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Contents: 1970197119721973197419751976197719781979Stats


1970[]

1970 Arkansas Razorbacks football
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
Ranking
APNo. 11[1]
1970 record9–2 (6–1 SWC)
Head coachFrank Broyles
Home stadiumRazorback Stadium
War Memorial Stadium
Seasons
← 1969
1971 →

Overview[]

Tackle Dick Bumpas was a consensus All-American for Arkansas in 1970, with Chuck Dicus also earning first-team honors.[2] Bill McClard averaged 7.3 points per game from the kicking position, the best in the nation for 1970. McClard converted on 50 of 51 extra points and 10 of 15 field goals. McClard connected on a 60-yard field goal against the Mustangs of SMU. This is the third-longest field goal in Arkansas history.[3] Quarterback Bill Montgomery completed 80% of his pass attempts (12 of 15) against Oklahoma State, tied for sixth-best in Arkansas history in that category.[4] Arkansas gained 658 yards (296 pass 362 rush) against TCU, the third most in the history of the Razorbacks.[5]

Schedule[]

Date Opponent# Rank# Site Result Attendance
September 12, 1970* #10 Stanford #4 War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR L 28–34   48,000
September 19, 1970* Oklahoma State #11 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 23–7   53,000
September 26, 1970* Tulsa #12 Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR W 49–7   40,000
October 3, 1970 at TCU #11 Amon Carter StadiumFort Worth, TX W 49–14   39,000
October 10, 1970 Baylor #10 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 41–7   53,000
October 24, 1970 Wichita State #9 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 62–0   40,000
October 31, 1970 at Texas A&M #8 Kyle FieldCollege Station, TX (Rivalry) W 45–6   34,000
November 7, 1970 Rice #7 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 38–14   40,000
November 14, 1970 SMU #7 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 36–3   43,500
November 21, 1970 at #19 Texas Tech #6 Jones StadiumTubbock, TX W 24–10   50,125
December 5, 1970 at #1 Texas #4 Memorial StadiumAustin, TX L 7–42   68,510
*Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll.
Captains
Bill Burnett
Bill Montgomery
Dick Bumpas
Mike Boschetti

1971[]

1971 Arkansas Razorbacks football
Liberty Bowl vs. Tennessee, L, 13–14[6]
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
Ranking
APNo. 16[7]
1971 record8–3–1 (5–1–1 SWC)
Head coachFrank Broyles
Home stadiumRazorback Stadium
War Memorial Stadium
Seasons
← 1970
1972 →

Overview[]

Kicker Bill McClard was an All American. McClard also averaged 6.5 points per game, the seventh best average nationally. Razorback quarterback Joe Ferguson was eighth in the nation in completions per game, with 14.5. Mike Reppond averaged 5.6 receptions per game, the fourth highest average during 1971. As an offense, Arkansas averaged 211.5 yards per game, the highest in the SWC, and eighth-highest in college football. Arkansas was seventh in total offense, with a total of 4898 yards over 11 games.

Schedule[]

Date Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 11, 1971* #7 California War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR W 51–20   54,176
September 18, 1971* Oklahoma State #6 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 31–10   54,176
September 25, 1971* Tulsa #7 Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR L 20–21   41,742
October 2, 1971 TCU #18 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 49–15   41,100
October 9, 1971 at Baylor #17 Baylor StadiumWaco, TX W 35–7   33,000
October 16, 1971 #10 Texas #16 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR ABC W 31–7   54,446
October 23, 1971* North Texas #9 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 60–21   38,135
October 30, 1971 Texas A&M #8 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR (Rivalry) L 9–17   54,446
November 6, 1971 at Rice #16 Rice StadiumHouston, TX T 24–24   32,000
November 13, 1971 at SMU #17 Cotton BowlDallas, TX ABC W 18–13   30,773
November 25, 1971 Texas Tech #17 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 15-0   43,000
December 20, 1971* #9 Tennessee #18 Memphis Memorial StadiumMemphis, TN (Liberty Bowl) ABC L 13–14   51,410
*Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll.
Captains
David Hogue
Ronnie Jones
Mike Kelson
Kay Maybry
Bobby Nichols

