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Razorbacks can’t stop McCowan, Danberry in 93-69 loss

FAYETTEVILLE — Chelsea Dungee, Alexis Tolefree and Taylah Thomas all scored in double figures, but it was not enough for Arkansas to stop No. 7 Mississippi State in a 93-69 loss to start Southeastern Conference play on Thursday.
Former Razorback Jordan Danberry, from Conway, led the Bulldogs with 26 points and 6-7 center Teaira McCowan had 16 points, a whopping 22 rebounds and three blocked shots in 25 minutes on the floor.
Dungee paced Arkansas (11-4, 0-1 SEC) with 25 points hitting 10 field goals and going 4-for-5 from the line.
Thomas posted a career-best 15 points on a 6-for-7 performance and led the team with nine rebounds while Tolefree scored 11 points for the Razorbacks.
Mississippi State (13-1, 1-0 SEC) had four players in double figures and their size hurt Arkansas in the paint. The Bulldogs grabbed 57 rebounds and scored 62 points inside.
The Razorbacks won the fourth quarter for the 12th time this season. Arkansas outscored State 28-20 in the final frame and grabbed more steals (8-6) and had fewer turnovers (10-13) than the Lady Bulldogs.

Notes
• Arkansas Starters: Alexis Tolefree, Malica Monk, Kiara Williams, Jailyn Mason, Chelsea Dungee
• Miss State’s 28 first quarter points are the most allowed in that frame by the Razorbacks this season.
• Chelsea Dungee had 12 first quarter points. It is the fourth time she has scored in double figures in a quarter.
• Dungee finished with 25 points. It is her 13th game of the season in double figures and her ninth with 20 or more points.
• Arkansas won the fourth quarter for the 12th time this season.
• Sophomore Taylah Thomas had a career-high 15 points … It is her fourth game in double figures.
Up Next
The Razorbacks travel to Ole Miss (6-9, 0-1 SEC) on Sunday as SEC action continues.
Arkansas remains on the road at Missouri on Jan. 10 before returning to Bud Walton Arena hosting Vanderbilt on Jan. 13.
Neighbors after Razorbacks’ loss to Bulldogs on Thursday night
Razorbacks coach Mike Neighbors talked about his team’s struggles, then finishing strong in the fourth quarter in a 93-69 loss to No. 7/6 Mississippi State.
Bulldogs’ Schaefer on areas to improve after blowing out Hogs
Mississippi State coach Vic Schaefer was joined by Teaira McCowan and former Arkansas player Jordan Danberry after the 93-69 win and talked about things they need to work on going forward.
Dungee on problems in Hogs’ loss to Mississippi State
Arkansas’ Chelsea Dungee scored 25 points against the sixth-ranked Bulldogs on Thursday night and admitted it wasn’t easy against a tall, talented team.
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Anderson: ‘Ready or not here we come’ to SEC schedule
Razorbacks coach Mike Anderson said it doesn’t matter whether they are ready to start league play, but the game Saturday against Texas A&M will kick things off.
Gafford looks ahead to opening league play against A&M
Arkansas center Daniel Gafford talked with the media Thursday about the SEC opening game on Saturday afternoon on the road against the Aggies and how team is ready.
If Kentucky can get 10 wins so can Hogs, plus some bowl notes
This bowl season is exactly why predicting those games is often a waste of time, not an indicator of any team’s strength and, realistically, fill-in programming for television and little else.
One of the most interesting in all of the games from an SEC standpoint was Kentucky’s 27-24 win over Penn State in the Citrus Bowl. Frankly, the Wildcats even making that game was eye-opening, then beating Penn State was, well, something not a lot of folks saw coming.
Arkansas fans should take note.
The last time the Razorbacks played the Wildcats was on a miserable, rainy night back in 2012. It was 49-7 at halftime, the weather was getting worse, so everybody just said it was good enough and the game was called and John L. Smith got his third win of the year.
The Wildcats were on their way to a 2-10 season and coach Joker Phillips’ firing. The Hogs were already looking for a coach because by mid-October it was evident Smith wasn’t the answer to replace Bobby Petrino.
Since then Arkansas has been 31-44 while Kentucky is 36-39. Granted, this season made the biggest difference there as while the Hogs lost 10, the Wildcats won 10.
At the end of the 2012 season the Razorbacks hired Bret Bielema and Kentucky hired Mark Stoops. At the time I said it was the worst hiring at Arkansas since Otis Douglas in 1950 and, well, we all know how that worked out. The Wildcats were so bad not many people outside of Kentucky paid attention. Or cared.
Now the Hogs are on another coach after going 29-34. Kentucky stuck with Stoops, who was 26-36 going into this year.
Patience paid off in Lexington, but will there ever be enough of that to make it work in Fayetteville?
Stoops started 2-10, then went 5-7 for a couple of years, moving to 7-6 for two years before breaking out this year.
Bielema wasn’t going 10-2 at Arkansas this past season, so don’t even start that. His best team was 2015 and he used more luck in that one season than some coaches have in a career going 8-5.
Kentucky had the good fortune this year to have one of the best running backs in the league plus a sound defense and catching some teams early with new coaches (Florida and Mississippi State).
