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Is there really a winning culture in place with Razorbacks from the top?

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Athletics director Jeff Long’s tweet has gotten a lot of attention, but maybe the deeper impact is lost in the autopsy of a football season that careened wildly into a ditch.

Just how deep the ditch is won’t be known for at least another year, maybe two.

Long’s tweet sounded more like a plea to ticket-buyers and financial boosters than anything else.

Razorback Nation I reject notion the sky is falling! We are strong & will make changes to become stronger! We will fight we will !

The first thought a media person at another state in the SEC said upon seeing it was, “the College Football Playoff is in trouble if that’s the level of knowledge deciding who should be in the playoffs.”

More fans would have been happier with a tweet that seven wins in a season is not acceptable at Arkansas.

And it shouldn’t be.

Hearing that it’s a rebuilding project worked fine in 2013 and maybe 2014. There were a couple of wins in that latter season that, in retrospect, should be viewed more as what the other team didn’t do as opposed to what the Hogs did.

The bigger problem is that we have a four-year body of work and there are some trouble trends that if Long isn’t looking at, then he’s the one that’s going to have the problem.

Under Bielema, the Hogs can’t close out games.

In four years, there have been 14 games where Arkansas was leading at halftime they’ve ended up losing. In six of those games the Hogs were leading in the fourth quarter.

Winning half of those games and Bielema’s record is 32-19 and we’re having an entirely different conversation.

Getting beat from the start, but keeping it close is a sign you just need a few more players. Blowing leads in the second half — particularly the fourth quarter — falls squarely on the coaches.

You have to wonder if it’s a cultural thing.

Has Arkansas’ expectations from within the university’s athletic department changed?

Many former Razorbacks are baffled that not even being in the chase for a championship every year is not the mandate from the highest places in the athletic department.

Don’t believe the hype, either, which often gives you a false sense of achievement. Some could say that in 2015 the Hogs were in the SEC West race late, but that required a sense of hopefulness not even the most rabid fan could muster.

Again, if the expectations at the top aren’t clearly defined, everybody is in total confusion. There are examples in the last couple of decades where not having expectations at the top to match the fan base has led to the ouster of athletic directors and, in a couple of cases, the presidents of universities.

That’s how you build a winning culture.

Long has said wins and losses aren’t the measure of how a program should be judged.

Sounds good.

Unless you’re in the SEC where it makes you sound like an idiot.

Or a Vanderbilt fan.

 

Saban confident Kiffin leaving will help Tide or he wouldn’t be going

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Despite all of the unreported drama around Alabama and Lane Kiffin for the past few weeks, there’s really only one reason he’s headed for Florida Atlantic a week ahead of schedule: Nick Saban thinks he can win that way.

“We made the decision because it was in the best interest of our players, our program and for Lane for him to assume his duties at Florida Atlantic,” Saban told ESPN on Monday. “We mutually agreed that this was best for both programs.”

Steve Sarkisian, named a couple of weeks ago to replace Kiffin, will take over for Monday night’s national championship game against Clemson.

Saban said Sarkisian, who had already been named Kiffin’s successor, will be in charge of Alabama’s game plan for the championship game.

Kiffin said he expects an easy transition for Sarkisian, noting how Sarkisian’s personality should mesh better with Saban’s than his did.

“I’m not saying it’s bad with him at all,” Kiffin said earlier about the change. “I would say Sark manages people better than I do.”

“This wasn’t an easy decision and we appreciate the way Lane handled this in terms of doing what is best for our team,” Saban said in a statement from Alabama. “At the end of the day, both of us wanted to put our players in the best position to be successful.

“Obviously, we are in a unique situation here where we have our next offensive coordinator already on staff. We have full confidence that Sark will step in right away and make this a smooth transition.”

Kiffin this is the best move for everyone.

“After going through these last couple of weeks, trying to serve the best interests of two universities as an offensive coordinator and a head coach, it became apparent that both programs would be better served by me giving all my time and efforts to being the head coach at FAU,” Kiffin said in the statement. “After meeting with Coach Saban during preparations last night and this morning, we mutually decided that it was in everyone’s best interests for the players and the program for Coach Sarkisian to take over all responsibilities as offensive coordinator for the championship game.

“This was a very difficult decision, but it’s a decision made in the best interests of the program. I look forward to helping Alabama win another championship, and would like to thank Coach Saban, the staff, and all the players and fans for the past three years at UA for an unforgettable time and championship run. Roll Tide!”

