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LSU game doesn’t provide good grades across board for Hogs

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As grades go, Arkansas’ 38-10 loss to LSU wasn’t as bad statistically as the Auburn game, but it comes close.

The biggest difference was the Tigers’ running backs were better. They hit some big runs that really made the Razorbacks defense look really, really bad at times.

OVERALL: D

OFFENSIVE LINE: F
Arkansas ran for just 81 net yards. With a goal of 200 yards per game that Brett Bielema has stated repeatedly, they couldn’t get halfway there. They were playing against one of the best defensive lines in college football, but this isn’t about effort … it’s results that matter and averaging 3.1 yards per rush isn’t going to win many games.

DEFENSIVE LINE: D
The flip side of the offensive line applies here. LSU averaged 7.6 yards per rush attempt. That will get you beat almost every time. It also allowed the Tigers to dominate the time of possession, a stat that almost always has to be in the Hogs’ favor every game, especially in the fourth quarter. LSU held the ball in that final period 10:51 to 4:09. Ouch.

RUNNING BACKS: D
To be fair, they didn’t have a lot of holes to run through, but there were some times when they simply didn’t hit a hole that was there. Rawleigh Williams III did make a correction on one lane read and broke a second attempt for a big gain, but they weren’t able to break enough big plays to take the pressure off the passing game.

WIDE RECEIVERS: C
Not a lot of glaring issues either way. Tight end Jeremy Sprinkle led the receivers with four catches and he was forced to stay involved in protection more than anyone wanted. Drew Morgan only had one catch, which is never good. In fairness, the Tigers are No. 14 in the country against the pass.

LINEBACKERS: F
Before anyone starts hollering, this is not a reflection of the effort. No group tries harder, but is less equipped athletically to stop the better teams in the SEC. When good running breaks break through a hole, the Hogs’ linebackers simply don’t have the ability to get them on the ground quickly.

SECONDARY: F
LSU quarterback Danny Etling didn’t make a lot of big plays, but he has the running game that doesn’t ask him to do that. He was 10-of-16 with a long gain of 48 yards. In run support, the secondary over-ran some plays and simply didn’t have the speed to catch Leonard Fournette or Derrius Guice once they were in the open.

KICKERS: A
Another steady performance. Toby Baker was the biggest weapon, averagin 43.1 yards per punt on seven kicks with three inside the 20-yard line. Adam McFain made his only field goal and two of his three kickoffs were touchbacks.

RETURNS: C
Deon Stewart had 117 yards on seven kickoff returns, but there was nothing spectacular or anything disastrous.

QUARTERBACK: D
Austin Allen struggled. He was 15-of-31 with one touchdown, but two interceptions, including one on first down which will send coaches’ blood pressures through the roof. As the season has progressed, Allen’s performances have declined. Whether it’s due to self-imposed pressure or what, that’s the way it’s trending.

COACHING: D
Bielema has said the team had a great week of preparation, so the performance is mystifying. The only conclusion that can be drawn is simply the planning was not accurate or the talent level simply wasn’t there. In either case, it comes back to the coaches. At times it appears the Jimmy’s and Joe’s can’t match the X’s and O’s drawn up in the game plan.

Salukis coach calls out Razorback fans not at game

After watching his Southern Illinois team give up 13 3-pointers to Arkansas in the Razorbacks’ 90-65 win, Salukis coach Barry Hinson had a few things to say.

Video from WholeHogSports.com

Five players soar to double figures in ULM victory

FAYETTEVILLE — Five Razorbacks scored in double figures as Arkansas blew past Louisiana-Monroe, 92-46, on Sunday afternoon in Bud Walton Arena.

The trio of Jessica Jackson, Alecia Cooley and Keiryn Swenson led all scored with 13 points each.

It was a career high for Swenson, who came off the bench and scored in double figures for the first time in her career. Also off the bench, Briunna Freeman added 12 points and Jordan Danberry had 10 points.

