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Three takeaways from Tuesday’s practice

1. Storey Has Strong Day With 2s
Head coach Bret Bielema and offensive coordinator Dan Enos added a twist to Arkansas’ 11th practice of preseason camp Tuesday as sophomore quarterback Ty Storey took all the reps with the second-team offense.

Wednesday’s practice will mirror Tuesday’s with redshirt freshman signal caller Cole Kelley taking the second-team reps.

Storey turned in a strong showing Tuesday, particularly when the team moved into the red zone for the last couple of periods. The Charleston redshirt sophomore connected with both sophomore tight end Cheyenne O’Grady and junior college transfer wide receiver Jonathan Nance for touchdowns.

2. Hayden Talks First Scrimmage, Big Run
After leading the way the way on the ground with 110 yards on 16 carries in his first collegiate scrimmage last Saturday, freshman running back Chase Hayden met with the media on Tuesday.

Hayden talked about preseason camp, working his way up to No. 3 on the depth chart, and his solid scrimmage performance, which included an explosive 65-yard run.

3. Florida A&M Prep Continues
With the season opener only 23 days away, the Razorbacks went through their second straight day of “install” in preparation for Florida A&M with the offense and defense working against the scout teams.

The Hogs will be part of the first Thursday night of the upcoming college football season when it hosts the Rattlers in Little Rock at War Memorial Stadium on Aug. 31 at 7 p.m. CT.

The game will be the first-ever meeting between Arkansas and Florida A&M and the first time since 2009 that the Razorbacks will open the season at War Memorial Stadium.

It marks the first time since 2001 when the Razorbacks defeated UNLV that Arkansas will open the season on a Thursday night.

It will also be the program’s first Thursday night game since 2003 when Arkansas took down South Carolina, 28-6. Both of those games were also played at War Memorial Stadium.

Storey on his turn at No. 2 in Hogs’ offense

Bret Bielema informed both backup quarterbacks they would each have a day as No. 2 and Tuesday was Ty Storey’s turn and he talked about it later.

Kelley on competition with Storey for backup role

Arkansas quarterback Cole Kelley met with the media Tuesday and talked about his competition with Ty Storey for the No. 2 spot.

Jackson on scrimmage TD over Pulley

Hogs wide receiver Kolian Jackson talked Tuesday about his scrimmage catch over Ryan Pulley and his dad’s influence.

Hayden on big scrimmage performance, Dad’s advice

Razorbacks running back Chase Hayden talked to the media Tuesday about his big numbers in the scrimmage Saturday.

Jones on adapting to speed of game at college level

Arkansas wide receiver Jordan Jones met with the media Tuesday and talked about the speed of the game and “selective memory.”

Jones in Hall of Fame not shocking now, but in ’89?

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Let’s be honest, you couldn’t have found anyone in February of 1989 that would have guessed Jerry Jones would ever be in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Not even Jerry.

Jones, who became the third Arkansas Razorback named to the Hall on Saturday night, was more worried than he let on, even to his closest friends.

And, for the record, none of them would have guessed it then, either.

Some, including Jones himself, were wondering if he had bitten off more than he could chew.

Being in the Dallas media at the time, I told everyone this would be as different from the Tex Schramm-Tom Landry-Gil Brandt regime as night was from day.

Not knowing Jones well, I did know he had virtually zero experience in dealing with the media and his “Ready-FIRE!-Aim” philosophy was going to cause trouble.

“Oh, no, Jerry,” was muttered more than once by me during the Saturday Night Massacre as it became known. That was the infamous press conference, carried live on at least four television stations in Dallas, that launched his ownership tenure.

There was no advice offered. I heard from folks back in Little Rock that DID know him well it would be a waste of time. I simply observed … and commented.

Legendary columnist at The Dallas Morning News, Blackie Sherrod, began instantly referring to Jones and Jimmy Johnson as the Jaybirds.

To be honest, it was classic Dallas hypocrisy in all it’s shining glory. A town that has always been plastic beyond belief, they instantly rallied around Landry, who was fired hours before the infamous press conference.

