Oklahoma’s baseball series with Arkansas State adjusted

The baseball series between Oklahoma and Arkansas State moved due to weather.

With spring sports comes spring weather. With spring weather comes spring storms. The Oklahoma Sooners announced they have adjusted their schedule for the series with Arkansas State at L. Dale Mitchell Park in Norman.

According to the release from OU Athletics, the series will now be played on Sunday and Monday, instead of Friday-Sunday.

Due to the forecast of inclement weather on Friday and Saturday, the Oklahoma baseball series against Arkansas State has been pushed back to Sunday and Monday, March 14-15, at L. Dale Mitchell Park.

The Sooners and Red Wolves will play a doubleheader at 2 p.m. Sunday and a single game at 1 p.m. Monday. Game two of Sunday’s doubleheader will begin approximately 45 minutes after the conclusion of game one.

Tickets for the games originally scheduled for Friday (March 12) and Saturday (March 13) will be valid for the doubleheader on Sunday. One ticket will gain admission for both games of the doubleheader. Tickets for the contest originally scheduled for Sunday (March 14) will be honored at Monday’s game.

After losing three of the last four games prior to their matchup with UT-Arlington, the Sooners were able to get their second 10-run win in three games. The Sooners currently sit at 6-6 overall, with a 2-1 record at the Dale. Following their three-game series, the Sooners will travel to Fayetteville for a one-game matchup with the Razorbacks.

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VFL Chance Hall joins Butch Jones at Arkansas State

Butch Jones was hired as Arkansas State’s head coach on Dec. 12.

Butch Jones was hired as Arkansas State’s head coach on Dec. 12.

He served as Tennessee’s head coach from 2013-17.

Offensive lineman Chance Hall played for Jones at Tennessee. Hall played in 24 games for the Vols from 2015-18.

He missed the entire 2017 season with a knee injury. During his freshman season in 2015, Hall made seven starts. He started six contests in 2016 for Tennessee.

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Hall served as a student assistant with Tennessee after retiring due to his injury. He will now assist with the offensive line under Jones at Arkansas State.

Jones joined the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days” and discussed Hall joining him at Arkansas State.

The entire show with Jones can be listened to here or below.

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Sun Belt Heat: The College Football Playoff Is A Lie

The College Football Playoff Committee screwed the conferences that risked life and limb to save the season Contact @astatefanrules It was as anticlimactic as it was profoundly unjust. The College Football Playoff committee delivered their annual …

The College Football Playoff Committee screwed the conferences that risked life and limb to save the season


Contact @astatefanrules

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It was as anticlimactic as it was profoundly unjust. The College Football Playoff committee delivered their annual bounty to the game’s wealthy elite – the same committee who had once upon a time said that “if you take care of business, win your conference, and go undefeated, the Playoff will take care of itself.

This was a lie.

Even during an unprecedented season that turned the entire college football world upside down, the Committee did what they do best: maintain the status quo. Consider, not a single team selected for the Playoff is new to the format. Even worse, not a single team truly deserves to be there.

Alabama didn’t play a single opponent outside of the SEC.

Ohio State played six games. They shouldn’t even qualify.

Clemson and Notre Dame have already played twice, and canceled each other out.

Meanwhile, two programs – Coastal Carolina and Cincinnati – did everything the Committee told them to do, which is to beat Top 25 teams, win its conference, and (as if it’s not hard enough) go undefeated. The Committee’s response was to rank Florida, Oklahoma and Texas A&M ahead of the Bearcats, and rank the Chanticleers completely out of NY6 consideration.

It. Was. A. Lie.

I’m not the only one bitching. While the Committee patted itself on the back for rewarding the same wealthy programs year in and year out, a handful of pundits raised a voice to grouse:

The Playoff is just one insult. The Bowl lineup is a completely separate line-item of Power Privilege. Look at this ghastly menu of sub .500 SEC teams who are awarded a plum Bowl game in 2020:

2-8 South Carolina – Gasparilla Bowl
4-6 Kentucky – Gator Bowl
3-7 Arkansas – Texas Bowl
3-6 Tennessee – Liberty Bowl
2-7 MissState – Armed Forces Bowl

Combined, they have exactly two more wins than Coastal Carolina, And yes, 2-7 Mississippi State is going to the Armed Forces Bowl while 9-2 Army get the shaft. This system is complete crap. It rewards teams not for their merit, but for their privilege.

