Recapping Hogs’ opening-day win; looking ahead with red glasses

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Has anyone recovered from yesterday?

No, not the celebratory partying we had after Arkansas’s football game against Rice. This question stems from the early-game apprehension Razorbacks fans unquestionably experienced early in the 2021 Week One contest.

Oh, you did not get to listen or watch? Or perhaps you simply want to experience it again mixed with the thoughts of a humble opinion piece contributor? Whatever your reason, wait no longer.

First Half

KJ does not look as sharp. He does not look polished.

A good friend of mine messaged asking if KJ has regressed. My initial thought is we need to give him and his nerves time to settle, but, honestly, I am worried.

He immediately scores on a 34-yard rush.

Arkansas opens the season with a 7 – 0 lead.

My friend later messages and this time states, “I might have spoken too quickly about KJ. He’s doing fantastic now!”

KJ, almost on cue, throws an interception.

No offense to my old compadre, but they probably noticed I quit responding. Moreso, on my end, I placed an emphasis on not even opening their digital musings. Superstition was at a premium.

The offensive line is not doing a good job in pass protection. The run blocking is grading out as moderate, but I would not say they are also setting the unbiased football fan’s world on fire.

The defensive line is not getting any penetration. This is something upon which they must perfect and perform better, especially against a lower-caliber offense such as Rice.

Somewhere in the middle of all this lack of execution Rice blocks a punt and misses yet later converts a field goal. Arkansas leads 7 – 3.

Two horrible penalties. One for targeting (leading to the election of Grant Morgan) and one for a late hit by Jalen Catalon.

This is a direct message to the NCAA: the targeting penalty has to be reviewed. I understand its purpose, and we all appreciate player safety; however, its interpretation and application for automatic ejection needs to be reviewed thoroughly.

Most fans, players, former players, and coaches all agree the penalty, as it is being applied, is taking away from the game. There needs to be a tiered level of what does and does not constitute an automatic injection.

No worries, NCAA, if you have questions, please check out “Twitter”. We have it all lined out for you.

Speaking of bad penalties, refs like to call that late hit “bump” out of bounds because they don’t understand what it’s like to be moving that fast. You cannot slam on the brakes. Good sell by Rice’s Jake Bailey to get Rice an extra seven (half the distance) and closer to a score.

A questionable pass interference call against Arkansas opens the door for an Owls’ touchdown.

Rice leads at the half, 10 – 7.

Going into Halftime

My thoughts are similar to Arkansas Head Coach Sam Pitmman’s he expressed to Tera Talmadge as he left the field.

To summarize: KJ is struggling with the pass, we cannot execute, we are unable to drive the ball, we are not able to defend the short pass, and we seem suspect at stopping the ground-and-pound rushing attack.

I did not even mention the penalties nor the blocked punt.

Basically, we are out of sync, and our foe is Rice. My pre-disdain (if that’s even a word) for the season has my psyche heading to the showers early.

“Social media is mocking us, and I have too much pride in my state and this program for us to once again be the laughingstock of the SEC.”

Truthfully, I searched #FirePittman to see if anyone had already let go of the rope. To my surprise, I found nothing of the sort. It was then I had a good feeling about the second half.

“Let’s go, HOGS!!!”

Very Early Second Half

A lot of people are talking high of our secondary, especially our corners; however, I am still not sold as my internal doubt was afforded validation through the long touchdown pass from Wiley Green to a wide-open August Pitre, III.

Rice extends its lead to 17 – 7 and shows its team dancing prowess on the sidelines.

The positivity I had gained at halftime has now dove to the bottom part of my stomach and sits there like a big Southwestern Conference rock.

Time for the offense to get on the board and officially start the 2021 season, right?

Wrong. The Hogs’ opening possession for the second half sputters into a turnover on downs on what looked like a manageable two-yard play when KJ was stuffed at the line.

Watching the white hat call and wait for the chains only heightens the anxiety of what did appear to be a very, very long 2021 campaign.

Remainder of the Second Half

[Enter a Sense of Pride]

Arkansas’s second offensive drive looks like a completely different team. With the lull of the first half still hanging in the minds of the Arkansas faithful, Jefferson throws what seems like our first down-the-field pass attempt. Tyson Morris (with the assistance of what should have been a pass interference penalty) makes a leaping one-handed catch that sparks not only the offense and the team, but the cardinal red donning crowd as well.

A few plays later, KJ (with the assist of tremendous blocking) runs the ball untouched into the end zone for his second rushing touchdown of the day.

Arkansas trails 17 – 14.

Momentum is shifting… Or is it?

Arkansas’s defense looks to be on its heels again as Rice has a slow burn of a drive drawing near the goal line.

