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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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Odom, Davis get raises to keep them from leaving Hogs before coaching

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Arkansas will be spending more money on assistants with defensive coordinator Barry Odom and offensive line coach Brad Davis getting a hike to keep them in Fayetteville.

The story was first reported at WholeHogSports.com on Wednesday.

New coach Sam Pittman mentioned in his teleconference with the media Friday that Davis had been offered some “pretty good” jobs since coming here and apparently that was in the SEC.

“If you go by jobs that he has been offered, he is as good an O-line coach as there is in the country because he has been offered a bunch,” Pittman said. “He has been offered some since he has been here.”

WholeHogSports said said in a speech at Cross Church in Pinnacle Hills a couple of weeks ago that Texas A&M tried to hire Davis and Odom was offered the defensive coordinator spot at a league shool, but he wasn’t say who it was.

We can all speculate, but the bottom line is both will be staying with the Razorbacks and Pittman should get credit for landing both of them soon after landing the job.

That’s what coaches who have been around awhile know to do quickly.

Each will get a $100,000 bump to stay, taking Odom to $1.3 million a year (which is still below what John Chavis was making) and Davis goes to $650,000 a year.

This comes at the same time Arkansas was No. 17 in football revenues in the country as reported by PennLive on Wednesday morning.

This is for the reporting year that ended in the summer of 2019.

According to the story, Arkansas football generated $76.5 million with a profit of $33.3 million and getting just two wins for that in that year made it hard to disagree with the view that may be the most profitable pair of wins in the history of college football.

In the SEC, though, that was good enough for the middle of the road (seventh) and fourth in the SEC West, $3 million ahead of Texas A&M.

 

 

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Razorbacks’ Tolefree named All-American finalist for Division I Region

FAYETTEVILLE — Senior guard Alexis Tolefree was named a 2020 Division I Region All-American Finalist, the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association announced Wednesday.

Tolefree was one of 52 players selected, and will be considered for the WBCA’s NCAA Division I All-American Team. The 10-member team will be announced on Thursday, April 2.

Tolefree’s breakout senior season was nothing short of spectacular.

She averaged career highs across the board, pouring in 16.3 points, 4.3 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 1.6 steals per game, all while shooting 42.3 percent from the field and 40.4 percent from three.

Tolefree was even better in conference play, averaging 18.6 points, 4.9 rebounds, 1.9 assists and 1.8 steals per game, shooting the ball at a 41.6 percent clip from the field and at a 38.9 percent clip from deep.

Tolefree led the team in scoring and in steals in SEC play, and her scoring average in conference only games was the third best mark in the league.

The senior guard seemed to always be at her best when it mattered most, as she had several huge second half performances in games the Hogs would end up winning.

Most notably, Tolefree dropped a career-high 35 at Missouri, 23 of which came in the second half in Arkansas’ epic 13-point comeback. She also scored 30 against then-No. 15 Kentucky, including 25 in the second half, in a game in which the Razorbacks would set a program record for most points scored against an SEC opponent.

Tolefree scored in double figures in 25 of Arkansas’ 32 games, scored 20+ 12 times, and dropped 30 or more four times, the most on the team.

Three of her 30-plus came during conference play, while she also had 30 against Auburn in the first round of the SEC Tournament.

Tolefree is among elite company, as the following players joined her on the Region Two team: Aliyah Boston (South Carolina), Jessika Carter (Mississippi State), Chennedy Carter (Texas A&M), Rennia Davis (Tennessee), Tyasha Harris (South Carolina), Rhyne Howard (Kentucky), Rickea Jackson (Mississippi State), Erica Ogwumike (Rice) and Chelsey Perry (UT Martin).

Olympics postponed, but questions still remain for Hogs’ track athletes

FAYETTEVILLE — Postponement of the 2020 Olympic Games has reset the international calendar for track and field athletes, putting Olympic dreams on hold for numerous athletes with ties to the Arkansas program.

However, questions remain regarding if, and when, any track meets will be held the rest of the 2020 season.

