Pittman’s recruiting goals nice, but development will be more critical

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Sam Pittman wants to shoot Arkansas into the elite level of recruiting, which is a nice goal, but history shows that probably isn’t going to be a realistic goal.

Coaching what he gets is more important.

Recruiting season has developed a cult-like following with a lot of people living and dying with every offer, commitment or de-commitment.

“We should be up there with the elite programs in the country in recruiting,” Pittman said last week talking about his first class, which ended up not being that bad and not that far off where the Razorbacks usually finish.

In the 247Sports.com composite rankings (from the major recruiting services), the Hogs have finished in the Top 25 twice and the Top 10 once over the last 20 years.

Houston Nutt and Bobby Petrino found ways to get the Hogs into the championship picture over-performing their recruiting rankings.

You got the idea Pittman’s probably not going to be completely satisfied on signing day going forward.

“We’re not up there with the elite guys,” Pittman said. “Until we get up there, well then, when we do that we’ll come in here and be really happy.”

In case you’re wondering, that’s not a signal he doesn’t expect to win ballgames. Arkansas has had success when higher-rated teams stumble somewhere along the way and they are right there to slip through the opening.

With the exception of a couple of years in 1964-65, the Razorbacks have needed some conference teams to stumble along the way.

Those two years, by the way, are the only ones where they ran the table and that was in the old Southwest Conference where you only had to figure out how to deal with Texas.

In the SEC West, unless you catch lightning in a bottle similar to what LSU did this past season, there can be one loss and still play for a championship. Alabama won titles in 2017 and 2011 after not going to Atlanta.

The Hogs have never won with recruiting highly-ranked classes. They have won with a coaching staff that got players they wanted, then developed them (Steve Spurrier used to call it “coaching ’em up”) and had them ready to play on Saturday.

The guess here is that’s going to be what Pittman does best. If he’s going to be consistently on the winning side in games, it’s what he better do best.

The Hogs play in a conference where they can win 10 games in a season and still end up third … in their own division. It happened in 2006, 2010 and 2011 so don’t say that won’t happen.

Shoot, at this point Pittman will be ahead of the game if he can settle on one quarterback for three games in a row. That would be progress.

Yeah, he wants to have a higher ranking on signing day. Whether he’ll say it or not it’s part of the public relations game. Fans want to see it.

“We just didn’t quite have as much time as we wanted, but we’ll do better,” Pittman said about this signing class.

While he obviously would relish the thought of having a class ranked in the Top 10 every year, Pittman also knows in the end it’s not the most important thing.

Winning with whatever’s on the team is what matters the most.

We’ll see how this staff does but the gut feeling is they would have had the Hogs in a bowl game the last couple of years. Yes, the previous staff was that bad.

A lack of preparation combined with a lack of motivation can coach a team all the way down to just a couple of struggle wins over teams they should have beaten by four touchdowns.

All that nonsense is gone.

Regardless of any recruiting ranking.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast- Hogs lose to Mizz, Steve Wiltfong on recruiting, and more

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Tye and Tommy on the Hogs’ close loss to Mizzou, Steve Wiltfong of 247 Sports on recruiting, plus Richard Cross joins the pod!

Lots of history in Razorbacks’ 103-85 win over No. 15 Kentucky on Sunday

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas put on a historic offense display on Sunday afternoon, beating No. 15 Kentucky, 103-85, marking the most points ever scored by the Hogs over an SEC team.

For the Razorbacks, the win marked their first against a top-15 opponent in Bud Walton Arena since 2016 and the first win against the Wildcats since 2011.

Coach Mike Neighbors said later the Hogs fed off what was a historic crowd all game long, as the 5,638 people packed in Bud Walton Arena were the most at a Razorback women’s game since January of 2011.

Senior guard Alexis Tolefree continued her dominant final collegiate campaign, as she went for a team-high 30 against Kentucky.

It was her second-career 30-point performance, and the second in her last three games.

Redshirt junior guard Chelsea Dungee also had a big game for the Hogs, going for 24 points on an efficient eight for 12 clip, including a perfect four of four from beyond the arc.

PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Turning point of game

The game was tightly contested in the first half, as the Hogs took a 38-35 lead into the intermission.

However, the Razorbacks used a huge third quarter, one in which they outscored the Wildcats 33-19, to break this game wide open.

Arkansas opened the period with an 11-3 run, getting contributions from Tolefree (5), Dungee (4) and Amber Ramirez (2).

