The Arkansas Razorbacks: Home of the #1 SEC basketball program

Discussion in 'The Mainboard' started by hogfan6494, Dec 14, 2009.

  1. Truman

    Truman Well-Known Member
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    Why would you not? He's the best QB on your campus right now.
     
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  2. bertwing

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    Eh, debatable. I'm high on Storey

    And I guess our staff didn't like the way he left USC. We'll see, he's definitely wanting to come here and likes our offense. I hope we take him tbh, just don't know if we will.
     
  3. Andy Reocho

    Andy Reocho Please don't get lost in the sauce
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    [​IMG]
     
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  4. bertwing

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    I'll give him some time before I throw in the towel. Way too early
     
  5. Andy Reocho

    Andy Reocho Please don't get lost in the sauce
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    That's fair but I think you and every other fan has way too high expectations for him
     
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  6. bertwing

    bertwing check out the nametag grandma
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    I've seen every QB we have on our roster play a minimum of 5 games in HS. Storey was far and away better than all of them. Adjusting from 3A football in Arkansas to SEC football will take some time... Similar to the growing pains Peavy went through when adjusting from shitty Missouri HS football to the SEC
     
  7. Andy Reocho

    Andy Reocho Please don't get lost in the sauce
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    Yea and everyone tries/tried to act like Peavy is good.

    I get that you want him to be good, but he's got a ways to go. The hitch in his throw isn't something to look past
     
  8. bertwing

    bertwing check out the nametag grandma
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    No Peavy sucks. If I ever said anything on here it was just to talk shit to our Mizzou friends

    It's a good thing Storey will have a couple years to work on his mechanics. Peavy can bounce whenever
     
  9. Andy Reocho

    Andy Reocho Please don't get lost in the sauce
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    If we were to get Town, Peavy is good as gone, obviously. And if it did happen, I imagine the QB depth chart(after this year) would be Allen/Town/Kelly/Storey with Allen and Town being the two favorites IMO. Austin has looked a lot better this summer/fall
     
  10. Truman

    Truman Well-Known Member
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    Except none of us thought he was good either, so you were just

    [​IMG]
     
  11. Andy Reocho

    Andy Reocho Please don't get lost in the sauce
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    Yea, I'm sure zero Missouri fans thought Peavy was good.
     
  12. Truman

    Truman Well-Known Member
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    That's not what I said.

    None of the TMBers, which I assume that's who he was talking about.
     
  13. bertwing

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    You don't have to lie to ocho. I remember how salty you were
     
  14. bertwing

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    Hearing that Beard and Thomas are working on a plea agreement to get the forgery charges dropped down to a misdemeanor and will be suspended for the first semester. Beard would be able to play come conference play. Thomas will still sit out, obviously, because of transfer rules

    Also, Jacorey pissed hot twice in recent months. Couple that with the assaults and the forgery, and I think it's safe to say he's climbed into the top five all time dumbest Razorbacks in history
     
  15. bertwing

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    God damn I'd love to punch Jacorey right in his stupid faux hawk
     
  16. bertwing

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    Ricky Town to Arkansas
     
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  17. bertwing

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    We've got five 4* QB's on campus now. One of them is bound not to suck right?

    Brandon Allen
    Austin Allen
    Rafe Peavy
    Ty Storey
    Ricky Town
     
  18. Prospector

    Prospector I am not a new member
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    really worried about all of them bert.

    none of them can unseat Brandon and Brandon makes me miss Casey Dick
     
  19. bhrangerfan0809

    bhrangerfan0809 Sprinkles are for Spelling Bee Winners™
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    Here's my projected depth chart for the upcoming season. This year will be forgettable from a basketball perspective.
    [​IMG]
     
  20. Nostradumass

    Nostradumass Well-Known Member
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    Fifth year senior isn't going to get passed by a freshman
     
  21. bertwing

    bertwing check out the nametag grandma
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    You an Ark fan?

