Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Arkansas 77, Southern Mississippi 35

Hogwired.com: Razorbacks Cruise Past Southern Miss, 77-35
Arkansas made its first four shots of the game, answered one run midway through the first half then closed the period with an 18-5 run to knock off Southern Mississippi, 77-35, in Bud Walton Arena on Wednesday.

The win improves the Razorbacks to 4-2 while USM drops to 1-4.

The 35 points allowed are the fewest for an Arkansas opponent since the Razorbacks beat SMU 47-33 in 1981.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Post-Game Quotes, Final Stats (PDF)
ESPN.com: Arkansas 77, Southern Miss 35
HawgsIllustrated.com: Arkansas 77, Southern Mississippi 35 (subscription)
Grant Hall: Brewer's Fling Launches UA Rout of Eagles
Jerry L. Reed: Arkansas Looks Like Different Team In Win Against Southern Miss
Ryan Aber: Hill Makes Big Contribution
Nathan Allen: Eustachy Getting Golden Eagles In Right Direction
Nate Allen: Hogs breeze past hapless Southern Miss, 77-35
Scott Cain: Rested and revved up

Updated 12/1/05 11:30 a.m. - Added additional links.

McFadden Undergoes Knee Surgery

Now as a Razorback fan, if that's not the scariest headline you've ever read...you must be dead. Fortunately, it's not as bad as it sounds.

The Short List

After Monday's hire of David Cutcliffe by Tennessee, the news on Tuesday centered around former Hogs quarterback coach David Lee removing his name from consideration as offensive coordinator and Director of Football Operations Louis Campbell considered a lock to rejoin the staff as secondary coach.

Today, The Morning News sportswriter Mike Capshaw provides an updated list of potential offensive coordinator candidates.

They include Fresno State offensive coordinator Frank Cignetti, Oregon offensive coordinator Gary Crowton, Northwestern offensive coordinator Mike Dunbar, South Carolina assistant Rick Stockstill, Louisiana-Monroe offensive coordinator Todd Berry and Arkansas passing game coordinator Roy Wittke.

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

"Grossly Underachieved"

I'm still waiting on my e-mail from Houston Dale...

It's All on You, Houston Dale

The day dawned cold in Northwest Arkansas, with Coach Broyles "confident that he (Houston Dale) will make the right decisions." Is that a vote of confidence or a version of "I'll be watching..."?

In fact, Coach Broyles goes one step further on the "it's all on you, Houston" bandwagon by stating, "'I haven't told him anything,' Broyles said Monday. 'Not one thing.'" Said it "wasn't his place" to do so, and “If I do that, I ought to be fired,” Broyles said. “I can't do that.”

Perhaps Northwest Arkansas is not the only place with freezing temps this morning.

The talk on morning radio has been that apparently the hiring of an offensive coordinator is "high centered" due to concerns the candidates have of joining the staff of a coach so obviously on the hot seat, besides the fact of joining a head coach who probably won't let go of the offense. The situation was referred to as a "mess."

On the quarterback front, Cole Barthel has asked for his release to transfer. It won't surprise me if Alex Mortensen follows shortly with the same request. Robert Johnson will either transfer or be moved to receiver. I continue to hear (contrary to what Houston Dale said to the press on Sunday), as I have for the better part of a year now, that Peyton Hillis wants to transfer. I think he just likes to make noise.

Also on the gossip front, I'm also hearing a very strong probability that Damian Williams will be wearing Razorback red next year.

The "in progress" evaluation continues...

Monday, November 28, 2005

The Year in Review (In Progress....)

So the Razorback football program is now in the midst of a "week long evaluation", "from A to Z", "beginning with me" ("me" would be Houston Dale, even though Nutt starts with a "N" which is not near the top of the alphabet, and coach starts with a "C", which is third, but I digress...).

Besides which coaches will disappear, the subject of offensive coordinator remains the hot topic. Nate Allen jumps into the fray today with a seeming defense of Houston Dale while giving credit to the confidence that Casey Dick brought to the offense and the overall team.

As I've written many times since the first of practice, I'm impressed with Casey. He struggled a bit in the LSU game but did perform pretty well down the stretch in the second half. Protection issues reigned for most of the game, which will cause a quarterback to struggle and throw the ball high. I thought the play calling against LSU was pretty hit and miss, with some really bad ideas brought in with the game plan. Again I saw pass plays that were poorly designed with little chance of success -- such as that streak up the sidelines with Monk we ran 2 or 3 times. Speaking of Monk, obviously he and Casey were not on the same page on the last, failed 2 point play. Repetitions in practice coming into play in the game situation -- yet again.

It can only remain to be seen what difference a new offensive coordinator along with the addition of Mitch Mustain might make. I do know the issue next year will not be talent at the skill positions.

The defense came on nicely during the year. Reggie Herring made me a believer. I thought the defense played well enough over the course of the year to have earned us a few more wins had the offense performed. I still see message board comments of how the defense lost us the Vandy game -- yes, they had a bad fourth quarter, true, but the offense left them on the field to die in their sweat with its lack of ability to do much more than 3 and out for most of the game. Not to mention failing to score on 4 plays starting from the 1 yard line.

Special teams actually performed pretty well for the latter half of the year. Jacob Skinner did well punting, our coverage was good, kick-off coverage was a bit hit and miss, but we did kick-off better as the year progressed.

Place-kicking is an area where we need to place more emphasis on getting some talent into the program. This "walk-on" based approach is not getting it done. Confidence in your field goal kicker can be a bit like the confidence your quarterback can give you. We "played scared" on our field goal kicking all year and it let us down when we needed it against LSU. Arkansas has a history of great, even All-American kickers. Little, Lahay, Ish, Trainor, Wright, etc. This area needs to be a point of emphasis again such as it was with Ken Turner coaching the kickers.

Game management and situation preparedness needs to improve. Clock management, apparent lack of any type of planned two minute drill, no thought given to attacking the end zone beyond just trying to run over people characterized most of the year. It ended up not making a difference in the LSU game, but we ran only 2 plays in just over a minute while supposedly in our "hurry up" offense. This endless exchanging of "packages" in order to run certain plays is a big problem -- it tips off the defense, and it takes a lot of time when we need to be in "hurry-up".

Is Arkansas football really close? It's possible. I'm confident the defense is headed in the right direction. Houston Dale is going to have to kick the coaching on offense up a couple of notches, recruit more linemen and get a field goal kicker or we'll remain Western Division also-rans. Can he do this? I suppose we will get the opportunity to see.

Sunday, November 27, 2005

Houston Nutt Press Conference - 11/27/2005

Hogwired.com: Houston Nutt Post-Season Press Conference Transcript
"I will go back and meet with Coach Broyles tomorrow. We will continue our conversation there. This week is a week for evaluating this program from A to Z. We are going to take one step at a time and step back from everything. You can’t get in a big hurry."

Cutcliffe Reportedly To Take Tennessee Job

According to Chris Low of The Tennessean, "Barring a late snag, a deal has been reached for David Cutcliffe to return as the Vols' offensive coordinator. He's expected to be officially introduced Monday and could be on the road recruiting as early as this week."

Reports on Friday afternoon (subscription required) had Arkansas offering Cutcliffe $400,000 to become its new offensive coordinator. If the salary numbers in the Tennessean story are accurate, Cutcliffe appears to have not been influenced by the $100,000 of additional income offered by the Hogs.

