Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nutt: Long live real kings of OT

- BOB HOLT

FAYETTEVIL­LE — As Houston Nutt watched the LSU-Texas A&M football game last season from the New York studio where he works for CBS Sports, he began getting nervous.

Nutt wasn’t worried about which team would win. That didn’t matter to him.

What made Nutt increasing­ly nervous was how long the game kept going.

After the game was still tied after four overtimes, Nutt texted his younger brother, Danny.

“I was texting Danny saying, ‘Are A&M and LSU going to make it? They’re up to five overtimes now,’ ” Nutt said. “Danny texted back, ‘No, they won’t make it.’

“Then they got up to six overtimes. I texted Danny, ‘I’m afraid they’re going to break our record.’ Danny said again, ‘No, they won’t make it.’

“When they got to that seventh overtime, I started getting really worried. I texted Danny, ‘They’ve got to stop here!’

“Thank goodness they did.” Texas A&M beat LSU 74-72 in seven overtimes to tie an NCAA Football Bowl Subdivisio­n record first set by the University of Arkansas

in 2001 when the Razorbacks won 58-56 at Ole Miss.

Houston Nutt was Arkansas’ head coach from 19982007, and Danny Nutt coached the running backs.

After the Arkansas-Ole Miss game, Houston Nutt said he couldn’t recall much talk about how the overtime rule needed to be changed.

“I think David Cutcliffe brought it up a little bit at the SEC meeting that next spring,” said Nutt, referring to the Ole Miss coach at the time. “But it never got much attention.”

That also was the case in 2003 when Arkansas again went seven overtimes in beating Kentucky 71-63.

“Nobody said anything about changing the rules then, either, as far as I can remember,” Nutt said.

But it didn’t take long for the NCAA to change the overtime rules after Texas A&M outlasted LSU.

In April, the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel approved a change that after four overtimes, teams will alternate two-point plays rather than begin possession­s on their 25.

So why change the rule now and not in 2001 or 2003?

“It’s definitely a student-athlete welfare issue,” Arkansas Athletic Director Hunter Yurachek said. “There’s been such a heightened awareness and focus on that, with the targeting rules and how we no longer have two-a-days practices.

“You don’t want a student-athlete to get injured at the end of a six- or seven-overtime game because they’re exhausted.”

Texas A&M and LSU combined for 255 plays in a game that lasted 4 hours and 53 minutes.

“That’s a lot of plays,” said Steve Shaw, the SEC’s supervisor of officials. “Think of the student-athletes on the field for that long. We needed to take a look at that.

“At some point, we’ve got to get the players off the field. However, nobody wants a tie.”

The new rule prevents a tie while limiting the plays. After the second and fourth overtimes, there will also be a two-minute rest period.

“The rules committee said, ‘Let’s leave the first two overtimes as is, but if we finish four overtimes, then it’s time to make a change,’ ” Shaw said. “It’s a way to still ultimately decide the game, but it was time [for a change]. There were way too many plays in some of these games.

“So this will be a great way to do it without changing the fabric of overtime.”

Arkansas Coach Chad Morris is 1-1 in overtime games as a head coach, with both coming at SMU and lasting one extra period. His Mustangs lost to Tulsa 43-40 in 2016 and beat Cincinnati 31-28 in 2017.

“I think probably the biggest thing you’ll see across college football is coaches will have more of those two-point situations built into their game plans,” Morris of the rule change’s impact. “We’ve definitely grown our library. We’re going to probably take in three or four a game, but maybe a little bit more than that.”

Arkansas and Ole Miss had a combined 198 snaps in their 2001 game that lasted 4 hours and 14 minutes. The 2003 Arkansas-Kentucky game had 202 plays and lasted 4 hours and 56 minutes.

“I never complained about the length of the games, because I loved overtime,” Nutt said. “We always had a mindset that if we get to overtime, we’re going win.”

Nutt’s Arkansas teams were 6-1 in overtime games. The lone loss was in six overtimes at Tennessee, 41-38, in 2006.

“Once we got to overtime, we just felt like we had the advantage because we had been there so much before,” Nutt said. “We were in great condition and we knew how to finish.

“Overtime games take a lot out of you physically, but when you win, it builds confidence.”

LSU quarterbac­k Joe Burrow said the Tigers and Aggies were fortunate their seven-overtime game was a regular-season finale.

“If we’d had to play a game that next week, that would have been very tough for sure,” Burrow said. “I was probably sore for a week and a half.”

The Razorbacks went 2-0 in games they played the week after going seven overtimes. They beat Central Florida 2720 in Fayettevil­le in 2001 and beat South Carolina 28-6 in Little Rock in 2003.

Arkansas and South Carolina played on Thursday night — five days after the Razorbacks won at Kentucky in a game that lasted until nearly midnight.

Nutt said the Razorbacks didn’t put on pads between the Kentucky and South Carolina games.

“We just practiced in sweats that week,” Nutt said. “I told the guys, ‘Hey, I know you can play. I know how tough y’all are, and now we’re going to make practice about getting mentally prepared.’

“But our guys were able to get refocused. That’s where our coaching staff and players did a great job of buying in and preparing.”

Nutt said even if teams play eight or more extra periods in the future, he’ll always consider his Razorbacks to be the overtime kings.

“We’re going to be No. 1 in overtimes, because we’re the only team to go the record seven overtimes twice, and we played all real overtimes where the ball was put on the 25,” Nutt said. “Nobody is ever going to top what we did.”

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/J.T. WAMPLER ?? Marcellus Poydras (95) and Matt Jones (9) of the University of Arkansas react to a Mark Pierce score during the Hogs’ 58-56, seven-overtime victory against Ole Miss on Nov. 3, 2001, at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss. A new NCAA rule will change how games are handled once a fifth overtime is reached.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/J.T. WAMPLER Marcellus Poydras (95) and Matt Jones (9) of the University of Arkansas react to a Mark Pierce score during the Hogs’ 58-56, seven-overtime victory against Ole Miss on Nov. 3, 2001, at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss. A new NCAA rule will change how games are handled once a fifth overtime is reached.

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