The Blog Hawgs

Sports & Pop Culture for the Arkansas Man

Archive for November, 2011

BlogHawgs Razorback Rewind–”The Response”.

Posted by Adam Butler on November 28, 2011

(NOTE: This is a comment from a one-word post. The comment is from Maukavelli, a longtime BlogHawgs reader and friend. I agree with most of it, but more than anything, I wanted to re-post it because it does something I cannot at this point–provide a rational response to the 41-17 Arkansas loss at LSU Friday. I am sure I will rally this week, but on a day when a 19-year old Razorback is going to be buried, and just a few days after whiffing on a chance to punch a ticket to Arkansas’ first gridiron National Championship in 47 years, I, much like the Hogs in the 2nd half in Baton Rouge, have nothing left in the tank, emotionally right now. Yes, I am a 35-year-old man, and it was a football game, and I know this note is uber dramatic.)

(Special to BlogHawgs by Maukavelli)

All weekend long, I’ve been trying to think of something… anything… to say. “Uggghhh” surely described my feelings, particularly about the time that Honey Badger was returning the punt and basically ended the game.

As the time went on in the 2nd half, I was equal parts irritated (mostly at the incompetence of CBS Sports, Vince Lindquist, and Gene Danielsman – SERIOUSLY, you only need a foot down, not a knee or an elbow. It’s not a difficult call. They’ve had that rule since, oh, about 1870), angry (at the inability to stop the run, the possibility that Les was rubbing it in while flinging it down field with 5 minutes to play, at my family members who tried to downplay a 24 point score differential, and just about anyone posting on Facebook or Twitter lamenting the loss), and despondent (Is this it? Will we ever be good enough?).

I argued with people on FB about why we shouldn’t be disappointed with the Cotton Bowl, all-the-while not really believing my own argument. I avoided the major message boards, because I knew that the full-on nuke-u-lar Razorback Nation meltdown had begun.

And I giggled when BMFP blew off Miles in the handshake, only Miles didn’t understand why. But mostly, I just stewed. I let it fester inside, not really wanting to talk about it, just letting it bubble inside, creating a chasm-wide burning sensation that had I gotten in college would have made me seek medical attention and some cream.

And then I woke up Saturday morning. The sky was blue. The birds were singing. My kids seemed happy, oblivious to the fact that my team… no… OUR TEAM had lost it’s biggest game in 42 years and of my lifetime. Confusion reigned because I didn’t expect things to seem so…so…so… normal.

My brain struggled to grasp things on Saturday, so I watched a little more football and quickly realized that of almost all the games on Saturday afternoon, OUR HOGS would beat nearly every team by at least two touchdowns. Sloppy football prevailed. QB’s missed receivers by 10 yards. Running backs fell down or missed the hole completely. Tacklers bounced off tackles like my kids in a bounce-house.

And then Michigan beat Ohio State, and for a few moments, order was restored in college football (well, at least for those of us who have a slight allegiance to a second team). It didn’t restore everything, but I felt a tad better – still bitter inside at the burning sensation. Still lamenting the lost opportunity. Still hating all things purple-and-gold. Still going through the “what-if” scenarios and wishing that Saban had never left MSU and brought honor (and a decent recruiting philosophy) to Red Stick. But better nonetheless.

Playing outside with the kids, I watching the joy in their faces, and saw their  innocence about sports, our society, and our world. For those with kids, you know what I mean. Protecting them from the kind of hurt that came on Friday is my ultimate job. So I wished, for a few moments, that they’d never become sports fans.

And then a funny thing happened on Sunday… My wife suggested I get out of the house by myself, for nothing else than to clear my head. I volunteered to do the grocery shopping, figuring a trip to WalMart was just what I needed to do to restore my faith in humanity (clearly, I’m insane).

Without thinking, I pulled on my nearest Razorback shirt, and left. And wouldn’t you know it, 3 minutes into the store, and someone says to me, “Man, I wish your boys had pulled it off the other day. I really don’t like those clowns from LSU, especially their coach. I think you guys are getting close.” I just smiled and said “thanks, me too.” and went on my way.

I realized then that maybe we are, in fact, getting close. Then a guy in an LSU shirt spied me, and said “Great game. You guys scare me. I honestly thought we were going to lose. I worry more about the Hogs in the near future than anyone else.” And I was so stunned, I didn’t know what to say, just muttering, “Well, we’ll see.”

But suddenly, my faith was restored in being a Razorback, and in loving sports. I realized that, like in Seattlehog’s post, the journey really is the most important thing about being a sports fan.

I’ve always maintained that being a sports fan is one of the most brutal things in life. Think about it. 99% of the time, your team doesn’t win “it” – whatever that is. Only one team can come out on top at the end, and the chances that it’s your team are pretty slim.

Even for the “legendary” teams, they lose a championship far more often than they win. But I realize that that’s what makes it fun. We hurt because we care. We invest in something tangible. Something real. Something that shouldn’t matter, but it does.

We get angry at the Penn State and Syracuse allegations. We loathe all things Texas and their arrogance and their money (although if they pay Saban $10 mil per, I may not be so mad).

We curse the names of Cameron Dollar, Toby Bailey, and Tyus Edney because we think  know (Editor’s Note–*I* changed the wording, there) that was a fluke.

We suffer through consecutive 4-7 seasons hoping that things will turn, and when it does, we still get angry at the way it happened (Springdale 5 vs. Murry St Mafia, DMac getting hosed, and Reggie Fish). We get lampooned in the national media, then hit the jackpot with a coaching hire after almost choosing Muschamp (ask Florida how that’s working out) or Venables (nobody’s calling him, now are they?), only to get lampooned again because Arthur Blank lied and ESP*I*N cares more about a “story” than the truth.

But you know what? I’m proud to be a Razorback fan. I’m proud that these past two seasons have given us more than anything we could have hoped for.

I’m proud that we have a coach who gets angry at another coach for running it up, even if the media doesn’t remember that Petrino could have done it last year but didn’t, and even if I don’t necessarily agree with Petrino for either decision (I’m not entirely sold that Miles was trying to run it up, and I wish Petrino had gone for the easy touchdown in 2010 after the fumble at the goal line with a minute to play. But neither opinion is worth arguing over).

I’m proud that we have a QB who takes shot after shot and keeps on flinging it. I’m proud that our team rose up and stood tall with the best team in the country 5 days after one of their own was found dead in his dorm room due to a rare heart condition.

And while I know that we have some lunatic fans, I’m glad to know that most Razorback fans understand that what’s happening (the journey) really is important.

I hope people will show up in Dallas or Orlando or tune in in TV and cheer on this team to an 11 win season. Read that again. An 11 win season.

That’s quite a journey in my book.

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , , | 13 Comments »

Ugh.

Posted by Adam Butler on November 25, 2011

…..

Posted in Commentary | Tagged: | 6 Comments »

BlogHawgs Twitter Style College Football Weekend Preview–11/24/11

Posted by Adam Butler on November 24, 2011

By this time tomorrow, Arkansas may have punched its ticked to the BCS Championship Game. Let that sink in for a minute. That made me tingle a little bit just typing it. Maybe it was my Tennis Elbow acting up. I guess I need to put my brace back on. PAUSE

OK. Now I am good to go.

Let the record reflect that I am a gamer. Neither Thanksgiving nor Tennis Elbow (nor the (national non-buildup for our Game of a Generation) can stop me from spending an inordinate amount of time on a marginally funny post that will be read by a dozen people, at best.

