Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pittman getting Razorbacks to buy in

- NATE ALLEN

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Sam Pittman isn’t one to brag.

But the first- year Arkansas coach at 2-2 already with two more SEC successes than the Razorbacks achieved the last two years responds proudly regarding what he and his staff have instilled.

Underdog Arkansas exhibits confidence opposing nationally No. 8 Texas A&M tonight at A&M’s Kyle Field in College Station, Texas.

“As far as the players go … we say what we mean,” Pittman said. “We do what we say we’re gonna do. Our kids have gravitated to that. They appreciate honesty. They appreciate discipline. And they appreciate love. We’ve got all three of those things.”

He stresses the collective “we.” “Let’s face the facts, I have a very, very good coaching staff,” Pittman said. “A good and knowledgea­ble group of men that teach the game and know how to talk to players. I’ve been very fortunate to have good men.”

Pittman bluntly asserts the offensive line he inherited isn’t the big bullying line he cultivated as Bret Bielema’s 2013-2015 Arkansas offensive line coach. But it tries hard to become one, Pittman said.

“We can’t just turn around say we’re going to bully you into the end zone,” Pittman said Wednesday on his radio show. “We’re not a big, physical team yet to say, ‘We’re going to give it to this guy. What are you going to do about it?’ I think we’ll become that team. They’re a group of guys who work hard, care and are smart, intelligen­t kids. We just need to continue to work together and I think we will.”

Sixteen who have produced so much for long in so many ways for Razorbacks athletics might still be employed had more than just one other 2016 University of Arkansas Board of Trustees member heeded David Pryor’s wisdom.

Pryor, the former Arkansas Governor, U.S Senator and former UA Board of Trustee, pleaded in 2016 against former Arkansas Athletic Director Jeff Long’s folly of a $160 million project adding luxury suites and other amenities in the North End Zone seating area of Reynolds Razorback Stadium.

Now in deference to safety restrictio­ns caused by the covid-19 pandemic, the UA limits football crowds to 17,000 at its 76,412 football stadium. It will cap men’s basketball crowds at 4,000 in 19,000 seat Walton Arena.

The revenue lost, including lopping the four nonconfere­nce games off Arkansas’ now 10-game entirely SEC football schedule, compelled the UA athletic department offering early retirement to some of its longest tenured and most valuable employees lest those employees risk permanent furloughs should the financial hits from covid persist.

This column Wednesday wrote of seven who have helped the program in so many ways. Among the nine not learned then then to mention is Pat Berger, the groundskee­ping sports turf manager since 2001 responsibl­e for planning pristine the Razorbacks’ landscapin­g and grass fields including Reynolds Razorback Stadium.

Ironic with less to carry through these hard times because of unnecessar­ily lavishing luxuries that Razorback Stadium’s Frank Broyles Field risks going to seed.

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