Arkansas Fight - Arkansas Razorbacks vs Alabama Crimson Tide 2015Your daily source for Razorback News.https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/community_logos/46887/expats-fave.png2015-10-15T14:23:01-05:00http://www.arkansasfight.com/rss/stream/92535022015-10-15T14:23:01-05:002015-10-15T14:23:01-05:00Hogs Enjoying Deep Breath Time; Bye Week Welcome
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<p>Let's rest up, heal up, and get ready to beat Auburn.</p> <p>The blood-and-thunder serial known as Hog fandom takes a break this week, gratefully, as players, coaches and fans alike pause to take a deep breath and come to terms with the season-defining matchup that awaits next week with Auburn.</p>
<p>And let's face it. The Auburn game very likely is season-defining. I believe we're beginning to resemble the team we envisioned would inhabit 2015, and the showing in Tuscaloosa was encouraging. Well, on defense anyway.</p>
<p>And while I certainly believe Arkansas could get a win in either Baton Rouge or Oxford, we'll be underdogs in both. It's probable we'll need to win out at home to go bowling.</p>
<p>A few housekeeping items from Bryant-Denny:</p>
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<li><span>Not sure how a D-1 crew misses the OPI on Bama's second touchdown. I mean, I realize the game essentially was over once they hit the bomb over the top, but geesh.</span></li>
<li><span>With all due appreciation for what it was up against, you'd think the OL could win at least a couple of battles. Then again, when a defense the caliber of Bama's settles into the box, daring us to go over the top or simply stretch the field in any measurable way, it's like ripples breaking against a brick wall.</span></li>
<li><span>That said, we didn't seem to try and stretch the field in any measurable way.</span></li>
<li><span>Brandon Allen is tough and gritty. But man, he locks on while other targets, some fairly big, roam free and clear.</span></li>
<li><span>Really, 48 minutes into the game, we're up 7-3 with Bama pinned deep and the defense playing valiantly. I guess that was about all we could ask for. Sadly, I actually called the deep ball. Ramirez will be a good one, but their guy made a play...and we missed a sack by a split second. </span></li>
<li><span>The D carried us Saturday. Our hat is tipped.</span></li>
<li><span>I have no problem with the fake. Play to win, I say. If Loewin makes a block, we pick it up. </span></li>
<li><span>As for Flopghazi....ugh. I confess that when I first saw the video, it did look like Bielema egged it on a little. But the whole thing's been so blown out of proportion. The main issue is the video itself and why it even exists.</span></li>
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<p>One day, we'll out-Bama Alabama. I truly believe we will. We're in year 3 of the Bielema era, and let's remember what the man inherited. Bama is in year 9 of Saban, and let's remember that the Tide was upset at home by none other than ULM in Saban's first season of 2007.</p>
<p>We'll get there. And on Saturday, despite feeling like we were walking a high wire and one slight misstep would lead to ruin (and it did), we looked the part of a good team. We're improving each week.</p>
<p>The 11 a.m. kickoff for Auburn is unfortunate. Given "the feud," real or imagined, you'd think this matchup would warrant an afternoon kickoff at least. The open date, however, is welcome. Psychologically as much as physically. We need to go 4-2 against Aubie, a 1-AA school, Ole Miss, LSU, Stark-vegas and Misery. Doable. While we've certainly underachieved so far, we're capable of closing 4-2.</p>
<p>Given the twists and turns of this crazy ride that we call the Hogs, one that sometimes feels like the plotline of a Mexican soap opera, who knows what awaits down the home stretch. I think it starts, though, with a satisfying win on Oct. 24.</p>
https://www.arkansasfight.com/2015/10/15/9537121/arkansas-razorbacks-enjoying-deep-breath-time-bye-week-welcomeMark Carter2015-10-14T14:00:02-05:002015-10-14T14:00:02-05:00Arkansas Advanced Stats: Alabama Review
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<p>The Hog Chart: advanced stats, charting data, analysis. </p> <p>Alabama is really really good again this season. Arkansas has improved this season. Those two points may get missed with all the other distractions going on after this game. On Saturday Arkansas posted its lowest totals in passing, rushing, first downs and pretty much every success rate on offense.</p>
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<p>Somehow with all that, they were still ahead 7-3 in the 3rd quarter. That can be attributed to the dominance of the Arkansas defense which has steadily improved. Lets take a look at the details.</p>
<p>Forcing the Alabama offense into two turnovers and only 3 points late into the 3rd quarter is a feat in itself but does not matter when the ultimate result is still a loss.</p>