After the Wildcats cut it back to six, Arkansas would close the period as strong as it opened it, finishing the frame on a 14-2 run. The Hogs would take a 71-54 lead into the third, and would never look back.

PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Hogs game notes

• The Hogs scored 100+ for the third time this season, and for the second time in SEC play. Their 103 points were the most since they scored 106 against Sam Houston State back in 2009.

• The Razorbacks shot the ball at a staggering .593 clip (35-59) on Sunday afternoon, the best since they shot 60 percent (36-60) against Ole Miss back in 2013 (3/3/12).

• Arkansas was somehow even better from three, scorching the nets at a .667 percent (14-21) clip, the best percentage in program history when attempting more than 15 threes.

• With her 30 points, Tolefree joined Chelsea Dungee as the only Hog with multiple 30+ point games so far this season.

• Tolefree continues to be a monster on the glass for Arkansas, as she registered her fourth game this season with 7+ rebounds.

• Junior forward Taylah Thomas continued her strong play, going for 13 points and a team-high seven boards.

• Ramirez matched her season-high in assists, dishing five of them against the ‘Cats.

• Redshirt junior guard A’Tyanna Gaulden also had five helpers against Kentucky, her seventh game this season going for five or more assists.

Next game

The Razorbacks are off Thursday before heading to Oxford, Mississippi, Sunday to face Ole Miss.

That game will tip at 2 p.m. and will air on the SEC Network.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Neighbors on writing ‘ONE’ on board in locker room before win over Kentucky

Razorbacks coach Mike Neighbors told the media he wrote just one word on the board before the team left the locker room before downing the 15th-ranked Wildcats on Sunday.

Razorbacks’ Tolefree, Dungee after taking care of Kentucky on Sunday afternoon

Arkansas’ Alexis Tolefree (30 points, 7 rebounds) and Chelsea Dungee (24 points, 5 rebounds, 3 assists) talked about working through loss Thursday night to down No. 15 Wildcats.

Kentucky’s Mitchell on Razorbacks ‘earning’ big win Sunday afternoon

Wildcats’ coach Matthew Mitchell talked with the media on his team not playing well enough after falling to Arkansas, 103-85, on Sunday afternoon at Bud Walton Arena.

Razorbacks’ bat crank out three homers in 15-4 win over Cornhuskers

LAS CRUCES, N.M. — Arkansas pounded 18 hits and three home runs against Nebraska pitching in a 15-4 five-inning run-rule victory at the Aggie Softball Complex on Sunday morning.

The 18 hits are tied for the fourth-most in a game in school history and 15 runs are tied for sixth-most in a game.

Senior Ryan Jackson, junior Braxton Burnside and sophomore Audrie LaValley all hit their first home runs in a Razorback jersey.

Jackson recorded a career-best five RBIs as part of a 2-for-2 day at the dish, and senior Sydney Parr turned in a career-high four hit game.

Game summary

Arkansas struck first for the fourth time in its first five games and posted a five-run first frame.

Parr led off the game shooting a hit to left and junior Hannah McEwen hit a double off the center field fence to put runners on second and third. Junior Linnie Malkin hit a bouncing single back up the middle to give the Razorbacks a 2-0 lead.

With two on and two out, Jackson smoked a line drive home run over the left field fence to increase the Hogs lead to, 5-0.

The Hogs batted around in the second inning and scored a season-high seven runs in a single frame.

Junior Danielle Gibson grounded out to second base to push Parr across the plate. Jackson blooped a single down the left field line which plated two more runs.

Senior Keely Huffine singled through the left side to load the bases and sophomore Audrie LaValley tomahawked a grand slam to right as the Razorbacks took complete control, 12-0. Parr singled twice and had two of the five Hog hits in the stanza.

Nebraska showed off its bats in the bottom of the third and hit two home runs to make the score, 12-3.

The Razorbacks put three more on the scoreboard via junior Braxton Burnside’s three-run shot to right, the first of her Arkansas career, in the top of the fourth. Nebraska hit another solo homer in the bottom of the fifth inning.

Freshman Jenna Bloom earned the start and threw 2.1 innings. She allowed four hits and three earned runs while striking out a career-best six.

Mary Haff (1-1) was the pitcher of record out of the bullpen. She completed 1.2 frames, struck out two and allowed a single hit.

