Defensive tackle
Dick Bumpas was a consensus
All-American for Arkansas in 1970, with
Chuck Dicus also earning first-team honors.[3]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.[4] 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.[5] Arkansas gained 658 yards (296 pass 362 rush) against TCU, the third most in the history of the Razorbacks.[6]
The Razorbacks' October 24 game vs.
Wichita State at Little Rock was the Shockers' first since the devastating
plane crash three weeks earlier in
Clear Creek County, Colorado which killed 14 players and 17 others, including WSU head coach Ben Wilson and athletic director Bert Katzenmeyer. Razorback fans saluted the Shockers' courage with standing ovations before and after the game.
Hours after losing 42–7 at Texas, the Razorbacks' bowl window slammed shut when
LSU routed
Ole Miss 61–17 to clinch the
Southeastern Conference championship and an
Orange Bowl bid vs.
Big Eight Conference champion
Nebraska. The Orange Bowl agreed to take the Southwest Conference runner-up if LSU lost either of its last two games vs.
Tulane and Ole Miss. The Tigers defeated the Green Wave 26–14 one week prior to its destruction of the Rebels. By making that deal, the Razorbacks withdrew themselves from consideration from lower-tier bowl games such as the
Bluebonnet, which took 6–5
Alabama to face
Oklahoma, or the
Sun, which took the Razorbacks' SWC rival,
Texas Tech, a 24–10 loser to Arkansas in Lubbock, to play
Georgia Tech.