???? Monday Halftime Pod — featuring Harry King

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Phil Elson & Tye Richardson hit on not overreacting to the sweep, interview Harry King and more!

Van Horn on starting Ramage Tuesday, ex-assistants at Northwestern

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn met with the media Monday morning to preview the midweek series with Northwestern, a school where he started and has fond memories of being there.

Hunter Yurachek joins The Morning Rush to discuss Musselman and more!

Arkansas AD Hunter Yurachek joins The Morning Rush to discuss Eric Musselman, the coaching search process, season tickets and more!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Monday

John & Tommy discuss Hogs sweeping MSU, buyouts, next goal for Arkansas athletics, and best/worst of the weekend!

Recruiting transfers not a negative these days, but way of life

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New Arkansas coach Eric Musselman landed his first new face of the spring signing period Saturday when Jeantal Cylla committed to be at Arkansas as a graduate transfer.

If you’re complaining about transfers being a problem, you’re living in the past. Thanks to the NCAA throwing the rule book in the trash a page at a time it’s a way of life now.

The Razorbacks will be the third team Cylla has played for in his collegiate career. That’s not a knock on him, by the way, because he appears to be another solid, well, journeyman that’s becoming a trend.

After graduating from North Carolina-Wilmington, where he averaged 13.7 points and 4.6 rebounds while shooting 42 percent from the field and 31 percent on 3-pointers last year, he now fills a roster spot for Musselman on a team that needed some experience.

It was the problem Mike Anderson pointed to this past season where there were some highs, but too many lows, which ended up costing him his job.

Enter Musselman, who guided Nevada to three straight NCAA appearances and a Sweet 16 using transfers. It was something some Hog fans have noted, questioning if that will work here.

Recruiting high school players is the old way of doing things when coaches got four or five years to develop players and their program. Now they’re lucky if to three years. More likely two years if things aren’t progressing rapidly.

You can thank the NCAA. There once was a time when transferring meant losing a year of eligibility while sitting around just practicing. The smart ones spent it getting ahead of academics. Dumb ones flunked out and were never heard from again. Most were somewhere in the middle, hoping everything worked out because there was no way to move again.

Now, in football, the past two Heisman Trophy winners were transfer quarterbacks. Think about that for a second.

That means two schools didn’t do a whole lot of either evaluation, development or coaching and let two Heisman-winning players get away. You can justify it nine ways to Sunday and back, but that’s the bottom line.

By the way, both of the coaches who let Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray leave are no longer coaching at Texas A&M and Texas Tech, respectively. Suit yourself, but I don’t believe in coincidence.

Yes, that means in some cases the inmates are running the asylum. Coaches who win — Dabo Sweeney and Nick Saban are the most high profile examples — are the best at coaxing talented players to maximize THEIR potential for the team’s benefit.

Gone are the days when a coach just simply laid down the law and worked players until the malcontents simply quit or everybody fell in line. If they quit that meant they were usually finished or playing at a lower-classification school.

Now you have good players making two or three stops in college.

Recruiting these days is much more than chasing high school kids. Now coaches see who’s in the mysterious NCAA Transfer Portal. If you want proof the NCAA has just completely given up, well, there you have it.

Little Rock attorney Tom Mars apparently figured out the worst you can do going up against the kangaroo court that runs college athletics is get a tie. Representing transfers he’s discovered you’ll usually win against the NCAA … and never have to go to court.

The way eligibility waivers are being handed out these days is drawing us closer to complete free agency in college athletics.

Whether that’s good or bad is somebody else’s argument to have.

It’s the way it is.

Musselman is just recruiting players to make the Hogs better as fast as possible. Just like Chad Morris is doing in football and every other coach in every other sport at the UA.

And in the end, wins are what Razorback fans want.

Whether the players come in as freshmen or fifth-year seniors with one year of eligibility really doesn’t matter. Let’s be honest, if you sign four of the best players in the country every year they are going to be gone to the NBA and you’ve got to do it again.

Exactly what the difference is in recruiting escapes me.

Wins are what matter.

Canaan gets Saturday’s game off to fast start with first pitch

Arkansas super fan Canann Sandy was at Baum-Walker Stadium on Saturday and threw out the first pitch with some flair, then talked to the team and pumped them up before the 10-2 win over Mississippi State.

Noland shuts down Bulldogs as Razorbacks sweep SEC series

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Freshman right-hander Connor Noland handcuffed second-ranked Mississippi State for 7.2 scoreless innings on Saturday and Arkansas rolled to a 10-2 win before a crowd of 11,087 at Baum-Walker Stadium.

