Razorback great Brewer on recruiting from Westark, playing for Sutton

Ron Brewer was one of The Triplets along with Marvin Delph and Sidney Moncrief and recruited out of Westark (now UA-Fort Smith) by Eddie Sutton and he talked about playing for him during the early years Tuesday afternoon with Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas.

PTN’s Irwin recounting Sutton’s history putting basketball on map in Arkansas

Pig Trail Nation’s Mike Irwin saw Eddie Sutton from the beginning to the end at Arkansas and talked with Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas Tuesday afternoon about the drastic changes he made.

Williams talks about past with Sutton on ESPN Arkansas’ ‘Halftime’

Arkansas current assistant Corey Williams played for Eddie Sutton at Oklahoma State and with Sutton’s passing Saturday, Williams talked about his former coach with Phil Elson and Matt Jenkins (Halftime) Tuesday on ESPN Arkansas.

Halftime Pod Presented By Jeff’s Clubhouse | May 26, 2020

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Phil and Smackdown remember the late Eddie Sutton. Arkansas assistant coach and former player for Eddie Sutton, Corey Williams joins the show to discuss Sutton’s legacy. Plus recruiting news with Nikki Chavenele!

Kjerstad picks up All-American honor from ‘Collegiate Baseball’ on Tuesday

Arkansas outfielder Heston Kjerstad has become the 28th All-America recipient in school history after being named to the Collegiate Baseball first team after a shortened 2020 season.

It is the first All-America accolade for Kjerstad since earning freshman All-America status in 2018. The award marks the fourth consecutive year a Razorback has picked up the honor.

A junior majoring in recreation and sport management, Kjerstad wrapped his third season with the Razorbacks, beginning the year on the USA Baseball Golden Spikes Award watch list for the second-straight season, while also earning Preseason First Team All-SEC accolades from the league’s coaches.

The accolades did not stop there, with Kjerstad gaining recognition from five outlets en route to unanimous first team preseason All-America honors.

The Amarillo, Texas, native put up video-game numbers in 2020, finishing the year with a .448/.791/.513 clip at the plate over 67 at-bats.

He recorded 30 hits, five doubles and six homers, with 20 RBIs and 19 runs scored.

Kjerstad quickly backed up the initial praise, putting together a .538/1.667/.643 line at the plate in the opening series against Eastern Illinois.

He went 7-for-12 overall over the three games, recording five extra-base hits, including four home runs, two in the opener and two in the finale. He also had 10 RBIs, scoring six times and walking twice, finishing with 20 total bases.

Every hit during the opening weekend brought in at least one run, while his four homers made him the first Razorback since at least 2002 to accomplish the feat in the first series of the year.

The performance at the plate earned him Collegiate Baseball National Player of the Week and SEC Co-Player of the Week, both honors for the first time in his career.

The hits kept coming, all season, as Kjerstad recorded at least one hit in every game of 2020, with multiple hits in 10 of the 16 contests.

All three games at the Shriners Hospitals for Children College Classic featured multi-hit performances, placing him on the all-tournament team behind a .538 batting average during the weekend.

His fifth dinger of the year came in Houston against Texas, but one of his biggest home runs of the season came in the final weekend of the season against South Alabama.

Tied at three and facing a 2-2 count with two outs in the ninth inning, Kjerstad rocketed a two-run homer over the wall in right field to clinch the series win.

It was the first walk-off home run by a Razorback in exactly seven years and helped exorcise the demons of what had a been a rough five-game stretch heading into the series.

As the season came to a close quicker than anyone imagined, the constants that everyone on the Hill anticipated and hoped for remained the same.

Kjerstad led the team in seven offensive categories, pacing the conference in hits (30), total bases (53) and slugging percentage (.791), as well as a close second in batting average (.448), while getting recognized by D1 Baseball as the best hitter in the SEC in the outlet’s wrap-up of the year.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Hutchinson’s press conference updates on Covid-19 crisis in state

Gov. Asa Hutchinson will provide an update to media Tuesday regarding Arkansas’ Covid-19 response, including updating current statistics.

Longtime assistant Dickey talks memories, qualities of former Hogs coach

Former Razorbacks coach Eddie Sutton passed away Saturday and nobody coached with him longer than Arkansas native James Dickey and he joined Tye Richardson, Tommy Craft and Clay Henry (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas on Tuesday morning.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Eddie Sutton memories, James Dickey, Would You Rather Tue

Tye & Tommy on some Eddie Sutton memories, former players on their coach, plus Would You Rather Tuesday!

James Dickey, Former Arkansas Asst. Coach to Eddie Sutton, joins The Morning Rush

Former Arkansas Asst. Coach James Dickey, who was a long time assistant coach to the late Eddie Sutton, joined The Morning Rush to discuss Coach Sutton’s legacy. Check out our conversation here!

Sutton taught an ENTIRE state how to fall in love with basketball

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It may come as a surprise to you but Eddie Sutton took the Arkansas job in 1974 over the head coaching position at Duke … despite his friends warning him not to come to Fayetteville.

Yes, THAT Duke. Granted it was in the time that the Blue Devils couldn’t get the best players in school because of academic requirements that softened a little shortly after 1974, but that was a school hot after Sutton.

It was Frank Broyles’ salesmanship that landed Sutton. Remember, Broyles was still the football coach at the time and in the first year of being the athletics director. He didn’t want to lose in any sport.

Sutton took the job in Fayetteville with home games played in what was then Barnhill Fieldhouse, which was a half-step above a barn even by 1974 standards. They had 33 wins combined in the last four seasons before his arrival.

