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Plenty of credit to go around as Razorbacks blow past Missouri

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Did you really think Arkansas would keep losing?

After an unprecedented four-game losing streak, Mike Anderson kept preaching patience and, at least Wednesday night, his patience paid off.

For those fans who gave up in the first half, they missed a young team doing exactly what Anderson has said when it started clicking and the result was a 72-60 win Wednesday night.

“It’s good for their psyche,” Anderson said later about getting the win, their first in three weeks. “Our guys know they’re a good basketball team, but we’ve come up short.”

Arkansas’ Isaiah Joe drives down the lane against Missouri’s Jordan Geist. PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

And while Isaiah Joe broke out with a 23-point effort and Daniel Gafford scored 13 and four of his 10 rebounds on the offensive end, it was the defense Anderson thought made the difference.

“It was triggered by our defense,” he said. “The push to the basketball, whether it was makes or miss, we did those things. Even when we made mistakes we just played through it.”

That’s something this team hasn’t done in a few weeks.

Against the Tigers this defense finally forced turnovers (24 for the game to the Hogs’ 14) and dominated the steals (13 to 2).

“For 40 minutes we tried to create tempo and the tempo was created by our defense,” Anderson said. “(The bench) really kind of changed the tempo defensively, just really getting after it, getting in lanes and getting steals and getting to the basket and getting to our defense.”

Reggie Chaney on defense guarding Missouri’s Jordan Geist. PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

One of the big players aiding that defense was Reggie Chaney, who didn’t pile up particularly big numbers in any category, but did create a lot of pressure that led to some of those defensive stats.

“He’s figuring it out,” Anderson said. “I’m finally figuring it out. He played really big. He continues to get better and better and better.

“And then he comes up, he deflects passes and we come up with them. That’s big and he can switch out and guard a guard. His impact on this team is very, very important. We want to put him in a position where he helps us.”

Gafford has been talking about Chaney for weeks and what he brings to the team defensively.

“Every time, Reggie brings that extra piece to the puzzle,” he said. “He gets hustle plays, he always has his hands in the passing lanes. He is touching passes that I am sure that neither one of us (Gafford and Joe at the postgame press conference) can even touch when we are playing our best defense.

“I mean, he comes in and he rebounds and he was missing layups today, but he is always around the basket getting easy looks. I like the way he attacks the basket. He attacks the basket like a monster.”

Arkansas’ Daniel Gafford looks around Missouri players for the ball during the Hogs’ win Wednesday night. PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

As for Gafford, who has struggled at times getting into foul trouble, he played the entire game without getting a single foul.

Gafford also hit what Anderson later called the biggest shot of the night when he threw up a shot at the buzzer to give the Hogs a 34-32 lead at halftime.

“I ain’t never hit a shot like that before,” Gafford said. “When Keyshawn (Embery-Simpson) passed it, if the guy would have never dug in and hit the ball out of my hands, I would have had a better shot, but I knew time was running down and there was like at last two seconds, so I just threw it up and I was just trying to hit backboard and it just went straight in.

“I was amazed. I thought I was just going to air ball it, but I just threw it up and it wasn’t going to touch rim and it didn’t touch rim, it just went straight in.”

Arkansas’ Isaiah Joe dribbles around Missouri defender Kevin Puryear. PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Joe wasn’t doing the circus shots, but he was 7-12 from the 3-point line had an old-fashioned 2-pointer for his 23 points.

“It was good to see him, even defensively,” Anderson said. “He’s learning. Just like our team, it’s amazing. It was good to see him step up in big moments.”

Now they’ve got to build a winning streak.

It won’t be easy.

They get back on the court Saturday on the road at Texas Tech, coached by former Arkansas-Little Rock boss Chris Beard.

Oh, the Red Raiders are ranked either 13th or 14th in the country, depending on your poll of choice.

As we said, it won’t be easy but it’s the type game Anderson’s teams in the past have been known to surprise folks.

 

Anderson glad to get back to winning after stopping Tigers

Razorbacks coach Mike Anderson was glad to see his team get out of their four-game slump as they came back from as many as 13 points down to stop Missouri.

Hogs’ Joe, Gafford after getting back on track after four losses

Arkansas players Isaiah Joe (23 points, 3 steals, hitting 8-of-12 from the field) talking about bouncing back with the big come-from-behind win over Missouri on Wednesday night.

Missouri’s Martin talking about 72-60 loss to Razorbacks

Tigers coach Cuonzo Martin had praise for the Hogs after seeing his team squander a lead that was as big as 13 early before the Arkansas comeback.

Neighbors on getting boost after win over Tennessee

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors talked with the media Wednesday afternoon about the nail-biting win over the Vols, the matchup with Alabama and playing with the band at the mens’ game Wednesday night.

???? Wednesday Halftime Pod — featuring Nashville Sports Radio’s Bill King

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Phil & Tye discuss if Missouri belongs in the SEC, Change My Mind, plus Bill King joins the POD!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Wednesday

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John and Tommy discuss Ark-Mizz, southern food, interview Alex Schiffer and more!

ANDY’S NOTES: Hogs losing skid; Saints threw away chances to win

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Many Arkansas fans are not handling the current four-game losing streak very well and, as usual, it’s all put in Mike Anderson’s lap.

That goes with the territory in any sport involving the Razorbacks because it’s always the coach’s fault … regardless of the sport.

Yeah, nobody is really happy with the way things are going right now and even borderline Lunatic Fringe members are ready to send Anderson packing.

So, once again, I’ll ask who do you think you’re going to get that’s better?