Now, let’s fake Twizeat.

The only rules for the BlogHawgs Twitter Style CFB Weekend preview are that the fake user names can’t be longer than 15 characters (but may or may not be registered, already), Tweets cannot exceed 140 characters, and I have to end each tweet with a smartazz (that’s for fellow BlogHawg, BK–he LOVES Zs in place of Ss) hash tag. Here we go:

Texas at Texas A&M: 11and11nlast22: Aggies’ Cyrus Gray should turn burnt orange black and blue. #keepaustinmediocre

Houston at Tulsa: airraid: Keenum? I hardly knew ‘em. #Case’scareermayoutlastCougarTown,anditshould

Iowa at Nebraska: awwshucks: Hawkeyes vs. The Cornhuskers–This game smells like something with corn in it. #michiganlovedtmagicsdisappearingactlastweek

Ohio St. at Michigan: urbsfamily: Thanks, Ohio St. We don’t like him any more than anyone else. #hemakestrumplookhumble

Missouri at Kansas: @dropfbhawks: Mizzou may score more points against KU than Duke hoops did last night (68). #shouldabeenturnervs.theguywholikesHooch

Georgia at Ga. Tech: @hobnailedboot: RIP Larry Munson. #wrecktech

Vanderbilt at Wake Forest: @SAT: Sub-2000 SAT scores need  not apply. #logarithms

Clemson at USCE: @daBoooo!: We told you emotion only lasts so long. #daboishungarianforHoustonNutt

Duke at N. Carolina: @DickieV: What time is tipoff? #IsGusafraidoftheACCtoo?

Tennessee at Kentucky: @passthebottle: Evan Williams v. Jack Daniels. Copious amounts will be needed to stomach this rock fight. #cutmeoff

Alabama at Auburn: @theforwardpass: Remember, me, War Damn Eagle Tigers? #thegusbusdoesntpassbetweenthewhitelines

Virginia Tech at Virginia: @namegame: Hokies v. Wahoos. Best nickname matchup in America–every year. #thatsallithasgoing4it

Penn St. at Wisconsin: @B10conference: This game is for the Big 10 “Leaders Division” Title. The sad irony is not lost on us. #itdidnthavetohappen

Texas Tech at Baylor: @jtessitore: The Oklahoma bad loss bowl. RG3 may have 450 total yards. #OUwasfavoredbyacombined44points

Florida State at Florida @noexcuse: Free Shoes U. vs. An overrated coach that will F-bomb U. #urbyourenthusiasm

Mississippi at Mississippi State: @houstontxtins: There are lots of lions and tigers and bears but I will coach the Memphis Tigers if they’ll pay me. #morristhecateventhinksIvehad2manylives

Notre Dame at Stanford: @luckystrikes: Someone’s Luck is going to run out. #lookout4thedomersin’12

Iowa St. at Oklahoma: @littlegameBob: No 30-point dog is coming into Norman and winning–except for the one that did and then lost 66-6 at home 3 weeks later. #alwaysOUverrated

UCLA at USCW: @NCAAprobation: A team destined for probation vs. a team on probation. #cheatersDOsometimeswinbutNeuheiseldoesn’t

Arkansas at LSU: @mourning88: On Sunday, Razorback Nation wept. On Friday, win or lose it will, too. But, we will not forget #88. #teamonamission

 

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off

Free Money–We’re Back

Posted by Adam Butler on November 24, 2011

It has been a few weeks since we have broken out Free Money. We apologize. More correctly, I should say Brett apologizes. He has been sicky-poo/handling family responsibilities the last few weeks and as a result has not kept BlogHawgs Nation abreast of our assault on the fake money books.

When last he did, we were making our Week 11 picks. For this first time in a while (all year?) BK lost money (just $30 fake dollars) in Week 11. I kept my phenomenal losing streak going, too, dropping my total at the time to $455 while BK was sitting at $1,825.

In Week 12, BK’s prescription strength Midol ran out so he made no picks and did not post mine. I went (relatively) big, risking almost all of my fake stack with two $200 plays–Tennessee +1.5 vs. Vandy and USCW +14.5 at Oregon. I hit them both, almost doubling my stack and bumping it back up to $855. More importantly, my 2-month streak is over!

Now, stung by his loss a few weeks ago, BK, MR. NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE, has stepped up to a hundy on each of his wagers but is uncharacteristically playing more college games (5) than NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE games (3).

I really like most of of my plays. Hopefully you all can thank me later for the others.

Now, it’s time to roll up.

Once again, here is a quick recap of the rules:

  • Maximum of 8 single plays during the week
  • One optional teaser and one optional parlay also allowed
  • Minimum of $50 wager
  • Both started the season with a $1,000 bankroll but can buy back into the game if they go bust

Free Money!

Brett ($1,825)

  • Dolphins (+7) at Dallas, 110 to win $100
  • Colts (+3.5) v. Carolina, $110 to win $100
  • Raiders (-4.5) v. Chicago,, $110 to win $100
  • Arkansas (+ 12.5) at LSU, $110 to win $100
  • Michigan (-7.5) v. Ohio State, $110 to win $100
  • Auburn (+21) v. Bama , $110 to win $100
  • Virginia (+5)  v. Va. Tech, $110 to win $100
  • Stanford (-6.5) v. Notre Dame, $110 to win $100
  • Total Wagers:  $880
  • Max Win: $800

Adam ($855)

  • Texas A&M (-7) v. Texas, $110 to win $100
  • Houston Cougars OVER 76.5, $110 to win $100
  • LSU (-12) v. Arkansas, $110 to win $100
  • Vandy (-2) at Wake Forest, $110 to win $100
  • Auburn (+21) at Bama, $110 to win $100
  • Oregon (-28) v. Oregon, $110 to win $100
  • Mississippi St. (-17) v. Mississippi, $110 to win $100
  • Notre Dame (+7) at Stanford, $110 to win $100
  • TEASE: LSU (-6) & LSU UNDER 46.5, $60 to win $50
  • PARLAY: LSU (-12) & LSU UNDER 52.5, $50 to win $125
  • Total Wagers:  $990
  • Max Win: $985

Wager accordingly. As usual, BlogHawgs.com is not responsible for you having to pawn your Black (Cardinal & White?) Friday purchases on Saturday.

Posted in Commentary, Entertainment, Sports | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off

Is It The Journey?

Posted by Adam Butler on November 23, 2011

(NOTE: This is a piece by a poster named “Seattlehog”. Given the news of the week–the tragic death of Arkansas tight end Garrett Uekman–I found this to be remarkably poignant and timely. Seattlehog gave me permission to post it here. I cannot thank him enough for sharing his perspective.)

My folks have a place on Beaver Lake. The house sits on a hill that leads to the lake and a boat dock. I sit on the back deck and watch hummingbirds fight over a feeder, a family of deer make their way slowly through the trees – leaves crunching under-hoof.

Vultures and hawks and even eagles cruise low over the water, coast in the thermals and perch in the bare limbs of the fall trees, exuding an arrogance and sense of place. Sometimes a sad sack pack of dogs, mutts that aren’t wild but sort of wish they were and like to pretend, will mingle and linger.

Their leader, a part husky whose name is Max and lives down the street, literally barks orders to his smaller, homlier cohorts, who trudge around like petulant teenagers, unhappy with their lot in leaders but resigned to their collective fate. It is, to use a fancy and snooty sounding word, a tableau.