That wasn’t Jones, by the way. Former owner Bum Bright hated Landry, who ignored him on a couple of social occasions and blew him off in a couple of phone calls. Bright even called into a talk show to question some of Landry’s decisions in 1988 (which officially meant everybody was doing that).

The fans were almost in panic mode for Landry to either be fired or quit. They were calling into the few sports talk shows daily screaming for him to be fired in a much less diplomatic manner than he was.

Bright sold the team to Jones primarily because he was going to bring in Jimmy Johnson to be the coach. He had others offering more money, but they were keeping Landry. That’s how badly Bright hated Landry.

Schramm, who ran the Cowboys however he wanted for 29 years, had simply ignored Bright’s instructions to fire him two years before and gave him a million-dollar salary instead.

Jerry, to his credit, took the heat in the immediate fallout and never complained. I firmly believe that’s why he took credit for a lot of the things later that Jimmy wanted credit for.

Jerry had bled the Cowboys’ success. Jimmy had only sweated.

Most of the success in the 29 years Jones has owned the Cowboys often hasn’t come from his original ideas. No, most of those have come from his family.

Like he did in the oil business, Jones had no fear of pulling the trigger on risky deals. Some didn’t work out.

He paid millions to engineers only to find out the genius behind original Cowboys owner Clint Murchison, who designed every inch of Texas Stadium, using his MIT engineering education.

Jones wanted a retractable roof on the stadium and about 40,000 more seats. He liked the location and really wanted to stay there … until he found out his improvements couldn’t be done.

Murchison had designed the roof on Texas Stadium to never be able to withstand a retractable roof and it would have cost more to completely tear the top off than it was going to cost for a new stadium.

What he inherited was a franchise losing more than $1 million a year. Even 30 years ago, you had to be spending money like a mad man to come up in the red every year. The Cincinnati Bengals, the lowest team in the league in terms of revenue, was netting well over $5 million a year.

Bad real estate deals, poor marketing decisions, having folks on the payroll that drew enormous salaries and perks for basically doing nothing plus giving away nearly 10,000 tickets a game were all areas Jones could deal with immediately.

Even before the new stadium and The Star in Frisco were conceived, Jones had the Cowboys making money hand over fist.

That’s what got him into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Which still won’t make him very popular for long if the Cowboys don’t win some playoff games. Dallas will nod and say, “that’s great, but what about the Super Bowl?”

For a franchise now on the longest streak in franchise history of not being in the Super Bowl, winning the last game of the year is starting to become a big deal for a fan base that almost demands championships.

And that’s the next problem Jones has to solve.

A gold jacket and a bust in Canton, Ohio, don’t mean that much to a fan base more interested in blue and silver.

Of course in 1989 you couldn’t find anyone who ever thought Jerry would ever get to a Super Bowl without buying a ticket.

Much less win three in four years.

So the smart money isn’t betting against Jerry now.

Former Razorback takes first world title

LONDON — An Olympic champion in 2016, former Razorback Omar McLeod showed the world he has no plans to slow down, capturing his first world championships title in the 110-meter hurdles on Monday evening at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in London.

His gold medal was the first for Jamaica at the 2017 IAAF World Championships and was also the first ever for his country in the 110 hurdles.

“Omar deserves this victory,” said 2015 Russian world champion Sergey Shubenkov. “The Jamaican is just too fast.”

The third-fastest hurdler out of the blocks (.123 reaction time), McLeod’s foot speed was no match for Shubenkov and the rest of the field. He crossed the finish line .10 seconds ahead of the 2015 champion and markedly ahead of their fellow competitors.

“This one is special, honestly,” said McLeod. “There was a lot of pressure coming in but I channeled it positively. I had to do it the ‘Omar McLeod’ way. It’s totally different to last year where we had Usain [Bolt] and Elaine [Thompson] winning, which I used to propel me. I didn’t have that this time so I really wanted to come out and shine my own light.”

