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Five keys for Hogs to challenge Tennessee’s tempo in Knoxville

Arkansas needs toughness, discipline, and tempo control in Knoxville to give Bobby Petrino’s return to SEC play real credibility.

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Arkansas Razorbacks wide receiver O'Mega Blake during game with the Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Arkansas Razorbacks wide receiver O'Mega Blake during game with the Notre Dame Fighting Irish at Razorback Stadium in Fayetteville, Ark. | Nilsen Roman-allHOGS Images

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — You can’t fake rhythm in Knoxville.

When Tennessee gets rolling, the Vols’ tempo feels like a runaway train. The question for Arkansas on Saturday is whether Bobby Petrino’s Razorbacks can find a way to throw the brakes on it.

Arkansas hasn’t been to Neyland Stadium since 2015, but the challenge feels familiar.

The Hogs have beaten Tennessee in their last four meetings, including the last two trips to Knoxville, but this time it’s different with a midseason reboot under an interim head coach, an SEC road test against one of the league’s most explosive teams, and a fan base desperate to see progress.

Petrino’s plan doesn’t need to be fancy.

It needs to be physical, disciplined, and smart. These are five keys that could make the difference between another long Saturday and a statement that Arkansas football still has some fight left.

Win the line of scrimmage

Everything for Arkansas starts up front.

Tennessee’s offense, led by quarterback Joey Aguilar, thrives on tempo and rhythm, and the only way to disrupt that rhythm is to win early downs.

If Arkansas can force second-and-longs and slow Tennessee’s hurry-up, it can at least make the Vols think instead of sprint.

On offense, the Razorbacks’ run game has to be more than token balance.

The offensive line has been inconsistent all season, and it’s time for it to establish some identity.

The Razorbacks rank near the bottom of the SEC in rushing yards per carry, and if that trend continues, they’ll be chasing this game before halftime.

This is where Petrino’s return to physical football has to show up — not just schemes, but toughness.

Force turnovers, limit mistakes

When two flawed defenses meet, the cleaner team usually wins.

Arkansas has struggled to protect the ball, while Tennessee has made a habit of turning takeaways into points.

If the Hogs can flip that script with just one interception or forced fumble in the right moment, they can steal a possession or momentum.

The truth is, Arkansas doesn’t have the offensive firepower to trade touchdowns all afternoon.

Every drive matters. Every decision from quarterback Taylen Green will carry weight. This game may hinge less on explosive plays and more on who blinks first.

Control tempo, shorten the game

Tennessee wants chaos. Arkansas needs control.

If Petrino’s offense can slow the game down — huddles, long drives, clock-eating possessions — it limits the Vols’ rhythm and keeps Aguilar watching from the sideline. The Hogs actually have the tools to do it: Green can run the ball, the tight end usage has improved, and Petrino’s play-calling thrives when he mixes personnel.

A 12-play drive might not make highlights, but it wins games like this. Controlling tempo is the closest thing to playing defense against Tennessee’s offense.

Prevent explosive plays

This Tennessee offense doesn’t mind punting. It minds patience.

The Volunteers live on chunk plays — deep posts, quick screens, runs that pop through the second level.

Arkansas has to make them work for yards, not give up quick-strike touchdowns. One missed tackle or blown coverage can swing a quarter.

Defensive coordinator Chris Wilson’s front has been hit or miss, but if the Razorbacks can at least contain the edge and tackle cleanly in space, they’ll have a chance.

“We’ve worked on pursuit and tackling all week,” Petrino said earlier this week. “We know what kind of speed they have.”

If the Hogs can force Tennessee to run 10- or 12-play drives, that’s a win, even if it ends in points. It keeps the score manageable and the defense rested.

Get the next men up ready

Depth isn’t a luxury anymore; it’s a necessity.

Arkansas’ injury report reads like an entire receiver room. Ismael Cisse, Monte Harrison and Jalen Brown are out for the season, and tight ends Andreas Paaske and Jeremiah Beck are also sidelined.

That leaves Petrino turning to CJ Brown, Raylen Sharpe and freshman Courtney Crutchfield for production.

“We’re going to need other guys to step up,” Petrino said this week. “CJ’s done a nice job moving between spots. Raylen gives us speed inside. We’ll see how that rotation looks early.”

It’s a fair gamble. Brown’s physicality could help in the run game, and Sharpe’s quickness fits well in Petrino’s crossing concepts. But it also means a lot of youth in a hostile environment.

What it all means

Vegas doesn’t love Arkansas’ chances, and it’s not hard to see why. Tennessee’s tempo, talent and depth are problems even for good teams. But there’s something intriguing about this Razorback reset — Petrino’s first real test, a locker room eager for proof that his process works, and a program that still believes it can scrap its way back to relevance.

If Arkansas can win in the trenches, protect the ball, and force Tennessee to grind for points, it can at least make this one interesting.

That’s not moral victory talk. It’s practical football — the kind Arkansas used to play under Petrino the first time around. Maybe Saturday, it can find that again.

Three key takeaways

  • Arkansas must control tempo and possession to limit Tennessee’s offensive rhythm.
  • Winning early downs and avoiding turnovers could be the difference in a one-score game.
  • Depth at receiver and defensive discipline will define how competitive Arkansas can be late.

Sports columnist, writer, former radio host and television host who has been expressing an opinion on sports in the media for over four decades. He has been at numerous media stops in Arkansas, Texas and Mississippi.

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