But a tableau is static and this is not. It moves continuously. The images and the feelings they evoke are fleeting in time, each moment so infinitesimally small they don’t have a beginning or an end. They exist on a continuum, impossible to nail down or to experience out of the moment. This is why we take pictures of these things or why I write about them.

But the pictures and the writing are weak and ultimately unsuccessful attempts to etch in permanence things that truly exist only in the moment and that disappear like smoke when we reach out to grasp them, to hold them, to own them.

Victories in sport, championships, have a permanence that most of life lacks. In some ways I think this is why we want them, because they are things that cannot be taken away. They can be grasped and held and cuddled in slightly inappropriate ways. They last forever, or at least we imagine they do.

But championships are rare and elusive and even those we have won lose some of their tingle over time and clinging to victories long past is not only unseemly it is ultimately unsatisfying. It is covetous by its very nature and its joys and perfections are blurred and smudged by later losses and failures.

My point is this. Obsessing with the ENDS, with the destination, will ALWAYS end up unsatisfying. The things that satisfy us, that truly fill our gaping holes, the things that COMPLETE us, exist only for moments. They are fleeting, an ever-moving tableau.

I started writing this on Sunday morning. It was a kind of response to the tone and build-up of the LSU game – so much hand wringing and speculating about possible outcomes and BCS implications, entire threads about the ways we will get hosed. Actual complaints about what some unseen and quite possibly imaginary persons MIGHT do IF we pull off an UNLIKELY win.

Now don’t get me wrong, I love the build-up. I love the trash talk and speculation. I love thinking about the ins and the outs and all the possibilities. But at some point the disconnect between the possibilities and the actual here and now becomes too great. It begins to diminish the moment, THIS MOMENT.

So anyway, that was the genesis of this column. Then I heard the news about Garrett Uekman and I stopped writing, not sure that any piece of writing about football really had any meaning in the face of that tragedy.

There is a walkway, a path, from the lake house to the water and I walked down it Sunday, not long after hearing the news.

It’s not a long path, maybe 30 or 40 yards, but it is a wonderful place. It winds across a hillside as a means of limiting the slope. Branches and limbs, bare and leave-less, arc overhead forming a porous canopy. Stones mark the walkway on either side, they are grayish-green with patches of lichen, irregular in a way that manufactured stone can never be. Some are chipped and some worn smooth by water. Each is an individual but they form a distinct collective, unique in their way.

The path itself is gravel, fine and almost dusty. The fallen leaves of the season completely cover parts of it.

While the metaphorical import of walking the path didn’t escape me, it wasn’t the symbolism of the path that struck me. It was the path itself and its shaded beauty and peacefulness that reminded me to simply BE AWARE, and to enjoy the things right in front of me, because that can be a very difficult if not impossible thing to do.

I don’t want to make this about me (Who am I kidding, I make everything about me. It is all I know how to do.) But I do want to make it about what I have learned and am learning.

I am not a stranger to death. I have dealt with it directly my entire professional life. I have been hands on for expected and unexpected deaths, the deaths of young and old, the unimaginable deaths of mere infants and the thankful passing of those who have lived many, many years and now just want peace from their pain.

Nine months ago my 42-year-old healthy wife laid down for an afternoon nap and I took our then 9 month old baby off her hands and went to get my stepson from junior high. Without going into too much detail, when I went to wake her 2 hours later she was dead. Her heart just stopped and even an autopsy couldn’t really explain why.

There were moments there that never really seem far from my conscious thought. The unnatural tilt of her head and parting of her lips, her half-open eyelids and lifeless pupils that responded to nothing I did.

I cannot adequately describe the things that sit with me when I am alone at night, watching my baby girl sleep. Sometimes the images and events of that awful day invade and I can’t keep them out. The feel of her chest and ribs as I tried to create a pulse. The taste and total lack of response from her mouth and lips as I tried to force air in her lungs. The cracking sound of my voice as I told my stepdaughter to call 911. The otherworldly screams of her and my baby as they saw what was happening.

I don’t know what to do with these thoughts when they come. There is really nothing to do except experience them, live in them for a moment, own them.

The thing is that as real and as powerful as those memories are I don’t want them to dominate my emotions when I think of my wife. It is an injustice to her I suppose, but also to me, and her kids, and my baby girl.

Her death was an ending. We all have them. Everything ends. But the ending didn’t define the story, it is only a tiny part. It is that STORY, the entire narrative of time spent with her, the good and bad and indifferent, that deserve my attention, not the undeniable fact of her death. It was the journey that mattered and my biggest (and most useless) regret is that I wasn’t more present, more directly involved from moment to moment, in that journey.

The same is true for Garrett Uekman. I didn’t know him but I know this. He was a 3 dimensional person with flaws and wonderful traits just like the rest of us. Too often we flatten and compartmentalize our memories of someone who dies too young. They become a figure of tragedy and sentiment rather than the full and deep person they were. His life was a story, an infinite series of tiny moments, of good and bad and indifferent, of little ripples in time. Those moments, those ripples are the important thing for those who knew him.

It has taken me a long time to learn this. It is wonderful to make plans and work toward goals and destinations. These things are important and vital. But in the end the destination doesn’t matter too much. It is how we got there that matters. It is the Journey. Celebrate it.

Our kindest hopes and deepest sympathies to the Uekman family. I want to say it gets better but that isn’t really true. It gets different. It gets bearable.

Seattle

Posted in Commentary, Sports | 7 Comments »

Geauxlden Shower

Posted by Brett Kincaid on November 23, 2011

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off

Special Matchup II

Posted by Adam Butler on November 22, 2011

I double dare you to kick it to me.

No one breaks down punts like the BlogHawgs. You thought we were stopping with “Special Matchup“? Think again.

(These rankings are for players with 10 returns minimum)
Arkansas’ Joe Adams has returned 16 punts for 259 yards.  16.2 average (1st in the SEC,  4th nationally)  3 TD’s.
Fellow UA Wide Receiver Marquel Wade has returned 12 punts for 99 yards.  82. average (6th in the SEC).
LSU punter Brad Wing has 40 punts (43.0 average) in which the total  combined return yards have been 7.
 For those who dig the anti-drop kick, Wade is first in the SEC (10th nationally) in kickoff return average with 10 returns, 296 yards (29.6), 1 TD.  Arkansas’ Dennis Johnson is 5th in the SEC (with 18 for 461 (25.6 avg)) and 1 TD.
(Thanks to BlogHawgs reader and LSU Tiger fan Michelle Lyon for the “heads up” on Wing’s remarkable stats.)

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , , , | Comments Off

Arkansas Forward Marshawn Powell Out For the Season

Posted by Adam Butler on November 22, 2011

Per the UA, Razorback forward Marshawn Powell is out for the season with torn knee ligaments he suffered last Thursday in practice.

The hits just keep on coming for a program struggling to get its fastball back. Ugh.

Posted in News, Sports | Tagged: , , | 3 Comments »

BlogHawgs Stat Geek Weekly Newsletter–Waist Expanding Edition on the BCS, Tyler Wilson and the Arkansas/LSU Series

Posted by Adam Butler on November 22, 2011

By BlogHawgs Statistical Front Man Brian Rogers

Before we start our gluttonous, special LSU/Turkey Week BlogHawgs Stat Geek  Weekly Newsletter,  I want to start by advising Arkansas fans to relax–don’t believe the hype that ESPN’s BCS-ologist Brad edwards is spouting.

Contrary to Edwards’ opinion, there is no guarantee that the Hogs are bound to remain 3 in the BCS even if they take care of business on the Bayou.

