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Sutton’s selection something former players, assistants expected, says Dykes

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Jimmy Dykes has played and worked for Eddie Sutton for a lot of years so the official announcement Sutton was headed to the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame last weekend was a relief as much as anything.

“We’ve always thought in our hearts he was a Hall of Famer,” Dykes told The Morning Rush statewide on ESPN Arkansas. “It was nice to have it validated like it was. I talked to the family Friday night after they found out he was selected and it was a sweet moment.”

Sutton, who is unable to talk because of health issues, still hears pretty well and communicates through his family and Dykes said they held the phone for him to hear Saturday after the official announcement.

it is an honor all the former players and coaches have been as excited about as anyone.

“I wouldn’t be at ESPN like I am today without him in my background,” Dykes said.

Sutton was one of the old-style coaches, emphasizing defense constantly. If you watched one of his practices at Arkansas in the 1970’s you wondered if he was aware you had to put the ball in the hole eventually to win.

He knew, Dykes said.

“He was great on both ends of the floor as a coach,” he said Friday morning. “You go watch Bill Self at Kansas and he’s doing some of the same defensive drills that Eddie Sutton did at Oklahoma State with Mr. Iba.”

There were a lot of those interviews in the early years when Sutton referred to those drills under legendary coach Henry Iba in Stillwater during his playing days there from 1955-58 when the Aggies were one of THE blue bloods of college basketball.

They were Oklahoma A&M in those days and the Cowboys nickname came later.

But Dykes pointed out how Sutton adapted what he was doing to what worked as the game evolved.

“The fundamentals of the game defensively have translated to today’s game,” he said. “The game offensively changed and he adjusted to that, but the defense never wavered.”

Teams now still play defense to win. It’s something Eric Musselman has brought a renewed interest in with the Hogs and for an analytics coach, it’s just in the numbers.

“Offensively, Gonzaga was number one team in the country and defensively just outside top 25,” Dykes said about an interesting aspect that was going to play out in the NCAA Tournament this year before being cancelled due to the global health crisis.

“No team in the last 10 years has won a national championship without a top 25 defense,” Dykes said. “I was anxious to see if Gonzaga could have done that this year. If you don’t play defense at a high level you’re not make a deep run or championships.”

The other part Sutton brought to the team was confidence in his ability to coach.

“I can remember a few times we’d be behind at Kentucky and two or three times he would say at halftime he could out-coach the other guy,” Dykes said. “There was never a game we thought we’d get out-coached. It never was even a thought.”

Dykes likes what he’s seen from Mason Jones, especially his ability to score at a clip where he became co-MVP of the SEC this season and gave some of the credit to Musselman.

“Eric did a tremendous job developing him,” he said. “How do we play with freedom, keep the proper spacing and still keep that freedom? Mason was tremendous at that. He could score from anywhere.”

But there are still some things he’s got to improve for the next level.

“He’s still got to develop his body, improve his athleticsm,” Dykes said. “He’s a full 6-5 and has that confidence to get it done. Can he defend, be explosive enough to make those plays at the NBA level?

“The bodies on the floor in the NBA is night and day different from college,” he said.

With all sports cancelled right now, it’s not just fans feeling the frustration.

“The games went away a lot, lot earlier than any of us wanted them to,” Dykes said.

Jones remembers what people said, what he did for Razorbacks

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When Mason Jones hit Fayetteville a couple of years ago it didn’t take long to get the story about him being a chubby kid who went to a junior college and re-made himself in a lot of ways.

Aside from losing over 50 pounds, he also turned into a heckuva player and he told Tommy Craft and Tye Richardson on The Morning Rush on ESPN Arkansas on Thursday what he wants Razorback fans to remember.

“I just want Arkansas fans to know that Mason Jones played his hardest every game and he made sure that win or lose, my team knew that we played my hardest and we gave it everything we could game in and game out,” he said in a roughly 20-minute interview. “I just want to leave that Mason Jones was one of the best scorers ever at Arkansas and that he could score at all three levels, knowing people said he wasn’t really athletic.

“(They said) he couldn’t do this and he couldn’t do that, and he proved everybody wrong, and that Mason Jones was a hard worker. He didn’t take ‘no’ for an answer, he didn’t let people stop him and he proved people wrong.”

Now fans are wondering if the SEC’s co-MVP this past season will move on to play pro ball or come back and Jones danced on both sides of that issue.

“Right now I’m just taking it day by day,” he said. “There’s a good chance that I’m going to stay in the draft and just take on bigger challenges.”

Then he later left a little crack in the door out of town.