    And Thomas isn't playing this year. Hannahs will prob play more SF than SG too

    God we are going to be awful
     
  22. bhrangerfan0809

    bhrangerfan0809 Sprinkles are for Spelling Bee Winners™
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    Yarp. And yeah, forgot about Thomas. I'm actually really interested to see how LSU puts it all together with their infusion of top end talent.
     
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  23. bertwing

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    :respek:

    I had no idea.
     
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  24. Prospector

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    The highly successful high school coach who never punts has another radical idea
    By Adam Kilgore August 13
    [​IMG]
    Pulaski Academy coach Kevin Kelley, center, celebrates with his team after the 2014 Arkansas Class 5A High School Championship. (Danny Johnston/AP Photo)
    Kevin Kelley, the head football coach at Pulaski Academy in Arkansas, has gained renown in recent years for his gonzo football philosophy. He is the coach who almost never punts and almost always kicks onside after scores. The strategy has made his teams consistently successful and provided him minor, cultish fame. He is 77-17 at Pulaski, with two state championship appearances. It’s weird. It also works.

    Kelley is a rogue, just a high school coach, but his ideas are taken seriously. He’ll be featured next week, for the second time, on HBO Real Sports. Several NFL coaches have called to discuss his strategy, he said. At the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference this spring, Atlanta Falcons executive Scott Pioli asked to meet Kelley and picked his brain for an hour.

    Kelley’s philosophy hatched from his devotion to statistical analysis. The underlying math and probability made him believe that possession in football had been astonishingly undervalued, and that it was irrational to give the ball away when you had a chance to keep it. Only convention dictated normal punting and kickoff patterns. Imagine, he likes to say, if punting had never been part of football. What would fans think if a coach suddenly sent out a specialized player to kick away the ball after three plays?



    At that Sloan conference this spring, another statistical insight led Kelley to another radical notion, which he plans to unleash this fall. It could be crazy. It could be genius. It’s probably a little bit of both. With football season around the corner, it’s definitely fun to contemplate.

    “It might be horrible,” Kelley said. “But there’s a lot of thought that went into it.”

    Kelley used an ESPN database to study college football history. He found that historically, there was no bigger indicator of victory than winning the turnover margin – teams that forced more turnovers than they committed won 80 percent of the time. But last season, Kelley said, a new trend emerged for the first time: Teams that recorded more plays of at least 20 yards won about 81 percent of the time.

    It made sense to Kelley – bigger chunks of yardage meant scoring quicker and less opportunity to commit turnovers and drive-killing penalties. He became obsessed with finding a system designed for big plays. He found that on plays when two players touched the ball – a typical handoff or pass – teams gained 20 yards about 10 percent of the time. But when at least three players touched the ball – a trick play with a lateral involved – the percentage for gaining 20 yards rose to around 20 percent.

    “That got me thinking,” Kelley said. “How could we develop a system for more than two people to touch the ball?”

    One day, watching television, Kelley stumbled across a rugby game. That was it. Rugby teams built designed plays despite constant movement, an intricate series of laterals. Teammates didn’t block for the ball carrier; they rushed to the right spot to receive a pitch.

    And so Kelley instituted a new system. When he calls out “Rugby!” before an offensive series, his wide receivers change their assignment. Rather than blocking downfield, they rush toward the receiver who catches the ball. If they’re open, they yell the receiver’s name and which side they’re on. He tells his players only to pitch the ball when they’re sure it’s safe.

    Essentially, Kelley’s offense will run the option – after a completed pass down the field.

    But one potential glitch stands out. Trick plays usually gain more yardage because of deception rather than design. Would those plays gain 20 yards less often because the defense could prepare? Kelley understands the potential problem, but believes the defense’s expectation for a lateral would actually help his offense.

    One of the hardest tasks on a football field, Kelley reasons, is open-field tackling. It’s why defensive coordinators tell their players to swarm to the ball. By changing his extra receivers from blockers to potential pitch men, Kelley hopes he’ll force extra tacklers to stay with them and give the pass receiver more space to operate.

