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Fayetteville

Forbes: Fayetteville top SEC college town for business, career

Fayetteville was ranked No. 24 by Forbes magazine in the publication’s 18th annual “Best Places to Live for Business and Careers” list.

Forbes analyzed data on 401 U.S. metropolitan statistical areas and divisions and Fayetteville was the highest-ranked Southeastern Conference institution on the list.

Nashville, Tennessee, home to Vanderbilt University, was the second-highest-ranked SEC city at No. 30, followed by Lexington, Kentucky, at No. 34.

Gainesville, Florida (University of Florida), at No. 70, Knoxville, Tennessee (University of Tennessee), at No. 82 and Baton Rouge, Louisiana (LSU), at No. 131 rounded out the list of U.S. cities with an SEC member school in the publication’s top 200.

Forbes generated the list with data from Moody’s Analytics and the U.S. Census, while also accounting for 14 metrics related to job growth, business and living costs, income growth, quality of life and labor force education.

Earlier this spring, U.S. News & World Report ranked Fayetteville No. 3 in the nation in its annual “Best Places To Live” list.

What happened to Arkansas’ defense?

ESPN.com’s Sam Khan took an in-depth look at Arkansas’ defense after Auburn ran roughshod over the Razorbacks last Saturday night in a 56-3 win.

The run defense by the Hogs was bad.

The 543 rushing yards the Razorbacks yielded to Auburn were the most allowed to any FBS team in a game this season. But this wasn’t a one-game issue for Arkansas. Defensively, the Razorbacks have been statistically poor in their three losses to Texas A&M, Alabama and Auburn.

You can read the entire story here.

Gators’ offense will be focusing on red zone issues against Georgia

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While Arkansas takes the week off, their next opponent has a rivalry game that will give Hog Country a chance to do some scouting.

Florida faces Georgia in the World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party. And, yes, I’m aware that’s not the politically correct term, but I don’t care and we’ll address all of that mandy-pandy stuff at a later time.

The Gators’ offense has been, well, lacking since about 2009. When Tim Tebow left, Florida’s entire offensive philosophy seemed to go with him.

Coming up, they’ll face a Georgia team that has been giving up points and, in fact the Gators are a 7.5-point favorite in play betting on sports.

Edward Aschoff of ESPN.com looked at the Gators’ red zone issues and how they will be looking to improve it this week.

Florida has been doing it with defense this year and that’s what Arkansas fans may be most concerned about after last week’s game against Auburn where the Tigers just dominated the Hogs’ offense.

Former Hogs quarterback Clint Stoerner talked on the Paul Finebaum Show on Wednesday about how — on paper — the Gators are very comparable to Alabama defensively.

Looking back at Auburn’s win over Arkansas

Ivan Maisel, Ryan McGee and Heather Dinich talk about Auburn’s blowout win over Arkansas and the tone it sets for the rest of the season for both programs.

Florida game time set for national television lead-in to Alabama-LSU

Following a bye week after playing eight straight games to open the season, Arkansas will return to Razorback Stadium on Saturday, Nov. 5, for a 2:30 p.m. showdown against No. 14 Florida on CBS.

With 11 wins over its last 15 games dating back to last season, Arkansas will look to open the month of November with a win over a ranked team for the second consecutive season. The Razorbacks’ 11 wins over their last 15 contests are the third most in the SEC over that span.

Coming off a loss at No. 21 Auburn, Arkansas will look to return to its winning ways when it hosts Florida. The Razorbacks defeated then-No. 12 Ole Miss 34-30 in their last game at home. Arkansas has won eight consecutive games following a SEC loss dating back to the 2014 season.

Florida will make its fourth trip in program history to Fayetteville and first since 2008. The Gators are ranked No. 14 in the Associated Press Top 25 leading into their game against Georgia this weekend. Florida has been ranked in eight of the 10 all-time meetings against Arkansas.

The last time the two teams met was in 2013 in Gainesville when a Gators’ team that finished 4-8 thoroughly dominated the Hogs in a 30-10 win.

Auburn embarrasses Hogs with talent, scheme and coaching in this one

TCU first exposed Arkansas’ talent drop-off the second week of the season.

Texas A&M exploited it in the fourth week.

Alabama hammered it in the sixth week.

Auburn just stripped it bare and laid it out for the world to see Saturday at Jordan-Hare Stadium.

The Razorbacks simply don’t have the horses to play with the top level teams in the SEC.

Don’t wave the Ole Miss win around like it was a big deal because the Rebels don’t have that much talent, either. The Rebels are the only team in football that can’t run the ball against their own defense in practice.

Bret Bielema knows it. When you sort through the coach-speak after the loss to the Tigers, he as much as said it.

“We have to take a serious look at some of the things that we are doing, how we are making guys play and what we are asking them to do,” he said later.

That’s how coaches say their team simply can’t match up with the other team.