“It’s sweet being the man on campus, but you also have to think about how you want to be remembered,” he said. “Did you leave it all on the court, do you feel like you have anything else to prove, did you show your worth?

“There’s so many little things that go into it … you never know what will happen, but right now I’m just taking it day by day and letting God handle everything.”

The bottom line is he may know but he isn’t saying.

And he talks with Isaiah Joe a lot but he wasn’t letting anything slip about what his decision might be, although most NBA mock drafts have him slotted in a higher position.

“A big decision is coming for my guy Isaiah,” he said. “I just want to let him just make his decision freely. I want him to make the best decision for him.”

One thing that came out clear in the interview, though, was the impact new coach Eric Musselman has had through all this, bringing a pro-style coach to the college game.

“Who wouldn’t want to play hard for a coach who treats you like a pro before you go pro?” Jones said.

Lady Tigers win girls title over Fayetteville; Magnolia claims boys crown in media poll

By Scott McDonald
Batesville Daily Guard

After the Arkansas Activities Association finally canceled the remaining state championship games that did not get played last month at the start of the COVID-19 virus pandemic, members of the Arkansas Sports Media voted on the final High School Basketball Polls of the year this week.

Since eight state championship games from the top four classes were not played, the AAA awarded both teams that advanced to each of those title games a co-State Championship. But the ASM voters had to make a choice of those teams to vote No. 1 in each of those classifications, making each of those teams the “mythical state champion.”

The lower two classifications were able to hold their state championship games and by rule, those teams are automatically a unanimous choice for No.1 in their respective classification in the ASM poll.

As for the top overall teams in the state, Magnolia barely edged out West Memphis for the boys’ top spot while the Bentonville Lady Tigers garnered all but one first-place vote to claim the girls’ No. 1 spot.

Girls’ rankings

GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL RANKINGS
Following is the overall Top 10 girls high school basketball teams in Arkansas and the top five in Classes 6A, 5A, 4A, 3A, 2A and 1A as voted by a panel of sports media from around the state for the week ending January 5. Ranking is given with first-place votes received, records, total points and last week's rankings:
OVERALLRecordPtsPrv
1.Bentonville (12)3-1150
2.Greenwood (1)4-1130
3.Conway (1)22-5-2112
4.Little Rock Christian5-0106
5.Fort Smith Northside5-1105
6.Melbourne7-187
7.Batesville4-064
8.Farmington6-139
9.Fayetteville2-137
10.North Little Rock1-117
Others receiving votes: Star City 7, Viola 6, Paragould 5, Nettleton 5, LR Central 4, Pulaski Academy 2, Valley Springs 2, Jonesboro 1, Harrison 1.
CLASS 6A
1.Bentonville (13)3-176
2.Fort Smith Northside (2)5-158
Conway (1)5-258
4.Fayetteville2-161
5.North Little Rock1-112
Others receiving votes: Little Rock Central 1, Springdale Har-Ber 1.
CLASS 5A
1.Greenwood (11)4-173
2.Little Rock Christian (4)5-062
3.Batesville (1)4-053
4.Paragould4-024
5.West Memphis2-09
Others receiving votes: Vilonia 7, Nettleton 5, Lake Hamilton 5, Jonesboro 2.
CLASS 4A
1.Farmington (14)6-178
2.Star City (2)5-156
3.Harrison3-048
4.Nashville5-129
5.Pulaski Academy2-117
Others receiving votes: Shiloh Christian 7, Southside Batesville 5.
CLASS 3A
1.Valley Springs (13)9-277
2.Lamar (1)6-049
3.Bergman12-136
4.Mountain View1-228
5.Hoxie3-015
Others receiving votes: Dover 13, Cossatot River 12, Mayflower 7, Central Arkansas Christian 2, Manila 1, Episcopal 1.
CLASS 2A
1.Melbourne (15)7-179
2.Tuckerman (1)7-055
Des Arc5-055
4.Acorn8-216
5.Cotter5-114
Others receiving votes: Bigelow 7, Quitman 6, Marmaduke 4, Conway Christian 2, Buffalo Island Central 1, Sout Side Bee Branch 1.
CLASS 1A
1.Viola (15)12-179
2.Kirby (1)5-350
3.Mount Vernon-Enola6-044
4.Sacred Heart6-117
5.Emerson6-116
Norfork8-216
Others receiving votes: Westside-Greers Ferry 13, Rural Special 5.

Bentonville had just one loss all year and it was very early in the season to Fort Smith Northside which spent all season at No. 1 while Bentonville was No. 2.

However, the Lady Bears were upset in the Class 6A state semifinals by Fayetteville, which ended up being the No. 2 team as the Lady Bulldogs were co-state champs with Bentonville.

