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Hill makes it official, signing basketball letter with Razorbacks

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas coach Mike Anderson announced Justice Hill has signed a National Letter of Intent to play for the Razorbacks.

“Obviously, we are very excited to have Justice join our family,” Anderson said. “He committed to us as a freshman and has continued to grow both as a player and a person. He is an excellent student and athlete who comes from an outstanding family.

“Justice possesses good court vision, has really good basketball instincts and is athletic. He will be a perfect fit for our ‘FASTEST40’ style of play.”

Justice Hill
5-11, 170, G
Little Rock, Ark. (Little Rock Christian Academy)

• Rated the #3 overall prospect in Arkansas and #36-best point guard in the nation by 247Sports.com … Also a three-star recruit by Rivals.com, which has him as the 48th-best point guard in the nation.

• Named to the 2018 5A All-State basketball team as a junior as he averaged 19.5 points, six assists, four steals and four rebounds … As a sophomore, averaged 15 points, four rebounds, three assist and two steals.

• Played summer ball with the Arkansas Hawks, teaming with current Razorbacks Isaiah Joe, Desi Sills and Ethan Henderson.

• Son of Dr. Fitz Hill, who was an assistant football coach at Arkansas under Jack Crowe, Danny Ford and Houston Nutt from 1992-2000 and went on to be the head coach at San Jose State (2001-04).

• Has been committed to Arkansas since his freshman year of high school.

• A standout quarterback for the Little Rock Christian football team and received several FBS football scholarship offers as well … To date this season, has passed for 2,102 yards and 24 touchdowns while completing 72 percent of his passes …. Rushed for 755 yards and 16 touchdowns for the 10-1 Warriors as they prepare to meet Texarkana in the Class 5A quarterfinals.

• Finished second in the 2018 5A state championship in the high jump (6-2) and placed fifth at the state meet in the long jump (21-1.75).

• High school head coach is Clarence Finley … Arkansas Hawks AAU coach is Bill Ingram.

???? Thursday Halftime Pod — featuring Neil Price

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Phil Elson & Tye Richardson discuss the draw to Indiana/Mississippi State, You Spent What?!?, and interview Neil Price!

Neighbors looks ahead to matchup with Arizona State after big win

Arkansas got a big win over the Lady Mavericks on Wednesday night and coach Mike Neighbors talked about that and looked ahead to Sunday night’s matchup with the Sun Devils.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Thursday

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John & Tommy talk coach’s speak, interview Richard Davenport, and Is It Ever Okay Thursday!

Morris talks about matchup with ’Dogs on SEC Teleconference

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Tolefree’s jumper at buzzer lifts Razorbacks to road victory

ARLINGTON, Texas — Fast-paced and physical is the best way to describe Arkansas’ 66-65 win in the first road game of the season at UT-Arlington on Wednesday.

The Razorbacks (2-0) trailed 54-53 but opened the final frame on a 9-0 run as the intensity and urgency elevated in final 10 minutes of the game.

Senior Malica Monk picked up her fourth foul and returned to the bench with 5:13 to go and the Lady Mavs rallied for a 6-0 run.

The North Little Rock native returned to the game with 3:27 to go but the Razorback scoring drought continued as UTA closed the gap and took the lead.

Down one, 65-64, UTA went to the line and missed both bonus shots. Monk grabbed the rebound and called timeout to advance the ball.

Arkansas got the ball at half court with 3.2 seconds on the clock. The inbound went to Monk who dished to Tolefree. Two hard dribbles down the center of the lane and a pull-up jumper that floated in lifted the Razorbacks to the thrilling win.

Arkansas was paced by Tolefree and Monk who finished with 18 points each while sophomore Chelsea Dungee had 16 points for the Razorbacks.

Key Stat

The game featured 16 ties and 13 lead changes in a back-and-forth battle. Both teams put together big scoring runs throughout the game as neither squad was able to maintain the momentum.

