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Neighbors tabs former Washington player to fill final staff spot

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors announced the hiring of Chantel Osahor on Friday.

Osahor, who starred for Neighbors at Washington, joins the staff as an assistant coach.

“Coaching student-athletes is a unique challenge, and today, we were able to add one of the most unique players in recent NCAA history in Chantel,” Neighbors said. “Chantel captured the hearts of NCAA basketball fans everywhere during our Final Four run because of a unique jump shot, but it was her ability to make everyone on our team a little bit better that made her so special.

“That same quality has followed her into coaching. As coaches, we sit in the homes of families and tell them we will take care of their daughters like they are our own.  Chantel will help us back that up.”

“Chantel Osahor will be a daily reminder to our players on how being a Razorback can positively impact not only their next four years, but their next 40.

“Her experience with coach Jennie Baranczyk and her staff have prepared her for this opportunity.  We can’t wait to get her with our players on the court and with our fans in the community.”

“I’m thrilled to be continuing my coaching career at the University of Arkansas,” Osahor said. “To be able to be part of a special program like Arkansas and compete against the best teams in the best league is a dream come true.

“I am grateful to have received such a unique opportunity and I look forward to helping the student-athletes become the best versions of themselves on and off the court.
I want to thank coach Neighbors and his staff for making me a part of the Razorback family.”

Osahor played four seasons for the Huskies, helping them qualify for the NCAA Tournament three times, including trips to the 2016 Final Four and 2017 Sweet Sixteen.

The 2017 WBCA All-American was well known as a force on the glass during her collegiate career, as she still owns Washington’s rebounding record, pulling down 1,253 boards over her four seasons in Seattle.

Osahor matched or set several other rebounding records during her time in school, including the single-season Pac-12 record (519), the single-game Pac-12 record (30) and the Pac-12 Tournament single-game record (27).

Osahor was a walking double-double, as she was one of just two players in Washington’s history to score 1,000 points and pull down 1,000 rebounds.

In her senior season, the WBCA All-American led the nation in rebounds per game (15.3) and double-doubles (30), while also registering 20 or more boards in eight contests.

Osahor was also second on the team in scoring, averaging 15.8 points per game.

Additionally, Osahor was named the MVP of the 2016 Lexington Regional after averaging 14.5 points and 15 rebounds per game.

Following her college career, Osahor was drafted 21st overall by the Chicago Sky in the 2017 WNBA draft.

She was later traded to the Minnesota Lynx, where she was one of the final roster cuts from the Lynx training camp roster.

Most recently, Osahor served as the Graduate Manager at Drake University after she was hired back in August of 2017, where she helped guide the Bulldogs to back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances.

Hogs pick up another ’20 commitment out of East Texas with Dixon

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Chad Morris’ direction to recruit in Texas isn’t wavering at all as Carthage athlete Kelvontay Dixon committed Thursday to play for Arkansas in a tweet.

One of things that many contribute to the Razorbacks’ slide over the past decade has been a lack of recruiting in the Lone Star state, which annually produces more highly-rated players than any other.

Morris and his staff, especially running backs coach Jeff Traylor, knows the area, particularly East Texas, which has produced an abundance of big-time players for decades.

How strong?

One example is Ron Meyer when he took over the SMU program in 1976, targeted East Texas as a primary area to get players “because I really liked the players down there.”

The Mustangs had a large amount of players from that area that produced the program that had the highest winning percentage of anybody in college football.

Say what you want about HOW they got the players, but it wasn’t much different from everybody else in those days … SMU just bragged about how they did it publicly more than anybody else.

Dixon is the 11th verbal commitment for the 2020 class and eight are from Texas. Traylor has been responsible for five of those eight.

He will join Carthage teammate Ty’Kiest Crawford, a highly-rated offensive lineman, in committing to the Razorbacks.

Dixon is a composite three-star who is also expected to be a return specialist.

Morris can’t overcome Hogs’ decade of ignorance, incompetence, quickly

It was Sylvester Croom in 2008 that sat at an interview in Starkville and flat told me on the air, “we may be a better team, but not have as good of a record.”

He said that during an SEC show that I was doing at the time as we made stops all across the South. Croom, coming off an 8-5 season with Mississippi State in 2007, couldn’t manage much in 2008 and got fired.

