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Ezell on finding home at first in early games for Razorbacks

Hogs’ first baseman Trevor Ezell talked with the media Tuesday about being settled into a position he hadn’t played before and getting more comfortable there.

Hogs’ Martin hoping to get caught up on schoolwork with homestand

Arkansas shortstop Casey Martin talked with the media Tuesday about the upcoming Memphis game, which kicks off a 14-game homestand and he can get caught up on schoolwork.

???? Tuesday Halftime Pod — featuring Rivals’ Nikki Chavanelle

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Phil & Tye discuss Chad Morris press conference, plus Nikki Chavanelle joins the pod!

Razorbacks sending five to next week’s NCAA Indoor Championships

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — Arkansas will have five opportunities to score at next weekend’s 2019 NCAA Indoor Championships at the Birmingham Crossplex as they compete in the final meet of the indoor season Mar 8-9 in Birmingham, Ala.

All-American Gabe Moore will return to the NCAA Indoor Championships where he finished sixth overall earning First-Team All-American honors.

Moore is currently No. 4 in the NCAA holding a personal-best total of 5,908 pts. that he set in a second-place finish at the SEC Championships this past weekend.

Moore will be joined by Derek Jacobus who is currently No. 13 in the NCAA with a season-best of 5,656 pts. that he set in at the Razorback Invitational in late January.

Arkansas is the only program in the nation this season to qualify two heptathletes through to the NCAA meet.

Along with the duo in the heptathlon, the Razorbacks will field both a 4×400-meter relay and a Distance Medley Relay.

Arkansas is the only team in the nation to qualify both a 4×400-meter relay and DMR, and the ONLY school in the nation to qualify both a men’s and women’s 4×400-meter relay and DMR.

Arkansas holds a season-best of 3:05.71 in the 4×400-meter relay that is the 11th-best in the field and the 10th best in program history, while the DMR is also ranked No. 11 in the NCAA with a time of  9:29.26 that is the fifth-best performance in program history.

In the field events, the Razorbacks will be represented in the triple jump by Laquan Nairn who posted a qualifying mark of 16.03m (52-7.25) in a third-place finish at the SEC Championships.

The Razorbacks will open competition at the 2019 NCAA Indoor Championship on Friday, March 8 and the indoor season will conclude on Saturday, March 9 in Birmingham.

Arkansas Qualifiers

4-×-400-Meter Relay – 11. Caldwell, Ejiakuekwu, Woodhall, Winn, 3:05.71
Distance Medley Relay – 11. Moehn, Winn, Taylor, Griffith, 9:29.26
Long Jump – 13. Laquan Narin, 16.03m (52-7.25)
Heptathlon – 4. Gabe Moore, 5,908 pts | 13. Derek Jacobus, 5,656 pts

Arkansas earns NCAA-leading 15 entries for NCAA Indoor Championships

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — No. 1 Arkansas will have an NCAA-leading 15 opportunities to score next weekend in Birmingham, Ala., at the 2019 NCAA Indoor Championships as the Razorbacks try for their third NCAA title.

Previous Qualifier Numbers (NCAA Finish, Final Score)

• 2018 – 12 (Second, 49 points)
• 2017 – 13 (Fifth, 32 points)
• 2016 – 12 (Second, 50 points)
• 2015 – 15 (First, 63 points)
• 2014 – 13 (Sixth, 30 points)
• 2013 – 9 (Fourth, 42.5 points)
• 2012 – 10 (Fifth, 25 points)

Arkansas will be led by seniors Payton Chadwick (60-meter hurdles; 200-meters; 4×400-meters), Kiara Parker (60-meters; 4×400-meters), Lexi Jacobus (Pole Vault), Tori Hoggard (Pole Vault), Desiree Freier (Pole Vault), and Kelsey Herman (Pentathlon) all of whom were huge contributors in last week’s run to its fifth-straight Southeastern Conference indoor title.

Of the aforementioned Razorbacks, three captured SEC titles in their respective events with and Jacobus returning to the NCAA meet as the defending champion from last season.

Arkansas is the only program to field two sub-eight second hurdlers as Chadwick (7.98) and Janeek Brown (7.95) enter the indoor meet ranked No. 2 and No. 4. Chadwick captured the NCAA title last season while Brown earned First-Team All-American honors in an eighth-place finish.

Sophomore transfer Kethlin Campbell will look to become a first-time contributor for Arkansas at the national meet, following an outstanding conference debut and regular season.

Campbell finished fifth in the 400-meters at the SEC meet running a personal-best 52.60 that tied for No. 7 in program history.

Redshirt-freshman Lauren Gregory and sophomore Carina Viljoen will get their first glimpse at the indoor championships in the mile.

Gregory will also compete in the 3K  with teammate Taylor Werner where they hold the sixth and seventh-best times in the NCAA.

Arkansas will also return an NCAA-leading three pole vaulters to the national meet for the third consecutive year with Desiree Freier, Tori Hoggard, and Lexi Jacobus all on the start list.

Last season Jacobus won the indoor title with Hoggard finishing runner-up and Freier taking fifth-place.

Arkansas is the only team in the nation to qualify both a 4×400-meter relay and DMR, and the ONLY school in the nation to qualify both a men’s and women’s 4×400-meter relay and DMR.

The Razorbacks will open competition at the 2019 NCAA Indoor Championship on Friday, March 8 and the indoor season will conclude on Saturday, March 9.

