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Hogs’ Moore leads after first day in decathlon at Texas Relays on Wednesday

AUSTIN, Texas — Arkansas’ Gabe Moore wrapped up day one action at the Texas Relays leading the field with 4,150 points through five events at Mike A. Myers Stadium on Wednesday afternoon.

Moore started the day by running a brisk 10.81 that was fourth in his heat and fourth overall in the 20 person field.

He returned to jump 7.10m (23-3.50) in the long jump that finished as the eighth-best in the field.

In the shot put, Moore posted a best throw of 14.47m (47-5.75) that was the third-best in the competition.

High jump once again saw Moore finish with the third-best mark in the field after clearing 2.01m (6-7).

The senior capped day one action by running 49.47 in the 400-meters to move to the lead in the competition.

Moore holds a 95-point lead over Texas A&M’s Nathan Hite, with Kennesaw State’s Paris Williams in third at 3,932-pts.

Arkansas will return to action at the 92nd Texas Relays at Mike A. Myers Stadium tomorrow afternoon.

Fassi named SEC’s top women’s golfer after performance last week

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas’ Maria Fassi was selected as the Southeastern Conference Women’s Golfer of the Week, the league office announced Wednesday.

The Razorback All-American fired a final round 68 to finish second at the Evans-Derby Experience at Auburn on Monday. Fassi’s finish paced Arkansas to a runner-up finish. The team finish is the second runner-up finish and the fifth top-3 finish in seven events.

Fassi’s final round 68 is her third round in the 60’s and her 12th round of par or better this season. Fassi ranks third in the SEC with a 71.65 stroke average through 17 rounds this season.

Fassi and head coach Shauna Taylor spent Wednesday in New York City taking part in several media appearances to preview the upcoming Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

The event takes place April 3-6 at the famed Augusta National featuring 72 amateurs in a 54-hole event. Razorback teammate Dylan Kim joins Fassi in Georgia at the prestigious event.

The No. 8 Razorbacks return to the links at the Liz Murphey Collegiate Classic in Athens, Georgia, April 11-13. It is the final event before beginning postseason play at the SEC Championship April 17-21.

More information

The Razorbacks host the NCAA Women’s and Men’s Golf Championships in mid-May at Blessings Golf Club. Check out NCAAGolf19.com for volunteer information.

Yurachek might take a few days, which could be good this time of year

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For fans wanting to know right now who the next basketball coach will be at Arkansas might want to take a deep breath … and wait.

Alabama hired Buffalo coach Nate Oats on Wednesday, so one opening is filled. It wasn’t with Mike Anderson as some had speculated was going to happen. The guess here is because Crimson Tide athletic director Greg Byrne pulled the trigger that quick he already had something in place.

You wonder if Hunter Yurachek has done the same thing.

These things aren’t done like many think. Coaches don’t usually come to town until after they’ve accepted the job. It’s the school that goes to the coach. The internet’s made it possible to do all this without the visit to check things out.

And coaches aren’t going to roll into town for an interview. They don’t have to these days. It all goes through agents these days and while basketball isn’t as high profile as football it’s a very similar process.

Any coach Yurachek might want that’s still playing in the NCAA isn’t going to want that information out. They are still playing for a national championship so there’s not going to be anything approaching an announcement before they’re eliminated.

Two of the hot names being thrown around are Texas Tech’s Chris Beard and Houston’s Kelvin Sampson.

Beard is far and away the least likely. He’s at $3 million in a year in his hometown and you can quote his past statements all you want, but it’s highly doubtful he would leave Lubbock for Fayetteville.

Sampson might be a different story, however.

Yurachek knows him. He inherited Sampson when he became the Houston athletics director and reportedly the two got along fairly well.

Sampson is affordable, making considerably less than $2 million a year, which is due more to the NCAA problems he had at Oklahoma and Indiana than his abilities to recruit, develop players and win ballgames.

Sampson left Indiana for making impermissible phone calls to recruits. Because he had run afoul of NCAA rules previously at Oklahoma, Sampson was served with a five-year “show-cause” order that effectively kept him off the college sidelines until Houston hired him.

Sampson’s problems with the NCAA were for things that would now be legal, according to some, and in a world where some coaches are being arrested amounted to going to prison for a traffic ticket. There have been no charges he paid a player or gave anyone extra benefits, which is my minimum standard for cheating.

