El Dorado News-Times

Australian makes vast impact for Arkansas

- By Nate Allen Special to the News-Times

FAYETTEVIL­LE - Sam IrwinHill arrived at Arkansas last year putting his best feet forward as he has since instructed as a lad by his dad Down Under.

The Ray Guy Award preseason watch list punter after averaging 44.3 yards per Razorbacks punt last season, including a SEC leading 20 downed inside the 20 with a career long 79 yards punt, IrwinHill kicked ambidextro­usly for the Hogs like he did the previous two junior college years at City College of San Francisco and practicall­y all his life growing up in Bendingo, Australia.

"It came from Australian Rules Football," IrwinHill said of kicking with either foot. "When I was four or five my dad took me out to a field and said 'Kick with both feet' or else he would take me home. So it was a big deal."

A big deal that quickly became bigger.

"I had a lot of inspiratio­n," IrwinHill said. "There were a lot of superstars in Australia who kicked with the left and right foot. So that's where it came from and I thought it would be a big deal to introduce it to the American style of football and it has definitely played that way."

Punt returners and the coaches designing schemes for them are bound to have some uncertaint­y from which foot an Irwin-Hill punt will be delivered even knowing they can guess "right" 75 percent of the time and probably will be correct guessing a higher right percentage this season.

" Last year it was probably 75/25 right foot," Irwin-Hill said. "The dominant foot is the right foot. That's where the strength comes from and I want to focus on the NFL traditiona­l style. I practiced a lot more this sumer on the more traditiona­l style so I am

really looking forward to put that more in the game this year."

But not entirely. The unexpected angles from a surprise left-footed punt can "definitely" be more difficult to field, IrwinHill said and enhance the chances of pinning an opponent deep.

It also expands Coach Bret Bielema's trick play options.

A 6-3, 209 fine all-round athlete, Irwin-Hill off a fake punt completed a 24-yard pass for a first down last year and dashed 12 yards for a first down off a fake against Alabama and he's ambidextro­usly adept at rugby-style punting.

"If we have that gap and there's a little wind behind my back, Coach B has that confidence in me," Irwin-Hill said of punting left-footed. "Or if there is a space open on that left side we could run the football. There are a lot of different things we can do and to have that versatilit­y is really good."

It's more punter versatilit­y than new special teams coach Rory Segrest has coached before.

"I can say I have not," Segrest said of coaching an ambidextro­us punter. "To me it's a great talking piece, but I just want him kicking where they faircatch. If it's right-footed or left-footed or whatever it is just make sure to hang it up there in the right spot where they can't return it."

Most times last year that's what Irwin-Hill achieved.

Just how did Arkansas and a San Francisco junior college before Arkansas and an Australian kicker get together?

"I did an academy in Australia called Pro Kick Australia," Irwin-Hill said. "That was designed specifical­ly to coach poten- tial kickers and punters from Australian Rules to American football. I practiced in that academy for 12 months and sent over a video. I got a lot of attention from the videos but in terms of grades I had to go to a junior college and that's where I ended up in San Francisco and I was more than happy to start my career there."

And even happier to end up Arkansas.

"Arkansas responded to the videos," Irwin-Hill said. "I looked at Arkansas and I never looked back. I came straight here and I committed straightaw­ay. It's a great place."

This week's every other day two-a-day sessions continued Wednesday with a closed morning regular practice and a night session announced as mostly devoted to the kicking game.

After the morning practice, Bielema announced that fourth-year junior walk-on offensive guard and Little Rock Christian alum Adam Deacon now is on scholarshi­p.

Deacon, whose older brother Tyler also originally was a Razorbacks walkon placed on scholarshi­p and lettered his final sea- sons of 2011 and 2012, had just addressed team during the ALS Bucket Challenge on the ALS illness that claimed his mother's life.

Regarding the scholarshi­p, Deacon was quoted by the UA: "I honestly didn't see it coming. "I've been working my butt off and I Coach told me how well I am doing but he didn't say anything about a scholarshi­p. Then at the team meeting he brought it up and it honestly brought tears to my eyes. I told my dad and he was screaming for like a minute straight on the phone. It means the world to all of us."

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