43.4 F
Fayetteville

Weather forecast forces cancellation of OU exhibition

FAYETTEVILLE — Due to the threat of heavy rain in the Norman, Oklahoma area this weekend, Arkansas’ scheduled fall exhibition with Oklahoma for this Saturday has been canceled.

A replacement game for a later date is in the works, but the opponent has not been determined at this time. Arkansas is still scheduled to play Wichita State at Baum Stadium on Oct. 5 at 6 p.m.

2018 Fall Exhibition Schedule
Oct. 5 – vs. Wichita State (6 p.m.)

Admission for the game with the Shockers will be free.

The Razorbacks are asking each fan to bring non-perishable food items and new or gently used coats to benefit the Salvation Army and the Jane B. Gearhart Full Circle Campus Food Pantry, who will be collecting these items at the stadium gates.

Seating throughout the stadium will be first-come, first-serve and parking will be free and the Hog Pen will also be open. Gates will open at 5 p.m.

Light concessions will be available via cash only and fans will also be allowed to bring in outside food and beverages with the exception of alcohol.

No coolers will be allowed in the main seating bowl, but will be allowed in the Hog Pen.

Wichita State, coached by former Arkansas assistant Todd Butler, will be visiting Fayetteville the day before the Razorback football team takes on Alabama.

The Shockers, a 35-win team from a year ago, faces Arkansas for only the second time since 2007.

The Razorbacks and Shockers faced each other one time during the 2013 NCAA Manhattan (Kansas) Regional and were regular opponents almost every year during the 1990s and early 2000s.

All fall practices through the month of September and October at Baum Stadium are open to the public. The dates for the annual Fall World Series will be announced at a later time.

???? Thursday Halftime Pod — Featuring the ADG’s Bob Holt

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Phil Elson and Tye Richardson talk about Chad Morris weathering the storm, the You Spent What Segement, plus Bob Holt of the ADG.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Thursday

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John and Tommy talk about recruiting, punt return safety, interviewed Richard Davenport with Brett Goode in the studio!

How will Hogs respond to Morris’ stern lecture Sunday?

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After last Saturday’s 44-17 loss to North Texas, one of the better teams in Conference USA, it wasn’t hard to tell Chad Morris was ticked off afterwards.

Not so much because of WHAT he said, but HOW he said it.

Then, as he left the stadium after recording his weekly television show, Morris strode from the new North End Zone to the parking lot outside the Fred Smith Center like a man trying to get somewhere in a hurry.

All of that is why we weren’t surprised Monday to hear that in the Sunday meeting with the team, Morris went off on the entire team. According to what we were told, there were no punches pulled and the words used left little doubt as to what Morris was feeling.

Good. Great. That’s the best news I’ve heard in a trainwreck of a season that flew off course in the fourth quarter against Colorado State and wandered in the wilderness against a North Texas team Arkansas should have beaten by four touchdowns.

No, this Razorback team isn’t devoid of talent. There appeared to be the appearance of going through the motions by some folks on the field and Cole Kelley simply melted down in a game situation.

Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock, desperate to get some stability at quarterback, even gave Kelley a vote of confidence and put him back on the field in the third quarter.

And Kelley responded with another interception. For a team looking for consistency at maybe the most critical position on the team, Kelley provided that … he was consistently throwing the ball to the other guys.

Blame who you want. Morris and Craddock on Monday tried to deflect some of the blame from Kelley, but there was something there because for the first time since spring practice started, Morris stepped up and named a starting quarterback early in the week, giving Ty Storey the nod with no equivocation.

Kelley is a big, tall kid with a strong arm. It’s amazing how many of those I’ve seen over the years that absolutely blew you away in practice. Then get in a game and lose their mind.

The classic sign of that is the quarterback pointing to everyone on the field but himself after every interception. Kelley looked like one of those guys near the terminal at an airport waving in the airplanes the way he was waving his hands coming off the field.

At halftime I remarked to somebody in the pressbox they should have Kelley untie his shoes and tie them back so he can say he did at least one thing right in the game.

It was surprising he started the second half. It wasn’t surprising when Connor Noland replaced him in the third quarter.

Now Storey gets his chance.

For the first time in his career in Fayetteville, Ty is given the same backing that other quarterbacks got under the previous coaching staff.

