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Expanding playoffs means pushover games will disappear soon

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Even though Arkansas has some rather cupcake football games scheduled down the road don’t be too shocked if they get replaced by much stronger teams.

Well, that’s only if the Razorbacks get good enough for just winning six games not being a primary objective every year. That’s where they are now.

The first expansion of the College Football Playoff to 12 teams is going to pretty much guarantee that and Sam Pittman’s former boss, Kirby Smart at Georgia, may have had the best comment of all on it recently.

“It’s not the losses that are going to kill you … it’s not playing the best teams,” Smart told ESPN’s Marty Smith and Ryan McGee over the weekend. “Losses won’t kill you when you start talking about top 12. You’ve got to have a powerful schedule and go play good teams.”

With the announcement last week that a 12-team playoff is now recommended, some fans will think their non-Power 5 school will get to play for the title.

Other people will talk about it being too much for the players, which is a ridiculous argument because the extra games will happen during the downtime between semesters. For the few schools with extra games the only thing it may interfere with is a trip home.

Don’t use the “too much risk for the players.” They are 18-21 years old. NFL players are older and play 17 regular-season games in a sport that is far faster and more physical than anything at the collegiate level.

It’s a blatant extra cash-grab for college football, but what it will do is allow a program like the Hogs to have a better chance to play for a title if that ever becomes a realistic possibility. They don’t have to win the SEC West to stay alive and could even finish third to have a shot.

Under a 12-team playoff format, the SEC would have had 14 teams over the last four years in the top 12, Bill Connelly at ESPN.com wrote last week after doing a dive into the numbers.

Here’s the breakdown of SEC teams in an expanded playoff system since 2017:

• 2017: Alabama, Auburn, Georgia
2018: LSU, Florida, Georgia, Alabama
• 2019: Florida, Georgia, LSU
• 2020: Georgia, Texas A&M, Florida, Alabama

Don’t get it wrong. You can’t win just six games, lose to six SEC teams in close games and expect to get in.

But you could go 10-2, have close losses to Alabama, Georgia or some other highly-ranked powerhouse and still have a legitimate chance to get in there.

For a program like Arkansas, it can give fans hope in a year unlike anything they’ve had since 2011 (the second straight year the Hogs won 10 games and finished third in the final polls in their own division).

One loss won’t kill you. The guess is two won’t, either … if you don’t have a bunch of rent-a-wins on the schedule.

Most of the talk is about how this provides hope for Group of 5 schools to get into the playoff the real winners could be teams in the SEC.

At least some will have hope when they have their best seasons.

 

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast: New TE’s coach, familar name

Tye & Tommy on the new Hog FB hire, looking ahead to the CFB season, plus a pregnancy question

 

Loggains returning to Arkansas to coach tight ends for Pittman

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Sam Pittman apparently has nailed down the open spot on his coaching staff with multiple reports that former walk-on Dowell Loggains will be the new tight ends coach.

Loggains was a walk-on from Abilene, Texas, Cooper under Houston Nutt and proved to be an effective practice quarterback because of his knowledge of the Razorbacks’ offense.

He played in 27 games in 2003-04 primarily as the holder on extra points and field goals.

Loggains started and NFL coaching career in 2008-09 with Tennessee and was offensive coordinator for the Titans and at Chicago, Miami and the New York Jets. He was also quarterbacks coach for the Titans, Browns, Bears and Jets.

After the entire coaching staff with the Jets was canned, he spent last season as an offensive analyst at Penn State.

The opening was created with offensive line coach Brad Davis bailed out to go to LSU over a week ago and Pittman moved tight ends coach Cody Kennedy to that spot.

The shuffling on the staff started when wide receivers coach Justin Stepp returned to his native South Carolina. Davis was hired in his hometown in Baton Rouge.

Loggains is back at Arkansas and won’t be going to an alma mater out of state.

Knox will need to step up for Hogs after Woods’ departure for Oklahoma

With Mike Woods moving on to Oklahoma, Saturday Down South’s Connor O’Gara thinks Trey Knox needs to play to potential for Hogs.

Murphy on Hogs’ season of destiny turning to season of disaster

Democrat-Gazette writer Tom Murphy talked about Sunday’s crashing end to a season that won’t be ending in Omaha after loss to NC State.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Heartbreak Hogs

Tye, Tommy and callers react to the Game 3 loss last night

 

Don’t blame Kopps or Van Horn for lack of hits when Hogs needed them

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Dave Van Horn made the right decision starting Kevin Kopps who held up his end of things but Arkansas couldn’t get hits at the right time and won’t be in Omaha.

North Carolina State won Sunday, 3-2, and they will be in the College World Series.

Some fans are looking to blame anybody. Others put the blame on Van Horn for starting Kopps and not having him available late.

“It didn’t go our way,” Dave Van Horn said later. “We didn’t get enough going offensively.”

Kopps was the best pitcher in all of college baseball. If nothing else, he’s shown his arm defies all logic the numbers nerds keep spouting about pitch counts and that sort of babble.

Counting his pitches is a waste of time because it doesn’t seem to matter.

“There’s not too many guys I would let pitch as much as I let him,” Van Horn said.

The Razorbacks’ coaching staff talked about whether to start him or bring him in early right after the 6-5 loss to NC State on Saturday.

Pitching coach Matt Hobbs put the choice to Kopps. He’d earned it with his performance this year.

“There’s not much difference between 114 pitches and 125 … it’s all the same,” Van Horn said. “Late in the game he was better than he was early in the game.”

Kopps, who spent about an hour after the game giving autographs and visiting with Hogs’ fans after the game, didn’t make any big mistakes, including the ninth-inning homer by Jose Torres.

“Torres went down and hit a good pitch and hit it a long way,” Van Horn said. “Gotta give him credit, sometimes the hitters just get you.”

The Hogs couldn’t just get to Wolfpack pitching and that proved to be the biggest problem in the series.

Elliott Avent probably won this series on Friday night when he just used half the game as an extended practice session for his team in a 21-2 loss.

Van Horn knew what Avent was doing. The Hogs weren’t going to see any of those pitchers the rest of the series.

On the other side, Van Horn didn’t have many options. He had started the only other pitcher he probably had a lot of confidence in Friday night when Patrick Wicklander started and lasted six innings.

The only consistent thing about this Arkansas pitching staff has been inconsistency. Kopps bailed out this staff in more games anybody would really want to count.

Starting Kopps was Van Horn’s best shot of getting to Omaha and it probably would have worked out if the Hogs suddenly ran into a pitching staff they couldn’t consistently hit.

All of that arrived at the worst possible moment for Razorback fans, many of whom were already making plans for Omaha. You never get too far ahead of things when it comes to sports because it can all come crashing down in one game.

In baseball that’s what happens when you don’t get hits at the right time.

Simply put, that’s what happened Sunday evening.

Van Horn says failure to produce at plate costs Hogs in Super Regional

Arkansas scattered just four hits against North Carolina State and missed a trip to Omaha after a 4-3 loss Sunday afternoon.

HOG REACTION: Hogs fall to NC State in deciding third game

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Tye and Mason react to the Hogs being eliminated by NC State in Game 3 of the Fayetteville Super Regional.