Confused? Check out the glossary here.

1. Collecting coaches

We hear a lot about how amazing the SEC is. The chatter goes above and beyond a lot, which both serves as a detriment to the argument (bad) and as a prompt for coaches of non-SEC programs to shoot their mouth off at times (good). But whether you come down on the "Pssh, the SEC isn't that great" side of the argument or the "I, for one, welcome our SEC overlords" side, you have to admit one thing: It was one hell of a statement for the conference to bring in the reigning Big Ten (Bret Bielema), Big East* (Butch Jones), and Sun Belt (Gus Malzahn) champion coaches in a single offseason. That, to me, was a more impressive statement than the "seven straight national titles" thing.

* Yes, Jones' Cincinnati squad was the co-champion of the Big East with Louisville (and lost the tie-breaker), and yes, that ever so slightly dings the argument. And if you wanted to further ding it, you could point out that Wisconsin only got to win the Big Ten in 2012 because Ohio State was banned from the postseason. But still. We're talking about aesthetics here, not technical details. The technical details start below.

That Bret Bielema, who brought Wisconsin to three consecutive Rose Bowls from 2010-12, not only jumped ship for an SEC program, but one that has never actually won the SEC, was the biggest statement of all. Bielema was not only at the helm of a pretty consistently strong Wisconsin program, but he was one of the more pro-B1G coaches on the conference roster. A former Iowa nose tackle, under Hayden Fry, Bielema fired away at Urban Meyer's SEC-esque recruiting tendencies in 2012. And now he's SEC, too.

2. Worse without Petrino … to an extent

I was both right and wrong about Arkansas in 2012. I struggled greatly with the top-10 hype; I saw too many close wins, too many warning signs, and too much defensive mediocrity in 2011 to believe that things would not only all come together in 2012, but all come together without head coach Bobby Petrino. Still, I didn't expect such uniform regression either. Arkansas sank from 11th to 43rd in Off. F/+, from ninth to 97th in Special Teams F/+, and, despite staff changes and experience, from 45th to 72nd in Def. F/+. Throw in a change of close-game fortunes -- Arkansas was 3-0 in one-possession games in 2011, 1-3 in 2012 -- and you've got a recipe for a seven-game turnaround in wins. The Hogs fell from 11-2 to 4-8, and the one-year John L. Smith experiment ended quietly.

Arkansas' regression was both uniform and stark, and that leads me to believe that something similar would have happened even if Bobby Petrino hadn't fallen from both a motorcycle and whatever grace he had found in Fayetteville. Petrino just hadn't recruited well enough on the defensive side of the ball to create a truly elite team, and as we saw, Arkansas was just one key injury away from falling apart offensively.

Regardless, the cupboard isn't exactly bare for Bielema heading into 2013.

2012 Schedule & Results

Record: 4-8 | Adj. Record: 9-3 | Final F/+ Rk: 60 Date Opponent Score W-L Adj. Score Adj. W-L 1-Sep Jacksonville State 49-24 W 37.9 - 32.7 W 8-Sep UL-Monroe 31-34 L 26.8 - 23.8 W 15-Sep Alabama 0-52 L 13.2 - 29.3 L 22-Sep Rutgers 26-35 L 55.1 - 43.8 W 29-Sep vs. Texas A&M 10-58 L 27.0 - 41.5 L 6-Oct at Auburn 24-7 W 28.8 - 23.3 W 13-Oct Kentucky 49-7 W 49.5 - 15.6 W 27-Oct Ole Miss 27-30 L 31.7 - 25.8 W 3-Nov Tulsa 19-15 W 41.0 - 24.5 W 10-Nov at South Carolina 20-38 L 37.8 - 28.3 W 17-Nov at Mississippi State 14-45 L 27.3 - 36.6 L 23-Nov LSU 13-20 L 42.9 - 17.8 W

Category Offense Rk Defense Rk Points Per Game 23.5 91 30.4 82 Adj. Points Per Game 34.9 20 28.6 67

3. Why did Tyler Wilson fall in the draft?

It was an odd experience, watching the 2013 NFL Draft, with just one quarterback taken in the first 38 picks, and realizing midway through the fourth round that Tyler Wilson had not yet been selected. Projected as a potential first-rounder a year earlier, Wilson's draft stock was muddied, evidently, by the disappointing product Arkansas put on the field in 2012, even though he really didn't have much to do with that disappointment. After completing 63 percent of his passes and averaging 7.5 yards per pass attempt in 2011, Wilson lost his top two targets, dealt with an early-season injury, and finished 2012 with a 62 percent completion rate and 7.9 yards per pass attempt. Yes, his interception rate went up, from 1.4 percent to 3.2 percent; but he was also facing a tougher slate of defenses, and he was facing a lot more "You're behind, and the defense knows you're going to pass all the time" situations. That, and 1.4 percent was almost unsustainably low.

