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Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Gators ahead

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Tye & Tommy on the FL game tonight, activities with Muss, #InternationalPancakeDay and more!

 

O’Gara thinks Burks best wide receiver in SEC, but still flying ‘under the radar’

Saturday Down South’s Connor O’Gara thinks Arkansas’ Treylon Burks is best in the league, but across the country others haven’t figured it out.

Musselman previews Tuesday night’s matchup with Florida, Top 25 ranking

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman talked with the media Monday afternoon about the Gators’ lineup and is glad with Monday’s No. 24 ranking.

Hogs’ big wins last week have to be starting point now, says PTN’s Jason Carroll

Beating Kentucky, Missouri on road got Hogs into Top 25, but they have to keep winning to stay that, said Jason Carroll of Pig Trail Nation.

Hogs break into national rankings with No. 24 spot in AP poll

Arkansas’ big road wins last week over Kentucky and No. 10 Missouri has vaulted them into the Associated Press Top 25 — barely — at No. 24.

It is the first time in three years the Hogs have made it into the rankings.

The Tigers had an 0-2 week last week and fell to No. 20. Alabama (8) and Tennessee (19) are the only other SEC teams to be ranked.

The Hogs’ game against Florida (17 votes in the poll this week) on Tuesday night will be the first home game as a ranked team since being 18th and LSU came to Fayetteville on March 7, 2015.

The last time Arkansas was ranked was the 2017-18 season, moving to No. 22 after an overtime win over No. 19 Tennessee, but that didn’t last long.

Back-to-back road losses at Mississippi State and Auburn kicked the Hogs out of the poll.

When the Razorbacks welcome Florida, which received 17 votes in this week’s AP Poll, to Bud Walton Arena on Tuesday, it will be their first home game as a ranked team since hosting LSU as the No. 18 team on March 7, 2015.

Murphy on Hogs’ defense picking up in overtime win over Missouri

Democrat-Gazette writer Tom Murphy on The Morning Rush on Monday morning recapping Arkansas’ key win in overtime over Tigers.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Shirtless Muss after 6th straight SEC win

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Tye & Tommy on the win over Mizzou, new Razorback football commit, Tom Murphy and more!

 

Bucknam disappointed placing second in team totals at Tyson Invitational

No. 3 Arkansas completed its quest to produce national qualifier during this weekend’s Tyson Invitational, while falling just short of winning the team title.

Among a national caliber field of teams competing inside Randal Tyson Track Center, Texas edged the Razorbacks in team scoring, 82-76, with Alabama (68) and Florida State (66) in a tight finish for third place. The rest of the field included Oregon (60), LSU (48.5), Texas A&M (40.5), and Florida (38).

“It was good meet, and we got a lot of things done this weekend,” stated Arkansas men’s head coach Chris Bucknam. “I was a little disappointed that we didn’t come out on top of the team scoring at the end. Texas had 82 points and we were second with 76.

“You can see how balanced all these teams are and it shows you the type of competition we’re up against. It was a great meet all around with some great individual performances.”

In addition to qualifying the distance medley relay for the NCAA Championships, the Razorbacks also wanted to get individuals qualified in distance events. Saturday’s mission involved the 5,000m, which was won by Amon Kemboi in 13:38.85 while teammates followed in places 3-4-5-9-10-11-13.

That time currently ranks fifth in the nation, and placed Kemboi at No. 4 on the Arkansas all-time list. Joining Kemboi with times that penetrated the all-time UA list were Gilbert Boit, clocking 13:40.20 to move to No. 6, Jacob McLeod with a 13:41.26 which ranks No. 8, along with a 13:42.59 for Matt Young that is now No. 11.

“Amon is a special athlete, and I think we’re just seeing the tip of the iceberg,” said Bucknam. “It would have been nice to just run him once this weekend, but we needed that DMR. He had no problem taking the stick for us on the anchor.

“Having him come back and running what he did in the 5k just shows you what kind of athlete he is. I’m also proud of Gilbert Boit, who decided to slow a bit with a mile to go, then picked it up and really made that race roll at the end. It was a good group of distance runners with all those kids in the race and I’m pleased with how they performed. Hopefully, those times will get them into the NCAA Championship.”

The next wave of Razorbacks in the 5,000m included Myles Richter (14:11.46), Ryan Murphy (14:17.42), Emmanuel Cheboson (14:19.24), and Josh Shearer (14:52.64).

Kieran Taylor produced a career best of 1:48.32 in finishing third in the 800m a day after giving his all in running the opening 1,200m leg of the DMR. Following with PRs in the race were Reese Walters (1:51.86), Luke George (1:52.34) and Ethan Carney (1:53.45).