He passed away at his home in Tulsa on Saturday from natural causes, according to his family. He was 84 years of age.

He walked into a job where it was truly a small, intimate gathering of good friends to watch the Razorbacks play home games. I remember being at games and actually sitting on the front row because nobody else was there.

At Broyles’ urging, Sutton hit the circuit around the state selling his program. He came to Warren in the spring of 1974 to speak at the all-sports banquet in a gym that had no air conditioning on a hot spring evening.

Somehow the plane delivering him to Warren arrived early and he came over the gym and Sutton went to the football coaches’ offices connected to the gym which is where a 16-year-old proceeded to stroll in and ask for an interview.

I have no idea why it was a little surprising he said sure, grinning in a manner everybody in the state got used to. My first question was about as straightforward as I could come up with and it was, simply, “why did you want to come to Arkansas?”

Granted, it was done because I couldn’t think of anything better, but what followed was a lengthy answer that even a 16-year-old could figure out was Broyles had sold him on it.

That launched a roughly 40-minute discussion where he laid out his plan he had come up with that was based largely on what convinced me at the time he at least was sold on his plan.

Sutton also inherited a media that had never covered a big-time college basketball program. With me, that interview in the only air-conditioned place on a hot spring evening started a run during which over the next 11 seasons, you could literally walk into his office without an appointment and get five minutes or so.

When you called his office you got a return phone call. If you called him at home he would either answer or come to the office and patiently answer any questions.

“I’m going to ask those folks out there a question and I want you to watch how many people hold up their hands,” he said that night in Warren, still smiling. “You’ll know it when I ask the question.”

He was correct about that because it came early and there wasn’t a lot of wasted words before he got to it.

“How many of you have season tickets to Razorback basketball?” Sutton asked after saying he was glad to be invited to Warren.

He was there for free. A lot of coaches then were charging fairly steep fees, including Alabama coach Paul “Bear” Bryant from nearby Fordyce, who wanted a significant appearance fee.

After Sutton asked the question, things got quiet really quick.

One man, longtime booster Sykes Harris, Sr., (one of Broyles’ good friends and golfing buddies), raised his hand. Everybody else suddenly was fascinated by the tables and plates in front of them.

Sutton just smiled again.

“You may want to go ahead and get on the list now because I can guarantee you they are going to be hard to get in just a couple of years,” he said.

Nobody laughed, but a couple of people later after Sutton left headed back to Fayetteville remarked, “I think he actually believes he can win enough games that people will want to come to those games.”

Sutton had a different timeline and an unbelievable confidence in himself. He knew what he could do, got Marvin Delph immediately out of Conway then got Ron Brewer from Westark Community College (now UA-Fort Smith) and Sidney Moncrief from Little Rock Hall and things changed in a hurry.

Within 18 months, Razorback men’s basketball tickets were a hot item. Less than three years later getting one required someone that either had deep pockets or knew the right people.

Hogs’ basketball was on the map. In his second season, Sutton had the Hogs in the NCAA Tournament and they blew a 17-point lead in the first round to Wake Forest as key players got in foul trouble and they lost a close one at the end.

His third season removed any doubt Arkansas basketball was back. They reached the Final Four, finished third in the nation a few months after the football team finished third after beating Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl.

Arkansas sports hasn’t been at that level with football and basketball in the same year since.

Sutton showed that, yes, you could win big at a traditional football school if you were fundamentally sound. He stressed defense and believed you HAD to be able to do that and not turn the ball over.

If the players did that, he figured he was good enough to bring them across as winners.

Which he consistently did.

During his first five years he spent as much time coaching the fans as the players. His shows on KATV with Sam Smith, Dave Woodman and Paul Eells were required viewing on Sunday afternoons at 4:30.

Watching one of Sutton’s practice was as educational as talking to him, which happened a couple of times when he would come close enough and start explaining what he was teaching. Before that I didn’t have a clue about how players really SHOULD be playing a man defense with footwork and angles to watch the ball and the man you were supposed to be guarding.

Sutton even came up with the idea of a pep band stuck in a corner of a renovated Barnhill Arena and the director, Jim Robken, ran all over the place firing up the packed house. He even put in one of those noise meters and fans tried to blow it through the top.

It was a deafening noise. Opposing coaches hated playing in Fayetteville with a passion. After games Sutton would often be hoarse from the strain of just communicating over the crowd.

Houston’s Guy Lewis just threw his hands up one night and sat down with his towel.

“My players couldn’t even hear what I was trying to tell them,” he told me a couple of years later in Dallas at the SWC Tournament, recalling the game where the Cougars blew a lead late. He blamed the crowd.

Sutton built a monster that only his successor, Nolan Richardson, has managed to keep consistently fed adequately.

He left for Kentucky in 1985 when he admitted years later he got caught up in the challenge of taking over one of the highest-profile programs in college basketball.

Sutton later admitted his comment about “crawling to Kentucky” was a dumb comment and aimed at Broyles, not the fans. He also said he never should have left Arkansas then. He probably would have left for his alma mater, Oklahoma State, later but that’s one hypothetical piled on top of another one.

What Richardson accomplished in continuing to actually build on the program reached the top of a mountain no one even considered possible two decades before.

But he never would have been here if Sutton hadn’t arrived in Arkansas in the spring of 1974. Deep down his biggest asset was the ability to teach. That extended to fans and, yes, even the media.

He really did teach an ENTIRE state how to love basketball.