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Hogs scrimmaging three times over next three days

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas’ fall season went into full swing earlier this week.

To cap its first set of practices, the team will be scrimmaging today through Saturday inside Baum Stadium.

Today’s scrimmage is scheduled to start at 7:05 p.m., while Friday’s will start at 4 p.m.

Saturday’s scrimmage before the football game will be at 10 a.m. All scrimmages will be played at Baum Stadium.

In the case of any inclement weather, the team will move the scrimmage indoors to the Fowler Center and it will be closed to the public.

Thursday Scrimmage – 7:05 p.m.
Friday Scrimmage – 4 p.m.
Saturday Scrimmage – 10 a.m.

Arkansas opened its 2017 fall practice on Tuesday and head coach Dave Van Horn welcomed back 28 returning players and 16 newcomers.

Among those returning players, seniors Carson Shaddy and Luke Bonfield, as well as junior Blaine Knight headline the squad that hopes to improve on the team’s 45 wins from a season ago.

In what will be the second season under pitching coach Wes Johnson, Arkansas brings back a number of arms from a year ago that helped the team reach the SEC Tournament final and host the NCAA Regional for the first time since 2010.

Knight comes back after making 16 starts and compiling a 3.28 ERA over 90.2 innings. His eight wins were good for most on the team and was the most by a Razorback pitcher since 2014.

Joining Knight, Arkansas will get to utilize a healthy Isaiah Campbell and Keaton McKinney, who both were shut down early in the spring with arm injuries.

McKinney was a freshman all-american two years ago and Campbell made six starts as a freshman and looks to be able to shore up a strong rotation.

Offensively, Arkansas returns some of its best bats in recent years. Both Shaddy and Bonfield will be back in the lineup as both hit over .270 last year with 17 home runs and 89 RBIs combined.

Along with them, junior shortstop Jax Biggers returns as the Razorbacks’ top hitter, coming off a year where he hit .338 in 63 games with four home runs and 37 RBIs.

Freshman All-American Dominic Fletcher will captain the outfield as Arkansas’ returning centerfielder. Fletcher was one of the best hitting outfielders in the SEC last season.

His .291 average was second among all SEC freshmen, while his 12 home runs were first and was the most by an Arkansas freshman since Zack Cox hit 13 in 2009.

The baseball team will play its annual Fall World Series at Baum Stadium next month with dates still to be determined.

All practices and scrimmages are open to the public throughout the fall, weather permitting.

Long shouldn’t pass on The Great Stadium Debate

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Get ready.

Like it or not, we’re going to have a few months of The Great Stadium Debate. Should Arkansas play football games at War Memorial Stadium or not?

Athletics director Jeff Long discussed it at the Northwest Arkansas Touchdown Club on Wednesday.

Considering the lack of attendance at last Thursday’s season opener against Florida A&M, he really didn’t have much choice. Attendance was announced at roughly 36,000. To these old eyes that must have included about 5,000-7,500 disguised as empty seats.

“We had hoped for more,” Long said.

The reality was he was clutching for some sort of answer of what to do in Little Rock when they put the game there. Attendance has been going steadily downhill over the last five years.

“We thought that moving the game to Thursday night would create an energy on opening night of college football and create a little more juice to the game against an FCS opponent,” Long said Wednesday.

Apparently, once again, nobody in Fayetteville talked to anybody in Central Arkansas that had much of a clue. Since it was announced, many fans considered that game to be a slap in the face more than anything else.

For a fan base where many in the age (and income range) to solidly support the program remember when four games a year were played there, scheduling Alcorn State last year and Florida A&M this season were just not acceptable.

The truth of the matter is Long is walking a political tightrope and, to a certain extent, not one he should be worried about.

When the Razorbacks played four games a year in Little Rock, Fayetteville and Springdale were nice towns, but not many people. Rogers and Bentonville were sleepy little towns.

