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Jacobus named SEC’s co-field athlete of week after Arkansas Invitational

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Senior Lexi Jacobus was named the SEC’s Co-Field Athlete of the Week following the Arkansas Invitational this past weekend.

Arkansas’ Lexi Jacobus finished her season-opening meet with an NCAA-leading mark of 4.49m/14-8.75 in the pole vault at the Razorbacks home meet at Randal Tyson Indoor.

Her clearance not only leads the NCAA, but is No. 4 in the world this season.

Jacobus and a select group of Razorback vaulters will head west to take part in the USATF Pole Vault Summit in Reno, Nev. Jan. 18-19.

???? Tuesday Halftime Pod — featuring Nikki “Nike” Chavanelle

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Phil & Tye discuss if Ben Hicks will start, interview Nikki Chavanelle and preview the Arkansas vs. Tennessee game!

Pettway becomes latest Razorback player to transfer out of program

La’Michael Pettway has decided to become a graduate transfer and leave the Arkansas football team, according to an announcement on his Twitter feed Tuesday.

Pettway led the Razorbacks in receiving this past season with 30 catches (tied for most) for 499 yards (most) and four touchdowns (second most). He played in 12 games and made five starts, averaging a team-high 41.6 yards per contest, logging a season-long reception of 48 yards.

The in-state product put up multiple catches in nine games and hauled in at least four receptions in three of them.

In the season opener, Pettway teamed up with fellow wideout Jordan Jones to have a big production day, finishing with five catches for 93 yards and two touchdowns.

Since Chad Morris took over the program in December 2017, there have now been 27 players leave the program:

QB Ty Storey, Jr. — Name in transfer portal

QB Cole Kelley, So. — Transferring

RB Maleek Williams, RS-Fr. — Transferring

WR La’Michael Pettway, Jr. — Transferring

WR Kofi Boateng, So. — Medical Hardship

WR Maleek Barkley, RS-Fr. — Transferred to Montana State

WR Brandon Martin, Jr. — Academic Issues

WR Jonathan Nance, Sr. — Transferring

WR Jarrod Barnes, So. — Transferring

TE Jack Kraus, Sr. — Gave up football early

TE Will Gragg, Jr. — Transferred to Pitt

TE Austin Cantrell, Jr. — Moving to next phase of life

OL Zach Rogers, Sr. — Moved on to next phase of life

OL Jalen Merrick, Jr. — Medical Hardship

OL Dylan Hays, So. — Medical Hardship

OL Jake Heinrich, So. — Medical Hardship

CB Ryan Pulley, Jr. — Declared for NFL Draft

CB Chevin Calloway, So. — Transferring

CB Korey Hernandez, RS-Fr. — Transferred to Iowa Western CC

CB Nate Dalton, Jr. — Left the team after suspension

FS Reid Miller, Jr. — Transferred to Montana

NB Derrick Munson, So. — Transferring

LB Kyrei Fisher, So. — Transferring

LB Josh Paul, Fr. — Left team

DE Alexy Jean-Baptiste, So. — Transferring

PK Cole Hedlund, Jr. — Transferred to North Texas

Razorbacks to open spring tennis season with pair of doubleheaders

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas’ men’s tennis team is slated to open its spring campaign this Wednesday at the Dills Indoor Courts in a doubleheader against Mercer.

The first match is scheduled to begin at 3 p.m.

It will be the first of two doubleheaders in Fayetteville this week as the team also hosts UCF and St. Louis this Saturday.

The first match is scheduled against UCF and will start at 1 p.m.

Match Info
Date: Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2019
Location: Dills Indoor Courts
Opponent: Mercer (DH)
First Serve: 3 p.m.
Live Stats: Arkansas.Statbroadcast.com

Following the matches, there will be an opportunity for the children in attendance to play on the courts for a brief period.

This week’s competition will be the first since Arkansas completed its fall season in October at the FGCU/Bonita Bay Invitational.

It’s also the first match at home since Arkansas defeated Ole Miss 4-3 on April 15 last spring. It’s the first time since 2017 that Arkansas will open up spring competition at home.

Arkansas was stellar at home last year, going 10-3 in Fayetteville, including three conference wins. Since the 2015-16 season, the Razorbacks have compiled a 32-13 record at home.

The two home matches this week mark the first of 12 home dates the Razorback have this season. The home slate includes matchups against Big 12 rivals Texas (Feb. 10) and Oklahoma (Feb. 27), in addition to hosting Southeastern Conference foes South Carolina (March 1), Florida (March 3), Vanderbilt (March 14), Kentucky (March 16), Mississippi State (March 30), and Auburn (April 13).