Saturday, November 26, 2005

Arkansas 75, Radford 55

AP: Arkansas 75, Radford 55
Jonathan Modica had 22 points, including a trio of 3-pointers, and six rebounds to lead Arkansas to a 75-55 victory over Radford on Saturday.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Fast Start Carries Arkansas Past Radford, 75-55, Post-Game Quotes, Final Stats (PDF)
HawgsIllustrated.com: Arkansas 75, Radford 55 (subscription)
Jerry L. Reed: Arkansas Plays Well Enough To Win
Nathan Allen: Inside Game Helps Hogs Take Down Radford
Ryan Aber: Hunter Returns To Limited Action
Nate Allen: Road-weary win
Terry Wood: Hogs get easy win, work through jet lag
Scott Cain: Road-weary Hogs sluggish in victory
AP Photos: Jonathon Modica

Updated 11/27/05 10:35 a.m. - Added additional links.

Pre-Game Reports - Arkansas vs. Radford

Hogwired.com: Game Day Central
Radford, which is located in Radford, Va., returns four starters and seven lettermen from the squad, including forward Chris Oliver (14.3 ppg, 7.0 rpg) and guard Whit Holcomb-Faye (15.1 ppg, 3.5 apg).

Radford is 3-1 this year with wins over Western Carolina, Bowling Green and East Tennessee State. The loss came at Virginia Tech. Holcomb-Faye leads the team with 22.0 points per game and has already been to the free throw line 44 times where he's made 31 shots. Oliver is scoring 17.3 points and leads the club with 7.5 rebounds.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Stan Heath Press Conference - Radford, Arkansas Game Notes - Radford, Game Notes (PDF)
Jerry L. Reed: Arkansas Tries To Bounce Back From Maui
Nate Allen: Jet-lagged Hogs take the court against Radford today
Terry Wood: Weary Razorbacks ready for Radford

Post-Game Reports - LSU 19, Arkansas 17

Robbie Neiswanger: Hogs Fall To LSU In 19-17 Defeat
Mike Capshaw: Washington Still Can Wing It
Ryan Aber: Razorbacks Defense Comes Through Again
The Morning News: 5 Keys To Arkansas' 19-17 Loss To LSU and Report Card: Arkansas vs. LSU

Nate Allen: Go down swinging
Terry Wood: Hogs' effort, resiliency stand out against LSU

The Times-Picayune: On To Atlanta and Tigers narrowly avoid red-faced finish

Friday, November 25, 2005

LSU 19, Arkansas 17

Hogwired.com: Arkansas Falls to LSU 19-17
No. 3 LSU punched its ticket to the Southeastern Conference Championship Game, but not before Arkansas delivered a series of blows that staggered the home team before the Tigers escaped with a 19-17 win in front of 92,127 at Tiger Stadium on Friday afternoon.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Post-Game Quotes, Post-Game Notes, Final Stats (PDF)
ESPN.com: Missed field goals prove costly as No. 3 LSU edges Arkansas
HawgsIllustrated.com: LSU 19, Arkansas 17 (subscription)
AP Photos: Benny Brazell, Justin Vincent, JaMarcus Russell, Darren McFadden, Casey Dick, LaRon Landry, LaRon Landry, Les Miles

Updated 11/25/05 11:50 p.m. - Added additional links.

Pre-Game Reports - Arkansas vs. LSU

Hogwired.com: Game Day Central
Arkansas and LSU will meet for the 51st time on the gridiron on Friday when the two teams meet in Baton Rouge. LSU leads the series 31-17-2 including wins in three of the last four meetings. The Tigers have won eight of 13 meetings since the Razorbacks entered the SEC in 1992.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Arkansas Game Notes - LSU, Game Notes (PDF)
ARSN: Razorback Report
HawgSports.com: Battle for the Boot (subscription)
Democrat-Gazette: Game Day
Bob Holt: Hogs hope to shine, not shiver, on national stage and Position-by-Position Matchups
Robbie Neiswanger: Bowling in Baton Rouge and End of the Line
Ryan Aber: LSU Presents Challenges For Young Quarterback
The Morning News: Head-To-Head
The Times-Picayune: LSU Football

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Maryland 75, Arkansas 62

ESPN.com: Maryland 75, Arkansas 62
Ronnie Brewer had 19 points for the Razorbacks, who lost to No. 3 Connecticut in the opening round and beat Kansas in the consolation semifinals. Townes added 13 points.

Maryland, despite holding a 10-point lead, kept fouling in the final minute but Arkansas was unable to take advantage, going 4-for-8 from the free throw line.
Also:

Hogwired.com: No. 23 Maryland Downs Arkansas 75-62 in Maui, Final Stats (PDF)
Grant Hall: Maryland's Long Rally Too Much For Hogs
Dudley Dawson: Hogs Fail To Deliver Big Punch
Scott Cain: Troublesome Terps and Maui Invitational Report
AP Photos: Ronnie Brewer, Dontell Jefferson, Cyrus McGowan, Steven Hill, Steven Hill

Updated 11/24/05 9:45 a.m. - Added additional links.

Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Arkansas 65, Kansas 64

ESPN.com: Arkansas 65, Kansas 64
Dontell Jefferson hit a jumper with 16 seconds left to give Arkansas the lead and the Razorbacks blocked two 3-point attempts in the final 3 seconds in a 65-64 victory over Kansas on Tuesday in the consolation round of the EA Sports Maui Invitational.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Jefferson’s Jumper Sends Razorbacks Past Kansas and Post-Game Stats (PDF)
Grant Hall: Jefferson Comes Up Huge For Hogs and Arkansas Finally Gets Revenge
Dudley Dawson: Hogs Come Up With Big Victory
Terry Wood: Jefferson makes key plays in UA’s victory over Kansas
Scott Cain: Rock, block, Jayhawks and Maui Invitational Report
AP Photos: Ronnie Brewer, Steven Hill, Ronnie Brewer, Stan Heath, Jonathon Modica

Updated 11/23/05 9:55 a.m. - Added additional links.

Connecticut 77, Arkansas 68

ESPN.com: Gay, UConn hold off stiff late challenge from Arkansas
Junior guard Ronnie Brewer had a career-high 25 for the Razorbacks, one more than he had in the season-opening win over Portland State. Modica added 13 for Arkansas, which committed 20 turnovers but had 13 steals, six by Brewer.

Connecticut shot 50.9 percent (27-for-53) and outrebounded the Razorbacks 37-25 but the Huskies struggled to win because of the turnovers.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Hogs Make Run at No. 3 UConn but Come up Short and Final Stats (PDF)
Grant Hall: Spirited Hogs Fall To UConn and Hawaii Notepad
Scott Cain: Huskies handle Hogs
AP Photos: Steven Hill, Jonathon Modica, Stan Heath, Jonathon Modica, Darian Townes, Jim Calhoun, Eric Ferguson

Updated 11/22/05 12:45 p.m. - Added additional links.