    The field would be stretched in a different way. Think about a basketball offense with strong three-point shooters stationed in the corner. Even if they never get the ball, their presence means more space for other players.

    “Let’s say we could successfully complete a pitch three times a game,” Kelley said. “The guy with the ball is going to be in more one-on-one situations down the field. Even if it’s not working as well, I do think opposing coaches are going to have to change the way they defend the field.”

    The other problem is that laterals will ratchet up the risk of turnovers. Kelley is even less concerned with that. If his players practice the plays, there’s no reason downfield laterals shouldn’t be precise and relatively safe.

    “The downfield pass sounded risky at one time, too,” Kelley said. “Oh my gosh, you throw it in the air, whoever catches it, it’s their ball!”

    Even if Kelley’s offense works this fall, it’s not going to change much outside of the Arkansas 5A-Central Conference. Despite his success derived from not punting, no copycats have sprung up at higher levels. Football coaches are too wedded to convention, scared by the knowledge that losing traditionally is safer than trying to win radically. Kelley is just fine with that.

    “I don’t want anybody else doing this,” Kelley said. “With not punting and the onside kicks, I know I have a stat advantage. If this works, I want everybody thinking this is stupid, too.”

    [​IMG]Adam Kilgore covers national sports for the Washington Post. Previously he served as the Post's Washington Nationals beat write
     
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  25. Nostradumass

    Nostradumass Well-Known Member
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    He's a bigger mad scientist than Gus was.
     
  26. Arkie Proud

    Arkie Proud The Dungeon Master
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    He'll become famous, get an offer from ASU or UCA, coach in Arkansas for a few seasons, get an O-coordinator job in the B1G 10, become a head coach in a few years at a small college, then a dark horse pick at Michigan or Florida and win a national championship while we flounder after Bielema dies of a heart attack and his wife's cousin takes over.
     
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  27. Hoss Bonaventure

    Hoss Bonaventure I can’t pee with clothes touching my butt
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    Or we just go and get Gruden.
     
  28. Prospector

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    so who is the hooker's cousin?
     
  29. bertwing

    bertwing check out the nametag grandma
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    lawd these look good

    [​IMG]
     
  30. Tiffin

    Tiffin ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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    http://www.al.com/auburnfootball/index.ssf/2015/08/arkansas_bret_bielema_i_hate_a.html

    Bret Bielema is a master at winning over a room.

    The Arkansas coach is a favorite at speaking engagements at booster club events and at coaching clinics across the country. He knows his audience and, more importantly, he knows how to rile them up.

    Bielema, entering this third season with the Razorbacks, provided some tongue-in-cheek takes on Arkansas' upcoming opponents at a fan event Friday night in Springdale, Arkansas.

    When he moved down to the Auburn game, he shared a personal take. Simply put, Bielema is not a fan of Auburn, which travels to Arkansas on Oct. 24 for a potential top-25 showdown.

    "Probably doesn't need to be said in here how much I hate Auburn," Bielema said, according to Arkansas News Bureau reporter Eric Bolin.

    The on-again, off-again rivalry between Arkansas and Auburn heated up with Bielema's arrival in 2013, when he and Auburn coach Gus Malzahn indirectly battled over player safety and the hurry-up, no-huddle offense.

    On the field, an act of gamesmanship spiced up a showdown in Fayetteville.

    Just days after Bielema voiced concerns over game film provided by Auburn, he used a swinging gate formation to pick up a crucial first down on fourth-and-3 late in the third quarter.

    The play used was similar to the swinging-gate formation Auburn used on point-after attempts, which Bielema said was omitted from Auburn's game film. Was it a show of gamesmanship by Bielema in the 35-17 loss to Auburn?

    "No," Bielema said at the time. "You guys read too much into that. No, we didn't even call it a swinging gate. It's called Field Goal Buehner because (Brian) Buehner is in there."

    Moments later, Auburn linebacker Anthony Swain looked to the sideline andtumbled suddenly to the turf and grabbed his right knee. The tumble drew the attention of ESPN broadcasters, who questioned the validity of the injury.