It is highly likely that LSU will remain #1 in most of the computers, as they have massive leads in each of the individual computer components. However, NO ONE can tell what the voters will do to the rankings in the human polls.

There are a number of scenarios that could put Arkansas in the BCS Championship game with a win over LSU.

For example, if Arkansas beats unanimous #1 LSU — in Baton Rouge — and gets some some 1st place votes OR enough voters vote LSU 4th behind Oklahoma State or Stanford (if they wallop the Fighting Irish), Arkansas could have enough points to move to second while sitting in the clubhouse.

Also, it is possible that Arkansas’ BCS score would improve after SEC Championship Game, as Oklahoma State is still ahead of Arkansas in every computer component (albeit by a slim numerical margin) and could fall behind Arkansas by losing to Oklahoma.

From the “For What It’s Worth” Department,  Jerry Palm (CBS’s BCS guru)  just yesterday opined that, when one takes into account what the humans might do to LSU after a loss at home to a double-digit underdog (and let’s face it–a Dog with less national respect than Bama), he sees the least likely scenario being the Hogs stuck at 3rd in the SEC West pecking order if they win at LSU.

The point is that the BCS situation is not close to any kind of certainty at this point - unless LSU and Bama win out.

——————————————————————————————————————————

Enough of the hashbrown casserole, let’s move on to the Stat Geek’s Turkey and Dressing – Stats!

How about Arkansas Quarterback Tyler Wilson? What a year. What moxy. He has shown resilience that propels good QBs to legendary status in the eyes of Razorback Nation.

While his predecessor, Ryan Mallett, set lofty records to shoot for, Tyler, in a year where Arkansas is breaking in 2 new bookend tackles, is doing his best to match the Gunslinger from Texarkana.

Through 11 games this year, Tyler has posted the third best season in school history for passing yards. If not for Mallett, Wilson would already be #1 by 600 yards.

 

Rank Player Yards Diff.  

1

Ryan Mallett 3,869 654

2010

2

Ryan Mallett 3,624 409

2009

3

Tyler Wilson 3,215  

2011

4

Clint Stoerner 2,629

1998

5

Casey Dick 2,586

2008

6

Clint Stoerner 2,347

1997

7

Clint Stoerner 2,293

1999

8

Joe Ferguson 2,203

1971

9

Barry Lunney 2,181

1995

10

Matt Jones 2,073

2004

 

In just (less than) 1 year as the starter, Wilson already holds the #10 spot for career yards at Arkansas:

 

Rank Player Yards Diff.  

1

Ryan Mallett 7,493 3,607 2009-10

2

Clint Stoerner 7,422 3,536 1996-99

3

Matt Jones 5,857 1,971 2001-04

4

Casey Dick 5,856 1,970 2005-08

5

Barry Lunney 5,782 1,896 1992-95

6

Brad Taylor 4,802 916 1981-84

7

Bill Montgomery 4,590 704 1968-70

8

Quinn Grovey 4,496 610 1987-90

9

Joe Ferguson 4,431 545 1970-72

10

Tyler Wilson 3,886   2009-pres

 

Wilson is currently sitting at 22nd  in SEC history in terms of season passing yards. As you can see, with at least 2 games left, he is very likely to end up around 6-9  .

 

Rank Player Yards Diff.  

1

Tim Couch 4,275 1,060

1998

2

Rex Grossman 3,896 681

2001

3

Tim Couch 3,884 669

1997

4

Ryan Mallett 3,869 654

2010

5

Peyton Manning 3,819 604

1997

6

Andre Woodson 3,709 494

2007

7

Jared Lorenzen 3,687 472

2000

8

Danny Wuerffel 3,625 410

1996

9

Ryan Mallett 3,624 409

2009

10

Eric Zeier 3,525 310

1993

11

Erik Ainge 3,522 307

2007

12

Andre Woodson 3,515 300

2006

13

Matthew Stafford 3,459 244

2008

14

Rex Grossman 3,402 187

2002

15

Eli Manning 3,401 186

2002

16

Eric Zeier 3,396 181

1994

17

Rohan Davey 3,347 132

2001

18

David Greene 3,307 92

2003

19

Peyton Manning 3,287 72

1996

20

Tim Tebow 3,286 71

2007

21

Dameyune Craig 3,277 62

1997

22

Tyler Wilson 3,215  

2011

 

A few other miscellaneous passing marks that help put his season in perspective:

·         With 26 more attempts and 23 completions, Wilson will be atop the Arkansas list for both of those categories.

·         Among Arkansas passers with at least 230 attempts in a season, Wilson is on par with Mallet for completion %. Mallett’s 2010 season stands at first with 64.7%, Wilson currently is at 63.1%, with the only other mark above 60% being held by Barry Lunney, Jr. in 1995 at 61.6%.

·         (JINX ALERT!!! REVERSE IT!!)Wilson currently throws 1 interception per 77 attempts (5 in 385 attempts). Of passers in SEC history with at least 300 attempts in a season, that is third all time behind Peyton Manning in 1995 with 1 INT per 95 attempts. (4 in 380 attempts) and Greg McElroy in 2009 with 1 INT per 81.3 attempts (4 in 325).

Finally, turning our attention to LSU week, everyone should know of the recent heartburn-inducing nature of the Battle for the Boot.

Despite LSU becoming an 800 lb. gorilla with a chainsaw for a pet since Nick Saban’s tenure began in 2000 (when he began bagging 4 and 5 star laden classes for the Bayou Bengals), this series has become extremely close and intense.

Since 2000, LSU holds a 6-5 edge in wins:

·         Margin of victory: 9

·         Average score: LSU 31.5 – ARK 27

·         only 3 games have had double digit margins of victory

·         2 of the 3 years were wrapped around LSU’s 2003 National Championship and were 31 and 29 point Hog stompings. The third was Arkansas’ 11 point victory in 2000.

Excluding those 3 games, the series is split 4-4:

·         Average margin of victory: 3

·         Total points scored: LSU 245 – ARK 244

·         4 of the 8 have been decided by 1 or 2 points

In other words, buckle up. This should be fun.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , , | 5 Comments »

Special Matchup

Posted by Brett Kincaid on November 22, 2011

I dare you to kick it to me.

I do not typically link to stories behind a paywall, but this is worth it.  If you have an ESPN Insider account, you’ll be able to read this awesome breakdown of the Arkansas v. LSU special teams.  Both have exceptional special teams units, a large reason both are ranked in the top 3 nationally going into this weekend.  Brian Fremeau with Football Outsiders (a must-read side for stat geeks like me) provides the analysis.

 

Here is a sample:

 

 

In this weekend’s marquee matchup, the No. 1 LSU Tigers versus the No. 3 Arkansas Razorbacks, the spotlight will shine even brighter on special teams. The Tigers and Razorbacks each boast one of the top special teams units in the country according to our Football Outsiders metrics. Special teams efficiency (STE) is our combined measure of the field goal, kickoff, punt, kickoff return and punt return units of each team, based on field position and expected success rates.

Teams that have won the STE battle have won 64.7 percent of FBS games played to date. In 55 games this season (9.1 percent of FBS games), the value generated on special teams exceeded the difference between victory and defeat. That includes two of Arkansas’ victories (versus Texas A&M and Vanderbilt) and one of LSU’s victories (versus Alabama). On the season, LSU ranks fifth nationally in STE, earning 3.2 more points per game on special teams plays than an average team. Arkansas ranks 10th nationally, 2.4 points per game better than average.