About the only thing he managed that year was beating Arkansas and first-year coach Bobby Petrino in Starkville.

What he talked about after the show was how tough things are in the SEC.

“You can win 10 games and finish third in your own division in this league,” he said.

That’s exactly what happened to the Razorbacks in 2011, by the way. When Alabama and LSU play in the national title game and those are your only two losses during the season, well, it can happen.

In 2010 they won 10 regular-season games and finished in a tie for second place with LSU. After a loss to Ohio State in the Sugar Bowl, the Hogs ended up 12th in the final polls, behind Auburn, LSU and Alabama.

If you’re going to play in the SEC West, there’s no easy path.

And Arkansas hasn’t found anything approaching that success since those two seasons.

The SEC has changed in the last 11 years. Arkansas simply hasn’t kept up with the pace Nick Saban, Urban Meyer, Steve Spurrier, Les Miles and some others introduced with a relentless pace of getting the best players to their schools.

During the summer “talking season” (credit to Spurrier for that one), the Razorbacks’ football woes have been chronicled from about every angle possible.

This all started, in my opinion, when Jeff Long and John White hired Petrino. As many told me when it happened, it’s a way to get short-term gratification just before the ship nose-dives into the depths of the SEC ocean. At the time I said it was going to set Arkansas football back 10 years and I was a little low.

Many will disagree, but I predicted on the air the morning after a Cotton Bowl win over Kansas State that 2012 was going to be 6-6 … at best. That was reinforced in the spring game when the complete lack of depth became apparent.

Hiring Bret Bielema didn’t even keep the program at mediocrity. It was a hilariously bad hire to begin with, but some didn’t see that.

Chad Morris now gets the task of building a program nearly from the ground floor up. Bielema liked to say how close his last team was to winning some games, which was verbal confirmation he wasn’t a winner.

You don’t hear winners talk about close unless they’re discussing dancing or throwing hand grenades.

Morris probably wouldn’t admit it, but he’s having to walk a delicate line between expectations and hope.

The Lunatic Fringe and many of the mouth-breathers on message boards don’t know there’s a difference, especially with a program that went through a decade of ignorance, incompetence and lack of forethought.

Expectations should be realistic while hopes can be off the charts.

It’s completely reasonable to expect Morris to get this team to a bowl game in his second season. With a completely winnable non-conference schedule and an improved culture, that should be doable.

Don’t ask me now where those six wins will be because this is truly a season to take one game at a time. Nobody can predict injuries, the twists and turns or how quickly newcomers will get the hang of things.

Morris isn’t going to overcome the problems created in the previous decade in a year or two. It’s going to take a little bit of time.

Whether you like it or not.

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

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Phil and Tye interview Nikki Chavanelle, Change My Mind, and more!

Opitz, Kjerstad named to USA Baseball’s roster for this summer

DURHAM, N.C. — USA Baseball unveiled the 26-man 2019 Collegiate National Team roster on Monday and Arkansas sophomores Heston Kjerstad and Casey Opitz were named to the team.

The Collegiate National Team will host a five-game international friendship series against Cuba before traveling to Taiwan and Japan next week.

Team USA will host the 8th Annual USA vs. Cuba International Friendship Series on July 2-6.

The five-game series will kick off at LP Frans Stadium in Hickory, North Carolina, followed by games at BB&T Ballpark in Charlotte, North Carolina, the Durham Bulls Athletic Park (DBAP) in Durham, North Carolina, and the National Training Complex.

The series will then return to the DBAP for the finale on July 6.

The Collegiate National Team leaves for Taiwan on July 7 for the 19th USA vs. Chinese Taipei International Friendship Series from July 9-12 and close out its summer schedule with the 43rd USA vs. Japan Collegiate All-Star Series, which will take place in various cities throughout Japan from July 16-21.

Louisville coach Dan McDonnell is the manager of the team. He will be joined on staff by assistant coaches Mark Kingston (South Carolina) and Tony Skole (The Citadel), pitching coach Greg Moore (Saint Mary’s) and bench coach Dave Turgeon (Pittsburgh Pirates).