    "No," Malzahn responded when asked about the fall. "We don't tell our kids to fake."

    Bielema voiced concerns to the SEC earlier in the week when Auburn, he said, failed to include a wide angle view of one of the Tigers' 2-point conversion sets, which it calls "Batman," before the Tigers' trip to Razorback Stadium.

    The rivalry seemed to cool down when the Hogs and Tigers opened the season in 2014. Auburn pulled out of a 21-21 tie at halftime to win 45-21.

    Bielema and Malzahn have shared pleasantries in the public forum, too. Malzahn said in 2014 he and Bielema exchange text messages.

    Arkansas is ranked 18th in the nation in the Associated Press poll entering the season.
     
  31. Tug

    Tug Well-Known Member
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    Stopping by for a visit - what do you guys think of Dan Enos so far?
     
  32. blind dog

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    best offensive coordinator in the sec

    ask again in 6 weeks
     
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  33. Gallant Knight

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    If he doesn't run a tight end reverse in the tech game he will be an upgrade
     
  34. Nostradumass

    Nostradumass Well-Known Member
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    He's still going to run Bielemas offense. He'll just do it without the boneheaded decisions and second half brain spasms.
     
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  35. bertwing

    bertwing check out the nametag grandma
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    Bielema says he's the best OC he's ever worked with

    we've only seen limited stuff right now with a pretty vanilla scrimmage and only the first 20 mins of every practice access every day

    Still in to be determined mode, but a retarded monkey could do a better job than Chaney... so we're expecting better things.

    I saw him working with kids at a camp a couple times and didn't really like the way he interacted compared to the other staff, but maybe he's more interactive to college kids or he was still getting used to things. We'll see.
     
  36. Prospector

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    FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas coach Bret Bielema announced three suspensions Monday.

    Punter Blake Johnson and tight end C.J. O'Grady are suspended indefinitely after being arrested for separate events last week. Wide receiver Jojo Robinson will be suspended for the first half of Saturday's game against UTEP for an issue stemming from the summer, Bielema said.

    O'Grady was arrested last Friday and charged with DWI after being pulled over on his motor scooter. Johnson was arrested last Saturday and charged with public intoxication after urinating on a light pole.

    Robinson is expected to play his first game at Arkansas on Saturday after being redshirted last season. Johnson and O'Grady are expected to redshirt this sea
     
  37. Prospector

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    CampusRush
    Razorbacks, Reinvented: How Bret Bielema changed the football culture at Arkansas


    By Pete Thamel
    27 August 2015

    FAYETTEVILLE, Ark.—When former Arkansas coach Bobby Petrino careened his motorcycle into a ditch in the spring of 2012, the Razorbacks program crashed along with him. Details soon emerged that Petrino engaged in an extra-marital affair, hired his mistress for $55,000 and lied to his bosses. Arkansas then endured a year with eight player arrests and a 4-8 record, including a loss to Louisiana-Monroe. The school became the SEC's punchline and punching bag under interim coach John L. Smith.

    Three years later the defining symbols of Arkansas football have changed from Petrino's wrecked motorcycle and robotic neck brace to Bret Bielema's doorless Jeep Rubicon and beloved flip-flops. Since Bielema's hiring in December 2012 no program in college football has undergone a more drastic overhaul on and off the field. The Razorbacks have gone from a spread to pro-style offense, from lawless to buttoned-up and from a coach considered to be the consummate introvert (Petrino) to one who is a distinctive extrovert (Bielema). Now the question lingers: Can they go from last to first in the vaunted SEC West?

    Arkansas looms as one of the most fascinating teams in college football in 2015; it's No. 18 in the preseason AP Poll and is on the fringe of the national title conversation, yet it hasn't proven it can climb out of the SEC basement. Optimism swells around the program despite a 2-18 record in its past 20 league games and back-to-back last-place SEC West finishes. Still, after going 7-6 in '14 with a "borderline erotic" bowl win over Texas—Bielema's words at SEC Media Days—and shutouts of LSU and Ole Miss, Arkansas's momentum transcends the win-loss column.