Northside finished up third. Greenwood and Nettleton were co-champs of Class 5A but Greenwood finished fourth overall and Nettleton was fifth.

Farmington, which tied for the 4A title with Star City, finished sixth while Class 6A’s Conway was seventh.

Star City, the only undefeated girls team in the state, finished eighth and Batesville finished ninth. Melbourne, winner of the Class 2A title for the second straight year, finished at No. 10.

In the Class 6A Top 5, it was Bentonville, Fayetteville, Northside, Conway and Cabot.
In the Class 5A Top 5, Greenwood got nine of the 15 first-place votes to edge Nettleton which got the other six.

Mountain Home finished in a tie with Little Rock Christian, the other semifinal team, for third. Vilonia, which was ranked No. 1 going into the state tournament before being upset by Mountain Home, finished fifth.

In the Class 4A Top 5, Farmington got 10 first-place votes to finish first over undefeated Star City. Batesville, the defending state champion coming into the season, lost to Farmington in the semifinals and finish up at No. 3.

Southside Batesville and Pulaski Academy finished tied for fourth while Harrison was just a single point behind.

Ironically, it was Valley Springs and Mountain View that finished as co-champs of Class 3A.

Both members of the same 3A-1 East Conference for a dozen years have dominated Class 3A girls basketball since 2009 as they have combined for 11 state finals appearances and four state championships.

Splitting their games 2-2 this season, Mountain View was the defending state champion coming in but Valley Springs had the hot hand coming into the title game as the Lady Tigers had beaten the Lady Yellowjackets the last two times they had met.

Because of this, Valley Springs ends up at No.1 with nine first-place votes to six for Mountain View.

The Top 5 is rounded out by Charleston, Hoxie and Mayflower.

Melbourne finished as the top team in Class 2A for the second year in a row and was ranked No. 1 the entire season.

Quitman finished second where it had mostly been ranked all year. Marmaduke is third, Bigelow finished fourth and Earle came in at No. 5.

And in the Class 1A Top 5, Kirby finished first while Viola, the only team in the state with 40 wins, finished second.

West Side Greers Ferry came on late in the year to make a push to the semifinals and finished third. Alpena, the other semifinalist, finished fourth and Norfork was fifth.

There were 16 girls’ teams in the state to win at least 30 games this year and four of them did not make the year-end rankings, including Emerson (32-4), Lamar (30-4), Acorn (31-5) and Mount Vernon-Enola (30-8).

Boys’ rankings

BOYS HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL RANKINGS
Following is the overall Top 10 boys high school basketball teams in Arkansas and the top five in Classes 6A, 5A, 4A, 3A, 2A and 1A as voted by a panel of sports media from around the state for the week ending January 5. Ranking is given with first-place votes received, records, total points and last week's rankings:
OVERALLRecordPtsPrv
1.North Little Rock (10)2-0150
2.Little Rock Central (4)4-1123
3.Magnolia (1)1-0112
4.Marion (1)3-0109
5.Little Rock Mills2-065
6.Jonesboro1-059
7.Springdale4-053
8.Fort Smith Northside3-037
9.Fayetteville4-235
10.Springdale Har-Ber3-034
Others receiving votes: Greene County Tech 26, Jacksonville 19, LR Parkview 18, Bryant 10, West Memphis 7, Maumelle 6, Bentonville 4, Viola 4, Berryville 2, Hot Springs 2, Blytheville 1, Dumas 1, LR Christian 1, Rogers 1, Southside Batesville 1.
CLASS 6A
1.North Little Rock (10)2-074
2.Little Rock Central (6)4-166
3.Springdale4-035
4.Fort Smith Northside3-119
5.Fayetteville4-218
Springdale Har-Ber3-018
Others receiving votes: Bentonville 6, Bryant 4.
CLASS 5A
1.Marion (10)3-070
3.Jonesboro (4)1-054
2.Little Rock Parkview3-138
4.Greene County Tech (1)7-033
5.Jacksonville (1)1-212
Others receiving votes: Little Rock Christian 10, Vilonia 7, Maumelle 7, Hot Springs 3, West Memphis 3, Sylvan Hills 2, Van Buren 1.
CLASS 4A
1.Magnolia (15)1-075
2.Little Rock Mills2-060
3.Blytheville4-142
4.Brookland1-117
5.Morrilton2-115
Others receiving votes: Berryville (1) 12, Southside Batesville 8, Ozark 7, Farmington 3, Valley View 1.
CLASS 3A
1.Dumas (9)0-064
2.Mayflower (6)5-057
3.Manila4-228
4.Valley Springs9-223
Rivercrest1-017
Others receiving votes: Pangburn (1) 14, Osceola 14, Bergman 11, Elkins 6, Prescott 4, Cave City 2.
CLASS 2A
1.England (9)2-165
2.Caddo Hills (4)10-150
Marianna (2)1-150
4.Earle (1)0-032
5.Lavaca4-214
Others receiving votes: Tuckerman 12, Acorn 10, Flippin 4, Bay 2, White Co. Central 1.
CLASS 1A
1.Viola (13)12-077
2.Izard County (3)7-067
3.Bradley5-040
4.Nevada5-216
5.Kirby2-314
Others receiving votes: Clarendon 6, Mount Vernon-Enola 6, Mammoth Spring 5, West Side Greers Ferry 5, Concord 4.