Liberty Bowl[]

1 2 3 4 OT
#18 Razorbacks 0 7 0 6 13
#9 Volunteers 7 0 0 7 14



The 1971 Liberty Bowl matched up Arkansas with Tennessee. The Volunteers took the lead first, with a two yard run by Bill Rudder. The Hogs responded with a 36-yard TD strike from Joe Ferguson to Jim Hodge. Scoring wouldn't resume until the fourth quarter, when Razorback Bill McClard kicked 19- and 30-yard field goals. A third McClard kick was good, set up by Louis Campbell's third interception, but a penalty kept the Hogs off the board a fourth time. Arkansas fumbled at their own 36 yard line, and Tennessee's Curt Watson scored three plays later.


Source: Razorback Bowl History – 1971 Liberty Bowl

1972[]

1972 Arkansas Razorbacks football
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
1972 record6–5 (3–5 SWC)
Head coachFrank Broyles
Home stadiumRazorback Stadium
War Memorial Stadium
Seasons
← 1971
1973 →

Overview[]

Schedule[]

Date Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 9, 1972* #8 USC #4 War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR L 10–31   54,461
September 23, 1972* Oklahoma State War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 24–23   54,431
September 30, 1972* Tulsa Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR W 21–20   40,003
October 7, 1972 at TCU Amon Carter StadiumFort Worth, TX W 27–13   42,558
October 14, 1972 Baylor #20 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 31–20   41,670
October 21, 1972 at #15 Texas #17 Texas Memorial StadiumAustin, TX ABC L 15–35   80,844
October 28, 1972* North Texas #18 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 42–16   48,735
November 4, 1972 at Texas A&M #20 Kyle FieldCollege Station, TX (Rivalry) L 7–10   36,770
November 11, 1972 Rice War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR L 20–23   51,475
November 18, 1972 SMU Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR L 7–22   38,342
November 25, 1972 at Texas Tech Jones StadiumLubbock, TX W 24–14   35,375
*Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll.
Captains
Louis Campbell
Jim Hodge
Tom Reed
Don Wunderly

1973[]

1973 Arkansas Razorbacks football
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
1973 record5–5–1 (3–3–1 SWC)
Head coachFrank Broyles
Home stadiumRazorback Stadium
War Memorial Stadium
Seasons
← 1972
1974 →

Overview[]

Running back Dickey Morton averaged 118 yards per game on the ground, the ninth highest average in the nation.

Schedule[]

Date Opponent Site Result Attendance
September 15, 1973* at #1 USC Los Angeles Memorial ColiseumLos Angeles, CA L 0–17   73,231
September 22, 1973* #17 Oklahoma State War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR L 6–38   45,684
September 29, 1973* Iowa State Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR W 21–19   37,830
October 6, 1973 TCU War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 13–5   49,456
October 13, 1973 at Baylor Baylor StadiumWaco, TX W 13–7   28,000
October 20, 1973 Texas Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR L 6–34   45,348
October 27, 1973* Tulsa War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 20–6   42,341
November 3, 1973 Texas A&M Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR (Rivalry) W 14–10   37,261
November 10, 1973 at Rice Rice StadiumHouston, TX L 7–17   23,500
November 17, 1973 at SMU Cotton BowlDallas, TX T 7–7   18,712
November 24, 1973 Texas Tech War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR L 17–24   42,061
*Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll.
Captains
Nick Avlos
Jack Ettinger
Steve Hedgepeth
Dickey Morton
Danny Rhodes

1974[]

1974 Arkansas Razorbacks football
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
1974 record6–4–1 (3–3–1 SWC)
Head coachFrank Broyles
Home stadiumRazorback Stadium
War Memorial Stadium
Seasons
← 1973
1975 →

Overview[]

Schedule[]