As the population exploded over the last 15 years or so, things changed. As Frank Broyles rather inelegantly put it about that time, things were growing at a pace that the Hogs didn’t need anything but Northwest Arkansas.

That was after improvements to highways with a new interstate and airport that totally changed the dynamic. No longer did you have to negotiate two-lane highways for much of the trip from Pine Bluff to Fayetteville … it suddenly was all interstate, all the way.

Personally, I thought in 1978 they should fix up Razorback Stadium and implode War Memorial. Up until maybe 17 years or so ago when it rained you got wetter standing under the stands than you did in the stands.

The place was a dump.

It’s not a dump anymore, but it’s nothing close to an SEC stadium. They can talk about the warmth, coziness and whatever about War Memorial, but it’s still a WPA stadium that, because of federal regulations, can only be upgraded so much.

Long should just be honest with the fan base and say it’s not in the Razorbacks’ best interest to play games there anymore.

Instead, he’s trying to pass it on.

“We believe in honoring the contract,” Long said Wednesday. “We have a contract through ’18 and we have a contract to play an SEC game in ’18, so I fully intend … to honor that contract.”

Whether he would publicly admit it or not he’s fully aware contracts are simply the starting point for negotiations to break them.

And it appears he doesn’t want to be the fall guy.

Long will make a recommendation to chancellor Joe Steinmetz. The decision will ultimately rest with president Donald Bobbitt and the Board of Trustees.

“I hope we don’t turn it into a statewide debate or referendum,” Long said Wednesday. “There are certainly people who can make the decision and make it in the best interest of the university and the state, and the system.”

That was obviously more wishful thinking than reality. The ship has sailed on not having a debate on the whole thing. It’s also a debate that won’t go away, even after a decision has been made.

It would be nice to see Long step up and clearly make a statement about what’s in the Razorbacks’ best interests. He has the numbers. He knows any public backlash will be short-lived at best.

It’s time, Jeffrey, to step up and make that statement.

Don’t try to pass this one.

As the old coaches’ saying goes, three things happen when you pass and two of them are bad.

Smith on Cornelius’ return, Jackson injury, more

Arkansas wide receivers coach Michael Smith met with the media Wednesday and talked about how the wide receivers shape up for game.

Anderson talks Clary, Malone, TCU’s defense

Arkansas offensive line coach Kurt Anderson met with the media Wednesday and talked about Ty Clary, Deion Malone and TCU.

Cornelius healthy, looking forward to playing Frogs

Jared Cornelius met with the media Wednesday and said he’s 100 percent for Saturday’s game against TCU.

Auburn’s recipe for success against Clemson

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SEC Network’s Jordan Rodgers and Marcus Spears break down why RB Kam Pettway and the run game are key against Clemson.

Arkansas loses Jackson with ACL knee injury

Arkansas has lost another player for the season, although in reality it was one expected to redshirt.

Koilan Jackson, one of the top recruits this past season, was injured Tuesday and will have surgery for an ACL injury.

“Koilan is playing wide receiver and is a guy who in high school played quarterback, wide receiver and a little bit of everything,” Bret Bielema said during Wednesday’s SEC teleconference. “He’s a guy who very well versed in football. Unfortunately yesterday afternoon in one-on-one drills he tweaked his knee.

“He has got an ACL repair job to do. He is gonna have to go through this week or next week when the swelling goes down.”

Bielema said Jackson wasn’t likely to play this year as it was, but still a loss.

“He is a guy who was probably gonna redshirt for us,” Bielema said. “This is a negative moment for anyone to go through, but he’s a very strong young man with a great family. We will put him with some great doctors, he will get that thing repaired and he will be a 100-percent in the spring.

“Unfortunately those things come up, but on the flip side of it he has got a redshirt year and plenty of time to get it right.”

. He was in the mix to play at wide receiver though it appeared he was likely going to redshirt. He was injured on Tuesday and now will not only redshirt, but have surgery for an ACL injury.