The win gave the Razorbacks a sweep in a series that has seen the winning team do that now for four years in a row.

Arkansas (30-10, 12-6 SEC) moved ahead of Texas A&M for the overall SEC West lead by half a game. The Hogs are now 21-4 at Baum-Walker Stadium this year and have won 21 or more games at home every year since 2006.

Noland, who had not pitched past the fifth inning in 10 previous starts this year, held the Bulldogs to only four hits in his career-long outing and came away with no walks and five strikeouts on 89 pitches.

It was Noland’s second win of the week as he pitched two scoreless frames on Tuesday against Arkansas-Pine Bluff and is now 2-2 on the year.

After a slight struggle in the first inning where he left two aboard, but didn’t let any runs cross, Noland retired 10 of the next 11 batters he faced, allowing just a single by Gunner Halter in the third inning.

He went on to pitch into the eighth inning before Jacob Kostyshock took over with two outs. Noland finished the game with 11 groundball outs and no extra-base hits allowed.

Offensively, seven Razorbacks had at least one hit in Saturday’s game. Casey Martin, Jordan McFarland and Jacob Nesbit each came away with two hits.

Nesbit took home the top hitting line with a 2-for-4 game and four RBIs, three coming off a home run in the sixth, making it 7-0. It was Nesbit’s second home run of the year as two of his three hits in the series came in today’s game.

Nesbit drives in first run, then blasts Hogs to big inning

With just one hit in the series prior to Saturday’s series finale, third baseman Jacob Nesbit came through not only once, but twice. Nesbit drove in the game’s first run in the fifth inning on a single up the middle to score Jordan McFarland.

Then, in the sixth, Arkansas had already sent six men to the plate before Nesbit came up again and blasted a 0-1 pitch into the Hog Pen for three runs and pushing Arkansas’ lead to 7-0.

Nesbit has seven hits in his last 10 games and the four RBIs was a career high.

McFarland steps up with Kjerstad out

With Heston Kjerstad having to serve a one-game suspension due to his ejection on Friday, junior Jordan McFarland got the start at designated hitter and Matt Goodheart moved to right.

McFarland responded well with the spot start, going 2-for-3 with two runs scored and an RBI. His single in the fifth eventually led to him being driven in by Nesbit for Arkansas’ first run.

Today was McFarland’s first start in conference play this season and first on the weekend since March 13. It was also his first multi-hit game since Feb. 16 against Eastern Illinois.

Hog pitching shuts down SEC’s top offense

Mississippi State came into the weekend series with Arkansas as SEC’s top hitting team with a .327 average, which was also the second-highest average in the country.

Arkansas pitching, however, kept the Bulldogs in check all weekend, limiting them to just 10 runs on 17 hits and a .173 team batting average. MSU’s leading hitter Jake Mangum was held to only two hits in the series.

All three of Arkansas’ starting pitchers held the Bulldogs to two runs or less and struck out five or more.

Razorback quotables

“Just a great job by our team, obviously, all three days coming out and really playing solid baseball and putting together some really good innings, offensively. Today, the story was Connor Noland. I mean, he was just lights outs. He had his two-seamer going, sinking. He wasn’t overpowering, 90 miles an hour. Most of his pitches were right at 90 and then he had a really good slider. He mixed in some changeups to some lefties. But he kind of went with the harder breaking pitch today and just did a super job.” — Coach Dave Van Horn on Connor Noland’s outing

“Great job all weekend. I’m just proud of these guys. It’s been a good week. We had that tough game last Saturday at Vandy after a tough 3-2 loss on Friday and then we fought back and won Sunday. You can see how it kind of turns things. We did Tuesday and then won three more games. We’ve won five in a row. Just a really good job by our team mentally to stay strong last weekend and it led to this great week we had.” — Van Horn on his team’s sweep of Mississippi State

“I’ve said all along that he’s mature for being a freshman in college. His mental makeup is advanced over some kids his age — maybe a lot — that we coach. It’s one reason why liked him right when he got in here and started working with us. We felt like he’d have a chance to pitch on the weekend, because of the mental part of it. Physically, he’s already there. Now he just needs experience. But you did see the mature part of him come out this whole week leading up today, and he got rewarded for it.” — Van Horn on Connor Noland’s maturity

 “I was just looking for a pitch I could handle. He threw me a fastball on the first pitch of the at bat that kind of sawed off my hands little bit. He threw me a fastball again on the next pitch and I didn’t miss it that time.” — Jacob Nesbit on his home run in the sixth inning

