45.3 F
Fayetteville

Walker, Williams named to watch list for top running back

DALLAS — Senior Kody Walker and sophomore Rawleigh Williams III were named preseason candidates for the 2016 Doak Walker Award, the PwC SMU Athletic Forum announced Thursday.

The Doak Walker Award is presented each season to the nation’s premier running back. Former Razorback Alex Collins was a semifinalist last year.

It marks the fourth straight year Arkansas has had multiple candidates on the preseason list.

Walker, a sixth-year senior, participated in nine contests and started once last season, rushing for 394 yards and six touchdowns on 90 carries. Walker missed four games due to a thumb injury, but returned in a big way in the Razorbacks’ quadruple-overtime win against Auburn.

Four of Walker’s eight carries against Auburn came in overtime with two going for touchdowns and another resulting in a first down. Walker gave Arkansas the eventual final score of 54-46 with a two-point conversion after wide receiver Drew Morgan’s 25-yard touchdown catch.

The Jefferson City, Mo., product went on to rush for 366 yards and five touchdowns during the final seven games of the season.

Despite missing the final five games of the season due to suffering a season-ending neck injury, Williams earned a spot on the SEC All-Freshman team in 2015.

He finished the season with 254 yards rushing on 56 carries. His first career touchdown came in his home state of Texas against Texas A&M at AT&T Stadium and he followed with his first career 100-yard rushing game the next week during a win at Tennessee.

Collins, who was selected in the 2016 NFL Draft by the Seattle Seahawks, was a semifinalist for the Doak Walker Award last year. Collins rushed for 1,577 yards and a program record 20 touchdowns, extending coach Bret Bielema’s streak to 10 straight seasons (every year of his career) with a 1,000-yard running back.

Arkansas legend Darren McFadden is one of just two players to win the Doak Walker Award twice. McFadden became the first sophomore to take home the award in 2006 and repeated as the winner in 2007 when he rushed for a program record 1,830 yards.

Arkansas is now represented on 10 different preseason award watch lists.

Peavey injures back, undergoes minor surgery

Arkansas sophomore quarterback Rafe Peavey sustained a back injury during summer workouts that required minor surgery. The surgery on Wednesday was successful and Peavey is expected to be back for the start of fall camp on Aug. 4. Below is a statement from head coach Bret Bielema about Peavey’s injury and surgery.

Bret Bielema Statement
“Unfortunately Rafe suffered a minor back injury during routine summer workouts. He underwent successful surgery on Wednesday and is on the path to recovery so he can return to the field for fall camp. I’m confident Rafe will make a full recovery and will build on his strong spring during fall camp.”

Morgan named to watch list for top wide receiver award

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Arkansas senior wide receiver Drew Morgan was named to the preseason watch list for the 2016 Biletnikoff Award, the Tallahassee Quarterback Club Foundation announced Wednesday.

The Biletnikoff Award is given annually to the most outstanding receiver in college football.

The Greenwood native is one of only seven players from the SEC to make the prestigious list.

Morgan was a late addition to the watch list last season after leading the SEC in touchdown receptions heading into November. Now he goes into the 2016 season as one of Arkansas’ primary receivers and looks to build on his team leading 63 catches and 10 touchdowns from a year ago.

After opening 2015 as the No. 3 or No. 4 wide receiver, Morgan went on to not only lead the team in receptions and touchdown catches, but also yards (843).

Ranking in the top 10 in the conference in receptions (T-6th), yards (9th) and TDs (2nd), Morgan also ranked 17th nationally in touchdown receptions and his 10 scores were the third-most in program single-season history.

Away from home field, Morgan was even better becoming the first player in program history with back-to-back 100 yard receiving games in SEC play away from home after going for 155 yards against No. 14 Texas A&M in Arlington and 100 yards at Tennessee.

His year-long performance earned him All-SEC second team status by the Associated Press, Athlon and Phil Steele. This preseason, Morgan has been named to Athlon’s All-SEC third team.

Bielema delivers strong message on Razorback program

0

HOOVER, Ala. — It’s hard to really get a handle on what goes on at these SEC Media Days.

