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Schaefer gets title to match what he’s been doing for Razorbacks

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors continues to retool his staff, announcing the promotion of Todd Schaefer to associate head coach Tuesday.

“Today’s announcement is simply a public recognition of what everyone in and around our program has known for the last three years,” Neighbors said. “None of our success would have been possible without Todd Schaefer being with us.

“Coach Todd has helped shape our identity on the court and has reinforced our culture off of it.  He has had a major impact on every aspect of our program.

“The title associate head coach implies various things from program to program, but in ours, it displays the highest level of trust and talent. It is evidence that he has earned the confidence of coaches and players alike. The title here has been earned and is well deserved. He has been, and will continue to be, a highly sought-after head coach.

“We are thankful he, Lisa, Landon, Will, and Jake have made Northwest Arkansas their home to help us build pride around our women’s basketball program. Todd and I have successfully busted the myth that you can’t hire friends in this profession.

“After being friends for 17 years before working together, we continue to challenge each other daily to make sure we are getting it right, rather than focusing on who is right.”

“I strongly believe in what we are doing here,” Schaefer said. “I believe in our on-court philosophy.

“But more than that, I believe in the culture of trust between coaches and players we have built here at Arkansas. It’s really unique in this day and age, and it’s something I embrace. I love working in this office and for this program.”

The promotion of Schaefer comes after two seasons at Arkansas and three seasons serving as Neighbors’ right hand.

Through those three campaigns, the Neighbors-Schaefer combination has amassed an impressive 64 wins, including a 22-win showing in their most recent season together.

Schaefer was the only coach on the 2016-17 Washington staff that followed Neighbors to Arkansas.

Schaefer has become the go-to guy on Neighbors’ staff, helping with any and all aspects of the program, including scouting, recruiting and administration.

However, Schaefer is most well-known for his ability to develop talent, and the ways he uses player feedback and creative workouts to get the most out of those he coaches.

Schaefer, who grew up playing football, had to learn to play the game of basketball at a different level than more natural athletes in order to compete with them on the hardwood.

That ability to learn in his playing days, along with his longevity in the sport, has translated into an unparalleled ability to teach the game that he loves.

“Todd is unbelievable at developing talent,” assistant coach Pauline Love said. “He knows every mechanical detail, every drill, by heart. He is a genius in this game. He is smart to the point where he seems to have an answer for everything.

“And, if he doesn’t, you know he will do whatever it takes to figure it out.”

Schaefer combines his intellect and the trust players have in him into results.

All you have to do to see those results is look at some of the players he has helped mold during his time at Arkansas, Washington and his previous stop at Ole Miss.

This past season at Arkansas, the player development guru helped unlock Chelsea Dungee’s game in a season in which she shattered Arkansas’ single-season scoring record.

While at Washington, Schaefer helped shape Kelsey Plum, who would go on to become the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer during Schaefer’s one-year tenure with the school.

Before that, the Cincinnati, Ohio, native helped build up Ole Miss guard Shandricka Sessom, improving her scoring output from 5.3 points per game as a freshman to 15.6 PPG the following year.

Other coaching stops for Schaefer during his illustrious career include Arkansas State, Cincinnati, Arkansas Tech, Christian Brothers University, Allen County Community College, Western Illinois and Greenbrier High School.

A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Schaefer earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in English at Thomas More College in 1995 while working as a student assistant basketball coach and playing on the football team.

He and his wife, Lisa, have three sons, Landon, Will and Jake.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — w/ Bobby Portis

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Tye & Brad Caldwell of River Valley Now hit on the coaches’ comments before fall camp, Bobby Portis and more!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday

John & Tommy discuss the Arkansas golf event, Musselman hiring his son, plus Tom Murphy!

Musselman hires son as director of recruiting for Hogs’ basketball

FAYETTEVILLE — Michael Musselman has been hired as the University of Arkansas men’s basketball director of recruiting, his father and Razorbacks coach Eric Musselman announced Monday.

Prior to Arkansas, Musselman spent one year (2018-19) as a graduate assistant at Nevada, helping the team win 29 games, win a Mountain West Championship and earn an NCAA Tournament berth.

Musselman previously served as a student manager at his alma mater, the University of San Diego. In his four years with the Toreros, he assisted the team in practice sessions, scouting reports, film editing and statistical analysis.

Musselman extends the coaching legacy that was started by his grandfather, Bill Musselman, and continued by his father, Eric Musselman.

Musselman received his bachelor’s degree in communications and a minor in business administration from San Diego in 2018. He completed his master’s degree in educational leadership from Nevada in the summer of 2019.

Harris, Burks, Catalon get strong positives bouncing back from injuries

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If you were expecting any bombshells at the annual golf outing Monday before fall camp starts, well, sorry, but there wasn’t anything.

Truth be told there wasn’t going to be anything good, so in a way it was positive. Everybody has made it through summer workouts without getting hurt. Remember, offensive lineman Ryan Winkel tore a pectoral muscle on his first bench press last summer and missed the whole season.