I don’t typically advocate handing money over to The Mothership, but in this case it’s worth the expense.  I think the ESPN Insider service costs $49.99 for a year, and it includes a subscription to ESPN The Magazine.  Most of the ESPN.com stuff is formulaic, but the Insider material is usually pretty good.  That’s probably because they contract out with people like Outsiders, Scout.com and AccuScore.

Also, if you’re a big baseball fan, the Buster Olney blog is a must.  He will take Peter Gammons’s place as best writer in baseball once Gammons retires.  Which will be 20-never…

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , , | 7 Comments »

The “C” in BCS Stands for Conspiracy

Posted by Brett Kincaid on November 21, 2011

Or maybe “Crappy Computers” is more accurate.

There is no denying one fact: The computers used to calculate the BCS rankings favor the Big XII this year.  It’s actually quite staggering.  If it were up to the guys with Macs and PCs, Kansas State and Oklahoma would both be deep in the hunt to play for the national title.  The unconditional love for the Big XII artificially keeps all conference members high in the rankings since they all play each other right now.

How bad is it?

Nine of the 10 teams in the league rank in the computers Top 40.  The 10th team – Kansas – ranks 75th in the computers.  Kansas is 2-8 on the season coming off a 61-7 loss to the CPU 24th ranked Texas A&M Aggies.  The Jayhawks have not won a league game, and their average margin of defeat in conference play is just shy of 28 points.  Statistically they have the worst defense in college football.  But the computers would have you believe there are 45 teams in the country that are actually worse than the Jayhawks.

This is how the Big XII ranks if you ask the computers:

Rank Team CPU Average
2 Oklahoma St. 2.25
5 Kansas St. 5
6 Oklahoma 6
13 Baylor 12.25
21 Texas 20.5
24 Texas A&M 22
26 Missouri 24.25
29 Iowa St. 25.5
39 Texas Tech 38.5
75 Kansas 74.75

Kansas State lost to both Oklahoma schools – one at home, one on the road – yet all three rank inside the top 6 of the computers.  Baylor – a team that has lost 3 road games by an average of 3 touchdowns – is somehow viewed as the 13th best team in the country according to the guys at Gigabyte Illustrated.  And Texas, a team that has combined to score 18 points in the past two weeks, is a Top 25 team according to the computers?  What gives?

The lovefest for the Big XII is only amplified when you consider the lack of respect the computers show for the SEC.  With 2 more teams than the Big XII, it is reasonable to expect some bottom-feeders to drag down the average a tad.  If that was the case, I think we could all accept it.  The problem, though, is that the SEC’s computer average is an eye-popping 34.17 compared to a 24.0 for the Big XII.  Huh?

Rank Team CPU Average
1 LSU 1
3 Alabama 2.75
4 Arkansas 4.25
10 South Carolina 10.5
14 Georgia 14.25
23 Auburn 21.75
33 Florida 32.75
45 Mississippi St. 45
46 Tennessee 46
61 Vanderbilt 59.25
79 Kentucky 77.5
91 Mississippi 93.5

Like a lot of folks, I still think Alabama is the best team in the country.  LSU deserves the top spot because they’ve proven it on the field.  There is no denying that.  But I think Bama still has a better overall team.  Does anyone honestly think Oklahoma State has a better team than Alabama?  Than Arkansas?  Hell, than South Carolina or Georgia?

Let’s take the top five teams from each conference, in order, and play a game of “Who Wins?”

  • LSU v. Oklahoma St.
  • Alabama v. Kansas St.
  • Arkansas v. Oklahoma
  • South Carolina v. Baylor
  • Georgia v. Texas

In how many of those games would the Big XII team be favored over the SEC team?  Any?  Maybe OU v. Arkansas would be a pick ‘em, and maybe Baylor would be a slight favorite over the Gamecocks without Lattimore.  But I think those are both very questionable.  Yet the average computer ranking for the five Big XII schools is 9.4 and for the five SEC schools that average is 11.

For Arkansas fans worried about not getting the bounce needed to secure a spot in the SEC Championship Game or the BCS Championship Game, the concern is valid.  The computer rankings, heavily tilted toward the Big XII conference, could stymie an 11-1 Razorback team from claiming any right to play for a national or league title.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , | 26 Comments »

Five in a Row

Posted by Brett Kincaid on November 21, 2011

For the fifth consecutive week an Arkansas Razorback has earned one of the SEC’s weekly awards.  This time it’s redshirt junior quarterback Tyler Wilson.  The Greenwood native was named the SEC Offensive Player of the Week thanks to a brilliant performance in Little Rock this weekend.  Wilson completed 32 of 43 passes for 365 yards with three touchdowns and no interceptions.  In the process Wilson broke Joe Ferguson’s 40-year old record for completions in a game.

 

 

Previous Razorback honorees from the SEC home office include:

Week 11 – Joe Adams, Special Teams

Week 10 – Dennis Johnson, Special Teams

Week 9 – Jerry Franklin, Defensive & Zach Hocker, Special Teams

Week 8 – Dennis Johnson, Offensive

Week 6 – Tevin Mitchel, Freshman

Week 5 – Tyler Wilson, Offensive & Jarius Wright, Offensive

Week 2 – Alvin Bailey, Offensive Line

Week 1 – Joe Adams, Special Teams

 

 

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , | 2 Comments »

BlogHawgs Heisman 5+1–11/21/11

Posted by Adam Butler on November 21, 2011

Special to BlogHawgs by Kris Boyd

WOOOOW.  Not only did every thrilling win/loss completely blast the Bowl Championship Series out of the water by creating a Southeastern Conference 1-2-3, but it also blew up the Blog Hawgs 5 +1. 

The +1 went back and forth since Saturday night as to whether to just bite the bullet and place Robert Griffin, III, all the way up to #1 or keep its rational head and place him at #2 or #3.  The +1 ignored the thoughts of submitting to the hype of “latest and greatest” and the talking heads’ “Andrew Luck has the body of work” rationale.  Welcome back to the top spot, RG3. 

RG3 had 1,201 yards, 9 touchdowns and 3 interceptions in Baylor’s three losses for goodness sake (which, oh-by-the-way, were all to ranked teams ).  

We see you Kendall Wright, David Wilson, Tyler Wilson and Matt Barkley.  We see you.

1.  Robert Griffin, III, QB, Baylor  Nobody has done more with less overall talent on his team than RG3 has.  Griffin flat out would not let Baylor lose to OU.  He was tired of losing and tired of losing to OU in particular.  Baylor is a below .500 team without RG3.  

3,572 passing yards, 33 passing touchdowns, 5 interceptions, 72.9 % completion rate, 7-3 record

550 rushing yards, 5 rushing touchdowns, 4.1 yards per carry

2.  Andrew Luck, QB, Stanford  Andrew got the W during an extremely wet and muddy game that usually stymies any semblance of a passing game.   

2,937 yards, 31 touchdowns, 8 interceptions, 70.3 % completion rate, 10-1 record 

3. Case Keenum, QB, Houston It would have been very easy for Case to have a letdown game with all the hype that was surrounding this game (most everyone else did), but he didn’t.

4,269 yards, 38 touchdowns, 3 interceptions, 73.4 % completion rate, 11-0 record

4.  Justin Blackmon, WR, Oklahoma State Blackmon was his usual outstanding self against Iowa State.  Most of his catches and runs were highlight worthy.

1,241 yards, 15 touchdowns, 12.0 yards per catch, 10-1 record

5.  Trent Richardson, RB, Alabama Trent put up his usual great numbers, albeit against an awful team.  Trent will drop out of the +1 if he has an average to below average game in the Iron Bowl.