Monday, November 21, 2005

Maui Invitational Reports - 11/21/2005

Hogwired.com: Arkansas Game Notes - EA Sports Maui Invitational

Nate Allen: Hawaii bound
Terry Wood: Maui provides measuring stick for Heath’s Hogs
Scott Cain: Huskies definitely among the big dogs and EA Sports Maui Invitational Report
HawgsIllustrated.com: Field of Dreams (subscription)
AP: College basketball in Maui: November feels like March
Maui Invitational: Official Site

Anderson Named SEC Defensive Lineman of the Week

After watching the game, I'm sure many people saw this one coming. Jamaal Anderson was dominating and today he was named the league's best defensive lineman for the week.

Ferguson To Play Against Huskies

AP: Player suspended after DWI citation to return for UConn game
Guard Eric Ferguson, suspended from the Arkansas basketball squad after being given a drunken-driving citation, will return to the team in time to see action in Monday night's game against No. 3 Connecticut, Razorback coach Stan Heath says.

Sunday, November 20, 2005

My Thoughts - Memories

In place of my game thoughts this week, I offer this...

As I watched Vanderbilt and Georgia Tech running onto the field in glorious victory on Saturday, I was filled with envy. How long has it been? How long since the Razorbacks have beaten someone we were supposed to lose to? How long since we've been thrilled with a football win that was good enough to put on the Reynolds Razorback Stadium video board before the Hogs run through the "A"?

I'm tired of falling back on beating Texas in Austin. And it seems like forever since Decori Birmingham caught the "Markham Miracle" touchdown. "Seventh Heaven" in Oxford is a distant memory. And the 2000 Cotton Bowl and '99 Tennessee wins are even further.

Now don't get me wrong...I love all of these memories. I love that I can look at those video board highlights and remember where I was when they happened. It's just that it's been so long, I'm starting to forget what a big win...heck, what a win over a good team with a winning record...feels like.

So Houston, Friday is another chance for you and your team to give the gift of a fond memory to Hog fans. Everyday people like me who will hold on to them for a lifetime. Some people are wanting it to be your last chance. I really don't care about that.

I just don't want to be envious when I see the fans of winning teams anymore.

Post-Game Reports - Arkansas 44, Mississippi State 10

Bob Holt: Revved up, rolling along
Chris Givens: Standards, performance up for Hogs
Otis Kirk: McFadden hits milestone and Hogs guard hurts hamstring
Chris Bahn: Hogs' patches open enough holes
Chris Cocoles: Norwood's feat eclipsed by losing
Wally Hall: Hogs again getting boost from central Arkansas
Nate Allen: Bashing the Bulldogs
Terry Wood: Razorbacks move to 2-0 in their 'new season'

Robbie Neiswanger: Razorbacks Run Past Mississippi State 44-10
Mike Capshaw: Dick Survives Third Start Under Pressure
Ryan Aber: Arkansas Defense Dominates Mississippi State
Clay Henry: Freshman Ride Offensive Line To Victory (subscription)

The Razorback Legacy Photo Archive: Mississippi State (W)
The Clarion-Ledger: Bulldogs a no-show in 7th straight loss

Saturday, November 19, 2005

Arkansas 44, Mississippi State 10

Hogwired.com: Hogs Blast Mississippi State on McFadden's Record-Setting Day, 44-10
The Arkansas offense scored early and often en route to a 44-10 win over Mississippi State in the final home game of the season at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock Saturday.

A crowd of 55,712 witnessed running back Darren McFadden become the first Arkansas freshman to rush for 1,000 yards in a season and just the seventh Razorback in school history to accomplish the feat. He finished the day with 165 yards rushing and two touchdowns against the Bulldogs.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Post-Game Quotes, Post-Game Notes, Final Stats (PDF)
HawgsIllustrated.com: Arkansas 44, Mississippi State 10 (subscription)
HawgSports.com: Hogs impound Dogs (subscription)
ESPN.com: Arkansas 44, Mississippi St. 10
AP Photos: Darren McFadden

Updated 11/19/05 6:45 p.m. - Added additional links.

Pre-Game Reports - Arkansas vs. Mississippi State

Hogwired.com: Game Day Central
The Razorbacks (3-6, 1-5 SEC) will be looking to parlay the momentum of last weekend’s 28-17 win at Ole Miss into another SEC victory.

The Bulldogs (2-7, 0-6 SEC) will return to the gridiron after an open date last weekend. In its last outing, Mississippi State dropped a 17-0 decision to Alabama on Nov. 5. Mississippi State’s wins came against Murray State and Tulane.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Arkansas Game Notes - Mississippi State, Game Notes (PDF)
ARSN: Razorback Report
HawgSports.com: Hogs vs. Dogs (subscription)
Democrat-Gazette: Game Day
Bob Holt: Hogs’ seniors toughing it out and Position-by-Position Matchups
Mike Capshaw: Hogs Hoping For Repeat Performance
Vernon Tarver: Arkansas Receiving Corps More Than Just Monk
The Morning News: Keys To The Game and Head-To-Head
The Clarion-Ledger: Bulldogs' offensive line beginning to bloom

Friday, November 18, 2005

Arkansas 107, Portland State 69

Hogwired.com: Early Scoring Runs Send Hogs Past Portland State, Post-Game Quotes, Final Stats (PDF)
ESPN.com: Arkansas 107, Portland State 69
HawgsIllustrated.com: Arkansas 107, Portland St. 69 (subscription)
Clay Henry: Keeping it Simple (subscription)
Grant Hall: Hogs Pound Portland State, Eye Maui and Pregame Scene Finds Eager Players, Fans
Nate Allen: Hogs sack Vikings in hoops season opener
Terry Wood: Hogs appear much improved in opening win
Scott Cain: UA gets offense going with 107-point effort
Bob Holt: In the Lane
AP Photos: Charles Thomas, Charles Thomas

Updated 11/19/05 9:50 a.m. - Added additional links.

Pre-Game Reports - Arkansas vs. Portland State

Hogwired.com: Game Day Central
Stan Heath:

"We don't know a lot about Portland State. They played an exhibition game against Seattle, which is where Coach (Ken) Bone was before, so they weren't too receptive to giving out information.

"They won the Big Sky Conference last year and won 19 games. They return one starter, they have a new coach and they have good size on the front line. We expect them to play multiple zones with a little man mixed in. Since it's their first game, there will probably be a little bit of them finding themselves."
Also:

Hogwired.com: Stan Heath Press Conference – Portland State
ARSN: Razorback Report
Grant Hall: Hogs Eager For Fresh Start Against Vikings
Nate Allen: UA opens 2005-06 season against Portland State
Scott Cain: Hogs get moving for season opener

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Let's Get It Started

It's that time again. Stan Heath and his Arkansas Razorbacks begin regular season play tomorrow night in Bud Walton Arena against Portland State.

After attending the Red-White and both exhibition games, I'm cautiously optimistic about this season. I say cautiously because I was also in the stands at last year's SEC Tournament when the Hogs turned in one of the most lackluster performances in school history. But this is a new year and a new team and, like every lifelong fan should be, I'm back on the bandwagon. ;-)

To learn more about this year's "new" team, you can download the 2005-06 Media Guide (PDF), which was recently posted over on StanHeath.com.

Interest Level

Phat Phil says David Cutcliffe is "interested" in returning to Knoxville.

Why is it that I get the feeling that we (Hog fans, boosters, athletic department, etc.) might be getting "played" here? It does take at least two interested parties to create a bidding war, right?

Oh well, even if that's true, I guess you don't hate the player...you hate the game.

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Already Decided?