Entering his sixth season at the helm, coach Andy Jackson returns eight players from last year’s roster, including four seniors in Pedro Dominguez Alonso, Oscar Mesquida, Adam Sanjurjo and Branch Terrell.

This fall, the Razorbacks went 43-25 (.632) in singles matches, including an 8-2 record from Jose Dominguez Alonso and an 8-4 record from newcomer Enrique Paya.

In doubles matches this past fall, Jose and Pedro Alonso accounted for the most wins on the team, going 4-2.

Arkansas loses All-American Jose Salazar who led the team in singles wins last season with 24, but returns four of its five players that reached double-digits singles victories last season.

The Razorbacks also return the duo of Oscar Mesquida and Adam Sanjurjo who led the team in doubles wins last season.

Gafford named to Sporting News’ midseason All-American team

FAYETTEVILLE — The Sporting News announced its 2018-19 midseason All-American squad and Arkansas sophomore Daniel Gafford was selected to the third team.

Gafford, on numerous preseason Player of the Year Watch Lists, joins Tennessee’s Grant Williams on the 15-player team.

Gafford leads the SEC with seven double-doubles (in 15 games) as well as leading the league in field goal percentage (..658), overall rebounding (9.5 rpg) and offensive rebounding (3.0  rpg).

He additionally ranks second in field goals made (102) while ranking fourth in scoring (17.5 ppg) and blocked shots (2.2). He is the only player in the SEC to rank among the top four in each of those categories.

Nationally, Gafford ranks 12th in field goal percentage, 23rd in double-double and 28th in overall rebounding.

Gafford opened the season with a double-double (20 pts, 12 rebs) versus Texas. Two games later, he led Arkansas to a win over now nationally-ranked Indiana. Gafford was tabbed SEC Player of the Week for his effort versus the Hoosiers, scoring a then career-high 27 points and tying a then career-high with 12 rebounds.

Gafford went on to set career highs for points (32 versus LSU) and rebounds (14 versus UTSA).

Gafford went 8-for-8 from the field in a win over Montana State, which tied a school record for best field goal percentage. Also helping his league-leading field goal percentage is that, of his 269 career field goals made, 44 percent (119) has been dunks.

This year, Gafford had made 102 field goals, 44 being dunks.

Gafford has blocked at least one shot in 13 of 15 games this season, including 11 games with at least two rejections. In 50 career games, the sophomore already ranks ninth on the school’s all-time list for blocked shots with 109.

In addition to his blocked shots, Gafford leads the team with 82 deflections this season, while ranking second on the team with 15 steals.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday with Ben Hicks

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John & Tommy discuss the newest addition of Ben Hicks, and he joins the podcast!

Was Hicks last option to run Morris’ read-and-react offense?

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You can probably consider the quarterback situation at Arkansas resolved at least for a year … at least from an available option view.

Former SMU quarterback Ben Hicks will be rejoining Chad Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock and the Razorbacks will have someone who at least understands what they are wanting at that position. He was 12-12 in two years with them at SMU.

Before you start, don’t expect incoming freshman KJ Jefferson to be the starter this season.

Let’s face it, playing that spot for the Hogs now is not something very many true freshmen can come in and handle. We’re talking having the ability of a Trevor Lawrence at Clemson maybe being the only way it could happen.

Jefferson may be that good, but nobody’s seeing it right now.

Besides, Morris simply doesn’t have a history of true freshmen coming in and everything running like a well-oiled machine. He didn’t do it at Clemson or SMU. Redshirt freshmen MIGHT have a shot, but Connor Noland and John Stephen Jones weren’t ready last year and Daulton Hyatt appears headed for career backup status.

Quarterback isn’t the biggest issue, though.

Quite frankly, any quarterback in today’s read-and-react offensive systems is only as good as his offensive linemen and receivers.

It’s a series of progressions where several positions have to make correct reads and reactions or, well, it ends up looking like what we saw in a 2-10 season.

This is nothing new, by the way. Vince Lombardi’s legendary Power Sweep that many thought was simply force of will required more cohesive movements than a ballroom dance:

• The first tandem was usually offensive tackle Forrest Gregg and tight end Ron Kramer, who had to decide whether to take the tackle and defensive end inside or outside based on how they reacted when the ball was snapped.

• Based on that, pulling guards Fuzzy Thurston and Jerry Kramer kicked the linebacker inside or outside.