Wilson really shouldn't have taken much, if any, blame for Arkansas' 2012 struggles. The Hogs' greatest struggles, actually, came with him on the sideline.

Adj. Points Per Game (with Tyler Wilson) : 37.9

Adj. Points Per Game (with Brandon Allen) : 20.0

Wilson was hurt late in the first half against UL-Monroe and missed the Alabama game; so he basically missed the six most atrocious offensive quarters of the season. The Oakland Raiders may have gotten a complete steal landing him in the fourth round of the draft.

Offense

Category Yards/

Game Rk S&P+ Rk Success

Rt. Rk PPP+ Rk OVERALL 49 5 14 5 RUSHING 107 20 10 39 PASSING 21 3 21 3 Standard Downs 3 7 2 Passing Downs 17 65 10 Redzone 68 91 48

Q1 Rk 2 1st Down Rk 10 Q2 Rk 22 2nd Down Rk 7 Q3 Rk 43 3rd Down Rk 45 Q4 Rk 39

4. Finishing drives matters

There are no more Petrinos on staff, and Wilson is gone. So let's talk about this year's Arkansas team. With no WIlson, Knile Davis, or Cobi Hamilton, the Hogs are lacking in proven stars, especially at the quarterback position, where Brandon Allen was in no way ready to hint at four-star potential last fall. Bielema will encounter quite a few issues with experience and offensive depth, but if he can figure out how to finish drives, he will have at least solved 2012's biggest issue.

Somehow, despite a Top 20 line, a wealth of big running backs, a go-to receiver, and decent play at tight end, Arkansas was just terrible at finishing drives last fall. The Razorbacks averaged just 3.69 points per trip inside the opponent's 40-yard line (98th in the country), 4.79 points per trip inside the 20 (112th), 5.49 points per trip inside the 10 (117th), and 6.27 points per trip inside the 5 (102nd). For Wisconsin, meanwhile, those numbers were 4.56 inside the 40 (40th), 5.85 inside the 20 (25th), 6.61 inside the 10 (fifth), and 6.68 inside the 5 (35th). If he takes Wisconsin's averages to Fayetteville, Arkansas won't need the same number of opportunities to average the same number of points despite the losses.

Quarterback

Note: players in bold below are 2013 returnees. Players in italics are questionable with injury/suspension.

Player Ht, Wt 2013

Year Rivals Comp Att Yards Comp

Rate TD INT Sacks Sack Rate Yards/

Att. Tyler Wilson 249 401 3,387 62.1% 21 13 15 3.6% 7.9 Brandon Allen 6'3, 214 So. **** (5.8) 21 49 186 42.9% 1 3 4 7.5% 2.8 Brandon Mitchell





2 8 45 25.0% 1 0 1 11.1% 4.9 Austin Allen 6'2, 217 Fr. *** (5.7)















Running Back

Player Pos. Ht, Wt 2013

Year Rivals Rushes Yards Yards/

Carry Hlt Yds/

Carry TD Adj.

POE Dennis Johnson RB 137 757 5.5 4.0 8 +9.2 Knile Davis RB 112 377 3.4 2.9 2 -10.2 Jonathan Williams RB 6'0, 220 So. **** (5.8) 45 231 5.1 5.0 0 +2.5 Tyler Wilson QB 26 119 4.6 1.7 0 +0.4 Kody Walker (2011) RB 6'2, 244 So. *** (5.7) 20 68 3.4 N/A 5 N/A Ronnie Wingo Jr. RB 12 59 4.9 2.8 1 -0.6 Brandon Mitchell QB 5 19 3.8 7.0 0 +0.3 Nate Holmes RB 6'1, 176 So. *** (5.6)









Alex Collins RB 5'11, 207 Fr. **** (5.9)