Go ahead. Remember, you have to be able to actually get the coach and keep him in town a lot longer than 24 hours (which has happened in the past in case you don’t remember Dana Altman).

If you’ve been paying attention, even though a four-game losing skid is a first for Anderson with the Hogs, his teams have generally started conference play slow.

And every year fans get antsy.

They tend to pick it up the last six weeks of the season and we’re getting into that time of the year.

Either the Hogs will get better … or they won’t.

But many of us saw a season that wasn’t going to be a banner year. This team has problems scoring at times and now teams are just sagging inside and Daniel Gafford’s scoring is sliding downhill at a rapid rate.

Too often a zone defense will shut this team down cold. It’s not a lack of coaching where this team can’t get shots to fall at a high rate.

If you’ve got the solution, I’m all ears.

But you might as well let the season play out before having a stroke. History says that will likely swing things in the other direction sooner or later.

And if you were basing this year on a big NCAA run, you might have expectations that were based on hope more than fact.

Regardless how it plays out, though, there likely won’t be any coaching change.

There shouldn’t be, either.

Saints’ fans can’t see forest due to a single tree

New Orleans fans have lost it after losing in overtime to the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday afternoon in the NFC Championship … and, as usual, some rather interesting lawsuits have resulted.

Yes, lawsuits. Saints Nation has decided to have a court overturn a non-call on an obvious pass interference call late in the game.

Naturally, it won’t make any difference.

And, also naturally, they haven’t mentioned the non-calls on New Orleans’ facemask penalties or stomping a player.

If there is a culprit, it’s the orchestrated effort to reduce calls on everything in the playoff games. They didn’t call much this past weekend in either of the two games (and don’t bore me with the calls that were made).

After a season where the complaints were about excessive flags, the officials kept them in their pocket in the league championship games and, well, there is just no winning for the league.

There were enough missed calls on both sides for everybody to have a complaint, but the Saints had their chances and basically threw it away in overtime when they got the ball first.

Then threw it to the Rams.

Which leads us to …

NFL’s overtime better than college

Some will take exception to that, but it really is.

Supporters of the college overtime, which is basically a short-field practice that comes down to a contest of wills more than anything else, claim the NFL’s system is not fair. Somehow they think both teams should get a chance with the ball.

On Sunday, both NFL games went into overtime. Some say the problem with that is the team that wins the toss wins the game.

The Saints won the toss … and Drew Brees threw an interception. New England won the toss and put together a masterpiece drive to win the game.

Statistics show the team winning the toss only has a 52 percent shot at winning the game, according to STATS. In the NFL there was only one game this past season, I believe, where the team who lost the overtime toss didn’t get an offensive possession this past season (Falcons over the Saints in week three).

It’s all subjective, but everybody cries fairness when, hey, it’s 50-50 on the coin toss and the team winning the toss doesn’t win an overwhelming amount of the games.

What could be more fair? All giving both teams a guaranteed offensive possession does is equivalent to a participation trophy.

And it does penalize a team that does what the Patriots did against the Chiefs.

 

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

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Phil & Tye discuss Mike Anderson’s mindset, ticked off
Saints’ fans, plus Nikki Chavanelle of Rivals!

Halftime’s Elson named top sportscaster by National Sports Media

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — ESPN Arkansas show host Phil Elson, the radio voice of Razorback baseball and women’s basketball, was named the Arkansas Sportscaster of the Year for the second straight year by the National Sports Media Association (NSMA) last week.

In 2018 Phil started hosting “Halftime” a daily sports talk show on ESPN Arkansas from Noon-2 p.m. that airs in northern and western Arkansas, as well as the River Valley in addition to live streaming and podcasts at HitThatLine.com.

Elson has been the Razorbacks play-by-play voice for baseball and women’s basketball since 2014, as well as fill-in roles for men’s basketball.

He was previously named the Arkansas Sportscaster of the Year in 2009 for his work with the Arkansas Travelers, the AA affiliate of the Seattle Mariners.

He won it again last year prior to coach Mike Neighbors first season with Arkansas women’s basketball and Arkansas baseball’s run to the College World Series finals.

Elson spent 17 years in professional baseball, including 14 as the director of broadcasting and media relations for the Travelers before joining the Razorbacks.

Prior to the Travs, Elson called games for the Helena Brewers, Ogden Raptors, and Mudville Nine. He also filled in for Razorback Baseball broadcasts from 2011-13.

“I don’t know if fans really understand what goes into being a good radio broadcaster,” Arkansas women’s coach Mike Neighbors said. “You have to be a good storyteller who can think and react quickly to a change in the action. You have to put in several hours of study on both teams so that the call is seamless to the listeners.

“Phil does all of that and more to ensure that he brings life to the game for people who cannot attend. Winning this honor for the second consecutive year is a testament to his hard work and passion for what he does.”

“This is a great honor for Phil,” Arkansas baseball coach Dave Van Horn said. “His work on the radio for us is Major League-quality and it’s something I know our fans have loved since he joined our program.

“He brings such a passion for the game every time he comes to the park and our fans can hear that passion when they’re listening to him on the radio. He’s been the voice to so many great Razorback moments over the last few years and I look forward to him calling many more.”

Previously, Elson served nine seasons as the play-by-play broadcaster for the Little Rock women’s basketball broadcasts and was the play-by-play announcer for Henderson State football from 2011 to 2017.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday

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John & Tommy discuss John Scott Jr. leaving, comparing the football and basketball programs, Would You Rather Tuesday and more!