Fortunately, on 4th and 1, Owls Head Coach Mike Bloomgreen opts for a dagger into the heart of Arkansas instead of what would be a 35-yard field goal attempt. The Hogs swarm, and a 1-yard loss resulting in a turnover on downs in our favor.

The ensuing drive for the Razorbacks only musters a 34-yard Cam Little field goal for Arkansas, but with the game now tied, momentum is definitely rooting Hogs for the rest of the afternoon.

Game tied at 17.

On defense, someone has to step up, and why should it not be the secondary upon which I had earlier found myself being critical?

Both Jalen “Freaking” Catalon and (as I like to call him) “Give Me Some Mo” Busta Brown answer what we can only imagine was an [Sunday morning PG edit]chewing at halftime.

Quick flash forward: With two and one interceptions respectively, mixed in with a great team play and great (Arkansas Defensive Coordinator) Barry Odom strategy, Rice never even drew a deep breath towards the end zone nor victory again. These bettered our lagging starting field position, enabled us to have easier scores, and changed the entire complex of the game.

Not to mention, Catalon has some decent moves with the ball en tote.

Our defensive line still needs more penetration. Apparently that liabilty did not get fully resolved at halftime. Rice’s enigma of quarterbacks have too much time to throw.

Our offensive line looks much better. They are allowing QB1 more time to throw, and even our run blocking looks better than the decent first half performance.

Subsequent to Catalon’s first interception, Telon Smith rushes in to give Arkansas its first lead in the second half.

HOGS up 24 – 7.

Punts are traded back-and-forth between the two teams.

KJ then has what appears to be a 60+ yard touchdown scamper, yet a holding penalty brings it back but still within Rice territory.

Three plays and a penalty later, a great play featuring KJ to Morris for a 9-yard passing touchdown has now removed the pressure and nerves from the home sideline.

Arkansas is starting to pull away, 31 – 7.

Catalon’s second interception, capped off by a short rushing score from Dominique Johnson, has everyone not cheering for the Owls feeling better on this Week One Saturday.

Arkansas wins, 38 – 17, and we start the season 1 – 0.

Final Thoughts

Some fans questioned whether or not we should have scored that last touchdown.

The answer (in my opinion): we looked sub-par on the field early. Adding on an extra seven points will look better on paper and in the minds of the players, fans, and (less importantly) voters.

Tyson Morris came to play, stepping up and carrying an entire game-shifting scoring drive on his shoulders.

Treylon Burks did not have a bad day, yet we all know he did not play his best. He will be better as his injury heals.

Rocket Sanders saw his first action as a Razorback. His initial carry was a good read for a first down. Welcome to the family, Rocket. No doubt your future is bright.

If the WWE ever decides it needs championship belts for three-man tag teams, without question the trio of Jefferson, Burks, and Rocket would be undisputed.

Trelon Smith will continue to get better as the season progresses. Along with his score, he quietly gained 102-yards on 22 attempts.

Cam Little looked good. His field goals and extra points were perfect, and his ability to consistently kick a touchback will be a difference maker this season.

There were inquiries of concern around the kick return team. Averaging 24.5-yards per with a bolting 45-yard return under his belt, I think LeDarrius Bishop has answered those question marks.

In fairness, I didn’t agree with the late hit call against Rice in the 4th quarter either.

Next Up

Arkansas will host the Texas Longhorns in Fayetteville, Saturday, 11 September 2021. Kickoff is scheduled for 6:30 PM and can be listened to via HitThatLine.com and on the air at ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs, and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

This is the first time Arkansas and Texas have met in the regular season since 2008.

The No. 21 Longhorns looked decent in new head coach Steve Sarkisian’s debut 38 – 18 win over the No. 23 Louisiana Ragin’ Cajuns. There is a lot of confidence building in Austin.

Texas will be even more of a challenge in the trenches. Our bigs have got to come to play.

Arkansas will be without the services of Bumper Pool for the first half due to a targeting penalty in the latter stages against the Owls. I find it hard to believe he is already a senior.

Texas, despite what their fans and staunchest bloggers will say, is beatable, and they will not find a cupcake on ‘The Hill’ come this Patriot Day. Arkansas cannot and must not come out flat.

See you on Saturday!

Find me on ‘Twitter’: @PeterMorganWPS

Go HOGS!!!

Huddle Up Episode 2: On to Texas

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Tye & John David on staying the course in the second half, Tyson Morris’ big day, KJ gaining confidence and more!

 

Don’t blame KJ for slow start as it was a joint effort with several others

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In the first half Saturday there were people wondering why Sam Pittman wasn’t changing the quarterback.

That’s a common refrain, by the way.