Some of the questions are about the players and, let’s face it, every coach says his team is improved, the players are bigger, stronger, faster and, by golly, his team should be better this year.

Oh, and we should all remember everybody is undefeated in July. Barring a suspension or major off-season injury, there’s not a whole lot of valid information to be divulged and you get a lot of coach-speak.

Bret Bielema is a prime example.

The video above is from the TV/Internet session the coaches go through. It’s a little different from the big press conference area for the general media where the coach delivers an opening monologue, then answers question from everybody in the country.

On Wednesday, Bielema pretty much stayed on topic, but there was a central theme in all of his conversations: Arkansas is heading up and they are doing it his way. He is one of the best in the country and promoting his program and what he’s trying to accomplish.

In his three years, the Razorbacks have gone 0-8, 2-6 and 5-3 last year in the SEC.

“It’s because the players in the program and coaches we brought in make a huge difference,” he said in one of the interviews.

The three players he brought with him to Media Days — tight end Jeremy Sprinkle, linebacker Brooks Ellis and defensive lineman Dietrich Wise — were all examples he used.

On Sprinkle:

“I remember the crossroad his sophomore year when he wasn’t doing what I wanted him to do in the classroom, off the field, A to Z,” Bielema said. “So I did the simple thing. I called his dad and say can we have a meeting. We sat down with his dad and talked with Dad about where he wanted to be, if he wanted to do it. From that point forward, he’s been a different guy.”

On Wise:

“I sat him down and just simply: Hey, do you want to be just involved in a lot of different things or do you want to be great at a few things?” Bielema said. “We talked about taking a few things off his plate. We had conversations with his parents. We took track out of his life until he got a better GPA.

“The result is he could probably be one of the best premier lineman. He already has a degree in his hands. Both he and Jeremy already graduated. They already have a diploma in hand going to their senior year.”

On Ellis:

“I knew he wanted to be a Hog. He committed before I got there. I sat in that hom,” Bielema said. “He is sitting there with his mom and a dad. There was a grandma that talked about her husband, who is Brooks’ grandfather who played at the University of Arkansas, and the whole room got quiet when she talked about who he is and what he represented to the family.

“Brooks made a lot of tackles, did a lot of good things. He probably at one point didn’t think he would be as
good of a player as he is today. A guy that’s up for the most elite awards for linebacker play, a four-year starter, but he’s also a pre-med student, did an internship in Belize, did so many different things that did not pertain to football that will give him success forever.”

Those are the recurring themes in nearly every conversation Bielema gets to have about his team out of season. He is involved with them, and wants them to succeed off the field as much as on the field.

It’s an approach that is not commonly known if others are doing it. That’s the only reason you can’t say it’s completely unique because there are some others that care, too.

But they aren’t as public about it as Bielema is.

Nick Saban recruits his way. Bielema recruits his way.

Make no mistake about it, with the SEC Network covering nearly every word uttered, this is a massive recruiting platform for the coaches and their programs.

Every coach uses it to what he hopes is something talented players will see and want to be a part of.

And every coach is recruiting a particular kind of player.

Only time will tell if Bielema’s method produces championships.

It’s just one more reason this is such a crucial year for Bielema.

Linebacker Brooks Ellis breathing easier on defense

HOOVER, Ala. — Arkansas senior linebacker Brooks Ellis met with the media at SEC Media Days on Wednesday and talked about how the improved depth would let him get a break more often.

Wise ready to step up into leadership role with Hogs

Last year, Dietrich Wise started just one game for Arkansas.

He didn’t view himself as a leader of the team, but it’s been different in the spring and during the off-season workouts as he has taken on more of that role.

Sprinkle weighs in on who will back him up

Arkansas tight end Jeremy Sprinkle was part of a difficult tandem for opponents to handle last year with Hunter Henry, but now he’s the feature tight end.

He talked at Media Days about who his backup will be, the win over Ole Miss last year, Austin Allen’s development and taking care of business against every team the Hogs play.

Ellis named to watch list for top linebacker award

CHICAGO — Arkansas linebacker Brooks Ellis has been named to the preseason watch list for the 32nd annual Butkus Award, it was announced Tuesday.