• What Thurston and Kramer did created the decision of who to block for fullback Jim Taylor.

• Finally, based on all of that, when Paul Hornung got the handoff, he would either shallow or deepen his run for the correct spacing to “hit the alley” as Lombardi described it … which could be anywhere from the guard to the sideline.

And you thought the playcall was the key thing, huh?

Morris explained all of this to the media back in August. There aren’t any secrets in college football and never really has been.

In case you didn’t know it, Texas coach Darrell Royal and offensive coordinator Emory Bellard basically took a high school offense out of Fort Worth, Houston sportswriter Mickey Herskowitz dubbed it The Wishbone … and the Longhorns had a nice run for three years.

Then Royal had Bellard give all of it first to Barry Switzer at Oklahoma, who was the offensive coordinator for the Sooners at the time, then Bear Bryant at Alabama, who took it and won three national championships in the 1970’s running it.

“If I had it all to do over again, I wouldn’t have been so damn benevolent,” Royal lamented during an interview in the 1990’s.

The Wishbone, by the way, was all read-and-react.

Very seldom was a play called that everybody on offense knew who was going to end up with the ball at the snap. When that happened, by the way, it was usually a pass as Arkansas found out in 1969.

Morris’ offense is all about the offensive line’s reads have to match what’s going to happen with the receivers and running back, then the quarterback has to assume before the ball is snapped that everybody is reading things like he is.

It really is coordinated chaos.

To be honest, a lot of things have to improve outside of the quarterback position. You could have had 2010 Cam Newton behind the Hogs’ offensive line with those receivers last year and it wouldn’t have been much better.

Those were the biggest problems areas on offense last year, not quarterback.

The group of receivers coming in has the potential to be better than the 2008 class (Jarius Wright, Joe Adams, Greg Childs, Chris Gragg). We’ll find out about that.

Morris’ offense requires a quarterback who can — most importantly — throw the ball. He also needs to be able to move in the pocket, extend plays and make the right decisions.

Hicks knows how to make those decisions in Morris’ offense.

He is the leading passer in SMU history, which is saying something considering Chuck Hixson back in the late 1960’s flinging it nearly every down in Hayden Fry’s “ABC Offense,” named for the entertainment value on the only television network carrying college football then.

But there are also unknowns with Hicks, primarily if he’s going to be able to make those decisions at the warp speed required in the SEC.

Whether you like it or not, though, that’s the direction Morris has gone.

We may never know if Hicks was the best they could get to look at the Hogs or if that was the direction Morris wanted to go all along.

Or had to go.

Morris gets his former SMU QB as graduate transfer for Hogs

Chad Morris went to Dallas to land the graduate transfer quarterback he was adding for the 2019 season and it is SMU’s all-time passing leader Ben Hicks, who was in Morris’ first recruiting class on The Hilltop.

He visited Louisville on Thursday and Arkansas over the weekend, including being at the basketball game against LSU on Saturday evening.

It was reported by various outlets he will be enrolling at Fayetteville this week and immediately start conditioning and be in spring practice, which starts Feb. 26.

Hicks started as a redshirt freshman after the starter went down in the 2016 season opener against North Texas.

He played the remaining 11 games of the season throwing for 2,930 yards with 19 passing touchdowns and two rushing touchdowns. He led the Mustangs to a road victory over then-top 25 ranked Houstonwith 228 yards and three touchdowns.

Hicks is a pro style quarterback, rated a composite three-star coming out of Waco Midway and redshirting in 2015.

He threw for 3,569 yards, 33 touchdowns and 12 picks and left after the 2018 season with the program’s career passing record topping 9,000 yards.

The Razorbacks now have a five scholarship quarterbacks projecte in 2019. The other four, redshirt sophomore Daulton Hyatt, redshirt freshmen Connor Noland and John Stephen Jones and true freshman KJ Jefferson combine for a total 68 game snaps.

After missing on former Clemson quarterback Kelly Bryant, Morris reportedly gauged the interest of other possible transfer quarterbacks, but the choice of Hicks was easy, considering his experience with both Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock.

???? Monday Halftime Pod — featuring ADG’s Scottie Bordelon

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Phil & Tye discuss the LSU loss, Mike Anderson’s future, plus Scottie Bordelon joins the POD!

Anderson previews Tuesday matchup with Tennessee

Arkansas coach Mike Anderson met with the media Monday to look ahead to the road game Tuesday night with the third-ranked Vols.