Three of the 8th USA vs. Cuba International Friendship Series games will be streamed live on USABaseball.com (July 3, July 4, July 6) and the remaining domestic Collegiate National Team games will be broadcast on USA Baseball’s Facebook channel.

The 26-man roster below will be cut to 24 for the series in Japan.

2019 Collegiate National Team Roster
(Name; Position; Hometown; School; Year)

Andrew Abbott; LHP; Halifax, Va.; Virginia; Sophomore
Logan Allen; LHP; Deltona, Fla.; FIU; Sophomore
Tanner Allen; IF/OF; Theodore, Ala.; Mississippi State; Sophomore
Patrick Bailey; C; Greensboro, N.C.; NC State; Sophomore
Tyler Brown; RHP; Ashland, Ohio; Vanderbilt; Sophomore
Alec Burleson; LHP/1B; Denver, N.C.; ECU; Sophomore
Burl Carraway; LHP; College Station, Texas; Dallas Baptist U.; Sophomore
Cade Cavalli; RHP; Bixby, Okla.; Oklahoma; Sophomore
Colton Cowser; OF; Cypress, Texas; Sam Houston State; Freshman
Jeff Criswell, RHP, Portage, Mich.; Michigan; Sophomore
Reid Detmers; LHP; Chatham, Ill.; Louisville; Sophomore
Justin Foscue; IF/OF; Huntsville, Ala.; Mississippi State; Sophomore
Nick Frasso; RHP; Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif.; Loyola Marymount; Sophomore
Heston Kjerstad; OF; Amarillo, Texas; Arkansas; Sophomore
Asa Lacy; LHP; Kerrville, Texas; Texas A&M; Sophomore
Nick Loftin; IF; Corpus Christi, Texas; Baylor; Sophomore
Austin Martin; UTL; Jacksonville, Fla.; Vanderbilt; Sophomore
Chris McMahon; RHP; West Chester, Penn.; Miami; Sophomore
Max Meyer; RHP/OF; Woodbury, Minn.; Minnesota; Sophomore
Garrett Mitchell; OF; Orange, Calif.; UCLA; Sophomore
Doug Nikhazy; LHP/OF; Windermere, Fla.; Ole Miss; Freshman
Casey Opitz; C; Centennial, Colo.; Arkansas; Sophomore
Spencer Torkelson; IF; Petaluma, Calif.; Arizona State; Sophomore
Luke Waddell; INF; Loveland, Ohio; Georgia Tech; Sophomore
Cole Wilcox; RHP; Chickamauga, Ga.; Georgia; Freshman
Alika Williams; IF; San Diego, Calif.; Arizona State; Sophomore

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday

John & Tommy react to Phil Steele’s comments, the best potato chips out there, and more!

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — featuring Blayne Toll & Kevin McPherson

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Phil & Tye hit on respect from the national media, Blayne Toll discuss his commitment, and Kevin McPherson gives a recruiting update!

Former Hogs Portis signs with Knicks; Beverley re-signs deal with Clippers

Bobby Portis and Patrick Beverley have agreed to terms with the New York Knicks and Los Angeles Clippers, respectively.

Portis signed a two-year, $31-million deal with the New York Knicks and Beverley signed to a three-year contract worth $40 million to stay with the Clippers.

Portis played two seasons at Arkansas (2013-15) before being a first-round draft pick (22nd overall) for the Chicago Bulls. He played three-plus seasons with the Bulls before being traded to the Washington Wizards in February 2019.

In his four seasons in the NBA, Portis has averaged 10.2 points and 6.2 rebounds while shooting 45.8 percent from the field, 36.1 from 3-point range and 75.1 percent from the free throw line.

Beverley was a member of the Razorbacks for the 2006-07 and 2007-08 seasons before being a second-round draft pick (42nd overall) of the Los Angeles Lakers in 2009 only to have his draft rights traded to the Miami Heat.

After playing overseas, Beverley signed a multi-year deal with the Houston Rockets in January of 2013. Beverley played four-and-a-half seasons in Houston.

He participated in the 2015 NBA All-Star Weekend Skills Challenge and, in his final season with the Rockets, he was selected to the NBA All-Defensive first team as well as winning the NBA Hustle Award. Prior to the 2017 season, Beverley was acquired by the Clippers.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Monday

John & Tommy discuss Mus going after 5-stars, Mt. Rushmore of Hog players, plus Phil Steele!