Date Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 14, 1974* #5 USC #20 War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR W 22–7   54,622
September 21, 1974* Oklahoma State #10 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR L 7–26   54,535
September 28, 1974* Tulsa Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR W 60–0   39,200
October 5, 1974 at TCU #20 Amon Carter StadiumFort Worth, TX W 49–0   30,210
October 12, 1974 Baylor #14 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR L 17–21   43,300
October 19, 1974 at #16 Texas Texas Memorial StadiumAustin, TX ABC L 7–38   66,700
October 26, 1974* Colorado State War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 49–3   44,852
November 2, 1974 at #8 Texas A&M Kyle FieldCollege Station, TX (Rivalry) L 10–20   47,887
November 9, 1974 Rice Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 25–6   38,000
November 16, 1974 SMU War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR T 24–24   46,300
November 21, 1964 at Texas Tech Jones StadiumLubbock, TX W 21–13   38,327
*Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll.
Captains
Billy Burns
Rollen Smith

1975[]

1975 Arkansas Razorbacks football
Southwest Conference Champions[8]
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
Ranking
APNo. 3[10]
1975 record10–2 (6–1 SWC)
Head coachFrank Broyles
CaptainScott Bull
CaptainMike Campbell
CaptainIke Forte
CaptainHal McAfee
Home stadiumRazorback Stadium
War Memorial Stadium
Seasons
← 1974
1976 →

Overview[]

Schedule[]

Date Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 13, 1975* Air Force War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR W 35–0   53,500
September 20, 1975* Oklahoma State #16 Cowboy StadiumStillwater, OK L 13–20   47,500
September 27, 1975* Tulsa Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 31–15   38,000
October 4, 1975 TCU War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 19–8   51,250
October 4, 1975 at Baylor Baylor StadiumWaco, TX W 41–3   47,300
October 18, 1975 Texas #20 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR ABC L 18–24   43,860
October 25, 1975* Utah State War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 31–0   44,265
November 8, 1975 at Rice Rice StadiumHouston, TX W 20–16   20,000
November 15, 1975 at SMU Cotton BowlDallas, TX W 35–7   21,880
November 22, 1975 Texas Tech #19 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 31–14   36,600
December 6, 1975 #2 Texas A&M #19 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR (Rivalry) ABC W 31–6   52,000
January 1, 1976* vs. #12 Georgia #18 Cotton BowlDallas, TX (Cotton Bowl Classic) CBS W 31–10   74,500
*Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll.


Game notes[]

Texas A&M[]

#2 Texas A&M at #18 Arkansas
by Quarter 1 2 3 4 Total
Texas A&M 0 0 0 6 6
Arkansas 0 7 17 7 31


Cotton Bowl[]

1 2 3 4 OT
#18 Razorbacks 0 10 0 21 31
#12 Bulldogs 3 7 0 0 10




1976[]

1976 Arkansas Razorbacks football
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
1976 record5–5–1 (3–4–1 SWC)
Head coachFrank Broyles
Home stadiumRazorback Stadium
War Memorial Stadium
Seasons
← 1975
1977 →

Overview[]

Ben Cowins averaged 6.3 yards per carry in 1976, the fourth-highest average in the nation. Steve Little averaged 44.4 yards per punt, the seventh-best nationally.

Schedule[]

Date Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 11, 1976* Utah State #13 War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR W 33–16   50,536
September 18, 1976* Oklahoma State #12 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 16–10   55,103
September 25, 1976* Tulsa #12 Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR L 3–9   40,563
October 2, 1976 at TCU Amon Carter StadiumFort Worth, TX W 46–14   37,186
October 23, 1976 at #14 Houston #15 AstrodomeHouston, TX W 14–7   47,192
October 30, 1976 Rice #14 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 41–16   43,908
October 6, 1976 at Baylor #12 Baylor StadiumWaco, TX T 7–7   47,900
November 13, 1976 #16 Texas A&M #13 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR (Rivalry) ABC L 10–31   47,497
November 20, 1976 vs. SMU Independence StadiumShreveport, LA L 31–35   32,000
November 27, 1976 #9 Texas Tech War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR L 7–30   41,327
December 4, 1976 at Texas Memorial StadiumAustin, TX ABC L 12–29   49,341
*Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll.
Captains
Seniors

