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Tate, Notae pass 1k career points in Razorbacks’ 100-75 win over UCA

Jalen Tate and J.D. Notae each scored their 1,000th career points to lead Arkansas to a 100-75 victory over Central Arkansas on Saturday night at Bud Walton Arena.

This was the first meeting between Arkansas and Central Arkansas since the 1946-47 season. The Razorbacks are now 7-0 all-time versus the Bears, including a 4-0 record in games played in Fayetteville.

The series dates back to Arkansas’ first season of basketball (1923-24). Prior to tonight’s game, the last time Arkansas hosted an in-state school for a regular-season game was Nov. 28, 1950, versus Arkansas Tech (the Razorbacks won 50-45). 

Tate, a graduate transfer from Northern Kentucky, also tallied his third career double-double, getting 17 points and a career-high 11 assists.

Notae, who played his first two seasons at Jacksonville University prior to sitting out at Arkansas due to NCAA transfer rules, finished with a game-high 22 points — 17 coming in the second half — with six assists.

UCA led for the first 11:20 of the game, but Tate hit a 3-pointer and gave Arkansas its first lead (26-25) with 7:43 left in the first half.

While the Bears tied the game at 28-28, Moses Moody hit a layup with 6L33 left and the Razorbacks held the lead the rest of the way.

Arkansas was down 10 (22-12) with 11:35 left in the first half before going on a 20-3 run.

The Hogs started the run with a 12-0 run and, after a UCA 3-pointer, capped the spurt with an 8-0 run.

For the fifth time in six games, at least five Razorbacks scored in double figures. Joining Notae and Tate were Desi Sills (17), Moody (15) and Justin Smith (12), Connor Vanover just missed a double-double, pulling down 10 rebounds with nine points.

Moody added seven rebounds and three assists.

UCA was paced by Deandre Jones and Rylan Bergerson, each scoring 13. Jared Chatman registered a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds. SK Shittu added 11 points.

Arkansas will not play a midweek contest this week due to final exams. The Razorbacks return to the court next Saturday (Dec. 20) to host Oral Roberts.

Tipoff is set for 2 p.m. and the game will be telecast on SEC Network.

FIRST HALF: Arkansas 41, Southern 35

• UCA scored the first six points of the game. Jalen Tate got Arkansas on the board first with a 3-pointer at 17:02.

• UCA got off to a hot start, leading 19-12 with 12 minutes to go and shooting 64.3 percent from the field.

• Arkansas took its first lead at 7:43 (26-25) on a Jalen Tate 3-pointer. UCA tied the game at 28-28 but never regained the lead the rest of the period.

• Arkansas heated up on a 7-0 run to get to within two (25-23) and force a UCA time out at 8:16.

• Arkansas used a 12-0 run and an 8-0 run as part of a 20-3 run – making 8-of-9 from the field – over 5:35 to take a 36-28 lead at the 4-minute timeout (3:54).

• Arkansas led by as many as 10 (38-28).

• UCA ended the half strongly and trailed by six at the break.

• Desi Sills and Jalen Tate each scored 10 points to lead the Razorbacks in the first half.

• There were just nine total fouls called and just two free throws attempted as Desi Sills was 1-of-2 at the line.

• For the first time this season, Arkansas was outrebounded in the first half, 20-16.

SECOND HALF: Arkansas 59, Southern 40

• Arkansas pushed its halftime lead from six to 14 (51-37) at the 17:10 mark.

• UCA got to within six (64-58) at the 9:50 mark. Moses Moody went on a 5-0 run but UCA cut it to single digits (69-60) with 8:29 left to play.

•  Desi Sills answered with an old-fashion 3-point play and the Razorbacks led by double digits the rest of the way. Sills started a 16-4 run to put Arkansas up 23 with 3:48 to go.

• Notae made two free throws with 14 seconds left in the game to provide the 100-75 final score.

• Arkansas shot 60.5% from the field in the second half and held UCA to 38.2%.

• Arkansas scored at least 50 in a half for the third time this season, getting 59 tonight. Arkansas scored 61 in the first half versus Mississippi Valley State and 81 in the second half of that contest.

Game notes

• Arkansas’ starting lineup was Jalen Tate (G) – Desi Sills (G) – Moses Moody (G) – Justin Smith (F) – Connor Vanover (F) for the fifth straight game.

• Arkansas won the tip and is 6-0 this year when winning the tip.

