Phil & Tye discuss Dee Walker’s arrest, FOMO Friday, and more!
Hogs basketball fans orange with envy over emergence of Vols in SEC
Arkansas basketball fans want what Tennessee fans have … and maybe don’t even appreciate.
Last Sunday, the Volunteers beat then-No. 1 Gonzaga furthering the case Rick Barnes’ team is one to be reckoned with.
Barnes, the former Texas coach, inherited a mess after UT administrators fired former coach Donnie Tyndall after one season in 2014 after due to NCAA violations from his time at Southern Miss.
Tyndall’s hiring came after Cuonzo Martin bolted for Cal after just one successful season in Knoxville to take the California job.
The instability of three coaches in three years led to 15-19 and 16-16 records, respectively, but then Barnes’ recruiting took hold, and the Volunteers burst on the scene last year finishing first in the SEC regular-season standings with a 13-4 record and a 26-9 overall record after a second-round NCAA Tournament loss to Final Four participant Loyola.
Barnes and Co. are picking up where they left off with a 7-1 mark this season and are considered favorites to fight for another SEC title.
The Gonzaga win cemented that fact.
The Vols’ only loss was a six-point defeat to No. 1-ranked Kansas, who is undefeated.
So what does this have to do with Arkansas? Plenty. Razorbacks fans desperately want their program to be relevant and to beating a No. 1-ranked team and to be ranked in the Top 5 with Final Four aspirations.
That’s far from reality in Fayetteville, but all of those elements are present in Knoxville — where Vols fans probably care way more about football and the Lady Vols, who are not what they used to be under Pat Summitt.
It’s also another example of an SEC program that was not at the level of Arkansas achieving more success, while the Hogs barely keep their heads above mediocrity.
I don’t need to remind you it’s been 25 years since Arkansas won the national title and more than 20 years since they played in a Sweet 16.
That’s the stat that gets me.
A Sweet 16 berth used to be habitual around Fayetteville, now the fan base would go bonkers if a Mike Anderson-led team could reach that round.
And speaking of programs that have eclipsed Arkansas, Bruce Pearl, the former Vols coach, has now revived the Auburn program.
They are ranked No. 8 and have one loss, a 78-72 loss to No. 2 Duke.
Pearl brought Tennessee to prominence before being fired amid NCAA violations. Auburn took a chance on him, and it has paid big dividends.
Meanwhile, Anderson has Arkansas in the middle of the pack. The most excitement generated was a narrow loss to North Carolina in the second round of the 2017 NCAA Tournament.
Arkansas most likely won’t be as close to as good as the upstart Vols and Tigers, but the young team has shown promise, a home upset loss last weekend to Western Kentucky notwithstanding.
The Hogs (6-2) will try to get that bad taste out of their mouths with a Saturday night game against Texas-San Antonio at Verizon Arena. The Hogs are looking for improvement and consistency as they get ready to tackle the demanding SEC slate.
Look for some unexpected wins and losses and needing a few wins in March to get off the proverbial bubble.
The Hogs play better defense than they have under Anderson and feature a true point guard in junior Jalen Harris, who has proven to be an effective distributor. This team is ultra-talented, just very inexperienced, and that showed against Western Kentucky.
Promise and potential have been advertised a lot in the Mike Anderson Era.
Meanwhile, teams such as Tennessee have created drastic turnarounds. Hogs fans are still waiting and jealous.
???? Highlights from Hogs’ matchup with UTSA in 2014
Game highlights: Arkansas vs. UTSA via ArkansasRazorbacks
Neighbors on busy schedule after finals for Hogs this week
Arkansas will be busy starting Sunday with three games in five days next week and how teams always make a move during this time of the year … one way or the other.
Anderson enjoys Hogs playing games in North Little Rock
Razorbacks coach Mike Anderson talked Thursday about how much he enjoys taking the team to Central Arkansas once a year for a game and how important it is to his program.
Gafford looks back at loss to Hilltoppers, game with UTSA
Arkansas center Daniel Gafford talked with the media Thursday about the loss last week to Western Kentucky and the upcoming matchup with Texas-San Antonio in North Little Rock.
Hogs’ Walker ‘suspended indefinitely’ after arrest on drugs, weapons charges
Arkansas sophomore linebacker Demetrius Walker was arrested Tuesday night by Fayetteville police and charged with a variety of felonies including having a firearm along with illegal drugs.
The university’s athletic department issued a release Wednesday:
“We are aware of charges involving Demetrius Walker, a student-athlete on our football team. The student-athlete has been suspended from our football program indefinitely, and we will continue to monitor the situation and cooperate fully with any related legal and campus processes. Our continued expectation is that our student-athletes conduct themselves and represent the University of Arkansas in an appropriate manner at all times.”
Walker was arrested and taken to the Washington County Detention Center in Fayetteville and was booked into the jail about 10:50 p.m. Tuesday.
He is scheduled for a hearing at 12:45 p.m. on Friday.
According to Fayetteville police, Walker’s is charged with delivering marijuana, being in possession of marijuana and Xanax in addition to being in simultaneous possession of drugs and firearms.
A preliminary report shows police found 95.8 grams of marijuana, 40 Xanax pills, several individual and sandwich baggies, a digital scale and a DPMS Panther Arms model AR-15 Rifle with a loaded magazine in the residence at 1399 N. Futrall Drive in Fayetteville.