5. Jonathan Williams will rush for 1,000 yards this year

The Arkansas offensive line really did struggle in short-yardage and power situations last year, but it was a strong line down-to-down. And in returning three-year starting center Travis Swanson, tackle David Hurd, and three other players with starting experience, it should be good enough to make sophomore Jonathan Williams look, at times, like a reasonable Montee Ball facsimile. Bielema and Wisconsin remained tactically interesting through the years despite turnover in the offensive coordinator chair, and to be sure, this offense will feature more than just "running back off right tackle" and "running back off left tackle." Still, Ball did average 23.7 carries per game in 2011-12, and Williams and his fellow backs will get plenty of opportunities to prove themselves. It would shock me if a healthy No. 1 Arkansas back didn't gain 1,000 yards in 2013.

Receiving Corps

Player Pos. Ht, Wt 2013

Year Rivals Targets Catches Yards Catch Rate Yds/

Target Target

Rate %SD Real Yds/

Target RYPR Cobi Hamilton WR 141 88 1321 62.4% 9.4 32.8% 66.7% 9.2 246.2 Mekale McKay WR 6'6, 195 So. *** (5.5) 39 21 317 53.8% 8.1 9.1% 66.7% 7.7 59.1 Brandon Mitchell WR 38 17 272 44.7% 7.2 8.8% 50.0% 6.9 50.7 Chris Gragg TE 33 22 289 66.7% 8.8 7.7% 75.8% 8.3 53.9 Javontee Herndon WR 6'1, 194 Sr. ** (5.2) 32 21 304 65.6% 9.5 7.4% 68.8% 10.2 56.7 Dennis Johnson RB 32 25 160 78.1% 5.0 7.4% 59.4% 5.0 29.8 Austin Tate TE 6'6, 266 Sr. *** (5.6) 25 14 111 56.0% 4.4 5.8% 60.0% 4.4 20.7 Julian Horton WR 6'1, 202 Sr. *** (5.6) 23 14 193 60.9% 8.4 5.3% 43.5% 8.2 36.0 Knile Davis RB 14 11 157 78.6% 11.2 3.3% 28.6% 11.7 29.3 Jonathan Williams RB 6'0, 220 So. **** (5.8) 13 8 208 61.5% 16.0 3.0% 69.2% 14.2 38.8 Demetrius Wilson WR 6'3, 181 Sr. *** (5.6) 13 9 117 69.2% 9.0 3.0% 53.8% 8.9 21.8 Ronnie Wingo Jr. RB 8 7 50 87.5% 6.3 1.9% 87.5% 5.6 9.3 Morgan Linton FB 5'11, 263 Jr. NR 5 4 37 80.0% 7.4 1.2% 40.0% 8.1 6.9 Keon Hatcher WR 6'2, 208 So. *** (5.7) 5 3 21 60.0% 4.2 1.2% 80.0% 4.6 3.9 D'Arthur Cowan WR 6'3, 187 So. *** (5.7) 5 3 14 60.0% 2.8 1.2% 40.0% 4.1 2.6 Hunter Henry TE 6'6, 235 Fr. **** (5.9)



















6. Who catches passes?

In losing Jarius Wright, Joe Adams, and Greg Childs, Arkansas faced having to replace 47 percent of its targets following 2011. And in losing Cobi Hamilton, Brandon Mitchell, Chris Gragg, and Dennis Johnson, Arkansas now faces having to replace 57 percent. Two years of extreme turnover can severely deplete a receiving corps, and while Petrino certainly recruited plenty of interesting receivers during his tenure, there are almost no proven weapons here.

Mekale McKay had an interesting freshman season as an all-or-nothing guy (15.1 yards per catch with barely a 50 percent catch rate in 3.3 targets per game), and players like Javontee Herndon and Julian Horton have certainly waited for their turn atop the depth chart. But there is very little proven talent here, and the offense will need the threat of the play-action to keep defenses on their toes. (Plus, new coordinator Jim Chaney is far from averse to the forward pass; his Tennessee passing game last year was top-notch.) Maybe McKay thrives in that role, but if he doesn't, then who steps up?

Offensive Line

Category Adj.

Line Yds Std.

Downs

LY/carry Pass.

Downs

LY/carry Opp.

