The best reactions from Arkansas’ 44-30 win over South Carolina

Irony: Arkansas is nationally respected again just in time for Bobby Petrino’s return to Fayetteville.

Football in Arkansas is fun again.

The Razorbacks and their fan base have mostly suffered the last 10 years. Coach Sam Pittman brought some light in 2020 and opened the iris last year.

Now, in 2022, the Hogs are a force with which to be reckoned. It isn’t just Hogs Faithful who are taking notice. The 16th-ranked Razorbacks have drawn the attention of college football at large. Saturday’s win over South Carolina was more evidence of it.

Arkansas certainly won’t drop in the polls when the next batch of rankings are released and could even move up. No one would be surprised. Not even the national media.

The respect for the Razorbacks has returned and considering next week comes against former coach Bobby Petrino, it couldn’t have arrived at a better time.

Life is a circle.

[vertical-gallery id=12162]

The 13 worst coaching tenures in NFL history

From Hue Jackson to Urban Meyer to Bobby Petrino, Touchdown Wire ranks the rockiest coaching stints in league history.

The conclusion of the NFL regular season inevitably triggers an annual personnel bloodletting, as head coaches who failed to meet great expectations are dismissed.

So as this year’s class of fired coaches takes shape and those unfortunate figures are cast overboard as flotsam and jetsam, Touchdown Wire decided to rank the most disastrous coaching tenures in league history.

Hue Jackson, Urban Meyer, Bobby Petrino are just a few of the coaches who embarked with lofty goals only to watch them unravel in front of the entire sports world.

With all that in mind, we present a subjective list of the worst coaching tenures in NFL history. We factored team performance, level of dysfunction and bizarre happenings into our reasoning.

Did we overlook your favorite coaching failure? Add it to the comments section below.

Arkansas football head coach salaries for past decade

Razorbacks Wire revisits the earnings of Arkansas football head coaches dating back to 2011.

Arkansas Razorbacks football is back on the right path under head coach Sam Pittman.

The Hogs went 8-4 in the 2021 regular season with wins over rivals Texas, Texas A&M, LSU and Missouri. Pittman is a relative bargain for the Razorbacks with a payout of less than $3 million this year. He will get a raise next season based on an incentive clause in his contract that was triggered when the Hogs beat Mizzou for their eighth win of the season.

All this got us thinking about how Pittman’s salary compares to his predecessors at the helm of the Razorbacks football program.

Below, we list the annual salary for Arkansas football head coaches for each season dating to 2011.

[Source: USA TODAY coaching salary database]

Also see:
Top 10 passing leaders in Arkansas history
Top 10 rushing leaders in Arkansas history
Top 10 receiving leaders in Arkansas history

Cowboys’ McCarthy won’t join ranks of one-and-done coaches

The NFL is no stranger to quick hooks among the coaching ranks, but Stephen Jones confirms that Mike McCarthy will return in 2021,

The 2020 season has gone badly enough that the question had to be asked on Monday: will first-year head coach Mike McCarthy survive the proverbial bloodbath to return next year? The answer from Stephen Jones was an unequivocal yes, but that got the wheels turning. Just how bad do things have to go for a coach to last a year or less?

Not as bad as some might think. There is a rich history of trigger-happy owners showing their new charges the door in a hurry. Peruse the handy list below to take a look at some of the quickest hooks the league has ever seen. Note: for those wondering, Bill Belichick’s day-long employment with the New York Jets is not included; he never actually coached a game.

Year Team Coach Record
2019 CLE Freddie Kitchens 6-10
2019 ARI Steve Wilks 3-13
2013 CLE Rob Chudzinski 4-12
2011 OAK Hue Jackson 8-8
2009 SEA Jim Mora 5-11
2007 MIA Cam Cameron 1-15
2007 ATL Bobby Petrino 3-10
2006 OAK Art Shell 2-14
2001 WAS Marty Schottenheimer 8-8
2000 NYJ Al Groh 9-7
1999 GB Ray Rhodes 8-8
1994 NYJ Pete Carroll 6-10
1993 WAS Richie Petitbon 4-12
1984 MIN Les Steckel 3-13
1978 SF Pete McCulley 1-8
1977 LAR George Allen 0-2*
1976 NYJ Lou Holtz 3-10

Poor Al Groh got shown the door after a winning record! A nine-win season would require the Cowboys to run off a seven-game win streak, a statistical improbability that would dash the dreams of all draft fans. Three different men finished a respectable .500 before getting the axe. The majority of the coaches, though, really put in the kind of work that rightfully earned them a ticket to the unemployment line. This much is clear, however: working for the Jets, Browns, or Raiders could be considered an occupational hazard.

Still, just two team owners, if they had any semblance of self-awareness, would look back and rue the day they moved on from their coaches so quickly. Pete Carroll would go on to build a mini-dynasty that’s still going with the Seattle Seahawks, winning one Super Bowl and appearing in another. And Marty Schottenheimer went on to a critically-acclaimed run with the San Diego Chargers, though he always fell short of the promised land.

This won’t be the case for McCarthy and the Joneses. Even though a three- or four-win season in 2020 seems as likely as any other outcome, and as badly as some fans already want to pivot in a new direction, it’s not happening. It’s hard to say that the newest coach in Dallas deserves as much criticism as he’s received, given the circumstances he’s faced.

