No. 10 Arkansas narrowly avoided a historic loss that would have packed an especially personal punch on Saturday night by surviving for a 38-27 win over FCS foe Missouri State. The Bears, who are coached by former Arkansas coach Bobby Petrino, led 27-17 early in the fourth quarter before the Razorbacks exploded for 21 unanswered points to close the game.
A victory for Missouri State would have marked just the second-ever win by an FCS team over a top-10 opponent along with Appalachian State's famous 2007 win at Michigan. But Arkansas came alive in all three phases of the game once its back was against the wall to improve to 3-0 ahead of a game with Texas A&M next week.
Raheim Sanders took a shovel pass from K.J. Jefferson 73 yards to the house for a touchdown with 11:38 left to bring Arkansas within 27-24. Then, an 82-yard punt return from Bryce Stephens gave the Razorbacks their first lead with 9:16 remaining. With Missouri State driving for a chance to retake the lead, defensive end Zach Williams sacked Missouri State quarterback Jason Shelley on third-and-12 for a loss of 9 yards. The stop forced Missouri State to punt, and the Razorbacks put the finishing touches on the win by scoring on the subsequent drive.
Still, even in defeat, Petrino made life uncomfortable for the Razorbacks more than a decade after his successful coaching tenure came to an unceremonious end. After amassing a 21-5 (12-4 SEC) record over his third and fourth seasons on the job in 2010 and 2011, Petrino was fired in the spring of 2012 following an infamous motorcycle wreck that led to revelations about his inappropriate relationship with an Arkansas staffer. Petrino, 61, is in his third season with the Bears, having amassed a 15-9 record so far. He also coached a season at Western Kentucky and five seasons at Louisville -- his second stint with the Cardinals -- following his separation with Arkansas.
The Razorbacks have just now recovered the national relevance they enjoyed during Petrino's tenure under third-year coach Sam Pittman. The two coaches shared a lengthy midfield embrace after the game.
"I'm proud that we found a way to win," Pittman told the SEC Network. "Coach Petrino had his group ready. They outplayed us, they outreached me. We were just fortunate enough that our kids made enough plays to win."