Defensively, Arkansas held ULM to just 22.1 percent shooting, including 10.5 percent from 3-point range, and also forced 17 turnovers, which led to 27 points off turnovers.

“I thought it was the best 40 minutes that we have played so far.” said coach Jimmy Dykes. “I know it’s only our second game, but I thought from the opening tip to the final buzzer that it was the most complete game that we have played. I really liked our energy defensively and I really liked like how active everyone was on the floor.”

Arkansas continues its four-game home stand with home games against defending WNIT Champion South Dakota on Thursday and Stetson on Monday, Nov. 21.

Guice, Fournette run over and through Razorbacks in 38-10 route

Derrius Guice rushed for a career-high 252 yards and Leonard Fournette added three touchdowns and No. 24 LSU improved to 4-1 under interim coach Ed Orgeron with a 38-10 win over No. 25 Arkansas on Saturday night.

The win ends a two-game losing streak against the Razorbacks for the Tigers (6-3, 4-2 SEC), who were coming off a 10-0 loss to No. 1 Alabama.

Guice rushed for two touchdowns on 21 carries, and his 96-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter was the longest in school history. Fournette scored on runs of 7, 7 and 3 yards for LSU, finishing with 98 yards rushing on 17 carries.

“Arkansas sees us as an easy victory every time we lose to Alabama because we always play them right after,” Guice said. “They felt like it was tradition to just beat us every time we play Alabama and lose, so I’m just happy we got to bring the Boot back home.”

The Tigers outgained Arkansas (6-4, 2-4) 547-291 in total yardage, and LSU quarterback Danny Etling finished 10-of-16 passing for 157 yards.

Rawleigh Williams accounted for 103 total yards to lead the Razorbacks, while Austin Allen was 15-of-31 passing for 210 yards and two interceptions.

“Offensively, it just seemed like whenever we did something good we shot ourselves in the foot or did something uncharacteristic,” Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said. “That obviously set us back.”

Guice’s previous career high was a 163-yard performance against Missouri on Oct. 1. The sophomore has now topped the 100-yard rushing mark in four games this season, and his career night comes a week after a two-carry, 8-yard performance against Alabama.

“We felt that Derrius deserved more touches,” Orgeron said. “Obviously, Derrius is a very good running back and we wanted to share the carries.”

THE TAKEAWAY

So much for the Alabama hangover for LSU, which had lost in two straight years to Arkansas. Both of those games came after physical matchups with the top-ranked Crimson Tide, but the Tigers were clearly the dominant team from their first possession — when they went 75 yards on nine plays for an opening touchdown.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Despite last week’s loss to Alabama, the Tigers remained in this week’s rankings and they’re likely to rise significantly after such a dominating win on Saturday. The Razorbacks, meanwhile, lost any good will they had with voters following last week’s 31-10 win over Florida and likely have to win out to return to the rankings this season.

UP NEXT

LSU returns home to host Florida in the makeup of the hurricane-postponed game from last month.

The Razorbacks are on the road for their final two regular-season games, starting next week at Mississippi State.

Bielema, coaches will find different schemes won’t really help

In the post-mortem following LSU’s boot-kicking 38-10 win Saturday night, Brett Bielema stomped all around one particular issue.

Without specifically mentioning it, he made it pretty clear Arkansas is short on talent when it comes to stopping the best teams in the SEC West.

“I thought we prepared very, very well,” he said later. “Probably been some of our best preparation from Sunday to Saturday.”

To decipher that bit of coach-speak, the Razorbacks simply didn’t have the talent to implement the planning. For coaches, that is the biggest head-scratcher they ever have to face.

It didn’t help the Tigers changed head coaches. For the past two years, LSU lost to Alabama, then proceeded to lose a few more in the hangover following that loss.

Les Miles was a lot of things good as a head coach. But he also tended to suffer the same emotional letdowns his players did.

Miles probably wasn’t fired because Alabama beat them every year. He was fired because that loss caused two or three losses.