Freshman Rylin Hedgecock made her collegiate debut in the fifth and struck out the side. Lindsey Walljasper (1-2) took the loss for Nebraska and went 1.2 innings and allowed eight hits, 12 runs, nine earned, with one walk.

Courtney Wallace surrendered 10 hits and allowed three runs over 3.1 innings.

Next game

The Razorbacks travel to the Sunshine State for another five-game weekend at the FGCU Invitational from Friday through Sunday against Memphis, UIC, Furman and the host Eagles, twice.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Gibson’s blast lifts Razorbacks to sweep over New Mexico State, Bradley

LAS CRUCES, N.M. — With Arkansas down to its final two outs in the top of the seventh inning and trailing by a run in front of a raucous New Mexico State crowd, junior Danielle Gibson blasted the go-ahead two-run home run to left for a 5-4 win.

Earlier in the day, the Hogs defeated Bradley, 12-1, in five innings. Junior Linnie Malkin had a career-day at the dish and launched two dingers and inside the circle, senior Autumn Storms notched two wins.

Game 1: Arkansas 12, Bradley 1 (5 innings)

The Razorback bats did all their damage in three four-run innings and banged out nine hits.

Junior Kayla Green put Arkansas on the scoreboard first with an RBI groundout to the right side that plated senior Sydney Parr.

Malkin crushed her first homer of the season, a three-run shot, into the trees beyond the centerfield fence to kickstart a successful day for the offense.

In the third inning, sophomore Audrie LaValley was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded to make it a 5-0 Arkansas lead. Parr continued her torrid start at the dish and slashed an opposite field bases clearing three-RBI double toward left center to balloon the lead to, 8-0.

The Braves’ lone run was of the unearned variety in the top of the fourth inning as the leadoff batter reached second on a throwing error that sailed past the first base bag. Later in the inning on a delayed steal, a throw went wide of third to score the run.

Arkansas’ offense went right back to work in the bottom of the fourth and began the frame recording three consecutive singles, the third by Green, scored junior Braxton Burnside from second.

Freshman Rylin Hedgecock and senior Aly Manzo both delivered in pinch hit assignments as Hedgecock registered an RBI single to left and Manzo a two RBI knock to center.

The success of the Arkansas’ bats allowed the pitching staff to work low stress innings. Storms (2-0) kept her workload down and earned the three-inning decision.

She surrendered just two hits and fanned two while only throwing 43 pitches. Freshman Jenna Bloom tossed the last two innings in relief and allowed an unearned run and one walk while striking out three.

Morgan Radford (0-2) took the decision for the Braves and went three innings allowing seven hits, 11 runs, seven earned runs and four walks.

Nine different Arkansas batters collected a hit and the Hogs hit .357 (5-for-14) with runners in scoring position. Green and senior Ryan Jackson each scored two runs.

Game 2: Arkansas 5, New Mexico State 4

For the first time this season the opposition scored first against the Razorbacks.

New Mexico State hit three solo home runs in the bottom of the second to go up, 3-0.

Senior Keely Huffine and LaValley both singled to begin the Arkansas fifth inning, after a fielder’s choice and a flyout, the Razorbacks still had runners on first and second.

Burnside came through and hit a scorching two-out single to center that sent home the first Arkansas run.

Arkansas scored another single tally in the top of the sixth inning. Malkin and Jackson both singled with one out.

After a flyout, LaValley dribbled an infield single deep in the hole to short which scored sophomore pinch runner Sam Torres and brought the Razorbacks within one, 3-2.

McEwen sent a single to center to leadoff the Hogs seventh inning and Burnside put down a sacrifice bunt to move her to second.

That set up Gibson’s long ball that gave Arkansas a 4-3 advantage. The very next batter, Malkin gave the team a much needed insurance run on a solo homer, her second of the day.

The Aggies plated an unearned run in the bottom of the seventh inning on an error but could not complete the comeback.

Storms (3-0) was the third Razorback to step inside the circle during the game and threw 2.2 innings. She allowed two hits, one unearned run, one walk and struck out four.

Bloom provided 3.1 valuable relief innings, did not allow a run and punched out a career-best five. Matalasi Faapito (0-1) took the decision for NM State and allowed 10 hits, four earned runs, one walk and struck out five. Chloe Rivas provided an inning of relief and allowed two hits and one earned run.

The Razorbacks collected a season-high 12 hits.

