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Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Wednesday

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John, Tommy & Tyler Wilson discuss Kelly Bryant’s decision, Urban Meyer retiring, What’s Your Beef Wednesday, and more!

Dungee sets tone for Razorbacks in 65-42 thumping of Tennessee Tech

FAYETTEVILLE — A 13-0 run in the final three minutes of the opening frame fueled by a 10-point quarter from Chelsea Dungee set the tone for a 65-42 Arkansas win over Tennessee Tech in Bud Walton Arena on Tuesday night.

Kiara Williams and Macy Weaver combined for nine of Arkansas’ school-record 13 blocked shots erasing the previous mark of 12 set in 1982.

The Razorbacks were good inside, outscoring Tennessee Tech 30-22 in the paint, while grabbing 42 rebounds and scoring 13 second chance points.

Dungee finished with a career-best 28 points going 12-for-18 from the floor with four 3-point field goals.

A’Tyanna Gaulden drives inside for a layup and part of her 12 points against Tennessee Tech.
PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

She had five rebounds, two assists and two steals. A’Tyanna Gaulden was in double figures for the second time as a Razorback with 12 points as eight different players scored.

Williams paced the team with nine rebounds and had six points to go with her five blocked shots. Bailey Zimmerman added seven points and five rebounds in the win.

Bailey Zimmerman guards Tennessee Tech’s Kentoria Alexander during the second quarter of their game Tuesday night.
PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Brrrrr …

Both teams were cold to start the game. Arkansas (6-3) opened 0-for-3 getting its first basket on a 3-pointer from the left side from Jailyn Mason.

Mason finished with four points, three assists and three steals. Tennessee Tech (5-3) went 0-for-7 and hit their first basket at the 4:55 mark of the game. Arkansas led 5-4 at the media timeout with 3:36 to go in the first quarter.

Arkansas’ Jailyn Mason drives inside against Tennessee Tech during Tuesday night’s game against Bud Walton.
PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Arkansas finished the quarter with a 13-2 run to lead 18-4 after the first 10 minutes. The Razorbacks held the Golden Eagles from the 3:32 mark of the first quarter to 7:31 in the second frame without a basket.

The Razorbacks had a 35-20 lead at the half with Dungee already in double figures. Arkansas had eight first-half blocks, just four rejections shy of the program record for a game at that point.

A strong start to the third period propelled the Razorbacks to a 23-7 advantage in the frame. Arkansas would lead by as many as 31 before finishing with the 23-point victory. All 13 players logged minutes in the game for Arkansas.

Notes

• Arkansas starters: Alexis Tolefree, Malica Monk, Kiara Williams, Jailyn Mason, Chelsea Dungee

• Kiara Williams tied her single game high of four blocks – in the first quarter. She finished with a career-best five blocked shots.

• Chelsea Dungee scored 10 points in the first quarter. It is her second game of the year with double figures in a single quarter.

• Tennessee Tech’s four points is the lowest opponent point total in the first quarter in program history.

• Chelsea Dungee scored in double figures for the ninth consecutive game and had 20+ points for the fifth time this year including four in a row.

• Arkansas posted season-bests for steals and blocks.

Up Next

Arkansas travels to Abilene Christian on Saturday, Dec. 8, before breaking from competition for finals.

The Razorbacks host Prairie View A&M Dec. 16 and Nebraska Dec. 18. The travel to Tulsa on Dec. 20 for the final game before the holidays.

Neighbors liked team’s energy to start win over Golden Eagles

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors took it easy on his team to keep their legs fresh after Sunday’s loss at Iowa State, but warned them they better start fast … and they did in a 65-42 win.

Williams, Dungee talking about big nights in win

Kiara Williams (nine rebounds, five blocks) and Chelsea Dungee (28 points) talked about their high-producing efforts in Arkansas’ 65-42 win over Tennessee Tech on Tuesday night.

Rosamond talking about Hogs’ inside dominance in loss

Tennessee Tech coach Kim Rosamond met with the media after the Golden Eagles’ 65-42 loss to the Razorbacks where her plan to attack inside didn’t exactly work out.

Decision made: Bryant chooses Missouri over Hogs, others

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Former Clemson quarterback Kelly Bryant made the most-anticipated graduate transfer decision in years Tuesday evening when he chose Missouri over Arkansas, Auburn, Mississippi State and North Carolina.

Bryant made the announcement via Twitter:

He was 16-2 as a starter for Clemson, including directing them to a berth in the College Football Playoff in 2017 before falling to Alabama in the semifinals.

