Powder River Play
Posted: Mon Aug 22, 2005 4:50 pm
No. 7 Arkansas 6, No. 5 Ole Miss 0
Perhaps the most famous paly in UA football history occurred on Oct. 23, 1954. Coach Bowden Wyatt and his legendary " 25 Little Pigs" were battling Johhny Vaught's mighty Ole Miss Rebels at War Memorial Stadium. The two teams had played to a deadlock and with 6 minutes left to go in the contest Arkansas began a drive from its own 17. The Hogs advanced the ball to the 30. At that point assistant coach Dick Hitt called down from the press box to suggest they run the scheme that was known as the "Powder River Play." The Hogs may not get the ball again and if ever there was a time to it, this was it, Hitt told Wyatt.
The unique play moniker was termed by Coach Wyatt who had come to Arkansas from Wyoming where the Powder River runs a mile ide and six inches deep. Wyatt knew that if his best passer, George Walker, was in the huddle, the Rebs might expect a pass. So on third and 6 at the UA 34, Wyatt made the play call with run specialist Buddy Bob Benson in the game.
Benson took the snap and darted towards the sideline. As Benson strung the play out both teams sprinted toward that side of the field. The was everyone except reciever Preston Carpenter who faked a block one the end and then snuck by Ole Miss' safety Houston Pattonand advanced behind the hard charging Rebs' secondary
As Benson neared the the boundary, he pulled up and lofted a pass 33 yards to the waiting Carpenter. The ball barely cleared a last ditch dive effort by Patton and Carpenter hauled it in and raced another 33 yeards to complete a 66 yard touchdown.
Razorback fans rejoiced in the win over No. 5 Ole Miss
Taken from the 2004 Arkansas football media guide
Perhaps the most famous paly in UA football history occurred on Oct. 23, 1954. Coach Bowden Wyatt and his legendary " 25 Little Pigs" were battling Johhny Vaught's mighty Ole Miss Rebels at War Memorial Stadium. The two teams had played to a deadlock and with 6 minutes left to go in the contest Arkansas began a drive from its own 17. The Hogs advanced the ball to the 30. At that point assistant coach Dick Hitt called down from the press box to suggest they run the scheme that was known as the "Powder River Play." The Hogs may not get the ball again and if ever there was a time to it, this was it, Hitt told Wyatt.
The unique play moniker was termed by Coach Wyatt who had come to Arkansas from Wyoming where the Powder River runs a mile ide and six inches deep. Wyatt knew that if his best passer, George Walker, was in the huddle, the Rebs might expect a pass. So on third and 6 at the UA 34, Wyatt made the play call with run specialist Buddy Bob Benson in the game.
Benson took the snap and darted towards the sideline. As Benson strung the play out both teams sprinted toward that side of the field. The was everyone except reciever Preston Carpenter who faked a block one the end and then snuck by Ole Miss' safety Houston Pattonand advanced behind the hard charging Rebs' secondary
As Benson neared the the boundary, he pulled up and lofted a pass 33 yards to the waiting Carpenter. The ball barely cleared a last ditch dive effort by Patton and Carpenter hauled it in and raced another 33 yeards to complete a 66 yard touchdown.
Razorback fans rejoiced in the win over No. 5 Ole Miss
Taken from the 2004 Arkansas football media guide