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Most anticipated part of full capacity football crowds this year for Holt

With football crowds expected to be at full capacity, Bob Holt of the Democrat-Gazette talked about what he’s looking forward to seeing.

Halftime Pod Presented By Eastside Liquor: Holt

Tampa Title Town; No Fans At Olympics; Halftime Homework; Favorite Team To Beat and much more!

Errors on original FPI rankings drop MSU, Hogs up to 6 wins

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When ESPN released the first preseason Football Power Index, somehow Mississippi State was listed at No. 8 and that raised a lot of eyebrows.

Yeah, it was a screwup and they finally got it fixed and released another index Thursday morning with a disclaimer at the top:

Editor’s Note: We recently discovered that our previous preseason release of the Football Power Index in April contained data and modeling errors. We have remedied the issues and are re-releasing FPI here ahead of the 2021 season. ESPN Analytics regrets the error.

Mississippi State was re-arranged at No. 24. Arkansas, meanwhile, is now No. 36 with the index projecting 6.3 wins for the 2021 season.

While all of that is at least a glimmer of hope for Razorback fans, it really didn’t make the schedule that much easier. When you take out non-conference games against Rice, Georgia Southern and Arkansas-Pine Bluff, the Hogs have eight opponents ranked in the Top 25 of the index.

The average opponent FPI of those eight opponents is 12. Alabama (1), Georgia (5), Texas A&M (7) and Texas (8) are the most highly-rated teams on the schedule.

Auburn is 15th, LSU 18th with Ole Miss No. 20 and Mississippi State 24th.

The usual teams are at the top. Behind the Crimson Tide are Clemson, Oklahoma and Ohio State.

Other teams affected by the revised index included Miami (moved up from No. 20 to No. 10), Oklahoma State (down from No. 9 to No. 19), Washington (up from No. 59 to No. 25), Utah (up from No. 57 to No. 30), UCF (up from No. 70 to No. 34), BYU (up from No. 63 to No. 38), Coastal Carolina (down from No. 35 to No. 60), Kansas State (down from No. 44 to No. 67).

ESPN’s Preseason Football Power Index (revised)

Halftime is LIVE with Holt, sports talk on ESPN Arkansas

Watch Halftime with Phil Elson, Drew Barrett and Matt Travis LIVE on ESPN Arkansas with Democrat-Gazette writer Bob Holt.

RECRUITING THURSDAY: Loggains’ NFL resume big role recruiting

After Hogs pick up big TE commit, Democrat-Gazette’s Richard Davenport said big key was Dowell Loggains pro experience.

Discussing ‘swing games’ on Hogs’ football schedule this fall

Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft talking about games that could go either way with Democrat-Gazette’s Tom Murphy.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast: Swing game for Hogs in 2021

Tye & Tommy on the swing game for Arkansas, Richard Davenport, plus things you miss as a kid!

 

The Morning Rush on Thursday with more NIL, Murphy, more

Watch or catch up on anything you missed by sleeping late with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft and The Morning Rush on ESPN Arkansas!

NIL could accelerate end of whatever NCAA control left, says Sherrill

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It didn’t take Jackie Sherrill long Wednesday to answer how many of his former players would have really taken advantage of the new name, image and likeness stuff.

“About 30 or 40,” he said with a chuckle.

Then he started ticking off names.

“Tony Dorsett, Dan Marino, Hugh Green, Mark May, Ray Childress, Kevin Murray,” Sherrill said, then paused. “I’m not even getting close to all of them.”

Sherrill played the recruiting game as well as anybody when he was coaching Pittsburgh, Texas A&M and Mississippi State. He’s coached a handful of Hall of Famers and has watched the NIL developments with more than a passing interest.

Most interestingly, though, it’s the tip of the iceberg that may see the NCAA melt away. Sherrill first predicted that was going to happen as far back as 2008 to me.

“The NCAA is on it’s way out,” Sherrill said. “The Power 5 is going to break away, form their own organization and control things how they want to control them.”

What nobody is talking about in this initial wave of confusion is there’s absolutely no control by anyone. The kangaroo court in Indianapolis is powerless to do anything about it, either. The schools may be in trouble once the lawyers get involved … because the NCAA doesn’t want it in court.

“They (the NCAA) won’t win a case,” Sherrill said. “They would spend more in court. I believe I’m correct that there has never been a lawsuit by the student-athlete where the student-athlete did not win. If the kids take it to court, the NCAA won’t win.”

Nobody knows what’s going to happen with the different states having laws that are all over the map. There will be challenges from everywhere and for guys who make their living coaching, it’s an area nearly all know nothing about.

“If you’re smart as a coach, you would recommend the players be treated as a group so it’s fair or at least close for everybody,” Sherrill said. “From the outside looking in there are a lot of ways to help players. You can’t use it in recruiting, but that doesn’t keep anybody from doing.”

In other words, the players will find out whether the school tells them or not. In today’s world of social media and communication in terms of seconds as opposed to minutes, hours or days, the word will get around.

“Say a group of car dealers go into a pact and one pays the offensive line, another the wide receivers and another the linebackers,” Sherrill said. “That way every player receives something. Obviously there are going to be players that make more than others, but everybody needs to get something.”

It’s already happening.

In Miami a gym owner is coming up with $500 for every scholarship football player (up to 90 total).

That opens creative doors … if business owners want to spend that kind of money. More importantly, they will have to see a return on spending that kind of money.

Unless they seriously want their team to win a lot of games.

All of which means we don’t know where this is headed or where it’s going to end. The guess is it’s going to get more interesting when lawyers get involved.

And the chaos may never end.

“It won’t,” Sherrill said Wednesday afternoon.

Prentice on how Arkansas is handling new name, image, likeness

Terry Prentice, the NIL Director for the Hogs, talked about all the new twists and turns and dealing with the various issues on Halftime.

Sponsorships could be final way Power 5 schools separate, says Henry

With companies now able to sponsor entire teams, Hawgs Illustrated’s Clay Henry thinks the big schools might pull away from everybody else.