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Declaring for draft now may raise questions, but is a grown man’s choice

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When Mason Jones declared last week he’s putting his name into the mix to be selected for the NBA Draft that is currently scheduled for June, but may — or may not — happen at that time.

Isaiah Joe may be looking at making the same decision in the next few days or weeks. That is not known right now.

Neither are projected right now to even be picked in some of the mock drafts that are continuing right along in these uncertain times due to the global health crisis.

Of course the NBA only picks 60 players a year, so to not be on the board right now removes them from being kids and turns them into grown men.

When you make the decision to forego college eligibility with no guarantees, well, that’s fine and well but just remember they are making their first legitimate grown-up decision.

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman didn’t criticize Jones’ choice, although having the SEC’s leading scorer on the team for the next season would make the projections a little higher.

He supported the decision (at least publicly), but it would be interesting to hear his evaluation of whether Jones would have moved up on the boards (which is more money) by coming back to the Razorbacks.

Don’t throw injury out there. The numbers show he’s more likely to suffer a career-ending injury crossing Leroy Pond Dr. in heavy traffic than playing another season. If you don’t believe it, go ahead and try to cross when everybody’s back in town, even in the crosswalks.

Hopefully it will all work out.

While Jones is going while he is the co-MVP of the SEC this year along with Mississippi State’s Reggie Perry, Joe doesn’t exactly have the biggest numbers to bank on.

In Joe’s case, the projection numbers are all over the place. CBSSports.com has him at No. 18 while others don’t have him even listed on the board and a couple of others have him rated higher than Jones.

Of course at this point there is a lot of speculation whether the draft is even held as scheduled, although with the NFL announcing it’s holding their annual cattle call in Las Vegas as a TV-only event, the guess here is there will be a draft.

Don’t be surprised to even see a window open up to allow workouts, interviews and such for teams to evaluate potential players.

That is where Jones could possibly improve his stock.

Hopefully it works out great for both.

It’s their decision and it officially moves them to adulthood.

Why sports still matter during time when more real issues loom larger

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We’ve reached a point in the current global health pandemic where watching the news is almost exhausting, especially delivered with political slants on both sides of the spectrum.

No, this isn’t about politics. That’s for others to cuss and discuss.

At least some of us have sports to speculate on everything from what-if’s to what-will’s in that world when competition resumes … at some point in time.

Things have fallen to the level of arguing about Arkansas bringing out the old gray-looking helmets for the football team to wear, regardless of how stupid that whole idea is. But that’s a topic for a different day.

This serious health crisis is a cause for concern. It’s also why sports — even with no games — has become an important part of just getting through it all to some folks.

It’s a distraction from the important issues of the day.

For Razorback fans, there will be no games until football practice starts, which could be as early as this summer. Not making any predictions here, but my guess is there will be a college football season and an NFL season.

Yeah, there may be a slight downturn in the quality, but the odds are no one really notice that much. As Sam Pittman told us last week “everybody is in the same boat.?

That’s the most important thing. Nobody is really getting any sort of advantage from this suspension of literally everything.

And every coach is bored silly, but they are able to deal with it because everybody’s playing on the same level right now. They are all focusing on recruiting and now that comes down to who can do the best on that … they can’t impress ’em with facilities, culture or any of that up close and personal.

According to the guys who follow the world of recruiting closely, the Hogs have been making a lot of offers during this down cycle, keeping up with the pace they’ve been on since Sam Pittman and his new staff came in.

There are even sports books that have put out lines on some key games in the college football season that some question even happening, but my guess is it will.

Here are some of the interesting numbers:

• Oklahoma over Texas by 3.5
• Alabama a 3.5-point favorite over LSU in Baton Rouge
• Alabama by 7.5 over Auburn

Arkansas hasn’t been forecast, yet.

All of this is why sports really does matter. People are still talking about it.

Everybody has an opinion, which is what normally happens anyway, but now it/s all by guess and by golly.

Nobody’s wrong. It’s their opinion, so they aren’t wrong whether we agree with them or not.

