(Advertisement)

COMMENTARY: Missed Kick Costly

TEJADA BECOMES HOGS’ SCAPEGOAT

Posted: November 30, 2009 at 2 a.m.

— Arkansas fans will have to wait 288 days to see if the Razorbacks take the next step under coach Bobby Petrino. Meanwhile, they will have much to anticipate.

The Razorbacks couldn’t have gotten any closer to winning on the road than they did Saturday night.

If there is any consolation in the fourth of four road losses, it is that LSU needed more than 60 minutes to subdue the Razorbacks.

The shame is that Alex Tejada, who was so good during regulation time with three field goals and two booming kickoffs, was the goat in overtime. From the right hash mark, he hung a 36-yard attempt to the right that would have necessitated a second OT. Maybe he was thinking about the Florida game when his kick from the right hash to break a 20-20 tie in the fourth quarter had too much hook and went wide left.

Golfers do that, pushing a tee shot to the right after snap-hooking one or two previous.

On the other side, Josh Jasper’s third field goal of the game, a 41-yarder, tied the score at 30 with four seconds left and his 36-yarder was the game winner.

Ironically, for 48 quarters, Arkansas was the most proficient team in the Southeastern Conference at scoring inside the 20. Until Tejada’s miss, Arkansas was 45-of-46 on such opportunities.

For now, Razorback fans should enjoy the turnaround from 5-7 to 7-5 and the prize of a January bowl game in either Dallas or Memphis.

Also, appreciate the resiliency of a Petrino-coached team that rallied from 17-3 and 24-13 in a stadium where the P.A. man introduces the kickoff with, “It’s Saturday night in Death Valley.”

To compete with the best in the SEC, Arkansas must win some conference games on the road and the Razorbacks’ next opportunity is Sept. 18 at Georgia. Arkansas’ first three road losses were more about the opposing defenses than they were about raucous crowds, and that was the case again at LSU.

Arkansas quarterback Ryan Mallett made some brilliant plays in the fourth quarter, including a fourth-down touchdown pass to Joe Adams - only a few plays removed from a helmet-to-helmet hit - for a 30-27 lead with 78 seconds to play.

But Mallett was only 17-of-39 against LSU, including 10-of-19 in the second half. His receivers dropped some and he overthrew some. In the losses to Alabama, Florida, and Ole Miss, Mallett was a combined 36-of-96.

The Tigers pursued Mallett relentlessly, particularly in the first half when they sacked him three times. Arkansas did a better job protecting him in the second half and LSU did not record a sack.

LSU’s Jordan Jefferson, who will not be mistaken for Mallett, completed 17-of-25, including four for 37 yards in the last-minute drive for the tying field goal.

HARRY KING IS SPORTS COLUMNIST FOR STEPHENS MEDIA’S ARKANSAS NEWS BUREAU.

Sports, Pages 7 on 11/30/2009

(Advertisement)



« Previous Story

Mallett cools off, heats up

Ryan Mallett rushed his throws, wasn’t setting his feet and was caught up in the hoopla in the first half Saturday at Tiger Stadium. Read »

Next Story »

RAZORBACKS’ LOSS: Defense Collapses Late

Arkansas tailback Dennis Johnson is tackled by LSU cornerback Patrick Peterson at the end of a big gain on the opening drive of the Razorbacks’ game Saturday in Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, La.

Arkansas defensive end Jake Bequette wasn’t making any excuses Saturday night. Read »

Comments

To report abuse or misuse of this area please hit the "Suggest Removal" link in the comment to alert our online managers. Please read our comment policy.

Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.

Registration is required to make comments. Click here to LOGIN.
You can register for FREE to post comments and receive alerts.

(Advertisement)