At a minimum, McCarthy’s job security for next year was likely locked in the moment starting quarterback Dak Prescott was lost for the season. Even though a divorce is inevitable, as it always is in the league whose initials are said to stand for “Not For Long,” it won’t happen in Dallas this off-season.

[vertical-gallery id=638027]

[vertical-gallery id=637633]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Oklahoma, Missouri State confident Saturday’s game will be played during pandemic

After postponements of three Big 12 games the first weekend of the schedule, there’s reason for pessimism about games being played.

After postponements of three Big 12 games the first weekend of the schedule: TCU and SMU, Oklahoma State and Tulsa and Baylor and Louisiana Tech, there’s definitely reason for pessimism about other games being played.

Oklahoma is slated to start the 2020 season against Missouri State on Saturday at home. The Sooners have chosen not to release football testing data for the season due to ‘competitive reasons’.

Despite that, the Sooners are confident about the game taking place.

“As far as the postponement, I’d be surprised,” Riley said. “But at the same time, we’re all one big test away from having to make tough decisions. That’s every team every single week. I don’t ever want to say it’s impossible, but I fully expect we’ll be out there playing at 6 o’clock on Saturday.”

Missouri State head coach Bobby Petrino was also confident about it on Monday during his game week zoom conference.

“Knock on wood, as of today, we feel pretty good about having most all our guys there at the game,” Petrino said. “But obviously we still got the protocol to go through this week. We were tested early (Monday) morning, be again on Wednesday and again on Friday. But as of right now, I feel pretty good about it.”

A lot can change and Oklahoma and Missouri State have two more rounds of tests to go through before the game on Saturday.

[vertical-gallery id=16696]

What Missouri State head coach Bobby Petrino said about playing Oklahoma

Game week is finally here for Oklahoma football. Here is what Missouri State head coach Bobby Petrino said about the game.

Game week is finally here for Oklahoma football as the Sooners will host FCS-opponent Missouri State at 6 p.m. CT on Saturday.

The Sooners have yet to meet with the media ahead of Saturday’s game, but the Bears went through their first media session on Monday.

Missouri State is coached by former Arkansas and Louisville head coach Bobby Petrino. Petrino spent a year on the sidelines after being let-go from Louisville after 2018, but the Bears hired him to be their head football coach in Jan. of 2020.

Oklahoma’s first opponent is in a full rebuild. Missouri State went 1-10 a year ago and are a member of the Missouri Valley Conference.

Here is what Petrino said about this week’s matchup with the Sooners.

OPENING STATEMENT: 

“We finished basically what we would refer to as camp last Saturday morning with an early morning scrimmage, which was fun. Our players needed it. It was a lot of good hitting. A lot of good running around, going full speed. And I think it was really good for our quarterback and our running backs and the physicalness for our offensive line and defensive line. This week is all about our process and doing things right getting ready for a game. Because of the holiday, we practiced today. Our guys came in this morning and worked out, lifted weights and a little bit of stretching. And then we have good meetings this afternoon and then go out and take the field and really do about half of a practice. Wouldn’t do a full practice today. Then a normal Tuesday, normal Wednesday, a normal Thursday and get ready to go. Think our guys are excited about it. It’s been a long go. Most of our guys came here that first week in June and started the process of getting ready for a game and then got delayed for a couple weeks. So they’ve actually been practicing for a long time.”

ON YOUNG DEFENDERS PLAYING OKLAHOMA’S OFFENSE:

“It’s going to be a tremendous challenge. There’s no question about that. They’ve got great offensive linemen, great skill players, tremendous quarterback and a really, really good scheme. What we want our players to do is to be able to put the video on and show that they utilize their technique, they played with great effort, they played fast and played within the structure. I think that’s what’s important for us is that our guys can really understand what we’re asking them to do and play fast and fearless and make sure they can look in the mirror after the game and say, ‘I played as hard as I possibly could.'”

BLOCKING OUT THE NOISE OF BEING AN UNDERDOG:

“Yeah, we’re trying to just focus on the process and how to go about preparing for a game, how to handle today’s shorter practice and meetings and do a great job in the meetings today. We’ve got to be able to go out and do what I call a half a practice on a Monday so we can have a real hard, physical practice on a Tuesday. I’ve always kind of went back and forth when you have an extra day of preparation on what the schedule was and I always feel like it’s best to do a half-practice on Monday. I think that’s the thing that’s the challenge is to, like you said, block out the noise and just focus on what we can control, focus on getting better. We’ve got some corrections to make from Saturday’s scrimmage, so that’s a big part of today also. And then go out and get better as an individual, on our technique, playing faster — we’ve got to learn how to play faster. You can still see some hesitation, some doubt in our players. Some of it is because of the schemes and not knowing exactly what to do, and some of it is trusting themselves and trusting their teammates. So we’ve got a lot of work to do. There’s a lot to focus on.”

ON WHAT IS GAINED FROM PLAYING OKLAHOMA

“First and foremost, going through our preparation, and learning how we go about our business and the process that it takes to get ready to play a game and how we can execute and put things together, how we have to do our job and rely on our teammates to do their job.”

[vertical-gallery id=16696]

Missouri State hires Bobby Petrino as head coach

After one year away from coaching, Bobby Petrino is heading to Springfield, Missouri, as the next head coach of FCS program Missouri State.

After one year away from coaching, Bobby Petrino is heading to Springfield, Missouri, as the next head coach of FCS program Missouri State.