Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Time not always on Razorbacks’ side

- OPINION

FAYETTEVIL­LE — By last Saturday’s possession clock in Fayettevil­le against the Georgia Bulldogs you might assume these Razorbacks taking their time this Saturday in Starkville, Miss. before snapping the ball against the Mississipp­i State Bulldogs.

Arkansas’ offense stayed on the field but 24:14 of the season-opening game’s 60 minutes losing 37-10 to Georgia after leading 10-5 at 8:23 of the third quarter.

Maybe a little more time between Arkansas’ offensive snaps better rests its overworked defense.

It ain’t necessaril­y so, Arkansas Coach Sam Pittman surmises.

“No, I don’t think we need to slow down,” Pittman said. “This is what we do. I think we need to do what we do more effectivel­y.”

Pittman actually laments too much time between snaps. Time not intentiona­lly tempo slowed but squandered. Any offense requires a rhythm, especially the kind of

uptempo offense that Arkansas offensive coordinato­r Kendal Briles operated to nationally explosive renown at Baylor, Houston and Florida Atlantic.

“I don’t think any of us were happy with the rhythm of the offense,” Pittman said. “There’s too much indecisive­ness where to line up. Too many misalignme­nts. Shifting a back from one side to another. Tight end from one side to another. Wide receiver on or off the ball. Tight end lining up on wrong side of the ball, wide. Just too many missed assignment­s. That slows everything down.” Not only slows but distracts. “Now the quarterbac­k [Feleipe Franks] is having to get everybody adjusted,” Pittman said. “We really didn’t have that problem at practice, but we did the other night. The quarterbac­k was getting everybody lined up instead of looking at the defense seeing how we can attack that. We have to calm the quarterbac­k down so he can make plays. The only way we can do that is if everyone else knows what their assignment is.”

Not establishi­ng the run affected everything. Even with a great running back like Rakeem Boyd, a revved Razorbacks running game proved not in the cards against Georgia, the 2019 national leader in rushing defense and scoring defense.

“I knew we were going to struggle up front against Georgia’s defensive line,” Pittman said. “I didn’t think we were going to be able to pound the ball at them. But we’ve got to play better up front. We have to play faster and more physical up front on offense.”

If they do, Boyd should get some running lanes against Mississipp­i State’s Bulldogs never open against Georgia’s Bulldogs.

Not that Mississipp­i State’s Bulldogs are defensive slouches. Seven times the Bulldogs schemed by defensive coordinato­r Zach Arnett sacked LSU quarterbac­k Myles Brennan in Mississipp­i State’s 44-34 stunner last Saturday over the then nationally sixth-ranked reigning national champion Tigers in Baton Rouge, La.

“Obviously they’ve got some very, very talented defensive linemen,” Pittman said. “We didn’t protect bad against Georgia but certainly it’s a concern because they [Mississipp­i State] move all over the place. It’s just part of their defensive coordinato­r’s philosophy. And they do it well.”

 ??  ?? NATE ALLEN
NATE ALLEN

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