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UT, OU take first step in Big 12 divorce; Murphy doesn’t like it

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Information from ESPN included in this story.

Oklahoma and Texas didn’t mention the SEC when they notifed the Big 12 on Monday they are leaving, according to a story at ESPN.

Now it’s up to SEC commissioner Greg Sankey for the next move after he consults with the likely several committees he’s using on all of this.

And sportswriters like Tom Murphy of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette aren’t particularly enamored with it.

“I didn’t think adding A&M and Missouri was good for Arkansas and the results have born that out, in football at least,” he said on The Morning Rush with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft on Monday morning.

“It makes recruiting in Texas and Oklahoma much more competitive.”

Well, it has been like that for the last 60 years. The Hogs traditionally haven’t gotten very many players over the years in thos two states A&M, Texas and Oklahoma wanted … regardless of the SEC.

Sam Pittman is taking more of a national approach in recruiting and not focused on Texas. With 300 Division I players coming out every year, Arkansas will get about what they’ve been getting there.

“Providing notice to the Big 12 at this point is important in advance of the expiration of the conference’s current media rights agreement,” the statement said. “The universities intend to honor their existing grant of rights agreements. However, both universities will continue to monitor the rapidly evolving collegiate athletics landscape as they consider how best to position their athletics programs for the future.”

There is a mile of wiggle room in there for everybody. It’s a game of high stakes wheeling and dealing in the background with television networks and, reportedly, other schools reaching out to the SEC wanting to get in.

Big 12 sources told ESPN on Monday that the statement doesn’t fully guarantee that UT and OU would remain in the league through 2025. The possibility remains that they pay the $75-80 million penalty for leaving early, while also giving the required 18 months’ notice, per Big 12 bylaws.

Some have speculated that this is the first legal maneuver, and the possibility also exists that if the Big 12 dissolves before 2025, OU and Texas would no longer be bound to stay through the duration of the contract.

SEC athletic directors are scheduled for their weekly call at 12:30 p.m. ET on Monday — a call that had been rescheduled because of the league media days.

The Big 12 executive committee met with the presidents of Texas and Oklahoma on Sunday, and sources have told ESPN they are still trying to understand exactly what Oklahoma and Texas are looking for. The question is whether the SEC would extend an invitation knowing the legal strategy of Texas and Oklahoma is to stay through the duration of the TV contract — which is what the statement indicated the teams plan to honor.

An SEC official told ESPN this week that the league’s current scheduling format would have to be revamped with the addition of Oklahoma and Texas. Some sort of “pod” system would likely replace the current East and West divisions, and the league would likely play more than eight conference games each season in the future.

Get ready because the news is going to be coming fast and furious … and not slowing down.

Halftime is LIVE! Texas, OU tell Big 12 goodbye, Olympics, Razorbacks, more!

Call or text into Halftime, at 877-377-6963. Today’s Guests: Connor O’Gara at 11:30, Jason Carroll, 3 up 3 down

Catalon named to watch list for Jim Thorpe Award

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Arkansas redshirt sophomore defensive back Jalen Catalon picked up another preseason honor, as he has been named to the Jim Thorpe Award preseason watch list.

Catalon, who already earned Preseason All-SEC and Bednarik Award Watch List recognition this year, logged 99 tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss, three interceptions, four passes broken up, one fumble recovery and two forced fumbles as a redshirt freshman last year.

His 9.9 tackles per game tied for the FBS freshmen lead and was fourth among all SEC defenders. Catalon became the first SEC freshman since Tennessee’s Eric Berry in 2007 to post at least 86 tackles and three interceptions.

Against Tennessee, he recorded 12 tackles and tallied an interception and pass broken up, claiming SEC Defensive Player and Jim Thorpe Award Player of the Week recognition.

He grabbed FWAA Freshman All-American and AP All-SEC First Team honors last season.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – OU & TX… help or hurt Hog FB?

Tye & Tommy on more OU/TX news, Tom Murphy joins plus teams you want added to the SEC

 

Watch The Morning Rush LIVE with Tom Murphy of the Democrat-Gazette

With Texas and Oklahoma taking the first steps in leaving the Big12 for the SEC, Tom Murphy joined Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft on Monday morning.

No, Pittman isn’t giving a number but knows Hogs need wins

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Fans usually have a specific number of wins they want to see and everybody in the media takes a guess but Sam Pittman isn’t getting into that.

Like a lot of coaches he doesn’t look too far down the road. He’s certainly not going to give a number.

“We just wanna be better,” he said at SEC Media Days on Thursday. “If we’re quite a bit better we’d like to be that.”

There are more questions than answers right now for the coaches and everybody else. Maybe the only thing we pretty much know for sure is Treylon Burks is going to catch passes, Jalen Catalon is going to hit people and Grant Morgan is going to be maybe the best leader on the team.

Everything else right now is sheer speculation.

“If we can just keep growing our program and beating more people,” he said, “you can use that in recruiting. I just want to play hard and have our players better prepared. Bigger, strong and faster and then the results happen on the field.”