Police said an undercover operation purchased marijuana from Walker with the assistance of a confidential informant over the last four months.
A search warrant was executed Tuesday and police said detectives found 56 grams of marijuana, then 6 more grams of marijuana with baggies and a digital scale in a kitchen cabinet. They also found 40 Xanax pills and sandwich baggies on the kitchen counter.
Police found an AR-15 rifle with a loaded magazine next to his bedroom door, according to the report.
Walker was a sophomore linebacker with the Hogs this past season and played in all 12 games.
Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Thursday
John, Tommy, & Nick Mason talk Ben Hicks, interview Richard Davenport, plus Is It Ever Okay Thursday!
Former SMU quarterback has fans’ interest, but some questions there
With SMU quarterback Ben Hicks’ announcement Wednesday he’s leaving SMU on the graduate transfer path, Arkansas fans, naturally, have started beating the drum.
Hicks was the first quarterback Chad Morris signed at SMU in the 2015 recruiting class and he ended up starting 11 games as a redshirt freshman in 2016 and every game in 2017-18, becoming the Mustangs’ career passing leader.
But Razorback fans might just want to look at the numbers a little.
In his third year starting last year, his numbers dropped off from the year before, 2017, which was Morris’ last year there.
But, maybe more importantly, it was the last year for a group of Trey Quinn, James Proche and Courtland Sutton at receiver in addition to a strong running game. That year he threw for 3,569 yards, 33 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. Without those guys, Hicks’ numbers dropped off to 2,582 yards, 19 touchdowns with just seven interceptions.
Think having three quality receivers made a difference?
Sutton was a first-round pick of the Denver Broncos, Quinn has played in three games for the Washington Redskins this year and Proche was the best target for Hicks this past season.
The Hogs have some highly-touted freshmen committed to sign with them. That hasn’t happened yet, so let’s not start making projections until they sign but they should provide a major upgrade over a group that performed far below expectations last year.
It is interesting, though, Hicks would choose to leave a school where he became the career passing leader with a year of eligibility left.
“You got to make some tough decisions sometimes and this was one I felt like I needed to make,” Hicks told PonyStampede.com this week.
As I said, interesting.
Hog fans have been on a rollercoaster concerning the quarterback position since former Clemson quarterback Kelly Bryant came on the market. They sweated out that decision and many were completely deflated when he chose Missouri.
Now there’s Hicks.
He’s not Bryant and the advantages he has over the current quarterbacks on campus is taking a team coached by Morris with Joe Craddock as offensive coordinator to a seven-win regular season … with a pair of NFL-caliber wide receivers and another one who may get a shot next season.
Hicks does know what Morris and Craddock expect. But we also know his numbers dropped off considerably when he lost some really good receivers at SMU.
With a week before the first signing date, the Hogs are lining up some offensive line commitments. They have a quarterback commitment, but nobody knows what KJ Jefferson will be able to do as a freshman (and anybody that thinks they do is guessing to even themselves).
As we suspected, while Arkansas is putting together a signing class that will be among the best since they started ranking recruiting, it is still the SEC.
In the 247Sports.com composite ranking of all the services, the Hogs are at No. 18 in the nation.
The naysayers among the lunatic fringe and the sociopathic internet trolls will point out that’s eighth in the league … and sixth in the SEC West.
All of that is true, but don’t read a whole lot into that.
While Alabama, Texas A&M and LSU are in the top four right now (along with Georgia), in the national rankings, five SEC teams are in the 12-20 spots.
Ignore the negatives, that’s within the numbers to be competitive. There isn’t the huge gap there has been in previous years.
Which is just one of the positives.
Remember, the Hogs still have five more players to get committed and that should make their ranking climb a little.
It will be an interesting week to start an interesting two months before the final signing day in February.
And this time the Hogs are at least in the discussion for a Top 20 finish.
Which hasn’t happened in a long, long time.
Razorbacks add another JUCO offensive lineman with Nwanna
Arkansas added another offensive lineman when Scranton, Pennsylvania, Lackawanna Community College offensive lineman Chibueze Nwanna committed Wednesday.
He announced his decision via Twitter:
Committed ????⚪️????????#Gohogs #WPS @coachchadmorris @coachdustinfry @CoachCraddock pic.twitter.com/YWTVQINB7V
— Chibueze Nwanna (@Bigboizee50) December 12, 2018
Multiple reports have said the 6-foot-8, 315-pounder, gave the coaching staff a verbal pledge about an hour before Myron Cunningham’s announcement Tuesday, but delayed his official announcement until Wednesday.
Nwanna is the Razorbacks’ 24th commitment for the 2019 recruiting class that is rated 16th by ESPN.com and as high as 11th by some services.
He chose the Hogs over offers from Cincinnati, Louisville, Maryland, San Diego State, East Carolina, Lafayette and Southern Miss.
Nwanna made his decision after wrapping up an official visit in Fayetteville over the weekend.
The Razorbacks are expected to sign 29 players in this recruiting class, so it’s a good bet they aren’t finished yet.
???? Wednesday Halftime Pod — featuring Bob Holt
Phil Elson & Tye Richardson take calls from Eddie in Clarksville, HogSlop, interview Bob Holt, plus Change My Mind!