Whether it’s something Yurachek wants to deal with or not is a question for him. He may have a better option up his sleeve, but no idea from here who that would be.

Outside of those two, your guess is as good as mine. Yurachek isn’t going to ask me for a recommendation and I probably couldn’t give him one if he asked.

But he pulled the trigger on firing Mike Anderson after eight seasons, none with a losing record. Whether that was a good decision or not will only be determined by what happens over the next few seasons.

In my opinion, if Frank Broyles knew Dana Altman was going to stay for only a day and John Pelphrey would be the best they could do back in 2007, the guess here is Stan Heath would have hung around for another year or two.

Hindsight is always 20/20, especially hiring coaches. It’s easy for us to sit back a few years down the road and grade any athletic director’s hires.

Shoot, nobody criticized Jeff Long for hiring Anderson in 2011. That was supposed to be the slam-dunk guarantee for success and it turned out to be like buying a like buying a flip-phone today. You can still make calls fairly reliably, but it’s nothing to get excited about.

Yurachek has to decide on somebody now. If it takes a few days, well, so be it as that could mean he’s at least having discussions about somebody still playing for a national championship.

It’s his call to make and in a business that is by guess and by golly a lot, he’s got to hit more than a ground-rule double.

This hire doesn’t have to be an immediate home run, but it does have to land in scoring position.

If not, well, Yurachek will be the one answering questions.

Hogs go on road against Ole Miss, return home for Bulldogs, Golden Lions

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas’ men’s tennis team travels to Oxford, Mississippi, on Thursday to end a three-match road trip against the Rebels before returning home to host Mississippi State and Arkansas-Pine Bluff in a Saturday doubleheader.

Ole Miss Match Info
Date: 
March 28
First Serve: 6 p.m.
Location: Oxford, Mississippi
Live Stats: http://bit.ly/2WuMmGR 
Live Streams: http://bit.ly/2HKSxmD

Mississippi State, UAPB Match Info
Date: March 30
First Serve: 1 p.m.
Location: Fayetteville, Ark.
Miss. St. Live stats: http://bit.ly/2JJkflJ
UAPB Live stats: http://bit.ly/2OtpCnT

Arkansas’ match on Thursday against the Rebels will mark the end of a three match road trip, the first of two three match road trips in conference action for the Hogs.

After hosting Mississippi State and UAPB on Saturday, the Razorbacks will travel to Tennessee (April 5), Georgia (April 7) and Alabama (April 11) before returning home April 13 to host Auburn in the regular season finale.

No. 52 Oscar Mesquida still leads the Hogs in the rankings, as he holds an even 7-7 record in dual matches this spring.

This season he has faced a team high 11 ranked opponents, going 5-6 in those matches. Enrique Paya still holds the team lead in wins this season, being 17-12 overall and 9-8 in dual matches. Enrique Paya and Maxim Verboven are 9-6 since starting action in January to lead Arkansas in doubles play.

Ole Miss is led by 70th-ranked singles player Tim Sandkaulen who has helped lead the Rebels to wins in four of the last five conference matches. Fabian Fallert and his partner Finn Reynolds lead the Rebels in doubles action, coming in at No. 14.

Saturdays match against Mississippi State will be yet another matchup against a top-10 foe, as the Razorbacks have faced five teams currently ranked in the top-10 already this season.

The Bulldogs come in ranked No. 8 and have a pair of ranked singles players, led by the No. 2 overall player Nuno Borges. The Bulldogs of Mississippi State also hold the No. 4 and the No. 8 ranked doubles pairs.

Arkansas will also face in state foe Pine Bluff for the first time in program history on Saturday following the match against Mississippi State.

Gymbacks’ Carter named to regular season All-American team Thursday

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio — Sophia Carter has been recognized by the Women’s Collegiate Gymnastics Association as a second team regular season All-American on the floor exercise, the association announced Wednesday morning.

Regular season All-Americans are awarded to student-athletes with the top-16 national qualifying scores on each event and in the all-around. Athletes with the top-eight NQS (including ties) are recognized as first team All-Americans, while athletes ranked 9-16 are second-team.

Carter is Arkansas’ ninth regular season All-American in program history, and third on the floor.