At times, KJ Jefferson was relying on his legs instead of his arm. People were getting frustrated as they struggled to make first downs through the air. Yes, there were times he couldn’t hit water falling out of a boat in Beaver Lake.

“Early in the game, they weren’t helping him,” Sam Pittman said later. “We were dropping some passes. We had a lot of missed blocking assignments out on the edge, from inside-out.

“Especially on those little quick tosses that we had. We really worked on them. I don’t understand how we made that mistake, but we did.”

Wide receiver Treylon Burks missed a lot of practice time the last couple of weeks and had some uncharacteristic drops early. Jefferson also started making plays with his legs.

Burks got back in the groove in the second half and Jefferson even had a 68-yard scoring run on an option play that didn’t count due to a holding call on Ketron Jackson.

“It’s unfortunate we got a holding call on the option that he ran because that was a heck of a run,” Pittman said.

After the game, Jefferson knew the nevers were playing a big part holding him back early.

“The main thing was just me settling down and playing ball,” he said of smoothing things out later. “Just cool, calm and collected, maintaining my composure, making sure I pump confidence into the guys up front, letting them know it’s my fault. It’s not always their fault. That was just the main thing.”

Jefferson wasn’t the only one battling some nerves early.

“All of us had a little bit of nerves going into that game,” Pittman said. “We have so much that we can improve on, so much that we have to.”

They have to do it quickly.

Texas comes to town next week. The Longhorns had a slow start, too, but they were playing a ranked team with a lot of experience that is considerably better than Rice.

Steve Sarkisian’s debut resulted in a 38-18 win over Louisiana, the 23rd-ranked team in the country.

But before things reach the fever pitch they will next week, the players are going to take some time to enjoy a 21-point win on opening day.

The last time the Hogs had a win like that was when they shut out Tulsa, 23-0 … in 2018.

HOG REACTION:Razorbacks beat Rice to start the 2021 season

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Drew Barrett and Zach Arns take your phone calls and text after the Hogs beat the Owls 38-17. Also look toward Texas Week.

Pittman says Hogs ‘didn’t play well at all’ in first half before bouncing back

Arkansas coach Sam Pittman told his team they would face adversity but he wasn’t counting on having to face an entire half of it.

Brown, Catalon after defense making big plays, carrying offense early

After the Hogs’ 38-17 win over Rice in the season opener, Montaric Brown and Jalen Catalon talked with the media.

Wagner, Jefferson on offense getting things moving in second half

After struggling early, Dalton Wagner and KJ Jefferson talked about the offense’s 31 straight points in win.

GAMEDAY: Hogs pull away late for 38-17 win to kick off season

After the turbulent 2020 football season, it’s time for real football with Arkansas and Rice kicking off a new year at Razorback Stadium.

Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. and will only be available on ESPN+ but you can listen to the game here at HitThatLine.com (use the black bar at the bottom of the page) or at ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 99.5 and 95.3 in Northwest Arkansas, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

Pregame

Wide receiver Treylon Burks, who has missed the last couple of weeks for some reason nobody wants to talk about, was participating in the warmups. He also started the game.

Rice won the opening coin toss and LaDarrius Bishop returned to the ball to the 30 before being stripped and teammates fell on it.

First quarter

After a slow start, Arkansas’ offense got in gear on the second possession and KJ Jefferson did what fans were hoping making plays with his legs.

First, he made a dive to the sticks on third down to keep a drive alive, then scrambled 34 yards untouched up the middle of the field to put the Razorbacks on the board first.

Drive: 80 yards, 8 plays, 2:32. Hogs 7, Rice 0

Second quarter

Rice controlled pretty much the entire frame, blocking a Hogs’ punt to set up a 34-yard field goal by Collin Riccitelli, then Jordan Myers got in from a yard out with 4:19 left in before halftime to cap an eight-play, 41-yard drive and grab a 10-7 lead. Rice 10, Hogs 7

Third quarter

The Owls caught the Hogs’ secondary not paying close attention and Wiley Green found August Pitre wide open for a 41-yard scoring pass. To say wide open might be an understatement because no one else was in the same zip code. Rice 17, Hogs 7

Arkansas answers with a six-play, 57-yard scoring drive using 2:10 of the clock as KJ Jefferson looked as sharp as anyone on his throws and decision-making. Jefferson got his second score of the game on a run up the middle from 5 yards out. Rice 17, Hogs 14

The Hogs finally back even with the Owls after an 11-play, 65-yard drive where Rocket Sanders did a lot of the work and started showing off the talent we heard about all through fall camp. Freshman Cam Little kicked a 34-yard field goal with 18 seconds left to tie the game. Hogs 17, Rice 17

Fourth quarter

Rice finally made a mistake when Green threw a pass that was tipped and picked off by Jalen Catalon who ran 39 yards to the Owls’ 9. After a pass interference penalty gave the Hogs a first down at the 2, Trelon Smith ran in for the easy score and Arkansas took the lead for the first time in the second half with 12:44 to go in the game. Hogs 24, Rice 17

The Hogs added a pair of late touchdowns for the final margin

 

Fantasy Football Sunday S2E1 — w/ Jake Ciely of The Athletic

Tye & Evan on their offseason, crucial injuries, rookie QB’s, what to watch for and more!