<p>The Arkansas offense capitalized on those turnovers and were able to score on a couple of big pass plays to Jeremy Sprinkle and Drew Morgan in the first half. Let's take a look at what they were able to do (or not able) in the passing game.</p>
<h4>Passing:</h4>
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<p>Arkansas came out with 5 wide on the first play and hit a big 15 yard completion to JoJo Robinson. But from then on the Alabama defense shut down pretty much anything beyond 10 yards. Allen only attempted one pass over 20 yards and that was the completion to Dominique Reed in the 4th quarter. A big part of that was the Alabama pass rush and Allen did not have much time for those deeper routes to get open, and he scrambled too soon on a few occasions.</p>
<p>For me, going 5/12 in the 0-9 yard category is acceptable, but this offense needed some more big plays to open up opportunities in the run game.</p>
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<p><span>Drew Morgan</span> has been steadily climbing up the targets chart the last few weeks. Another four catches but for only 15 yards due to the solid tackling of the Alabama secondary. Nothing is easy against that group, and <span>Hunter Henry</span> struggled to get open the entire game.</p>
<p>It has almost become automatic that teams double him in the redzone where he has been targeted 5 times. This has opened up some red zone opportunites for Morgan, and eventually someone like Reed or <span>Kendrick Edwards</span> will be left open in those situations.</p>
<h4>Rushing:</h4>
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<p><span>As expected, just not much on the ground for </span><span>Alex Collins</span><span> and Rawleigh Williams. It was the old adage of getting behind the sticks leading to difficulties on third down. Up front Alabama was able to play solid against the lead draw the few times Arkansas ran it on passing downs, and there was just nothing outside on the edges.</span></p>
<h4>Offensive Identity:</h4>
<p>The success rate shows just how tough it was to move the ball against Alabama. The overall gameplan was what you would expect. Throw short quick passes, try to blast the brick wall of the Alabama front seven for a few yards and hit some big plays in playaction. They were able to do that for the most part into the third quarter, but after giving up a few big plays on the other side of the ball all that was left was to gamble by throwing a few more which resulted in an interception late. Not real sure why Enos went away from the 5 wide stuff that he came out in to start, the reasoning was probably the fact that Arkansas was unable to play base protection on the pass rush and had to use Alex Collins or an extra back to chip. (Editor's note: that's the exact reason given by the coaches in the weekly press conference).</p>
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<p>Arkansas ran more plays out of shotgun than under center.</p>
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<p>In the second half Arkansas was forced to use more shotgun sets with 3 WRs (TEs as WRs) on 1st and 2nd downs. There was just nothing going in traditional 1 back and 2 back sets. Combine that stifling run defense with a pass rush that was putting pressure on the QB and the offense struggled to move the ball.Ž1</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Dan Enos went with several bunch packages that had limited success in the second half and Dominique Reed was able to get open a couple of times in those situations.</p>
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<h4>Defense:</h4>
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<p>Not enough can be said about the performance of the Arkansas defense against Alabama. The big 81 yard touchdown pass was a result of bringing pressure, but it was a gamble for Alabama as well. They blocked it with 7 vs the 5 pass rushers of Arkansas and that gave him the time he needed. When Arkansas did not send pressure Coker hit the short routes and Arkansas picked him off on 2 of the other plays that he took deeper shots downfield.</p>
<p>Brooks Ellis had another high caliber game and Dre Greenlaw may be playing himself into an All SEC Freshmen team spot.</p>
<p>This defense can heal and recover in the bye week and on the other side of the ball there are several players that would add production as well when they return. During the bye week I will put together a mid season chart showing some of the trends so far.</p>
https://www.arkansasfight.com/2015/10/14/9520947/arkansas-advanced-stats-alabama-reviewjoshgoforth2015-10-13T13:09:59-05:002015-10-13T13:09:59-05:00Tusk Talk Podcast: Alabama Review and FlopGhazi
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<p>Chad and I recorded this episode Monday night, so we kicked things off by discussing the most serious Razorback matter of the last two or three decades: Bielema's alleged flop and celebration dance video.</p>
