Tye & Tommy on the win over Kentucky, Frank Noland joins, plus What’s Your Beef Wed!
Tye & Tommy on the win over Kentucky, Frank Noland joins, plus What’s Your Beef Wed!
It was just under a month ago segments of the Lunatic Fringe of the Arkansas fan base were deserting the bandwagon as fast as they could jump off.
Yes, in true fashion for some folks, they were screaming about Eric Musselman.
That was a knee-jerk reaction any Razorback fan will recognize. It was my position you might want to hang on a bit because a turnaround wouldn’t be surprising.
Yeah, well, it turns out I was right.
Jalen Tate provided the fifth straight SEC win for the Hogs on Tuesday night in Rupp Arena when he calmly stepped to the free-throw line with 4.3 seconds left and hit both shots for an 81-80 win.
For a team that has, at times, looked like a ship without a captain, Tate did what you’d expect from an experienced graduate transfer and it went deeper than just the shots.
“It was funny, because he said, ‘After I make this free throw make sure we get into what we work on every day,’ which is our prevent defense,” Musselman said later. “We’re supposed to match up full court right away and react immediately upon a ball going through the net.”
That’s leadership.
“His ability to coach the team and remind them to be in our prevent, and the confidence he had to say I’m gonna make the shot and then we’re going to get into prevent was pretty unique in a college timeout,” Musselman said.
For Tate, who transferred to Fayetteville from Western Kentucky and grew up just a few hours from Lexington, he just wanted a win in front of a host of his family and friends at the game.
“With situations like this, it’s in my mind to just take us home,” Tate said later. “I just wanted to win it for my team.”
Razorback fans probably were holding their collective breath. Kentucky still had a shot with 4.3 seconds left to take it away.
Freshman Davonte Davis ended that with a steal.
“I told Jaylin Williams before Jalen Tate shot his second free throw that I was going to get a steal,” Davis said later.
Even though Kentucky is not very good this year (5-13 overall, 4-7 in the SEC), it’s still Rupp Arena and the legends connected to that building.
“It’s huge,” Musselman said about winning there. “Last night after our dinner with the players, our staff sat around and did a little University of Kentucky trivia. Obviously there’s so much history in this building that (winning) does mean something.”
Maybe more than that for the entire program. It was the first win over the marquee program in the league in seven years.
Arkansas fans never could get comfortable, even with a 12-point lead with 6:11 to play. When Davion Mintz hit a three-pointer with 14 seconds left to take an 80-79 lead, there was a collective groan from Hog fans.
They had seen how this plays out before.
But not this time.
When Davis missed a short jumper, Tate managed to get the rebound and was fouled. Even with John Calipari calling a timeout to try and throw Tate off, even that didn’t work.
“I actually think that was good,” Musselman said. “He got to catch his breath a second.”
As a result, the Hogs are now 15-5 overall (7-4 in the SEC) and the bandwagon will continue filling up for at least a few more days.
The Razorbacks go back on the road to play Missouri on Saturday with a chance to make up for the worst home performance of the year in an 81-68 loss back on Jan. 2 in Bud Walton.
Winning that one may bust the springs on the wagon, but you don’t hear much complaining about Musselman these days.
Even from the Lunatic Fringe.
Arkansas coach Eric Musselman spent Monday night re-living Rupp Arena history, so getting win over Wildcats is a big step in right direction.
Jalen Tate (15 points, 4 rebounds, 3 assists) had one of his biggest games of the year hitting two free throws with seconds left for the win.
Arkansas’ Davonte Davis (4 points, 3 assists, 2 steals) came up with a steal when the Wildcats were coming down the court and clinched the win.
• Who: Arkansas Razorbacks (14-5, 6-4 SEC) at Kentucky Wildcats (5-12, 4-6 SEC)
• What: First of back-to-back road games for Arkansas this week
• When: Tuesday, Feb. 9, 6 p.m. (pregame starts at 5:30 p.m.)
• Where: Rupp Arena in Lexington, Kentucky.
• TV: ESPN (Karl Ravech and Jimmy Dykes) CLICK HERE
• ONLINE: HitThatLine.com LISTEN HERE
• Radio: ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home (Chuck Barrett and Matt Zimmerman)
After not playing during a six-day layoff, Arkansas returns to action on Tuesday to face the Kentucky Wildcats in the first of two road games this week.
Tip-off at Rupp Arena is set for 6 p.m. and the game will be televised on ESPN.
Pregame coverage begins at 7:30 p.m. and you can LISTEN HERE or on the radio at ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.