Hawgs Illustrated's Dudley Dawson minced very few words on Sports Rap tonight saying that, according to his sources, the struggle for power between the "Nutt Camp" and the "Davis Camp" was over and that the Butch Davis supporters had now conceded.

According to DD, Houston Nutt will remain the head coach next year under the condition that he hire an offensive coordinator and become more of a "CEO" coach. Several assistant coaches will be "shuffled around," but the possibility of a full house cleaning was dismissed as unlikely.

As for the "worst kept secret in Arkansas," Dawson continues to believe that Springdale High School coach Gus Malzahn will be hired as an assistant coach, though unlikely as offensive coordinator. That job appears to be David Cutcliffe's for the taking. As Dudley said, "Don't be too surprised if that happens."

As for when this will all play out publicly, that has apparently not yet been determined. I'm sure a very public vote of confidence and press conference will be held as soon as possible to attempt to quiet the mob and assist the coaching staff while out recruiting.

Time For A Change?

The drumbeat of offensive coordinator rumors has gotten louder the past few days. From footballrumormill.com to this morning's column by Harry King, the consensus is that David Cutcliffe and Gus Malzahn will soon be on the Hill.

My comment is that I'll believe it when I see it. I am sure of one thing, though...to paraphrase what ole Chuck Heston used to say, "Big Daddy" Frank will have to yank the play calling duties away from Houston Dale's "cold, dead hands."

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

This Has Gotten Silly

Robbie Neiswanger's Morning News article today had the following lead:
Arkansas coach Houston Nutt said quarterback Casey Dick's second-half performance during the 28-17 win at Ole Miss has given him more confidence to call pass plays the rest of the season.
That's nice. I'm glad he feels that way. I'm also glad he's finally complementing Casey a bit - all the while keeping the focus on his play calls.

I wish he would just be quiet and coach. I'm tired of him talking. "Hat on a hat," "buckle up both chin straps," jumping around like a fool when he finally wins a game (on the opposing team's field no less -- have some class!).

Houston Dale needs a coach. For him.

I Wrote This Post...And I've Written Some Good Posts, Brother

Yes...the Houston Nutt post-game interview from Saturday lingers on. It was discussed on most of the radio talk shows yesterday and Wally provides his take on it today.

My opinion? It's a complete distraction...from the good and the bad. It's kept many people from discussing what went right with the win on Saturday. But it's also allowed fans to temporarily set aside discussing what's still wrong with this program.

(Thanks to a member over on The Hill for the headline idea.)

Monday, November 14, 2005

Dick Named SEC Freshman of the Week

Hmmm. Darren McFadden...one rushing attempt on September 8th...SEC Freshman of the Week on October 17th. Casey Dick...fourth string quarterback on October 30th...SEC Freshman of the Week on November 14th.

I'm starting to sense a trend here...

Sunday, November 13, 2005

My Thoughts - Ole Miss

I wanted to watch the Houston Nutt show before I wrote this today. I got about two minutes in, stopped the DVR, and started writing. Before the studio show even started, there Houston was...after the game...shirt untucked...singing the fight song to the crowd and then yelling "To the band!" and sprinting to the other side of the stadium.

Maybe I'm just old school. I appreciate the enthusiasm...I really do. And many fans love it and base much of their opinion of Houston Dale on it. But "act like you've been there before" was the phrase I couldn't get out of my mind. I started trying to picture any other SEC coach doing the same thing. I started thinking about, if I was a fan of the other team, what would I think of Houston Dale if he sang and sprinted on my home field. The answer was obvious.

As for the game itself, I enjoyed the victory until midnight. As a wise man once said, you try not to get too high after the wins and too low after the losses. Houston Dale doesn't know that guy.

Unfortunately, the problem remains that the LSU game is the only meaningful game that this coach and these young players can prove they are really, as HDN says, "coming on." I realize that coaches can't look past opponents and that the preparations this week will rightly focus on Mississippi State. But I'm not a coach (and, some might say, not enough of a fan either) and so I don't have to follow those rules.

At this point, when decisions will soon be made about the future, I want to know where we stand. That may be unfair to the current regime...but the November 25th contest in Baton Rouge is the only "real" game left. With South Carolina's win over Florida, a victory against them a week ago might now have been considered a quality win. But yesterday's win in Oxford and the battle for last place in Little Rock this Saturday obviously don't qualify. (And, of course, wins over 1-AA and Louisiana "directional schools" are ignored every year.)

So like it or not, even after a satisfying and long awaited conference win, this coach is still in a one game playoff for how much control he'll maintain over his program. Some might complain that this "darkside view" tarnishes what was accomplished on Saturday. And maybe it does. But I would argue those in control of this program, whether they work in the Broyles Complex or not, are thinking along the same lines.

Post-Game Reports - Arkansas 28, Ole Miss 17

Bob Holt: Cathartic comeback and Game Sketch
Scott Cain: 'Big-time' Hillis all over the field and Instant Replay
Chris Givens: Casey’s might
Rob Keys: Personal foul call swings momentum and Inside the Matchups
Otis Kirk: Kelly's interception return keeps hope alive
Wally Hall: Freshman grows up fast with second-half play

Robbie Neiswanger: Razorbacks Earn First SEC Victory
Mike Capshaw: Reviews Finally Give Razorbacks Relief
Grant Hall: Nutt: Keep Bandwagon In Sight
The Morning News: Defense Dominant When It Mattered The Most

The Clarion Ledger: Rebels go kerplunk and Of all Rebs' losses in last 2 years, this may be worst

Saturday, November 12, 2005

Arkansas 120, LSU-Shreveport 79

Hogwired.com: Razorbacks Ground Pilots in Exhibition Victory
Arkansas didn’t connect on many threes against LSU-Shreveport on Saturday, but the Razorbacks made sure the high-scoring Pilots didn’t shoot much better in rolling to a 120-79 exhibition game victory.

LSUS came in 2-0 on the year and was averaging 135.5 points per game with a lot of those points coming from behind the arc. The Pilots took 41 threes Saturday but connected on only 10 in a fast-paced game, including only two-of-19 in the second period.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Post-Game Quotes, Final Stats (PDF)
HawgsIllustrated.com: Arkansas 120, LSUS 79 (subscription)
HawgSports.com: Hogs ground Pilots, 120-79 (subscription)
Chris Cocoles: Razorbacks willing, able to fly with Pilots
Chris Bahn: In The Lane
Jerry L. Reed: Shorthanded Hogs Still Roll To Win

Updated 11/13/05 12:05 p.m. - Added additional links.

Mississippi -- HogBlogger Quick Thoughts

Casey Dick, second half, 12-13 passing for 153 yards. Told ya! He just looks like a quarterback to me. 17-24 for 172 yards overall.

It sounded on the radio as if the defense really played well. Herring is getting it in place. Finally got the scoring help from the offense that he's needed for several games.

Hard to believe we could win while getting only 112 yards rushing out of the running backs (89 net for the game). Is that possible? Losing the stubborness and putting Roper on the bench for the second half was a good decision. Roper's been bravely playing hurt, but he's been hurting us on the O'line.

And, although according to Houston Dale, "play calling is sometimes overrated," he was quick to take credit in the postgame interview for the play call on the touchdown pass to Monk and then stated, "and I called a lot'o good'uns today!"