It was all a lie. The College Football Playoff was supposed to bring balance to college football. We were told we’d have a place at the table so long as we pulled ourselves up by the bootstraps and proved our mettle to out just and benevolent overlords. In this dumb season of COVID, you’d have thought that playing more than 10 games would count for something, or that playing only within your conference would count against you. Nope. Not a bit. It’s they eye test that counts.

Why do we even play?

A former notary public, Jeremy Harper is a professional writer and Chief Instigator for Storm the Castle Creative. He spends much of his free time staring blankly into space. 

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Michigan State Football lands Arkansas State offensive tackle Jarrett Horst from transfer portal

Michigan State Football has landed Arkansas State offensive tackle Jarrett Horst from the transfer portal.

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Michigan State Football head coach Mel Tucker promised that the team would be aggressive in their roster overhaul and utilize the transfer portal to rebuild the team quickly, and that has been evident this week.

Mel Tucker already landed Auburn running back Harold Joiner and Temple quarterback Anthony Russo, and now they have found a new starting offensive tackle in former Arkansas State lineman Jarrett Horst.

Make no mistake, this is a huge pickup for the Spartans. The 6’6″, 305-pound Horst had multiple suitors competing with MSU to land the talented tackle, and Tucker was able to out-recruit schools like Texas, Oklahoma, Baylor and more to land him.

Here are some highlights of MSU’s new tackle:

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Butch Jones names former Tennessee staffer as Arkansas State’s Director of Player Personnel

Former Tennessee head coach Butch Jones has been hired at Arkansas State in the same capacity.

Butch Jones was formally announced as Arkansas State’s head coach on Wednesday.

Jones served as Tennessee’s head coach from 2013-17, compiling a 34-27 record and going 3-0 in bowl games. He spent the last three seasons in an off-field capacity at Alabama.

The former Tennessee head coach has assigned Matt Wilson as his Director of Player Personnel at Arkansas State.

Wilson served as Associate Director of Player Personnel at Tennessee under Jones from 2014-17. At Tennessee, Wilson provided recruiting assistance to Jones and his staff. He was a key part in identifying prospects two years in advance of a signing class.

Wilson comes to Arkansas State after serving two-plus years as Director of Player Personnel at Mississippi State and one-plus years at Indiana as Senior Director of Recruiting Personnel.

COLLEGE STATION, TX – OCTOBER 08: Head coach of the Tennessee Volunteers Butch Jones watches a play in the first half of their game against the Texas A&M Aggies at Kyle Field on October 8, 2016 in College Station, Texas. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images)

Jones also announced that former Vols’ offensive quality control assistant Derrick Lett has joined his coaching staff at Arkansas State. Jones mentioned Lett will serve as wide receivers coach for the Red Wolves.

Lett was at Tennessee from 2013-14 under Jones, working with running backs, wide receivers and punt return specialists. He has coached running backs at Yale since 2015.

Vols Wire previously reported that former Tennessee graduate assistant Jon Shalala is joining Jones’ Arkansas State staff.

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Butch Jones hires former Vols’ assistant to coach wide receivers at Arkansas State

Butch Jones hires former Vols’ assistant to coach wide receivers at Arkansas State.

Butch Jones was formally announced as Arkansas State’s head coach on Wednesday.

Jones served as Tennessee’s head coach from 2013-17, compiling a 34-27 record and going 3-0 in bowl games. He spent the last three seasons in an off-field capacity at Alabama.

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Jones announced Wednesday that former Vols’ offensive quality control assistant Derrick Lett has joined his coaching staff at Arkansas State. Jones mentioned Lett will serve as wide receivers coach for the Red Wolves.

Lett was at Tennessee from 2013-14 under Jones, working with running backs, wide receivers and punt return specialists. He has coached running backs at Yale since 2015.

Vols Wire previously reported that former Tennessee graduate assistant Jon Shalala is joining Jones’ Arkansas State staff.

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Former Tennessee assistant set to join Butch Jones’ Arkansas State staff

Butch Jones has been hired as Arkansas State’s head coach.