Arkansas Qualifiers

60 Meters – 2. Kiara Parker, 7.15
200 Meters – 6. Payton Chadwick, 22.97
400 Meters – 12. Kethlin Campbell, 52.60
Mile – 6. Lauren Gregory, 4:32.92 | 11. Carina Viljoen, 4:33.88
3000 Meters – 6. Lauren Gregory, 8:55.97 | 7. Taylor Werner, 8:56.97
60 Hurdles
– 2. Janeek Brown, 7.95 | 4. Payton Chadwick, 7.98
Pole Vault – 1. Lexi Weeks, 4.68m/15-4.25 | 2. Tori Hoggard, 4.60/15-1 | 7. Desiree Freier 4.41/14-5.50
Pentathlon – 3. Kelsey Herman, 4,330 pts.
4×400 Meter Relay – 4. Parker, Burks-Magee, Chadwick, Campbell, 3:29.69
Distance Medley Relay – 5. Gregory, Burks-Magee, Byrnes, Werner, 10:57.19

Jacobus named USTFCCCA National Athlete Of The Week after SEC Indoor title

NEW ORLEANS, La. — Arkansas’ Lexi Jacobus was named a U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association National Athlete of the Week following a spectacular weekend at the SEC Indoor Championships at Randal Tyson Indoor Track this past weekend.

Lexi Jacobus put herself in rarefied air this past weekend at the SEC Championships. Jacobus, competing in front of her home crowd at the Randal Tyson Track Center, became the second-best performer with the No. 2 performance in collegiate history with her title-winning clearance of 4.68m (15-4.25) in the pole vault.

Gritty doesn’t even begin to describe Jacobus’ effort on Saturday. She needed three attempts at both 4.52m (14-10) and 4.60m (15-1) before setting a PR on her first try at the height.

Her clearance also clinches the program record outright for her breaking her tie with Sandi Morris’ mark of 4.66m (15-3).

This is the second time in her career that Jacobus has been named National Athlete of the Week during the indoor season. Her first honor came back on February 21, 2017.

Jacobus and the sprint crew will head to the NCAA Indoor Championships at Birmingham Crossplex Friday-Saturday, March 8-9, in Birmingham, Ala.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday

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John & Tommy discuss Chad Morris’ press conference, the new football culture, plus Jack Pilgrim of Kentucky Sports Radio!

Has Anderson changed as game has evolved over last eight seasons?

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When Mike Anderson was hired in the spring of 2012, the hope of many fans were things would be returning to the glory years of the mid-90’s, but the problem is basketball has changed … Arkansas hasn’t.

That was really the last time Razorback basketball had any relevancy on the national stage. In the entire history, the Hogs have really only been relevant consistently nationally from 1977-1996.

Many Arkansas fans spend more time living in the past in all sports and worrying about what didn’t happen more than focusing on the here and now. The “Fastest 40” marketing slogan was just a re-branding of the “40 Minutes of Hell” that worked in Nolan Richardson’s day, but won’t today.

Even Nolan has told people it’s nothing today like it was when his system worked. Everybody does it today to a certain degree, but the players change too much now for things to work the way they did in the mid-90’s.

He didn’t have nearly every game televised with incredibly long timeouts that simply bleed off any crowd or momentum advantage. That alone took away a lot of the advantages the Hogs had back in those days.

They would simply wear teams out and the timeouts weren’t long enough to quiet a crowd when the flames were fanned higher by the pep band. Today there’s something going on almost every timeout that literally requires the crowd to calm down a bit.

Nolan’s system relied on players that weren’t one-and-done. They were around for three years or they weren’t good enough to matter. If you don’t have the talent, you better have players that stick around for three or four years.

The Razorbacks haven’t had a lot of that. The best players Anderson has gotten have lasted a couple of years, then they were gone. He hasn’t had a group at any time anywhere near the level of talent on Nolan’s best teams … or even Eddie Sutton’s best teams.

Shoot, things are different now than they were when Anderson started at Arkansas. The SEC Network in 2014 changed everything from that standpoint.

Anderson’s doesn’t have a style that has adapted well, especially when you get a bunch of players who aren’t quite ready for prime time.

Results haven’t matched expectations and that’s become a problem for Anderson, whether he wants to just shrug it off or not.

There is no doubt Anderson’s own expectations haven’t been realized. For the first time as a head coach, there is a a lot of noise from many fans and whether any coach wants to admit it or not, it is distracting.

He’s not really helping his case by pointing out how close they’ve been late in some losses. There was a football coach that got fired using that same line all the way through his final press conference.

Now Anderson has fans calling for his hide. The recognition of the 1994 national championship team may get a few more fans in the building Saturday, but if the don’t unveil a floor with the Slobberin’ Hog and Nolan Richardson’s name on the court, well, you wonder how long the excitement will last.

For the record, I didn’t care for the Slobberin’ Hog in the 1970’s when they put it on the floor instead of the real logo. Yes, I’m in the minority on that one, but it’s not a big enough deal for me to really care one way or the other.

There are bigger issues right now with the Hogs. Mainly a matchup with No. 4 Kentucky on Tuesday night at Lexington. Nobody is giving Arkansas a snowball’s chance in that one, but it would help Anderson’s cause if it isn’t a blowout.

But mainly I’m more interested in how the rest of the season plays out and what Anderson does about what has been the most struggling year for him as a head coach.

That’s assuming, of course, he stays.

Which will require possibly some changes.

But definitely some adapting.

 

Morris: Hill will be participating in Razorbacks’ spring practices

Arkansas coach Chad Morris said in his press conference previewing spring practice that starts Friday that current basketball redshirt Justice Hill will be in football spring practices.

???? Monday Halftime Pod — featuring RSN’s Brett Dolan

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Phil & Tye discuss Arkansas’ 5th straight loss, interview RSN’s Brett Dolan, and more!