“We are in a much better spot this year than we were at this time last year,” strength and conditioning coach Trumain Carroll said on Monday.

He would know because he’s actually the closest thing to a coach around the players during the summer, not counting graduate transfer quarterback Ben Hicks, who is basically a graduate assistant coach in a uniform. Well within NCAA rules in case you’re questioning anything there.

Even the guys in the summer who were coming back from injuries apparently are doing fine and dandy, according to Carroll.

Senior linebacker De’jon Harris sat out the spring after foot problems forced putting a screw in and freshmen Treylon Burks and Jalen Catelon suffered knee injuries requiring surgery last fall.

All are good to go, according to Carroll … and making an impression.

“Scoota (Harris) is moving faster than I’ve ever seen him,” Carroll said Monday. “From an agility standpoint, he’s like, oh my goodness. It’s fun to watch.”

Burks has gotten Carroll’s attention, too.

“They still make him wear his knee brace when he does certain things just as a safety precaution,” he said. “But when he’s out there running routes and doing all of that, he looks really good. Really fluid, really fluid.”

Wide receivers coach Justin Stepp said Burks is fighting a natural wariness over the knee.

“There’s times when he doesn’t trust it,” he said Monday. “Once he gets more comfortable with the offense, he’ll be fine. He’s such a tough kid.

“He ain’t worried about nothin’ but playing football and fishing. We’re really excited about him and what he brings to our room.”

The biggest issue with Catalon is making sure he doesn’t wear himself out in the summer.

“He’s doing phenomenal,” Carroll said. “He’s one of those extra-work guys that’s going to be up there eight days per week. I really have to monitor his extra work to make sure he’s not running himself into the ground.”

Monday was simply a time to talk with the coaches in a fairly relaxed atmosphere, but nobody was going out on a limb.

You also got the idea last year’s season to forget is something they have all worked to avoid repeating this fall.

“It was very humbling,” defensive ends coach Steve Caldwell said, adding it was the worst he’s endured in over 40 years on the field.

The process to erase that memory starts in earnest Friday. Here’s the workout schedule for August and who we’ll have for interviews (no freshmen will be available to the media until after they have played in a game):

Friday, Aug. 2: Practice 1 (Chad Morris)
Saturday, Aug. 3:  Practice 2 (media day following practice)
Monday, Aug. 5: Practice 3 (select players)
Tuesday, Aug. 6: Practice 4 (Chad Morris)
Wednesday, Aug. 7: Practice 5 (select players)
Thursday, Aug. 8: Practice 6 (select players)
Friday, Aug. 9: Practice 7 (no interviews)
Saturday, Aug. 10: Scrimmage/practice 8 (Morris, Joe Craddock, John Chavis, select players)
Monday, Aug. 12: Practice 9 (select players)
Tuesday, Aug 13: Practice 10 (defensive assistants)
Wednesday, Aug. 14: Practice 11 (Morris)
Thursday, Aug. 15: Practice 12 (offensive assistants)
Friday, Aug. 16: Practice 13 (No interviews/Kickoff Luncheon)
Saturday, Aug. 17: Scrimmage/Practice 14 (Morris, select players)
Monday, Aug. 19: Practice 15 (select players)
Tuesday, Aug. 20: Practice 16 (Morris)
Wednesday, Aug. 21: Practice 17 (Craddock, Chavis/first radio show)
Thursday, Aug. 22: Practice 18 (Morris)
Friday, Aug. 23: Practice 19 (no interviews)
Saturday, Aug. 24: Beanie Bowl (Fan Day)
Monday, Aug. 26: Game week press conference (Morris, Craddock, Chavis)
Tuesday, Aug. 27: Practice (select players)
Wednesday, Aug. 28: Practice (Morris pre-practice)
Thursday, Aug. 29: Practice (no media availability)
Friday, Aug. 30: Practice (no media availability)
Saturday, Aug. 31: vs. Portland State, 3 p.m.

Carroll on Hogs better physically than this time last year

Arkansas strength and conditioning coach Trumain Carroll talked about the team’s physical condition being far ahead of where it was last season heading into fall camp.

Lunney on special teams being focus and philosophy there

Tight ends coach Barry Lunney, Jr., talked on Monday about how the special teams he’s now over is a priority with all of the coaches and the philosophy they have in that area now.

Traylor on having more running backs heading into fall camp

As the Razorbacks get ready to start fall practice Friday, running backs coach Jeff Traylor talked about how he’s more comfortable with the number he has this season.

Caldwell on putting bad season behind him, looking ahead

Arkansas defensive ends coach Steve Caldwell talked before the Coaches-Media Golf Tournament on Monday about how last season has made staff work harder in offseason.

Fry on how lineman resembles pro wrestling star

Razorbacks offensive line coach Dustin Fry on how offensive lineman Dalton Wagner isn’t particularly fond of comparisons with the wrestler known as The Undertaker.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — w/ Nikki Chavanelle

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Tye hits on one of the biggest differences between Chad Morris and Bret Bielema, Nikki Chavanelle, and more!