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Morris gets back to what he can do coaching high school

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The general feeling among some with the announcement of Chad Morris getting the job as head coach at Allen High School is they are doomed for failure.

Some of the talking heads on the airwaves are even predicting doom and gloom for any poor kid that happens to play quarterback for him. They sound like many of the Great Unwashed out there that somehow think coaching at one level is any indication what you can do at other levels.

His colossal failure at Arkansas (then going to Auburn where he got fired after one season along with his good buddy, Gus Malzahn) only proves he has no idea how to the world works on a big-time atmosphere.

Yes, when he was hired to guide the Hogs I bought into what others told me about him being a “can’t miss” type of head coach. When I went back to those same people in 2019, their answer was, “well, I was wrong.”

Morris simply couldn’t really relate to college players. Don’t throw out there what he did at Clemson because the Tigers got better when he left.

Most of the coaches I’ve talked to in the Dallas-Fort Worth area when the news broke early Wednesday morning about this is, simply, his line of schtick works on high school players, who are not college players.

College players are grown men. Most high school players are already at the highest level of football they’ll ever play. Especially in Texas, particularly at Allen, which is the largest high school in a state that is completely absorbed with football.

Morris said early on at Arkansas, he moved up to the college level to see if he could achieve what he did at the elite level of Texas high school football (an 81.6% winning record over 16 seasons).

That success didn’t translate to the major college level, for whatever reasons.

But the guess here is he will keep Allen on a winning track.

He’s coaching at a level not seen in many other places. Allen’s high school marching band has 750 members. The football program for the school has 480 football players (counting all grades).

The only stadiums in the state of Arkansas bigger than the $60 million stadium at Allen are Razorback Stadium, War Memorial Stadium and Centennial Bank at Jonesboro. The Eagles have never lost a game in that stadium.

He inherits a program that is used to winning, replacing a coach that went 65-4 over five seasons and won a state title.

Morris wanted to see if he could win at the college level and found out he couldn’t. He’s not the only coach that discovered he was more suited for high school. In Texas, Todd Dodge compiled a mind-boggling record at Southlake Carroll, then flopped at North Texas, and is back winning at the high school level.

There is a reason coaches don’t usually have success at every level and most successful high school coaches aren’t big winners at higher levels.

It’s a different game at every level.

To the best research I’ve managed to find, there is only one coach that’s won national championships at the high school, big-time college and professional levels.

And there’s only been one Paul Brown. He invented a lot of what the modern game now uses like film study and face masks (he held the first patent on that).

Morris discovered he better get back to what he can do and apparently that’s coach at the high school level.

Neighbors on RnZ after Goforth announces she’s now a Hog

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors was glad to get the news Fayetteville’s Sasha Goforth is transferring from Oregon State to play for Razorbacks.

Henry on transfers starting quickly as Sills enters portal

Desi Sills put his name in the transfer portal Wednesday and Hawgs Illustrated’s Clay Henry talked about that on Halftime.

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Bill King of Nashville Sports Radio and Phil Elson talked SEC baseball with a big Friday night night matchup of top draft picks at LSU this weekend.

Previewing Aggies with former Hog Goode on Morning Rush

Brett Goode isn’t looking for Texas A&M to fall very far after losing Kellen Mond, who seemed to be in College Station for a decade.

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Tye & Tommy on the best memory, Kareem Moody’s letter to Hog fans, Brett Goode, plus What’s Your Beef!

 

Moore after hitting for cycle, driving in six runs in win over UCA

Razorbacks’ second baseman Robert Moore has broken out of his slump in dramatic fashion, hitting for the cycle, driving in six runs Tuesday night.

Van Horn recapping Hogs’ win over UCA; previewing Auburn

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn was glad to get win over the Bears, but knows they face challenge in early series against Tigers.

Moore, Razorbacks’ bats come alive blasting UCA, 21-8

White-hot Arkansas kept the pedal down Tuesday night with a convincing, eighth-straight win against in-state opponent Central Arkansas, 21-8.

The Razorbacks notched season-high totals in hits and runs, with 21 and 20, respectively.

The top-ranked team in Baseball America’s poll put on a show offensively, highlighted by sophomore second baseman Robert Moore hitting for the cycle in just six innings.

He finished 4-for-4 on the night with six RBIs, four runs scored, a walk and a hit by pitch.

Moore’s cycle was the first by a Razorback since Kyle Harris did it against Tennessee in 1994.

The Hogs scored in each of the first six innings, including two seven-run frames in the 4th and 6th innings, which opened up a double-digit lead before stretch time.

Junior shortstop Jalen Battles took the Bears deep twice in his first two at-bats of the night while designated hitter Charlie Welch, catcher Dylan Leach and Moore all added long balls, bringing Arkansas’s home-run count on the season to 45 and moving the Razorbacks into first place on the D1 home run leaderboard.

The midweek matchup saw senior pitcher Kole Ramage earn the start, tossing four solid innings with a couple punch-outs, enough for the win.

Relievers Caleb Bolden and Elijah Trest tag-teamed to finish the fifth inning and Trest handled the sixth, allowing the Razorback offense to extend the lead from six to 13 by the end of the sixth inning.

Evan Gray, Evan Taylor and Gabriel Starks dealt three scoreless innings to finish off the win in style.

The visiting Bears were led by designated hitter A.J. Mendolia, who tallied a four-hit game with three RBIs on the night.

All nine Razorbacks in the starting lineup recorded at least one hit while eight knocked in at least one run.

Arkansas improved to 20-3 on the season and claimed the victory in the first ever meeting between Arkansas and UCA.

Hogs highlights

• Moore was the first Razorback to score four runs in a game since Trevor Ezell did against Arkansas-Pine Bluff in April of 2019.

• Moore was also the first Razorback to notch six RBIs in a game since Heston Kjerstad did it against Eastern Illinois to start the 2020 season.

• Arkansas had not scored 21 runs in a game since the 2016 season when the Razorbacks did so against Mississippi Valley State.

• The Hogs last recorded 20 hits in a matchup against Dayton in February of 2018.

• The last time Arkansas hit five long balls in a game was against Texas A&M in May of 2019.

The Razorbacks will resume conference play in a three-game series against Auburn starting Thursday night at 6:30 at Baum-Walker Stadium.

Fans allowed to attend Hogs’ football practice Saturday

Arkansas football continues spring practice with the second scrimmage Saturday inside Razorback Stadium and again open to fans.

The  gates will open at 10:30 a.m. and is free to attend.

The Razorbacks is set for their eighth spring practice on Thursday afternoon prior to Saturday’s scrimmage.

The second scrimmage of the spring will be the Hogs’ final tune up prior to the spring game on April 17. The spring game will kick off at 2 p.m. on SEC Network+.

It will also be carried live at HitThatLine.com and on the radio at ESPN Arkansas 95.3 (River Valley), 96.3 (Hot Springs), 104.3 (Harrison-Mountain Home) and 99.5 (Fayetteville-NWA).