It also gives everybody a chance to step back and take a breath from the serious talk of the day, which really is far more important in the overall scope of things in the world.

Yes, sports does matter in these difficult times, even without games or even practices to argue about.

But hang in there.

This, too, shall pass.

Pittman, Hogs’ staff will finally be able to hold ‘virtual’ meetings with players

While it’s still not getting on the field, new Arkansas coach Sam Pittman and his staff will be able to hold online meetings with players during the downtime caused by the ongoing health crisis.

This comes from a report from 247Sports.com on Friday evening that obtained a copy of a memo from the SEC office to member schools.

They had not been able to take advantage of modern technology for virtual instruction, position meetings and other activities during the pandemic after everything was halted March 13 when students were sent home.

Most of the spring break ends this week and campuses will be closed, but the schools have gone to online-only instruction and the memo will allow coaches to meet with players but can’t ask the players to get video of their workouts.

With many gyms and workout facilities closed across the country, the players are having to go back to old-school type excercises in many cases.

Nobody knows what the schedule going forward could be, as Pittman told the media last week. For an almost completely new coaching staff he’ll take what he can get now.

As he said, “everybody is in the same boat.”

Which could change a lot of things when the ball starts getting thrown around.

Jones chooses to follow dream, declaring he’s available for NBA Draft

Mason Jones’ dream, he says, is to play in the NBA and he announced via Twitter on Friday morning he’s putting his name into the group for the draft … whenever that is held this summer.

The global health pandemic has put all of that in question, but Jones seemed pretty clear his decision has been made after winning Player of the Year honors in the SEC after leading the league in scoring.

“This has been a lifelong dream of mine to play in the NBA so I’m looking forward to the next chapter in my life,” Jones said in the Twitter post.

Declaring eligibility is one thing. Getting picked for one of just 60 spots in the two-round draft is another.

ESPN’s draft ranking has him at No. 80 and the chances will be limited to immediately improve his standing. The NBA’s season has been suspended over the health pandemic and that includes any meetings with prospects or workouts.

The deadline to pull out of the draft and go back to college is also up in the air.

His senior year had some pretty impressive stats, averaging 22 points a game and shared Player of the Year honors with Mississippi State’s Reggie Perry and was named an honorable mention All-American by The Associated Press.

Jones was unanimously picked for the All-SEC first team by the coaches and media.

If he’s not selected for the draft his options will be to play out of the country or go to the NBA’s G-league.

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NCAA’s reduced payout won’t affect Razorbacks or DII schools in state much

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The global health pandemic has completely disrupted the sports world, but the NCAA’s announcement Thursday the check won’t be as big this time around probably won’t kill any of them.

For an organization that routinely makes insanely stupid decisions at times, this one is really out of their control so we’re not going to kick them over this so we’re not heading down that road.

While it won’t affect Arkansas significantly or the Division II schools in the state (which is the largest number of universities) is because that NCAA check isn’t that big of a deal in their overall athletic budgets.

SEC schools get about 90-plus percent of their revenue from television and bowl money in addition to donors.

The Division II schools have a completely different business model.

“Unlike D1, it’s not kicked to the schools to fund portions of the athletic operations,” Henderson athletics director Shawn Jones said Thursday night. “Division II has tried to keep their reserves at something like 70 percent of the budget for a while.”

That comes back to how it’s a different structure than Division I programs.

“Division II uses their percentage of the NCAA budget to fund championships and provide money to conferences, special projects and initiatives, etc.,” Jones said. “Division II should be able to operate championships and the other initiatives fairly close to a normal level in 20-21 based on solid budgeting practice in the past.”

However, if the crisis continues for a really extended period, well even careful budgets may be extended dramatically.

“That is a one year fix, so hopefully things get back to normal soon,” Jones said.

It won’t be as devastating as the doom-and-gloom scenario many in the media have said. That’s because it’s handled differently.

According to Mark Schlabach’s story at ESPN on Thursday:

According to the NCAA, Division II members will receive 4.37% of actual revenues, currently projected to be about $13.9 million, which is $30 million less than last year. Division III will receive 3.18% of actual revenues, about $10.7 million, which is about $22 million less than last year.