1,380 yards, 20 touchdowns, 5.8 yards per carry, 10-1 record

+1.  Brandon Weeden, QB, Oklahoma State  Brandon, Brandon, Brandon *shaking head*.  The +1 has pumped you for two years, now.  We had your back when nobody knew who you were.  Now everyone knows who you are; and you will be known as that 28 year old quarterback who choked away a game to a 28 point underdog that cost your team a chance to play for a National Championship.

4,111 yards, 34 touchdowns, 12 interceptions, 73.0 % completion rate, 10-1 record

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , , , , , | 11 Comments »

Select 17 – Week 13

Posted by Brett Kincaid on November 21, 2011

It all comes down to this.

For the first time since 1969, the Arkanas Razorbacks have a chance to knock off the #1 team in the country on the season’s final game and ensure the Hogs spot in the National Championship game.  The closest thing we’ve seen in these parts since The Big Shootout was 1988, when the #8 Hogs lost at #3 Miami (yet another heartbreaker) in a game that could have inserted Arkansas into the title discussion.  However, that was long before the BCS guaranteed a matchup of #1 v. #2 for all the marbles.  While there is still a bit of gray area here, a win over the #1 team in the land on the last weekend of the regular season should just about sew up the bid to the BCS Championship Game

This week you will hear all sorts of theories and predictions.  The anti-SEC sentiment will be loud, so prepare yourselves.  Do not get distracted.  As we learned this weekend, winning is the most important thing out there.  If you win, you advance in the discussion.  The biggest lesson to be learned from this weekend – one of the best college football weekends in recent memory – is this: Anything can happen.  Arkansas could definitely beat LSUAuburn could definitely beat Alabama.  Or the favorties could just as easily roll this weekend, eliminating much of the debate.

It’s a holiday week.  Don’t let Brad Edwards, Kirk Herbstreit, and the other national blowhards ruin your Thanksgiving.  If the #3 team in the nation beats the #1 team in the nation – at their house – on the final weekend of the regular season, it’s a pretty safe bet that the #3 team will punch a ticket to the title game.  Winning takes care of everything.  Enjoy your family and let Bobby Petrino worry about getting the Hogs into the program’s biggest game in 47 years.

I’d be remiss at this point not to mention the death of redshirt freshman Garrett Uekman.  This young man’s passing is a sobering reminder of how delicate life is.  Personally I take it as a reminder that this thing we love, college football, is but a piece in the greater puzzle of life.  It is a reminder for me to choose to celebrate the fact that Arkansas is in position to play for a title rather than to worry about what others may think.  We often forget to enjoy these moments because we spend so much energy worrying about “What’s Next?” when we have no control over it.  Rest in peace, Garrett. 

One thing we do control here at BlogHawgs.com is our weekly Select 17 poll.  For the first time all season, the top 3 teams are unanimous by all voters.  We may have been ahead of the curve compared to our national colleagues, but it’s nice to see them all catch up.  Oklahoma proved to be a fraud, Oregon showed it was flawed, and Oklahoma State said, “Oh my, God!” after taking it on the chin in Ames, Iowa, last Friday night.  Stanford, OSU, Boise State, and Virginia Tech are all lurking, waiting on the SEC West to fail.  Of that group, Stanford and Oklahoma State pose the biggest threat to disrupting an all-SEC party in New Orleans.  If Alabama wins the Iron Bowl, though, it’s hard to imagine anyone getting into that game that doesn’t reside in the country’s toughest football division.

To the poll…

Rank Team Votes LW
1 LSU (9) 153 1
2 Alabama 144 3
3 Arkansas 135 5
4 Stanford 119 8
5 Oklahoma St. 112 2
6 Virginia Tech 111 9
7 Houston 90 10
8 Boise St. 81 11
9 Oregon 77 4
10 Michigan St. 59 13
11 Georgia 55 12
12 Oklahoma   50 6
13 USC 48 NR
14 Wisconsin 44 15
15 South Carolina 38 14
16 Kansas St. 30 17
17 Michigan   14 NR

Others Receiving Votes:  Clemson 12, Baylor 5, Penn St. 1, TCU 1, Tulsa 1

 

 

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 8 Comments »

BlogHawgs Razorback Rewind–Mississippi State Game

Posted by Adam Butler on November 21, 2011

I should start by saying I am hesitant to even publish this post.

Less than 24 hours after Arkansas whipped Mississippi State 44-17 at War Memorial Stadium Saturday in Little Rock to move to 10-1 on the season, Arkansas redshirt freshman tight end Garrett Uekman died in his dorm room in Fayetteville.

So, an already trivial exercise seems even more so at this point. For that reason, I am going to keep things short and bittersweet this week.

I expect that we will have wall-to-wall bloggage of Friday’s matchup between the #1 (LSU) and #3 (Arkansas) teams in the BCS standings which, despite only differing by one number, is not likely to receive even a scintilla of national coverage compared to that which was heaped on the November 5th game between LSU and Alabama.

The LSU/Arkansas tilt in Red Stick may not be this year’s Game of the Century, or even Game of the Month, but for Arkansas fans born after 1969, it is the game of our lifetime.

We will obsess, accordingly, soon, but at this typing are saddened by the loss of such a young, bright member of the Razorback family.

What We Saw:

Just like last year, Arkansas is playing its best football in November. UA quarterback Tyler Wilson had one uncharacteristically awful decision, which led to a sack, fumble and long, temporary hope-inducing fumble return by Mississippi State defensive lineman Fletcher Cox, but he was otherwise very good. Wilson set a school single-game school record for completions (32), and showed off an emerging offensive toy–tight end Chris Gragg.

We also (again) saw what we already knew. Arkansas’ much-maligned defense is actually fairly solid if it has most of its playmakers. Razorback defensive end Jake Bequette added 2 more sacks to his season total, giving him 6 in the last 3 weeks and placing him 3rd in the SEC for the season with 8 sacks despite missing essentially 4 games and being slowed in a few others upon his return. He is in flat out Beast Mode.

But Bequette is not the only Razorback defender who is playing at that level. Arkansas defensive tackle Byran Jones has 40 tackles, a very good number for an interior lineman, and has been an anchor in Willy Robinson’s gap control scheme.

And, after getting pushed around by Alabama’s defense early in the season, Arkansas linebacker Jerry Franklin has logged the best campaign of his stellar career, as he is on pace to set a personal record for tackles in a season while becoming the first Razorback to lead the team in tackles in 4 consecutive seasons.

Those three played very well Saturday and, with help from plenty of their friends, held Mississippi State to just 211 total yards (with 66 of those coming in under 4 minutes left in the game garbage time against several Razorback backups).

With the effort, the often-criticized Razorback defense is 6th in the SEC in scoring defense–a respectable number considering the Arkansas offense scores often and quickly, giving opposing offenses more opprtunities, and 2 of the best defenses in recent college football history (Alabama and LSU) are atop the league charts.

What We Didn’t See:

Arkansas had every opportunity to look ahead to Friday’s Battle For The Boot A Likely Spot in the BCS Championship Game and didn’t.