    The rebuilding of the Hogs links back to Bielema's extensive off-field cleanup. A program with an average of one arrest every 45 days in 2012 has experienced one arrest every 483 days since his hire. After Bielema inherited a roster with cumulative team GPA of 2.2, the Razorbacks enter '15 with a team GPA of 2.8.

    Bielema's vision to build a power-football powerhouse at Arkansas hasn't wavered, a Harvard Business School archetype of staying consistent even when results—like a 3-9 debut campaign—didn't immediately materialize. And entering year three in Fayetteville, expectations have changed. With 15 returning starters, including the nation's top offensive line, there's burgeoning hope the Hogs can compete in the SEC despite losing tailback Jonathan Williams to a season-ending foot injury in camp.

    How did Arkansas reach this point? Bielema opened the doors of his program for two days this spring to provide a glimpse of the intricacies of instilling a winning culture. From bringing kale into the weight room to teaching lessons about Steph Curry in the meeting room, a belief in paradoxical core philosophies—discipline and fun—emerged. They're the same tenets that allowed Bielema to capture three straight Big Ten titles at Wisconsin, and he plans on using them to win an SEC championship at Arkansas. "I don't know if it's gratifying as much as I just knew," Bielema said in his office in June. "I never flinched. I never felt we weren't going to be able to do this."

    *****



    [​IMG]

    Wesley Hitt/Getty Images

    The empty hallways around the football offices in the spring of 2013 perhaps best exemplify the sterile atmosphere that accompanied Petrino's tenure at Arkansas. Players only visited Petrino or his assistants when something went wrong. Coaches only pressed players about academics when their eligibility was in jeopardy. The operation was so uptight that even the act of celebrating big plays in practice was frowned upon. "Everyone," Bielema said, "was on eggshells."

    No one has ever doubted Petrino's X's-and-O's acumen, as he has won 73% of his games as a college head coach (92-34). But those have come at a price: 21 players were cleared out of Louisville for disciplinary issues following his departure from the school in 2006. Given the Razorbacks' eight arrests from '12 and the 10 players maintaining a GPA below 2.0, Bielema and his staff inherited a similar situation in Fayetteville. "Bret took over a train wreck," former Arkansas defensive coordinator Chris Ash said. "I don't think anyone truly understands the social issues, the academic issues, the things he walked in to."

    To fix that, Bielema infused the program with the same duo of strict discipline and positive energy that helped him churn out victories at Wisconsin. He ratcheted up the importance of academics and roamed around practice in flip-flops. He cranked up the intensity of off-season conditioning and also the volume of reggae music in his office. He made players grind to improve in the weight room, but also made a sincere effort to get to know them. His players found his office mentality mirrored his preferred method of driving—doors open. "The coaches were like, 'Why don't you come in our office to talk?'" Williams said. "We were like, 'What?' That wasn't even something we had in our heads we could do."

    The more inviting environment came with more demanding standards. In the semester before he arrived, Arkansas players received 21 F's on their report cards. Ash recalled a "culture of worrying about being eligible," which went against Bielema's ideals. "It was ridiculous what they were getting away with it," Bielema said. "Kids, you let them get away with it, they will."

    Bielema brought in a new head of academics from Kansas State, Ragean Hill, who senior quarterback Brandon Allen calls the program's "strict mom." Bielema receives a report every afternoon at 3 p.m. detailing which players missed classes and then doles out discipline accordingly. He also meets with the academic staff for two hours each week. As he enters his third season, the culture has embraced accountability: those 21 F's dwindled to five last semester, and the team GPA in summer sessions was 3.0. "For as long as I've been in this business," Bielema said, "guys that have very few issues off the field tend to have very few issues on the field."

    Said athletic director Jeff Long, "Those players know [Bielema] cares about them and that's the difference."