<p>By the time we recorded, the second video had been released that shows <span>Cam Robinson</span> did swat away Bielema's arm, showing it pretty clearly wasn't a flop, but there are other issues about the video we talk about. There's the dance, of course, which will hopefully live on forever. Also, who on the Arkansas sideline was taking that video? How did it get to that Alabama high school coach? Why was Bielema pushing Robinson away instead of his own player? And finally, will anything come of this?</p>
<p>And, of course, once we get through the video we go head first into the Alabama game. We focus mostly on the positives. We don't spend a lot of time complaining about the fake punt, but it does get mentioned.</p>
<p><iframe width="100%" height="400" frameborder="0" src="//www.razorbacksportsradio.com/episode_player/7515/"></iframe></p>
<p>As always, you can obviously listen to the show right here or you can download the Razorback Sports Radio app from Vsporto on iTunes or Android. Thanks for listening!</p>
https://www.arkansasfight.com/2015/10/13/9521789/tusk-talk-podcast-bielema-flopghazi-alabama-review-arkansas-razorbacksDoc Harper2015-10-12T09:50:18-05:002015-10-12T09:50:18-05:00Bielema Goes Viral Again In Bama Celebration Video
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<p>Is there anything he can't do?</p> <p> </p>
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<p dir="ltr" lang="en"><a href="https://twitter.com/ClayTravisBGID">@ClayTravisBGID</a> watch Beilema instegate Cam Robinson, fake like he was shoved, then dance a jig to celebrate. <a href="http://t.co/DYSSZdEkOM">pic.twitter.com/DYSSZdEkOM</a></p>
— Anthony Jacks (@Coach_Jacks) <a href="https://twitter.com/Coach_Jacks/status/653400272002248704">October 12, 2015</a>
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<p>This is so hilarious and so awful and so amazing and so terrible.</p>
<p>First, of course, there's the flop. The main question regarding the "controversy" is whether or not Robinson actually touched Bielema. If he did, this really seems like much ado about nothing. The only outrage should be why Robinson was only assessed a 15-yard penalty instead of being ejected for shoving an opposing coach.</p>
<p>However, you've got to think if Cam Robinson had actually pushed or put his hands on Bielema in some way the situation would have been much more severe, and Bielema would have acted accordingly instead of celebrating a 15-yard flag.</p>
<p>Regardless, watching Bielema stumble backwards was cute. Not as good as if he'd fallen down like an NBA or soccer player, but still cute.</p>
<p>The best part is celebration to the flag. It begins with sort of a cowboy lasso 360 move with a truly fantastic "YEEAAAAHHH", and ends it with possibly the greatest lunging fist pump I've ever seen. It's not so much a traditional uppercut fist pump but more of a thrusting, stabbing pump as if he was wielding the Magical Sword from Zelda.</p>
<p>The video has gone viral Monday morning. It was posted by twitter user Anthony Jacks, who according to his Twitter page is a football coach at Pelham High School in Alabama. I guess he was on the Arkansas sidelines for some reason, or someone he knew was there. (UPDATE: "<a href="http://www.al.com/alabamafootball/index.ssf/2015/10/new_video_shows_bret_beliema_i.html">Jacks told AL.com</a> he got the video from a friend whose camera was rolling on the Arkansas sideline." Now, who was "his friend" right there on the Arkansas sideline who would have leaked that video?)</p>
<p>This is just the latest way Bielema has made himself the most beloved college football coach in the nation. A nation, it should be noted, absolutely reveres flopping as the pinnacle of sportsmanship.</p>
<h4><b>UPDATE:</b></h4>
<p><a href="https://twitter.com/SportsTalkwBo/status/653713185904594944" style="background-color: #ffffff;">Bo Mattingly was able to find an alternate angle to the video</a> above. Here it is:</p>
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<p dir="ltr" lang="en">Was able to get another video angle that shows Cam Robinson's personal foul. Doesn't look like a Bret Bielema flop. <a href="http://t.co/nCilLLbsWz">pic.twitter.com/nCilLLbsWz</a></p>
— Bo Mattingly (@SportsTalkwBo) <a href="https://twitter.com/SportsTalkwBo/status/653713185904594944">October 12, 2015</a>
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<p>The video doesn't show the celebration, but it does clearly show that Bielema didn't flop. However, it does show Bielema with his arm on Robinson instead of his own player, and Robinson shoving Bielema's arm off of him, causing the backward stumble.</p>
<p>I doubt anything significant comes from this other than years and years of replaying Bielema's celebration dance.</p>
<p>I think it's clear there's nothing malicious here, although it probably is fair to criticize Bielema for seeming to clear out Robinson instead of JaMichael Winston.</p>
https://www.arkansasfight.com/2015/10/12/9507527/bielema-endears-himself-to-nation-yet-again-with-uncommon-flopping-alabamaDoc Harper2015-10-11T11:58:41-05:002015-10-11T11:58:41-05:00Feel The Rhythm: Alabama