Instead, unlike Oklahoma State (um, Iowa State? Really? With their preseason 4th-string QB?), Oklahoma (a pretender as we have been saying since the Sooners’ INEXPLICABLE loss at home to 30-point underdog Texas Tech) and Oregon (yes, the Ducks have played a tough schedule, and ESP*I*N LOVES them and their 1,072 different uniform combinations, but remind me, again, how is it that Arkansas’ 38-14 loss at Bama was a dream-ender per some, but Oregon’s 40-27 loss to LSU on a neutral field–that was set to be a 40-20 punking until the Ducks scored a meaningless TD with :13 left in the game–was not going to keep them out of a 2nd straight BCS Championship Game appearance until they gagged at home against USCSW Saturday?) the Hogs handled their business.

(Oh, speaking of Oregon and OU….how is it that some of the pundits that incessantly complain about the lack of  a playoff system in the college football rationalize away regular season losses in order to pump up teams that they subjectively feel are the better? How is that “settling it on the field”?)

Also, we should note that the game atmosphere at Arkansas’ home stadiums has been very good all year and Saturday was no exception. I have routinely begged the UA to come into the 21st Century in terms of the gameday atmosphere, and this year it has.

Cutting down the number of ads, mixing in recorded, situationally appropriate music, etc. has added to the experience and helped give Arkansas more a homefield advanatage. War Memorial Stadium even has decent cell service on gamedays (the 10,000 fewer fans in the stadium might seem to explain that but for the additional 20 or 30 thousand that congregateget blitzed around the WMS golf course during the game). Maybe one day Reynolds Razorback Stadium will have gameday cell service, too.

What You May Not Have Seen:

Lined up on the left side of the offensive line, tight end Garrett Uekman blocked for Wilson on his 2-yard, 3rd-quarter touchdown pass to Gragg.

What We Hope to See Next Week:

Isn’t it time that the good guys finally win the big one? We’ve been outdueled in the Big Shootout, tripped up by Storner’s Stumble and Filleted by Fish. Long-suffering Hog fans can only hope now is our time.

In the meantime, our thoughts are with the family and friends of Garrett Uekman.

 

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , , , | 5 Comments »

Garrett Uekman–6/22/92–11/20/11

Posted by Adam Butler on November 20, 2011

Razorback Nation mourns the tragic loss of one of its own, today.

Nineteen-year-old Razorback redshirt freshman tight end Garrett Uekman passed away in his dorm room in Fayetteville this morning. He was blocking on a touchdown pass play from Arkansas quarterback Tyler Wilson to fellow tight end a little under 27 hours ago at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock.

Arkansas will hold a press conference in a matter of minutes to field questions about his death, but one thing is certain–the sudden death of a young person with a great future ahead of him is terrible sad.

I can only imagine what his family and friends our going through today. Our thoughts are with them.

Posted in News, Sports | Tagged: , | Comments Off

BlogHawgs Twitter Style College Football Weekend Preview–11/19/11

Posted by Adam Butler on November 18, 2011

Thanksgiving is almost upon us and I still don’t have a Twitter account.

I do, however, have an internationally renowned Twitter Style College Football Weekend Preview. And, thanks to Arkansas Wide Receiver Cobi Hamilton, BlogHawgs now has Re-Tweet Cred. What’s next? A Faux Hawk? Skinny Jeans? An over-inflated sense of self? Only time will tell.

Unfortunately, 11 glorious weekends of college football are in the books, so we don’t have much time left to make spiteful, snarky comments about pretty much every major college football program. Rest assured, though–I am as ready today to bring smarmy fake Tweets as I was on Day 1 of the season.

The only rules for the BlogHawgs Twitter Style CFB Weekend preview are that the fake user names can’t be longer than 15 characters (but may or may not be registered, already), Tweets cannot exceed 140 characters, and I have to end each tweet with a smartazz (that’s for fellow BlogHawg, BK–he LOVES Zs in place of Ss) hash tag. Here we go:

Oklahoma State at Iowa State: @bweeeden’89: I’m glad this one is on Friday night. I’m chaperoning my daughter’s high school homecoming dance, Saturday. #OldHeisMan

Wisconsin at Illinois: @weRzooked: Even Ron Zook’s postgame rants are boring and ineffective. #mr.february

Kentucky at Georgia: @RichtgrrrScale: From the Hot Seat to Hotlanta. #noeasyoutintheSECCG

Vanderbilt at Tennessee: @Vandymania: The ‘Dores are 1-27 against UT since ’82, but Vandy is a road favorite. Dooley noted. #betweenaRockyTopandahardplace

Texas Tech at Missouri: @nO,U: Tech is so bad Mizzou Coach Gary Pinkel played Quarters Wednesday instead of scripting the first quarter. #whatsyourexcuseOU?

Kansas at Texas A&M: @SmokedSherman: How many Aggies does it take to screw up a preseason Top 10 team? Don’t answer that. #SECusoon

LSU at Mississippi: @WeToldUSo: This season has finally provided the proverbial pound of The Mississippi Coach’s flesh. #passthefavabeansandchianti

California at Stanford: @ALuck12: It seemed like the band was on the field last  week. #Indyisniceinthesummer

Nebraska at Michigan: @Maize&Boo: 2 All-Nickname Team QBs with All-Sunbelt Conference talent. #theforwardpassisimportantforaQB

Penn St. at Ohio St.: @ShameGame: Remember when this game mattered? #stillangry

Kansas St. at Texas: @MackAttack: Is it too early to fire a bunch of assistant coaches, again? #3envelopes 

Boston College at Notre Dame: @DomerHomer: At 7-3, we’re guaranteed a BCS Bowl, right? #Win8forTheGipper

SMU at Houston: @MakinthaCase: 17, 537 passing yards & 144 TDs. Imagine the #s he would have if he played in the Big 12! #afriendlyreminderthatOUlostto30ptdogTTechinNorman

USC at Oregon: @Ilikeursweater:  *Holding Nose* Fight On!  #OllyOllyAutzenFree

Boise St. at San Diego St.: @Nov.Reign: What? Boise choked even though it (per the usual) only had 2 competitve games all season? It must be November. #goaway

Mississippi St. at Arkansas: @RockCityHam: Cobi Hamilton 14 Mississippi State 10 #MayorofMarkham

Posted in Commentary, Sports | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

NWC Report for 11/18/11

Posted by Jeff on November 18, 2011

 

And the new name is...

The Hilton, The Radisson, The Cosmopolitan, The Chancellor Hotel in downtown Fayetteville is getting a complete makeover.  So come on down and buy some used hotel stuff!

Occupy NWAgot the mayor of Fayetteville’s blessing to freeze to death outside the Town Center. The low last night was 25o F.  No Thanks.  Gooch, too cold to protest all night?

Speaking of freezing, Bentonville has its ice rink ready.  It opens tomorrow.

It’s Dollar Beer Night in Springdale!  Well… they are selling beer at a Dollar General. Close enough?  The Springdale Liquor Association might finally be losing their death grip on all things alcohol in Springdale.

Employees of Benton and Washington Counties might be getting a pay raise next year.

The iconic Bank of Fayetteville might be sold.  Bank officials are trying to quell customer concerns during the process. The BOF is the third largest in NWA in terms of money loaned.

A Springdale bakery could be fined $500,000 for knowingly employing illegal aliens.  Turns out the owner’s wife got pulled over and didn’t have her papers.

Who said CDs and Vinyl are on the way out? Look how useful!

 

In advance of the Lights of the Ozarks, Block Street business owners decided to spruce up their little corner of Fayetteville with some Christmas décor.

And those aforementioned Lights of the Ozarks get turned on tomorrow.

Vol Walker Hall on the UA campus is getting an overhaul.  Marlon Blackwell compiled a video of the destruction of part of the building taken over four days.  Fayetteville Flyer has it.  It’s pretty fun to watch. 