    *****



    [​IMG]

    (Running back Jonathan Williams) Courtesy of Arkansas athletics

    Prior to Wisconsin's 2009 season, strength coach Ben Herbert bought two oversized houseplants from the Home Depot and stationed them in the weight room. One plant's nametag read: "I'm The Governor. I take pride in how I care about myself. I focus on nutrition, hydration and meal frequency." The other's tag read: "I'm The Deacon. What's going on? I've heard all these things about feeding the body well and hydrating, but I've got this far doing it my own way."

    Over the next four weeks Herbert fed The Governor heavy doses of Miracle Grow and water. He fed The Deacon cheap whisky, Miller High Life and crumbled bits of Oreos and Doritos. "The Governor shot up and looked beautiful," Herbert said. "And The Deacon looked and smelled so bad that guys were begging me to get it out of the weight room." Herbert's plant parable resonated to such a degree that a few weeks ago a Central Michigan transfer who debuted for Wisconsin in 2009 shot Herbert a message. "I'm in Governor mode," J.J. Watt, the NFL's Defensive Player of the Year, texted after a strenuous workout.

    Soon after Bielema arrived at Arkansas in 2012, a player walked into his office who Bielema assumed was a tight end. It was actually his starting left tackle. Petrino's pass-heavy, high-octane offense favored speed and maneuverability over size and power. So, when Herbert arrived with Bielema with instructions to grow Arkansas in the model of hulking Wisconsin, he made sure the Hogs grew like The Governor.

    Williams lived on a diet of Taco Bell, Chick-fil-A and Flamin' Hot Cheetos early in his Arkansas career. This spring the senior tailback stashed fresh bread from a local bakery in Herbert's office, packed a healthy lunch at the facility every morning and picked up nutritional tips by going with Herbert on a grocery-shopping trip to Wal-Mart. Williams packed on 12 pounds of muscle to get up to 223, but the superior definition of his frame proved even more notable. "Coach Herbs was talking about Melvin Gordon before he was Melvin Gordon," Williams said. "Seeing those results, if I know he's helped people in the past, I'm buying in."

    Nutritional buy-in begins at an elaborate shake bar in the football facility, replete with kale, kiwi and avocado as additives for the players' Generation UCAN energy drinks. (The Razorbacks believe in the shakes enough that they serve them before and during every practice; late last year they began drinking them at halftime of games.) Physical buy-in begins with Herbert's philosophy, which features more squats and less sprints than that of the Petrino regime. The left tackle cannot be mistaken for a tight end anymore, as Arkansas's offensive line averaged 328.4 pounds per man last year. (It was reportedly the biggest in college football and the NFL in 2014.) The Razorbacks return four starters with 74 starts from that unit, which led the SEC with just 14 sacks allowed. This year's Razorbacks will weigh an average of 326.4 with enough extreme makeovers to launch a reality show. Junior Dan Skipper, a 6' 10", 335-pound solar eclipse of a right tackle, weighs 35 pounds more than he did when he arrived. Senior left guard Sebastian Tretola trimmed down to 325 after arriving at 376. (The extra mobility could help him throw a few more touchdown passes to launch another faux Heisman Trophy campaign.)

    Herbert also instilled a unique incentive to the weight room, as the program's top four performers—Williams, junior linebacker Brooks Ellis, junior defensive end Jamichael Winston and senior receiver Keon Hatcher—earned invitations into a special Black Room workout. Throughout the summer, only those four were allowed to enter the converted closet where they endured separate, more rigorous workouts than the rest of their teammates. The Black Room serves as motivation for the best workers on the roster, and it features a photograph of Mike Tyson. The accompanying quote doubles as a mantra for the Hogs: "Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth."