The Magnolia Panthers were the only boys team in the state to finish undefeated and were set to play for the second straight title but ended up sharing the 4A championship with Little Rock Mills.

Magnolia finishes the season as the No.1 team overall, clipping No. 2 West Memphis by a single point. Each received seven first-place votes. Jacksonville, co-champs of 5A with West Memphis finished third and 6A co-champs Conway and Little Rock Central were fourth and fifth, respectively.

Mills finished sixth followed by last year’s 6A champ Fort Smith Northside at No. 7, the Fayetteville, North Little Rock and Hot Springs.

Conway got 12 first-place votes to take No. 1 in Class 6A with co-champ LR Central getting three for No. 2. They were followed by Northside, Fayetteville and North Little Rock.

West Memphis nearly got all the votes for No. 1 in Class 5A with 13 while co-champ Jacksonville got two to finish second. They were followed by Maumelle, Hot Springs and Marion.

Magnolia got all 15 first-place votes to stay at No. 1 in Class 4A where the Panthers were all season. Mills also remained second. Blytheville finished third with Brookland fourth and eStem coming in at No. 5.

Two teams that weren’t even ranked prior to the state tournament finished up first and second in Class 3A.

Rivercrest and Osceola ended up being co-champs but Rivercrest got nine votes to finish first and Osceola got the other six. Dumas finished third, Valley Springs was fourth and Mayflower finished fifth.

England won its second-straight Class 2A title to finish at No. 1. Earle, the runner-up, is second followed by Marianna, Lavaca and Bay.

The Nevada Blue Jays pulled the upset in the 1A title game, slipping past defending champ Izard County, 48-47. Kriby, which gave Izard County a tough game in the semifinals, finished third and was followed by Bradley and Concord.

There were 11 boys teams that finished the season with at least 30 victories but four of them were not ranked, including Bergman (32-9), The New School (36-2), Hillcrest (31-6) and Caddo Hills (32-11).

Vote now in Hatfield region of the 2020 greatest Hogs football games of all time

It’s time to answer the question that everyone is asking: what is the greatest Razorback football game of all-time? Is it the 1969 Shootout vs. Texas, Miracle on Markham, 1965 Natty Cotton Bowl vs. Nebraska, 1978 Orange Bowl vs. Oklahoma, 1964 vs. Texas, 2007 vs. #1 LSU, or is it something different? We look to find the answer to that question with The 2020 Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time Bracket!

Voting is open now on our social media channels! You can vote on Twitter @hitthatlinear, or on Facebook @hitthatline, or by voting below! Make sure you share with your friends!

Also, you can click here to view the full 64-game bracket! Let us know what you think!

This page will be updated daily, so make sure that you bookmark this page! Tomorrow (Thursday), we will have opening round voting for the Hatfield Region! Get out there and vote on what you think the Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time!

UA board cancels summer classes, prospect camps for recruiting

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Sam Pittman hasn’t had a lot of good news since taking over Arkansas football in December and Wednesday he got another curve thrown into his plans heading into his first season.

The University’s board of trustees voted to suspend all athletic and academic in-person camps through the summer in addition to face-to-face classes for the summer term.

This has nothing to do with fall practices and doesn’t address permitting player-led workouts during June and July if restrictions from the ongoing health crisis are relaxed.

The chaos for the Razorbacks continue in football. On the heels of 4-20 the last two years, this issue is not something anyone in Fayetteville caused but Pittman is the one having to sort it all out.

He said at a teleconference nearly three weeks ago that getting in by August 1 may be reality. While he didn’t have a clue he’s not going to panic over it.

“If they said you couldn’t have anything and just have the regular time you have in August — just Tuesday, Wednesday practice — you’re going to practice about half your season before the first game starts,” he said.

And he’s done it before.

Youngsters don’t know it, but when Pittman started coaching in the high school ranks they often didn’t really have much of a clue what they really had coming in every year until August.

While it’s not the preferred way to go about things it’s not exactly like the Hogs are on an island alone.