The award is presented each season to the nation’s best linebacker by the Butkus Foundation. This is the second straight year that Ellis has appeared on the award’s preseason watch list.

The Razorbacks’ leading tackler in 2015, Ellis is one of 12 players from the Southeastern Conference (SEC) on the 51-person list and the sixth Razorback to earn a spot on a preseason award watch list during the past two weeks.

Ellis started all 13 games last season, extending his streak to 18 straight contests. He totaled 102 stops, which tied for ninth in the SEC.  He tallied eight or more tackles six times, highlighted by three double-digit tackle efforts, and was one of two SEC defenders to log 15-plus tackles in a conference game twice.

Charting programs’ trends heading into another season

0

Who will break their trend?

Who will continue down the path their trend, sometimes decades in developing, has laid out for them?

This is a story good to look at twice a year. Before the season, you can guess who might break their trend, especially if it’s been flat for a few years. More often, though, it tells you who is going to remain where they are.

If nothing else, history has shown us that in college football, you are what you are over the long haul. And a word of note, not much has changed in the SEC over the years in relation to the teams that win the most games.

Much like anything else, you can analyze numbers and pretty much find justification for any result you want to obtain if you narrow things down enough, but over the long haul you pretty much end up where you belong in the college football pecking order.

We start with the records from 1972 as that was when virtually all teams were integrated and the 11th game on the schedule was pretty much standard for everyone.

Winning Percentages from 1972-2015

  1. Alabama 73{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  2. Georgia 70{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  3. Florida 69{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  4. Auburn 67{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  5. Tennessee 66{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  6. LSU 65{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  7. Texas A&M 64{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  8. Arkansas 61{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  9. South Carolina 53{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  10. Ole Miss 51{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  11. Missouri 51{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  12. Mississippi State 46{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  13. Kentucky 42{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  14. Vanderbilt 33{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}

Overall, this is pretty much like you would expect.

Now, to look at trends, we go from 1992 when the SEC expanded the first time, bringing in Arkansas and South Carolina into the fold.

Winning Percentage from 1992-2015

  1. Florida 75{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  2. Georgia 71{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  3. Alabama 68{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  4. LSU 68{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  5. Auburn 67{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  6. Tennessee 67{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  7. Texas A&M 64{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707} (non-SEC until 2012)
  8. Arkansas 55{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  9. Ole Miss 54{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  10. Missouri 54{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707} (non-SEC until 2012)
  11. South Carolina 53{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  12. Mississippi State 50{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  13. Kentucky 39{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  14. Vanderbilt 34{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}

You can see that things pretty much stayed the same at the top, with some adjusting. As hard as it may be today for youngsters to grasp, the first decade and a half of the SEC realignment saw the power primarily in the East.

To continue looking at the trend and refining it to get another way to look at the 2016 season, you take the past decade to see if anything changed.

Winning Percentages from 2006-2015

  1. Alabama 80{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  2. LSU 77{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  3. Florida 72{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  4. Georgia 71{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  5. Missouri 67{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707} (non-SEC until 2012)
  6. Auburn 65{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  7. South Carolina 62{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  8. Texas A&M 60{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707} (non-SEC until 2012)
  9. Arkansas 58{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  10. Mississippi State 55{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  11. Tennessee 53{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  12. Ole Miss 51{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  13. Kentucky 44{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  14. Vanderbilt 41{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}

The result of this is we see the Crimson Tide jumping back to the top with the consistent success Nick Saban’s hiring in 2007 brought to Tuscaloosa. We also see the success of Steve Spurrier having his best years with the Gamecocks.

Maybe more startling is the similarity with the rankings from the period of time when the SEC started expanding for the first time, which leads to a look at how things have gone after the second expansion.

Winner Percentages from 2012-2015

  1. Alabama 89.2{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  2. Georgia 75.4{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  3. LSU 72.5{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  4. Texas A&M 69.2{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  5. Ole Miss 65.3{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  6. Mississippi State 65.3{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  7. Missouri 63.4{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  8. Florida 62.7{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  9. South Carolina 62.7{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  10. Auburn 57.6{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  11. Tennessee 52{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  12. Vanderbilt 50{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  13. Arkansas 44{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}
  14. Kentucky 29{e1768d0eec022f908d772ba0c0274d97d05d220b4341147789bdb671ddb19707}

This last trend cycle shows how programs like Florida, Auburn, Tennessee and Arkansas fell following problems within that all three schools are hoping was addressed with their present coaches.

