El Dorado News-Times

Razorbacks fondly remember win over No. 1 Texas

- By Bob Holt

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Billy Ray Smith Jr. didn’t show a lot of emotion on the football field when he starred for the University of Arkansas as a defensive end.

“Billy Ray was not demonstrat­ive at all,” said Jay Bequette, a center who was Smith’s teammate from 1979-82. “He acted like he expected to sack the quarterbac­k every time. He just kind of dusted himself off and got up when he tackled the quarterbac­k.

“But I do remember that celebratio­n he had against Texas. The offense was running on the field as the defense was running off, and he was really pumped up.”

On Texas’ first offensive snap of the game in Razorback Stadium on Oct. 17, 1981, quarterbac­k Rick McIvor fumbled and Smith pounced on the loose ball.

Smith came off the field yelling and holding the ball high for everyone to see.

“I never have been a guy that dances and jumps around and screams like a little girl after a big play,” said Smith, an All-American in 1981-82 who played 10 seasons in the NFL for the San Diego Chargers. “But when I got that ball, I went a little crazy. I was fired up.

“I felt what the effect that play was going to have on the game, and my feeling turned out to be right.”

Smith’s fumble recovery got the unranked Razorbacks rolling to a 42-11 victory over the No. 1 Longhorns, who a week earlier had beaten Oklahoma 34-14 to move into the top spot in the national polls.

“It was just one of those special days you never will forget,” said David Bazzel, a freshman linebacker for Arkansas in 1981.

Arkansas and Texas were both Southwest Conference powers, but the Longhorns had beaten the Razorbacks 12 times the previous 14 years.

“The way we beat Texas in ‘81 was probably one of the biggest upsets in the history of college football considerin­g they were ranked No. 1 and had just beaten Oklahoma,” said Ken Turner, an Arkansas assistant coach from 1972-87 who lives in Little Rock. “I don’t think you ever could envision a game like that happening to the Longhorns.

“I mean, back in those days didn’t anybody beat Texas like that. They were so good and had so much talent every year.

“It was an unbelievab­le feeling for us after that game.”

Forty seasons later, another unranked Arkansas team will look to upset Texas when the No. 15 Longhorns play in Reynolds Razorback Stadium at 6 tonight.

Smith plans to watch the game on ESPN from his home in Del Mar, Calif., a suburb of San Diego.

“I still follow the Arkansas program,” Smith said. “I’m a Razorback all the way through.

“I think it’s great we’re playing Texas on the 40th anniversar­y of the ‘81 game. Let’s line up and get after them again. Quite frankly, you just can’t ever tell what’s going to happen in a football game, but I’ll put my money on the Hogs.”

Fred Akers, a Blythevill­e native who played at Arkansas, was Texas’ coach from 1977-86.

“We were ready and we were eager,” Akers said after the 1981 game. “I just can’t explain it.”

Seven turnovers by Texas had a lot to do with the outcome.

Arkansas cornerback Danny Walters had two intercepti­ons, linebacker Jeff Goff recovered a fumble and had an intercepti­on, cornerback Kim Dameron had an intercepti­on and linebacker Bert Zinamon recovered a fumble.

“I remember we kept thanking the defense for all those turnovers,” said Gary Anderson, who played running back and flanker for Arkansas from 1979-82. “The defense played out of their mind. They were in the right place at the right time to keep getting the ball back for the offense.”

Arkansas’ five touchdown drives covered 19, 5, 36, 44 and 40 yards.

“The defense made it a lot easier for us,” Anderson said. “We still had to go score, but the field position was a big key. We didn’t have far to go to score.”

Smith’s fumble recovery was at the Texas 19 and the Razorbacks scored in four plays on quarterbac­k Tom Jones’ 1-yard dive for a 6-0 lead.

The extra point attempt failed, but the Longhorns helped Arkansas negate that on their next series when punter John Goodson — waiting in the end zone to field the snap — saw the ball sail far over his head for a safety.

A play after Arkansas recovered a second Texas fumble at the Longhorns’ 5, Anderson ran for a touchdown for a 15-0 lead. Bruce Lahay’s 47-yard field goal early in the second quarter put Arkansas ahead 18-0.

A crowd of 44,031 — Razorback Stadium’s capacity at the time — seemed to be in a state of shocked euphoria.

“You’re coming off the field after another of those turnovers we got, and you’re looking up in the stands and seeing the fans going wild, and you’re thinking, ‘Is this really happening? What’s going on here?’ ” Smith said. “You don’t expect to win any game 42-11, even if you’re the favorite by a couple of touchdowns. The lead just never gets that big.

“But we turned them over so many times and gave our offense so many more chances than an offense normally has, and they kept cashing in for touchdowns. It was just a great team effort.”

Twenty seconds before halftime Jones hit a wide-open Anderson with a 19-yard touchdown pass to give the Razorbacks a 25-3 lead. Jones absorbed a blow to the ribs by Texas All-American defensive lineman Kenneth Sims as he got the pass away.

“If you look at the tape, Tom stood in there and took a lick for it, but he delivered a perfect pass to me right on time,” Anderson said. “That was one of the plays we put in for the Texas game.

“You get the linebacker going to the sideline, then you turn up and you’re wide open. They had to respect me going out, because I’d been doing a lot of out routes, and so we kind of set them up.”

Bequette, a Little Rock attorney, said Arkansas Coach Lou Holtz put in several plays for Texas, in particular to get the speedy Anderson isolated on linebacker­s who couldn’t cover him.

“Texas played pressure defense, press man coverage, and Lou had these ‘just for Texas plays’ that we never ran in any other game of the year,” Bequette said. “The stuff we put in that week was just golden.”

Anderson, who like Smith was a firstround draft pick by San Diego in 1982 but played for the USFL’s Tampa Bay Bandits before joining the Chargers, had 2 catches for 33 yards in the 1981 Texas game along with 6 carries for 23 yards while scoring 2 touchdowns.

Jones, hobbled by a turf toe injury that bothered him all season, accounted for 2 touchdowns and rushed 13 times for 73 yards and completed 7 of 18 passes for 83 yards.

In the third quarter when Texas was still trying to fight its way back and had Arkansas facing 3rd and 17 from its 11, Jones scrambled for 41 yards to the Longhorns’ 48.

“Tom played like an All-American that day the way he commanded the game,” Anderson said.

Jones’ scramble didn’t result in an Arkansas score, but it kept field position in the Razorbacks’ favor.

Texas began 13 of its 17 drives at its 20 or worse, including its 6, 5, 2, 15, 15, 3, 7, 11, 8 and 8.

The only drive the Longhorns started in Arkansas territory was at the 48 when they recovered an onside kickoff after scoring a touchdown and twopoint conversion with 58 seconds left to cut the Razorbacks’ lead to 42-11.

The Razorbacks were ahead 42-3 after

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States