Notes
•Arkansas starters: Alexis Tolefree, Malica Monk, Kiara Williams, Jailyn Mason, Chelsea Dungee
•The Razorbacks are 7-0 against UT-Arlington and are 2-0 in Arlington.
•Redshirt sophomore Chelsea Dungee had 12 points in the first half. Senior Malica Monk and junior Alexis Tolefree had eight points each at the half.
•Double-figure scorers: Chelsea Dungee, Alexis Tolefree, Malica Monk
•The game was tied 16 times and there were 13 lead changes.

Up Next
Arkansas returns to Bud Walton Arena on Sunday, facing its first ranked team of the season as they welcome No. 22 Arizona State.

The game tips at 7 p.m. following the Razorback men’s game against Indiana earlier in the day.

Deifel, Razorbacks sign three players on national signing day

FAYETTEVILLE — Featuring a top-50 addition, coach Courtney Deifel and Arkansas announced the program’s 2019 signing class.

The newest group of Razorbacks are Jenna Bloom, Paloma Usquiano and Rylin Hedgecock.

“We are excited to welcome Jenna, Rylin, and Paloma to the Razorback Softball family,” said Deifel. “Although this class is small in size there is no doubt they will have a huge impact from the day they step on campus.  We cannot wait for them to get to Fayetteville and begin to make their mark on the program.”

This marks Arkansas’ fourth recruiting class under coach Deifel as Bloom is the latest top-100 recruit to come to Fayetteville.

She will be joining future teammates Larissa Cesena, Taylor Greene, Mary Haff and Autumn Storms who were all ranked in their respective classes.

Jenna Bloom | 5-10 | RHP
Huntington Beach, Calif./Edison HS (Athletics Mercado)

LA Times: Jenna Bloom’s return sparked Edison softball

About Bloom …
A standout performer for Edison High School and the Athletics Mercado travel ball team, Bloom is ranked No. 43 in the final FloSoftball Hot 100. During last season’s state tournament run, Bloom struck out 24 batters in 12.1 innings of play while allowing just one earned run while leading Edison HS to its first playoff win in two years. Against the nationally-ranked Mission Viejo High School in Edison’s season opener last spring, Bloom dominated, striking out 15 batters while allowing just one hit in a 10-0 win. The five-inning game saw every out be recorded via a Bloom strikeout. She finished last season with a 6-4 record while splitting time at pitcher.

Jenna is the daughter of Daniel and Melonie Bloom and has one brother, Jacob. Her mother, Melonie, played volleyball for San Diego State from 1992-97.

Paloma Usquiano | 5-5 | INF
Downey, Calif./Lutheran HS (So Cal Athletics Jendro)

About Usquiano …
Usquiano helped lead Orange Lutheran High School to a 26-5 record last season, that included a tournament win in the Dave Kops Tournament of Champions against third-ranked Los Alamitos High School. She also lead the team to the Torrance National Tournament championships; a tournament that features the top softball teams from California, Arizona, Utah and Nevada. Usquiano has batted over .350 in each of her sophomore and junior seasons, including a .435 average during her sophomore campaign. As a member of the So Cal Athletics Jendro travel ball team, she has been equally consistent, owning a .350 and a .360 batting average during her sophomore and junior seasons, respectively.

Paloma is the daughter of Armando and Dianna Usquiano and has two sisters, Sofia and Julietta.

Rylin Hedgecock | 5-9 | RHP/INF
Valdosta, Ga./Lowndes HS (Gainesville Gold)

About Hedgecock …
During her high school career, Hedgecock posted a 1.1 ERA in each of the last two seasons. She holds the school record for career strikeouts with 500. Hedgecock has led Lowndes High School to two Region Championships, including a fifth-place finish in the state tournament during her sophomore campaign. As a batter, she has posted 11 or more home runs in a season three times, including a career-high 13 home runs and 49 RBI her sophomore year. She has batted over .400 each season with Lowndes HS, including a .549 mark last season, with 12 homers and 43 RBI.

Hedgecock plays travel ball for Gainesville Gold. Rylin is the daughter of Russ Hedgecock and Heather Prince. She has three siblings: Tori, Bryson, and Savannah.

