FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Arkansas interim coach Bobby Petrino said little about the officiating Saturday night, but what he didn’t say might have been louder.
The Razorbacks set school records for both penalties and penalty yardage in a 38-35 loss to Mississippi State at Razorback Stadium, drawing 18 flags for 193 yards. By contrast, the Bulldogs were flagged only four times for 30 yards.
“I do want to say something, but I can’t,” Petrino said after the game. “That’s how they handcuff you. But I’ll just say, watch the video. And the one thing I can say is they picked our quarterback up and suplexed him, which is a really bad deal.”
The fourth-quarter collapse dropped Arkansas to 3-6 overall and 0-6 in the SEC, continuing a season marked by narrow losses and missed chances.
The Bulldogs (5-4, 2-4) turned an 11-point deficit into a late comeback capped by Blake Shapen’s 18-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Evans with 43 seconds left.
The Razorbacks have now lost three straight games in which they’ve led by double digits in the second half.
Penalties unravel promising start
Arkansas entered the game averaging 5.5 penalties per contest, one of the lowest totals in the SEC. But midway through the third quarter, the game took a turn.
After a successful two-point conversion gave Arkansas a 28-14 lead, receiver CJ Brown was flagged for a personal foul — despite appearing to be part of the play formation.
Petrino then drew his own unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, pushing the kickoff back to the Razorbacks’ 10-yard line.
The Bulldogs returned that kickoff past midfield, and Arkansas fullback Maddox Lassiter made it worse with a late-hit penalty.
Minutes later, safety Larry Worth III was ejected for targeting. The sequence flipped field position and shifted momentum entirely in Mississippi State’s favor.
From there, the Razorbacks were hit with roughing-the-passer, pass interference, and holding calls in rapid succession. Each penalty extended Bulldog drives or negated positive plays.
By night’s end, Arkansas had nearly as many penalty yards (193) as passing yards (194).
Players shoulder responsibility
While Petrino hinted that officiating played a role, his players were more direct about accountability.
“It was frustrating, but a lot of those penalties were self-inflicted wounds,” defensive lineman Cam Ball said. “We’ve got to be more disciplined. We can’t make bonehead mistakes. We can’t put it on the refs — we just got to do better.”
Ball’s comments echoed what several players said afterward: frustration with the officiating, but acknowledgment that the Razorbacks lacked composure. Penalties wiped out third-down stops, explosive runs, and red-zone opportunities.
“Once the momentum started going their way, we didn’t handle it well,” running back Isaiah Augustave said. “You can’t give any team that many free yards in the SEC.”
Historical perspective and national reaction
The penalty total broke Arkansas’ previous single-game record of 16, set in 2011. The 193 yards were the most in any SEC game this season.
College football outlets took note. Sports Illustrated pointed out that the Razorbacks had been one of the nation’s least-penalized teams until Saturday’s collapse. Meanwhile, social media erupted with complaints about the officiating crew.
The SEC has not publicly commented on the game’s officiating, but its replay protocols and officiating quality have come under scrutiny in recent weeks across the league.
Petrino seeks answers ahead of LSU matchup
Petrino said he expects the Razorbacks to turn in the game tape for review.
“You hope they’ll take a look at it,” he said. “But our job is to fix what we can control.”
Arkansas will have a bye week before facing LSU on Nov. 14. Petrino said the team’s focus must shift to correcting discipline issues that have undermined its season.
“This one hurts because we did a lot right,” Petrino said. “But you can’t overcome that many penalties, especially in the SEC. We’ve got to move on, get better, and learn from it.”
Three key takeaways
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Arkansas was penalized 18 times for 193 yards, setting new single-game program records.
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Players and coaches cited both officiating and self-discipline as factors in the loss.
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The Razorbacks enter a bye week still searching for their first SEC win of the season.






























