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How Morris could be hottest search name

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As we start to fall into the name game in the coaching carousel, there are already rumblings from around the world of college football about possible coaching changes.

This year much of that is swirling out of Dallas, Texas. Chad Morris is only in his third year with SMU, yet has made the type of consistent progress you see in winning coaches (2-10, 5-7, 5-2 in year three) and is suddenly the hot name in the search circles.

His availability may affect decisions made on current coaches and whether a school will pull the plug or not.

Just to give you a quick background on why Morris is so hot, it’s simple: Recruiting, recruiting, recruiting. Everything he does is based on recruiting, including his house in Dallas which includes a lot of of amenities specifically targeted at recruits.

He is a native of Texas, won state championships in Texas high school football and is instantly accepted in every high school in the state.

His last class at SMU is 100 percent Texas signees, which is the first time in school history that’s happened. The results on the field are starting to show. Going into Friday night’s game against Tulsa, the Mustangs could become bowl eligible in the eighth game of the year.

Expect a tough fight, though. SMU has gotten alumni together like Eric Dickerson, Craig James and others to do whatever has to be done to keep Morris in charge of the Mustangs. The boosters have the resources to top any offer made by any other school in the country (their banking school is one of the largest in the country, so, yeah, money is kinda their thing).

Morris put together the offense Clemson has used to reach the national title game two years in a row. He was also the second choice at Texas Tech (they hired Kliff Kingsbury) and Ohio State (they hired Urban Meyer).

The groundwork has been laid for a wild, wild crazy year of coaching movement, especially in the SEC.

Possible SEC openings

• Arkansas: Bret Bielema is 10-26 in the SEC at four and a half years into his tenure with the Hogs. Sitting at 2-5 overall and 0-4 in the SEC, the Razorbacks will have a shot at a win Saturday as Ole Miss is viewed as being in total disarray. Realistically, this team is going to have to catch a team asleep (or in a coma) to make a bowl game this year. Luckily he’s at Arkansas otherwise he would have been gone two years ago.

Morris would be a dream candidate in Fayetteville. He could be the one person to bring back the Texas recruiting that has dropped off dramatically the last 10 years. He has an offensive style that is geared to take advantage of what players he has and doesn’t try to fit players to his system.

• Ole Miss: Matt Luke was named the interim coach and not the permanent coach for a reason. They will be in the hunt for a new coach this year and it will be intense.

In Oxford, Morris is so attractive for the same reasons as Arkansas. The Rebels’ third largest booster club is in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. They have a large, large percentage of students from Texas.

• Texas A&M: Kevin Sumlin was probably dismissed by many in the Aggie Nation back in September when he lost the opening game to UCLA, blowing a huge lead. Since then, he’s won almost every game, losing only to Alabama.

Quite frankly, Morris’ availability may be what forces them to pull the trigger if they are convinced they would be better with him than Sumlin. Tom Herman at Houston probably caused two coaches to be fired last year in Les Miles at LSU and Charlie Strong at Texas.

Morris graduated from A&M in 1992 with a math degree, but he didn’t play there, although once an Aggie always an Aggie.

• Tennessee: It’s almost a foregone conclusion that Butch Jones is not going to be back in Knoxville next season, although it’s still 50-50 he makes it to the end of the year.

Many Vol fans are still thinking they are going to land Jon Gruden. The rest think they will get Chip Lindsey. But it’s likely Morris’ name will pop up somewhere in the search.

Those are just the schools in the SEC. It’s not exactly a guarantee that Morris wants to be jump into that deep water that is filled with bloodthirsty sharks.

But it’s close to a guarantee he’ll have the opportunity to say no in a couple of months.

Arkansas’ Barford after winning opener

Arkansas’ Jaylen Barford talked with the media after the win in the exhibition opener over Central Oklahoma.

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.