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If Marshall has turned down Hogs, well, what’s the next flavor of day?

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You’d have to be deaf or simply not paying attention to hear the rumblings this week concerning the next men’s basketball coach at Arkansas.

Assuming Hunter Yurachek is actually making the decision this thing is filled with as many wild rumors and as much speculation as anything in Washington, D.C., these days.

Some think a member of the UA’s esteemed Board of Trustees who actually thinks he knows something about basketball is holding veto power and pulling the strings on the entire deal.

Everybody has known somebody and this entire search has gone in so many directions it’s clear all of it’s just wild speculation or somebody sending everyone in a wild goose chase.

Which brings us to today’s flavor of the day with the Hogs reportedly near a deal with Wichita State coach Gregg Marshall before a radio show Friday afternoon said he turned down the Hogs.

That sorta throws things into chaos.

The speculation is Yurachek has been asked to wait until Texas Tech’s Chris Beard finishes a run at the Final Four to give him the opportunity to say no. Some have said a friend of Beard reached out to say he would be interested after the tournament ends.

It seems from this corner this an interesting way to end up worse than where you started.

Over the past two weeks now we’ve heard the names Kelvin Sampson (that was supposed to be a done deal before Yurachek came to Arkansas), Eric Musselman (that was allegedly going to happen earlier this week) and former UCLA coach Steve Alford.

Now Marshall was the hot name and if he’s indeed turned down the gig that means, well, who really knows?

From a positive standpoint you wonder that if he’s turned it down, how many have declined?

You never really get a bill of particulars on these things. Let’s face it, when’s the last time you heard an athletic director get up and say, “After we have been turned down on five candidates this is who we’re stuck with.”

But you do have to really start to wonder what’s going on.

There is some speculation that part of the problem is they don’t want to pay a basketball coach more than Chad Morris’ $3.5 million a year … which is a futures contract, based on a 2-10 season to start last year.

If that IS the case, it means they are appearing to at least try making Arkansas a football school. That will be entertaining to watch play out.

Right now it appears if they don’t pull the Beard rabbit out of the hat, well, fans may have to lower their sights because that takes Billy Donovan and Rick Pitino out of the mix (although I’m not remotely confident either would be interested in coming to Fayetteville).

Is the Hogs’ job not as big of a deal as some fans have hoped it is?

Hogs get 15th inning homer from Kjerstad to avoid sweep at Auburn

Auburn thought it had a doubleheader sweep in the 10th inning against Arkansas on Friday night.

Then they didn’t.

The Razorbacks hung in, getting key hits when they needed them until Heston Kjerstad led off with a homer in the 15th inning, then Matt Goodheart had a two-RBI double for a 9-6 win in a game that lasted five hours, 40 minutes.

It could end up being a huge win down the road.

Auburn had rallied in the first game scoring six straight runs for a 6-3 win over Hogs’ starter and ace Isaiah Campbell.

And it looked in the 10th inning of the second game like they had a sweep.

Tigers catcher Matt Scheffler singled to bring Steven Williams home from second base. Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn appealed the play at the plate and replay showed Hogs catcher Casey Opitz tagged Williams and that sent things to the 11th inning.

Arkansas will try Saturday to get a series win, facing Auburn at 1 p.m.

Hogs fans shouldn’t worry about baseball’s loss to Little Rock

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Arkansas fans were already on edge Tuesday night.

With a men’s basketball coaching search that appears to be going off the rails, the last thing Razorbacks fans needed was a baseball loss to Little Rock in the teams’ inaugural meeting.

Not just a loss but a 17-7 clubbing at Baum-Walker Stadium.

It didn’t take long and social media was buzzing with distraught fans who claimed the series was a bad idea from the get-go.

Last year, Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek gave the OK for Hogs programs to play University of Arkansas System programs. The announcement halted a decades-long moratorium.

The reaction was a mixed bag, but when the Trojans routed the Hogs, some were livid.

To those who are bent — I know you are already upset about the prospects of firing Mike Anderson to possibly hire a mid-major coach or re-tread, but you don’t need to worry about this baseball loss.

Forgive me, but I am going to lean on my Iowa roots again. I know you get sick of that sometimes, but trust me, it’s applicable here. Growing up, Iowa State and Iowa, the state’s Power Five programs, played mid-majors Drake and Northern Iowa in most all sports –even football.

Hapless Iowa State lost to Drake the year the Bulldogs announced they were transitioning to a non-scholarship program. The Cyclones have also lost to UNI in football a handful of times.

Drake and UNI have beaten both Iowa and Iowa State in basketball over the years.

In a recent meeting, Iowa blocked to field goals on back-to-back possessions (because of penalties) to preserve a win in the final seconds.

And guess what?

The Cyclones and Hawkeyes haven’t lost revenue or recruits to those lesser programs. They still run the state, even though the Panthers and Bulldogs pull the occasional upset.

Obviously, this is a foreign concept in Arkansas since it’s brand-new. No one really knows how to react because these games have been taboo.

But this loss will show that in the grand scheme of things, it really doesn’t mean much.

Little Rock will have a great highlight video to show recruits and photos to include in the media guide. It’s a feather in their cap, but it won’t allow them to host an NCAA Regional, or even make one, let alone make a College World Series Run.

It won’t build them a new stadium they need or sway the top recruits from Arkansas to go there.

It also must be pointed out that in these nonconference midweek games, bigger schools don’t pitch their weekend starters. Could Little Rock beat Hogs No. 1 starter Isaiah Campbell? I wouldn’t bet on it.

Also this week, the University of Central Arkansas won at No. 24 Oklahoma State and No.18 Ole Miss, who only beat Little Rock 11-8 earlier this month, lost 10-6 to North Alabama.

These losses to mid-majors happen without much consequence and most know that the big boys aren’t wasting their top pitching.

The Hogs are still right where they want to be to make a deep postseason run. The Auburn series, which begins Friday, with a doubleheader is much more important.

Arkansas needs to bounce back after dropping two of three to SEC West rival Ole Miss last weekend at home. A couple of wins on The Plains and the Little Rock loss will be well in the rearview mirror if it isn’t already.

So, don’t fret over this. Your concern over the coaching search is a valid one. A baseball loss to an instate school? Nah.

Trust me, I know.

Photos from Razorbacks’ final regular spring practice Thursday

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Thursday was the last day of a regular spring practice, but the players were sporting the Hogs on the helmets as they worked getting ready to finish up spring drills, starting with the Red-White game on Saturday.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Friday

John & Tye discuss the flavor of the day, grading the potential coaching hires, plus Arkansas head football coach Chad Morris joins the show!

Hicks on adapting to playing at Arkansas, offensive improvement

Razorbacks quarterback Ben Hicks talked after Thursday’s practice about the offensive improvement in the spring and getting ready for summer practices.

Agim on defense winning belt on final regular practice of spring

Arkansas defensive tackle Sosa Agim after his last regular spring practice and he’s planning on doing a lot of coaching in the Red-White game Saturday.

Foucha after Hogs’ last practice Thursday before spring game Saturday

Razorbacks’ defensive back Joe Foucha talked with the media after Thursday’s practice about how the defense has improved in this spring practice.

Stewart after last ‘legit’ spring practice as fifth-year senior for Hogs

Arkansas wide receiver Deon Stewart talked with the media after what he called his “last legit spring practice” Thursday before Saturday’s Red-White game.

???? Thursday Halftime Pod — featuring Bob Holt of the ADG

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Phil Elson & Tye Richardson hit on how the Arkansas program has fallen, interview Bob Holt, and a little Halftime Homework!