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Is ‘disagreement’ routine or warning sign for Hogs?

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This has been a strange and interesting couple of weeks.

First, we have Bret Bielema and his coordinators telling us how close this team is to “being something to be proud of.”

Now that is a statement that over the last 40-plus years I’ve only heard from coaches talking about getting a team to .500. Every single time that phrase was uttered, that was what he was talking about.

None of them made it, in case you’re wondering.

What you expect to hear from coaches in their fifth season at a school is how close they are to competing for a championship, not something the fans can be proud of.

And, quite frankly, it may be another sign Bielema has no clue what the Arkansas fan base wants or expects. It’s been clear for awhile Jeff Long doesn’t have a clue, but there was some hope Bielema was kinda getting it.

But apparently not.

Is this a team that is teetering on the edge of implosion?

That leads us to the second, a “minor incident,” as Bielema termed it Thursday. It may have been just that.

Even if it was it may be a warning sign.

This team hasn’t played like a real cohesive unit at any point this season. Don’t throw the Florida A&M game out there, either. The Hogs saw better players every day in practice.

But is it a clue to the second-half collapses that have become a habit?

We were told by the national media’s talking wags that Bielema teams are physical and they grind you down as the game goes on.

Over the last four seasons plus two games that has rarely happened and in most cases the Hogs were the ones being ground down. That gives you a 26-27 overall record and an average of 2.5 wins in the SEC per season.

No one at this point is expecting a repeat of that first Bielema season. Not even me.

For starters, the SEC is not as strong as it was then. Alabama is still, well, Alabama, but everybody else is a week-to-week proposition.

The Razorbacks haven’t improved as much as the rest of the league has backed up to let Bielema and the Hogs get on the bus.

You have one team in the league everybody else really respects and a bunch of others that folks are giggling at right now. Don’t throw bowl games up as being representative of anything anymore. Too many players opting out of playing that extra game before going to the NFL Draft.

No, the SEC is not what it once was top to bottom, mainly because the better coaches now are in the ACC and Big 10. Interesting that Bielema was in the Big 10 when it was as weak as it has been in awhile, comes to the SEC and sees it fall into the tank.

While there isn’t a program out there that takes three years to completely rebuild, Bielema has gotten the benefit of the doubt from a forgiving fan base.

But you get the idea from talk shows and our own Facebook posts that the time for forgiveness has passed.

The fans want — and expect — wins now.

Losing to TCU is one thing. The way the Hogs lost that one is what has everyone chafing.

Now we hear they were close, which is Bielema’s go-to phrase that we’ve heard since 2013. We were told it was going to be special and how close the Hogs were for four years.

If Bielema thought 2015 was a success, he didn’t understand the situation. It was successful only if things improved in 2016 and 2017.

Now we have at least one incident of players fighting in the lockerroom and it being dismissed as, ho-hum, it happens every day.

There may be some extra conditioning, but coaches can’t even do that much anymore because the players will quit and transfer somewhere else. They are doing it in record numbers these days.

No, this is a team we suspected back in fall camp wasn’t exactly brimming with talent in the lines or with proven playmakers at the skill positions.

Nothing we’ve seen in the first two games has changed that.

And now there is an incident with the No. 1 running back and a wide receiver that hasn’t been in a game this season.

You hope it’s not a warning sign. But the question is out there now, in the back of fans’ minds if nothing else.

And it will linger for awhile.

Until there are some wins.

UPDATE: Bielema says Whaley cleared to play

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Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said on his radio show Thursday night that running back Devwah Whaley has been cleared to play against Texas A&M on Saturday.

“He’s ready to play,” Bielema said of Whaley, the starter for the Hogs.

“How many times are 21-year-olds in an disagreement? Devwah is excited to play in the game in his home state.”

Bielema termed it as an altercation between two players and dismissed it as something happens on a fairly frequent basis.

Earlier Thursday, reports from multiple sources of unrest in the Arkansas football locker room, including a scuffle Wednesday between Whaley and backup wide receiver Brandon Martin.

Thursday, Whaley tweeted that he was traveling with the team to Saturday’s game in Arlington with Texas A&M, but didn’t mention playing.

Whaley, a sophomore from Beaumont, Texas, is the second leading rusher on the team with 92 yards on 22 carries through the first two games.

Martin, a junior college transfer from Gulf Coast Community College and a Monroe, Louisiana, native, hasn’t caught a pass this season.

The scuffle reportedly ended with Whaley’s jaw catching the brunt of it.

The status of any injuries is not known at this time or if any disciplinary action has been taken.

HitThatLine.com and ESPN Arkansas have reached out to the Razorbacks’ sports communications department, but have not received a reply.

We will have further updates as the story develops and on The Morning Rush in the morning.

Is A&M’s running game all Hogs should worry about?

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All we heard Wednesday from Arkansas’ defensive players and coaches was about stopping Texas A&M’s running game.

That’s mainly because Trayveon Williams, Keith Ford and Kendall Bussey have shown they can, at times, be among the best backfield groups in the SEC.

The Razorbacks are certainly preparing for that.

“Our philosophy is to stop the run, so we’ll start there,” linebackers coach Vernon Hargreaves said Wednesday.

The players have all bought in, too.

“Each of them have their great abilities and each of them have their different spots in the way they run the zone,” sophomore linebacker Scoota Harris said of the three running backs.

And if the Hogs have a special plan they weren’t disclosing it.

When asked what the key is to stopping A&M’s running attack, Sosa Agim had a fairly well rehearsed answer.

“Again, penetration in the backfield, being quick off the ball, making the tackles, gap responsibility also,” he said. “Making the tackle is one of the biggest things, I think, because these backs can go up under you, go around you, go through you also, so you have to be ready for all three styles.”

Which is pretty much the case every week.

