Arkansas wide receivers coach Michael Smith talked about the emergence of Jonathan Nance as a playmaker against Texas A&M.
Alvarez subtly points out problems Bielema, Long have
If Bret Bielema and Jeff Long will bother to listen, Barry Alvarez told everyone Monday what the problems are at Arkansas.
Very, very subtly.
Alvarez was in Little Rock on Monday talking to the lunch bunch at the Little Rock Touchdown Club and the timing was good, considering the state of affairs with Arkansas football these days.
He simply pointed out that what Bielema wants to do at Arkansas is what they did at Wisconsin. If you are able to listen to it carefully, then take in the big picture he also pointed out that might not be the best approach.
“If I were coaching in the southwest or the southeast where I had access to a lot of skill players I’d probably run some things different than I do at Wisconsin,” he said.
Well, that’s something a lot of us thought back on that December day in 2012 when Bielema was hired as the Arkansas coach and spent most of that first press conference telling us how he did it at Wisconsin.
I thought at the time that wasn’t going to work at Arkansas.
Five years into this and it’s not. Bielema’s teams haven’t been particularly physical, especially the last two years. They are actually more of a passing team than a running team.
Bielema obviously didn’t follow Alavarez’ advice of tailoring what you want to do based on the players you can recruit.
“When I took the job I looked at the state of Wisconsin and you have some of the biggest people in the world there,” Alvarez said. “You look at our nationalities and they’re German, they’re Scandanavian, they are big people. You have a camp and you have guys that are 6-6, you have more 300 pounders than you can shake a stick at. Now, not a lot of speed there, not a lot of speed in our state.
“For me to say you’re going to spread it out and throw it around, you’re not very smart. Now we’re going to get some, one here, one there. But you don’t have an over abundance (of speed).
“We devised our plan around the type of guys we could recruit. We’re gonna be good in the offensive line, we’re going to run the ball, we’re going to be physical, we’re not going to beat ourself.”
That is a subtle message for anyone paying attention. In Wisconsin, there were linemen like Bielema prefers growing on trees.
Not in Arkansas.
It’s becoming crystal clear Bielema’s style isn’t going to work at Arkansas without some major modifications.
“When you’re in the Southeastern Conference you have access to a lot of great athletes,” Alvarez said. “When I was at Notre Dame I could get into anyone’s living room. You have to do a good job of evaluating.”
Which is not something Bielema has been particularly great at. Oh, there have been some really good players come through. It’s not like we’re saying he’s batting all zeroes.
But he’s not getting near enough. Not to win in the SEC. Not to compete for championships, which is something Arkansas has only been remotely in the conversation about once —2015 — since Bielema came here. That chance of a title was so remote as to be virtually impossible and actually is embarrassing to mention, but I’m trying to be a little positive here.
“First of all, you have to know what you want to do,” Alvarez said. “I think I know what Bret wants to do. Bret’s gonna be very similar to what we’ve done. I see his lines, big lines, physical teams, but you have to evaluate what’s coming out.”
He did say if you could get that style working it would be something other teams would have a difficult time preparing for, but it all comes down to evaluating talent, then coaching that talent up to play at a championship level.
For going on five years now, Bielema has not shown an ability to do that at more than a very, very mediocre level.
And, we’ve heard the tired line about how nobody wants to win more than the coaches and players.
But that’s the difference between champions and mediocrity.
Champions HAVE to win. Nick Saban HAS to win. Urban Meyer, too. Dabo Swinney HAS to win. Chris Peterson, too.
You get the idea winning is something Bielema and Long want to do, but they aren’t going to go into a fainting spell if they don’t.
And Long basically mortgaged the football program’s future after the Texas Bowl in 2014 by giving Bielema a ridiculous buyout on a contract for a 6-6 regular season.
As we said at the time, that’s what happens when you have someone not from Arkansas or the SEC trying to make a decision and bringing in somebody that knows less about those two areas.
“You better be smarter than the agent,” Alvarez said Monday.