• For the first time this season, Arkansas did not score on the opening possession of the game. Central Arkansas’ Samson George scored the game’s first points at 19:03.

• Jalen Tate scored Arkansas’ first points, a 3-pointer from the right corner at 17:02.

• JD Notae was the first sub for Arkansas.

• This was the first meeting between Arkansas and Central Arkansas since the 1946-47 season. The Razorbacks are 7-0 all-time versus the Bears, including a 4-0 record in games played in Fayetteville. The series dates back to Arkansas’ first season of basketball (1923-24).

The last time

• Arkansas hosted an in-state school for a regular-season game was Nov. 28, 1950 versus Arkansas Tech. (Razorbacks won 50-45)

 • Arkansas hosted an in-state school overall was Mar. 13, 1987 versus Arkansas State in the first round of the NIT. (Razorbacks won 67-64)

NOTE: Arkansas did host UALR last season in an exhibition game as Razorback All-American Darrell Walker brought his squad to play the first contest on Nolan Richardson Court. (Arkansas won 79-64)

• Jalen Tate scored his 1,000th career point at 14:57, a layup to give him 1,001. He now has 1,013. He is 31 rebounds shy of 400 and now has 313 career assists.

• With a 3-pointer at 5:49, JD Notae scored his 1,000th career point. Notae now has 1,009 career points. Notae has scored in double figures in 52 of his 66 career games, has led his team in scoring 32 times and has scored 20-plus 16 times.

• Justin Smith is up next as he now needs 105 points for 1,000.

Tate goes over 1,000 points for college career, has double-double in win

Razorbacks’ Jalen Tate (17 points, 11 assists) reached a college milestone scoring, dismissed injuries after 100-75 win over Bears on Saturday.

Notae overcomes slow start but gets hot to pace Arkansas’ win over UCA

Arkansas guard J.D. Notae (22 points, 6 assists, 3 steals) said his shots wren’t falling early, but then it started to click in big night.

Despite a virus, opt-out excuses, schedule, Pittman has made Hogs better

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Despite catastrophic predictions to the contrary from just about every corner, Arkansas managed to complete a ridiculously tough schedule in a crazy year.

An uncontrollable virus led to the greatest excuse for players to quit and coaches to run off players are just the highlights of what Sam Pittman has had to deal with in his first head coaching gig.

The fact he actually improved on things with the Razorbacks may be lost on some after a 52-3 loss to Alabama on Saturday that probably wasn’t really as close as the final score might indicate.

In the second half, Nick Saban was looking to the SEC Championship next week, which matters considerably more than the margin of victory over the Hogs.

“The second half they were just trying to go home,” Pittman said of the Crimson Tide, who took the second-half kickoff and ran off over half of the third quarter. “We got our butts kicked today … bad.

“But that’s the only time this year.”

Yes, it was ugly and every bit as bad as Pittman said. It was worse than Georgia, Texas A&M or Florida. Don’t judge the season by the last regular-season game.

“I told them you can’t let one game define your season,” Pittman said about what he told a group with long faces after the game.”

The numbers say things turned around for the Hogs this season. The final record will say 3-7, but it should have been at least 4-6 (the Auburn loss), probably 5-5 (with one defensive lineman regular in loss to LSU).

Remember, Pittman didn’t even get to see his team practice until the summer with the coronavirus wiping out spring practice and delaying everything for a month in fall practices.

And the SEC handed him maybe as tough of a schedule as anybody has ever had to play. When you have every opponent but one ranked at some point during the season that’s tough. Half of the schedule was the Top 10 at some point, making it tougher.

Despite all of that, plus the craziness of opt-outs and safety protocols, the Hogs still won 30% of their games … all in the SEC.

Since the 2012 season, Arkansas has won just 20.3% of their conference games. In one season, Pittman took a roster that hadn’t won a single league game in two seasons and won nearly a third of the conference games.

Maybe Pittman’s best recruiting efforts when he got the job was keep the seniors from leaving in droves. He’ll be recruiting most of them again since they can come back due to the free year they all get this year.

His pitch is probably going to be to keep it going.

“These guys helped start turning the program,” Pittman said. “We’re not near where we need to be, where we want to be. They helped us.

“We won three SEC games and we hadn’t done that in three years.”

To put this season in context, Pittman has dealt with getting a job and not getting to coach his team for nearly nine months, then having to deal with a ridiculously difficult schedule while never knowing who he’s going to have on the team.

“Ya’ll have no idea what going through covid, opt-out and injuries are about,” he said. “I mean none. You basically put your team together on Friday because the test comes back on Thursday.”