Texas A&M and Missouri, the schools joining the SEC in 2012, have improved themselves in somewhat of a surprise, but it’s only been four years, so there is still some time required before a definitive trend can be seen.

We could see a change in these trends as Florida and Tennessee are projected to trend upward from their present position. Many are putting Auburn and Arkansas anywhere from the middle to the bottom of the pack in the West this year.

This will be an interesting year in the trend cycle as programs at the bottom of the current four-year cycle are all looking to have better years while some (Vanderbilt, Missouri) are trending downward based on preseason projections.

It will be interesting to see how the composite recruiting rankings are reflected in the trends of the results.

Michigan dumps Hogs to renew series with Notre Dame

0

The public reaction of Jeff Long and Bret Bielema to Michigan’s dumping a home-and-home with the Razorbacks in favor of Notre Dame has been polite.

To read the quotes of them, it’s the politically-correct way of saying “it happens.”

Privately, though, you know they are both pissed off. It may not be an understatement to say Long more than Bielema.

With fans clamoring for a better slate of non-conference games (as if the weekly minefield in the SEC West isn’t daunting enough), Long was on a roll. He has a home-and-home with TCU starting this year.

And with Jim Harbaugh having the Wolverines back in the public eye with his nonstop antics, it was going to be a marquee step up the ladder going to Ann Arbor in a couple of years. At this point never mind what each program is doing. You simply never know with these things.

Long received an e-mail Wednesday night about the cancellation. It is assumed the check will follow soon. Well, maybe since everything is done electronically these days it’ll probably be done via some computer keystrokes.

The guess here is Long is steaming.

“Primarily, we are disappointed in Michigan’s timing in pulling out of a non-conference football series between the SEC and the Big Ten that has been set for four years,” Long said in a statement, per Matt Jones of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. “While there are many other quality opponents that would help us strengthen our nonconference schedule, the late notice of Michigan’s cancellation makes securing those games substantially more difficult.

“Our focus will be to find a program that welcomes the opportunity to compete against a nationally respected program in the most competitive conference in college football.”

In a take-off on my usual deciphering of coach-speak, here’s the summation of what all of that politically-correct commentary really disguises:

“Those freakin’ a-holes! I’ll schedule a game with Arkansas State before I’ll schedule them again in anything!”

Okay, I added that last one just for fun. I would seriously doubt he’s THAT pissed-off about the whole deal.

But it does create a future hole in the schedule. That will create a headache for Long. Getting a marquee opponent along the lines of Michigan won’t be possible in this short time frame, considering how far in advance schedules are done these days.

And remember, it could have been worse.

Instead of dumping the Hogs for the Irish, it could have been for somebody like Texas.

Well, Jim Harbaugh won’t be coming to Fayetteville

0

If you were already getting hopes up of seeing Michigan in Fayetteville in a couple of years, forget it.

The Wolverines backed out.

And will pay $2 million to do it.

Based on an agreement signed in 2012, the two schools were scheduled to play a home-and-home series with a game at Michigan during the 2018 season and at Arkansas in the 2019 season.

“Primarily, we are disappointed in Michigan’s timing in pulling out of a non-conference football series between the SEC and the Big Ten that has been set for four years,” athletics director Jeff Long said in a press release. “While there are many other quality opponents that would help us strengthen our non-conference schedule, the late notice of Michigan’s cancellation makes securing those games substantially more difficult.

“Our focus will be to find a program that welcomes the opportunity to compete against a nationally respected program in the most competitive conference in college football.”

“As a former player and coach in the Big Ten, I was looking forward to the opportunity for our team to compete against one of my favorite Big Ten conference rivals,” Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said. “I’m disappointed that won’t happen now.”

Of course, finding out why the Wolverines cancelled will be interesting.