He didn’t mention anyone in particular and tried to generalize it, but everyone in the room was thinking about Long and that $15 million-plus buyout on Bielema’s contract.
“You’ve got the last word, he doesn’t,” Alvarez said of dealing with agents. “We have never guaranteed the entire contract.”
Of course, it’s not just Long’s responsibility. The Board of Trustees had the final say and they obviously weren’t paying attention or just didn’t care.
“That’s the obligation of the administration,” Alavarez said. “It’s good business. I see schools that are paying tens of millions of dollars to guys that aren’t coaching.
“We had a school in our league that was paying two football coaches, two basketball coaches $10 million and they’re not around. It’s five years down the road and they’re still not around and you’re still paying them. That’s bad business.
“It’s bad enough you hired somebody that didn’t fit, that didn’t win, but to not protect your school with liquidated damages that’s just bad business.”
And that is something Razorback fans are saying every day.
Although not as nicely.
Razorbacks post lowest rounds of year at ‘Bearcat’
CINCINNATI, Ohio. — No. 19 Arkansas used 38 birdies and one eagle on Monday to fire its two lowest rounds of the year and sit in second place at the Bearcat Invitational at Coldstream Country Club.
The Razorbacks are holding strong against some of the best teams in the nation, as No. 7 Kentucky leads the way at 21-under, while Arkansas is lurking at 17-under. Ohio State (-14), Mississippi State (-13) and No. 17 Illinois (-12) round out the top five.
Arkansas will tee off Tuesday morning looking for consecutive team victories for the first time in six years, and seeking multiple wins in a season for the second straight year and the sixth time in the last eight seasons.
Alvaro Ortiz continues his torrid pace this fall, recording a pair of 4-under 67’s to sit T-4th overall at 8-under par. He rolled in nine birdies on the day, including five during the afternoon round. Ortiz goes for his third straight top 10 finish of the year on Tuesday and his second collegiate victory.
Mason Overstreet finds himself in the top 10 again after a 4-under 67 in the morning round and a 1-under 70 in the afternoon. He rolled home nine birdies on the day and has four consecutive rounds under par.
William Buhl and Dylan Naidoo are tied for 25th overall at even par, while Luis Garza (T29) and Charles Kim (T49) round out the team.
Arkansas will tee off Tuesday morning at 8:35 a.m. with Ohio State and Kentucky.
Razorback Lineup Day 1 Results
T4. Alvaro Ortiz 67-67—134 (-8)
T10. Mason Overstreet 67-70—137 (-5)
T25. William Buhl 70-73—142 (E)
T25. Dylan Naidoo 74-68—142 (E)
T29. Luis Garza 75-68—143 (+1)
T49. Charles Kim 74-72—146 (+4)
Bearcat Invitational Day 1 Results
1. Kentucky 278-269—547 (-21)
2. Arkansas 378-273—551 (-17)
3. Ohio State 283-271—554 (-14)
4. Mississippi State 279-276—555 (-13)
5. Illinois 275-281—556 (-12)
6. Middle Tennessee 283-276—559 (-9)
7. Louisville 278-284—562 (-6)
T8. Cincinnati 287-281—568 (E)
T8. Michigan State 286-282—568 (E)
10. Akron 292-277—569 (+1)
T11. Xavier 294-282—576 (+8)
T11. College of Charleston 292-284—576 (+8)
Bielema: No apathy from Razorback fans now
Bret Bielema showed Monday he’s either not understanding of the Arkansas fan base … or he refuses to believe it.
At his press conference Monday, he was asked about fan apathy.
“What’s apathy?” he asked. “The fans don’t care? No, I think they’ve shown they care a lot. That’s a bad adjective.
“The part that we sense from our players is, again, they’re disappointed, they’re upset, but this one was more of an anger factor that they … certain things happened that … I know our defense guys were frustrated, thought they had a third down stop and it didn’t end up being one.
“That turns out to be a bit of anger afterward. We gotta make sure it’s channeled the right way.
