Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Razorbacks report

- By Tom Murphy

Morris said. “It happened at SMU. We were 2-4 in Year 2 coming off a devastatin­g loss against Tulsa in overtime to have No. 11 ranked Houston come in at home.”

SMU upset the Cougars 38-16.

“Really the thing you … do is you go back to work, you self evaluate, you self audit and you go back to just daily decisions and encouragin­g your players to continue to play hard, to see and to give examples of other teams,” Morris said. “The Washington Nationals are a prime example. You know, May 23rd, they’re 12 games below .500. Only eight teams in the history of baseball have ever come back and made the postseason [from that record].

“So we shared that with our team today to say, ‘Look how they finished.’”

AD talk

Athletic Director Hunter Yurachek addressed the state of the football team in a post to the university website, while encouragin­g fans to attend Saturday’s football game and Sunday’s exhibition basketball game that will include the unveiling of Nolan Richardson Court at Walton Arena.

“Clearly, our win-loss record at this point in the season is not where anyone would like it to be,” Yurachek wrote. “A loss is a loss, but I am encouraged that in each of our last three games, all decided by one score or less, that the Razorbacks had a chance in the later stages of each to earn a win. I can assure you that no one is more disappoint­ed that we were unable to do that, than the young men and the coaching staff who have put in countless hours in preparatio­n for this season.

“However, within this program, our focus is on the opportunit­ies that remain ahead. There is plenty of football left to be played this season and our coaches and student-athletes are continuing to prepare day by day for the remaining six regular season games on our schedule.”

Win the date

Auburn enters Saturday’s game at Arkansas after coming off an open date, which is bad news for the Razorbacks.

Under Coach Gus Malzahn, the Tigers are 8-0 in the regular season when coming off a bye week. Auburn is 7-0 against SEC teams in those games and 3-0 in road games.

Those victories: 30-22 over Ole Miss and 34-28 over Alabama in 2013; 2014 at Kansas State and 41-7 over LSU in 2014; 30-27 at Kentucky in 2015; 56-3 over Arkansas in 2016; 42-27 at Texas A&M in 2017; 28-24 over Texas A&M in 2018.

One pick

Auburn has one intercepti­on on the season, safety Jeremiah Dinson’s pick with no return in a 24-6 victory over Tulane in Week 2.

The Tigers are tied for last in the NCAA with Alabama-Birmingham, New Mexico and Tulsa in that department.

“We’ve been close,” Gus Malzahn said Wednesday. “We’ve had some opportunit­ies. We’ve got to seize the moment when we get our chances to get the ball. I think the second half of the season that number will grow dramatical­ly.”

The Tigers are tied for fifth in the FBS with eight fumbles recovered and tied for 55th with nine turnovers gained. The Razorbacks are tied for 34th with 11 takeaways, on six fumble recoveries and five intercepti­ons.

300 for 300

Auburn kickers have successful­ly converted their last 300 points after touchdowns and have a chance to break the NCAA record at Reynolds Razorback Stadium on Saturday.

The last PAT miss for the Tigers came in a 2013 game vs. Tennessee. The streak of 300 consecutiv­e PATs is an SEC record and the longest-active streak in the FBS.

The NCAA record is 302 in a row made by Florida State from 2012-16, which included all their PATs in a 34-31 victory over Auburn in the 2013 BCS National Championsh­ip Game played at the Rose Bowl.

Series history

Auburn leads the all-time series against Arkansas by a 16-11-1 margin. The Tigers lead the series 7-5 in Fayettevil­le, 8-5-1 in Auburn, Ala., and 1-0 in Memphis. Arkansas leads the series 1-0 in Little Rock.

Auburn’s edge was 11-10-1 before the Tigers reeled off victories in five of the last six games under Coach Gus Malzahn.

Arkansas’ lone victory in that span was a 54-46 win in four overtimes on Oct. 24, 2015.

Prior to Auburn’s recent dominance, the Razorbacks had won in three of four trips to Auburn, a 27-10 upset of the No. 2 Tigers in 2006, a 25-22 victory under first-year Coach Bobby Petrino in 2008, and a 24-7 rout under interim Coach John L. Smith in 2012. The only loss in that span came in a 65-43 shootout to the Cam Newton-led Tigers in 2010, a game in which Tyler Wilson came off the bench to fire four touchdown passes.

Auburn’s five victories in the series since 2013 have been by a combined score of 222-64 for an average score of 44-13, including a 56-3 beatdown in 2016 that stands as the Hogs’ largest losing margin in a conference game.

24, no more

Auburn is one of 10 FBS teams which has not allowed more than 24 points in any game this season. No. 10 Florida hit that number in a 24-13 victory over the Tigers on Oct. 5, and only Oregon (21), Texas A&M (20) and Mississipp­i State (23) have exceeded 20 points on the Tigers.

The other teams who have not given up more than 24 points: Alabama-Birmingham, California, Clemson, Georgia, Iowa, Ohio State, Penn State, San Diego State and Wisconsin. The Badgers are the only team in the nation that has not trailed at any point this season.

Hog ties

As usual, the ties to Arkansas run deep for the Auburn coaching staff, starting with Coach Gus Malzahn, the Fort Smith native and Arkansas prep coaching legend who was offensive coordinato­r for the Razorbacks during the SEC West winning campaign of 2006.

Offensive line coach J.B. Grimes, a Clarendon native, played offensive line at Henderson State, coached in the prep ranks at Nashville and Des Arc, then worked at the UA as a graduate assistant (1981-82) and a full-time assistant coach (1989-92).

Co-offensive coordinato­r and receivers coach Kodi Burns is a Fort Smith native who played at Auburn and got his start in coaching as a graduate assistant with Malzahn at Arkansas State in 2012. He followed Malzahn back to Auburn in 2013 as a graduate assistant before moving on to Samford, Middle Tennessee State and Arizona State before re-joining the Tigers in 2016.

Extra points

• The Razorbacks will play their second 11 a.m. game of the season, joining the Hogs’ 31-27 loss to Texas A&M on Sept. 28.

• Former Georgia offensive lineman Matt Stinchcomb will serve as analyst for the SEC Network crew assigned to the game, with Taylor Zarzour on play-by-play duties and Alyssa Lang as sideline reporter.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF • @NWABENGOFF ?? Defenses coordinate­d by Arkansas defensive coordinato­r John Chavis (above) have accounted for four of the 11 worst offensive showings by teams coached by Auburn coach Gus Malzahn.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF • @NWABENGOFF Defenses coordinate­d by Arkansas defensive coordinato­r John Chavis (above) have accounted for four of the 11 worst offensive showings by teams coached by Auburn coach Gus Malzahn.

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