The Sentinel-Record

Hogs moving on after controvers­ial call

- TOM MURPHY

AUBURN, Ala. — University of Arkansas coach Sam Pittman had a message for his heartbroke­n charges in the visitor’s locker room at Jordan-Hare Stadium Saturday evening.

Pittman had to provide an uplifting message after a controvers­ial officiatin­g decision went against the Razorbacks in the final seconds of a 30-28 loss to No. 13 Auburn.

Had the officiatin­g crew properly adjudicate­d the bungled “spike” by Auburn quarterbac­k Bo Nix, the Razorbacks would have notched a second consecutiv­e road win over a ranked Southeaste­rn Conference opponent.

But they had not. Officiatin­g experts Terry McAulay and Bill Lem

monier, among others, agreed the SEC got it wrong.

And the Razorbacks grieved again at the hands of the SEC.

Pittman said he told the Razorbacks “That I was proud of them, that they fought their butt off, that we’ve got a good football team, and that the times of us going some place and embarrassi­ng our fans and our football team are over. I was proud of them. That’s what I told them.”

Pittman has been plain spoken to his team, which has quickly made him a fan favorite.

The first-year Arkansas coach was livid on the field after what he thought was a backward pass by Nix and a live ball recovered in just a few seconds by Arkansas safety Joe Foucha.

He and the Razorbacks cannot go back and reverse the ruling, which of course had a fatal bearing on the outcome of the game.

Instead of Arkansas being 2-1 and tied with Texas A&M one game behind No. 2 Alabama, the Razorbacks are undeserved­ly in the SEC West cellar with LSU, Ole Miss and Mississipp­i State.

Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek spoke with the SEC office on Saturday and encouraged Razorback fans to begin turning the page on Sunday.

Yurachek wrote on his Twitter account, “Fans of @RazorbackF­B; immediatel­y following last night’s game, I spoke with the appropriat­e staff at the SEC office regarding the official’s ruling on 3rd down with :30 remaining in the game. They provided an explanatio­n consistent with what was outlined in their statement.

“I expressed my disagreeme­nt and disappoint­ment with the final decision. However, there is no further action to be taken and we will turn our attention to the Ole Miss game on Saturday. I am extremely proud of the effort of our football team. I appreciate your continued support.”

Razorback fans will end up raging over the blown call, which immediatel­y stoked memories of a loss at No. 1 Florida in 2009, but Pittman and the football team cannot stew in their anger and disappoint­ment.

The most diverse and explosive offense the Razorbacks have faced all season is heading into Fayettevil­le on Saturday.

Ole Miss is an early 3.5-point favorite over Arkansas for the 2:30 p.m. game at Reynolds Razorback Stadium.

The Rebels are No. 5 in the nation in total offense with 536 yards per game, No. 2 in passing efficiency and No. 17 in scoring with 38.5 points per game.

They turned Alabama’s traditiona­lly stout defense inside out on Saturday with 647 yards, a school record for a Crimson Tide opponent, in a 63-48 home loss. No matter if the Rebels had Alabama’s defensive signals as Nick Saban and his players suggested or not, that’s serious production.

Auburn coach Gus Malzahn and his players recognized Arkansas as a significan­t threat, three games into the Pittman era.

“It was a close one,” Auburn quarterbac­k Bo Nix said. “They fought their butt off. They were actually a really good team. You have to give them credit for playing it down to the wire, playing to the end and never giving up.

“They easily could (have given up) getting down early, but they continued to battle.”

The Razorbacks hope to start getting star players back this week. Pittman would not elaborate on their status, but tailback Rakeem Boyd, receiver Treylon Burks, cornerback­s Montaric Brown and Jerry Jacobs, and defensive end Dorian Gerald have missed varying amounts of time the last two weeks. Additional­ly, linebacker­s Bumper Pool and Grant Morgan practiced only in shells last week, did not engage in contact, and Pool went out and returned again with what looked like a shoulder injury or stinger against Auburn.

Arkansas safety Jalen Catalon, a redshirt freshman, had the perspectiv­e of a veteran in his postgame remarks.

“It’s a tough one to swallow, but we got to swallow it, get back in the film room, and get ready for Ole Miss next week,” Catalon said.

Pittman, who has not been doing opening statements on his Zoom conference­s with reporters, adding a closing statement on Saturday night because he didn’t want the moment to pass without saying it.

“I want everybody to know how proud I am of our football team,” Pittman said. “They played their butt off tonight and I’m proud of them. We’ll get better, but I’m proud of those kids.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? TAKEDOWN: Auburn wide receiver Anthony Schwartz (1) stretches for extra yards as he is tackled by Arkansas defensive back Hudson Clark (17) during the first quarter of Saturday’s game in Auburn, Ala.
The Associated Press TAKEDOWN: Auburn wide receiver Anthony Schwartz (1) stretches for extra yards as he is tackled by Arkansas defensive back Hudson Clark (17) during the first quarter of Saturday’s game in Auburn, Ala.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States