Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Recapping last night’s season ending loss to Baylor
The guys are joined by Clay Henry and Bruce Stanton, of Pradco Fishing, to recap last night’s season ending loss to Baylor in the NCAA Tournament.
Musselman said after loss to Baylor turnovers prove too costly
After falling in the Elite Eight to the Bears, Eric Musselman acknowledged the turnovers, especially in the first half, created a hill too big.
Tate says this Hogs’ team ‘will never be forgotten’ after loss
Graduate transfer Jalen Tate said after the Hogs’ loss in the Elite Eight this team made a lot of strides getting program back to high standards.
Drew on Baylor advancing to Final Four with 81-72 win over Hogs
Bears coach Scott Drew knows how big the Bears’ advancing to the Final Four for the first time since 1950; acknowledges Hogs’ big year.
Baylor’s Teague on winning pair of games against ‘good teams’ to advance
Macio Teague (22 points, 5 rebounds, 2 blocks) on big effort downing Arkansas on Monday night to reach Final Four for the Bears.
Fans’ reaction after Hogs knocked out of NCAA by Baylor
Mostly, social media reaction was encouraging and positive after Arkansas’ 81-72 loss to Baylor on Monday night in the Elite Eight.
Not our night, but damn proud of this team. We will be back and will not end here. Thank you Razorback fans for your support during this entire season. As always we are #OneRazorback https://t.co/MNOHlVg9Ck
— Hunter Yurachek (@HunterYurachek) March 30, 2021
Very proud of this year’s @RazorbackMBB. All of Arkansas is proud of this team. It is their heart and love of the game that inspires us all to work hard and excel.
— Gov. Asa Hutchinson (@AsaHutchinson) March 30, 2021
Great season @razorbackmbb! Still proud of our Hogs! We’ll be back next year!
— Leslie Rutledge (@LeslieRutledge) March 30, 2021
Proud of y’all boys❤️ @RazorbackMBB
— Trey Knox (@Fbu1Tk) March 30, 2021
Hold your heads high fellas! The destination may have not been reached, but y’all for sure put on for the state! Y’all fought from beginning to end. Can’t be more proud!!??❤️ @RazorbackMBB #WPS
— Isaiah Joe (@zai_joe1) March 30, 2021
Turn on that damn jukebox, light up Dickson, and Call Those Hogs…
support when we don’t win ‘em all is what makes us One Razorback. @EricPMusselman @RazorbackMBB are Champions without winning an actual Championship!!
Thanks for the season!!
— Mike Neighbors (@coachneighbors) March 30, 2021
Not the outcome we wanted but can’t be much prouder of @RazorbackMBB. Thankful for the memories and congrats on a helluva season! ❤️ #WPS
— Bobby BP Portis (@BPortistime) March 30, 2021
Even with all the obstacles this year presented, we felt the support of the whole Razorback family.
Can’t wait until we’re back in a full Bud Walton with y’all. pic.twitter.com/sJY6CeYZXK
— Arkansas Razorback Basketball ? (@RazorbackMBB) March 30, 2021
Late scoring drought costs Hogs in 81-72 loss to Baylor
When Arkansas needed a basket down the stretch in the second half they couldn’t buy one and Baylor pulled away for an 81-72 win in the Elite Eight in Indianapolis.
The loss finished the Razorbacks’ season at 25-7, which is the best they’ve done in 26 years but people were expecting more.
“This team will never be forgotten,” senior transfer Jalen Tate said later.
Once the sting from a stinging loss to Baylor at a level of the NCAA Tournament fans probably weren’t expecting before the season if they’re being honest this will be viewed as a positive season.
“It’s raw right now,” Eric Musselman said later. “As a competitor you want to win every game. Right now I’m thinking about the 40 minutes that just happened. All of us are really proud of the season that we’ve had.
“We got scorching hot at the right time to end the season. We played with confidence. We were a basketball team that got better every single day.”
The Hogs simply ran into what Tate called “a very good team.”
“They got All-Americans,” Musselman said. “We had three freshmen in our starting lineup. Obviously we were the youngest team left in the Sweet 16. Those guys earned their starts based on how they played.
