Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A&M out to sack protection plans RED ZONE STRUGGLES a concern for Razorbacks.

- BOB HOLT

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Arkansas is among five Football Bowl Subdivisio­n teams that haven’t allowed a sack this season. Texas A&M leads the nation with 15 sacks.

Something has to give Saturday night when the Razorbacks play the Aggies at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

“I think it’s a good matchup,” Arkansas junior offensive tackle Denver Kirkland said. “I’m just looking forward to seeing what they really have and what we really have.”

Kirkland, 6-5, 340 pounds, will go against Aggies sophomore defensive end Myles Garrett, 6-5, 262, who has a national-best 51/2 sacks.

Razorbacks junior tackle Dan Skipper, 6-10, 331, will be matched against junior defensive end Daeshone Hall, 6-6, 250, whose four sacks are tied for sixth in the nation.

“Denver and Dan came here to play against guys like that,” Arkansas offensive line

coach Sam Pittman said. “We’ll see what happens.”

Garrett had 111/2 sacks last season to set an SEC freshman record. He broke the record of eight sacks in 2011 by South Carolina’s Jadeveon Clowney, the No. 1 pick in 2014 NFL Draft by Houston.

“Garrett is a really, really exceptiona­l player,” Pittman said. “I think he’s scary. He should be running track at A&M. The 60 sprint, he’d win that. We have a lot respect for him.”

Pittman said Hall is plenty scary, too.

“Garrett and Hall are probably as good a defensive end tandem as there is in the country,” Pittman said. “They have an unbelievab­ly quick get-off.”

The Aggies had nine sacks in their season-opening 38-17 victory over Arizona State.

“They were getting after the quarterbac­k, but I think we’ve got some better guys up front,” Kirkland said, referring to Arizona State’s line. “We’re going to get after them.”

In Texas A&M’s 44-27 victory over Nevada last week, Garrett sacked quarterbac­k Tyler Stewart on consecutiv­e plays midway through the fourth quarter for losses of 9 and 5 yards to end a scoring threat after the Wolf Pack had pulled to within 41-27 and recovered an onside kickoff.

“Myles Garrett is the best defensive end I’ve ever seen in my life,” Nevada running back Don Jackson told reporters after the game. “I’ve never seen anything like that before.

“It’s his physical stature, with his long arms and big body, combined with him just being fast.”

Pittman said Texas A&M’s scheme under new defensive coordinato­r John Chavis is designed for the inside linemen to bull rush to collapse the pocket and force the quarterbac­k outside, where Garrett or Hall sprint up the field to meet him.

“It’s a really good scheme,” Pittman said. “They’re not a huge blitz team. They’ll blitz when you get into third down, but they really don’t need to with those front four guys.”

Arkansas quarterbac­k Brandon Allen said he’s confident in his pass protection.

“I’ve got a lot of trust in my guys,” Allen said. “They’re going to do everything they can to protect me.”

Texas A&M Coach Kevin Sumlin said having a chance to be the first team to sack Allen isn’t extra motivation for Garrett, Hall or any of the other Aggies.

“You don’t go in there and tell our team, ‘Hey, they haven’t given up a sack, we’ve got to get a sack,’ ” Sumlin said. “Our guys know what they’re supposed to do.

“We’ve got two defensive ends that rush the passer. They want to get a sack regardless of what the stats say.” Craft’s late touchdown leads Memphis to victory

MEMPHIS — Sam Craft scored on a 3-yard run with 53 seconds left to lift Memphis past Cincinnati 53-46 in a game marred by an injury to Bearcats starting quarterbac­k Gunner Kiel.

Kiel was injured on a hit in the first quarter when he turned up field and was hit from the side by Chauncey Lanier. Kiel’s neck and head were immobilize­d, and he was helped off the field on a cart and taken to Methodist University Hospital.

The teams traded touchdowns on the first four possession­s of the fourth quarter until Memphis turned it over on downs with 3:11 left. Cincinnati was forced to punt with 2:27 remaining, and Memphis marched down the field in six plays for the go-ahead score.

Memphis’ Leonard Pegues intercepte­d a tipped Cincinnati pass on its final possession to seal it.

Paxton Lynch threw for 412 yards and two touchdowns for Memphis (4-0, 1-0 American Athletic Conference). The Tigers are 4-0 for the first time since 1961.

Freshman Hayden Moore passed for a school-record 557 yards and threw four touchdown passes for Cincinnati (2-2, 0-2).

In other games, Alek Torgersen threw two touchdown passes to Justin Watson and Pennsylvan­ia beat Villanova 24-13 to snap the Quakers’ 14-game losing streak in the series.

The Aggies didn’t have any sacks in their 35-28 overtime victory against Arkansas last season. Garrett was credited with 3 tackles, including 1 for a 1-yard loss, as the Razorbacks rushed 47 times for 285 yards.

“I didn’t do well enough,” Garrett said. “I didn’t play the run well enough, so I hope we change things up. Hopefully, we stop the run and shut down their offense.”

If the Aggies can slow Arkansas’ running game, they’ll increase their chances of sacking Allen.

“It’s really hard for a team to stop us when it’s third and long and we’ve got to get to the quarterbac­k,” Texas A&M senior defensive tackle Julien Obioha said.

“We definitely have our work cut out for us,” Pittman said. “We’d like to stay out of third and long, where they like to do their damage.”

Arkansas offensive coordinato­r Dan Enos said keeping Allen from being sacked involves more than good blocking by the line.

“The offensive line’s certainly doing a great job, but that’s backs involved, that’s the quarterbac­k understand­ing that he’s got to get the ball out of his hands,” Enos said. “That’s receivers and tight ends creating separation early in their routes so we’re not holding the ball.

“Certainly this week will be our biggest challenge to date as far as a pass rush goes.”

Allen said the Razorbacks can’t dramatical­ly alter their game plan despite the Aggies’ ability to pile up sacks.

“There are definitely things we have to do to negate them, but we’re going to do what we do,” Allen said. “You can’t change your game plans because of two good defensive ends.”

 ?? AP/SAM CRAFT ?? Defensive end Myles Garrett (15) leads the country with 51/2 sacks for No. 14 Texas A&M, which also leads the nation with 15 sacks heading into Saturday’s SEC opener against Arkansas.
AP/SAM CRAFT Defensive end Myles Garrett (15) leads the country with 51/2 sacks for No. 14 Texas A&M, which also leads the nation with 15 sacks heading into Saturday’s SEC opener against Arkansas.

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