1977[]

1977 Arkansas Razorbacks football
Orange Bowl vs. Oklahoma, W, 31–6[11]
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
Ranking
APNo. 3[12]
1977 record11–1 (7–1 SWC)
Head coachLou Holtz
Home stadiumRazorback Stadium
War Memorial Stadium
Seasons
← 1976
1978 →

Overview[]

PK Steve Little was a consensus All-American in 1977. Little punted 48 times for 2,127 yds, and had the fourth-best average in college football, with 44.3 yards per punt. Little scored an average of 8.5 points per game for the Razorbacks, including 19 field goals (30 attempted) and 37 extra points. This was the eighth-best average per game, and the second-best among kickers. His 1.73 field goals per game was second-best to Paul Marchese of Kent State. The third-best scoring defense, Arkansas, was also in a tie for the fourth-best pass defense. The Hogs, along with the Indiana Hoosiers, gave up only 89.5 yards per game through the air, and the Hogs only surrendered 8.6 points per game. Only North Carolina and Ohio State allowed fewer points in 1977. The Hogs finished in a five-way tie for the National Championship, with a record of 11–1. They were ranked third by the AP, behind runner-up Alabama and Champion Notre Dame.

Schedule[]

Date Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 10, 1977* New Mexico State War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR W 53–10   53,167
September 17, 1977* #15 Oklahoma State War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 28–6   54,280
September 24, 1977* Tulsa #16 Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR W 37–3   43,524
October 1, 1977 at TCU #12 Amon Carter StadiumFort Worth, TX W 42–6   22,713
October 15, 1977 #2 Texas #8 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR ABC L 9–13   44,296
October 22, 1977 Houston #9 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 34–0   53,924
October 29, 1977 at Rice #8 Rice StadiumHouston, TX W 30–7   20,000
November 5, 1977 vs. Baylor #8 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 35–9   53,620
November 18, 1977 at #11 Texas A&M #8 Kyle FieldCollege Station, TX (Rivalry) W 26–20   54,000
November 19, 1977 SMU #8 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 47-7   43,791
November 26, 1977 Texas Tech #6 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 17–14   32,856
January 2, 1978* vs. #2 Oklahoma #6 Miami Orange BowlMiami, FL (Orange Bowl) NBC W 31–6   60,987
*Non-Conference Game. Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll.
Captains
Leotis Harris
Steve Little
Howard Sampson

Orange Bowl[]

1 2 3 4 OT
#6 Razorbacks 14 0 10 7 31
#2 Sooners 0 0 0 6 6



The 1978 Orange Bowl was played between #6 Arkansas and #2 Oklahoma. Entering the game, the Hogs were twenty-one point underdogs against the Sooners.[13] Arkansas had four offensive starters suspended for the contest, which also led fans to believe the Sooners would roll.[14] Roland Sales of Arkansas rushed for 205 yards on 23 carries, setting an Orange Bowl record. Sales would hold the record until Ahman Green carried for 206 yards in 1998, beating Sales by a single yard.[15] He came in relief of star running back Ben Cowins, who the Hogs left in Fayetteville for a violation of team rules. Sales bagan the scoring on a one-yard run after a Billy Sims fumble. Hog QB Ron Calcagni would score next, after a fumble by Oklahoma fullback Kenny King. Steve Little completed a field goal to give the Hogs a 17–0 cushion in the third quarter. Sales scored on a four-yard run to stretch the Hog advantage to 24–0. Oklahoma would score on an eight yard touchdown pass, but the Hogs would stop the two-point conversion. Barnabas White would tack on another Razorback touchdown, getting the ball from a young Houston Nutt playing quarterback for the Hogs.