That’s going to be the most important thing of all. Especially winning games against the people expect them to beat.

Let’s face it, if they aren’t ahead of Rice, Georgia Southern and UAPB by 20 points at halftime there’s a problem. Even in the down years of the best coaches in Arkansas’ history, that’s what they did to teams like that.

Others got fired and the leash isn’t that long.

“Each year if we can just continue to improve, then we’ll have some huge success,” Pittman said.

The Hogs should have three wins and to get to a bowl game — which is the measurable most fans want — they’ve got to squeeze those out of the most difficult schedule in the country.

There are no teams in that group you can point to right now and say are a win. You might hope, but that’s a flimsy plan that usually doesn’t work out well.

Throw in the usual variables of injuries, bad calls and other stuff it’s going to be a week to week guessing game what the final number might be.

And Pittman isn’t going to throw one out there, either.

In SEC the way things have been isn’t how it will be

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When the first round of conference shuffling started over a decade ago, Arkansas’ athletics director at the time was asked about a move to the Big 12.

“There are about seven million reasons to not do it,” he said in a rare moment of common sense.

Now Hunter Yurachek has about 16-20 million reasons to be in favor of Texas and Oklahoma coming into the SEC. That’s how many dollars per year that are projected to be added to the athletic fund … every year.

Just the rumors and speculation about the whole thing has sent every major conference in the country scrambling. Considering the NCAA has little interest in governing anything, the race is on to be the first super conference.

Nobody does that better than the SEC.

Quit yammering about competitive balance and recruiting because it doesn’t matter in this case. It’s all about money, there’s a lot more being the gorilla in the room and adding two of the 10 biggest brands in college athletics (the Longhorns is No. 1 there in dollars) will generate more for everybody.

The Texas legislature is powerless to stop it. That bill introduced isn’t even included for the special session where they can’t even get a quorum because a bunch flew to Washington, D.C. Nothing from Oklahoma State is going to stop it.

Forget about the exit fee for the two schools. They’ll play the waiting game because the Big 12 probably may not survive next week, much less to 2025.

Conferences share the wealth fairly equally. Yes, the Hogs had their check from the league go higher when Alabama wins the College Football Playoff. The check goes to the SEC, not to Tuscaloosa.

Everybody is scrambling.

The Big Ten, which already has a bigger TV deal than the SEC, was caught flat-footed, according to a report from Brandon Marcello at 247Sports on Saturday.

“That has not even been broached,” Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez told 247Sports.

The Big Ten, as we found out during the chaos of last year at this time, tends to wait until the bandwagon gets rolling pretty good, then jumps under it, grabbing the Pac 12 by the arm and yanking them in with them.

Make no mistake about it, they are both scrambling. Ignore what they’re saying publicly. Remember, Texas A&M was jumping up at SEC Media Days, then Saturday came out with statements where they did everything except open their arms for a big hug (and that will never happen).

Keep an eye on the AAC. That’s the American Athletic Conference where Central Florida, Memphis and some others reside. They are going to be aggressive, according to a story at The Athletic on Saturday.

They will probably have super conference numbers, little money and not big enough names to cause any disruption. They will provide viewing, though, on weeknights.

No, Texas and Oklahoma bring the biggest names to what is probably going to be the biggest splash in college athletics in a century or so. More importantly, they bring the most dollars.

Don’t look to the past as a guide to predicting the future of college athletics.

To keep up, the Hogs will need money. More than they have coming in now. Texas and Oklahoma will bring that.

How it’s organized is somebody else’s problem. Everybody has an opinion, but you can wonder if the SEC is going to stop at 16 teams.

A few of us old-timers remember when the old Southwest Conference admitted Houston as the ninth member in 1976. Fans wondered why anybody needed more than eight.

In 1990 folks thought the SEC was doing something incredible by going to 12 teams. Nobody could figure out why they would add two teams in 2012.

Going to 16 teams is a logical step forward and it probably won’t stop there forever.

More teams mean more viewers. The SEC already has one network and it wouldn’t be surprising if Texas donates the Longhorn Network (that has been disappointing for everybody involved financially) and it turns into SEC Network 2.

Don’t be surprised by anything over the next four years. The way things have been isn’t how it will be.

Even A&M appearing to be on board with Texas, OU, joining SEC

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A lot of Arkansas fans can’t seem to see the forest of all this talk of SEC expansion because they can’t get past the first tree, but it appears Texas A&M is accepting it, so get ready for a reality check.

Saturday afternoon the Aggies released statements to national media outlets that didn’t exactly sound like they were going to put up as big of a fight as everyone predicted:

A&M president Katherine Banks released a statement on the possibility of the SEC expanding:

“The last few days have been challenging in many ways, and I recognize that change in college athletics is often unsettling for those who love their institutions,” Banks said. “Rest assured, the chancellor, our athletic director, and I, and everyone involved in this matter are focused solely on what is best for Texas A&M University. Since 2011, we have been a proud member of the best intercollegiate athletic sports conference in history and we look forward to continued success in our SEC partnership for many years to come.”

