Hogs’ coach Sam Pittman’s complete press conference

Looking ahead to Alabama game on Saturday in midst of four-game losing streak for Hogs after falling at Ole Miss.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Hogs lose 4th straight game, comes up short vs Ole Miss 27-20

Tye, Tommy and Chuck on the loss to Ole Miss, Cowboys/49ers and more!

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Hog Reaction – Arkansas falls to Ole Miss 27-20

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Hogs’ coach Sam Pittman still just trying to get a win after loss

With Razorbacks floundering now with four straight losses, three in the SEC West, he’s getting antsy to beat anybody.

KJ Jefferson, Ty Washington on Hogs’ loss to Ole Miss

Quarterback frustrated in final trip to play closest to his hometown of Sardis, Miss., tight end breaking into spotlight.

Hogs’ defensive players recapping 27-20 loss at Ole Miss

Jaheim Thomas and Jayden Johnson on defensive problems on road in fourth straight loss, third in SEC to Rebels.

LIVE BLOG: Late interception kills any shot as Hogs fall to Ole Miss

We will update with more content Sunday morning to follow up on Razorbacks’ 27-20 loss at Ole Miss on Saturday night. Postgame interviews will be posted tonight.

OXFORD, Miss. — At times this week, Arkansas’ players and Sam Pittman sounded like they hoped Ole Miss would be overlooking them tonight when the two teams square off at 6:30 p.m. on the SEC Network. You can also listen online here (clock on the bar at the bottom of the page) in coverage markets or on the radio at ESPN Arkansas 99.5 in Fayetteville, 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

“Coming off the LSU win, they’re going to overlook us,” defensive lineman Cam Ball said on Tuesday evening. “I don’t think they’re too much worried about us.” That’s using the power of positive thinking and hoping it happens. It was 45 years ago that Lou Holtz told all of us in a press conference to forget that kind of stuff because “last week has nothing to do with this week and last year has nothing to do with this year.”

All of that means this could be an interesting game tonight. The Razorbacks come into the game and the wheels on the season may be wobbling a little with a 2-3 record and neither one of those wins over a Power 5 team … or in the SEC. The Rebels are sitting at 4-1 (1-1 SEC). Those numbers aren’t far apart, but the Hogs didn’t play well last week and were dominated by Texas A&M. Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin is hoping last year has nothing to do with this year.

“Not really bulletin board material,” Kiffin said this week. “I just use it as saying, ‘It doesn’t matter what happened last year.’ With Arkansas playing against Ole Miss, it doesn’t matter what they’ve done before. If I remember correctly, I think the week before us they lost to Liberty, didn’t move the ball very well, and then they came out against us and looked like a top-five team in the country. It doesn’t matter what’s happened before. So, I did use that game as evidence of how these guys come to play against us.”

KJ Jefferson (Craven Whitlow / HitThatLine.com)

Live Blog:

1Q 6:08: The coming out party for Ty Washington comes on the Hogs’ first drive of the game, going 80 yards in 15 plays and eating up 7:46 of the first quarter as Washington had 5 catches for 56 yards, the last being a 3-yard flip for a score. The drive overcame a couple of penalties by the offensive line (mostly Brady Latham) and some big sacks, but chalk this one up to Washington and KJ Jefferson. Hogs 7, Rebels 0

1Q 3:21: Ole Miss answers, mostly with quarterback Jaxson Dart’s key scrambles but bog down close to the Hogs’ goal. Linebacker Jaheim Thomas comes wide open on a blitz and Dart limps off after not much of a hit at all and it ends up in a short field goal from Caden Davis. Hogs 7, Rebels 3

1Q :29: Ole Miss quickly answers again, thanks to Jefferson hitting the open receiver, who happened to be Rebels linebacker Ashanti Cistrunk, who nearly had a pick-six. Ole Miss punched it in from inches away on fourth down, moving Quinshon Judkins to take a direct snap through a huge crease on the left side, leaving Hog fans to wonder if that is not in the arsenal of offensive coordinator Dan Enos. Rebels 10, Hogs 7

2Q 1:34: You have to wonder if Ole Miss is starting to wear the Hogs down. They go 50 yards  in six plays and the final 6 coming on a pass from Dart to Dayton Webb and lead by two scores late in first half. Rebels 17, Hogs 7

3Q 10:07: Maybe the Hogs are starting to get offense going, reverting back at halftime to original starters on offensive line. You can discuss later all this shuffling to end up where Sam Pittman started, but Cam Little comes on to kick a 56-yard field goal to get a lead back. Rebels 17, Hogs 10

3Q 02:46: Malik Chavis sets offense up in Ole Miss territory with a fourth-down sack and Hogs move down before drive stalls near the goalline … again. Little has to come on for a short (26 yards) field goal to inch back closer to Rebels. Rebels 17, Hogs 13

