42.5 F
Fayetteville

ANDY’S PICKS: Don’t be shocked at a game closer than expected

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Season openers can be funny things to handicap or predict.

There’s almost no evidence to really justify anything other than reputation and seeing how many starters one team has coming back and a whole lot of other stuff that may — or may not — even matter.

It was Lou Holtz after a surprising No. 3 finish in 1977 with an Orange Bowl win over Oklahoma in the spring of 1978 that told us in the media “last year has nothing to do with this year.”

Over the years I’ve found that to be a pretty accurate statement.

Arkansas fans think they got better while Cincinnati went to the College Football Playoff, graduated a bunch of guys, then got worse. That’s what many folks think.

Razorbacks coach Sam Pittman has been trying to tell anyone interested in listening the Bearcats are a pretty good team.  They have a winning record against Power 5 teams under coach Luke Fickell and they were the only team to beat Notre Dame last year … in South Bend, no less.

Hog fans want it both ways. They want last year to matter for them and not for Cincinnati.

Which is why this game could be a lot more competitive than many in Hogs Nation really expect or want.

Then again it could be a complete blowout.

That’s the problem with season openers. Nobody really knows one way or the other.

There will be some folks on sports radio Monday that claim they knew what was going to happen whichever way things go. Those folks should go take a nap. Sometimes you get lucky and if there’s no record what you said, well, we’re all undefeated, untied and unscored upon when Monday rolls around.

The Hogs come in a 6.5-point favorite, mostly because the game is at Razorback Stadium and nobody is chancing a ton of money that line is completely out of line.

But a blowout will be surprising. The Hogs have an edge in talent, but an awful lot of question marks in key areas, mostly on defense.

That doesn’t mean there aren’t answers, but they aren’t glaring solutions to the defensive front and several positions in the secondary. In some of the fall camp practices we’ve seen the cornerbacks can’t cover a double-movefrom a wide receiver.

If the Bearcats just line up and try to go straight at them the Hogs will look good. But don’t expect that. Fickell is not an idiot and Cincinnati has scholarship players, too.

It will be a game a lot of people won’t really like, but it will be a win.

Which is the most important thing in the season opener.

Arkansas 31, Cincinnati 28


It is time for our HitThatLine.com picks contest with Peter Morgan, who stumbled his way to a win last year, mainly because somehow I took some chances to blow it open and faceplanted. Thanks LSU, Auburn and Mississippi State.

So here we go again as the fifth year of HitThatLine.com is coming strong with the picks … and guessing.


Sam Houston State at 6 Texas A&M (NL): The Aggies are over-rated. That may be wishful thinking as much as actual evidence, but they did get ahead of the whole NIL thing and have some talent on the roster. We won’t know much more after this game or until they host Miami the week before playing the Hogs in AT&T Stadium. Texas A&M 56, Sam Houston State 6

11 Oregon at 3 Georgia (-16.5): Maybe the best game of the day and how the Bulldogs are a double-digit favorite over a team that is No. 11 in the country is somewhat interesting and probably based on heavy betting by Bulldogs’ fans still celebrating a national championship last year. Unless the Ducks are better than anybody knows, Georgia will have a routine win. Georgia 35, Oregon 24

Troy at 21 Ole Miss (40.5): While Troy has been a problem for some folks at times in the past, this isn’t one of those times. The Rebels should have a romp and we might find out more about who’s going to be the quarterback this year. Ole Miss 52, Troy 10

7 Utah (2.5) at Florida: The obituaries about the Gators have been written since Dan Mullen got fired. Nobody believes the Gators are any good, but a hunch tells me they aren’t Chad Morris-type bad … maybe not even Bret Bielema-bad. Most of this hunch is based on the opinion Billy Napier is better than anybody thinks. Florida 27, Utah 24

Miami, Ohio at 20 Kentucky (-15): The Wildcats are actually developing enough interest that the basketball coach took an unsolicited shot at the football coach to remind everyone UK is a basketball school. First of all, John Calipari even mentioning that is a boost to Mark Stoops’ football team. Now he has to back it up. Kentucky 31, Miami, Ohio, 21

Mercer at Auburn (NL): Good grief, not even Bryan Harsin could manage to mess this game up. Of course it is Auburn and we are talking about Harsin so just about anything is possible, I guess. Auburn 48, Mercer 10