Kathrine Grable took six regular season All-American honors from 2013-14, while Amanda Wellick was a vault All-American each year from 2014-16.

Among Arkansas’ regular season All-Americans, Carter owns the Razorbacks’ second-highest NQS on an event at the time of the award.

Carter finished tied for No. 10 on the floor with an NQS of 9.935. Carter averaged a 9.910 on the event and recorded a season high 9.950 four times throughout the course of the season.

From Feb. 1 to March 16, the Blue Springs, Missouri, native recorded a 9.900 or higher in seven-consecutive meets on the floor. Throughout the season, she has not recorded below a 9.850 on the event as the team’s anchor.

Ranked inside the top-10 throughout the majority of the season, Carter has recorded the fourth-most 9.900’s on the event in the Southeastern Conference.

In nine of 12 meets she has posted a 9.900 or higher on the floor, earning her eight floor titles in the 2019 campaign.

With her four 9.950’s on the floor this season, her career total is now five on the event, giving her the third most 9.950’s or higher on the floor in program history.

Ranked No. 9 on the floor at the conclusion of the regular season, she became Arkansas’ first gymnast to be ranked inside the top-10 on an event at the start of postseason action since 2014.

Similarly, she was ranked No. 1 on the event after week one of competition in January, becoming the first gymnasts since Katherine Grable to garner a No. 1 ranking in 2014.

Fourth-ranked Razorbacks split squads in Texas, California at weekend meets

FAYETTEVILLE — The No. 4 Arkansas women’s track & field team splits between the Stanford Invitational in Stanford, California, and Texas Relays in Austin, Texas, this weekend looking to take advantage of sunshine and great competition.

The Razorbacks competed at home last week hosting the Arkansas Spring Invitational where it picked up 33 top-10 finishes, including six event winners to open the outdoor season.

Action at the 92nd Clyde Littlefield Texas Relays gets underway on Wednesday, March 27 with the collegiate decathlon and heptathlon.

Thursday’s action will highlight several of the distance disciplines, including the 1,500 meters and 5,000 meters, and the steeplechase events across both the High School and University/College divisions.

The Friday evening session will showcase some of the non-traditional outdoor relay events with the sprint medley and distance medley for the High School and University/College levels.

The Saturday portion of the 4×100-meter relay events will lead into an exciting, action-packed day.

Arkansas checked in at No. 4 in the USTFCCCA preseason poll last week, and currently boast six performances inside the top-20 of the NCAA Rankings.

No. 12 – Kethlin Campbell – 200-meters (23.37)
No. 12 – Rylee Robinson – Pole Vault (4.13m/13-6.50)
No. 15 – Sydney Hammit – 400-meters (53.92)
No. 18 – Paris Peoples – 400-meters (54.24)
No. 18 – Kethlin Campbell – 100-meters (11.51w)
No. 20 – Janeek Brown – 200-meters (23.53)

92ND CLYDE LITTLEFIELD TEXAS RELAYS BY THE NUMBERS
University/College Teams – 210
University/College Athletes – 2,424
High School Teams – 715
High School Athletes – 4,312
Invitational Teams – 25
Invitational Athletes – 465

Stanford Scheduled Competitors

800-meters: Reed, Gregory, Underwood, Clark, Viljoen
1500-meters: Reed, Gregory, Underwood, Owen, Nichwitz
5000-meters: Viljoen, Brown, Clark
10,000-meters: Werner

Razorback split squads between Texas Relays, Stanford this weekend

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas’ men’s track & field team heads to both the Stanford Invitational in Stanford, California, and Texas Relays in Austin, Texas, this weekend looking to take advantage of sunshine and great competition.

The Razorbacks competed at home last week hosting the Arkansas Spring Invitational where it picked up 25 top-10 finishes, including seven event winners to open the outdoor season.

Action at the 92nd Clyde Littlefield Texas Relays gets underway on Wednesday, March 27 with the collegiate decathlon and heptathlon.

Thursday’s action will highlight several of the distance disciplines, including the 1,500 meters and 5,000 meters, and the steeplechase events across both the High School and University/College divisions.

The Friday evening session will showcase some of the non-traditional outdoor relay events with the sprint medley and distance medley for the High School and University/College levels.

The Saturday portion of the 4×100-meter relay events will lead into an exciting, action-packed day.