“There is disappointment, but at the same time we know it’s the best decision for all,” Arkansas women’s coach Lance Harter said. “Obviously, this is a virus that has taken a lot of lives already and doesn’t need to take any more, especially if attending an Olympic Games this summer would be the reason.

“Our athletes are still going to train with the idea that is there going to be a U.S. national championship, or some type of competition this season. They’re incredibly fit, now we’re just trying to get them to back off the intensity and kind of go into a cruise control.”

While the collegiate season has been canceled regarding conference and NCAA championships, track and field athletes usually compete in senior or junior championships in the U.S. (or their respective countries) during the summer.

“Hopefully, by mid-April we have a better idea what is going to be available for the 2020 track season,” said Harter. “The other decision for seniors is will they have an opportunity to come back next year or do they move on with their lives with the choices they have post-graduation.

“The whole timetable is in suspension, waiting to see what is going to happen. You want to stay as optimistic and positive as possible, but at the same time reality is reality.”

Arkansas alums competing professionally are also waiting to see what remains of this outdoor track and field season.

“Among our post-collegians we have a few athletes who are involved with the Diamond League and that is part of their livelihoods,” Harter said. “So that is even a tougher decision in waiting to see what’s the forecast for availability of competition.”

Arkansas alum Wallace Spearmon, Jr., a member of the USA Track and Field Board of Directors as well as serving on athlete advisory committees for USATF and Team USA, said in a Tuesday social media post:

“The Games being canceled has put a halt on athletes having to decide if they wanted to risk their life for the Games or practice social distancing, thank you. But there are still lots of unanswered questions, the Games are canceled but the season isn’t.

“I advise all professional athletes to speak to their sponsors about ways they can still market themselves and their brand. Speak to your AAC rep about tier questions, medical programs, and benefits. Speak to AAC about season plans, USATF plans, etc.

“Please don’t go full off-season mode without consulting with most of these people first. And before you say this isn’t important, please realize it’s not a matter of IF this will affect you, it’s when will it. Be smart and safe!”

Hogs ranked in Top 25 of ESPN’s ‘way-too-early’ ranking for next season

We get these things at the end of every season so now that the college basketball season has suffered a forced premature ending, ESPN has wasted little time ranking next season.

And it was interesting to see Arkansas in that ranking, which hasn’t happened in awhile.

The Razorbacks come in at No. 20 in the poll, talking about the No. 7-ranked recruiting class coming in along with getting guard J.D. Notae and 7-3 Connor Vanover finally on the floor in a game.

“(Eric) Musselman has done the rapid-rebuild thing before at Nevada and he’s on his way at Arkansas,” Jeff Borzello wrote in the story.

To put that in a little perspective, a ranking in the Top 20 means they are easily an odds-on bet to make the NCAA Tournament in Musselman’s second season and to at least win one game.

The Hogs haven’t won an NCAA game since the 2016-17 season and haven’t been to the Sweet 16 in about a quarter of a century. Getting picked to be there before we even know who the players are is partly due to some strong recruiting and a little bit of Musselman’s reputation.

Reports say Harris entering transfer portal as grad transfer for final year

Arkansas guard Jalen Harris has put his name into the NCAA’s transfer portal as a graduate transfer, according to his announcement Tuesday via Twitter:


Harris saw his playing time reduced significantly under new coach Eric Musselman with the addition of Jimmy Whitt, Jr., coming to the Razorbacks as a graduate transfer from SMU before this season.

Harris started every game in 2018-19. He averaged 7.6 points and 5.6 assists in 30.8 minutes per game. His 189 assists that year are seventh for a Hogs’ single season along with his 2.86 assist-to-turnover ratio. His 5.6 assists rank eighth.

He became a role player in Eric Musselman’s first season as head coach. In 32 games, Harris started five times and averaged 4.2 points and 2.4 assists in 24.3 minutes.

With five players coming in for next season, Harris’ departure opens a spot for Musselman to add a graduate transfer of his own in what has become another recruiting season all by itself in college sports.

“Right now the whole world has come to a stop except the basketball transfer portal and that moves a quicker rate than anything,” Musselman said in a teleconference last week.

Now that has hit the Hogs with a departure.