Former Tennessee head coach Butch Jones has been hired by Arkansas State.

Jones will serve as Arkansas State’s 31st head coach in program history after working in an off-field capacity at Alabama since 2018.

Jones has already started to fill his coaching staff at Arkansas State.

Vols Wire has been told that former Tennessee graduate assistant Jon Shalala is set to join Jones’ Arkansas State staff.

Shalala served as a defensive graduate assistant from 2016-17 under Jones at Tennessee.

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Shalala was a graduate assistant in 2018 for the Vols during Jeremy Pruitt’s first season as head coach.

He spent the last two years at Mississippi State in a defensive quality control capacity.

Jones was 34-27 in five years (2013-17) as Tennessee’s head coach.

“It is truly an honor and privilege to be the head football coach at Arkansas State University,” Jones said in a press release. “It is a position that I take great pride in, and I look forward to connecting with our student-athletes to build upon the strong tradition of excellence both on and off the field of play.

“I am extremely grateful to Terry Mohajir, Dr. (Kelly) Damphousse and Dr. (Chuck) Welch for trusting me to be the caretaker of Arkansas State football.”

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Alabama analyst Butch Jones announced as new Arkansas State head coach

Former Tennessee head coach Butch JOnes has called Alabama home for the last three years, but starting in 2021, Jones will be the Arkansa…

The Alabama Crimson Tide was in Arkansas and they meant business. Actually, they weren’t the only ones that meant business. Former Tennessee head coach and Alabama analyst Butch Jones has been named the new head coach for Arkansas State.

Jones was the head coach at Tennessee from 2013-2017, and then was fired. Following his termination as the Volunteers head coach, he joined the Alabama staff as an analyst, a move that Crimson Tide fans loved.

After spending the last three seasons with Alabama, Jones has seemingly made a move in an attempt to revitalize his coaching career and return to the helm of a program.

Arkansas State, who calls the Sun Belt conference home, has been a stop for some of colleges biggest names in coaching. Former Ole Miss head coach Hugh Freeze and Auburn head coach Guz Malzahn were both head coaches for the Red Wolves in the last decade.

Jones has already met the team and be formally introduced, you can see the pictures below.

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Butch Jones discusses being hired as Arkansas State’s head coach

Former Tennessee head coach Butch Jones hired at Arkansas State.

Former Tennessee head coach Butch Jones has been hired by Arkansas State.

Jones will serve as Arkansas State’s 31st head coach in program history after working in an off-field capacity at Alabama since 2018.

He was 34-27 in five years (2013-17) as Tennessee’s head coach.

“It is truly an honor and privilege to be the head football coach at Arkansas State University,” Jones said in a press release. “It is a position that I take great pride in, and I look forward to connecting with our student-athletes to build upon the strong tradition of excellence both on and off the field of play.

“I am extremely grateful to Terry Mohajir, Dr. (Kelly) Damphousse and Dr. (Chuck) Welch for trusting me to be the caretaker of Arkansas State football.”

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Report: Butch Jones leading candidate for Arkansas State job

Butch Jones spent five seasons as head coach in Knoxville, compiling a 34-27 overall record and 14-24 in the SEC.

Butch Jones might be a head coach once again … and very soon.

Per FootballScoop.com, the former Tennessee coach and current Alabama assistant has become the favorite to be named the new Arkansas State head coach, replacing Blake Anderson who left for the Utah State position earlier this week.

From the report:

Butch Jones is the leading candidate for the head coaching position at Arkansas State, sources told FootballScoop on Saturday.

We’re told a deal could be done as soon as tonight. Alabama completed its regular season with a 52-3 win over Arkansas early Saturday afternoon.

Jones is currently the special assistant to the head coach at Alabama, but prior to that was the head coach at Central Michigan, Cincinnati and Tennessee. He went 84-54 in 11 combined seasons, winning four conference titles at Central Michigan and Cincinnati. Jones’s 2009 team at Central Michigan went 11-2 overall, unbeaten in the MAC, and became the only team in CMU history to reach the AP poll. He led Cincinnati to back-to-back Big East titles in 2011-12, and his 18-8 stretch from 2015-16 at Tennessee represent that program’s best run in a decade.