 

ANDY’S PICKS: Only news in this one will be IF game is close

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(EDITOR’S NOTE: As this column progresses throughout the football season, there will be wailing and online tears shed as the gap between myself and Peter Morgan grows weekly. Just relax. Nobody is being harmed physically.)

With football season FINALLY getting under way after what has seemed an eternity, it’s time for the annual picking of the games between Peter Morgan and myself.

The way this usually goes is I build a substantial lead by the halfway point of the season, then Peter starts picking like I do to avoid falling farther behind, then realizes it’s a lost cause and starts picking things like Vandy to upset Alabama … making it worse.

For Arkansas fans, hope springs eternal starting the season every year, but especially this year. Yes, somehow three wins (or 30% of their games) in the SEC is supposed to provide a springboard this year.

Sorry, but it’s got to be better than that to get to a bowl game and this team may come close, but I honestly don’t think they will get there in November when they’ll likely have to win a game over LSU or Alabama for that magical sixth win.

First up, though, is Rice. The only way this game makes news is if the Hogs aren’t up by 20 points at halftime.

Yes, the talent differential is that great. It will be a chance for Sam Pittman to just run the ball down somebody’s throat they can push around and if he can keep Kendal Briles patient, this one should be over by halftime.

Hogs 48, Rice 7

In other games, Peter and I would have both taken Tennessee over Bowling Green on Thursday night. And Bowling Green is a better team than the Owls.

Bowling Green at Tennessee: Josh Heupel opens his tenure in Knoxville with a big win. Tennessee 38, Bowling Green 6.

Louisiana-Monroe at Kentucky (-31): Kentucky may be on the edge of contending in the East on a regular basis and should walking through this one fairly easily. Kentucky 42, La.-Monroe 10.

(1) Alabama (-19.5) at (14) Miami: If this one is still close at halftime, everybody is going to be laughing along with Peter. The Crimson Tide have re-loaded what may be their best defense in a decade. Alabama 51, Miami 10.

Louisiana Tech at Mississippi State (-23): Mike Leach got rid of the malcontents last year and it hurt the record in a year where new coaches pretty much got a pass. State is simply better than Tech and roll big. State 54, Tech 17.

Central Michigan at Missouri (-14): This is just an example of SEC schools making up for having such a tough year last season playing all conference teams. Don’t be shocked if this is close for a bit. Missouri 24, Central Michigan 10.

 Akron at Auburn (-37): Bryan Harsin will want to make a statement here and there’s not a whole lot Akron can do to stop The Tigers from doing what they want. Auburn 63, Akron 12.

Eastern Illinois at South Carolina: Oh good grief. Another where if the home team is not ahead by three touchdowns at halftime, everybody may start squirming in their seats. South Carolina 54, Eastern Illinois 7.

 (5) Georgia at (3) Clemson (-3): This is like a playoff game to kick things off and you wonder which team is going to be ready … or if both are. If the latter is the case, this could be a great game. If not, well, the Tigers may run away with it. But I think it’s going to be closer. Georgia 27, Clemson 21.

FAU at (13) Florida (-23.5): The Swamp gets back to rocking a little as Dan Mullen gets a team in town he can kick around pretty good … and probably will. Florida 45, FAU 7.

Kent State at (6) Texas A&M (-29): The first step after getting a contract extension and raise is make everybody feel pretty good about it by kicking around some team you shouldn’t be playing anyway. Texas A&M 54, Kent State 6.

ETSU at Vanderbilt: Vanderbilt better get a double-digit win in this one or they’ve got a problem down there bigger than anybody else in the league. Vanderbilt 38, ETSU 10.

(16) LSU (-2.5) at UCLA: This may be more of a home crowd for LSU than the Bruins, based on the small, intimate gathering at the Rose Bowl last week for UCLA’s opener. The Tigers’ faithful will be ready to rock … if they can find the place. LSU 31, UCLA 21.

Louisville at Ole Miss (-10): The Rebels like the exposure these Labor Day night games bring and the Cardinals have gone downhill quickly in the last few years.  Ole Miss 45, Louisville 35.

Torres going with Georgia to upset Clemson, win national championship

Aaron Torres said on Halftime on Friday he’s sticking with Kirby Smart to pick up his first title this season.