In the semifinal game against Washington,

Saban could be seen on the sideline yelling at Kiffin during the first quarter after a three-and-out on the opening series.

Against Washington, the Crimson Tide’s offense struggled as quarterback Jalen Hurts had a season-low 57 yards passing.

Make no mistake about it, Saban felt something wasn’t right.

And making the change gives Alabama the best chance to win the game.

In an unprecedented move, Saban will add another notch to his coaching lore if it works by making the coordinator change at a time most wouldn’t dare.

But that’s only if it works.

Which Saban feels it will.

Hogs go on road to face Tennessee in second SEC game

Arkansas opens the calendar year on the road Tuesday evening, traveling to Knoxville, Tenn., to face the Volunteers at 5:30 p.m. in Thompson-Boling Arena.

The Rundown
Date:
Tuesday, Jan. 3
Tip-off: 5:30 p.m. CT
TV: SEC Network
WatchESPN:
Click Here

The #Fastest40 Facts
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Arkansas has equaled its best 13-game start in the Mike Anderson era with an 11-2 record. The 2014-15 team opened the year 13-2.

• After Thursday’s loss to Florida, Arkansas checks in at No. 41 in the latest NCAA RPI. The Razorbacks are one of 10 league teams with a top 100 RPI, with Tennessee moving up 37 spots to No. 65 after a road win at Texas A&M.

• Arkansas is looking for its third straight SEC road win after ending last year with victories at Tennessee and Alabama.

• Arkansas’ eight-game winning streak entering SEC play was its longest under head coach Mike Anderson in the last six years. The program’s previous eight-game winning streak came in the 2008-09 season with 10 straight victories.

• Arkansas has recorded runs of at least 10-0 on 13 different occasions this year, including a season-high 21-0 run against Austin Peay on Dec. 3. The Razorbacks have multiple 10-0 runs in five of 13 games this year.

• The Razorbacks have held opponents scoreless for three-plus minutes 22 times this year, including at least once in 10 of 13 games this season. Arkansas held UT Arlington scoreless for a season-best 7:11 during the second half, going on a 15-0 run.

• The Razorbacks have pulled down 10-plus offensive rebounds in 14 straight games, the longest streak under Anderson. Arkansas is scoring 16.1 percent of its points on second chance opportunities this season, good for 13.3 points a game.

The Rocky Top Series
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Arkansas is 18-19 all-time against Tennessee, including four straight victories against the Volunteers. A win Tuesday would mark the longest win-streak by either team in the series.

• Mike Anderson is 5-2 all-time against Rick Barnes, with five of the seven meetings taking place when both coaches were in the Big 12 Conference. Anderson is 2-0 since Barnes moved to the SEC.

• The Razorbacks have road wins over 10 different SEC opponents in the last three-plus years, joining Florida (11) and Kentucky (13) as the only schools to accomplish the feat.

Rebels hold off Arkansas late for SEC win, 73-64

OXFORD, Miss. – Arkansas rallied late but was unable to complete the fourth-quarter comeback, falling 73-64 to Ole Miss on Sunday afternoon in The Pavilion at Ole Miss.

Trailing by as many as 22 points in the fourth quarter, Arkansas (11-3) went on a 14-0 run over 4:23 to pull within eight, 67-59, with 2:41 left in the game.

Arkansas got to within eight on two different occasions in the final three minutes, but they were unable to draw any closer. Erika Sisk hit a key lay-up for the Lady Rebels (12-2) with 2:06 left to end a 5:19 scoring drought.

Keiryn Swenson led all scorers with 19 points on 6-of-13 shooting, including 4-of-9 from 3-point range. Jessica Jackson recorded her second straight double-double, the 15th of her career, with 11 points and 10 rebounds.

Jailyn Mason also tallied her second consecutive double-double, finishing with 10 points and 10 assists. Alecia Cooley added 12 points.

Ole Miss held a decisive advantage inside, outrebounding Arkansas 50-33, including 18-6 on the offensive glass. They outscored Arkansas 44-20 in points in the paint. The Lady Rebels outscored the Razorbacks 30-15 in the third quarter, including an 11-0 run in the period.

Arkansas returns home for back-to-back home games, beginning with its SEC home opener against No. 5 Mississippi State on Thursday night with a tip-off set for 7 p.m.

Key Run
After Arkansas had pulled to within two, 34-32, with 8:02 left in the third quarter, Ole Miss answered with a 16-3 run, including 11 straight to end the run, to lead 50-35 with 3:32 left. Ole Miss was 7-of-9 from the floor, while Arkansas was 1-of-8 from the floor during that span.