No. 11 Wildcats shut out Razorbacks at Barnhill Arena

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas fell 3-0 to No. 11 Kentucky Wednesday night in the team’s final mid-week home match of the season.

FINAL
No. 11 Kentucky 3, Arkansas 0 | Box Score
Attendance: 389 | Time: 1:19
Barnhill Arena

#RazorStats
• Stat leaders vs No. 11 Kentucky
o Kills:  Reagan Robinson – 11
o Digs: Okiana Valle – 15
o Blocks: Liz Pamphile and Fernanda Guitron – 1.0

The Wildcats went up early, taking the first set 25-18. The Hogs dropped the second set 25-15 before Kentucky clinched the match with a 25-13 third-set win.

The Razorbacks will return to the court Sunday afternoon to host No. 23 Tennessee for senior day.

???? Wednesday Halftime Pod — featuring Madre Hill

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Phil & Tye interview former hog Madre Hill and try to change each other’s mind!

Has apathy become Hogs’ biggest opponent moving forward?

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Have we reached a point with Arkansas football where bountiful, almost over-the-top, enthusiasm has been replaced with almost total indifference or, worse, an expectation of failure?

It appears to be that way with many Razorback fans.

The one thing Frank Broyles always feared may have come to fruition.

“The worst thing in the world is if the fans don’t care,” he said one time in the 1970’s in response to folks screaming he should be replaced as the coach.

Over the past few years, fan interest appears to have waned with each passing year. This year, tickets sold averaged out to 61,458 per game. Actual tickets scanned has been considerably south of that number.

Yes, a lot of folks who bought tickets considered it a donation and didn’t bother showing up.

To be completely fair, it’s a trend all across the college football landscape. Many schools are downsizing their pigskin cathedrals dramatically. Oh, they’re not doing massive rebuilding, just replacing bleacher seats with armchair-type seats with cupholders.

That’s the direction college football is going.

It’s the cycle of college football continuing. Years ago, Yale and Rice had some of the largest football stadiums in the country. When Arkansas played in Houston against the Owls it was a guaranteed ticket for Hog fans that couldn’t regularly make a game. The same was true of the Cotton Bowl in Dallas.

Now teams like Penn State and others are downsizing seating capacity.

It reminded me of the preacher at the church my grandparents attended down in Southeast Arkansas and they made expansions to the overall facility, but not the main sanctuary.

“It holds the same number of people it did before,” I remarked to the pastor when I was still in single digits of age.

“Young man,” he said as he gently put a hand on my shoulder, “you don’t build the church for Easter Sunday.”

Those words popped back in my head as I see empty seats at every game on television nearly every week.

Oh, you still have full houses at some places. But even at Alabama, Nick Saban chastised students for not coming to games or leaving early. Get ready, Nick, because that’s just the start of this current trend.

With every game live on television, there has to be some incentive for folks to spend the ever-increasing large sums of money to go fight traffic, brave the weather (hot, cold, rainy) and then sit on a bench, literally rubbing shoulders with people you don’t know … only to spend half the time watching big screens in each end zone.

College football has changed and Arkansas has right along with it.

The most important things now are sales of luxury boxes and club seats. For media coverage, many act like they’d be just as happy if everything went through ESPN, which is interesting as they continue to lose massive amounts of subscribers every month.

All of that has combined to place interest in Razorback football where it is now. It’s a massive shrug from a fan base that once was as crazy fanatical as any in the country.

The blame shouldn’t be placed at the feet of Hunter Yurachek or Chad Morris.

They inherited a mess created by other people who made you wonder if they spent an entire decade trying to sink Arkansas football as deep into the ground as possible.

Yurachek is working on his end of things. Morris is doing things nobody has done with the Hogs in decades, mainly increasing the talent level.

Winning will help things somewhat. There once was a time when winning guaranteed sold-out stadiums and made life great.

The business of college football today says that’s not the only thing that matters anymore.

Morris before Hogs’ indoor workout Wednesday on noise, injuries

Arkansas coach Chad Morris talked with the media before the team’s workout indoors Wednesday in the final media availability before Saturday’s game in Starkville against Mississippi State.