Athletics director Ross Bjork issued the following statement to Dennis Dodd at CBS Sports:

“The culture of any conference, but especially for A&M, that’s the priority in this whole conversation,” Bjork said. “I’ve been in the league 10 years. When I first sat down and met Mike Slive, it was about culture and collaboration, excellence on and off the field. That’s what makes us the best conference. We’ve got to protect that.

“Look at A&M, We’re stronger than ever. … Look at the landscape of college athletics. Who wouldn’t want to join the SEC? Here in Texas, we’ve been able to pave the way. … Whoever joins, whenever they join, we’re ready. We embrace it at the highest level. That’s how we look at this.

“There is emotion, we get it. We’re in a great state; we’re in the best conference.”

Bjork also released a statement to ESPN:

“Regardless of who joins the SEC, whether it’s now [or] in the future, ‘the 12th Man’ is ready,” Bjork told ESPN on Saturday. “Our teams are ready. Our coaches are ready. Our athletic department is ready to compete at the highest level. That’s what the SEC is, that’s what we are as a university, and we’re ready for whatever comes next.”

That’s nothing compared to the posturing the Aggies were doing when the initial story broke at SEC Media Days on Wednesday.

Some Razorback fans don’t want the Longhorns getting in the league. The primary point is some goofball hatred for a football team they never managed to beat even three out of every 10 times they played in 75 games for most of the last century.

It’s bigger than just football. It would be much more interesting to hear what Eric Musselman, Mike Neighbors, Dave Van Horn and Courtney Deifel think about this whole expansion deal. Texas and OU do pretty well in their sports, too.

The thought here is those coaches will compete just fine, thank you, and football will do whatever it does. Playing in Austin and Norman every other year will only help the Hogs in recruiting, despite what you think.

It’s a short-sighted argument about hurting recruiting. And wrong.

Texas produces 300 players a year and the Hogs will still get about the same number they’ve been getting. Sam Pittman is recruiting nationally (they aren’t shy about making offers to anybody, anywhere). The Lone Star state isn’t the only place they look.

Besides, folks, this has nothing to do with competitive balance and the SEC hopes Texas and Oklahoma will win like they always have.

But it is happening.

The Big 12 has made a last-ditch effort to the Longhorns and Sooners by taking money from each member to sweeten the payout just to those two, according to a story at CBS Sports.

Texas and Oklahoma are expected to inform the Big 12 of their intention to leave the conference Monday. That does not mean they have a place to go because no one has said the SEC is going to be extending an offer over the weekend.

But you wonder if each member of the Big 12 is really going to be that interested in giving up millions to bump just UT and OU up to around $56 million a year while they take a pay cut … just to keep them in a conference that is teetering on the edge of collapse if just a couple of other folks walk away.

Each school would owe the Big 12 around $80 million to leave by the 2022 season, but some folks have said neither school is really too concerned about paying that. Both schools have double-digit boosters that could write the check and not worry about it.

But if they say their intention is to leave when the current TV deal expires in 2025, every other member is going to be on the phone and it’s doubtful very many will be left by 2023, much less a couple of years later.

Remember, Texas A&M and Missouri came to the SEC a year earlier than originally planned because of the disruption they caused bailing out.

 

Pittman: ‘I’m at the University of damn Arkansas’ from SEC Media Days 2021

Hogs coach Sam Pittman believes he’s at the best university in the country and didn’t leave room for doubt.

Torres thinks A&M’s bluster not enough to stop league change

Aaron Torres from Fox Sports Radio expects Texas, Oklahoma to be members of SEC and the Aggies can’t stop it.

Hey guys, it was Ruscin who picked Hogs to win SEC West

Apparently nobody really paid attention (or cared) but Derek Ruscin on Ruscin & Zach has been projecting Arkansas to meet Kentucky in the SEC Championship Game for awhile.

Ruscin, the self-proclaimed Rodney Dangerfield of the ESPN Arkansas cast of characters, addressed it on Friday afternoon’s show. He put it out there on social media … and nobody really noticed.

Or they didn’t believe he would do it. LISTEN LIVE NOW or click the new player bar below.

The major part of conversation, of course, is Texas-Oklahoma leaving the Big 12.

And, of course, everyone thinks this has anything to do with competitive balance in football. In the coming arms race among the conferences, it’s about money … this puts the SEC in the position of being the big guy.

If you think this

Here’s what we’ve heard Friday:

• Announcement reportedly close to being made.

“The Austin American-Statesman reported Friday that a Big 12 source believed talks between the SEC and the two schools had been ongoing for more than six months, though SEC member Texas A&M had been left out of the discussions,” according to the story at ESPN.com. “An SEC source told ESPN’s Heather Dinich that it’s inaccurate that A&M was left out of the conversation.”

• The hurdles, domino effects and more of potential move.

The only thing that’s becoming clear is that from multiple reports, the move will be announced soon and it will be approved. Texas A&M may be allowed to say it voted no but the guess among experts is they aren’t turning down the money, either.