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Take Lashlee’s name out of mix for Razorbacks coaching job

DALLAS — When Rhett Lashlee agreed to a two-year extension with the SMU Mustangs on Saturday, it represented more than a commitment to Dallas.

For the Arkansas native, it may have signaled a clear decision to keep building in Texas rather than chase his alma mater’s job in Fayetteville.

Hours later, Lashlee watched his Mustangs take down No. 10 Miami 26-20 in overtime, a win that put SMU in control of the Atlantic Coast Conference football race.

Lashlee’s new contract extends his deal through 2032, according to multiple reports, and positions him among the better-paid coaches in the sport.

The agreement came just as speculation swirled that he might be targeted for the Arkansas job, one of several major vacancies across the country. Schools such as LSU, Florida, and Penn State are also in the market for new head coaches.

“SMU is a special place to our family,” Lashlee said in the school’s announcement. “We are so excited for the opportunity to continue building our program on the national stage.”

Despite growing up in Springdale, Ark., and playing quarterback for the Razorbacks in the early 2000s, Lashlee may never have been particularly close to taking the Arkansas position.

The Razorbacks’ job, though notable in tradition, does not currently match the resources or stability that Lashlee has built in Dallas.

Industry reports have ranked Arkansas’s athletic operating budget and football resources near the bottom of the Southeastern Conference, a key factor that may have made the SMU project more appealing.

Lashlee’s program stability, financial support, and recent on-field success all point toward a coach who sees a brighter long-term path where he is.

In just his fourth season leading the Mustangs, Lashlee has guided SMU to a 34-15 record and back-to-back major bowl appearances.

SMU’s playoff berth in 2024 marked its return to the national conversation, and the Mustangs now find themselves contending for an ACC title only a year later.

Saturday’s win over Miami showed exactly how far that have risen. The Mustangs started slow, struggling to find space on the ground and finishing regulation with only 23 rushing yards.

Quarterback Kevin Jennings, limited by an ankle injury, found key completions late to keep SMU alive. A roughness penalty on Miami extended SMU’s final drive, setting up Sam Keltner’s 38-yard field goal that tied the game with 25 seconds remaining.

In overtime, safety Ahmaad Moses intercepted Miami quarterback Carson Beck near the goal line. Running back T.J. Harden then carried four straight times, punching in the game-winning touchdown from a yard out to cap the 26-20 victory.

Lashlee praised his team’s poise after the game, saying they showed “playoff-caliber toughness” against one of the nation’s best defenses.

The win vaulted SMU into first place in the ACC standings and gave Lashlee a signature moment on the same day his extension became official.

It also marked the Mustangs’ first win over a top-10 opponent in their short ACC tenure. For Lashlee, the timing could hardly have been better.

He got an emphatic victory to back up his new deal and solidify his standing nationally.

For Arkansas, meanwhile, Lashlee’s decision to remain at SMU may close a potential door before it ever really opened.

Though his Razorback connections made him a natural name in coaching rumors, sources around both programs have indicated that the interest may have been more media speculation than mutual pursuit.

Arkansas continues its search following the dismissal of Sam Pittman in late September, and the Razorbacks are expected to consider multiple Power Four coordinators and head coaches rather than chase alumni ties.

Lashlee, for his part, has continued to deflect speculation, focusing instead on SMU’s future.

He has said repeatedly that he views the Mustangs as a program capable of competing for championships every season, a belief backed by their 2023 conference title and 2024 playoff appearance.

His success in recruiting and in player development has helped transform SMU from a regional program into a national presence in a matter of years.

That transformation is now bearing fruit in real time. SMU’s win over Miami not only shook up the ACC race but also reinforced the idea that the Mustangs are here to stay among college football’s upper tier.

For Lashlee, that success — combined with the long-term contract extension — gives him security and leverage rarely seen for a coach in his early 40s.

Whether Arkansas eventually comes calling again remains to be seen, but Lashlee’s decision this week made one thing clear: his heart, and his ambitions, appear firmly planted in Dallas.

Key takeaways

  • Rhett Lashlee signed a two-year extension with SMU despite Arkansas rumors.
  • SMU defeated No. 10 Miami 26-20 in overtime to take control of the ACC.
  • The Arkansas native may not have seriously pursued a return to his alma mater.