During that season, Bryant was 262-of-398 passing for 2,802 yards, 13 touchdowns and eight interceptions. He also ran for 665 yards and 11 touchdowns, averaging 3.5 yards per carry.

Bryant started the first four games for the Tigers in 2018, but lost his job to true freshman Trevor Lawrence and immediately made the decision to transfer and Arkansas was immediately in the conversation for his services.

Hogs coach Chad Morris had been the lead recruiter on Bryant but left for the head position at SMU in December 2014 before Bryant signed. He spent two seasons as the backup to Deshawn Watson, including the national championship season of 2016.

With Cole Kelley’s announcement earlier this week that he was leaving, Arkansas has scholarship quarterbacks Ty Storey, Connor Noland, John Stephen Jones and Dalton Hyatt on the roser.

It will not be surprising if Hyatt leaves and the Hogs are expecting to have North Panola three-star quarterback KJ Jefferson sign and be on campus next summer.

???? Tuesday Halftime Pod — featuring Nikki Chavanelle

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Phil & Tye hit on Kelly Bryant’s decision at 6 pm, interview Nikki Chavanelle, Get Off My Lawn, & more!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday

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John & Tommy discuss Kelly Bryant’s decision, Would You Rather Tuesday and more!

Bryant decision Tuesday; Kelley won’t be last to leave Razorbacks

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We’re close to decision day for former Clemson quarterback Kelly Bryant to announce where he’s headed for his final year and Arkansas is in the mix.

Too many fans may be pinning too many expectations on that decision because if he does come he probably won’t make that much difference in the offense.

Of all the problems this team has, quarterback is the one where several other things have to get fixed before any of us will know who the answer is there.

Whatever Bryant’s decision, Cole Kelley won’t be here either way. In maybe the most anticlimactic announcement, Kelley tweeted Monday he wouldn’t be back. If you were paying attention you figured that was the case about mid-September when he was firing one pass after another to North Texas’ defense.

Just in case you’re wondering, Dalton Hyatt will probably be the next quarterback to leave town.

If all that sounds harsh it shouldn’t be. Neither player is a bad individual, but they haven’t shown the ability to lead the Hogs to any level of success.

There still has to be six players to leave if Arkansas wants to sign 29 this recruiting cycle. If that sounds cruel, sorry. There aren’t very many four-year scholarships handed out these days and it’s on a year-to-year basis.

Hyatt will likely be leaving along with running back T.J. Hammonds (who told some privately in early November he wouldn’t be back). Chevin Callaway has “stepped away” from the program, but he likely won’t be back. There will be others.

But for this week, the quarterback position will take center stage.

Bryant may or may not be coming. To be honest, the Hogs need a lot more than just a one-year graduate transfer at quarterback. If he had played this season they might have won four games.

Let’s face it, Cam Newton behind that offensive line with that group of wide receivers would have been lucky to be 6-6.

Bryant is only an immediate short-term possible solution. No one knows how good he will be away from a Clemson program in the College Football Playoff for the fourth year in a row and picked to be in the championship game for the third year out of those four.

He was also beat out on that team by a true freshman, albeit a talented one. Arkansas doesn’t have anyone on the radar with Trevor Lawrence’s skillset.

Not even incoming freshman KJ Jefferson. There is absolutely no way to predict what he will do. When he steps on the practice field in Fayetteville he will face talent on the scout team twice as good as anything he faced in high school at North Panola (the smaller school in Sardis, not the nationally-recognized South Panola a few miles away in Batesville).

That’ll leave Connor Noland, who will be juggling baseball with spring football, redshirt freshman John Stephen Jones and fifth-year senior Ty Storey.

Storey has been labeled as gritty and tough, which is how us media wags term a quarterback that is the object of what closely resembles a jailbreak through an offensive line that at times didn’t appear to have the common courtesy to at least holler “look out!”

Most of that offensive line won’t be back, which may be the best news of all heading into spring practice.

As Bear Bryant said one time after an off year at Alabama in the late 1960’s (yes, it even got so bad he nearly jumped to the NFL with the Miami Dolphins), “the worst thing you can have coming off a bad year is a bunch of returning starters.”

That likely will be the case with the Hogs. Keep a roster handy.

Otherwise you may not know who’s on the team.

Anderson recaps win over FIU, previews upcoming road trip

Razorbacks coach Mike Anderson talked about Saturday night’s win over Florida International and looked ahead to the game against Colorado State on Wednesday night.

Neighbors on loss to Iowa State; previews Tennessee Tech

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors met with the media Tuesday afternoon to recap the loss at Iowa State on Sunday afternoon, then look ahead to Tuesday night’s matchup.