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<p>Your BERT-Approved Companion To The Alabama Game</p> <p>Brought to you once more this week courtesy of Bob Marley, Tito's Vodka, and the realization that, in 2016, I will have spent an entire decade wandering the desert of Razorback fandom, feebly plumbing the depths of my brain to pull out a cobwebbed memory of what it feels like to beat Alabama.</p>
<p>I don't always hate Alabama. I respect them. I envy their success and their support and their facilities. I have never had an ugly encounter with an Alabama fan. I have been to Tuscaloosa and been treated like a king. I have welcomed Alabama fans into my own tailgate and have had cordial and knowledgeable football discussion with them. I generally cheer for Alabama to do well when they are not playing Arkansas.</p>
<p>When I hear their Rammer Jammer chant after they have beaten my team, however, all of that goes out the window. When I hear it, I have to immediately remove myself from whatever situation I am in, because if I do not, my seething, simmering exterior will quickly give way to the frothing, dog-cussing crazy person who is juuuust under the surface and who thinks that breaking things and spewing torrents of profanity into the night are valid coping mechanisms.</p>
<p>I will remove myself from the living room, or the stadium, or the tailgate. Because hearing that chant flips a switch inside me, and hearing it nine consecutive years is just too freaking much. In four of those nine games Arkansas has held a second-half lead, and twice the Hogs have led with less than five minutes left in the game. At some point, though, as long as they keep playing every year, Arkansas is going to beat Alabama. And I am going to be insufferable. I will whoop and holler and point a stubby finger at every Alabama fan I see (who I would generally respect, most of the time) and I will tell them in no uncertain terms that "WE just beat the hell out of YOU". Finally.</p>
<p>That didn't happen last night, though. Last night, Arkansas lost to Alabama. Again. And they did that chant. Again. And I had to remove myself from the living room and walk into the kitchen and crack open a beer and eat about six cookies when they did. Again. Let's talk a little football.</p>
<p>It's remarkable how similarly last night's game played out when compared to last year's contest in Fayetteville. In both games, Alabama began the game giving Arkansas the option to pass the football in order to shut down the Hogs' rushing attack, and finished the game with its secondary capitalizing against a one-dimensional Arkansas offense that was forced to pass. The difference between the two games is that, in 2014, Jim Chaney took the passing opportunities that Alabama was giving his offense, and last night Dan Enos refused to. This is why Arkansas ran only 57 plays last night, when in a very similarly-styled game in 2014 the Hogs ran 79 offensive plays. Arkansas couldn't move the sticks in part because Alabama has an absurdly stout defense, but also because the Hogs seemed to be running the exact offense that Alabama wanted it to run. <b>If what they do best is stop what you do best, and they are better than you, sometimes you have to try to do what you maybe don't do best, and just hope for the best.</b> Or something. Chaney understood this. Enos clearly does not. Or at least he did not last night.</p>
<p>Last night, Dan Enos called his fifth consecutive game where every play was in front of the safeties. Arkansas plays inside a 20-yard box and it is killing what could be a very good offense. Think way back to that UTEP game, and the deep touchdown pass to <span>Keon Hatcher</span>, and the two deep incompletions to Dominique Reed. Unless I have missed a play here or there, those are the last times Arkansas has attempted to pass over the top of the defense. At this point, getting beat deep doesn't even register in an opposing safety's mind. They know that the entire game is going to be played in front of them, and can play in the aggressive manner that comes with that. This shrinks windows for <span>Brandon Allen</span>, and it also compacts running lanes for <span>Alex Collins</span> and Rawleigh Williams. A pro-style play-action offense without a deep ball is easy pickings for a good defense. They just tighten the screws whenever they need to.</p>
<p>As far as individual performances go, I am very hesitant to make much of how anemic the offense looked because the Alabama defense is just so good. Not many teams are going to hold Alex Collins to a long run of five yards. Last year, his long against Alabama was six yards. <span>Brandon Allen</span> didn't have a terrible game. He just didn't have much to work with. The Alabama front seven dominated the line of scrimmage, and Dan Enos called a game that did almost nothing to help Arkansas stop spinning its tires. Because of that, I'm not going to say anybody sucked last night.</p>