 Coach (Dave) Van Horn says the SEC is kind of like a league like no other. Rankings don’t matter so much, like we saw last year.  We got swept by them in Starkville and we were ranked top five and they weren’t ranked at all.  So, anybody can beat anybody on any given day.  Thats just kind of baseball in general. Anytime you can sweep anybody in the SEC that’s something you want to do.” — Jordan McFarland on sweeping Mississippi State and now leading the division

 “I’ve been waiting for that moment for a long time. Going seven and two-thirds innings, I mean that’s what you dream about, going out there and performing well at your peak performance. That was a big thing and just happy it happened.” — Connor Noland on having a career day on the mound

 Up next

Arkansas continues the homestand next Tuesday and Wednesday as it welcomes Northwestern State to Baum-Walker Stadium for a two-game series.

First pitch on Tuesday is set for 6:30 p.m., followed by game two on Wednesday at 3 p.m.

You can listen to the game on ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

Both games will be televised online on SEC Network+.

Nesbit, Noland, McFarland recapping series sweep over MSU

Arkansas third baseman Jacob Nesbit, pitcher Connor Noland and designated hitter Jordan McFarland talked about the 10-2 win, series sweep over the Bulldogs.

Hari sets Danish 100-meter national record, Top 10 mark

WACO, Texas — A Danish national record and a pair of Arkansas Top 10 marks highlighted action for Arkansas at the Michael Johnson Invitational at Clyde Hart Track & Field Stadium Saturday afternoon.

Kris Hari has had quite the last two weeks on the track for the Razorbacks where he’s turned in a lifetime-best in the 100-meters on each occasion.

At last week’s John McDonnell, Hari raced to a time of 10.31 lowering his personal-best from the previous wind-legal mark of 10.52.

On Saturday, Hari ran 10.26 in the 100-meters finishing fourth-overall in a field that featured the No. 1 time in the NCAA this season by Texas Tech’s Divine Oduduru who paced the field at 9.94.

Hari’s time is the 10th-fastest in Arkansas program history and is also a new Danish National Record in the event besting the previous mark of 10.29 set by Morten Jensen in 2004.

Roy Ejiakuekwu also turned in a lifetime-best in the 100-meters with his time of 10.37 for seventh-place, while Josh Oglesby made it 3-for-3 on the day for Razorback PRs in the race as his time of 10.44 is a lifetime-best for the freshman from Katy, Texas.

Jalen Brown (21.17), Rashad Boyd (21.29), and Rhayko Schwartz (21.51) finished 10th, 12th, and 14th in the 200-meters with Brown’s mark being an all-conditions lifetime-best in the event.

Hunter Woodhall, who returned to the track where he made his Arkansas outdoor debut last season, used a run of 46.52 to finish fifth overall.

Tre’Bien Gilbert (14.01) and Shakiel Chattoo (14.24) grabbed top-three finishes going 2-3 in the 110-meter hurdles.

The 400-meter hurdles saw Travean Caldwell run a lifetime-best 50.40 that is the eighth-fastest ever by a Razorback athlete.

Sam Kempka’s fourth-place finish in the shot put was a lifetime-best for the senior who finished with a best of 18.54m (60-10). Jeff Rogers mark of 17.58m (57-8.25) was also a lifetime-best in a seventh-place finish.

Arkansas’ 4×400m Relay of Caldwell, Brown, Hari, Woodhall closed out the meet with a season-best 3:07.37.

Men’s 4×100m Relay
1. Oglesby, Boyd, Hari, Ejiakuekwu – 39.40 – season-best

Men’s 100-meters
4. Kris Hari – 10.26 – Danish National Record/No. 10 in program history
7. Roy Ejiakuekwu – 10.37
12. Josh Oglesby – 10.44

Men’s 200-meters
10. Jalen Brown – 21.17
12. Rashad Boyd – 21.29
14. Rhayko Schwartz – 21.51

Men’s 400-meters
5. Hunter Woodhall – 46.52
16. John Winn – 47.50
24. James Milholen – 48.85

Men’s 800-meters
8. Eugene Grayson III – 1:52.73
11. Reese Walters – 1:56.01

Men’s 3,000-meter steeplechase
3. Carter Persyn – 9:54.98

Men’s 110-meter hurdles
2. Tre’Bien Gilbert – 14.01
3. Shakiel Chattoo – 14.24
9. Gabe Moore – 14.75
10. Daniel Spejcher -15.12

