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Razorbacks set to open indoor season Friday with Arkansas Invitational

FAYETTEVILLE — Eighth-ranked Arkansas is set to open its indoor slate hosting the Arkansas Invitational on Friday at the Randal Tyson Track Center.

Field action starts at 12:30 p.m. with the shot put, while the 400-meters kick off the running events at 3 p.m.

At last year’s Arkansas Invitational, Carl Elliot III and Kieran Taylor picked up wins in the 60-meter hurdles and 1000-meters, respectively.

Elliot dropped a new personal record of 7.89, while Taylor finished ahead of the pack by almost two seconds (2:26.74).

Redshirt-senior Gilbert Boit will lead a distance group this year after he won the 2019 SEC Indoor title in the 5,000-meters and ran a leg of the All-American DMR that finished sixth last season.

He’ll be joined by teammate Hunter Woodhall, a two-time Paralympic medalist, who is looking to earn First-Team All-America honors for the second-straight year in the 4×400-meter relay.

The junior turned in a seventh-place finish in the 400-meter dash at the SEC Indoor Championships in 2019.

Fans can grab an Arkansas men’s track & field poster, magnets and schedule cards at the gates, and the first 200 fans will also get a free Arkansas track and field water bottle.

The Razorbacks were tabbed at No. 8 in the preseason top-25 earlier this week after finishing last season in 13th-place at the NCAA Indoor Championships.

Arkansas is joined by three other squads from the SEC in the top-10.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

???? Halftime Pod — the basketball rotation, looking at Ole Miss, plus Aaron Torres

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Phil & Tye on what the basketball rotation will look like, preview of Ole Miss, plus Aaron Torres joins the pod!

Neighbors on quick turnaround after first ‘beatdown’ against South Carolina

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors met with the media Friday afternoon to talk about the loss to the Gamecocks on Thursday night, then having to get ready quickly for Missouri on Sunday.

A disappointed Musselman on loss at Baton Rouge, quick turnaround

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman talked after practice Thursday about the disappointing loss to LSU on Wednesday night, getting back late and heading to Ole Miss.

Tolefree, Ramirez combine for big night, but not enough against Gamecocks

COLUMBIA, SC — Alexis Tolefree and Amber Ramirez combined for 42 points, but it wasn’t enough as Arkansas fell to No. 4 South Carolina on Thursday night, 91-82.

Tolefree had 22 points on the night, going 5-of-10 on 3-pointers and Ramirez added 20. They had seven of the Razorbacks’ dozen 3-pointers.

Aliyah Boston led the way for the Gamecocks, double-doubling in the game with 19 points and 25 rebounds.

South Carolina came out strong to open the game, going on a 24-6 run to open things up. Carolina’s freshmen duo of Boston and Zia Cooke was great in the open, as they combined for 20 of the Gamecock’s first 24 points.

The Hogs never laid down though, finally getting hot in the fourth quarter. The Hogs outscored the Gamecocks, 29-17, in the final frame, cutting the lead to nine on several occasions.

The Hogs trailed by as many as 25 in the game.

Highlights

• For Tolefree, it was her sixth 20+ point game of the season, and her third in her last five games.

• Ramirez went for 20+ for the second straight game, joining Tolefree and Chelsea Dungee as the only Hogs to drop 20 or more in back-to-back games this season.

• A’Tyanna Gaulden kept it going at the point, dishing a career-best seven assists in this one. It was her third game this season with 6+ assists, the only Hog with multiple such games this season.

• Sophomore guard Rokia Doumbia led the Hogs on the glass, pulling down six boards, including two offensive.

The Razorbacks return home after two straight games on the road, where they will take on Missouri on Sunday.

That game is set to tip at 2 p.m.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Can Leach finally win a big game making move to SEC with Bulldogs?

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Let the fun and games begin in the SEC West.

With Mississippi State hiring Mike Leach on Thursday, the safest bet is the crowd for the Mississippi schools at SEC Media Days this summer in Atlanta will have significantly more in attendance than in the past.

Arkansas fans wanted Leach during the search process to replace Chad Morris. Athletics director Hunter Yurachek reportedly talked to him, but that was never going to work financially. Leach didn’t have a lot of interest in trying to fix the Razorbacks’ mess without a ton of money.

He either thought things in Starkville were better or the Bulldogs’ faithful put enough money on the table to where he couldn’t say no.

We won’t know the answer to that until we hear the numbers.

Maybe the biggest indicator of that is Leach becomes the first coach hired at State that is a sitting head coach since 1949.

Let that sink in for a minute.

For over 70 years the Bulldogs have only been able to manage hiring coaches that were coordinators somewhere or were in the unemployment line.

Hog fans that were carrying the torch for Leach to be in Fayetteville for years will be ready to jump off the cliff now.

The problem is exactly why Leach has been considered such a hot prospect by Arkansas fans kinda makes you want to shake your head anyway.

The only thing he consistently has been successful at is entertaining press conferences and an offense that can score a ton of points one week, then disappear the next week. That usually involves the big games, by the way.