“We have to do a lot better of a job to put our guys in the position to have success,” Bielema said. “The position we have been putting them in can’t be executed or called, then we have to make changes.”

Again, that’s a shortfall of talent. But it really wasn’t the most alarming comment in the postgame.

“We are a 5-3 football team that can end on a high note, but we definitely have to make corrections moving forward,” Bielema said.

Eight games into the season and Bielema is talking about making corrections and actually hinting at changing things defensively in terms of scheme to make up for the talent shortfall.

In college football, it comes down to players. Coaching is, well, secondary. Great coaches don’t win championships unless they have high-ranking recruiting classes.

“Coach (Bobby) Bowden always used to tell us about recruiting that having a top class doesn’t guarantee you a national championship,” former Florida State coach Max Howell tells me at least three times a year, “but then he would add that he could guarantee you that you won’t win a championship without those high recruiting rankings.”

That has held true.

Especially in the SEC. Alabama dominates on the field and, in case you missed it, they have rounded up the No. 1 recruiting class in the nation for the last six years. The last time Nick Saban’s crew wasn’t No. 1 in recruiting was 2010, according to the 247sports.com composite recruiting rankings.

Let’s face it, you could put Willie Shoemaker in his prime on a Clydesdale and he ain’t going to win the Kentucky Derby.

Don’t blame Bielema. He’s doing the best he can with what he’s got to work with.

He’s managed to keep it strung together about as well as can be expected and better than most.

Yes, this team is 5-3 with four games to play and two of them should be winnable. If he gets a run of November Luck like he’s had in the past the Hogs could finish 9-3.

But you got the idea from his brief comments with the media Saturday night that may be a little too optimistic.

“When you are playing against teams like this, especially teams that like to run the football as well as Auburn, it is as simple as being gap sound, edge sound and support sound,” he said as a way of explaining his defense.

Sounds simple, right? Unfortunately, it isn’t quite that easy to fix without the talent.

“We unfortunately aren’t that way at this point,” he said.

The guess here is he found it surprising that he couldn’t get the talent at Arkansas to compete for championships in the SEC like was able to do at Wisconsin in the Big 10.

He also got out of the Big 10 before Urban Meyer got things rolling at Ohio State. Jim Harbaugh was coaching in the NFL, not at Michigan.

With a bye week coming up, rest and recovery will go a long way.

It will also give the coaches a chance to hit the recruiting trail … hard. Somehow, some way, Bielema has to figure out a way to get better players to be Razorbacks.

In his time at Arkansas, the Hogs have an average finish of 10th in the SEC in recruiting.

In case you’re wondering that’s down with Mississippi State, Kentucky, South Carolina and usually Ole Miss.

What can be done to fix it?

Get better players.

SEC Network Q&A with running back Rawleigh Williams III

SEC Offensive Player of the Week and Arkansas RB Rawleigh Williams III answers questions about his life on and off the field.

Razorbacks’ fourth-quarter push downs Ole Miss for third straight year

Jared Cornelius scored on a 6-yard touchdown run late in the fourth quarter to lift No. 22 Arkansas to a 34-30 win over No. 12 Ole Miss on Saturday night.

The win is the third in a row for the Razorbacks (5-2, 1-2 SEC) over the Rebels, who have now lost three of their first six games a season after winning the Sugar Bowl.

Austin Allen was 19-of-32 passing for 229 yards and three touchdowns for Arkansas, giving the junior an SEC-best 18 touchdown passes for the season. Rawleigh Williams added a career-high 180 yards rushing on 27 carries for the Razorbacks, who bounced back following a 49-30 loss at home to No. 1 Alabama a week ago.

“I told the guys, `Let’s do whatever we have to do to protect this house,” Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said. “They never wavered and needed help from the crowd, and they delivered.”

Chad Kelly accounted for 342 yards of total offense for Ole Miss (3-3, 1-2), throwing for 253 yards and rushing for 89 more. The senior also threw for a touchdown and ran for two more.

Evan Engram led the Rebels with seven catches for 111 yards and a touchdown.

The two teams played an overtime thriller a year ago in Oxford , a game in which Arkansas completed a miraculous fourth-and-25 on its way to a 53-52 victory.

They also entered Saturday with the two most efficient quarterbacks in the SEC, and neither Kelly nor Allen disappointed. The duo combined for 571 yards of total offense.

It was Cornelius, however, who had the final say with his 6-yard touchdown run with 2:20 remaining.

Ole Miss had one more drive following Arkansas’ go-ahead score, but Kelly fumbled on a fourth-and-16 scramble that came up short.

“We’re in the games and competing,” Rebels coach Hugh Freeze said. “We’ve got to see the big picture, even though it’s hard to right now, sitting here.”

Notes

Ole Miss: The Rebels entered the game 102nd in the country in total defense, allowing 449.4 yards per game. They once again struggled on Saturday by allowing 429 total yards to Arkansas, a number that was more than 450 before the Razorbacks purposely took several large losses while running out the clock on the game’s final drive.