“Everybody’s in the same boat,” Pittman said.

Which, ultimately, may be the most important thing in all of this.

The Hogs are the only SEC school that has suspended things through the summer and it remains to be seen what they will do although they aren’t jumping the gun in early April cancelling things in the summer.

Of course there’s nothing that says the board can’t hold another teleconference and modify things.

Razorbacks finish short season ranked No. 19 in national poll

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas earned a No. 19 ranking in the final NFCA (National Fastpitch Coaches Association) Coaches’ Poll.

The Razorbacks moved up one spot from the previous poll after winning a pair of walk-off games against Kansas to close the shortened 2020 season. The final ESPN.com-USA Softball poll gave Arkansas a No. 21 ranking.

Despite only playing a single SEC series this season, the Razorbacks made it a memorable one winning their first game in Tuscaloosa since 2000 with a 1-0 triumph over No. 9 Alabama.

Junior catcher Kayla Green garnered SEC Player of the Week recognition in the third week of the season, hitting .667 at the FGCU Invitational.

Junior outfielder Hannah McEwen earned Softball America shortened season All-America third team honors after ranking third in SEC in on base percentage (.565) and seventh in batting average (.418).

Senior pitcher Autumn Storms won the most games in the SEC (11) and became the third winningest pitcher in program history (59).

The Razorbacks were ranked in all seven releases of the NFCA and ESPN.com/USA Softball polls this season.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Sidney Moncrief joins the show, Brett McMurphy, and more!

Razorback legend Sidney Moncrief joins the show to discuss his former college head coach Eddie Sutton joining the Naismith Hall of Fame. Plus Brett McMurphy joins the show to discuss college football. All that and more!

Vote now in bracket for 2020 greatest Razorback football games of all time

It’s time to answer the question that everyone is asking: what is the greatest Razorback football game of all-time? Is it the 1969 Shootout vs. Texas, Miracle on Markham, 1965 Natty Cotton Bowl vs. Nebraska, 1978 Orange Bowl vs. Oklahoma, 1964 vs. Texas, 2007 vs. #1 LSU, or is it something different? We look to find the answer to that question with The 2020 Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time Bracket!

Voting is open now on our social media channels! You can vote on Twitter @hitthatlinear, or on Facebook @hitthatline, or by voting below! Make sure you share with your friends!

Also, you can click here to view the full 64-game bracket! Let us know what you think!

This page will be updated daily, so make sure that you bookmark this page! Tomorrow (Thursday), we will have opening round voting for the Hatfield Region! Get out there and vote on what you think the Greatest Razorback Football Game of All Time!

Briles looking to do on grass what Musselman does on the hardwood

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If Eric Musselman hadn’t already dropped the phrase in Arkansas, new offensive coordinator Kendal Briles could probably use the “pace and space” description for what he wants to do.

As wide receiver Mike Woods told the media last Friday, he’s using a much simpler method to get playmakers in the open to make plays.

“It’s real simple for us all,” Woods said. “It really makes the game less thinking I think for all of us, and it allows us to play a lot faster.”

We got an idea about that earlier in the year meeting with the assistant coaches when Briles’ body language and expression pretty much scoffed at not getting an offense installed over two years with the Razorbacks previously.

“We’ll have almost all of it in,” he said.

He didn’t leave any wiggle room there. With the global health crisis throwing any spring practice out, Briles hasn’t talked with the media but Woods didn’t appear too concerned.

“It’s like a new system, but for me it’s kind of close to my high school style of offense,” he said. “(Briles) played under my high school head coach and a lot of the offense has similarities. It was kind of like I had to go back to some of the high school setup as far as the offense.”

In Texas high schools a staggering amount of programs run the offense that Art Briles created starting at Houston, then perfecting at Baylor. Kendal was there for it.

“It’s a great system as far as being able to play fast,” Woods said.

Keeping wide receivers coach Justin Stepp has made the transition to the new staff easier for a talented group that includes Woods, Treylon Burks and Trey Knox among others.

While the previous staff came in promising to play fast their offense never could never get untracked and the excuse was they didn’t have it all installed.

My thought at the time we were told that is this must be the most complicated offense in football history. We were being told that almost to the day that staff was leaving town.

“We didn’t really have to go through that change,” Woods said. “We’re all pretty comfortable with it right now. We just have to get a little refresher because it’s been a little minute since we could actually meet up with it.”

Woods didn’t sound too concerned about know what to do, admitting they did need some practice reps, though.

“As far as knowing what we need to do, I believe that we’re pretty good in that phase,” he said.

Which might mean the Hogs simplify things hoping it produces better results.