Hogs burned by special teams mistakes in opener

Georgia's Zamir White (3) blocks a punt by Arkansas' George Caratan (40) during the second half of game Saturday, Sept. 26, 2020, in Fayetteville. (AP Photo/Michael Woods)

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas coach Sam Pittman threw his right arm up in the air in frustration after kicker A.J. Reed’s long field goal attempt didn't count near the end of the first half Saturday.

Rather than potentially carrying a 10-2 lead into halftime against No. 4 Georgia, the Razorbacks’ field goal unit was flagged for delay of game and Arkansas was forced to punt. Pittman had to signal for his punt team to take the field.

It was one of a number of special teams miscues for the Razorbacks in their 37-10 season-opening loss. The all-important third phase was said in the preseason to be improved under the direction of coordinator Scott Fountain.

But the Razorbacks have plenty to work on in that regard.

“Our guys were saying they were standing over the ball, but the bottom line is … there was no hesitation whether we were going to kick a field goal or not,” Pittman said. “Once we got the yardage to get it into (field goal range), I wanted to kick a field goal. We got it off right as it went to zero.

“I had no thought that we weren’t going to get it off. Then once it got to one (second), I felt like we were going to snap the ball, but obviously we didn’t until it went to zero.”

Entering Saturday’s game, Pittman felt as if his team would be able to hold its own on special teams and possibly win that battle. Fountain had a solid game plan coming in, but execution has to be better, Pittman said.

“We didn’t play well,” Pittman said. “They had so many (yards after catch) on kickoff, on punt. They blocked a punt, (had) so many big plays and you would think we would get the field flipped. They would get it back out to the 45 or 50 on us, and again, we played in a hole the entire first half.

“I elected to take the wind to start the third quarter and it seemed to work out early because we had a good drive going down there. I was concerned about kicking off and not getting the ball in the end zone and then we kicked off and the ball was 3 feet off the air and the guy returned it 45-50 yards.

“We’ve got to do a better job, all of us, myself included.”

Pittman made his own mistake on special teams, calling a timeout just before Georgia kicker Jack Podlesny banged a 38-yard field goal attempt off the right upright at the end of the first half. The timeout nullified the attempt and Podlesny was good on his next try to cut the Arkansas lead to 7-5 at halftime.

The sequence that swung all momentum in Georgia’s favor in a decisive 22-point third quarter was the Bulldogs’ block of George Caratan’s punt. Backed up against the Bulldogs’ end zone, Caratan was rushed by Georgia defenders and his tipped kick traveled only nine yards to the 24-yard line.

Georgia running back Zamir White was credited with the block, and four plays later, Georgia covered the 24 yards needed and scored on backup quarterback Stetson Bennett’s 7-yard touchdown pass to John FitzPatrick.

“The guy just ran right in the middle of our wedge and blocked the punt, from what I saw,” Pittman said. “Now, I may be wrong, but I think they had two guys running right in the A-gaps of the wedge and went through there and blocked a punt. I heard talk on the sideline that possibly a guy came off the edge as well.

“But they really dented the integrity of the shield and that’s where the punt block came from.”

As Pittman mentioned, the Bulldogs also burned Arkansas on kickoff and punt return. Kenny McIntosh racked up 91 yards on his two kickoff returns, which included a 48-yard return in the second quarter following a safety.

His 43-yard return in the third quarter sparked Georgia’s first second-half touchdown that put it ahead for good. The Bulldogs averaged 19 yards on their three punt returns.

Linebacker Grant Morgan, who finished with a career-high 13 tackles, said Arkansas’ coverage units take their performance in the loss personally and will work to correct the mistakes ahead of next week’s game against Mississippi State, which won at LSU on Saturday.

“Special teams is something we’re going to have to definitely go to work and figure out the exact little things, because special teams, one big return can be just one guy barely getting out of his spot,” Morgan said. “We’ll just have to go back, watch film. They definitely got a lot more yards than what we wanted to give them on special teams, but I can tell you this, no one works harder than Coach Fountain.

“He’s going to come back and get that right. And all of us who are on special teams, we take it as a challenge that we will come back and get that right, too.”

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story stated Arkansas' A.J. Reed made a field goal near the end of the first half. The kick appeared good from inside the stadium, but TV replays appeared to show Reed's kick was wide left. The officials on the field never signaled because of a pre-snap penalty.