Next game

Arkansas closes out its first weekend of competition at the Troy Cox Classic with a single game against Nebraska at 10 a.m. on Sunday, Feb. 9.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Musselman won’t make any excuses, but Hogs playing shorthanded now

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Eric Musselman doesn’t make excuses, even after a second straight overtime loss Saturday that every fan will be wondering how it could have been with a healthy Isaiah Joe.

Joe’s long-range bombing is sidelined while he rehabs from knee surgery Tuesday. Whether anybody wants to admit it or not, that has changed how Arkansas plays offensively.

Let’s face it, they don’t have a lot of options.

That showed dramatically in an 83-79 loss at Missouri, which comes after a 79-76 loss to Auburn on Tuesday, was when the problems with this Razorbacks’ team showed up.

We’ve been expecting it. Sooner or later, teams that rely on guards and shooting with just seven players have one of those games where, well, it just doesn’t work.

When Joe went down Mason Jones was able to pick up the slack, scoring over 40 in three straight games, but it all broke down against the Tigers.

“If you don’t rebound the ball, then you foul when you defend, you are going to get a result that you don’t like,” Musselman said later.

As mentioned earlier, he doesn’t make excuses. Especially for defense which is something that should be able to go on the road and work. The Hogs were called for 32 fouls and Missouri converted that to 34 points.

And it could have been worse. The Tigers missed 10 free throws.

Musselman couldn’t even keep up with how many fouled out of the game. He said later it was three, but it was actually four guys. Adrio Bailey, Desi Sills, Mason Jones and Reggie Chaney all ran out of fouls. Desi Sills and Jimmy Whitt, Jr., finished with four.

“We just had some guys not bend their knees, get in a stance,” Musselman said.

The rebounding didn’t help, either. For a team that did well on the defensive end early, getting out-rebounded 36-24 against Missouri put them in a hole and they complicated things with bad defense.

“If you don’t rebound the ball and then you foul when you defend, then you are going to get a result that you don’t like,” Musselman said.

For yet another game, this team didn’t start well in a first half that saw the Hogs trail by as much as nine, yet somehow managed to stay with six at the break, 36-30.

“You kind of get what you deserve if you can’t get open in the first half,” Musselman said. “We turned the ball over too many times in the first half. Missouri was way more aggressive. They denied and we didn’t cut hard enough.”

That’s the technical part. What Musselman didn’t mention was how things have changed offensively with Joe out. He was shooting 34 percent of his 3-pointers, which forced the defense out and opened things for Jones, Whitt and Sills.

The Hogs have been scrambling since he tweaked the knee and wasn’t himself for a couple of games before having the surgery. Musselman has even had to play Bailey and Chaney at the same time.

“When we play two bigs, it’s a big-time struggle offensively,” he said.

It wasn’t Chaney’s fault. He hit 50 percent from the field and put up 17 points, plus had 11 rebounds. Bailey made all three of his attempts and finished with 10 points, but just three rebounds.

And they don’t have a lot of time to figure it out.

Arkansas will be on the road again Tuesday, going to Tennessee, another team trying to figure things out after being thumped by Kentucky at home Saturday, 77-64.

Just remember, with a two-game losing streak Musselman hasn’t lost three in a row in his career. Somehow he’s always figured it out.

It will be interesting to see how he figures this one out.

Crouser gets win at Millrose Games on Saturday with world-leading effort

NEW YORK — Arkansas volunteer assistant coach Ryan Crouser opened his season with a shot put victory at the 113th Millrose Games on Saturday, producing a world-leading mark of 72-9¾ (22.19).

Joe Kovacs, the 2019 World champion, finished second with a toss of 70-0¼ (21.34) as Payton Otterdahl placed third with a 69-2¾ (21.10).

Featuring the shot put in the middle of the infield at the Armory Track and Field Center, Crouser and Kovacs each opened the competition with identical marks of 69-8¼ (21.24) to lead the field of six throwers.

Crouser, who set the Millrose Games meet record of 73-3¼ (22.33) last year, improved his mark in three consecutive rounds, from 70-10 (21.69) in round three to 71-2 (21.69) and then his winning effort in round five.

Kovacs bettered the 70-foot distance once, in the third stanza.

The 2016 Olympic champion, Crouser is in his first season as a volunteer assistant with the Razorbacks.

His Millrose meet record set in 2019 ranks fourth in the world all-time and third among Americans.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.