You get the idea, though, the opt-outs that players do bothers Pittman more than anything. It does me, too.

While it was designed as a way for players concerned about their safety could not play and keep their eligibility, it’s turned into an excuse for some of them to flat quit and avoid criticism.

Coaches have also used it as a politically-correct way to run off malcontents.

“Hopefully if the vaccine gets out and things our depth will get better,” Pittman said. “The kids aren’t afraid of the virus and at that point opting-out would be a thing of the past. Our depth is probably better than it looks simply because of the virus and opting out.”

When all of this settles down (and it will, whether you want to believe it or not), there will be plenty of things that could have been done differently.

That’s for later.

For now Pittman will be holding practices this week and waiting to hear where the Hogs’ bowl destination will be.

And he sounds confidant the Hogs will go bowling.

“In a regular season when you beat three SEC teams, you usually have 3-4 wins in the non-conference games and that’s 6-7 wins, and you go to a bowl game,” he said.

It has nothing to do with playing a game. That’s simply for television (this year ESPN is wanting matchups that people want to watch because records don’t mean a whole lot).

“Teams that don’t go to bowl games, they lose about 15 practices … they lose a spring ball to everybody that [goes to a bowl],” Pittman said Saturday. “If we didn’t think practice is important, then we wouldn’t want to go to a bowl game. But we do, and we want to.”

The good news is he will be going to a bowl game, probably in Houston or Memphis. Pittman was careful not to mention any specific bowl games.

Practices will be held this week he said near the end of his postgame comments.

Most of this week is about recruiting where the Hogs are sitting at No. 19 in the national rankings, according to the 247Sports.com composite rankings.

Which is the most important thing right now because the season is complete.

And that may ultimately be the biggest accomplishment of all.

Pittman: Best Alabama team he’s seen, but knows Saban won’t like that

Sam Pittman thinks this is “the best squad I’ve seen,” but Nick Saban will like him saying that because he’s called it “rat poison” before.

Woods on Hogs’ offense not able to execute against Tide’s defense

Razorbacks’ wide receiver Mike Woods talked with the media after the 52-3 loss to No. 1 Alabama about the struggles all day for offense.

Smith says running on Alabama’s defense tough because they are disciplined

Hogs running back Trelon Smith (69 yards on 19 carries) said the Crimson Tide’s defense was “very disciplined,” which made yards hard to get.

Catalon on getting big interception taken away with targeting penalty

Razorbacks safety Jalen Catalon talked after the game about getting the interception in the end zone against Alabama taken away on penalty.

Pool on loss to No. 1 Alabama, but says bowl game for Hogs would be big

Arkansas linebacker Bumper Pool said after the blowout loss against the Crimson Tide going to any bowl game would be big boost for program.

HALFTIME REPORT: Hogs’ poor offensive execution digs 38-3 hole

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If anybody asks Sam Pittman about the execution of Arkansas’ offense in the first half against Alabama, he might be in favor of it.

No, not really, but as the Crimson Tide offense has methodically put up 226 yards, the Razorbacks have a total of 70 so the 38-3 Bama lead shouldn’t be surprising.

The Hogs’ offensive line has piled up numerous procedure penalties (moving at the line) and Eric Gregory alone on the defensive side has been drawn offsides by Tide quarterback Mac Jones apparently getting away with some creative snap counts.

Arkansas was in this game for most of the first half. It was 3-3 with 2:16 left in the first quarter when DeVonta Smith returned a punt up the middle of the field for 84 yards for a score that opened the floodgates.

Alabama got a pair of touchdowns from Najee Harris (1 yard, 5 yards) and Brian Robinson, Jr. (1 yard, 4 yards) while the Hogs’ offense just basically stumbled around.

Feleipe Franks started at quarterback for the Hogs, but didn’t have a lot of success and K.J. Jefferson is finding the going a little more difficult than he did last week against Missouri.

Franks had 33 yards in lost rushing yardage on sacks or failed scrambles while Arkansas’ inability to convert on third down (just 1-of-7) has led to the Crimson Tide getting the ball back to set up drives.

The Hogs got a 26-yard field goal from Matthew Phillips (replacing A.J. Reed who wasn’t getting much consistency) with 7:18 left in the first quarter after getting a first-and-goal before bogging down.

There is still a half to go, so spring practice may start for the Hogs with the second-half kickoff.

Making this game competitive, though, probably isn’t going to happen.