Chuck Barrett and Matt Zimmerman will have all the coverage.
• This will be the 45th meeting between Arkansas and Kentucky.
The Wildcats own a 33-11 advantage in the series, including a 28-11 mark since Arkansas joined the SEC. Kentucky leads 15-3 in games played in Lexington.
• Even though Arkansas lost at Oklahoma State on Jan. 30 in the SEC-Big 12 Challenge, Arkansas is riding a four-game SEC win streak.
This is Arkansas’ first four-game, SEC win streak since 2017-18 season (Feb. 6-17) with victories over South Carolina, Vanderbilt, Ole Miss and Texas A&M.
• Arkansas sits at 6-4 in the SEC, a half-game out of second place behind Missouri (6-3).
• Arkansas’ 14 overall wins are second-most in the SEC, trailing only Alabama’s 15.
• Moses Moody ranks third among NCAA freshmen in scoring (16.4 ppg).
• Arkansas ranks 24th in the NCAA, first in the SEC in scoring margin at +13.4.
• Arkansas ranks 14th in the NCAA, first in the SEC in scoring at 82.7 ppg.
• Arkansas is 29th in the latest NCAA NET. Arkansas (combined 13-0 vs Quad 2-3-4 teams) is one of 11 teams in the NCAA NET top 30 to be undefeated versus Quad 2, 3 and 4 opponents. A total of 19 teams ahead of Arkansas in the NET have at least one loss versus Quad 2 or 3 teams.
Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.
Tampa Bay’s Tom Brady is Nikki Chavanelle’s favorite player, but the win over the Chiefs never was in doubt so not much to get excited about.
Tye & Tommy on the Ark/Ken matchup, #NationalPizzaDay, the Super Bowl streaker story continued and more!
With the start of Arkansas’ spring football practice roughly a month away, Sam Pittman’s biggest question is with the most critical position on the field.
He’s got to find a quarterback that can win.
Nobody on the roster right now have ever won a college game or even completed half of their passes.
While Pittman and offensive coordinator Kendal Briles got lucky when Feleipe Franks chose to play his final year in Fayetteville, only KJ Jefferson got any significant playing time behind him.
The only passes thrown in games were by Jefferson (18-of-34) and Treylon Burks, who completed the same number of his four attempts as I did from the press box (his main job is catching passes, not throwing them).
True freshman Malik Hornsby got some snaps but it was essentially to try and out-run everybody on a few goal-line plays that didn’t really work.
As we are into February there’s little chance a graduate transfer could come in and make much of a difference. Franks at least had player-led workouts when covid shut down last year’s spring practice and he ended up leading some of those.
We have no idea if anyone has stepped into a leadership role like that, which is going to be required if this team is going to make much improvement.
The only thing we know for certain is nobody knows for sure and that probably includes the coaches.
Jefferson was the surprise starter at Missouri the first weekend in December and he had moments where he played fairly well, but he wasn’t consistent, completing just over half of his throws in that game.
For a point of comparison, Franks completed 68.5 percent of his throws for the entire season without any spring practice and just having some backyard passing drills with his new teammates.
It’s probably Jefferson’s job to lose and there’s more questions than answers with him right now. That’s simply because he has significant playing time in one game in 2019 (against LSU) and the Missouri game last year.
Pittman’s problem is it’s only the most important position on the field.
Like the NFL, the college game has changed to the point where the number of wins is in direct proportion to the play of the quarterback. Just managing the game isn’t enough anymore.
Both of the quarterbacks in the SEC title game this past season were finalists for the Heisman Trophy. Yes, they had better players around them than Jefferson will have this year, but the quarterback can’t play down to the level of those around him.
The coaches will start finding out in a few weeks more about Jefferson. He’s got the physical ability but the coaches have got to figure out if he can be more consistent.
And be THE leader of the offense. Shoot, we don’t even know if he can handle a media interview because we haven’t talked to him.
Last year the defense was the biggest question mark. Franks settled the offense almost immediately after he arrived on campus.
Now it’s KJ’s turn.
How he handles it will likely determine the fate of this team.
Saturday Down South’s Connor O’Gara talked on Halftime about how different running back Leonard Fournette is playing in Tampa Bay.
HitThatLine.com is the website for ESPN Arkansas. Listen at 99.5 in Fayetteville, 95.3 FM in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 FM in Hot Springs and 104.3 FM in Harrison.
© Copyright 2017-25 by Pearson Broadcasting. All rights reserved.