Morris and Craddock didn’t mention anybody else. Apparently they are going with Storey against Auburn, sink or swim. Some think if he can just dog paddle and stay alive that will be progress.

Don’t misunderstand the simplification of the offense. That doesn’t mean Storey’s just going to turn and hand the ball off to the running back three times, then send in the punter and let the adventure begin with THAT aspect of the Hogs’ game.

The reads won’t be as complex for either Storey or the receivers.

In practice Wednesday, Storey was much sharper in most of the passing drills I saw, connecting with receivers consistently more than other quarterbacks. He has looked more relaxed with his body language this week.

What does that mean for Saturday?

I have no idea. It could be incredibly ugly with a final score. After getting beaten at home by LSU last week, the Tigers will be looking for redemption.

But, let’s face it, it can’t be any worse that what we’ve seen the last two years from Auburn. The Hogs have lost 56-3 and 52-20 each of the last two games … that’s 108-23 over the last couple of seasons.

We’ll see how Morris’ stern talk Sunday night plays out with this team Saturday.

Razorbacks fall in SEC opener on road against Texas A&M

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Arkansas dropped its SEC opener Wednesday evening at Texas A&M.

Hailey Dirrigl led the team with seven kills while Ellease Crumpton and Kelly O’Brien each tallied five kills and five blocks in the setback.

With the result, the Razorbacks are now 6-5 overall with a 0-1 mark in conference play.

Arkansas returns to Barnhilll Arena on Sunday afternoon for its SEC home opener against Missouri. First serve is scheduled for 1 p.m. and will be streamed live on the SEC Network+ which is available through the WatchESPN app.

FINAL
Texas A&M 3, Arkansas 0 | Box Score
Attendance: 1,529 | Time: 1:34
Reed Arena (College Station, Texas)

#RazorStats
• Stat leaders at Texas A&M
o Kills: Hailey Dirrigl – 7
o Digs: Okiana Valle – 12
o Blocks: Ellease Crumpton, Kelly O’Brien – 5.0

After dropping the first two sets—despite late leads in each—the Razorbacks fell behind 10-2 in the third set.

Texas A&M (8-5, 1-0 SEC) maintained its advantage and led 22-14 before Arkansas put together a late-set rally of its own, winning eight of the next nine points to pull within one on a kill by Dirrigl.

The sophomore outside hitter went on to save a match point with her seventh kill of the night but the home team clinched the win on the following point.

Six different Razorbacks had at least four kills in the match including redshirt freshman Maia Stripp who put down four kills on four swings with a pair of blocks in the third set.

Junior setter Rachel Rippee tallied 25 assists, seven digs, two aces and a kill against the Aggies.

PHOTOS: Best pictures from Hogs’ practice Wednesday

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It was hot Wednesday afternoon when Arkansas took the field in preparation for their matchup with Auburn on Saturday and here are the best pictures from the limited media availability during the beginning of the workouts.

Photos by Andy Hodges | HitThatLine.com

Morris says Hogs had good day of practice Tuesday

In Chad Morris’ last media availability on game week before Auburn, he talked about a good day of preparation on Tuesday and how he was looking forward to another good practice Wednesday.

???? Wednesday Halftime Pod — Featuring Bill King

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Phil Elson and Tye Richardson discuss bright spots on the Arkansas football team, the Change My Mind Segment, plus Bill King of Nashville Sports Radio.

Hogs sign Van Horn, five others to new contracts

PHOTO BY RAZORBACK SPORTS COMMUNICATIONS

FAYETTEVILLE — Following one of the most successful competitive years in Razorback history, Arkansas has signed six of its coaches to new contracts, athletics director Hunter Yurachek announced Wednesday.

In 2017-18, Arkansas finished 16th in the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup, including first among programs with 19 or fewer sports. The No. 16 national finish tied a program record for a combined University of Arkansas intercollegiate athletics program.

Dave Van Horn (baseball), Courtney Deifel (softball), Chris Bucknam (men’s track and field), Lance Harter (women’s track and field), Brad McMakin (men’s golf) and Shauna Taylor (women’s golf) have been signed to new five-year contracts with options for two one-year extensions, based on success, that could extend the agreements to a maximum of seven years.

All six contracts replace previous employment agreements. The new agreements took effect, retroactively, on July 1, 2018 and run through June 30, 2023.