Hey, luck is part of it.
But if it takes six years to turn things around with the Wildcats, it’s possible at Arkansas.
And I don’t think it takes six years.
LSU ends UCF nonsense
Thank you, Ed Orgeron and LSU.
With the Tigers’ 40-32 win over Central Florida in the Fiesta Bowl we don’t have to listen to a team in a junior varsity conference awarding itself a national title and complaining about being left out of the playoff for a year.
Also, LSU quarterback Joe Burrow showed he was one tough sonofagun getting absolutely blown up after he threw an interception, then bouncing back to go 21-of-34 for 394 yards and four touchdowns.
Considering the Golden Knights couldn’t make big plays against the Tigers’ third and fourth team secondary, do you really think they ever belonged in the conversation to begin with?
Of course LSU defensive coordinator Dave Aranda compensated by sending everybody with any eligibility remaining after the UCF quarterback. They hadn’t seen that and couldn’t handle the speed.
Oh, and don’t thrown Auburn out there last year in the Peach Bowl. The Tigers had virtually zero interest in that game after blowing up in the SEC Championship Game.
That leads us to …
Another face plant by SEC runner-up
We should have known something was up with Texas on Tuesday night when the normally docile Bevo charged Uga, Georgia’s mascot, in the pregame.
Everybody was okay, including the cowboy who grabbed Bevo’s horn and the people who busted their tail trying to get the hell out of his way.
Pro tip: When a full-size longhorn comes your way with his head down, drop everything in your hands but a baby and run at an angle, not straight ahead. Those steers can do pretty good straight ahead, but forcing them to make sharp cuts is your best option. Especially on field turf.
After that, Texas just beat the daylights out of Georgia on the field. The Bulldogs had a couple of good series that prompted some people to think they could have done that all night, but that’s dreaming up excuses.
And it may not have mattered.
Not with Jake Fromm throwing the ball just about everywhere but to his receivers in critical situations. The Longhorns were making the plays when it counted the most.
The Aggies can’t win it all when they win
Texas A&M throttled North Carolina State in the Gator Bowl, 52-13 … and still managed to lose in it’s ongoing public relations battle with the Longhorns.
While Jimbo Fisher and the Aggies are third in the country in the composite national recruiting rankings and boasting about their bowl win, Texas does it to them again. By the way, the ‘Horns are ninth in the recruiting rankings, which means they aren’t exactly getting overwhelmed in recruiting.
The Longhorns love to proclaim they do everything bigger and better.
In the never-end PR war with the Aggies (that’s been going on for 100 years or so), well, they accomplished that this year. Sorry, A&M, but Texas’ win over Georgia in the Sugar Bowl is a bigger, better win.
Oh, and they finished 10-4 while A&M is 9-4.
And the Aggies continue to be, well, the Aggies … and always will be.
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Hogs’ recruiting ranking better nationally, but same in SEC
It’s good that Chad Morris has come in and kicked up Arkansas’ recruiting … or at least injected some more enthusiasm into the whole process that has become a season unto itself.
In the 247Sports.com composite rankings of the 2019 class, the Razorbacks are sitting at No. 20 with some more players still to sign, but the commitments expected to sign in February already count in the rankings.
Where it counts, though, the Hogs aren’t improving in the SEC. They are still ninth in the league … and sixth in the SEC West.
The highest national ranking in the modern age of recruiting is only keeping Arkansas at the status quo in the league pecking order.
As the marketing slogan goes, it just means more in the SEC.
At No. 9, that’s, well, right where Bret Bielema and Bobby Petrino ranked in the league ratings of incoming players.
Bielema averaged a No. 10 ranking in his five years with two No. 9-rated classes. Bobby Petrino’s five classes (and, remember, he didn’t fly through the handlebars until after his fifth signing day) averaged an 8.8 ranking. Of course the league only had 12 members then as Texas A&M and Missouri were in the Big 12 then.
As I’ve said for years, don’t pay attention to the national ranking. What matters most is how you stack up with the other teams in the SEC West.
For the Hogs, they are where they have been since 2008 … either at the bottom of the division or one spot above it.
The only time in the last 12 recruiting seasons (that includes 2019) Arkansas hasn’t finished in one of the last two spots in the division was 2008 when they were fourth in a six-team SEC West.
In case you’ve forgotten that 2008 class probably had as many skill-position playmakers as any group since maybe the 1969 class (the Joe Ferguson group including Mike Reppond, Jim Hodge, etc.).
The Hogs still haven’t had offensive playmakers like Jarius Wright, Tyler Wilson, Joe Adams, Chris Gragg and Greg Childs as a group since then. They also rounded up some solid defensive playmakers, too.
Morris’ class this year has some potential of playmakers, but anybody that tells you any of them are a lock is guessing because not a single one of them has caught, thrown or run the ball for a single play at the SEC level.
Nobody knows.
But what is known is the Hogs have to be recruiting at the level they are now just to have a chance to keep pace. In the Top 25 of the composite rankings, the SEC has 11 teams ranked there.
By the way, this is not where Morris wants to be in the rankings.
The guess here is his goals are higher than yours.













