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Musselman pleased overall with Hogs’ Red-White performance

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman on the atmosphere at Barnhill Arena, his team’s play in the Red-White Game on Saturday with Eddie Sutton, Nolan Richardson attending.

Fantasy Football Friday: Dennis Bennett, DynastyNerds.com

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Tye & Dennis on if the Browns take off, why fantasy football beats baseball/basketball, the 2011 Sugar Bowl and more!

With Burks, Knox, the guess here is you really ain’t seen nothing yet

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Arkansas freshmen wide receivers Treylon Burks and Trey Knox are a perfectly matched mismatch for opposing secondaries.

The best part for Razorback fans is they probably really ain’t seen nothing yet out of these two.

Hogs wide receivers coach Justin Stepp has had one big-time receiver, Courtland Sutton at SMU, but having this pair is a little different.

“We didn’t have another guy that size on the other side,” Stepp said. “As far as safety rotation, it helps keep guys basic and they can’t really cloud a side because you have two weapons on the other side, as well.”

He would like to have them both on the field at the same time, which has only been in three games this year. Burks missed the San Jose State game, Knox was out of Saturday’s game against Texas A&M.

Offensive coordinator Joe Craddock said back in the spring when Knox visited Fayetteville he told the other coaches after he left, “we won’t see him again.”

They had him for spring practice and Craddock wasn’t complaining anymore. It took until summer player-led workouts to get Burks in town, but the Warren native started making a splash almost from the first drill.

Together, they have made a formidable team. It’s not an accident.

“They’ve done a great job of preparing every single day,” Stepp said Wednesday after practice. “They study and they watch a lot of film. That shows up in how they play on Saturday.”

Knox missed the game against the Aggies with a nagging hip injury. Burks, meanwhile, stepped up with four catches for 58 yards, including a big-time 31-yard catch in the fourth quarter after he had jumped offsides.

“The good thing about it is every mistake we’ve made in a game is correctible,” Stepp said about the mistakes.

One of the biggest plays Burks made, though, wasn’t even a catch. When Ben Hicks short-armed a throw to an open Burks in the end zone, it looked like an interception … until Burks came back and knocked it away from the defender.

Treylon Burks PHOTO BY TED McCLENNING | HITTHATLINE.COM

None of it surprises the folks back home in Warren, who’ve been watching Burks have jaw-dropping moments on the football field since he was in the fourth grade.

Plays like his 32-yard punt return that came within a whisker of being a touchdown became routine during his time with the Lumberjacks.

Burks catches punts like it’s a pass, high-pointing the ball and taking off. It initially drove Stepp crazy.

“When he started returning punts in fall camp, I was back there trying to coach my tail off and trying to get him fixed,” Stepp said. “Coach Morris finally looked at me one day and said, ‘Hey Stepp, just leave him alone.'”

Burks and Knox both just know how to make plays.

“He’s got an incredible future ahead of him,” Morris said about Burks. “As a freshman, just being able to make those plays is very impressive.”

But Stepp still has things he’s working on, mainly Burks’ knack for being an aggressive wide receiver when it comes to running after the catch.

“He tries to bully and run everybody over which is something different than you usually have in the room,” he said Wednesday.

They aren’t the only two big-time freshmen on the Hogs’ roster this year. T.Q. Jackson and Shamar Nash are also there and Jackson tends to make some plays in practice.

“That kid is electric,” Stepp said. “He can do some things physically that nobody else in that room can do. It’s our job to find the best ways to put him on the field where he can be successful.”

He’s just got to figure out a way to keep ’em all healthy and on the field together to go with Mike Woods, who has been big this year, too, and the senior citizen of the bunch as a sophomore while De’Vion Warren has been out.

If you’re looking for positives in a year that has started with a thud, just look at the guys lined up outside.

Because the odds are they are only going to get better.

Hilitz grabs spot in IAAF final of 1,500 in Quatar on Saturday

DOHA, Qatar — Team USA’s Nikki Hiltz grabbed a spot in the IAAF final of the women’s 1,500-meters Thursday night at the World Championships from Khalifa Stadium.

Former Razorback Nikki Hiltz ran faster than she ever had in the semifinal of the women’s 1,500-meter semifinal. Hiltz, who entered today’s race with a PR of 4:03.55 from the USATF Championships back in July, crossed the line in seventh-place stopping the clock in a new lifetime-best of 4:01.52 earning the all-important little “q” to advance to her first World Championship final.

“Yea I knew I had to run whatever I had to to get seventh,” said Hiltz” “I thought I was in 4:01 shape and i ran 4:01 so I’m stoked!”

The American will be joined by teammates Jenny Simpson and Shelby Houlihan as Team USA was able to advance all three of its athletes to the final.

Hiltz and crew will return to the track for the 1,500-meter final Saturday, Oct. 5 at 12:55 p.m.

Teams announced for Red-White Game … subject to any changes

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas will be divided into two teams with two Razorback legends serving as honorary coaches at the Red-White Game on Saturday at Barnhill Arena.

Eddie Sutton is scheduled to be the honorary coach for the Red Team. Nolan Richardson is scheduled to be the honorary coach for the White Team.  Members from the Sutton and Richardson families are set to attend the game and be a part of a pregame recognition.

The breakdown of the teams include:

RED (TEAM EDDIE)
  1 — Isaiah Joe
2 — Adrio Bailey
11 — JD Notae
13 — Emeka Obukwelu
23 — Connor Vanover
24 — Ethan Henderson
33 — Jimmy Whitt Jr.

WHITE (TEAM NOLAN)
  0 — Jeantal Cylla
3 — Desi Sills
5 — Jalen Harris
12 — Ty Stevens
15 — Mason Jones
22 — Abayomi Iyiola
35 — Reggie Chaney

Eddie Sutton was 260-75 (.776) as Arkansas head coach from 1974-85 and led the Razorbacks to nine NCAA Tournament berths in 11 seasons, including the 1978 NCAA Final Four.

Sutton was inducted into the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2011. This past spring, the men’s practice gym in the Basketball Performance Center was named in honor of Coach Sutton.

Nolan Richardson posted a school-record 389 wins with 13 NCAA Tournament appearances.

The Razorbacks won the 1994 NCAA Championship, was 1995 NCAA Runner-Up and reached the 1990 NCAA Final Four. Richardson was inducted into the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2008 and the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2014.

On Oct. 20, 2019, the University will unveil Nolan Richardson Court at Bud Walton Arena prior to the Razorbacks exhibition game with Arkansas-Little Rock.

Free and open to the public, the Red-White Game at Barnhill Arena will begin at 3 pm with doors to the arena opening at 1:30 pm.

Seating will be on a first-come, first-served general admission basis. Parking is free as well.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — Halftime Homework

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Phil & Tye on plays that could have changed this season, impact of young players, Mus at practice and Halftime Homework!

Traylor on being 2-3 makes him want to ‘go home and kick the dog’

Razorbacks running backs coach Jeff Traylor said after practice Wednesday that instead of the team “being 4-1 and dabbing, we’re 2-3 and it makes me want to go home and kick the dog.”

Fry on players’ development, offensive line practices in bye week

Arkansas offensive line coach Dustin Fry talked after practice Wednesday about individual players through first five games, workouts in bye week.

Lunney on tight ends’ development; getting Henry playing time

Razorbacks tight ends coach Barry Lunney talked after Wednesday’s practice about the quality of his group, special teams and getting freshman Hudson Henry playing time.