That means $30 million less for the Division II members as a group. That’s not each school. Those schools don’t have budgets a whole lot over that number if you combined every school in a conference.

The DII schools aren’t exactly waiting on a NCAA check that basically amounts to beer money. For schools like Arkansas State, UCA, Little Rock and Arkansas-Pine Bluff, though, it could be a significant hit. The money from the NCAA Tournament is why some of them went through an extended process to move up to Division I.

We don’t know how the cut will affect the SEC. In the Big 12 each school is expecting get about $1 million instead of the pre-corona estimate of roughly $2.4 million.

Again, that’s not that big of a number because it really isn’t a big part of their budgets.

The Big 12 members probably won’t even really notice it.

Big 12 commission Bob Bowlsby said Thursday he anticipated the Big 12 would still be able to “make members whole” in financial distributions this year by using its reserves.

Cutting out the spring sports that frustrated a lot of fans but from a financial standpoint for the schools it’s not that big of a deal because there are significant expenses that are eliminated, too.

What it DOES hurt, though, in Fayetteville is the economic impact cancelling baseball has on hotels and eating establishments in addition to fan shops. Those are the ones that will take a collective big hit.

Not the Razorbacks getting a check from the NCAA that really doesn’t have a giant impact on the overall financial picture.

 

Northside’s Williams named Gatorade Player of Year for Arkansas

While trying to find a place to work out during the nationwide health crisis, Razorbacks’ center commitment Jaylin Williams was named the Arkansas Gatorade Player of the Year on Thursday.

Williams, who can fill in a spot lacking warm bodies for the Hogs, had a solid senior season at Fort Smith Northside, but now is having to work outdoors a lot with gyms closed, according to his father Thursday.

That is due to the current social distancing recommendations and involves a lot of solo individual work.

He scored 19.6 points a game while pulling down 12.6 rebounds, getting 2.5 blocks, 2.7 assists and 1.1 steaks in a 20-10 season before falling to Little Rock Central in the semifinal.

Williams had 17 of the Grizzlies’ points in the 40-37 loss.

He completes a sweep of the player of the year honors for Northside as Jersey Wolfenbarger women the girls’ title and remains one of the Razorbacks’ top targets for the 2021 class.

Williams is the only one of four top commits for the highly-ranked 2020 class. Moses Moody, K.K. Robinson and Davote Davis have also committed, but only Davis has signed.

The regular signing date is April 15 and it’s not clear whether that will remain fixed or be moved due to the uncertainty over health concerns while campus visits and normal recruiting has been delayed.

Gaulden joins Doumbia in Hogs entering NCAA’s transfer portal

While the world of college sports has ground to a halt with the national health emergency, the mysterious NCAA transfer portal is still spinning and Arkansas’ A’Tyanna Gaulden has put her name into it.

This has been previously reported at multiple media outlets, including HawgBeat.com on Thursday.

It will be the third school for Gaulden, who transferred from Florida State, sat a year and has been a key role player for Mike Neighbors coming off the bench behind Malika Monk last year, then Makayla Daniels this past season.

The Razorbacks’ Rokia Doumbia had previously entered the portal, which Neighbors confirmed earlier in the month.

Gaulden led the Hogs this past season with 100 assists despite never starting and averaging 16.8 minutes per game, 6.9 points, with a 17-point effort at Florida.

Doumbia was an ESPN four-star prospect coming out of the IMG Academy in Florida in 2018, but didn’t play much as a freshman. From Mali in West Africa, the 5-foot-9 guard averaged 3.2 points, 4.2 rebounds and 1.2 assists in 16.3 minutes as a sophomore this season.

Neighbors has already signed Elauna Eaton, Rylee Langerman and Destinee McGhee in this year’s signing class and now four spots are open on the roster with seniors Alexis Tolefree and Kiara Williams leaving.

That is, of course, pending official NCAA notification of granting extra eligibility due to the coronavirus situation knocking out NCAA tournaments and other events affecting college basketball.

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