“Kieran is such a great team player,” stated Bucknam. “He ran the lead leg of the DMR on Friday night, and it’s a real stretch for him distance-wise. He was seeing stars after that race, it really knocked him out. I’m proud of his effort, but he really belongs on that 800m leg when we finally put that together, because that’s his specialty.

“The other thing that helped us is that we had a good race from Andrew Kibet, who missed a couple of months of critical training after the cross country season. He’s just coming back. Opening up with a 4:02 is going to give us that lead-off leg in the DMR. Then we can put KT back in that 800m leg belongs in. It was good to finally see Kibet compete.”

Kibet clocked a career best of 4:02.27 to place sixth while Tommy Romanow also ran a PR in winning his section and placing ninth overall in 4:09.76. Kibet bettered his previous best of 4:04.51 while Romanow improved upon his 4:19.60 debut earlier this season.

Alabama’s Eliud Kipsang won the mile in 3:56.88 over a pair of Longhorns, Yusuf Bizimana (3:57.81) and Crayton Carrozza (3:59.79), with Oregon’s EJ Holland (3:59.95) completing the sub-4 mile crew.

Ryan Brown placed fourth in a very competitive triple jump, hitting a distance of 52-3 ¾ (15.94). The leading trio included Oregon’s Emmanuel Ihemeje (53-7 ¾ | 16.35), Sean Dixon-Bodie of LSU (53-6 ¼ | 16.31), and Alabama’s Christian Edwards (53-6 ¼ | 16.31).

Winning pair of road games this week sets up interesting finish to season

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When Arkansas couldn’t close out a win over Missouri in Columbia in regulation Saturday afternoon, you’re excused if you didn’t hold out a lot of hope for a win.

“Often you see a team that’s right there on the verge of winning when they’re on the road and the game goes into overtime, you see an emotional letdown,” Eric Musselman said after the 86-81 win. “You see a team kind of hang their head because it was right there in regulation for us to win.”

However this season plays out the rest of the way, you might want to go ahead and highlight this game.

It’s one the Hogs for a couple of decades now have figure out a way to lose.

Instead, Jalen Tate’s block of a Missouri shot with 21 seconds left held the Hogs’ one-point lead and Moses Moody knocked down free throws and the SEC winning streak continues at six games.

Maybe the biggest thing is it’s now back-to-back league road wins over a Kentucky team that can’t figure out how to win a game and a Top 10 team in Missouri that was missing a key player.

Don’t start qualifying wins. Yes, the Tigers’ were without Jeremiah Tilmon, who missed the game because of a death in the family.

Near the end of Musselman’s post-game press conference Saturday he was asked what it was like to play the Tigers without Tilmon on the floor, but he wasn’t taking the bait on that one.

“I don’t know, I wonder what it was like for them to play us without Justin (Smith) in game one,” Musselman said while unwrapping another Jolly Rancher piece of candy. “Obviously they missed him. Our thoughts are with him and his family.”

Smith stepped up big in this one, leading the Hogs with 19 points, 6 rebounds, 3 assists and 2 steals.

“That was his best game as a Razorback,” Musselman said.

With all of that, though, it came down to the officials reversing a goal-tending call against Tate on his block, then playing defense.

“Tate knew he didn’t goal-tend,” Musselman said. “It was either going to be their ball or our ball on the baseline out of bounds. We did a good job not giving up an easy catch. We had really active hands.”

No, this one still counts as a huge win, regardless who Missouri put on the floor. It’s the first win over a Top 25 opponent for the Hogs this year and will come in handy when they start handing out post-season tournament bids.

“It’s a great win anytime you can beat a top 10 team on the road,” Musselman said.

It counts.

And it shows how Musselman has managed a team that some fans had given up for dead after back-to-back road losses back in mid-January against LSU and Alabama.

“I’m just really proud of our team’s growth,” he said later.

As a result, this team is now 16-5 overall and 8-4 in the SEC. But it gets tougher in the final five or six games (there’s a makeup game with Texas A&M at Bud Walton Arena to be scheduled).

Home games with Florida, Alabama, LSU and the Aggies are wrapped around road trips to Texas A&M and South Carolina.

“Incredibly difficult schedule coming up with some really, really good teams,” Musselman said. “We felt it was really important this week to try and go 2-0.”

Add in a win over a Top 10 team and it will be huge in about a month.

But the Hogs can’t waste this week’s road wins by dropping too many games in this final stretch.

It will be an interesting finish to the regular season.

Moody on Hogs winning back-to-back SEC games on road this week

Arkansas’ Moses Moody (16 points, 5 rebounds) talked with the media after the 86-81 overtime win over the Tigers to finish good week.