the NFL where the brand is what matters.

“It breeds mediocrity.”

It has at Arkansas, where it appears the only people that matter are the ones who purchase luxury boxes and ESPN. The average fan and the average media are just things that have to be tolerated.

After a week where the Hogs looked like a junior varsity team against Auburn, they played how they looked — bad. Whoever signed off on letting an Arkansas team play a football game where you couldn’t see the Hog on the helmet made a breathtakingly stupid decision.

In the SEC, where the league office does it’s best to control every minute detail, only one school really just kind of nods … then goes out and does what is best for them.

That’s Alabama, the school closest to the league office, who pretty much is focused on winning football games. When it comes to the SEC, they go along with the recommendations they agree with and quietly do things their way with the rest.

“These schools take the control away from the head coach,” Crowe said.

How? Follow the money. Schools make the coaches rich so they can control him. At Alabama, Nick Saban is so rich because he wins and the school uses the football team’s success as the primary marketing tool for the entire university.

Robert Witt, who was Alabama’s president at the time of Saban’s hiring and is now the chancellor, told The New York Times a couple of years ago hiring Saban was the university’s wisest investment.

After he was hired, the campus surpassed a $50 million capital improvement campaign by $52 million, and he has been a key to reaching a $500 million campaign for the university at large. That had nothing to do with sports improvements.

They use the football team to recruit for the entire school. All Arkansas does is give Texas high school students a break on tuition to get them to come to Fayetteville in ever-increasing numbers.

It hasn’t been the same influx in football players, which is a huge difference from Crowe’s time in Fayetteville.

“It was a great move for Arkansas to go to the SEC, but when it was announced I had a problem,” he said. “I had to fight to keep them together because over half the team was from Texas.”

Which brings us back around to why this week’s game with Ole Miss could be a huge turning point for the program.

A loss drops the Hogs to 2-6 on the season. That means the improbable best they could do mathematically is 6-6. I think that’s pretty close to the definition of mediocrity.

A loss will likely mean, at best, a 4-8 team.

That could spell, at the very least, a coaching change. Long, who doesn’t like to take ownership of anything, will likely put that off on the Board of Trustees like he does everything else he doesn’t want the blame for. Whether it puts Long on the hot seat or not depends on who you talk to.

Replacing the coach will not be easy because, despite what many fans believe, it doesn’t always come down to money.

Barry Switzer had chances to come back to Arkansas on at least a couple of occasions when he was at Oklahoma.

“Tyson doesn’t have enough chickens in the state to put up with what you have to put up with in that state,” he told some people.

That’s a problem for next month, though.

Right now, it appears that there may be more than the football coach needing a win over Ole Miss.

Of course, that’s just to stay in the mediocrity conversation.

Arkansas looks to extend title streak in Athens

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas women’s cross country will travel to Athens, Georgia, for the Southeastern Conference Championship Friday Oct. 27 in quest of its fifth-consecutive and 18th overall SEC cross country title.

“This is one of those highlight events that our legacy lives by,” coach Lance Harter said. “We’re excited about the opportunity. This year there are more ranked teams than I can remember.”

The Arkansas Twelve

While only five score, Arkansas will compete twelve runners in Athens, the maximum allowed by the league. Coach Lance Harter will field the same group of runners this weekend that ran for a first place finish at the Riverside Invitational 6K (Sept. 19) and a third place finish at the Pre-Nationals 6K (Oct. 14); in addition to the group that took first at the Chile Pepper Festival and the Riverside 5K.

• Sydney Brown
• Ashton Endsley
• Lauren Gregory
• Therese Haiss
• Nikki Hiltz
• Maddy Reed
• Alex Ritchey
• Greta Taylor
• Carina Viljoen
• Taylor Werner
• Ruth Wiggins
• Devin Clark

Rankings Check
No. 6 Arkansas holds its highest national ranking since the conclusion of the 2015 season when it finished ranked No. 5. No. 16 Georgia and No. 22 Ole Miss join Arkansas as the only conference teams ranked for the championship.

The Razorbacks are looking to match their streak of five-consecutive league titles from 1991-1995 and 1998-2002. No other team in the SEC has won more than three-straight. The women’s track and field and cross country programs have won 10-consecutive conference championships dating back to the 2014 outdoor season, which is the longest streak in conference history. Since joining the league in 1992, Arkansas has won 17 of the 25 conference titles in cross country.

Back Where It All Started
Arkansas officially joined the SEC in 1992, but the men’s and women’s cross country teams were the first to compete in SEC events in the fall of 1991 as Harter’s Razorbacks won the school’s first ever Southeastern Conference title. 2017 marks the first time the championship will be held in Athens since 1991.

SEC Championship Totals (Since 1983)
Arkansas (17), Florida (6), Tennessee (5), Kentucky (3), Alabama (2), Vanderbilt (1)

The Razorbacks have faced SEC competition in three races during the regular season, including facing six conference foes at Pre-Nationals. Arkansas also faced Alabama at Riverside and Notre Dame, finishing ahead of the fastest Crimson Tide runner in both events.

SEC Participant Results Pre-Nationals (Points)
3. No. 9 Arkansas – 148
6. No. 25 Georgia – 236
9. No. 12 Ole Miss – 360
24. No. 24 Missouri – 666
33. Tennessee – 820

Back Where It All Started
Arkansas officially joined the SEC in 1992, but the men’s and women’s cross country teams were the first to compete in SEC events in the fall of 1991 as Harter’s Razorbacks won the school’s first ever Southeastern Conference title. 2017 marks the first time the championship will be held in Athens since 1991.

The event is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. central time with the women’s races beginning at 10 a.m. A one-hour SEC Cross Country Championships highlight show will air Sunday, Nov. 5 at 11 a.m. CT on the SEC Network. Live scoring will be available at SECSports.com, and Primetime Scoring.

2017 Cross Country Schedule
Fri, Sept. 1 – Cowboy Duals (Stillwater, Okla.) 2nd of 4
Sat, Sept. 16 – Riverside Invitational (Riverside, Calif.) 1st of 29
Sat, Sept. 16 – Southern Stampede (Joplin, Mo.) 5th of 32
Fri, Sept. 29 – Joe Piane/Notre Dame Invitational (South Bend, Ind.) 4th of 20
Sat, Sept. 30 – Chile Pepper Festival (Agri Park) 1st of 45
Sat, Oct. 14 – Pre-Nationals (Louisville, Ky.) | 1st of 43
Fri, Oct. 27 – SEC Championship (Athens, Ga.)
Fri, Nov. 10 – NCAA South Central Regional (College Station, Texas)
Sat, Nov. 18 – NCAA Championship (Louisville, Ky.)