The Palm Beach Post

Tide’s new look still dominant

Arkansas next in line to try to topple No. 1 Alabama.

- Associated Press

FAY E T T E VI L L E , ARK. — I f Arkansas coach Bret Bielema had a kindred spirit of sorts who he modeled the Razorbacks after when entering the Southeaste­rn Conference, it was Alabama and coach Nick Saban.

The No. 1 Crimson Tide (5- 0, 2- 0 SEC) might not look like Bielema’s pro-style offense quite as much anymore, but its success is still the standard by which the Razorbacks and the rest of the SEC measure themselves.

I t ’s a s t a n d a r d N o . 1 6 Arkansas (4-1, 0-1 SEC) — loser of nine straight to the Crimson Tide — would like to meet for a change when it hosts the defending national champion tonight. And it hopes to do so using the style of power offense Alabama has used less and less of in recent years.

“From a defensive point of view, it’s kind of a whole new preparatio­n,” Bielema said about Alabama. “In recruiting, we used to compete with them quite a bit in pro-style offense settings and they don’t look like that now. Alabama’s in the Spread market now.”

Regardless of the style of offense used by the Crimson Tide these days, the results have remained constant during the Saban era.

This season is no different, and Alabama’s 17-game winning streak is currently the longest in the nation and the second-longest under Saban — trailing only a 19- game stretch over the 2009-10 seasons. It’s a streak that will be put to the test over the next three weeks with games a g a i nst No. 9 Tennessee and No. 8 Texas A&M on deck, one that begins with the Razorbacks.

Arkansas enters the game with the SEC’s most efficient quarterbac­k in junior Austin Allen, but it has stayed true to Bielema’s traditiona­l offensive approach — foregoing the hurry-up style that has taken over college football.

It’s a welcomed breather for Alabama defensive end Dalvin Tomlinson.

“I’m glad it’s not fast ball because as a defensive lineman, you like the slower teams so you get time to recover and just play old football, just like the old days,” Tomlinson said.

Some other things to watch as Arkansas tries to end its nine-game losing streak to the mighty Crimson Tide:

S t o pp i n g Hur t s : T h e R a z o r b a c k s h a v e s t r u g - gled in defending the running of quarterbac­ks like Texas A&M’s Trevor Knight. Now, they face freshman Jalen Hurts , the Tide’s No. 2 rusher with 276 yards and three touchdowns. Bielema expects offensive coordinato­r Lane Kiffin to continue using Hurts’ running ability. “As we all know, Lane is a very creative, very good play caller, and I think they’re using his strengths as good as anybody I’ve witnessed this year on film,” the Razorbacks coach said. “He’s a very talented player that’s getting used in all the right ways, and he’s got some good players around him.”

Ragnow’s status: Arkansas starting center Frank Ragnow missed much of practice this week after flying home to Minnesota last weekend following the death of his father. However, the junior returned to the Razorbacks on Thursday night and is likely to play tonight.

Healthy again: It appears likely that Alabama will have tailback Damien Harris and wide receiver ArDarius Stewart back. Harris, the leading rusher, was limited against Kentucky with a sprained r i g ht a nkl e . S t e war t has missed the past two games with a knee injury after totaling 203 receiving yards in the first two games. He returned to practice this week.

H a t c h e r ’ s h a m m y : A r k a n s a s wi d e r e c e i v e r Keon Hatcher missed last week’s win over Alcorn State with a hamstring injury, but Bielema is hopeful the senior will return tonight. Hatcher missed most of last season with a broken foot, but he’s returned to form this season — with 14 catches for 281 yards and three touchdowns in four games.

 ?? PAUL MOSELEY / FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM ?? Arkansas quarterbac­k Austin Allen, celebratin­g the winning touchdown against TCU, ranks as the SEC’s most efficient passer.
PAUL MOSELEY / FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM Arkansas quarterbac­k Austin Allen, celebratin­g the winning touchdown against TCU, ranks as the SEC’s most efficient passer.

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