Elon at Vanderbilt: Well, this could … oh, never mind. Nobody really cares. Vanderbilt 3, Elon 2

Utah State at 1 Alabama (-41.5): Alabama at least scheduled an opening game against a team that was fairly decent last year, but the theme of this is that has absolutely nothing to do with this year. Alabama 54, Utah State 6

Memphis at Mississippi State (-16.5): If you don’t think Mike Leach hasn’t been laying in wait for this game after what happened in Memphis last year you haven’t been paying attention. The Tigers will get buried if the Bulldogs get up because they don’t have enough offense against a defense that’s going to be a lot better than anybody thinks. Mississippi State 41, Memphis 10

Georgia State at South Carolina (-12.5): The Gamecocks might be looking ahead to playing the Hogs next weekend in Fayertteville, but should still have enough to handle this game fairly easily. South Carolina 28, Georgia State 14

What you need to know for Hogs’ opener against Cincinnati

A top-25, season-opening showdown is on the horizon as No. 19 Arkansas hosts No. 23 Cincinnati at 2:30 p.m. in Razorback Stadium.

You can watch the game on ESPN.

Listen to the game online at HitThatLine.com or on the radio at ESPN Arkansas 99.5 in Fayetteville, 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and central Arkansas and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

10 Things to Know – Cincinnati

1: Arkansas and Cincinnati are meeting on the gridiron for the first time in history. The Razorbacks won all five games against non-conference opponents in 2021. The last time Arkansas dropped a game to a non-conference opponent was against Western Kentucky (Nov. 9, 2019). Additionally, head coach Sam Pittman is 5-0 versus non-conference foes.

2: The Razorbacks are coming off the program’s best season in a decade after going 9-4 and winning four trophies for the first time in school history, capturing the Southwest Classic (Texas A&M), the Battle for the Golden Boot (LSU), Battle Line Rivalry (Missouri) and the Outback Bowl (Penn State). Arkansas had won seven games combined the previous three seasons before winning eight in the regular season and then winning the team’s first bowl game since 2016.

3: Arkansas is ranked in both major polls to begin the campaign, checking in at No. 19 in the preseason Associated Press Top 25 Poll and No. 23 in the preseason USA Today Coaches Poll. The Hogs, ranked in the AP preseason poll for the first time since 2015, finished last season ranked No. 21 following their 24-10 over Penn State in the Outback Bowl. Arkansas will play five teams ranked in the AP preseason poll in 2022, including No. 23 Cincinnati in this year’s season opener.

4: By the end of the 2021 season, the Razorbacks were the best rushing team in all of Power 5 and the seventh-best rushing attack at the FBS level, averaging 227.8 yards per game. The Arkansas offense ran for 2,961 yards – the most since 2007 when running backs Darren McFadden and Felix Jones led the Hogs to a school-record 3,725 yards. Four different Razorbacks gained over 500 yards for the first time since 1975 with QB KJ Jefferson (664) leading the way and joined by running backs Trelon Smith (598), Raheim Sanders (578) and Dominique Johnson (575). The Arkansas running game was also explosive, producing 113 runs of 10+ yards to lead all Power 5 schools and rank second nationally behind Kent State (126). Of those 113 runs, 27 went for 20+ yards and 12 went for 30+ yards, including the team’s longest runs of the year – 49-yard runs by WR Treylon Burks (UAPB) and Jefferson (Missouri).

5: Junior QB KJ Jefferson is coming off a remarkable sophomore campaign in 2021. The Sardis, Miss., native passed for 2,676 yards and 21 touchdowns to go along with a team-high 664 yards rushing and six scores. He capped his first season as the full-time starter by earning Outback Bowl MVP honors after rushing for 110 yards in the win over Penn State. His 110 yards rushing made him the first Arkansas QB since Matt Jones in 2004 vs. Ole Miss to eclipse 100 yards in a single game. Jefferson is one of two returning FBS quarterbacks (Louisville QB Malik Cunningham) to lead their team in both passing and rushing yards last season.

6: The Hogs boast a three-headed monster in the running back room with sophomores Raheim Sanders and AJ Green and junior Dominique Johnson. Johnson, a converted tight end, led the team in rushing touchdowns after taking over starting duties midway through the season, while Sanders finished his freshman campaign with two touchdowns in the Outback Bowl. Green ran for 227 yards on just 47 carries as a true freshman last fall.