“Each coach in this group has proven to be among the best coaches in their respective sports as evidenced by the numerous national championships, national championship runner-up finishes, conference titles and program firsts,” Yurachek said.

“After having an opportunity to observe each of these programs and their performance, both historically and in their most recent seasons, I made it a priority to secure these highly successful coaches with agreements that will keep them at the University of Arkansas and reward them accordingly based on the success of their programs. Head coaches are an integral part of the overall success of Razorback Athletics. I am confident that under the leadership of Dave, Courtney, Chris, Lance, Brad and Shauna we will continue to successfully pursue our mission of Building Champions and Razorbacks for Life.”

Dave Van Horn, Baseball

Entering 17th season at the University of Arkansas, Van Horn has led the Razorbacks to 15 NCAA Tournaments and five College World Series appearances and has a 642-404 record as a head coach at Arkansas. Overall, Van Horn is entering his 31st year as a head coach and has compiled a record of 1,227-604, with 19 NCAA Tournament and seven College World Series appearances. In 2018, Van Horn led the Razorbacks to a 48-21 record, an NCAA Regional and Super Regional championship and a national runner-up finish at the 2018 College World Series.

Courtney Deifel, Softball

Entering her fourth season at Arkansas, head coach Courtney Deifel guided the Razorbacks to its first-ever NCAA Super Regional appearance in 2018. The Razorbacks finished the 2018 campaign with a 42-17 record and hosted an NCAA Regional for the first time in program history. In 2017, Arkansas’ 17-win improvement from the previous season marked the largest increase in the country among Power 5

programs. After leading the program back to the SEC and NCAA Tournaments, Deifel was named the 2017 D1SoftballNews Coach of the Year.

Chris Bucknam, Men’s Track and Field

Bucknam is entering his 11th season as head coach of the Razorback Men’s Track & Field/Cross Country program. Since his arrival in 2008, Bucknam has captured 20 SEC titles, as well as the 2013 Indoor National Championship. In 2018, Bucknam led the Razorbacks to their eighth-straight SEC cross country title en route to a fifth-straight South Central Regional title and a fifth-place finish at the NCAA Championships. Arkansas was runner-up at the SEC indoor meet and third at the outdoor meet. In total, last season Arkansas had 20 first-team All-Americans.

Lance Harter, Women’s Track and Field

Harter is entering his 29th season as head coach of the Razorback Women’s Track & Field/Cross Country program. During his time with Arkansas, Harter has orchestrated 34 SEC titles and two National Championships. In 2018, Harter led the Razorbacks to their 13th and 14th-straight SEC titles during the cross country and indoor seasons extending the streak that began with the 2013 SEC Cross Country Championships. At the NCAA Indoor Championships, the Razorbacks posted a runner-up finish that included three individual national champions. In total, last season Arkansas had 10 All-Americans.

Brad McMakin, Men’s Golf

McMakin is in his 13th year as head men’s golf coach for the Razorbacks. Last season, the Razorbacks placed 12th at the NCAA Championship and his team’s scoring average of 285.23 was a school record. Overall, his teams have earned 11 straight NCAA postseason berths and advanced to the NCAA Championship six times. Arkansas was NCAA runner-up in 2009 and Mason Overstreet was the NCAA individual runner-up in 2017. The Razorbacks have won at least one tournament in each of McMakin’s first 12 seasons and 26 tournaments overall in his tenure.

Shauna Taylor, Women’s Golf

Entering her 12th season as the head coach of the Razorback women’s golf team, Shauna Taylor has paced Arkansas to 11 consecutive NCAA Regional appearances and eight NCAA Championship appearances. Last season, Taylor lead the Razorbacks to the program’s first Southeastern Conference and NCAA Regional titles while winning a program-best seven tournaments. She coached junior Maria Fassi to the SEC and ANNIKA Award titles as the league and the country’s best collegiate golfer. Taylor and the Razorbacks have won 18 team titles and 27 individual victories.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Thursday

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John and Tommy talk about the relationship with Chad Morris and Gus Malzahn, interview Brandon Marcello, and WHAT’s YOUR BEEF WEDNESDAY.

Woods on problems with Razorbacks’ offense in loss

Arkansas wide receiver Mike Woods met with the media Tuesday and talked about the offensive problems against North Texas and how they are working to get better in practices this week.