Notable
• Arkansas saw its two-game win streak against Ole Miss snapped and is now 16-26 all-time against Ole Miss, including 2-16 in games played in Oxford.

• Arkansas is now 4-21 in SEC openers, since joining the league for the 1991-92 season. Arkansas last won an SEC opener during the 2005-06 season.

• Arkansas used the same lineup from its 101-40 win over Houston Baptist on Wednesday: Jailyn Mason, Devin Cosper, Keiryn Swenson, Bailey Zimmerman and Jessica Jackson.

• Arkansas was held to a season low for first-quarter points (8) and tied for a season low for first-half points (26). The 30 points allowed by Arkansas were the most allowed since changing to quarters.

• Arkansas and Ole Miss combined for 53 first-half points, 33.9 percent shooting from the field and 11.1 percent shooting from 3-point range. Both Arkansas (26) and Ole Miss (27) set season lows for first-half points.

• Jessica Jackson has scored in double figures in all 14 games this season, finishing with 11 points, and is averaging a team-best 17.6 points per game.

• Jailyn Mason scored in double figures for the third straight game and recorded a double-double for the second straight game. She has 24 assists and just two turnovers in 109 minutes over the last three games.

• Keiryn Swenson scored 20-plus points for the second straight game and scored in double figures for the seventh time this season, tied for the second-most on the team.

• Alecia Cooley scored in double figures for the third straight game, finishing with 12 points in her second consecutive game off the bench. She has seven games in double figures, tied for the second-most on the team.

• Arkansas was outrebounded 50-33 and outscored 44-20 in points in the paint and 16-6 in second-chance points.

Up Next
Arkansas returns home for back-to-back home games against No. 5 Mississippi State on Thursday and LSU on Jan. 8. The Razorbacks play four of their first seven SEC games at home in Bud Walton Arena.

Bless Jeff Long’s heart, he just really may not get it with Hog fans

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Either Jeff Long can’t really read the Arkansas football fan base or, well, he just doesn’t care.

In what is becoming something some view as a trend, Long took to Twitter on Sunday and tried to calm the waters of discontent after the Razorbacks’ meltdown in their last two games against Missouri and Virginia Tech.

And promptly opened a door he may not be able to close easily.

While that may have sounded like a good idea before hitting the final button to submit it, you have to wonder if he really believes it. Fans wasted little time responding.

Long’s marketing gadgets may be backfiring as well, which was something predicted in these quarters when they came out with the hashtags #NeverYield and #Uncommon.

Several fans took to Twitter to point out that yielding is becoming a pattern in football the fans are starting to tire of.

As for the #Uncommon tag, well, the last four years of Razorback sports in football and basketball have indeed been very mediocre, which some could argue is very common.

When the Hogs blew a 24-7 lead at Missouri, the initial reaction was to just chalk it up as one of those things that happen. Then folks started looking at the history over Bret Bielema’s tenure.

Blowing second half leads is not unusual.

Having it happen again in the Belk Bowl, combined with a player shoplifting from the title sponsor’s store and a player ejected for spitting on another player has made the seat upon which Bielema sits suddenly become very warm.

One problem is there doesn’t appear to be any hope of a quick fix.

The other problem is Long seems to be fairly content with mediocrity. Standing three feet away from him at the end of the Little Rock embarrassment against Toledo in 2015, one expected to see something.

Instead, Long turned and walked back up the tunnel to the locker room … quickly. No, he didn’t wait to stand by his coach. You didn’t expect him to walk on the War Memorial Stadium field and fire him on the spot, but you’d think he’d at least stand by Bielema.

When it was compounded by a loss the next week against Texas Tech, there were still no public demands made from Long, who tends to shy away from that sort of thing which some perceive as weakness.

He was saved by the Hogs taking advantage of some luck and fortunate scheduling to scramble to a 5-3 league mark and a 7-5 finish.

This year’s record was also 7-5, but just 3-5 in the league and with the top three offensive playmakers gone due to graduation, it’s reasonable to have questions about next year.

Long has said in the past that wins and losses weren’t the most important things in an athletic program, which sounds all fluffy and nice, but fans don’t care about all that other stuff if there aren’t considerably more wins than losses.

At some point you start to sound like the Texas Longhorns, who brag about their revenue, but haven’t done anything in wins and losses, which is starting to wake up some of the longtime boosters over there.