7: Arkansas returns four starters – Dalton Wagner (41 games played with 28 starts in career), Ricky Stromberg (34 games played with 32 starts in career), Brady Latham (25 games played with 23 starts in career) and Beaux Limmer (24 games played with 16 starts in career) – on its offensive line in 2022. The foursome has combined for 124 career games played with 99 career starts, the second-most combined career starts among SEC teams entering the season (Auburn – returning 102 combined career starts).

8: Bumper Pool’s decision to return for a final year at Arkansas will make an enormous impact on the Razorbacks’ defense. Pool was sensational last season, leading the Hogs with 125 tackles and ranking third in the SEC. He paced a linebacker unit of Grant Morgan and Hayden Henry that saw all three defenders post at least 100 tackles. Pool’s return gives defensive coordinator Barry Odom a star in the middle of the Arkansas defense that has played in 44 games in his career. When the Hogs kick off against Cincinnati, Pool’s race to become Arkansas’ all-time leading tackler will begin. He enters the 2022 season with 349 tackles, good for ninth all-time on the Arkansas career list and just 60 tackles away from overtaking the legendary Tony Bua. Bua’s 408 career tackles have been the standard since 2003.

9: The Razorbacks get back All-America safety Jalen Catalon against the Bearcats. Catalon missed the Hogs’ final seven games of 2021 after having shoulder surgery following the Ole Miss game. Despite only playing in six games, the Mansfield, Texas, product made 46 stops and picked off two passes. Catalon, who has 151 tackles and five interceptions in 20 career games, is a first-team All-SEC honoree entering the 2022 season.

10: Sophomore place kicker Cam Little was named to the preseason watch list for the Lou Groza Collegiate Place Kicker Award, which includes 30 of the best returning kickers in the country. The Moore, Okla., product’s 20 field goals last season were the third most in a single season by a Razorback kicker in program history and helped him garner Freshman All-America status from the FWAA, The Athletic and Pro Football Focus. Little drilled 20 of his 24 field goal attempts and all 46 of his point after attempts during his freshman campaign. Heading into the 2022 season, Little earned Preseason Third Team All-SEC distinction by Phil Steele Magazine.

Former Razorback center Ron Rivard on playing for Joe Gibbs, differences now

Pro football Hall of Famer was his position coach for the Hogs when he was blocking for Joe Ferguson.

Aaron Torres looking at first night of college football plus big weekend

Razorbacks against Cincinnati and looking at his NFL Pick ‘Em Challenge with Phil Elson and the guys on Halftime.

Halftime is LIVE. From Baxter Crossroads Clinic in Harrison, ONE MORE DAY and more

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11:15 – Aaron Torres

One Day & Counting; Season Predictions; Weekend Picks; The Guys are at Baxter Crossroads Family Clinic in Harrison!

Call or text, 877-377-6963

Democrat-Gazette’s Bob Holt on what he expects to see in opener

What the veteran reporter wants to see and what he thinks he’ll see when Razorbacks play Cincinnati on Saturday.

Bud Light Next Morning Rush Podcast: Football Friday is here!!!

Live from The Stadium Shoppe with Chuck Barrett

The Morning Rush is LIVE from the Stadium Shoppe with Chuck on location

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Tye, Tommy and Chuck Barrett LIVE at the Stadium Shoppe on Razorback FOOTBALL FRIDAY

The Gimme the Hawgs Chuck Podcast E1: Featuring former Arkansas QB Matt Jones

Chuck Barrett opens up the Arkansas football season with a brand new podcast presented by Weichert Realtors-The Griffin Company

Peter’s prediction for a big Razorback season

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Like so many other fans of college football, every year, within a week or so of New Year’s Day, we as Razorback fans partake in watching our last game of the season.

This could be your team’s final and thankful attempt to close out a lackluster season, their attempt to win a bowl game, or simply you enjoying two good teams compete despite your lack of vested interest.

Perhaps you live outside the state of Alabama but your die-hard nature motivates you to watch football all the way through the National Championship year after year.

No matter which category you fall into, we all start to mourn the looming eight-month period in which there are no Saturday games, no tailgates, and no watch parties.

Then, as time passes like it always does, a brightness starts to fill our eyes in late July or early August.

Our faces grow a little more hopeful. Our future has purpose.

Our upcoming weekend schedules have to be carefully crafted to accommodate possible kick-off times. Our children clean their rooms without being asked.

Okay, that last one may have been a bit of a stretch.