4Q 14:11: Hogs finally get a score from a suddenly emerging Ty Washington at tight end, who has either had some click for him lately or nobody saw it until lately. Jefferson finds him for a 17-yard scoring pass and the lead. Hogs 20, Rebels 17

4Q 7:49: Rebels don’t waste any time taking the lead back. Dart leads offense on 75-yard, 12-play scoring march, converting one fourth-and-short in the process to get the lead back on a 7-yard run by Ulysses Bentley. Rebels 24, Hogs 20

4Q 2:43: Rebels get ball back and move down to Hogs’ 2 before defense makes a stand and have to settle for a 22-yard field goal. Anybody else remember 2021 and thinking redemption. Rebels 27, Hogs 20

Jefferson throws a late interception that killed any chance of setting up a repeat of what happened in 2021 with a late drive and having to make a decision on a 2-point conversion. Razorbacks sitting at 2-4 on season, still looking for first SEC win and heading to Alabama for a game next Saturday morning.

ANDY’S PICKS: Can Hogs end losing streak in Oxford tonight?

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FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — I’m pretty sure Arkansas didn’t plan on a horrific start to this season, but that’s exactly the way the Razorbacks have played through the first five games. There’s not much of a different way to call a 2-3 start anything else without a win over a Power 5 team.

Never mind last week’s faceplant in Arlington against Texas A&M. Don’t quote me the final score because the Aggies didn’t really make that big of an effort to score. That looked and felt like a four-touchdown blowout and I don’t really care how you want to spin it. That 34-22 final probably should have been at least 41 because the officials didn’t give them a score on that push at the end.

What did it do to the psychology of the Razorbacks, though? Don’t read the quote sheet from the press conferences this week. Sam Pittman can’t really say much else other than positive things and the players were coached to basically say the same things. Very, very rarely do you ever hear clues in those things to indicate anybody’s letting it carry over.

Tonight we’ll find out, though. Ole Miss might have a letdown, though, after winning a shootout against LSU in Oxford last week and having students rush the field with a security guy throwing weak blocks without a lot of footwork and knocking students, including a co-ed, to the ground.

The Hogs are still trying to figure out where everybody should line up in the offensive line. It’s a mess and playing musical chairs there might just be so the coaches can say they are trying to do SOMETHING. It may be lke thinking a mule can do better in the Kentucky Derby moving to a different starting spot.

Now there are questions of depth in the secondary with Dwight McGlothern probably not going to play much tonight or certainly at full strength. He was limping around at practices this week and Pittman wasn’t hopeful.

The Hogs probably don’t want to get in a shootout with the Rebels, who seem to have things figured out there and Jaxson Dart starting to play up to all the hoopla surrounding him being a highly-rated recruit originally, going to USC. And Lane Kiffin is about as good as anybody in the business at finding the matchups in favor of his team.

(-13) Ole Miss 34, Hogs 24


Around the SEC, Pete picked his usual collection losers and accused me of running scared with the huge lead he forfeited to me. Uh, no, He will continue his chances because, really, what option is he left with as we get near the halfway point of the season and if he sent up smoke flares I couldn’t see that far in the rearview mirror.

LSU (-6) at Missouri: LSU collapsed in the fourth quarter last week and there’s not really a better way to describe it. Brian Kelly probably knows it, too. We’ll see if he can get them re-grouped before whatever mildly interested fans show up for the game in Columbia, Mo. LSU 31, Missouri 17

Western Michigan at Mississippi State: The Bulldogs should have a breather in this one. They need it because it hasn’t been a good year, but they are getting better. If they can put up points for a change, this one should be fairly easy. If it goes sideways and ends up being one of those shocking upsets, it may be a long year in Starkville. Bulldogs 38, West Michigan 10

Alabama (-2) at Texas A&M: If the Aggies hand the Crimson Tide a loss, there won’t be a fistfight at midfield between two West Virginia hillbillies, but it will be short and quick. Nick Saban won’t be mad at the Aggies, but his own team will have a quiet flight back to Tuscaloosa and the offensive coordinator probably won’t be e-mailing students. A&M was the sleeper pick for Zach Arns on Ruscin & Zach and I agree. They have a pile of talent there, especially on the defensive line as the Hogs saw last week. Welcome to a surprise. Aggies 27, Crimson Tide 24 (and they will probably take it out on the Hogs next week).

Vanderbilt at Florida (-18): When you have a mismatch, don’t sit around trying to over-think the whole thing. The Gators are better than a lot of people think (probably not championship-level), but the Commodores are as bad as everyone knows. Florida 42, Vanderbilt 14

Kentucky at Georgia (-14): The betting line is probably close to accurate in this one. A lot of people are hoping the Bulldogs’ dominance the last couple of years is coming to an end, but at the halfway point if Kirby Smart is going to get it figured out, he probably will in this game. The Wildcats may be set up for the kill. Bulldogs 31, Wildcats 17