Razorbacks pull off upset of No. 4 Tennessee, 19-14
Arkansas holds Vols scoreless in 1st half, rally for big SEC win
From the University of Arkansas
arkansasrazorbacks.com
FAYETTEVILLE — It wasn’t even the biggest upset in the SEC last Saturday but for Hog fans, it was one of the biggest wins in recent memory.
Arkansas stunned No. 4 Tennessee 19-14 Saturday night in Razorback Stadium with two unlikely heroes quarterback Malachi Singleton and running back Braylen Russell in front of 75,573 fans.
Quarterback Taylen Green left the game injured with 10:40 remaining in the game. That brought Singleton into the game with the Hogs trailing 14-13. The defense got a stop with 3:20 remaining in the contest. Singleton and the Hogs took over at their own 41.
On first down, Singleton hit wide receiver Isaiah Sategna for a 13-yard gain and first down at the Vols 46. Enter Russell at this point. Russell, the 6-foot-1, 253-pound freshman from Benton, rushed for 24 yards to the Tennessee 22.
The next play was Russell gaining 11 yards to the Vols 11. On first and 10 at the 11, Singleton faked a handoff to Russell and raced around right end for what proved to be the winning touchdown with 1:17 remaining. The try for two failed. Tennessee wasn't finished though. They took over 75 yards away. On a thirdand- 2 play at its own 37 Nico Iamaleava passed 42 yards to Dont'e Thornton for a first down at the Hogs 25 with 35 seconds left. But the Hogs held on and the fans celebrated storming the field and tearing down both goal posts.
Russell finished the game with 62 yards on eight carries. Singleton was 2 of 3 passing for 31 yards and the 11-yard touchdown run.
The Razorbacks scored first on a 20-yard field goal by Kyle Ramsey for a 3-0 lead with 5:48 remaining in the opening quarter. That was the first time all season the Vols trailed in a game. The Hogs drive was 16 plays, 74 yards and used 9:13 on the clock.
The first half ended with the field goal by Ramsey being the lone score. Tennessee got the ball to start the second half. They put together a 7play, 75-yard drive that ended with Dylan Sampson racing in from 4-yards out and a 7-3 lead with 12:33 remaining in the third quarter.
After a three-and-out series for the Hogs Tennessee took over at its own 40. They drove 60 yards in seven plays with Sampson powering it in from the 4-yard line. That allowed the Vols to take a 14-3 lead and many felt here they go again. But the Hogs had other plans.
Arkansas drove 75 yards in eight plays with running back Ja'Quinden Jackson covering the final three yards. Matthew Shipley replaced Ramsey at kicker after Ramsey missed a 40-yard field goal. Shipley's PAT moved the score to 14-10 with 4:33 left in the third quarter. Jackson finished the game with 20 carries for 57 yards and the one touchdown.
After the Arkansas defense forced another Tennessee punt the Hogs were looking to regain the lead. The Hogs took over at their own 20. Green found Tyrone Broden for a 22-yard pass to the Vols 45 from Arkansas' own 33. On the next play, Green hit wide receiver Andrew Armstrong for a 31-yard gain to the Vols 24. Green was hurt on the play. Armstrong had 132 yards rushing on nine receptions.
Enter Singleton who took over at quarterback. The Hogs got to the Vols 2-yard line, but had to settle for a 22-yard Shipley field goal. That moved the Hogs within 14-13 with 12:08 remaining in the game.
Arkansas had 337 yards of total offense to 336 for Tennessee. The Hogs had 297 through the air. Tennessee had 156 yards passing and 176 rushing. Iamaleava was 16 of 28 passing for 156 yards.
Sampson rushed 22 times for 140 yards and two touchdowns. Pittman credited Travis Williams, the defensive coordinator, and staff for the job on Iamaleava.
'The game plan came in Sunday night,' Pittman said. 'TWill had talked about what he thought he wanted to do. We started practicing it on Monday. We weren’t going to let them get behind us if we could help it, and we were really worried about stopping the run, but we always had the edge covered, because we were bringing corners off a read run and we were bringing the field linebacker off the read run, and we mixed it up so we had a little bit of an odd front and then a little bit of a four-man and mixed it up. We brought total zero blitz, heat. I just through Travis did a wonderful job of calling the defensive game, and more.”