Rate Power

Success

Rate Stuff

Rate Adj.

Sack Rate Std.

Downs

Sack Rt. Pass.

Downs

Sack Rt. Team 114.2 2.94 2.78 42.4% 57.1% 18.6% 170.0 3.0% 5.2% Rank 15 70 99 27 113 56 20 32 42

Player Pos. Ht, Wt 2013

Year Rivals Career Starts/Honors/Notes Travis Swanson C 6'5, 314 Sr. *** (5.6) 38 career starts Alvin Bailey OG 38 career starts Jason Peacock OT 16 career starts David Hurd LT 6'6, 309 Sr. NR 12 career starts Tyler Deacon OG 11 career starts Brey Cook RG 6'7, 318 Jr. **** (5.8) 5 career starts Mitch Smothers LG 6'4, 313 So. *** (5.7) 4 career starts Luke Charpentier C 6'4, 312 Jr. *** (5.7) 1 career start Chris Stringer RT 6'7, 318 Jr. *** (5.5) Grady Ollison RT 6'5, 274 So. *** (5.7) Austin Beck LT 6'7, 296 So. *** (5.6) Cordale Boyd RG 6'3, 311 RSFr. *** (5.6) Jonathan McClure LG 6'4, 321 Jr. *** (5.5) Reeve Koehler OL 6'3, 321 Fr. **** (5.9) Denver Kirkland OL 6'5, 333 Fr. **** (5.8) Dan Skipper OL 6'10, 295 Fr. *** (5.7)

Defense

Category Yards/

Game Rk S&P+ Rk Success

Rt. Rk PPP+ Rk OVERALL 74 66 72 61 RUSHING 19 16 25 9 PASSING 116 101 113 92 Standard Downs 73 84 72 Passing Downs 55 61 51 Redzone 29 26 37

Q1 Rk 53 1st Down Rk 78 Q2 Rk 72 2nd Down Rk 55 Q3 Rk 85 3rd Down Rk 50 Q4 Rk 46

7. An aerial abomination

Arkansas plays in the SEC West, which, as you know, features run-first teams like Alabama, LSU, and Auburn. Yes, the Hogs also faced pass-happy teams like Texas A&M and the Mississippi schools, but it is still a bit jarring to see that opponents passed quite a bit more frequently than the national average against Arkansas. Then again, opponents aren't stupid: They knew they could pass on Arkansas, so they did.

The Hogs didn't have much of a pass rush beyond a stellar pair of defensive ends, and the secondary was both young and incredibly passive. No DB defensed more than five passes, and despite a Top 50 pass rush, Arkansas ranked an awful 101st in Passing S&P+. Wisconsin's secondary in 2012 was aggressive and successful under coordinator Chris Ash (who came to Fayetteville with Bielema), and while it is probably too much to ask for an immediate turnaround, any sort of improvement in the secondary would be welcomed.

Defensive Line

Category Adj.

Line Yds Std.

Downs

LY/carry Pass.

Downs

LY/carry Opp.

Rate Power

Success

Rate Stuff

Rate Adj.

Sack Rate Std.

Downs

Sack Rt. Pass.

Downs

Sack Rt. Team 114.4 2.59 2.86 33.8% 62.9% 22.7% 108.5 5.3% 8.0% Rank 16 17 29 15 34 20 47 41 40

Name Pos Ht, Wt 2013

Year Rivals GP Tackles % of Team TFL Sacks Int PBU FF FR Chris Smith DE 6'3, 266 Sr. *** (5.7) 12 40.0 6.1% 13 9.5 0 4 1 0 Trey Flowers DE 6'4, 256 Jr. *** (5.5) 12 36.0 5.5% 13 6 0 3 0 0 Byran Jones DT 6'2, 310 Sr. **** (5.8) 12 33.0 5.0% 5 1.5 0 0 0 1 Alfred Davis DT 12 27.5 4.2% 2.5 0 0 1 1 0 Jared Green DT 12 21.0 3.2% 7.5 3.5 0 0 0 1 Robert Thomas DT 6'3, 318 Sr. *** (5.6) 12 12.0 1.8% 5 2.5 0 0 0 0 DeQuinta Jones DT 10 11.5 1.8% 1.5 0 0 5 0 0 Colton Miles-Nash DE 11 9.0 1.4% 0.5 0 0 0 0 1 Austin Flynn DE 12 8.0 1.2% 1.5 0 0 0 0 0 Deatrich Wise, Jr. DE 6'6, 265 RSFr. *** (5.7) 2 2.0 0.3% 1 1 0 0 0 0 Demarcus Hodge DT 6'1, 340 So. *** (5.7) 3 1.5 0.2% 0.5 0 0 0 0 0 Darius Philon DT 6'3, 284 RSFr. *** (5.7)