Actually scoring a few touchdowns does make a big difference in the results. Attacking the end zone from the 20 yard line is a necessity for success. Casey was two for two from that distance, with touchdown passes to Monk of 23 and 24 yards (to go along with his 4 yard touchdown toss to Hillis).

Kinda nice having a quarterback. Wonder where he's been all year?

Arkansas 28, Ole Miss 17

Hogwired.com: Casey Dick and Marcus Monk Connect for a 28-17 Arkansas Win at Ole Miss
Arkansas parlayed a stifling defensive effort with a second-half offensive revival to earn a 28-17 win over Ole Miss on Saturday night in front of 53,289 at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium. Arkansas (3-6, 1-5 SEC) scored 21 points in the second half, including 14 in the fourth quarter, to earn its first Southeastern Conference victory of the season. Ole Miss (3-6, 1-5 SEC) led 14-7 at halftime, but managed only a field goal following the intermission.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Post-Game Notes, Post-Game Quotes, Final Stats (PDF)
HawgsIllustrated.com: Arkansas 28, Ole Miss 17 (subscription)
HawgSports.com: Hawgs Down Rebels (subscription)
ESPN.com: Arkansas 28, Mississippi 17
AP Photos: Vickiel Vaughn, Mike Espy

Updated 11/12/05 10:20 p.m. - Added additional links.

Pre-Game Reports - Arkansas vs. Ole Miss

Hogwired.com: Game Day Central
The Razorbacks have won three of the last four meetings between the teams including a 35-3 win in Fayetteville last season. Ole Miss leads the series 5-1 in games played in Oxford. The Hogs' only win in Oxford was in 2001 when Arkansas outlasted Ole Miss 58-56 in a seven-overtime thriller. It still stands, along with Arkansas' seven-overtime win at Kentucky in 2003, as the longest college football game in NCAA history.

Arkansas enjoys a 7-6 advantage in the series since the Hogs joined the SEC in 1992. Houston Nutt is 4-3 against Ole Miss since taking over the reins at Arkansas in 1998.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Arkansas Game Notes - Ole Miss Game, Game Notes (PDF)
Democrat-Gazette: Game Day
Bob Holt: Appetite for redemption and Position-by-Position Matchups
Robbie Neiswanger: Arkansas Searching For a Spark
Mike Capshaw: McFadden Racing To 1,000
The Morning News: Keys To The Game and Head-To-Head
The Clarion Ledger: Crack Down

Pre-Game Reports - Arkansas vs. LSU-Shreveport

Hogwired.com: Game Day Central
LSUS is an NAIA (National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) member of the Gulf Coast Athletics Conference. The Pilots went 27-9 last year and reached the Sweet 16 of the NAIA Tournament.

This year, head coach Chad McDowell's club is ranked No. 10 in the nation and is led by preseason All-American guard Fredericko Payne, who scored 25.0 points per game.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Arkansas Game Notes - LSU-Shreveport, Game Notes (PDF), Stan Heath Press Conference - LSU-Shreveport
HawgSports.com: Razorbacks set for high-flying Pilots (subscription)
Grant Hall: Townes Pines For Twin Towers Tonight
Clay Henry: State of the Hogs: Big Screens (subscription)
Nate Allen: Hogs continue exhibition slate against LSU-Shreveport
Scott Cain: Heath's plan is to give Brewer time at point

Friday, November 11, 2005

Know Thy Enemy

Bill over at The Rebel Wrap blog writes about some of the "funny things" that have happened in recent meetings between Arkansas and Ole Miss.

I still remember being at the 1998 game. "Nothing stinks like a wet hog," Tuberville bellowed. Now it's so bad around here...some Hog fans are wishing we'd hired Tommy T. in 1997.

As for the 2002 game, well, I'll never forget how red my mom's face got when the "Colonel Reb Streaker" made his appearance. Ha...that legendary guy will be featured on the video board during a game of the 2052 season as a "Razorback Classic"!

Overrated?

As part of an effort to shoot down certain local sports reporters (actually, pretty much all of them, if you count their comments on message boards) announcing certain candidates for the offensive coordinator position next year, Houston Dale informs the readers that "Play calling is sometimes overrated."

Play calling does exists in a framework of overall offensive scheme, game planning against the opposing defense of the week, talent/ability of the offensive players, ability of the offensive unit to execute, etc. So, within that context, play calling alone is just a piece of a larger puzzle.

Once you are in the game in specific situations, play calling is absolutely important. That's so obvious that it doesn't even need an argument. Play calling and the results let you know how well you've executed the whole process of offense.

The reference to Spurrier -- well, he has 6 wins and we don't. He was able to generate enough offense to score 14 points and beat us. His offense controlled the ball in the 4th quarter and limited our opportunities. I saw a few pretty good play calls along the way that made a big difference.

The real question is "why is Houston Dale choosing to spout off something like this?" He could have squashed rumors without giving those that would like to see him gone another bullet.

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Scattered Shots

The Hog universe appears to be one of commentary right now. John Brummett has weighed in with his stages of Hog fandom. I don't buy what Brummett is saying. (I get it free over the Internet...)

My dad calls December 6, 1969, "the day I learned to never care that much again." I'm with him. Arkansas football has a way of letting you down. Besides, I was a John Robert Starr guy and never cared for Brummett. And if I hadn't changed chairs that day at the start of the 4th quarter...

Wally and Nate have apparently been given marching instructions by Coach Broyles to take the "Houston must stay" bandwagon out of storage and roll it out. Perhaps in response to the message boards wondering why JFB hasn't been saying much.

Speaking of message boards...there are crazy people out there with rumors that would do better to just keep their thoughts to themselves.

Went to the bball game Friday night. I'm still concerned that the "stagnation" issues the offense experienced last year will be a problem this year. We didn't move the ball well, and we don't push the ball up the court very well. There's definitely some talent out there, so I am hopeful. We shall see.

Heath continues to recruit well. Hopefully the coaching skills will come. I hear him worrying about the right things -- in contrast to (we need to get a hat on a hat and buckle up both chin straps) Houston Dale. Now Houston Dale is not going to be so afraid to throw the ball -- I think he definitely reads message boards.

The Hog Wild Band needs to be fixed. My other brother-in-law, former Hog Wild Band member in the days of Robkin, wonders in amazement why nothing has changed in the band since the 80's, except that it's no longer really any good. The atmosphere in Bud Walton needs definite work. Of course, some people actually showing up to watch the games would be a start.

Wonder how Brummett would describe my stage?

Heath Comments On New Recruiting Class

Stan Heath made his first public comments today about the 2006 Razorback basketball recruiting class.

Heath says forward Michael Washington "could be the prototype power forward. ... He has good size and length, and could continue to add to his 230-pound frame. He has good face-up skills, is a good athlete and is very aggressive. As he continues to hone his skills, he has the chance to be a very special player in our conference."

Of combo guard Stefan Welsh, Heath said, "He comes from a winning program. ... In addition to being a talented scorer, he’s a good defender and playmaker. The big adjustment for Stefan will be adding strength and tailoring his skills to playing both guard positions, but we expect him to contribute and make an impact."

Heath could not comment yet on recruit Sonny Weems, who is expected to sign with the Hogs on Friday. Weems has been ranked by many recruiting services as the #1 junior college prospect in the country.