    *****



    [​IMG]

    (Safety Josh Liddell) Courtesy of Arkansas athletics

    Security pounded on the door of the Miami Airport Marriott at 2 a.m. in January of 2014. When Bielema opened it, the hotel personnel suspiciously eyed the room's misplaced desks and tables. Bielema had picked up his old friend, Robb Smith, in Tampa and brought him to Miami to interview for Arkansas's vacant defensive coordinator position. (Ash left to become Ohio State's co-defensive coordinator.) Smith began to demonstrate how he would teach players tackling, and soon enough the room cleared out. "We weren't yelling and screaming," Smith said with a laugh. "But we were coaching, and security was ready to run us."

    Bielema hired Smith shortly after, and his addition brought the team more than just one of the country's top young defensive minds. Smith also introduced the concept of teaching a program's language like it's a three-credit college course. He learned the idea from Greg Schiano, whom he worked under as an assistant at Rutgers and then for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. (Schiano called the language "Chopanese" at Rutgers—after the program's slogan of "Keep Chopping Wood"—and "Bucanese" in Tampa.) At Arkansas, the team adopted "Hoganese," which is essentially a glossary of Bielema's football beliefs and sayings. Twice a week this summer coaches met with players for an hour to teach "Hoganese." "What I want them to understand is we have an opportunity to create our own culture," Bielema said. "And what we've created now through two years has been very positive."

    Bielema, 45, showcased that culture while addressing the team at a meeting in June. He posed a question to his players he'd been asked all spring. "Coach, how will your team handle the change in expectations from low to high?"

    To the masses Bielema offered a stock answer, usually to laughs: "Well, it kind of sounds like a country music song—'High expectations are better than low expectations.'" But in front of his team, Bielema imparted a strikingly different message: external expectations can't change the internal momentum forward. "The only way you get to where you want to be is if you expect it," he said. "Nobody gives you things. You earn everything because you expect it and you want to get it."

    To reinforce that line of thinking, Bielema assigned his team some summer reading: Fearless, a book about Adam Brown, who overcame an addiction to crack to become a Navy SEAL. Despite losing vision in one eye as the result of a shooting and severing three fingers in a Jeep accident, he remained an elite sniper. (Brown happens to be from Arkansas, and his glass eye reportedly featured a Razorbacks sticker.) "Over the course of that book," Bielema said, "the thing that jumped out at me is, time and time again, he's faced with an option of failure and he says, 'No way!"

    Bielema also brought up the career collapse of Tiger Woods as a cautionary tale. As a young head coach, Bielema pointed to Woods's play as an example of dominance, execution and peak performance. But Woods's mindset of invincibility changed after his extra-marital affairs came to light in 2009. "All these women come out, he gets dragged through the mud," Bielema said. "Has he won [a major] since? What's the one thing changed in his game? Mentality. Now he doesn't know if he can win. And he's up and down and all around."

    Finally, Bielema talked about the underdog story of reigning NBA MVP Stephen Curry, who was lightly recruited coming out of Charlotte Christian School. He attended Davidson, where he led the Wildcats to the Elite Eight, but still slipped to the Golden State Warriors with the No. 7 pick in the 2009 NBA draft. Bielema put up a flurry of Curry's quotes on a projector screen so his team could soak in the overlooked-to-overachiever mindset.

    Every time I rise up, I have confidence I'm going to make it.

    I'm not that guy that's afraid of failure. I like to take risks. I take the big shot.

    I've never been afraid of big moments. I get butterflies, I get nervous and I get anxious. But I think those are good signs. I'm ready for the moment.

    "We're a little bit like Steph Curry here at Arkansas," Bielema said. "Not everyone thinks we can do it. The only one that's going to make that decision are the ones that are in here now. If you expect success you'll make it happen."

    *****



    [​IMG]

    Scott Halleran/Getty Images

    Arkansas's rise has prompted the most fascinating question in college football this season: Who will finish last in the SEC West? There is such a small gap between the division's defending champ (Alabama) and last-place finisher (Arkansas) that a blocked extra point proved the difference when the Crimson Tide edged the Razorbacks 14-13 last October. All seven SEC West teams—Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Mississippi State, LSU, Ole Miss and Texas A&M—are ranked in the top 27 of the preseason AP Poll.