92ND CLYDE LITTLEFIELD TEXAS RELAYS BY THE NUMBERS
University/College Teams – 210
University/College Athletes – 2,424
High School Teams – 715
High School Athletes – 4,312
Invitational Teams – 25
Invitational Athletes – 465

Texas Relays Entries
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
11 a.m. Decathlon 100 Meters – Moore
• Decathlon Long Jump – Moore
• Decathlon Shot Put – Moore
• Decathlon High Jump – Moore
• Decathlon 400 Meters – Moore
Thursday, March 28, 2019
10 a.m. Decathlon 110 Meter Hurdles – Moore
• Decathlon Discus Throw – Moore
• Decathlon Pole Vault – Moore
• Decathlon Javelin – Moore
• Decathlon 1,500 Meters – Moore

Running Events
5 p.m. University/College Men 400 Meter Hurdles Prelims – Caldwell, Elliott, Gilbert, Hilson
Field Events
2 p.m. University/College Men’s Hammer Throw – Sullins

Friday, March 29, 2019
Running Events
9:55 a.m. Clyde Littlefield University Men’s 4×100 Meter Relay Prelims –
Arkansas: Oglesby, Boyd, Hari, Ejiakuekwu
10:15 a.m. University/College Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles Prelims – Chattoo, Elliott, Gilbert
5:15 p.m. University/College Men’s Sprint Medley Relay –
Arkansas: Schwartz, Winn, Woodhall, Taylor
5:40 p.m. University/College Men’s 400 Meter Hurdles Final – (Caldwell, Elliott, Gilbert, Hilson)
6:05 p.m. University/College Men’s Distance Medley Relay –
Arkansas: Moehn, Milholen, Wilkinson, Griffith
Field Events
9:00 a.m. University/College Men’s Discus Throw (Section B) – Sullins
10:00 a.m. University/College Men’s Shot Put (Section B) – Kempka
3:00 p.m. University/College Men’s Triple Jump (Section A) – Nairn

Saturday, March 30, 2019
Running Events
10:55 a.m. University/College Men’s 4×800 Meter Relay –
Arkansas: Taylor, Pareti, Wilkson, Grayson, Walters
12:00 p.m. Invitational University/College Men’s 4×200 Meter Relay –
Arkansas: Winn, Woodhall, Schwartz, Caldwell
1:30 p.m. Clyde Littlefield University/College Men’s 4×100 Meter Relay Final –
(Arkansas: Oglesby, Boyd, Hari, Ejiakuekwu)
2:35 p.m. University/College Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles Final – (Chattoo, Elliott, Gilbert)
3:45 p.m. Jerry Thompson Invitational Men’s Mile – Griffith, Moehn
4:50 p.m. Cleburne Price, Jr. University Invitational Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay –
Arkansas: Winn, Woodhall, Schwartz, Caldwell (Gilbert, Hilson, Milholen)

Tentative Competition Schedule (STANFORD):
11:30 a.m. – Men’s 5,000m Heat #4 – Cates
1:56 p.m. – Men’s 1,500m Heat #6 – O’Mara
5:37 p.m. – Men’s 3,000m Steeple Heat #3 – Levermore
9:28 p.m. – Men’s 10,000m Invitational Heat #1 – Boit
10:37 p.m. – Men’s 10,000m Invitational Heat #2 – Dalquist, Murphy,
Young

Friday at Chabot College: Mike Fanelli Track Classic:
TBD – Men’s 1,5000m – O’Mara, Dressel
TBD – Men’s 5,000m – Cates, Brown, Schillinger

???? Wednesday Halftime Pod — featuring Dudley Dawson of Hawgs Illustrated

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Phil Elson & Tye Richardson hit on the coaching change, interview Dudley Dawson of Hawgs Illustrated, and go through the coaching names tossed around.

Photos from Tuesday’s spring practice, including ‘Attack!’ drill

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PHOTOS BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

One of the new drills that had folks whispering was a new Attack! drill which resembles something between the old “get the flag” and “chase” you did in elementary school.

Except for this one you’re in full pads and everybody is trying to keep you from touching a tackling dummy by putting you on the ground.

We didn’t find out the name of the drill until D’Vone McClure talked to the media after practice, but he had a big smile talking about it.