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Coaching Afraid

From today's UA press release:
"I think we have gained confidence in Casey (Dick), and we are not afraid to throw the football a little bit more," Nutt said.
Whether that's a Freudian slip or not is debatable. But few will disagree that Houston Dale's fear has, at times in his career, taken ahold and controlled his actions on the sidelines. (I'm sure Freud would say his nailbiting is a dead giveaway.)

The last win this program had against a top 25 team was 788 days ago on September 13th, 2003 against #5 Texas. For anyone who purchased the "Ambush in Austin" DVD or still has it on tape, I would challenge you to go back and watch Houston during the game. You can just see a calm confidence on his face. I would argue that hasn't been there since that bright, sunny afternoon against the Longhorns.

And now, with a bowl game unreachable and a losing season assured, it seems like the pendulum has swung completely to the other side. Earlier tonight on Sports Rap, Chuck Barrett played a short audio clip where Nutt said, "I think you might see us throw five, six, seven times in a row down field on Saturday." It's like he's saying, "Okay...you don't want us to play not to lose? Fine...I'm not afraid anymore. I'll show you I can call seven pass plays in a row!"

Well Houston...I hope you figure out soon that somewhere between audacious and terrified is the target that you're shooting for. And for your sake and for the Razorback fans, I hope it's before it's too late for you here on the Hill.

Just Your Average Win

With lopsided preseason basketball matchups, I guess it's possible to see just about anything. But for the Hogs' Saturday night opponent, the LSU-Shreveport Pilots, just winning by a 45 point margin apparently wasn't good enough. They had to do it by scoring 153 points against the (apparently hapless) Paul Quinn College Tigers (a.k.a. "the Patsies").

The Pilots, who appropriately enough play in a gym called "The Dock," hit 22 three point shots and had an astounding 43 assists in the game. Hmmm...so I wonder what Stan Heath's scouting report says?

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Why Even Bother?

When you ask a "darksider" what school they'd like to ship Houston Dale to, there's always one that's near the top of the list: Kentucky. Well now it looks like they'll have to find another option.

It amazes me why Kentucky even bothers to play football anymore. They obviously don't give a crap about it. Being mediocre is a good year for them. If an 8-23 record is enough to get you a "vote of confidence," just think what averaging 5-6 would get you. (Thus the reasoning why Houston would be a perfect fit in Lexington.)

But here's the worst part Hog fans: we're so bad...the Wildcats and Mississippi State are the only two SEC football programs we can make fun of anymore. Ugh.

On Further Review

So last night I watched the South Carolina game (again) with my brother-in-law the ex-running back, making heavy use of the DVR to re-run plays we found interesting.

We focused a lot on the play of the offensive line and the type of running plays that were being called in certain situations. ...more...

Monday, November 07, 2005

Course Correction

So...we're coming up on three months now since the TipsterHog Blog started. And wow...HogBlogger and I have been amazed at how well it's been received. Over 4,000 visits! We want to thank each and every one of you for spending some of your valuable time here. We hope and think we've been providing something unique and useful to the Razorback fan nation.

So why change anything now? Well, since we started, this site has primarily been a "link blog": a way to find links to articles on the web about the Hogs. But if there's one thing we've noticed, it's that most of our visitors have shown more interest in the opinion posts we make and less on all the links. And so for that reason (and a few others), we want to focus more on creating original content.

So what does that mean? Well, that means fewer "reports" article link posts in between games and more emphasis on providing something unique. Now, that doesn't mean we won't highlight what we think are some of the more interesting Razorback articles on the web. We'll hopefully continue to do that every day. And we'll also continue our pre-game and post-game link pages which have proven to be popular with many of you as well.

We hope you'll agree with us that this "course correction" makes the TipsterHog Blog more interesting and useful. But if you're disappointed with the changes, we at least want to recommend an alternative. So if you still want to see as many links to Hogs-related articles as possible, we encourage you to visit The Slop, a great site that's been doing that kind of thing really well for a long time.

We'd love to get your feedback on this change and on others you'd like to see us make in the future. Please leave us a comment or send e-mail to TipsterHog or HogBlogger.

Getting Down to Cases

Welcome to the beginning of my view to the litany of things that are wrong with the Arkansas football program and some thoughts as to what to do to make corrections.

To start with, our offense is poorly designed. In fact, it’s not designed at all. ...more...

Sunday, November 06, 2005

My Thoughts - South Carolina

We really are losing the same way every week. Many things remain either uncorrected or, apparently, impossible to fix. So that's going to make this post pretty short. If you want a refresher on why we're losing, see here, here, here, here and here.

Statistically, Casey Dick versus Robert Johnson wasn't a huge difference. Similar completion percentage; one TD and one interception; pretty close on passing yards as well. (Although one long pass to the flat was called a "lateral." Man...even the official statistician must not like Houston.)

But for anyone watching the game, it was like night and day. We actually looked like a real football team throwing the ball. Although the pass protection (always a problem for a Markuson offensive line) and the receiver play (especially route precision and hot routes in blitz situations) now need to improve. But hey...to be working on those things and not on finding a quarterback...that's an improvement, folks.

I feel bad for RoJo because he wasn't recruited here to be a drop-back passer. During his tenure, Houston Nutt has had a hard time figuring out what kind of offense he wants to run. Because of that failing, the man who recruited RoJo (former quarterbacks coach David Lee) brought him here to be a so called "dual threat." (When I hear that about a high school prospect, I usually conclude that he's a good runner and an average passer.)

But it's obvious that what this rush-happy offense needs right now is a pure passer. Although, in RoJo's defense, the results were still the same even after the quarterback change. (Unfortunately, that's not exactly a compliment to him either since he's been on campus two years longer than Casey Dick.)

Through all this, the common thread is the offensive coordinator and head coach. The quarterback he has said he wants is someone like a Mike Cherry or a Clint Stoerner. Not someone like a Matt Jones who couldn't run "his offense."

Well, Houston, maybe you've found your new guy...and I'm sure you're happy that he's no Matt Jones. But there's a trade-off, too, and you are feeling it right now. Because unlike 2001, that also means there's no Matt Jones anywhere on your bench to pull your butt out of the fire this time.

So enjoy that hot seat, Houston Dale...you've earned it.

Houston Nutt Press Conference - 11/6/2005

It's now official. The towel has been thrown into the ring for this season. Houston Nutt says he and his staff are "starting over."
"I want to let the state of Arkansas know, that I know there are some unhappy fans and there’s an unhappy coach too. I want our fans to know that. There are coaches that are down and players that are really down. We hate it. It was a wonderful homecoming, with the pageantry, the fans and the attendance. Everything was perfect, except for one thing and that’s the scoreboard."

Quotes to Note - South Carolina

Whether you call the quarterback by the name of Johnson or Dick, Arkansas being a bit short on key plays has been the theme of the year.

“Wish I wouldn’t have,” Nutt said of going for it. “I know better than that. But I thought we could make six inches.”

I can’t believe I couldn’t get a yard on three carries,” McFadden said. “But there wasn’t any running room. South Carolina’s defensive line must have gotten a really good push coming across.”
On the next to the last possession, Steve Superior took the “I’ll believe it when I see it, but until then we’re playing the run” view to the Arkansas passing game.

The scoring threat ended when freshman tailback Darren McFadden, who rushed 32 times for 187 yards, was stopped for no gain on second-and-1 and third-and-1, then was dropped for a 1-yard loss on fourth down.

