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Gafford earns first team All-SEC honors; Joe named to freshman team

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas sophomore Daniel Gafford was voted consensus first team All-SEC (coaches and The Associated Press) as well as being and named to the SEC All-Defensive Team by the league’s coaches.

Isaiah Joe was voted to the SEC All-Freshman Team, it was announced today.

Gafford is the 12th first team All-SEC selection by the coaches for Arkansas and the sixth SEC All-Defensive Team honor. Gafford and Lee Mayberry (1992) are the only two Razorbacks to earn first team All-SEC and SEC All-Defensive Team in the same season.

Gafford joins Bobby Portis (2-15), Ronnie Brewer (2006), Scotty Thurman (11994 and ’95), Corliss Williamson (1994 and ’95), Todd Day (1992) and Lee Mayberry (1992) as consensus first team All-SEC picks.

PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Joe is the 18th Razorback to be named to the SEC All-Freshman Team.

Gafford, from El Dorado, leads the SEC in field goal percentage (.660), rebounding (8.7) and offensive rebounding (2.87) while ranking third in blocked shots (2.06), third in defensive rebounds (5.87) and fourth in scoring (17.0).

He is the only player in the SEC to rank among the top five in each of these categories. He additionally leads the SEC in field goals made and ranks third in double-doubles.

The two-time SEC Player of the Week ranks sixth nationally in field goal percentage and leads the SEC in the category by 91 percentage points.

Gafford is one of two players in the NCAA to average at least 15.0 points, 8.0 rebounds and 2.0 blocked shots while shooting at least 60 percent.

Gafford scored a career-high 32 points versus LSU this season and ended the regular season by grabbing a career-high 16 rebounds and scoring 29 points, his second-best career output.

On the defensive end, Gafford is a dominant force in the paint. He has turned away 64 shots and leads the Razorbacks with 149 deflections — 50 more than the next closest on the team.

Joe, from Fort Smith Northside, has not only had one of the best rookie campaigns in school history, but he is producing one the best in SEC and even NCAA history.

He has made 106 3-pointers to date to set the Arkansas single-season record for triples made in a season. (Scotty Thurman previously held the mark with 102 in 1995.) Joe leads the SEC in 3-pointers made per game (3.42) and 3-point percentage (.429).

He is looking to join Tennessee’s Chris Lofton (2005) as the only freshmen to lead the league in both categories. Joe additionally ranks second among all NCAA freshman in both 3-pointers made and percentage.

Joe only needs to make three more 3-pointers to rank among the NCAA top six for 3-pointers made in a season by a freshman. Joe ranks second in SEC history for 3-pointers made in a season by a freshman with the record being 113.

Joe also is a standout on the defensive end as he leads the team in steals, ranking 10th in the SEC, while leading the team in charges taken with 24. Joe is tied for the team lead with 96 defections, including seven in two of the last four.

Arkansas, the ninth seed, will face eighth-seeded Florida on Thursday (March 14) at the 2019 SEC Tournament. Tip-off is set for Noon at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena.

???? Tuesday Halftime Pod — featuring Nikki Chavanelle

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Phil & Tye hit on the college admissions cheating scandal, interview Nikki Chavanelle, plus Get Off My Lawn!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday

John, Tommy, & Tyler Wilson discuss spring football updates, the QB battle and more!

SPRING PRACTICE: Monday’s practice bouncing back from scrimmage

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Here are photos from Monday’s spring practice for Arkansas following their scrimmage on Saturday inside Razorback Stadium.

Morris likes energy at Saturday scrimmage, Monday’s practice

Arkansas coach Chad Morris met with the media after Monday’s practice at approximately the halfway point of spring and likes the energy plus has updates on injuries.

Anderson previews Razorbacks taking it one game at a time

Arkansas coach Mike Anderson met with the media Monday afternoon and talked about the finish to the season and taking it one game at a time as they head into the postseason, starting with the matchup against Florida at the SEC Tournament.

Sills, Bailey talking playing better, facing Florida at SEC Tournament

Arkansas players Desi Sills and Adrio Bailey talked with the media about the team playing better as they leave Tuesday for Nashville to face the Gators in the first game of the NCAA Tournament later this week.

???? Monday Halftime Pod — featuring “The Shoota” Pat Bradley

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Phil Elson & Tye Richardson hit on the basketball games over the weekend, interview Pat Bradley, 3 up 3 down and more!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Monday

John, Tommy & Nick discuss hogs heading into the SEC tourney, first spring scrimmage and more!

We don’t know what we don’t know about Hogs … but Mallett still Mallett

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Every year about this time people start asking what we know in March about Arkansas’ football prospects for November.

Every year the answer is the same: We don’t know what we don’t know.

The only thing we know at this point of spring practice is former quarterback Ryan Mallett is, well, still Ryan Mallett.

In case you’re wondering what in the world, well, just before Saturday’s scrimmage when Mallett — yes, the same one with the million-dollar arm and nickel head — came roaring through the narrow parking lot between Barnhill Arena and the Smith Center behind Razorback Stadium.

And promptly faked an aim at quarterback Ben Hicks, sitting down on his horn, then hysterically laughing as he tried to find a parking spot.