Source: Arkansas Razorbacks Bowl History – 1978 Orange Bowl

1978[]

1978 Arkansas Razorbacks football
Fiesta Bowl vs. UCLA, Tie, 10–10[16]
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
Ranking
APNo. 11[17]
1978 record9–2–1 (6–2–0 SWC)
Head coachLou Holtz
Seasons
← 1977
1979 →

Overview[]

Schedule[]

Date Opponent# Rank# Site Result Attendance
September 16, 1978* Vanderbilt #2 War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR W 48–17   55,718
September 23, 1978* at Oklahoma State #2 Lewis FieldStillwater, OK W 19–7   49,500
September 30, 1978* Tulsa #2 Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR W 21–13   45,428
October 7, 1978 TCU #4 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 42–3   54,430
October 21, 1978 at #8 Texas #3 Memorial StadiumAustin, TX ABC L 21–28   78,000
October 28, 1978 at #11 Houston #9 AstrodomeHouston, TX L 9–20   50,913
November 4, 1978 Rice #17 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 37–7   45,709
November 13, 1978 at Baylor #16 Baylor StadiumWaco, TX W 27–14   45,000
November 18, 1978 #14 Texas A&M #13 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR (Rivalry) ABC W 26–7   54,118
November 25, 1978 at SMU #11 Texas StadiumIrving, TX W 27–14   43,301
December 2, 1978 #16 Texas Tech #8 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 49–7   44,147
December 25, 1978 vs. #15 UCLA #8 Sun Devil StadiumTempe, AZ (Fiesta Bowl) NBC T 10–10   55,202
*Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll.
Captains
Ron Calcagni
Ben Cowins
Larry Jackson
Jimmy Walker

Fiesta Bowl[]

1 2 3 4 OT
#8 Razorbacks 0 10 0 0 10
#15 UCLA 0 0 3 7 10




1979[]

1979 Arkansas Razorbacks football
SWC Co-Champions (Houston)[18]
Sugar Bowl vs Alabama, L, 9–24[19]
ConferenceSouthwest Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 20
1979 record10–2–0 (7–1–0 SWC)
Head coachLou Holtz
Seasons
← 1978
1980 →

Overview[]

Offensive tackle Greg Kolenda was a Consensus All-American for the Razorbacks in 1979.[20] Placekicker Ish Ordonez led the nation in field goals with 18 and lead the Southwest Conference in scoring for the second year in a row with 80 points. He hit 18 of 22 FG on the season, for a 82% average and was 2nd Team All-American. As a defense, Arkansas was tied for 6th in scoring defense in the 1979 season, giving up 108 points in 11 games (9.8 ppg). McNeese State was the other program that held this mark.

Schedule[]

Date Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 15, 1979* Colorado State #17 War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock, AR W 36–3   55,317
September 22, 1979* Oklahoma State #15 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 27–7   55,812
September 29, 1979* Tulsa #13 Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR W 33–8   45,742
October 6, 1979 at TCU #13 Amon Carter StadiumFort Worth, TX W 16–13   25,317
October 13, 1979 at Texas Tech #12 Jones StadiumLubbock, TX W 20–6   47,109
October 20, 1979 #2 Texas #10 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR ABC W 17–14   55,838
October 27, 1979 #6 Houston #4 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR ABC L 10–13   43,319
November 3, 1979 at Rice #9 Rice StadiumHouston, TX W 34–7   17,000
November 10, 1979 #17 Baylor #9 Razorback Stadium • Fayetteville, AR W 29–20   43,284
November 17, 1979 at Texas A&M #8 Kyle FieldCollege Station, TX (Rivalry) W 22–10   62,648
November 24, 1979 SMU #7 War Memorial Stadium • Little Rock, AR W 31–7   54,718
January 1, 1980* vs. #2 Alabama #6 Louisiana SuperdomeNew Orleans, LA (Sugar Bowl) ABC L 9–24   77,486
*Non-Conference Game. Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll.
Captains
Jim Howard, Roland Sales

Sugar Bowl[]

1 2 3 4 OT
#6 Razorbacks 3 0 6 0 9
#2 Crimson Tide 14 3 0 7 24




1970–1979 Statistical Leaders[]