His best team at Texas Tech was 11-1 … then promptly lost to Houston Nutt’s first Ole Miss team in the last Cotton Bowl played AT the stadium with that name.

At Washington State, his best team dropped an early game to USC, then lost to Washington the end the season and instead of the Rose Bowl took a postseason trip to San Antonio for the Alamo Bowl.

He has won some games, but not particularly consistently and few big games.

As one State booster told me earlier, “it will be interesting to see how he fits in with the culture of Mississippi State.”

That will be interesting. He’ll also have to be able to recruit at a level he’s never been able to get near during his head coaching years.

Athletics director John Cohen fired Joe Moorhead last week after it became clear he had completely lost the team which was beset with problems on both sides of the ball and in the middle.

That’s what got Morris fired at Arkansas, too. Players and many of the fans weren’t buying into his trying to turn the Razorbacks into Clemson. He apparently didn’t have many original ideas and tried to duplicate what Dabo Swinney had done somewhere else.

Nobody really knew what Moorhead was trying to do in Starkville. It was a curious culture mis-match from the initial hiring and apparently never really got better.

Nobody really knows how this will change the balance in the league other than the always-simmering rivalry between the Bulldogs and Ole Miss may now reach the boiling stage pretty quickly and not settle down soon.

Meanwhile, Sam Pittman will probably just keep quietly working.

Former Razorback Jones selected to Cotton Bowl’s Hall of Fame for 2020

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas native Jerry Jones has been named to the Cotton Bowl Hall of Fame Class of 2020 and will be inducted during an enshrinement ceremony this spring at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

Jones is the owner of the Dallas Cowboys, which owns AT&T Stadium which has been the home of the traditional bowl game since 2009.

Along with Jones, this year’s honorees in the 12th Hall of Fame Class include: Kansas State quarterback Jonathan Beasley, Notre Dame split end Thom Gatewood, Ole Miss halfback Dexter McCluster, Texas defensive end Cory Redding, Boston College linebacker Bill Romanowski, and Kansas State head coach Bill Snyder.

Jones was one of the seniors named as captains of Arkansas’ national championship team in 1964.

The Razorbacks rallied in the game’s waning minutes of the 1965 Cotton Bowl to drive 80 yards for the winning touchdown that secured a 10-7 victory over Nebraska.

The induction ceremony for The Class of 2020 will be held on the west concourse of AT&T Stadium in Arlington next spring. The exact date is still to be finalized. The hour-long ceremony is free and open to the public.

“Those extraordinary individuals whose unique talents formed the pageantry and prestige of one of college football’s most historic postseason bowl games are showcased in the Cotton Bowl Hall of Fame,” said Carl R. Ice, chairman of the Cotton Bowl Athletic Association. “The Cotton Bowl Hall of Fame allows fans to revisit the rich tradition of outstanding college football played annually here in North Texas.”

A judging committee comprised of media representatives and athletic administrators voted from a ballot consisting of 60 nominees that included former players, coaches, bowl administrators and others who have made special contributions to the Classic.

Information from a press release provided by Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Hogs fall short at end, dropping nail-biter on road to LSU, 79-77

Despite getting blown out on the boards, Arkansas somehow found itself in the last few seconds with a shot to win a game on the road at LSU on Wednesday night.

But the last dozen seconds saw the big effort come up short, giving up an old-fashioned 3-point play and the Tigers came away with a 79-77 win at the Pete Maravich Center.

When Adrio Bailey swatted Skylar Mays’ layup out of bounds with 12 seconds left and the Razorbacks holding a thin 77-76 lead, things were looking up.

That lasted four seconds.

Jimmy Whitt, Jr., fouled the Tigers’ Trendon Watfer on a short jumper, he hit the and-1 free throw. The Hogs came down the floor and Isaiah Joe’s jumper was blocked at the buzzer, Desi Sills grabbed it and wasn’t able to get off much of a shot.

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman has said all season he didn’t expect to win many offensive rebounding battles, but he probably didn’t think they would be like Wednesday night. LSU dominated that area, 23-3.

As usual, the only way the Hogs stayed in the game was forcing turnovers and they won that area, 13-7. They were out-rebounded on the defensive side, too, 30-21.

“To think that a team could beat you on the glass, 26-0 in second-chance points, and you still have a chance to win the game is absolutely unheard of,” Hogs coach Eric Musselman said later.

That’s not a good combination, yet the Razorbacks found a way to stay in the game behind Mason Jones’ 24 points and another 22 by Whitt.

At the end, though, Jones was on the bench, fouling out with 32 seconds left.

The game had settled into the usual Arkansas-LSU game after the Hogs saw an 11-point lead in the first half slip away. That was the largest lead of the game. The Tigers’ biggest lead was 54-47.

The story of the game was rebounding and Mussleman said the Tigers just took it.

“It was strictly them going and getting it off the glass and them getting free-throw attempts. That’s what won the game for them,” he said.

The loss evened Arkansas’ record in SEC play at 1-1 and dropped them to 12-2 overall. They will stay on the road, going to Ole Miss on Saturday.