JaMichael Winston DE 6'5, 254 RSFr. *** (5.6)















8. An underrated front four

The struggles in pass defense and the overall defensive regression distracted us from the fact that Arkansas really did have a damn strong run defense in 2012, one that could potentially hold up this fall despite massive turnover at linebacker. The defensive end duo of Chris Smith and Trey Flowers was strong in rushing the passer but also held up against the run, and two key members of a five-man tackle rotation (Byran Jones and Robert Thomas) return. The depth on the line is not nearly as strong as it was last fall, and that could be an issue with any injuries whatsoever. But the starting front four, as currently constituted, is one of the better lines in the SEC. And that's saying a lot.

Linebackers

Name Pos Ht, Wt 2013

Year Rivals GP Tackles % of Team TFL Sacks Int PBU FF FR Ross Rasner OLB 12 70.5 10.7% 8 2.5 3 7 2 0 Alonzo Highsmith LB 6 39.5 6.0% 4 2 0 1 0 1 Terrell Williams LB 10 38.5 5.9% 2.5 1 0 2 0 0 A.J. Turner OLB 6'2, 208 So. *** (5.7) 12 35.5 5.4% 3.5 1 0 0 0 0 Kaelon Kelleybrew OLB 12 26.0 4.0% 2 0 0 7 0 0 Otha Peters WLB 6'2, 232 So. **** (5.8) 10 23.0 3.5% 0.5 0.5 0 0 0 0 Tenarius Wright LB 5 17.0 2.6% 0 0 0 1 0 0 Jarrett Lake WLB 6'3, 220 Sr. *** (5.5) 9 8.0 1.2% 0.5 0 0 0 0 0 Matt Marshall LB 11 1.0 0.2% 0 0 0 0 0 0 Braylon Mitchell SLB 6'3, 229 Jr. *** (5.6) 7 0.5 0.1% 0 0 0 0 0 0 Robert Atiga MLB 6'3, 237 Sr. *** (5.6)





Austin Jones SLB 6'2, 230 Sr. NR



Daunte Carr MLB 6'3, 229 Jr. *** (5.6)

Myke Tavarres LB 6'2, 220 Jr. *** (5.6)



Martrell Spaight LB 6'1, 220 Jr. *** (5.6)

Brooks Ellis LB 6'2, 215 Fr. *** (5.7)









Secondary

Name Pos Ht, Wt 2013

Year Rivals GP Tackles % of Team TFL Sacks Int PBU FF FR Rohan Gaines SS 5'11, 190 So. *** (5.5) 12 60.5 9.2% 0 0 0 4 1 0 Eric Bennett FS 6'0, 191 Sr. *** (5.7) 11 28.5 4.3% 0.5 0 0 3 0 0 Tevin Mitchel CB 6'0, 181 Jr. **** (5.8) 8 24.5 3.7% 0.5 0 1 4 2 0 Will Hines CB 6'1, 191 So. *** (5.7) 12 20.5 3.1% 0 0 1 4 1 1 Alan Turner FS 6'0, 198 Jr. ** (5.4) 12 10.5 1.6% 1 0 1 0 0 0 Davyon McKinney CB 6'3, 195 So. *** (5.6) 11 9.0 1.4% 0 0 0 0 0 0 Jerry Mitchell S 6'1, 219 Sr. *** (5.5) 12 5.0 0.8% 0 0 0 0 0 0 Darius Winston CB 8 4.0 0.6% 0 0 0 1 0 0 Kelvin Fisher, Jr. FS 5'11, 200 So. *** (5.7)



Jared Collins CB 6'0, 169 RSFr. *** (5.6)



Carroll Washington CB 6'0, 182 Jr. *** (5.6)



Tiquention Coleman SS 5'10, 198 Jr. ** (5.4)















9. Does experience matter?

If the answer is yes, that says some positive things about this year's Arkansas secondary, which has a lot more experience than it did nine months ago, when freshmen Rohan Gaines, Will Hines and Davyon McKinney and sophomores Tevin Mitchel and Alan Turner were all forced to play more minutes than they were ready to play. This time around, however, the top seven backs all return, and two junior college transfers enter the fray as well.