“Offensively, second to last play of the game, we have one that’s an open touchdown and it ends up being out of bounds, so that turns to anger when you see it.
“As far as fans having angst, after the definition you gave that they don’t care I’ve seen the exact opposite.”
He was asked again if he saw a problem.
“Not from what I’ve seen of Arkansas,” he said, apparently trying to convince himself as much as anyone else. “I’ve been overwhelmed at the positive things, the mail, the e-mail, people stopping you walking out on Saturday, the comments … I realize there’s negative people out there … I don’t hear from them or see them … I think our players probably see it a little more than us, but I would think the exact opposite.
“I think they’ve demonstrated they care a lot and I think that’s a positive thing.”
Either Bret isn’t paying attention (which calls some other things into question) or he’s denying the reality, based on what we hear and see.
He could look around to see that many fans are simply throwing up their hands over the state of the Razorbacks.
Being 1-2 is part of it. Six straight losses to Texas A&M in a showcase game adds to the problem.
Not having any noticeable improvement in his program, though, is the biggest problem.
While many in the fan base simply have said they don’t care, others are, well downright upset over the downward spiral of this football program over the last five years.
Bielema can say what he wants about being close, but that’s just trying to put a happy face on a program that is mired in mediocrity, which is not something the fans are used to.
While Arkansas has not been a program to rip off a run like Alabama is enjoying under Nick Saban, the fans have gotten used to eight and nine-win seasons regularly with the occasional 10-win season in there and maybe one, at the most two, down years every decade.
Bielema and the coordinators Monday tried to put some narrow-minded spin control on things, but here’s the actual facts:
• In the first three games of each of his five seasons, the only Power 5 win is over Texas Tech in 2014.
• Saturday’s loss was to a team that played 17 freshmen extensively.
• Defensive coordinator Paul Rhoads said the Hogs only missed two tackles the entire game, basically saying it was about as well as they can play defensively.
• According to offensive coordinator Dan Enos, they are still trying to find answers at wide receivers, especially now with Jared Cornelius out for the season with an Achilles injury.
So, to summarize, in yet another 1-2 start to a season (it’s the third time under Bielema), the Hogs played about as well as they can defensively and gave up 43 points in regulation to a team playing 17 freshmen — including a true freshman quarterback — and they lost their only experienced wide receiver.
Add to that the rather startling statistic that 38.8 percent of the Hogs’ tackles in the game were made by two linebackers — Dre Greenlaw and Scoota Harris. Yes, that number is accurate, well over a third of the tackles by two players.
And that freshman quarterback, Kellen Mond, ran for 109 yards. It would have been 119 if an official hadn’t gone brain dead and blew the play dead, which turned out to be huge for the Hogs because it never would have gone to overtime if the correct call was made.
On that play, what maybe is more telling is the fact that nobody on the Hogs’ defense really caught him. Oh, Josh Liddell got close enough that Mond stopped and carried him the final 10 yards into the end zone, but he was so wide open it looked like Arkansas’ entire secondary ran to the A&M sideline.
No, this team has bigger problems.
The biggest is a lack of quality players, which falls directly on Bielema’s shoulders.
If that’s the best Bielema can do in five years, then THAT is why the fans are mad and disgusted.
All the way through August, I said we won’t know what this team is until after the Texas A&M game and 1-3 at that point could be disastrous.
We have a pretty good idea what this team is now.
Most of the fans do, too.
Which is why Bielema will probably learn first-hand that apathy is directly related to those empty seats at Razorback Stadium.
And that, friends, is the worst thing of all.
Enos on young receivers, ‘Steamboat Package’
Arkansas offensive coordinator Dan Enos met with the media Monday and talked about losing Jared Cornelius and special packages for Cole Kelley.
Rhoads says defense missed just two tackles
Arkansas defensive coordinator Paul Rhoads on Monday told the media there were just two missed tackles in the game against Texas A&M.