Spurrier said the Gamecocks’ defense was loaded up to stop McFadden on those three runs and was ready to take its chances if Dick attempted a pass.

“They’re a running team,” Spurrier said. “So get everybody up there, and if they throw it and hit it..., you’ve got to see them do it.”
Running, but where?
How many yards rushing did Arkansas gain, the Gamecocks coach wanted to know. The answer was 219.

Between the goal lines,” Spurrier said.
A bit of clarification is in order regarding the offensive stats.

Official stats: 356 Total yards by the Arkansas offense. 219 rushing, 137 passing. But when you take note that 36 rushing yards came on a swing pass that was counted as a lateral, and that 30 yards of sacks from the passing game counted against the rushing, the stats more accurately reflected are 213 yards from the rushing offense, and 143 yards from the passing offense.

To borrow from the Queen's English - “We are neither amazed nor amused.” How about annoyed?

Houston Dale is at his “lowest point,” and from the point of view of at least one member of the defense, “everybody can see it for themselves.”

“That's just what it is,” Nutt said. “It's my lowest point since I've been here.”

“When we get the offense the ball, they've got to put points on the board," safety Randy Kelly said. “I'm not trying to be negative. I mean, everybody can see it for themselves. But we're going to keep doing our jobs.”
In case you've been pondering the Razorbacks success this season on a spiritual level, this clarifies the situation.

Steve Superior’s view is that God apparently favors the Gamecocks over the apparently non-cheerful gift giving Razorbacks:

“Arkansas was tough,” Spurrier said. “We are very fortunate and got good penalties from them. God has been smiling on the Gamecocks.”
Is the nuiance in this situation that God loves cheerful givers? (I think that’s in the Bible somewhere, isn’t it?) We certainly gave some nice gifts of numerous penalities, besides the first and best gift, the ball on the 29 yard line. And we are certainly not cheerful about much of anything regarding Arkansas football.

I wonder if Houston Dale’s excuse for senselessly going for it on fourth down from the Razorback 29 yard line is “the devil made me do it?”

Post-Game Reports - South Carolina 14, Arkansas 10

Bob Holt: Another lost cause and Game sketch
Scott Cain: Yards, not touchdowns, yielded and Instant Replay
Chris Givens: Reviews mostly positive for QB
Otis Kirk: Mistake mars improved effort
Rob Keys: Gamecocks know how to cash in
Wally Hall: Timid Razorbacks find another way not to win

Nate Allen: Missed opportunities
Joe West: Former Hogs have happy homecoming
Terry Wood: Hogs fail to clean plate; USC gobbles up the leftovers

Robbie Neiswanger: Arkansas' Postseason Plans End After 14-10 Loss to South Carolina
Mike Capshaw: Defense Sweats Out Another Loss
Grant Hall: Hogs' QB Does Fine For First Time
Ryan Aber: South Carolina Bowl Eligible With Win
Clay Henry: Plenty Of Blame To Go Around

Saturday, November 05, 2005

South Carolina – HogBlogger Quick Thoughts

Once again, we can’t score enough points to win the game. Rushing yards really don’t matter in the broader sense. Touchdowns matter.

Special teams played well. The defense played well. They were hurt by the short field after the offense failed on fourth down on their first possession and pounced on after the turnover with a play obviously derived from film study and just waiting for the right opportunity to be called.

At this point everything about the Razorback team actually looks pretty good except for the performance of the "offensive coach" – Houston Dale. Casey Dick played pretty well – certainly well enough to give us a chance to win. The freshmen running backs – especially that number 5 guy, McFadden – pretty impressive. Receivers - well, ok, I'm not so impressed with these guys, including Monk.

3 screw-ups by the offensive coach stood out to me.

Going for it on 4th down on your first possession from your own 29 yard line. That was just stupid.

First and goal, then second and goal from what started out as the one yard line just before the first half ended. Ran on second down – had to call time out – leaving third down as an obvious passing down since only 16 seconds remained and we were now out of timeouts. Should’ve passed on second down – either touchdown or incomplete would have stopped the clock, leaving third down to either pass or run. Result – Defense plays only for pass on third down and we fail and end up kicking a field goal.

Next to last possession: Second and two. The last chance we had to have an opportunity to win the game. I forget which yard line, but we are down on the South Carolina end of the field. We are in striking distance of the end zone. The South Carolina defense accurately concludes by this point that the one back offense with two tight ends WILL NOT pass the ball and puts 8 men in the box – and plays Marcus Monk man-to-man. We run three straight running plays and fail to make a first down.

We made a lot of mistakes on offense. The early penalties. Poor pass protection in the second half by the tackles. People lining up wrong. Wasting timeouts due to the obvious lack of adequate preparation by the offensive coach for various game situations (as has been the case all year – “we’re down at the goal line, let’s call time out and figure out what we want to do now, stall the momentum and take the crowd out of the game” (if you’ve been keeping up you’ve heard this a few times from me before - and oh yeah, the band sat on their hands during the timeout). A couple of examples of the usual atrocious clock management (it's a passing down, and we have the wind, but let's just let the quarter run out). There is much more to talk about than just the three obvious screw-ups.

This was not about talent. We were the best team on the field today talent-wise.

We’ve stayed on the field pretty well with Alabama, Auburn, and Georgia. It was within our grasp to have won today.

The defense has had its rough spots but it has come along nicely. The offense is just offensive.

Houston Dale sounded very sad during his post game radio comments. It’s near death for him and he still can’t manage to move beyond his stubbornness and admit that he is a big part of this offensive problem. It’s time for him to say “I’m sorry” or just fall on his sword.

Houston Dale's the one not getting it done.

South Carolina 14, Arkansas 10

Hogwired.com: South Carolina Spoils Hog Homecoming, 14-10
Arkansas showcased its dominating rushing attack once again, but South Carolina's bend-but-don't-break defense came up with a stop when it needed it most.

Running back Darren McFadden was stopped short on fourth-and-one inside the South Carolina 20 yard-line with 3:33 remaining in the game and the Gamecocks held on to win 14-10 at Reynolds Razorback Stadium.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Post-Game Notes, Post-Game Quotes, Final Stats (PDF)
HawgsIllustrated.com: South Carolina 14, Arkansas 10 (subscription)
HawgSports.com: Squandered opportunities (subscription)
ESPN.com: South Carolina bowl eligible with win over Arkansas
AP Photos: Cedric Washington, Mike Davis, Casey Dick, Blake Mitchell, Darren McFadden

Updated 11/5/05 5:40 p.m. - Added additional links.

Pre-Game Reports - Arkansas vs. South Carolina

Hogwired.com: Game Day Central
Arkansas and South Carolina will meet for the 14th time and only the third time Fayetteville. All 13 games of the series have come since Arkansas and South Carolina joined the SEC in 1992. Arkansas holds an 8-5 advantage in the series including a edge in Fayetteville. The two schools meet annually as permanent rivals in the SEC schedule rotation.
Also:

JP Sports: Live Game Video
HawgSports.com: Hawgs vs. Gamecocks (subscription)
Democrat-Gazette: Game Day
Bob Holt: Razorbacks zeroing in on the finish and Position-by-Position Matchups
Robbie Neiswanger: Arkansas Geared Up For Spurrier and One And Done
The Morning News: Keys To The Game
Clay Henry: State of the Hogs: New QB (subscription)

Friday, November 04, 2005

Arkansas 86, Southwest Baptist 49

Hogwired.com: Razorbacks Get Physical with Southwest Baptist in Exhibition, 86-49
The score may not have been close, but Arkansas got a physical test against NCAA Division II member Southwest (Mo.) Baptist Friday in Bud Walton Arena.