“It’s asking a lot for three freshmen in the Elite Eight game.”
Again, Arkansas got behind early, mostly due to turnovers. For most of the season they were able to come back from getting behind early, but not Monday night. Part of it was Baylor, but a bigger part was 15 turnovers.
The Bears converted those into 21 points while the Hogs turned nine Baylor turnovers into just six points.
“Just too much to overcome,” Musselman said of the turnovers.
Another big factor was JD Notae, who only played 15 minutes fouling out early in the second half with 14 points. Freshman Davonte Davis also had 14 while Moses Moody’s shooting woes continued with just 11 points, going 2-of-10 from the field.
“Honestly, some calls didn’t go his way,” Tate said. “We would have had a better shot with him out there on the court. It was unfortunate the refs took it out of his hands with some of the 50-50 calls that didn’t go his way.”
Musselman didn’t take it there. He’s been doing this at a high level for too long and throwing the officials under the bus simply isn’t his style.
“His dribble penetration, we were just going to see how long he could play out there,” he said. “Then he picked up a fifth way too early.”
Don’t write this off as a lack of effort. In the final stats, the Hogs were right there, shooting even with Baylor (48.1% to the Bears 48.4%), out-rebounding them, 34-29, and shooting more free throws (17-23 to 13-17).
“We did shoot 48 percent from the field against a really, really, good defensive team,” Musselman said. “So if someone told me we were going to be able to shoot 48% from the field, you know, we probably would have taken that. It was our defense is where we thought the major issues were.”
Missing Notae, nobody else picked up the scoring slack and a dry spell lasting over six minutes late when they had cut the Baylor lead to 4 with 7:34 left.
And didn’t get another point from the field until 1:19 left and only free throws kept it to an 8-point game after Justin Smith’s layup.
Then it was up to the Bears hitting their free throws and closing it out.
Hogs need big game from Moses to reach Final Four
• Who: No. 10 (No. 3 seed) Arkansas Razorbacks (25-6) vs. No. 3 (No. 1 seed) Baylor Bears (25-2)
• What: Arkansas will be playing its first NCAA Elite Eight since 1995. Arkansas and Baylor are longtime Southwest Conference rivals. The series dates back to Arkansas’ first season of basketball (1923-24). This will be the 144th all-time meeting and Arkansas owns a 96-47 advantage.
• When: Monday, March 29, 8:57 p.m.
• Where: NCAA Elite Eight, Unity Court at Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, Ind.
• Television: CBS (Jim Nantz, Grant Hill, Bill Raftery, Tracy Wolfson)
• Radio: ESPN Arkansas 95.3 (River Valley), 96.3 (Hot Springs), 104.3 (Harrison-Mountain Home), 99.5 (Fayetteville) with Chuck Barrett and Matt Zimmerman.
Moses Moody was the SEC’s top freshman this year, but it’s been Davonte Davis that has stepped up to make the big plays for Arkansas at tournament time.
Oh, Moody hasn’t played horrible. He’s averaging just over 13 points a game, but Devo has made THE play when it HAD to be made … on offense and defense.
Against Baylor tonight in the Elite Eight, Moody is going to have to step things up on the offensive side. The Bears have been considered one of the top two or three teams in the country all season.
The Razorbacks probably can’t dig a double-digit hole like they have throughout the tournament and expect to climb out of it. Baylor is that good.
So is Moody, but for whatever reason it hasn’t shown up in Indianapolis.
The Hogs’ freshman trio of Moody, Davis and Jaylin Williams will be critical and all three are going to be challenged in this game … if the Hogs have a shot of staying in it.
For Moody, who likely will be gone after this season for the NBA, where he is projected as a likely lottery pick in the draft, this could be the game where his legacy is determined in the minds of fans.
They’ll always love him.
But they’ll remember this game.
O’Gara thinks adopted Hogs’ defense big key against Baylor
Connor O’Gara of Saturday Down South has, more or less, adopted the Hogs to root for and he said on Halftime he’s expecting big game Monday night.














