Going into Saturday's Southeastern Conference opener against Auburn, it felt like the tone of Arkansas' final eight games would be determined on the Plains.
It certainly wasn't a pretty affair, but Arkansas came out on top with a 24-14 victory that moved the Razorbacks' record to 3-1.
Sam Pittman's squad led 7-0 at halftime, but it was a first half marred by poor quarterback play by Taylen Green. For the second consecutive week, Green finished the game with a completion percentage under 50%. Only a strong effort by running back Ja'Quinden Jackson gave Arkansas the slim lead at the break.
After Auburn quarterback Hank Brown threw three interceptions in the first half, he was benched for Payton Thorne, who led the Tigers on a game-tying drive midway through the third quarter. A touchdown toss from Thorne to KeAndre Lambert-Smith tied the game at 7-7 and all of a sudden, all the momentum in the world was on Auburn's side.
With a raucous Jordan-Hare Stadium crowd against the Hogs, Green — who had himself been pulled for a series in favor of Malachi Singleton — threw up a prayer on third-and-19 to receiver Isaiah Sategna, who came down with the football in the end zone. Just as quickly as it had swung in Auburn's favor, the momentum pendulum was suddenly on the visitors' sideline.
HE WENT UP AND GOT IT
— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) September 21, 2024
This grab by Isaiah Sategna in Arkansas-Auburn pic.twitter.com/9oWRyZTVPK
TJ Metcalf's second interception of the game led to an Arkansas field goal before Auburn's own miraculous touchdown on fourth down — this one a slant route to Lambert-Smith that went the distance — early in the fourth quarter made it a 17-14 game.
Pittman's teams — and plenty of past Arkansas teams — had folded in situations such as this, but Green led a methodical, 12-play drive that ended in another Jackson score that gave the Hogs a 24-14 lead with just over three and a half minutes remaining in regulation. Two defensive stops later, it was Pittman and the Razorbacks walking away with an SEC road victory.
For an Arkansas team that suffered a heartbreaking double-overtime loss to Oklahoma State two weeks prior, showing the ability to close out a road game in the SEC was imperative.
Arkansas has now proven that they can rise to the occasion when the chips are down and in the most competitive conference in college football, a killer instinct is an invaluable asset.
In a do-or-die season for Sam Pittman in Fayetteville, Saturday's win was exactly the type of game that can turn a season around.
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