Regardless, for Arkansas’s faithful, somewhere in the late summer mix we all begin spending more time invested in media releases about the Hogs.

We read the practice reports, watch the interviews, and hold our breath when we perform a web search regarding possible injuries.

Up and down we scour countless sources to see whether or not we should be praising or cursing the transfer portal, loving or vilifying NIL, and worshipping or downplaying the importance of any and all polls.

Oh, and we read predictions, perhaps even a large number of them. We read them from our writers, the prosers of our opponents, and the national gurus who always seem to show us nothing but love, am I right?

Consider yourself lucky in this very moment, because you get to read one last guy’s humble attempt to lay his knowledge into the ring with the big boys of college prophecy.

Without hesitation nor even the slightest amount of bias ahead, here we go.

Week 1: Sept. 3 vs. Cincinnati — Going back to coach Sam Pittman’s thoughts regarding to the opening week game, if you have ever had tea up north, you might be hopeful the Bearcats are only bringing a small glass of unsweet. Not simply because that’s a metaphor for how they will play, but more so it is an opportunity for me to remind people up north to step up their brewing game a little bit. It’s nothing personal, but you all need serious beverage help up there. ARKANSAS wins this one.

Week 2: Sept. 10 vs. South Carolina — I love Shane Beamer, but I do not want his team to win this week. ARKANSAS has the edge.

Week 3: Sept. 17 vs Missouri State — Is it not fun just to sit back and think about the possible full-display pranks and slights fitting the return of Bobby Petrino to Donald W Reynolds that weekend? Let’s see what cleverness abounds in the student section as well. Bring it, Gen Z. ARKANSAS with another win.

Week 4: Sept. 24 at Texas A&M (in Arlington, Texas, at AT&T Stadium) — Too close to call at this point, and we will be going into the weekend hopeful our season is not looking like a letdown. HOGS barely get out of Texas with a victory.

Week 5: Oct. 1 vs Alabama — Could this be the year? One writer in Alabama has the game versus Arkansas as a very possible loss. Unfortunately, mark me in the column of those not so certain it can be done in Tuscaloosa. The Tide will give us our first loss.

Week 6: Oct. 8 at Mississippi State — ARKANSAS wins on the road after bouncing back from their lost to Bama.

Week 7: Oct. 15 at BYU — In the end, the Cougar fans will be leaving the stadium, looking up at their school logo on the mountain, and asking, “Yes, ‘Y’ did we not win?” HOGS over Brigham Young University.

Week 8: Bye

Week 9: Oct. 29 at Auburn — This game has a big circle on it. Auburn is in internal disarray, yet their performance on the field may still be too much to defeat in the plains. ARKANSAS does what they like to do to Auburn though.

Week 10: Nov. 5 vs Liberty University — Has anyone called Hugh Freeze lately offering him a new position?… Please, take from that question what you will. Not surprisingly this game scares me a little as the Eagles have been playing well. The RAZORBACKS win by double-digits though.

Week 11: Nov. 12 vs LSU — They say LSU is back already under the fresh reins of Brian Kelley. I do not believe they are better than us, especially this quickly and with the game being in Fayetteville. HOGS over Tigers.

Week 12: Nov. 19 vs Ole Miss — I have to pick one more against us. I cannot be a homer throughout the entire season. I will not. I must not. I hate I have put myself into waiting to have to pick a second lost against us versus the Rebels. Ole Miss wins but barely.

Week 13: Nov. 25 at Missouri — Hey, Eliah Drinkwitz is going to get his wish with Arkansas staying on the schedule for his Missouri Tigers. Good idea, coach; we agree! ARKANSAS rolls in Columbia.

Like taking your first driving test, 10-2, that’s the prediction for 2022, my fellow Cardinal and White faithful.

Lee Corso could not say it better himself. No, seriously, after watching him during his segment this past weekend he really could not say it any better at all. I love that guy and wish he could stick around forever because he has earned his right to do what he loves for as long as he likes.

Hopefully, ESPN finds a way to honor his legacy this season thus ushering a much needed departure without a loss of his dignity.

Going back to our season, these games all being winnable, yet the overall schedule itself may be too brutal for any team to accomplish double-digit wins.

Therefore, please forgive me for being a homer, for having a huge soft spot for Nebraska, and for listing my ‘Twitter’ account: @PeterMorganWPS.

God Bless and Go HOGS!!!