Arkansas: The Razorbacks still have offensive line concerns after allowing three more sacks of Allen, but they moved the ball consistently through the air and on the ground — giving them renewed hope with only SEC games remaining this season.

In the Rankings

Arkansas was in danger of falling out of the rankings, but now it’s likely to once again push its way into the top 20 — perhaps even surpassing the Rebels. The Razorbacks’ only losses this season are to No. 1 Alabama and No. 6 Texas A&M.

Next Week

Ole Miss: The Rebels are on the road for the second straight week, traveling to Baton Rouge to face LSU.

Arkansas: The Razorbacks play for the eighth straight week to open the season, traveling to No. 23 Auburn next week.

12th-ranked women get top five finish at national invitational

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. — In its final meet of the regular season, the 12th-ranked Arkansas women’s cross country team posted a top-five team finish at the Pre-National Invitational, besting 37 teams from across the country including No. 7 Stanford, No. 16 Eastern Michigan and No. 22 Virginia.

“We had a great race, our athletes ran really well,” head coach Lance Harter said. “I thought if we could be in the top five [here] we could make a run for a top-10 finish at nationals or higher. When you lose an ace like Dominique Scott, you rework some things and we are operating now with true team running.”

Leading the way once again for the Razorbacks was sophomore Devin Clark who crossed the finish line among the top-10 best individual performers of the day, completing her first 6K of the season in 20 minutes, 20 seconds.

Clark was consistent with her performance in the race from start to finish, maintaining stride with the lead pack, including meet winner Erin Finn (Michigan) through the majority of the competition.

“Devin [Clark] is establishing herself quite well and making a strong case to be a frontrunner at the national level,” Harter said.

Not the sole underclassman making an impact for Arkansas, Clark was joined by freshmen Taylor Werner (27th) and Abby Gray (52nd) inside the top 60 in a field of 284 runners.

Werner set a new 6K PR of 20:44.40 as the only other Razorback to record a sub-21-minute performance at the LaVern Gibson cross country course.

Arkansas’ top five was completed by All-American middle-distance runners Nikki Hiltz (65) and Therese Haiss (74) who completed the race in 21:07.40 and 21:14.20, respectively.

“Taylor Werner has really high goals and she is certainly on schedule,” Harter said. “She ran brilliantly. Abby [Gray] ran with our pack and maybe stayed a little too long but when she took off they all started taking off and making moves and Therese [Haiss] and Nikki [Hiltz] held us on.”

Razorback captain Valerie Reina captured the 6K open race title in 21:32.40. Reina was joined inside the top-10 by Sydney Brown (2), Rachel Nichwitz (5) and Maddy Reed (10).

The Razorbacks compete next on their home course as they host the 2016 SEC Cross Country Championship on Friday, Oct. 28.

Top Five Team Results
1. #2 Colorado, 93 (2-12-17-26-36)
2. #9 Oregon, 154 (6-13-34-48-53)
3. #13 Michigan, 179 (1-22-49-51-56)
4. #5 Portland, 196 (9-28-39-50-70)
5. #12 Arkansas, 225 (7-27-52-65-74)

Arkansas Results (6K Blue Overall Finishes)
7. Devin Clark – 20:20.00
27. Taylor Werner – 20:44.40
52. Abby Gray – 21:01.40
65. Nikki Hiltz – 21:07.40
74. Therese Haiss – 21:14.20
95. Carina Viljoen – 21:22.60
117. Regan Ward – 21:36.90

Arkansas Results (6K Open)
1. Valerie Reina – 21:32.40
2. Sydney Brown – 21:34.90
5. Rachel Nichwitz – 21:44.70
10. Maddy Reed – 22:10.70

2016 Cross Country Schedule
Thurs, Sept. 1 – Cowboy Duals (Stillwater, Okla.) | 1st of 6
Sat, Sept. 17 – Southern Stampede (Joplin, Mo.) | 1st of 2
Sat, Sept. 17 – Riverside Invitational (Riverside, Calif.) | 1st of 20
Sat, Oct. 1 – Chile Pepper Festival (Agri Park) 10:20 a.m. | 1st of 18
Sat, Oct. 15 – Pre-Nationals (Terre Haute, Ind.) 10:00 a.m. | 5th of 42
Fri, Oct. 28 – SEC Championship (Agri Park) 11:00 a.m.
Fri, Nov. 11 – NCAA South Central Regional (Agri Park) 10:00 a.m.
Sat, Nov. 19 – NCAA Championship (Terre Haute, Ind.) 10:00 a.m.

Bold denotes a home event.

Rebels enter game a heavy favorite over Arkansas

No. 12 Ole Miss has a 77 percent chance to beat No. 22 Arkansas on the road, per ESPN’s FPI. The Rebels’ stronger offense is expected to pull away and win by an average of 10 points.