Of course, if experience indeed matters, then that says some extremely negative things about this year's Arkansas linebacking corps, which is replacing five of the seven players who logged at least 10.0 tackles in 2012. Sophomores A.J. Turner and Otha Peters are now the wily old veterans, and junior college transfers Martresll Spaight and Myke Tavarres have almost no choice but to be immediately ready for playing time. Without punter Dylan Breeding, one of the best in the country in 2012, Arkansas opponents might be seeing some shorter fields this fall; it is absolutely vital that improvement in the secondary doesn't simply offset regression at linebacker. The entire defense needs to step forward in 2013.

Special Teams

Punter Ht, Wt 2013

Year Punts Avg TB FC I20 FC/I20

Ratio Dylan Breeding 53 45.6 3 11 18 54.7%

Kicker Ht, Wt 2013

Year Kickoffs Avg TB TB% Zach Hocker 6'0, 182 Sr. 58 64.7 39 67.2%

Place-Kicker Ht, Wt 2013

Year PAT FG

(0-39) Pct FG

(40+) Pct Zach Hocker 6'0, 182 Sr. 32-32 9-12 75.0% 2-6 33.3% John Henson 5'11, 165 Jr. 1-1 2-2 100.0% 0-0 N/A

Returner Pos. Ht, Wt 2013

Year Returns Avg. TD Dennis Johnson KR 17 18.2 0 D'Arthur Cowan KR 6'3, 187 So. 10 17.6 0 Nate Holmes PR 6'1, 176 So. 11 6.4 0 Keante Minor PR 9 6.1 0

Category Rk Special Teams F/+ 97 Net Punting 5 Net Kickoffs 5 Touchback Pct 5 Field Goal Pct 84 Kick Returns Avg 115 Punt Returns Avg 97

2013 Schedule & Projection Factors

2013 Schedule Date Opponent Proj. Rk 31-Aug UL-Lafayette 78 7-Sep Samford NR 14-Sep Southern Miss 87 21-Sep at Rutgers 48 28-Sep Texas A&M 13 5-Oct at Florida 4 12-Oct South Carolina 19 19-Oct at Alabama 1 2-Nov Auburn 59 9-Nov at Ole Miss 29 23-Nov Mississippi State 51 30-Nov at LSU 3

Five-Year F/+ Rk 29 Two-Year Recruiting Rk 28 TO Margin/Adj. TO Margin* -19 / -10.6 TO Luck/Game -3.5 Approx. Ret. Starters (Off. / Def.) 11 (4, 7) Yds/Pt Margin** +4.4

10. Survive October

When you are simply looking to return to a bowl -- and in the SEC West, that's all Arkansas can really aspire to in 2013 -- then it probably benefits you to start from the bottom of the schedule, not the top. There are plenty of potential wins on a schedule that features six teams projected to rank 48th or worse this fall and home games versus two teams projected in the teens (Texas A&M and South Carolina, both of which are quite a bit higher than the teens according to humans). The Hogs should certainly threaten for 6-6 or 7-5 this year, but to reach a bowl the biggest goal has to be surviving October with your confidence and health intact.

From September 28 to October 19, Arkansas will play two tough but potentially winnable home games (Texas A&M and South Carolina) and go on two brutal road trips (Florida and Alabama). The Hogs were done a favor with a post-Alabama bye week, and if they're at least 4-4 heading into November, then 6-6 is quite probable. But wow, is that a tough stretch.

Bret Bielema inherits a team that is probably too young at key positions to succeed at any high level, but it is talented enough to return to the postseason after a one-year absence. It will certainly take him a little while to build the type of program that he was maintaining at Wisconsin in recent years, especially in the zero-sum universe of the SEC West; for Arkansas to go up, somebody has to go down, and aside from maybe Mississippi State, who in the West looks like they're ready to go down? Still, Arkansas made a hell of a hire, and it should pay off eventually. Just erase your 2012 expectations from your mind a bit and embrace the rebuilding project.