Have a great weekend, BH Nation!

Posted in News | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

The Idiot Box

Posted by Jeff on November 18, 2011

Beavis and Butt-Head are not role models. They’re not even human. They’re cartoons. Some of the things they do would cause a person to get hurt, expelled, arrested, possibly deported. To put it another way: Don’t try this at home.

"Hey Beavis. Check out my abs... Uh huh huh huh."

Uhhh Huh Huh Huh… Mmmm  Heh Heh Heh…

I truly cannot think of a better title for this edition of The Idiot Box.  Ladies and gentlemen, Beavis and Butthead have returned to MTV.  Technically, the new show is called Mike Judge’s Beavis and Butthead but it has not changed much.  And I think that is great.

Beavis and Butthead was must-see TV on MTV from 1993 to 1997.  Spawned from an animated short called Frog Baseball on another MTV show called Liquid Television (remember Æon Flux?), Beavis and Butthead chronicled the adventures of two dangerously stupid teenagers that love heavy metal, girls, and watching TV.   Similar to Seth McFarlane of Family Guy, creator Mike Judge voices most of the characters in the old show and the rebooting.  On NPR last week,  McFarlane said that he just knows what he wants the characters to sound like so he just does them.  South Park’s Trey Parker has made similar comments.   I’d bet that the producers of The Simpsons  had just one or two actors to deal with.

A lot of guys in my demographic fell in love with Beavis and Butthead and then in love with Mike Judge when he directed the cult classic comedy, Office Space.(DIE Fax Machine DIE !!)  Swingline is still sending checks to Judge for making office supplies sexy again.  But try as he may, Judge hasn’t been able to get another live-action project to be as funny.  Judge set Beavis and Butthead aside for a while to focus on his new series for Fox, King of the Hill.  That show started out great.  everyone loved following the weird antics of Hank Hill’s son Bobby (their only child due to Hank’s narrow urethra) and trying hard to understand what the ever-mumbling, permanent bachelor Boomhauer was saying.

King of the Hill went off the air in 2010 and Judge decided to bring Beavis and Butthead back. In an interview with David Letterman on The Late Show, Judge told Dave that he had been thinking about it and about how much fun it always was.  Apparently MTV thought so too.

I have enjoyed the reboot.  Judge was quick to bring back Cornholio, Beavis’ caffeine-fueled alter-ego.  I also forgot how much Mr. Anderson and Hank Hill sound alike.  In fact a lot of the reboot is very similar to the original.  One big change that has me in stitches is the fact that the boys have expanded their TV watching to include more MTV staples like Jersey Shore and 16 and Pregnant. (Yes, that’s a real show.)   I’m no stranger to taking shots at Snooki.  But I’m not the professional.  It’s good stuff and it makes me feel uhhhh… uhhhhh… like warm and stuff.  Mmmm huh huh huh.

Maybe I’m trying to relive my 20′s.  Maybe I just think that some current videos and reality shows need some skewering.  Either way, I am glad to see Mike Judge back on MTV.  He may not be able to grab a wand and recreate the magic of Office Space, but he has recreated the magic of Beavis and Butthead.

“Uhhh huh huh huh… He said ‘wand.’   Oh yeah.  That’s pretty funny, Butthead.  Wand.”

Posted in Entertainment, Pop Culture | Tagged: , , , | 4 Comments »

Senior Moments–A Salute to the 2011 Arkansas Razorbacks Senior Class

Posted by Adam Butler on November 17, 2011

Thank You.

That’s what I really want to say to this year’s group of remarkable Arkansas Razorback seniors–all 17 of you.

You may think you understand the impact you have had on Arkansas Razorbacks football history and the collective psyche of our great state, but you don’t–you can’t. You are young, impressive adults to be sure, but, in your early 20s, your historical perspective is likely about as long as the life span of the latest version of Playstation.

You have yet to be attacked by random, pesky gray hairs coming out of your ears or slowed by cracking knees worthy of a Rice Krispies (Snap, Crackle, Pop) commercial. Trust me, that day will come.

Forty years from now when a stranger in a Razorbacks cap comes up to you at your grandson’s high school football game and tells you exactly where he was when you and your teammates thumped LSU in Little Rock to earn the school’s first BCS Bowl appearance, you may then be able to fully appreciate your place in Razorbacks history. Make no mistake–you have carved out a special place in that history.

While we should be ever-mindful of the need for perspective–especially in light of the Penn St. tragedy–we also should feel no need to apologize for taking pride in your athletic accomplishments or the fact that the way we identify ourselves–as Razorbacks–does matter to us.

By now you well know that as denizens of Razorback Nation, we are all united, in a way by the program and the University–ties that bind Arkansans—from Texarkana to Paragould, from the Big Apple to the San Francisco Bay.

The Razorbacks have long been a source of pride for an inferiority complex-saddled citizenry that has bristled at its shabby national image.We revel in your athletic exploits and are pained when you come up short.

We mark the passage of time by Street to Peschell, the Stoerner Stumble, The Miracle on Markham, and, hopefully, upcoming triumphs in Atlanta and New Orleans.

We rise in unison at the drop of a hat to deliver a boisterous cheer that is equal parts stereotype enforcing and, when done right, awe-inspiring. There’s no shame in any of those things.

Photobucket

A cynic will, somewhat correctly, chide these as syrupy sweet musings about games that, again, in the grand scheme of things don’t move the dial. That’s fine. I get that.

But for a moment, let us unapologetically divert our attention away from the sometimes stark, brutal truths of everyday life. For some people, that diversion is a fine wine or film noir. For me, it’s well-designed play on 4th and 4.

It’s an escape that has been an enjoyable one for a few seasons, largely due to this year’s Razorback seniors who have helped shape the Arkansas football program for the last four years, and seemingly for years to come.

It is a group of seniors that arrived on campus and cast its lot with a program not far removed from being in total disarray and leaves having established the same as a nationally relevant Top 10 program–something that it has not been in decades.

It wasn’t easy. As freshmen, these seniors were learning a new system and were toyed with and embarrassed in a 3-week stretch that saw the Razorbacks lose by a combined score of 139-34 in successive losses to Alabama, Texas and Florida.

Now, in 2011, they are in the midst of a 24-5 streak and with 9 wins in 2011 have just 2 less victories than college football bluebloods Texas and Florida combined.

The seniors have overcome strokes, broken necks, torn knee ligaments (in record rehab time) broken bones, the death of loved ones, and highway robbery. They have also confounded The Hat, and, but for an errant kicker might be 3-0 against mighty LSU. And, while they still have work to do, they are on the verge of completing one of the best 2-season showings in school history.

With just one more win, Arkansas will have 20 wins in a 2-year span for only the 5th time in program history, back-to-back 10-win seasons for only the 3rd time in program history and 2 of the twelve 10-win seasons in Arkansas’ 117-year program history.

So, as Arkansas’ seniors prepare for their last home game Saturday before what will undoubtedly be a raucous crowd in and around Little Rock’s War Memorial Stadium, (hopefully to be followed by the opportunity of a football career–the chance to win in Baton Rouge against the unanimous #1 team in America in a showdown of BCS Top 5 teams) let us do what they can’t afford to do.

Join me in taking pause, reflecting and giving a tip of the cap to Arkansas’ group of 17 seniors who have put the “W”s back in “Woo, Pig Sooie!”. They’ve earned it.

 

Photobucket

Posted in Commentary | Tagged: , , , | 14 Comments »