The excuse will be given that Bielema has a $15.4 million buyout, which is true. But that doesn’t mean the UA has to be prepared to write a check on the dismissal date.

It can be strung out through 2020 and is payable every month on the last day of the month. While the overall number is rather large, it is manageable, especially considering it is reduced by whatever job he took next.

Having said that, any thoughts of firing Bielema now are unreasonable. He’ll get one more year.

But there will have to be changes made, with assistants, schemes and approach.

Most importantly there has to be a change in the culture.

While all of the off-the-cuff comments, laid-back dress and flip-flops are cute, it doesn’t project an air of seriousness in and around the football program unless it’s winning and competing for championships.

The fans don’t want to hear what Bielema did at Wisconsin. Considering the Badgers have gotten better since Bielema left doesn’t help his argument by invoking past history.

Make no mistake about it, the spotlight is fixing to be pointed at the football program over the next 12 months. Nothing will matter to most of the fans other than the number of wins.

How Long reacts to that is also going to be in the spotlight.

Long has 30 days from the end of the Belk Bowl to provide a written analysis to Bielema. It’s doubtful we’ll ever see that letter.

Let’s just hope it wasn’t what Long tweeted.

Four years without seriously competing for a championship is too long.

Mitchell a wasted four-star recruit under Hogs’ pro-style offense

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We’ll never know how good Duwop Mitchell could have been as a quarterback in the SEC.

The four-star recruit from Cedar Creek, NJ, never really fit anywhere for the Razorbacks. He was a spread quarterback in high school, but played at running back, wide receiver, special teams and returning punts.

Now he’s going back home.

Mitchell announced he’s transferring to Rutgers to play his final year of eligibility for former Arkansas defensive coordinator Chris Ash.

He will be a graduate transfer and eligible immediately.

In high school, Mitchell was rated as a four star dual threat quarterback by 247Sports, checking in as the No. 321 player in the country, No. 12 quarterback in the country and No. 12 recruit in the state of New Jersey.

He originally committed to Arkansas over offers from Rutgers, UNC, Iowa, Georgia Tech, Boston College, Syracuse and several other programs.

At Arkansas, Mitchell was immediately moved from quarterback to running back, where he has seen limited action throughout his career.

He redshirted his freshman year, and in his redshirt freshman year he had six carries for 58 yards while also playing on the kick coverage and punt coverage teams.

As a sophomore, he had four carries for 29 yards while also catching six passes for 84 yards and scoring his only college touchdown. Again, he also played on special teams.

As a junior, he was expected to have a breakout campaign, but that never happened, as he played in just three games carrying the ball seven times for 18 yards.

From 247Sports.com:

Ultimately, Mitchell was underused in Brett Bielema’s pro-style offense and should be able to make a bigger impact in Rutgers power spread. He has great agility and quickness and is very versatile. Expect him to line up all over the field next year, at running back, slot receiver, kick returner, punt returner, and on the coverage units for both punts and kickoffs.

National picture of Bielema starting to fade after Belk Bowl collapse

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It didn’t take long after Arkansas’ historic collapse in the Belk Bowl on Thursday night for the national media to start weighing in.

Clay Travis at OutKicktheCoverage.com had an interesting take:

I think the way the Razorbacks lost coupled with a senior tight end getting popped for stealing from Belk in the Belk Bowl — seriously, this is the best viral marketing in Belk Bowl history — it’s clear that Bret Bielema, who is now 25-26 and 10-22 in the SEC after four years, is not the answer if your goal is to compete for championships

Now, if your goal is to go 7-5 or 8-4 and win half of your SEC games and every four or five years contend for the SEC West, I think Bielema can pull that off. But anything more than that isn’t happening. Arkansas’s problem is two fold: 1. Bielema has a 15 million buyout and 2. who else can you hire that’s definitely better?

I think Bielema would be a good coach in the Big Ten — where we already know he won big at Wisconsin — or the Big 12. But the problem is he’s at Arkansas and right now the Razorbacks are the 8th or 9th best job in the SEC. (Alabama, Auburn, Texas A&M, LSU, Tennessee, Georgia, and Florida are all definitely better jobs. And South Carolina, Missouri and Ole Miss are roughly equivalent jobs. The only schools in the SEC that Arkansas is definitely a better job than are Mississippi State, Kentucky, and Vanderbilt.)

So if you’re going to win big at Arkansas you need to have a coach who either has a schematic coaching advantage, like Bobby Petrino, or one who recruits consistent top ten talent. Bielema offers neither of these. So how is Bielema ever winning at a high level at Arkansas?

