Chattanooga Times Free Press

Arkansas AD: ‘I have to get this search right’

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FAYETTEVIL­LE, Ark. — Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek said Monday he felt the football program was moving in reverse over the past month, leading to the firing of second-year coach Chad Morris after 22 games.

Morris was 4-18 in two seasons and was winless in Southeaste­rn Conference games. The tipping point came Saturday as the Razorbacks were badly outplayed from the outset in a 45-19 loss to Western Kentucky at home in front of a sparse crowd of 42,985.

“I thought the football program had taken a step backward,” Yurachek said a day after the firing was announced. “I think it was clear over the last several weeks that we were no longer competitiv­e on the football field. I got the sense that players were no longer enjoying playing the game.”

Arkansas (2-8, 0-6 SEC) has not won a game since Sept. 14, a 55-34 win against Colorado State. Over the past four weeks, the Razorbacks were outscored 198-60 in lopsided losses to Auburn, Alabama, Mississipp­i State and Western Kentucky. Three of those four losses were at home. Arkansas has lost 17 consecutiv­e SEC games dating to 2017.

The decision to let Morris go came Saturday night, Yurachek said. Morris’ contract also included a substantia­l buyout clause, reportedly in excess of $10 million.

“We will follow his employment agreement,” said Yurachek, who was announced as the AD just one day before Morris got the job in 2017. “We will pay 70% of his contract value over the next four years. We have the means to do so, and we were comfortabl­e doing so.”

Morris was introduced in December 2017, replacing Bret Bielema, who was fired after five mostly average seasons and a 29-34 record. Morris signed a six-year contract with a base salary of $3.5 million annually.

The 50-year-old Morris was the coach at SMU for three seasons and before that was the offensive coordinato­r at Clemson from 2011 to ’14 and Tulsa in 2010. Before entering the college coaching ranks, Morris was a highly successful high school coach in Texas, winning a number of state championsh­ips.

Yurachek said he sensed the team starting to slide during the second half of the Kentucky game, a 24-20 loss. That was followed by the current four straight blowout losses.

The search for a new coach will include current head coaches, former head coaches and coordinato­rs, Yurachek said, adding that he is considerin­g employing a search firm. He did not put a timeframe on when he would have the new coach in place.

“I know I have to get this search right,” he said. “We have to make sure we get the right candidate in here. We have to put a competitiv­e product on the field.”

Yurachek has turned to assistant coach Barry Lunney Jr., a former quarterbac­k for the Razorbacks in the early 1990s, to serve as the interim coach for the remainder of the season. Arkansas has an open date this week before closing the season with games at No. 1 LSU and the season finale against Missouri.

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