Men’s 400-meter hurdles
5. Travean Caldwell – 50.40 No. 8 time in program history
9. Nick Hilson – 51.88

Men’s 4×400m Relay
3. Caldwell, Brown, Hari, Woodhall – 3:07.37 – season-best

Discus
5. Erich Sullins – 51.22m (168-0.50)
12. Gabe Moore – 45.44m (149-1)
16. Daniel Spejcher – 38.44m (126-1.50)

Men’s Long Jump
6. Gabe Moore – 6.78m (22-3)
13. Daniel Spejcher – 6.40m (21-0)

Men’s Shot Put
4. Sam Kempka – 18.54m (60-10)
7. Jeff Rogers – 17.58m (57-8.25)

Men’s Triple Jump
4. Laquan Nairn – 15.12m (49-7.25)

Razorbacks get five Top 10 performances in sprints, relays in Baton Rouge

BATON ROUGE, La. — Arkansas’ women’s sprints and relays wrapped up the LSU Alumni Gold Saturday afternoon with five program Top 10 marks including two by sophomore Janeek Brown who took a break from the hurdles this weekend to focus on her sprint work.

The Razorback sprint relay of Kiara Parker, Payton Chadwick, Janeek Brown, and Kethlin Campbell got the day started on a high note, turning in a season-best performance of 43.45 that also doubles as the No. 4 performance in program history.

Brown started her individual events with a quick run of 11.22 in the 100-meters finishing fifth-overall. Heer time stands as the No. 4 time in program history behind Jada Baylark (11.04), Veronica Campbell (11.10) and Kiara Parker at 11.13.

Parker finished sixth in the same event running 11.23 while Tamara Kuykendall finished seventh in the “B” section of the event running 11.83.

In the deuce, Brown once again led the charge for Arkansas as she doubled back from the 100-meters to post a lifetime-best in the 200-meters at 23.05.

For the second time in the meet, Brown ran a lifetime-best that finished in the all-time top-10 list checking in at No. 4 in program history trailing only Veronica Campbell (22.41), Taylor Ellis-Watson (22.48), and Jada Baylark (23.00).

Also competing in the 200-meters were Chadwick (23.39) who finished ninth in the “A” section, and Tamara Kuykendall (24.26) and Shafiqua Maloney (24.73) who took seventh and 19th in the “B” section.

Kethlin Campbell ran the No. 5 time in program history in the 400-meters earning a second-place finish in her season opener in the event.

Campbell is now a member of both the indoor and outdoor top-10 list in the 4000-meters in only her first season on The Hill after transferring from Duke this past summer.

Following Campbell were Morgan Burks-Magee (53.83) in 10th, Sydney Hammit (54.03) close behind in 11th, Paris Peoples (54.36) in 13th, and Tiana Wilson in 16th-place.

Sydney Davis (56.01) and Shafiqua Maloney (56.75) took seventh and 10th in the “B” section of the 400-meters.

Alex Byrnes took eighth-place in the 800-meters with her run of 2:09.85.

In the hurdle events, Chadwick took care of the high hurdles running a season-best 12.97 for third-place while J’Alyiea Smith handled the intermediate hurdles running 1:01.12 for 12th-place.

To close out the meet, Burks-Magee, Campbell, Chadwick, and Parker ran 3:30.37 in the 4×400-meter relay that is good for No. 7 in program history.

4×100-meter relay
1. Parker, Chadwick, Brown, Campbell – 43.45 – No. 4 in program history

100-Meters
5. Janeek Brown – 11.22 – No. 4 in program history
6. Kiara Parker – 11.23
7. Tamara Kuykendall – 11.83

200-meters
4. Janeek Brown 23.05 – No. 4 in program history
9. Payton Chadwick – 23.39

7. Tamara Kuykendall – 24.26
19. Shafiqua Maloney – 24.73

400-meters
2. Kethlin Campbell – 51.83 – No. 5 in program history
10. Morgan Burks-Magee – 53.83
11. Sydney Hammit – 54.03
13. Paris Peoples – 54.36
16. Tiana Wilson – 55.26

7. Sydney Davis – 56.01
10. Shafiqua Maloney – 56.75

800-meters
8. Alex Byrnes – 2:09.85

100-meter hurdles
3. Payton Chadwick – 12.97 – Season-Best

400-meter hurdles
12. J’Alyiea Smith – 1:01.12

4×400-meter relay
1. Burks Magee, Campbell, Chadwick, Parker – 3:30.37- No. 7 in program history

Long Jump
7. G’Auna Edwards – 6.00m (19-8.25)