“How Ryan Mallett …,” said one media person watching this unfold as we awaited our cattle call outside the fences of the stadium. Most were just standing there shaking heads.

Whether Hicks actually thought it was funny or not isn’t known. Normally you wouldn’t expect those antics from a grown man with a few years of being on some NFL rosters.

To be fair he wasn’t going 100 miles an hour, but anything over 10 with players and other assorted people walking to the stadium is probably a little too quick and he was exceeding that. No one thought he was actually trying to run over anybody, but that’s probably not the time or place for it.

Nobody that cut Mallett from three NFL rosters (and doesn’t appear to have a whole lot of interest in signing him again) said he couldn’t still throw the ball so that pretty much narrows down his problem, doesn’t it?

Mallett is wandering around Razorback practices these days, usually standing behind the quarterbacks, but exactly what he brings to the table is something only Chad Morris and Joe Craddock can answer.

Quarterback Ben Hicks making a read behind Cheyenne O’Grady during Saturday’s scrimmage at Razorback Stadium. PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

In a scrimmage where the main highlights in front of the media came on a couple of big runs by Devwah Whaley and Chase Hayden, plus a true freshman wide receiver (Trey Knox) just simply beating a sophomore (safety Joe Foucha) in the modern-day tame version of the old Oklahoma Drill, there wasn’t a whole lot to see.

Ask the recruits, high school coaches and various others who get to stay longer than the media because they’ll see more than we do.

Don’t ask the media because all we’re doing is repeating what we’ve been told. It’s been awhile since I heard a college coach step in front of a microphone and talk about his team looking like it might not win a game against a high school team.

What this team is doing IS focusing more on fundamentals than last year. From what we’ve seen and heard that’s the bulk of what’s going on. Morris and Craddock have both told us the offense has actually scaled back, the tempo has slowed considerably … and the defense apparently is winning most of the head-to-head matchups.

That appears to be the focus for the spring … along with recruiting at a pace never seen before with the Hogs, according to the guys who follow that important game within the game.

The initial reaction upon hearing about the fundamentals is Morris is still working on the foundation. We hear about culture, the latest buzzword in college football, but it comes down to players … good ones.

There’s never been a plowhorse win the Kentucky Derby and there’s never been a team without really, really, good players win an SEC championship, much less a national title.

Morris knows this. He also knows the dysfunctional mess he walked into. Oh, don’t look for him to talk about any of that, but his actions are pretty clear.

Converted cornerback Jordon Curtis runs the ball behind a wall of blockers during the Razorbacks’ scrimmage Saturday. PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Getting back to basics is how coaches for decades have done things when they don’t have the talent in numbers to compete for a title. Being sound is the only way they’re going to win games.

That IS something Morris knows he has to do this year. A repeat of last season won’t work and there really isn’t an excuse anybody would buy.

Working on the fundamentals also keeps expectations down. Fans remember more about what was expected in August than what was delivered at the end of November.

Which is why coaches often like us not knowing what we don’t know about a particular team in the spring.

Right now, the bottom line is we’ve all seen a few good things, some bad things (snaps from center still seem to be a little wild at times) and some things we don’t know if they’re good or bad.

Quarterback John Stephen Jones leaps to field a high snap from center during the Hogs’ scrimmage Saturday. PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

But there is a different feel around this team. The players look more like SEC players (particularly at wide receiver and in the offensive line). The attitude seems to be more focused.

What that translates to on the last day of August isn’t known.

Don’t expect a lot of answers in the spring. You get the idea this isn’t a spring where Morris will be showing off a lot for the fans with a high-flying offense.

But it just might produce a team that plays better.

Ole Miss blasts Razorbacks in second game of series on Sunday

OXFORD, Miss. — Arkansas dropped the second of three games against Ole Miss on Sunday, 12-0.

Arkansas and Ole Miss will return to the dirt Monday, for a rubber match at 6 p.m.

Arkansas (19-4, 1-1) experienced its first true road loss of the season, after taking game one of the series from Ole Miss (15-7, 1-1) just the night before.

The Razorbacks fourth loss of the season was the first shut out of the 2019 campaign, and the first in five innings, nonetheless.

Junior Sydney Parr and sophomore Hannah McEwen were the only Hogs to log hits in the match. Parr earned her hit in the second inning; following a walk by sophomore Nicole Duncan, Parr hit a hard ball back to the circle to reach first.

It would be the only time Arkansas had runners on multiple bases.

McEwen kicked off the third inning with a single back to the pitcher as well but was out on the next play as Danielle Gibson fired one off up the middle but the Rebels were able to make the play at second to keep the Hogs out of scoring position.

Duncan was the only Razorback to reach base multiple times, reaching base in the fourth inning after being hit by a pitch. That was the final chance Arkansas had to score, as the Ole Miss pitching staff and defense sat down the order in the top of the fifth.

Starting pitcher Mary Haff recorded the loss and sits at 11-4 through 17 appearances.

The last time the Hogs split games one and two in Oxford was 2006, the Razorbacks went on to win game three and clinch the series against the Rebels.

Tomorrow’s game three is slated for a 6:00 pm (CT) start and will be available for viewers on the SEC Network.