The Razorbacks played without senior guard Eric Ferguson (broken nose) and sophomore forward Darian Townes (sprained toe), but still rolled to an 86-49 victory.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Final Stats (PDF)
HawgsIllustrated.com: Arkansas 86, SW Baptist 49 (subscription)
AP Photos: Dontell Jefferson and Charles Thomas, Vincent Hunter
Grant Hall: Brewer, Hogs Dispatch Physical Bearcats
Jerry L. Reed: Big Man Sidelined With Minor Injury
Nate Allen: Razorbacks tame Bearcats in hardwood exhibition matchup
Terry Wood: Better ball movement is key to improved Razorback squad
Scott Cain: Hogs short-handed , but don’t miss a beat

Updated 11/5/05 8:35 a.m. - Added additional links.

Pre-Game Reports - Arkansas vs. Southwest Baptist

Hogwired.com: Arkansas Game Notes
SBU, located in Bolivar, Mo., is an NCAA Division II member of the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association. The Bearcats, coached by Jeff Guiot, were 16-13 last year and fourth in the league. SBU’s top two scorers return in 6-1 senior guard Sheldon Pace (13.7) and 6-4 senior guard Deon Davis (11.5). Bearcat newcomers include 7-2, 295-pound senior center Frans Steyn, a transfer from Oklahoma State.
Also:

Hogwired.com: Game Day Central, Arkansas Game Notes (PDF)
Nate Allen: Hoop Hogs open exhibition slate against Southwest Baptist
Scott Cain: Heath envisioning Hill-Townes force
Grant Hall: Bearcats Offer Arkansas A Challenge Tonight

Football Reports - 11/4/2005

Hogwired.com: Arkansas Finalizes South Carolina Preparations
Nutt has been pleased with the progress of new starting quarterback freshman Casey Dick and is looking forward to seeing him carry over his skills to the playing field in this important league match-up.

"He did good," Nutt said. "He improved each day and I think he really concentrated with great focus. Now he's got to do it live. For the first week knowing he’s going to play he did very good."
Also:

ARSN: Razorback Report
HawgSports.com: Great week of practice (subscription)
AP: Razorbacks to start freshman at quarterback and Nutt pleased with new starting quarterback's progress
Nate Allen: Arkansas wraps up strong two weeks of practice
Bob Holt: Slimmer, grimmer and Razorbacks Report
Mike Capshaw: Nutt Expects USC To Bring The Heat
Jerry L. Reed: South Carolina Quarterback Last Man Standing

Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Razorback Reports - 11/3/2005

Hogwired.com: Stan Heath Press Conference – Southwest Baptist
The Red-White Game:

"We've practiced better in some areas than we showed in the game. We didn't push the ball hard. On defense, we didn't pressure well. I'm not pleased with our full-court pressure. We need to pick it up."

Starters:

"I'll finalize that later, but Ronnie Brewer will start. Dontell Jefferson will be at point guard unless something drastic happens. Jonathon Modica will be out there. I'm leaning towards Darian Townes and Steven Hill, but I also have to look at Charles Thomas and Vincent Hunter."
Also:

Grant Hall: Heath Denies Any UA Wrongdoing
Nate Allen: Angry Heath refutes allegations and Brewer ready to lead Razorback resurgence
Scott Cain: Heath: UA hasnt violated any rules

Hogwired.com: Razorbacks Continue Preparations for Homecoming
ARSN: Razorback Report
HawgSports.com: True freshmen command spotlight on senior day (subscription)
GamecockCentral.com: Best way to stop Arkansas: stop the run (subscription)
HawgsIllustrated.com: Casey's Shot (subscription)
AP: Nutt believes Arkansas-South Carolina is a strong rivalry
Rick Schaffer: Quarterback Change
Mike Capshaw: Staying True and Dick's Camp Confident About First Start
Vernon Tarver: Arkansas Secondary Ready For Pass-Happy South Carolina
Nate Allen: Dick, Roper working on snaps for USC game
Terry Wood: Hogs can take nothing for granted against USC
Scott Cain: Return engagement
Chris Cocoles: Razorbacks Football Report
Wally Hall: Hogs QB is unknown commodity to Gamecocks

Updated 11/3/05 12:40 p.m. - Added additional links.

SEC Football Conference Call - 11/2/2005

SECSports.com: 2005 SEC Football Coaches Press Conference - 11/02/2005
Houston Nutt:

"We had a good practice yesterday and we're looking forward to another one today. We're playing a South Carolina team who is coming off a gigantic win last week against Tennessee."

(On South Carolina being a rival) "I think our fans get into it. When Lou Holtz was there that was a natural tie with him having coached at Arkansas and now with Steve Spurrier who is such a name in this league there is a draw there."

Steve Spurrier:

"We came out of the Tennessee game very healthy. We were very fortunate last week to come out ahead. Arkansas is a very good team that has lost several close ones. They're a lot better than their record indicates. They're a great rushing team, at the top of the conference while we're at the bottom of the league."

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

Razorback Reports - 11/2/2005

Hogwired.com: Hogs Practice with Increased Intensity
After being named the starting quarterback freshman Casey Dick was given about 90 percent of the snaps on Tuesday. Nutt has been pleased with his development and expects him to keep learning more as the week progresses.

"He had a good day," Nutt said. "We put a couple things on him and he is figuring them out on the run and he'll be better tomorrow. This was really his first full practice where he got 90 percent of the reps, so he'll be a little sore today. The one thing he has done is he has carried himself in a good manner and his instincts have been really good. We just want him to keep doing that."
Also:

ARSN: Razorback Report
HawgsIllustrated.com: Tuesday Grid Update, 11/1 (subscription)
HawgSports.com: Looking for a spark (subscription)
GamecockCentral.com: USC must keep its eyes on the prize (subscription)
Robbie Neiswanger: Former Hogs Coming Home and Wommack's Meet On Saturday
Jerry L. Reed: Arkansas Begins Intense Practice For South Carolina
Nate Allen: Put through the paces and Hoping McFadden, Jones stay grounded
Bob Holt: Freshmen, front and center, Nutt needs nearly 18 to step up, Razorbacks Report
Wally Hall: Nutt trying to find QB who moves team best
AP: Dick takes snaps in preparation for South Carolina and Spurrier puts South Carolina celebrations behind

Updated 11/2/05 8:50 a.m. - Added additional links.

Razorback Reports - 11/1/2005

ARSN: Razorbacks Report
Robbie Neiswanger: Option Play: Dick To Start At QB
Mike Capshaw: Vinnett Hopes Surgery Corrects Leg Problem
Nate Allen: Freshman QB hopes to spark Hogs’ offense
Bob Holt: New QB audible amid media blitz, Mortensen stays ready for action, Razorbacks Report
Scott Cain: South Carolina far from perfect
The State: Razorbacks to start freshman QB

Grant Hall: Ferguson Suffers Broken Nose