    Can the last finish first? The case for the 2015 Razorbacks winning the school's first league title goes beyond cultural transformation. Allen is SEC's most experienced quarterback, as he has started 25 games in his career and recorded an impressive 20-to-5 touchdown-to-interception ratio last year. He'll be aided by new offensive coordinator Dan Enos, who Allen predicts will open up the offense to take pressure off the ground game. Though Williams's production will be hard to replace (1,190 rushing yards in '14), 215-pound junior Alex Collins (1,100) and 260-pound junior Kody Walker (174 yards in the spring game) provide solid backfield options.

    The hulking offense line, behind 338-pound left tackle Denver Kirkland, embodies Arkansas's identity, and potential All-America tight end Hunter Henry should help compensate for a receiving corps that's among the worst in the SEC. Although the defense returns just six starters, which has led Bielema to nickname the unit "The Bad News Bears," Smith likes the potential of 299-pound freshman tackle Hjalte Froholdt, from Denmark. Plus, the Hogs should be able to find their footing in games against UTEP (Sept. 5), Toledo (Sept. 12) and Texas Tech (Sept. 19) to open the year.

    Arkansas has come a long way since Petrino's crash. It looks different, it feels different and it even sounds different. With a refined identity, searing momentum and a nearly a ton of mass on the offensive line, Arkansas's optimism is growing like The Governor. "Why not us?" Allen said. "We can go into any game on Saturday and win every single game."
     
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  38. Andy Reocho

    Andy Reocho Please don't get lost in the sauce
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    And 2 arrests within a week of that article coming out

    Thanks, Thamel
     
  39. bertwing

    bertwing check out the nametag grandma
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    Arkansas basketball getting visits from SF Cameron McGriff and PG Jaylen Fisher this weekend. Good chance we land McGriff.

    Also, Monk announcing his finalists/visits tomorrow on his brothers radio show on ESPN 99.5 with Nick Mason.
     
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  40. bertwing

    bertwing check out the nametag grandma
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    Kapita signs a pro contract in France, confirming what we already knew, that he will never play college ball.

    Fag
     
  41. infected donkey

    infected donkey Arkansas Razorbacks
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    Well we were already fucked now we're proper fucked.
     
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  42. Nostradumass

    Nostradumass Well-Known Member
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    It's a sign. Traditionally, either basketball is good or football. Not both. Usually how good one is relates to how poor the other is.

    Basketball looks like it will be in the tank this year.

    Which means New Years Day bowl.
     
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  43. Andy Reocho

    Andy Reocho Please don't get lost in the sauce
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    Basketball will be embarrassingly bad
     
  44. bertwing

    bertwing check out the nametag grandma
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    Anderson has never had a losing season as a head coach

    I think that streak might just end this year
     
  45. Gallant Knight

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    if the football team is good then the basketball team could lose every game and i wouldn't give a single fuck.
     
  46. blind dog

    blind dog wps
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    meh, while i agree football is king i give a lot of fucks about basketball, and its gonna be real bad. hell i even give fucks about baseball
     
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  47. Gallant Knight

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    started following the hogs in like 2003 and the basketball team has never done anything but piss me off.

    i would get more joy from winning one close football game than from an elite 8 run by the basketball team.
     
  48. bertwing

    bertwing check out the nametag grandma
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    Different strokes

    My childhood was the 90's when we were once a proud basketball program. Now it's just an annual embarrassment.

    We've got one shot with this 2016 class or we'll stay in the dumpster for at least another 2-3 years.
     
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  49. Tug

    Tug Well-Known Member
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    So as an interloper in this thread, what was the real story with Nolan Richardson?
     
  50. bertwing

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    He challenged the brass and got arrogant, and turned it into race. He felt like he was held to a different standard than Houston Nutt and basically called Broyles racist in a press conference after a 14-15 season, and dared them to fire him.... So Broyles did.

    Lots of butthurt ensues over the next 15 years, and we've finally kissed and made up now that Long took over for Broyles