Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The Razorbacks are looking to capture the Golden Boot today against rival LSU.

Victories in ’14, ’15 give reason for hope

- TOM MURPHY

BATON ROUGE — The Arkansas Razorbacks own a two-game winning streak while No. 24 LSU lost last week.

And yet it feels like the momentum is with the Tigers (6-3, 3-2 SEC), who will host the Razorbacks (4-5, 1-4) today in a rare 11 a.m. kickoff at Tiger Stadium in the annual battle for the Golden Boot trophy.

LSU is coming off a 2410 loss at No. 2 Alabama in which the Tigers outrushed and outgained the Crimson Tide but could not connect on enough open downfield passes.

The Razorbacks have won two thrillers in a row— including one on the road at Ole Miss in which the Razorbacks mounted the biggest

comeback in school history, rallying from a 24-point deficit for a 38-37 victory on Connor Limpert’s field goal in the final seconds.

Arkansas failed to transfer the momentum from Oxford into its home performanc­e last week, needing to rebound from a 13-point fourth-quarter deficit to eke out a 39-38 victory over a Coastal Carolina team that had been 1-7.

The seat under fifth-year Coach Bret Bielema seems as hot as ever with the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le entering a finishing stretch against LSU, Mississipp­i State and Missouri. Bielema understand­s the pressure of the job.

“Saturday is another opportunit­y,” he said. “You go over there and you play well and have a chance to beat LSU, and if that happens good things will come your way. If you have defeat, naturally negative things come your way.

“That game is always, since I’ve been here, a knockdown drag out.”

The Razorbacks have not announced their starting quarterbac­k, although senior Austin Allen’s right shoulder has been medically cleared. He said Tuesday he was close to 100 percent. Freshman Cole Kelley, who is 2-2 as a starter the past four games, has a case of turf toe suffered last Saturday but has practiced this week.

“We’ll go through walkthroug­h [Friday] afternoon and that’s when we’ll put the No. 1 quarterbac­k in there and just kind of go from there,” Bielema said Thursday night.

Bielema said LSU’s defense, which ranks No. 8 in the country with 3.33 sacks per game, is an issue after Allen’s four-week layoff from game action.

“Any time you have a guy who hasn’t played to step in, especially at a place as daunting as LSU’s stadium is and as good as their defense is, that could be an issue,” Bielema said. “I would be very, very comfortabl­e with Austin playing, from one rep to every rep.”

Allen called LSU a great football team on par with Alabama and Auburn.

The Razorbacks have not been intimidate­d in trips to LSU under Bielema, who is 1-1 against the Tigers in both

Fayettevil­le and Baton Rouge. The Hogs have outscored LSU 58-45 in their past two games at Death Valley.

Bielema notched his first SEC victory in 2014 in shutout fashion (17-0) against the Tigers on a rainy evening in Fayettevil­le, and the Razorbacks thumped LSU 31-14 in Baton Rouge the next season. But interim Coach Ed Orgeron and the Tigers drilled the Razorbacks with 390 rushing yards and five rushing touchdowns in last year’s 38-10 victory at Reynolds Razorback Stadium to reclaim the Golden Boot.

Arkansas safety Santos Ramirez said the Tigers’ reaction to that victory resonates.

“The fact they ran over there and took that boot, I still remember that image,” Ramirez said. “The fact I saw an article where they said they don’t even see us as an SEC opponent, that really bothers me. It kind of angers me just thinking about it right now.

“I told those guys over this week of practice, these guys don’t even take us serious out here, man. And it’s about that time for us to go get what’s ours. You know what I’m saying? Everybody’s counting us out, but we believe we can come out here and get this Dub. And that’s what we’re going to do. We’re gonna outmuscle these guys.”

The unranked 2014 Razorbacks provided one of the iconic moments of the Bielema era by shutting out the No. 17 Tigers on a cold, wet evening. As the Arkansas players raced to the LSU sideline to claim the Golden Boot, they were joined by thousands of fans storming the field to celebrate the end of the Hogs’ 17game SEC losing streak.

That Arkansas upset led to a bitter memory for LSU linebacker Devin White, a native of Springhill, La., near the Arkansas border, who was a key recruiting target for the Hogs.

“That wasn’t a good feeling,” White said. “It was real cold up there, raining. LSU was getting blown out. I went inside. I didn’t finish watching the game. That will never happen again. The tables are turned now. LSU is back on top of that little series.”

Bielema’s first Arkansas team led the Tigers 27-24 late in the fourth quarter at Death Valley before succumbing to a 99-yard touchdown drive in a 31-27 loss.

“We played a good game, but we weren’t able to close it out,” Bielema said. “Then in year 2 and 3, when we were able to get back to get a win, we played a complete four-quarter game.

“We didn’t do the things that cause defeat. No matter who you’re playing in the SEC, there’s a lot of things you do to win a game, but there’s a lot of things you can do to lose a game, and we did more good than bad.”

Bielema’s Razorbacks need two victories to ensure bowl eligibilit­y, and they might have to pull an upset to get there. They are a 17-point underdog today, and Mississipp­i State is 7-2 and ranked No. 16 as one of the surprise teams in the SEC heading into today’s game against No. 2 Alabama.

For inspiratio­n, the Razorbacks need to look no further than their last visit to Tiger Stadium. The unranked 2015 Razorbacks thumped No. 9 LSU 31-14 with solid defense and a flurry of big plays.

“We really played fast that game, really executed the game plan,” said junior linebacker Dre Greenlaw, whose sack and strip of quarterbac­k Brandon Harris led to Alex Collins’ 5-yard touchdown and a 21-0 Arkansas lead late in the second half.

“I feel like everybody was just swarming around the ball — Leonard Fournette was their running back at the time — and we did a good job of stopping him from getting over 100 yards. We really started off the game well, and it helped create momentum.”

Dominique Reed’s 52-yard catch-and-run touchdown opened the scoring, and Collins had an 80-yard touchdown run on the first play of the second quarter for the Razorbacks.

“That was a fun game for us,” Allen said. “It just seemed like everything went right for us that game. Dominique Reed catching that little 5-yard hitch and taking it [all the way]. The defense played well that game.

“We were just clicking on all cylinders as a team, and hopefully we’ll catch a little of that magic on Saturday.”

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 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette file photo ?? Dominique Reed’s 52-yard touchdown reception got the Razorbacks rolling in their victory in 2015 over No. 9 LSU at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge. The Razorbacks defeated the Tigers 31-14 thanks to Reed, tailback Alex Collins and a stingy defense.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette file photo Dominique Reed’s 52-yard touchdown reception got the Razorbacks rolling in their victory in 2015 over No. 9 LSU at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge. The Razorbacks defeated the Tigers 31-14 thanks to Reed, tailback Alex Collins and a stingy defense.
 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette file photo ?? Arkansas football players and Razorbacks fans celebrate the 2014 victory over LSU in Fayettevil­le and winning the Golden Boot.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette file photo Arkansas football players and Razorbacks fans celebrate the 2014 victory over LSU in Fayettevil­le and winning the Golden Boot.

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