Ed Orgeron wasn’t going to suffer the same fate.

“They were very motivated and played very well today,” Bielema said. “However they came about that I’ll leave that to them to comment.”

“We had heard all the stuff,” LSU coach Ed Orgeron said after the game. “This is a new team, a new mindset. We do things different, we act different and you saw that tonight.”

As it usually does, talent proves itself in the final result.

Over the last four recruiting classes, Arkansas has placed sixth in the SEC West, according to the 247Sports.com composite rankings. Ignore the national rankings. It only matters how well you recruit within your own conference division.

LSU has finished second.

The four teams Arkansas has lost to this year were higher. Ole Miss was fourth over that time frame and Arkansas won that game.

Next year might be different.

Rebels coach Hugh Freeze feels he’s now lost to Arkansas three straight years when his team had the better players and he wasn’t able to get them focused for any of those games.

The flip side to that is the Hogs have lost four years in a row to Mississippi State, this week’s opponent that more or less showed up and went through the motions against an Alabama team that may be among the best ever in college football.

All week long in Starkville, you got the impression Dan Mullen wasn’t going to let a loss to the Crimson Tide cost them the game against Arkansas. For whatever reason, Mullen and his staff have had a good read on Bielema the last three years.

What Bielema may be coming to the realization is that what he wants to accomplish at Arkansas isn’t possible without him making some adjustments in his thinking.

There’s nothing wrong with that.

Nick Saban said two weeks ago that his philosophy has changed dramatically over the last four years. The evidence is a mobile quarterback that can make plays with his feet in addition to his arm.

The Crimson Tide are doing it this year without a superstar running back, a freshman quarterback that only makes plays and a defense that is built on speed.

Speed is becoming a necessity now to win in college football. Many of the players that made up his 2009 national championship team would not even be recruited by the Tide now.

Speed is the first ranking, size is second.

The lack of it is costing the Hogs.

“We definitely have to look at what we’re doing,” Bielema said.

With all of the NCAA restrictions on time coaches can keep players at practice, a lot of the work on fundamentals gets left out. To make up for that, coaches like Saban and Urban Meyer in particular have discovered that speed makes up for a lot of mistakes.

Never was that more evident for Arkansas than Saturday night when LSU running back Derrius Guice broke free on a 94-yard scoring run. Arkansas defensive back Santos Ramirez gave chase but the only thing he accomplished was watching Guice’s No. 5 get smaller as he ran away.

Bielema may not say it, but that should never happen.

At the worst, the defensive back should be able to get close enough to dive at his feet. Ramirez, who never gave up, simply couldn’t get close enough to do that.

In the areas Bielema can consistently get players from — Arkansas and Texas — the best available players are fast, but not big. They have played in a spread-type offense and the best quarterbacks are mobile quarterbacks.

It might be the direction Bielema may have to start considering.

Stepping back and looking at the big picture, he was just beaten by the guy who replaced the most recent SEC coach that refused to change from a straight-ahead approach.

Miles averaged 10 wins a year for 11 years. He was fired because of a lack of improvement (oh, you can argue particular specifics, but that’s the bottom line). The trendline was not good.

Bielema’s trend line is dropping this year. In the SEC, his win totals are 0-2-5 in his first three years. The best he can do this year are 4 wins.

In today’s world of college football, you know what you have in 3-4 years with a coach and his system. What you have at the end of year four is pretty much what you’ve got going forward unless there is a radical change in something.

How Jen Bielema surprised Bret when he got home from Florida win

One thing most people can agree on is that it is pretty good to be Bret Bielema. So good in fact, that he has his own TV show called “Being Bret Bielema”. It wouldn’t shock us to see what transpired last night after the Florida win included in the upcoming series.

Bielema tweeted today that he had quite the surprise waiting on him when he came home last night…

Some people get a Razorback coffee mug from their wives. Our coach got a customized Razorback wrought iron fence.

Note to my bride for our next residence……