McLeod may get a chance to win another world gold for Jamaica as a member of the nation’s 4-x-100-meter relay pool with the revered Usain Bolt. The 4-x-100 relay preliminary round will be held on Saturday, Aug. 12 at 4:55 p.m. CT.

In the field, Clive Pullen finished with a best mark of 15.61m/51-2 3/4. He was unable to get on the board during his first two attempts, struggling to find his rhythm after a two month hiatus from competition.

“Clive was ready and excited to compete tonight,” assistant coach Travis Geopfert said. “The big break from competition caused him to struggle a bit technically. He’s of course very disappointed but he’ll pick himself up, brush himself off and will be back to show the world what he can do. That’s simply the type of competitor he is.”

Survive and Advance
NCAA bronze medalist and rising Arkansas senior Kemar Mowatt qualified for the 400-meter hurdle finals with the second-fastest non-automatic qualifying time of 48.66. Mowatt’s section, which featured reigning Olympic gold medalist and two-time world champion Kerron Clement, was the fastest of the three.

Mowatt’s performance would have earned him a heat-win in both section two and section three of the 400 hurdles semifinals.

“It was a good race but it wasn’t a perfect race,” said assistant coach Doug Case. “He [Mowatt] ran the first 200 really well with a really fast split. At the end he just clipped that 10th hurdle but he was on his way to a really great race. I think he can contend in the finals. He’s ready to run really, really fast. If his last hurdle is clean, he runs a much better race and I talked to him about that already.”

Up Next
ProHog Stanley Kebenei will look increase the Arkansas men’s track and field 2017 worlds medal count to three, racing the steeplechase finals tomorrow at 3:10 p.m. CT. Kebenei heads into the finals with fifth-fastest time in the event this season.

World championships coverage will begin at 1:30 p.m. CT on NBC Sports. Fans can also follow the live results HERE.

Date: Aug. 4-13
Venue: London Stadium at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park
Important Link: Meet Central (Schedule, Live Results, IAAF Radio and Athlete Stats)
Broadcast Schedule: NBC (see table below)

Arkansas Entries (12)
• Bahamas – Tamara Myers (Triple Jump)
• Jamaica – Kemoy Campbell (5,000), Omar McLeod (110mH), Kemar Mowatt (400mH) and Clive Pullen (Triple Jump)
• Slovenia – Tina Sutej (Pole Vault)
• Trinidad & Tobago – Sparkle McKnight (400mH)
• USA – Daina Harper (4-x-400m Relay), Andrew Irwin (Pole Vault), Stanley Kebenei (Steeplechase), Jarrion Lawson (Long Jump) and Sandi Morris (Pole Vault)

Arkansas World Championships Medalists (Chronological)
• 1983: Mike Conley (Long Jump – Bronze)
• 1987: Mike Conley (Triple Jump – Silver), Roddie Haley (4-x-400m Relay – Gold)
• 1991: Mike Conley (Triple Jump – Bronze)
• 1993: Mike Conley (Triple Jump – Gold)
• 1997: Erick Walder (Long Jump – Silver)
• 2005: Wallace Spearmon Jr. (200m – Silver)
• 2007: Tyson Gay (100m – Gold, 200m – Gold, 4-x-100m Relay – Gold), Wallace Spearmon Jr. (200m – Bronze, 4-x-100m Relay – Gold)
• 2009: Tyson Gay (100m – Silver), Wallace Spearmon Jr. (200m – Bronze)
 2017: Jarrion Lawson (Long Jump – Silver), Omar McLeod (110mH – Gold)

Agim on growing up in Texarkana, better defense

Defensive tackle Sosa Agim met with the media Monday and talked about how the defense will be better and growing up in Texarkana.

Morgan on differences with brother, new defense

Redshirt freshman Grant Morgan talks about differences with his brother Drew, the new defense and how playing smart helps.

Coley talks about scrimmage, improvement

Defensive back De’Andre Coley met with the media and talked about his improvement, scrimmage and more.