In the lead-up to Arkansas’ home date with Notre Dame, Sam Pittman offered a nearly by-the-book set of observations and acknowledgments.
While some fans and media might want some bolder declarations, he probably doesn't have much latitude to be more aggressive.
Especially when a lot of them think he's just playing out the string on this season.
Pittman opened with emphasis on respect and measurement.
“Excited to get the opportunity to play Notre Dame,” he said. “It’s good to be home, glad to be back home. Really good football team, outstanding running backs, quarterback, tight end, wide outs. Really good offensively.”
Just be fair, he then presented a glowing report on Notre Dame’s defense as well.
“Defensively, they’ve got some really good playmakers over there … they played good last week against Purdue … Coach Freeman has done a wonderful job there.”
After blowing some decent chances of wins for the last two weeks and facing a team that has been ranked since summer in the Top 25, nothing else would probaby be realistic.
Pittman is going to stick with a positive outlook, just like the guy before him was still sayting he was the man for the job of coaching the Hogs a day before he was fired.
Now a 2–2 start, losses decided by turnovers or late defensive breakdowns, and increased external pressure all conspire to make sweeping optimism risky.
As one SI analysis put it, Arkansas has allowed over 400 yards per game recently and is being exposed for “missed tackles, lack of aggression, and mental lapses.”
Pittman is choosing realism and accountability rather than flourish.
When pressed on prior flaws, Pittman spoke with bluntness grounded in fundamentals.
“We didn’t run to the football and we didn’t tackle well,” he said. “We obviously had more turnovers than we have had.”
He also dispelled insinuations of injuries or mental malaise behind linebacker Xavian Sorey Jr.’s play.
“He’s healthy,” Pittman said. “We’ve just got to play better.”
On pressure and narrative, including his perennial “hot seat” speculation, Pittman acknowledged the noise but circled back to results.
“The only way we can win people that don’t believe in us is to win ball games,” he said. “You can say whatever you want, but what’s the score?”
Instead of sitting back and being defensive, he leaned into responsibility.
Critics might say he lacked punch or declared too much caution. But the circumstances mitigated that possibility.
Even if one grants that Pittman’s remarks were measured by necessity, that raises a bigger question.
Is Pittman's measured approach going to stand up under pressure?
At this point in a season, coaches under fire often use messaging to deflect, inspire, or reframe. Think of coaches in earlier seasons who used motivational toughness or promise posture to reset narratives.
That seldom works for the fans or media.
Compare how some coaches under similar heat speak with boldness at the cost of accuracy or accountability. Pittman chose the opposite route.
But that route may or may not galvanize confidence among skeptical donors.
For the Razorbacks to respond, they've simply got to play a full 60 minutes. Criticism of missed tackles or turnovers is only useful if players correct them.
Without seeing them play better under the scrutiny from everybody, nobody is going to even pay that much attention to what Pittman tries to explain. At some point, even logical explanations will be dismissed.
Behind his tone, Pittman has clearly outlined the expectations:
If Arkansas can execute, even a “modest” statement from Pittman get something positive going for a fan base desperately looking for it.
More must-reads:
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!