Passing[]

Year Player Com Att % Yards
1970 Bill Montgomery 110 195 56 1662
1971 Joe Ferguson 160 271 59 2203
1972 Joe Ferguson 119 254 47 1484
1973 Mike Kirkland 75 151 50 990
1974 Scott Bull 14 32 44 238
1975 Scott Bull 33 71 46 570
1976 Ron Calcagni 17 57 30 366
1977 Ron Calcagni 73 137 53 1147
1978 Ron Calcagni 62 103 60 807
1979 Kevin Scanlon 92 139 66 1212

Rushing[]

Year Player Att Yards Avg
1970 Bill Burnett 110 445 4.0
1971 Dickey Morton 127 831 6.5
1972 Dickey Morton 242 1188 4.9
1973 Dickey Morton 226 1298 5.7
1974 Ike Forte 187 974 5.2
1975 Ike Forte 174 983 5.6
1976 Ben Cowins 183 1162 6.3
1977 Ben Cowins 220 1192 5.4
1978 Ben Cowins 188 1006 5.4
1979 Roland Sales 138 625 4.5

Receiving[]

Year Player Rec Yards YPC
1970 Chuck Dicus 38 577 15.2
1971 Mike Reppond 56 986 17.6
1972 Mike Reppond 36 475 13.2
1973 Jack Ettinger 28 411 14.7
1974 Freddie Douglas 15 332 22.1
1975 Freddie Douglas 13 232 17.8
1976 Charles Clay 7 174 24.9
1977 Donnie Bobo 22 454 20.6
1978 Robert Farrell 13 229 17.6
1979 Gary Stiggers 23 221 9.6

See also[]

Notes[]

Arkansas Razorbacks Sports Network Online 1970–1979 Football Schedule/Results

  1. Final AP Top 20. 1970 AP Poll. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on October 11, 2008.
  2. Consensus All-America Team. 1970 All-Americans. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on October 11, 2008.
  3. "Arkansas Football Records-Longest Field Goals." 2008 Arkansas Razorbacks Media Guide. pg. 113. University of Arkansas. Retrieved on October 11, 2008.
  4. "Arkansas Football Records-Completion Percentage." 2008 Arkansas Razorbacks Media Guide. University of Arkansas. Retrieved on October 11, 2008.
  5. "Arkansas Football Records-Team Yards-Game." 2008 Arkansas Razorbacks Media Guide. University of Arkansas. pg. 126. Retrieved on October 11, 2008.
  6. Bowl Games with Top 20 Teams. 1971 Bowl Results. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on July 13, 2008.
  7. Final AP Top 20. 1971 AP Poll. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on October 18, 2008.
  8. "Major Conference Champions." 1975 SWC Champions. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on November 16, 2008.
  9. "Bowl Games with Top 20 Teams." 1975 Bowl Results. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on November 16, 2008.
  10. "Final AP Top 10." 1975 AP Poll. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on November 16, 2008.
  11. "Bowl Games with Top 20 Teams." 1977 Bowl Results. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on November 16, 2008.
  12. Final AP Top 20. 1977 AP Poll. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on November 16, 2008.
  13. Whitmire, Keith. "Remember win Short-handed Arkansas' upset of OU in '78 Orange Bowl is still on the minds of many." Story. December 7, 2001. The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved on November 16.
  14. "The Orange Bowl – 1978." Game Recap. Retrieved on November 16.
  15. "Orange Bowl Records-Single Game Leaders." Record Book. Orange Bowl. Retrieved on November 16, 2008.
  16. "Bowl Games with Top 20 Teams." 1978 Bowl Season. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on July 5, 2007.
  17. "Final AP Top 20." 1978 AP Poll. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on November 7, 2008.
  18. "Div. 1–A Conference Champs." 1979 Division Champions. Information Please. Retrieved on July 31, 2007
  19. "1979 College Football Recap." Recap. Information Please. Retrieved on July 31, 2007
  20. "Consensus All Americans."1979 Retrieved on July 31, 2007.
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