<p>If you are looking for positives, the defense really stepped up last night. Robb Smith's unit held <span>Derrick Henry</span> and <span>Kenyan Drake</span> to an average of less than four yards per carry. They forced two interceptions of <span>Jake Coker</span>. With just one exception, they limited the big play and made Alabama earn every yard. Up until the dam broke in the fourth quarter, they looked every bit of the top ten defense that finished the 2014 season. Even early on in the game when it seemed the defense just couldn't get off of the field, they were getting Alabama into third down. As the game went on, third-and-short gave way to third-and-medium and third-and-long, and Alabama finished the evening 7-16 on third down. That is how you keep a struggling offense in the game.</p>
<p>There was a moment in the second half where Deatrich Wise sacked Jake Coker and it felt like the Arkansas defense had taken control of the football game. Wise badly beat his man on the way to Coker, and it was evident that the Arkansas defensive line was not just holding their own with Alabama's front. They were bettering them. The same unit that had run roughshod over Georgia the week before was getting outplayed by the Razorbacks. They forced a punt that resulted in the Arkansas possession in which Bert chose not to go for it on 4th-and-1, opting instead to punt. The Arkansas defense held once more, but the next Alabama punt would flip the field. Momentum was gone, Alabama would score on its next possession, and world order was quickly restored. But, man, that feeling when Wise made that sack was a good one.</p>
<p>I cannot believe Bert called that punt fake after he wouldn't go for it on 4th-and-1. It eliminated every good feeling that had been built since the game began. The red zone stops and the interceptions and the Deatrich Wise sack and the <span>Brandon Allen</span> touchdown pass. All of it that had made me believe that somehow Arkansas might win the football game WHEN I SWORE TO MYSELF I WOULD NOT ALLOW MYSELF TO FEEL THAT WAY. All of it was gone in two calls. One that ripped all swagger from his team, followed by one that reeked of his desperation to snatch it back. Both displaying zero confidence whatsoever in the ability of his team to just go out and win the damned football game. It was sickening.</p>
<p>Even with the frustration that comes with losing one more time to Alabama, it does seem that the Razorbacks have gotten themselves back on track. This was never a game that anyone expected to win, and we cannot go back and change the outcome of the three other losses that we expected to go the other way. All we can do is to look at the current team and see that they are playing much, much differently than they were in September. They now get a week off before hosting Auburn, and there is no reason that the Hogs cannot pound them into oblivion. The Hogs have stopped better offenses, and they have bullied better defenses. And you know Bert badly, badly wants to put Gus Malzahn in his place. If the Hogs do what they can do, it sets up to be just as satisfying a win as the Texas Bowl last season.</p>
<p>I'll see y'all in two weeks.</p>
<p>---</p>
<p><i style="vertical-align: baseline; line-height: 21px; color: #3f3f3f; font-size: 15px; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; border: 0px; padding: 0px;">Trent Wooldridge will be that guy with enough <span class="il">bourbon</span>. He loves the S-E-C chant and honks because he hates Texas. He puts honey on his pizza, demands aisle seats, and sees quitting golf as more of a hobby than actually playing golf. Follow @twooldridge and track his quest to transform his five-year-old into a southpaw ace in the bigs.</i></p>
https://www.arkansasfight.com/2015/10/11/9496775/feel-the-rhythm-alabamaTrent Wooldridge2015-10-10T22:42:11-05:002015-10-10T22:42:11-05:00Alabama 27, Arkansas 14: Let's Go Home
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<p>2-4, 1-2</p> <p>The Razorbacks led this game 7-3 for essentially a quarter, almost the entire third quarter, and despite every rational bone in your body that told you seven points would not be nearly enough to win this game, Arkansas' defense had me believing for a while they might be able to pull it off.</p>
<p>Alabama's talent and depth advantage was well evident throughout, but like a scrappy baseball team trying to manufacture runs to stay alive, Arkansas cruelly teased a positive outcome. It was kind of like thinking, "Arkansas really can pull off this 12 minute drive to beat A&M" a couple of weeks ago after the Hogs picked up the first few first downs, but like the concept of that drive, the Razorbacks weren't quite capable of holding them down.</p>
<p>The defense deserves a ton of credit. Alabama missed a pair of field goals in the first half and only had three points at halftime, only 10 points after three quarters. The Tide averaged just 2.9 yards per carry and the Hogs had eight tackles for loss. That gave Arkansas a chance.</p>