It’s simple, he isn’t.

But who would definitely do better at Arkansas? I’m not sure there’s an easy answer.

Travis, who also does a national morning radio show on Fox Sports Radio, is saying the same thing a lot of Arkansas fans are muttering right now on various message boards.

You can read Travis’ blog here (there is adult language for those who might find that offensive).

 

The harsh reality of what to expect from Hogs going forward

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The guessing game on Arkansas’ record next year started for many fans before the post-mortem on the Belk Bowl loss.

That’s normal.

Stepping back and looking at it, the outlook for the future is, well, grim.

The three top receivers on the team are gone. While the Hogs have gotten a pair of wide receivers from Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College, the best wideout on that team signed at Central Arkansas.

The last time the Razorbacks lost their top three receivers to graduation and had a senior quarterback coming back was 2012.

Dan Skipper finally ran out of eligibility. Some will applaud that, but he was the best lineman on the team and filling his left tackle spot is not going to be easy.

While many of the talking heads who don’t look at anything other than well-worn propaganda have spewed the line that the Hogs are a running team. No they aren’t. They are a passing team because they don’t have the linemen to run the ball consistently. Just over 61 percent of their yardage came through the air.

With four years in the book, it’s clear Bielema is out of his element at Arkansas. Making blowhard claims, crying at the drop of the hat and looking like a bum in flip-flops at the office has worn thin.

So has references to what he did at Wisconsin. Considering that the Badgers have actually improved since Bielema left is a sign that maybe Barry Alvarez had something to do with it. Even in basketball, too.

Wisconsin has become what Arkansas was in the late 1970’s through the 1980’s with football and basketball competing for national championships.

Arkansas has fallen to almost laughingstock status in the SEC in football and basketball.

Maybe Jeff Long thought hiring a coach like Bielema back in 2012 — a coach that liked to do the same things Nick Saban was doing at Alabama — was the way to go.

He should have called around. That doesn’t work.

Maybe the scariest part of that whole scenario is that Long couldn’t see that or didn’t ask anyone. To do what Saban is doing at Alabama can’t be accomplished in his way … Arkansas has never recruited at the level the Tide does.

The only way Arkansas can win at a big-time level is either take recruiting to a level that is light years ahead of what has happened in the last couple of decades or have a coaching scheme that works. Petrino proved that can work.

At a time when the SEC coaching talent is at an all-time league low, the Hogs are stuck at the lower part of that ladder.

With a football coach that has made such ridiculous statements like telling Texas high school coaches, “If you don’t play with a fullback, we’ll kick your ass. If you throw it 70 times a game, we’ll kick your ass.”

That made its way through the coaching circles rather quickly and even made it over to Arkansas coaches. Considering that pretty much was looking down his nose at over 90 percent of high school coaches, the lack of success in recruiting isn’t surprising.

He even criticized the hurry-up, no-huddle offenses, even making up supporting data out of thin air. At the time, Saban thought he shared the view.

Now Saban has incorporated tempo and a dual-threat quarterback.

“I looked at what types of offenses gave us the most trouble and incorporated that into our scheme,” he said.

At times this season, Bielema has looked completely bewildered during games. While he is goofy at times and often engages his mouth before his brain, he’s not a complete idiot.

But he may be stubborn.

It’s interesting to see these national media types talk about how Bielema “was successful recruiting players to his system and coaching them up at Wisconsin.” The implication is he can do the same thing at Arkansas.

In reality, he couldn’t do it at Wisconsin today.

College football has changed dramatically in the last five years, especially on offense. Time of possession, controlling the ball and balance have been replaced with run-pass options, scoring points and taking what the defense gives you.

We’ll hear in the offseason how the Hogs scored the second most points on Alabama this year. True, but the last 13 points came against the backups. Remember, the Tide led 35-17 at halftime of that game and still won by three touchdowns coasting in the second half.

Bielema is not at the crossroads in this offseason. That was last year after the win over Kansas State in the Liberty Bowl.

They went backwards this season.

And it’s hard to find a rational way to see improvement next year. The Hogs will play two nonconference games, then get their bye week followed by 10 straight weeks of play, eight against league opponents.

Bielema’s seat is hot now.

This time next year could see flames.

Did getting caught shoplifting hurt Sprinkle’s status in NFL Draft?

ESPN talks about Arkansas tight end Jeremy Sprinkle’s draft status after getting arrested for shoplifting at the Belk Bowl.