Texas A&M has had a good three quarters of one game — their opener against UCLA.

The fallout from the collapse of that game has dominated all conversations in Aggieland.

The one things we haven’t heard a lot about is wide receiver Christian Kirk, who got a couple of mentions earlier in the week, but hasn’t been heard from since.

Everyone is saying all the correct and proper things.

But the guess here is the Hogs’ coaching staff really doesn’t know what to expect. Texas A&M didn’t show much in their last two games against Nicholls and Louisiana.

They didn’t have to. They won the games and did just enough to accomplish that.

Oh, the fact that Nicholls tied them at 14 heading into the fourth quarter was good for some to read more into it than what it was. The Aggies turned it on and put the game away rather quickly.

Against Louisiana, they stumbled and bumbled through a first half, turned it on in the second half and ran away with a fairly comfortable margin.

The mistake many people make is thinking a college football team is focused for 12 weeks and for every minute of every game.

Never has happened in the history of college football.

Every team has a game or two where the focus isn’t there and every game has moments where the focus isn’t there. It’s not a lack of effort, but just one of those things.

And, yes, it happens at Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State and every school in every game, regardless of opponent.

If teams are lucky they pull it together in time to win. If they aren’t, then, well, you have what happened to LSU against Mississippi State last Saturday night.

All of that is a rambling way to say don’t read a whole lot into the Aggies’ last two games. Considering the magnitude of a total faceplant on national television in a prime time spot, the guess here is took a week and a half to get over it.

That means what the Hogs are likely to see Saturday is more of what UCLA saw in the first half of that game and less of what Nicholls and Louisiana saw in the next two games.

Which is why Arkansas better be ready for a passing game they have zero film on. It wouldn’t be out of character for Kevin Sumlin to work on a passing attack for Kellen Mond that he hasn’t shown in the last two games that really meant absolutely nothing.

That is why all this talk from the Hogs about the Aggies’ running attack may not be the key to the game.

Is there a plan if Sumlin resorts to his old Houston Cougars offense where he’s using a form of Bobby Petrino’s shallow cross passing attack?

Mond can make those throws.

And Kirk can be a problem for the Hogs on those routes.

But, hey, we’re just guessing here. We don’t have a clue what A&M has planned for the Razorbacks.

The hope is the Hogs do.

Hogs sweep Tennessee in SEC opener in straight sets

FAYETTEVILLE — Behind a balanced attack featuring 19 combined kills from middle blockers Elizabeth Pamphile and Kelly O’Brien, Arkansas posted a straight-set victory over Tennessee in Wednesday’s SEC opener.

Redshirt senior Pilar Victoria led all players with 17 kills and the Razorbacks registered seven service aces on their way to a fifth-consecutive win.

With the win, Arkansas improves to 11-2 overall and 1-0 in league play.

The Razorbacks return to their home floor Sunday afternoon to host third-ranked Florida. First serve of the weekend finale is scheduled for 1 p.m. (CT) at Barnhill Arena.

Single match tickets are $5 while UA students and fans 17 years and younger receive free admission with a valid ID.

FINAL
Arkansas 3, Tennessee 0 | Box Score
Attendance: 833 | Time: 1:26
Barnhill Arena (Fayetteville, Ark.)

#RazorStats

  • Leaders vs Tennessee
    • Kills: Pilar Victoria – 17
    • Digs: Okiana Valle – 11
    • Blocks: Pilar Victoria – 4.0 (1-3)

Pamphile and O’Brien each tied their respective career highs with 12 and seven kills, respectively, and combined for a .517 hitting percentage. The pair also contributed defensively with three total blocks each.

Sophomore setter Rachel Rippee had 39 assists in the match and guided the team to a .291 hitting percentage. Reagan Robinson and Hailey Dirrigl added seven and six kills, respectively.

Victoria, the reigning and three-time SEC Offensive Player of the Week, added seven digs, four total blocks and two service aces to her kill production.

With 17 kills against Tennessee, she continues her run of having at least 15 kills in each match this season.

Junior libero Okiana Valle paced a trio of double-digit performers with a match-high 11 digs. Seniors Kori Ortiz and Krista Kolbinskie each had 10 digs.

Arkansas led throughout the opening set, building an early 9-5 lead after back-to-back-to-back kills by Robinson that forced Tennessee (7-3, 0-1 SEC) to use its first time out.

The visitors pulled to within two at 14-12 but the Razorbacks won four of the next five points for an 18-13 advantage.

Arkansas won the last three points of the set, securing the frame with a service ace by Rippee for a 1-0 match lead.

After dropping the first point of the second set, the Razorbacks rattled off six of the next seven to seize control of play. The lead reached as high as eight points after a block by Pamphile and Victoria gave the home team a 14-6 lead.

The Volunteers never got closer than three points in the set and a tandem block by Dirrigl and O’Brien took Arkansas to set point at 24-19. The ensuing play featured a kick save by Rippee that extended a rally that was eventually ended by Victoria’s 11th kill.

With the score tied at 5-all in the third set, Tennessee used a 4-1 surge to go ahead and used a block to further its lead to 11-7.

However, the Razorbacks responded to tie the score on a Dirrigl kill and take its first lead of the set at 15-14 with an ace by Valle.

Looking to post its seventh sweep of the season, Arkansas turned a 7-1 push to turn a tie score into a 22-16 lead with a kill by Pamphile. Tennessee saved three match points but Victoria closed out the match with a kill down the line.

Agim: Stopping Aggies’ running game big key

Arkansas defensive lineman Sosa Agim met with the media Wednesday and talked about how stopping A&M’s rushing attack a key.

Harris on calling defenses, stopping A&M running

Hogs linebacker Scoota Harris met with the media Wednesday and talked about making the calls on defense and stopping the Aggies’ running attack.