<p>But everything changed in the third quarter. The momentum started to swing when Arkansas elected not to go for it on 4th-and-1 from the Alabama 46-yard line. Bielema said afterward he wasn't confident the Hogs would get it because of the difficulty Arkansas had running the ball throughout the game. Arkansas only averaged 1.8 yards per carry throughout. Also, Arkansas tried to go for a 4th-and-one conversion in the fourth quarter last year in Fayetteville but came up short.</p>
<p>Alabama finally took back the lead on an 81-yard touchdown pass to Calvin Ridley a few drives later, and with momentum squarely gone, Bielema chose to fake a punt on 4th-and-five at the Arkansas 41-yard line. It failed. Alabama scored on their next drive with the short field and the game was essentially over now that the Tide were up two scores.</p>
<p>I'll say this: I don't understand not going for the 4th-and-1 in Alabama territory but trying the fake punt in Arkansas territory. I understand the Hogs were leading for the former and trailing for the latter, but again, when being rational, did anyone think seven points would be enough to win this game? Even in the third quarter, did anyone truly believe that?</p>
<p>Bielema is correct in noting that Alabama had been stuffing Arkansas all night on the ground, but a fourth down play doesn't necessarily have to be on the ground. Hog fans have seen pass plays on 4th-and-short work really well in the past. Or, even try faking a punt there. Both the fake punt against Alabama and the fake field goal against Tennessee gained yardage, just not enough for the first down.</p>
<p>There were options, is what I'm saying.</p>
<p>I'm not complaining about fake punts and field goals as a stand-alone attempt. I understand they're always "genius if you make it, idiot if you don't" ideas. But I don't understand them in context of plays surrounding them.</p>
<p>I also don't understand opening the game with a 5-wide set, picking up a 15-yard first down on the first play, and then never returning to it. I know that's not Arkansas' identity, but to beat Alabama, like last year, the Hogs were going to have to hit some big plays and they were unlikely to come on the ground. I'm not suggesting Arkansas should have done that for every play, but it did work that one time they tried.</p>
<p>This is the first time I truly felt like all the offensive injuries seriously hampered Arkansas. The Hogs' only points came off an interception that let them start in the red zone and a big play to Dominique Reed in garbage time. It takes an explosive offense to put points on the board against Alabama. Coming into the game, Arkansas had been remarkably efficient, but not very explosive, and against a defense like Alabama's, they needed more explosion. They might still have lost if Jonathan Williams, Keon Hatcher, and Jared Cornelius had been playing, but I bet they'd have had more chances.</p>
<p>The game overall wasn't very surprising. I expected Arkansas to make a great effort after coming so close last year and because so many key players have played in Bryant-Denny before, so they shouldn't have been intimidated like the previous few Arkansas teams to go through Tuscaloosa, and they weren't. I think it speaks well for what could come in the second half of the season.</p>
<p>While it would have helped, Arkansas didn't need to win this game to become bowl eligible. It's obviously frustrating to lose, especially when you have a chance of pulling off a major upset against a team the Hogs will have lost to for a solid decade by the time the Tide visit Fayetteville next year, but in the big picture, I'm not nearly as concerned about the team's ability to get up and move on as I was after Texas A&M or Texas Tech.</p>
<p>The team gets a bye week, which is great because they were taking a lot of chair shots on that field Saturday night, and then they finally get the big home game against Auburn two weeks from now. It will have been a month since they last played in Fayetteville. And after five games in five different stadiums, it should feel good to come home.</p>
https://www.arkansasfight.com/2015/10/10/9495901/alabama-crimson-tide-27-arkansas-razorbacks-14-lets-go-homeDoc Harper2015-10-10T19:41:52-05:002015-10-10T19:41:52-05:00Watch Bielema Celebrate Alabama's Missed Field Goal<iframe src="https://vine.co/v/e0t5PMaKmJe/embed/simple" width="600" height="600"></iframe>
<div class="source source-img"><p><p>...and the Hogs take a 7-3 lead into the half. #BERTLYFE</p></p></div>
https://www.arkansasfight.com/2015/10/10/9495547/watch-bielema-celebrate-alabamas-missed-field-goalDoc Harper2015-10-10T17:50:02-05:002015-10-10T17:50:02-05:00Arkansas vs Alabama GameThread
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<figcaption>Marvin Gentry-USA TODAY Sports</figcaption>
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<p>Fire away!</p>
https://www.arkansasfight.com/2015/10/10/9493243/arkansas-razorbacks-vs-alabama-crimson-tide-gamethreadDoc Harper