Hogs’ addition by subtraction may prove to be Morris’ intention

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You might want to make sure you have a roster handy watching Arkansas football this year, which might not be the worst thing in the world.

It’s good to remember the time Fordyce native and legendary Alabama coach Paul Bryant once duly noted in 1971 while keeping a change to the Wishbone offense a secret.

After back-to-back 6-5 regular seasons, Bear knew something had to change. He’d flirted with the Miami Dolphins before backing out, but had stumbled onto something in a Bluebonnet Bowl 24-24 tie with Oklahoma.

When the SEC Media gathered in Tuscaloosa and noted the lack of returning starters after maybe Bryant’s three worst seasons, well, he had a ready answer.

“Last thing you want is a bunch of starters coming back from a bad team,” he said.

Chad Morris would never say that publicly after last year’s disastrous 2-10 season, but he could be excused if the thought has crossed his mind a few times.

It may have started back last September after back-to-back collapses against Colorado State and North Texas State.

In the post-mortem after that one, Morris said everybody’s got to start with some accountability, but you could listen to what he wasn’t saying that may be have been even louder.

By that point, he knew he didn’t have a lot of leadership within the team. Some hadn’t bought into his approach and others didn’t appear to have a lot of interest in putting forth the effort that Morris demands.

The result is a roster full of new faces. That happens when some upperclassmen transfer out with remaining eligibility.

Others may have been “encouraged” to look elsewhere for playing time. It’s a good bet Morris and the staff had some pretty blunt assessments of statuses in the end-of-the-year reviews done with each player.

Like Sosa Agim.

A five-star recruit out of Hope, he’d spent three years resembling a three-star with some flashes of what might be.

Morris told him if he wanted to stay with the Hogs, he’s was going to play inside and stop all this wanting to be a defensive end nonsense. If he wasn’t completely committed to doing that, he might want to take his chances in the NFL Draft.

Agim is back, has a new attitude that was obvious in the spring and is clearly doing some mentoring of the incoming freshmen during the summer workouts by all reports.

At quarterback, Morris stumbled through a season making do with what he had and keeping redshirts on freshmen Connor Noland and John Stephen Jones. Turns out it didn’t matter for Noland, who is going with baseball full-time, but it saved a year for Jones.

And he got his first SMU quarterback recruit to transfer to the Hogs and basically become a fifth-year senior who is likely to start and has taken command of the offense from a leadership standpoint.

That was missing last year and it was obvious.

In reality it may have been addition by subtraction with the roster and a crop of incoming freshmen with the potential to be big-time.

Some will want to downplay that by pointing out the negative of the word potential.

Others will use that worn-out babble about lack of experience, but if you look at the recent national championships, the rosters were full of freshmen.

In case you missed it, coaches that compete for championships don’t recruit players that NEED to be developed to be come winners.

They recruit winners to be developed into championship contenders.

Morris is still got some distance to go before there’s any talk of competing for even an SEC West championship. That does automatically put you in the national title conversation, by the way.

But that’s the goal.

And he’s hoping it’s off to a good start with this class.

 

Lopez, Lewis make cut on second day at NWA Championship

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas’ Gaby Lopez and Stacy Lewis both made the cut following day two at the NWA Championship, as each followed up strong round one performances with solid showings on moving day.

Lopez has done most of her damage on the front during the tournament, and she was phenomenal there again Saturday morning, shooting a 33 after firing a 32 Friday.

Her round-two 67 matched her total from Saturday’s round and currently has her sitting in a tie for 17th place with one round left to go.

Lopez will be paired with Lizette Salas, and will tee off Sunday morning at 11 a.m.

For Lewis, it was the back nine that provided the boost. She birdied five of the nine holes after making the turn on her way to carding a 32, matching the best round by a former Razorback at the event.

Like Lopez, Lewis matched her day one score, posting a 68 to give her a share of 39th place. Lewis will be matched up with Jessica Korda Sunday, starting her final round at 9:30 a.m.

The four other former Hogs in the event missed the cut at three-under-par, meaning Alana Uriell (-2), Kaylee Benton (-1), Maria Fassi (+1) and Dylan Kim (+9) will not get to play in round three tomorrow.