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Malham, Neece, Cannata push Razorbacks past Nebraska

LINCOLN, Neb. — Arkansas finished off the exhibition portion of its 2018 schedule Thursday night with an outburst of goals to defeat Nebraska, 3-1, at Hibner Stadium.

Taking advantage of the lenient substitution rules for exhibitions, the Razorbacks, once again, utilized nearly its entire roster, as well as all three of its goalkeepers, in what was their final tuneup before opening the regular season next week against Duquesne.

Sophomores Taylor Malham, Abbi Neece and junior Tori Cannata all provided scores in the two-goal victory. Malham scored the lone goal in last week’s 1-0 exhibition win over Kansas State and played 62 minutes in Thursday’s match at Nebraska.

With Thursday night’s victory, Arkansas has now come out a winner in five of its last six exhibition matches.

From Head Coach Colby Hale

“First of all this was a great result by the players. We were a bit off in the first half, but they found a way to stay in the game. The second half, we were suffocating at times. Obviously, there are some areas of growth for us that Nebraska exposed, but we had a lot of really good stretches.” — Head coach Colby Hale

How It Went Down

5th minute – Arkansas utilized a quick pace at the start of the match that seemed to catch Nebraska off guard as Malham netted her second goal of the exhibition season. Coming off a corner kick from fellow sophomore Parker Goins, the ball was jostled around the box and deflected to the foot of Malham, who was able to put it past the Nebraska keeper for the game’s first goal.

13th minute – Nebraska was able to even the match eight minutes later on a goal by Faith Carter, but Arkansas’ defense limited the Cornhuskers to only one shot on goal for the remainder of the first half.

52nd minute – Sophomore Abbi Neece, who had a shot go just wide of goal earlier in the first half, punched one through seven minutes into the second half to make it 2-1 Razorbacks. Freshman Tyler Runnels provided the nice cross on the play found a wide open Neece in the box, who didn’t miss from near point-blank range. Neece had two goals and two assists for six points in her freshman campaign last year.

82nd minute – The Razorbacks got the insurance goal from junior Tori Cannata with eight minutes to go in the match after she placed one just over the goalkeepers head and into the bottom left portion of the net.

Other Key Notes

• For the second-straight exhibition, Arkansas utilized all available goalkeepers in the match as Taylor Beitz, Alexis Bach and Rachel Harris all logged roughly 30 minutes Thursday night between the pipes.

• Bach led all Razorback keepers with two saves on the night and picked up the victory, while Beitz and Harris both tallied one save

• Of the eight shots tallied in the match, Arkansas was able to get two shots off from set pieces, both coming in the first half.

• Seven players recorded 60 or more minutes in the match with midfielders Carly Hoke playing full 90 minutes. Hoke is coming off a season-ending knee injury last year that forced her to miss the entire second half of the season.

• For the second-straight exhibition, Arkansas totaled eight or more shots. Last year, the Razorbacks were 10-9-2 when getting eight or more shots off.

Up Next

Arkansas will open the 2018 season on the road in State College, Pennsylvania, on the campus of Penn State University. Even with Penn State as the acting host for the opening weekend’s slate of matches, the Razorbacks will not face the Nittany Lions on this trip.

The Hogs will face, however, Duquesne to open the season on Friday, Aug. 17 at 4 p.m. and then No. 9 West Virginia on Sunday, Aug. 19 at 11 a.m. Both matches will be played at Jeffrey Field on the campus of Penn State.

PHOTOS: With pads on, hitting part of Hogs’ routine

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In the second day of pads, Arkansas started showing more hitting, with tackling to the ground as coaches continue to evaluate the team ahead of Saturday’s closed scrimmage inside Razorback Stadium.

Photos by Andy Hodges | HitThatLine.com

Morris on first practices, Saturday’s scrimmage

Arkansas coach Chad Morris met with the media after Thursday’s practice and was glad to have a hot day before the Razorbacks hold a closed scrimmage inside Razorback Stadium on Saturday.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Thursday

John and Tommy discuss who will start on the offensive line, news around the SEC, interview ADG’s Tom Murphy and more!

PHOTOS: Up close and personal views at practice

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Heres’s some up close pictures from players and coaches in Wednesday’s practice on the outside fields at the Fred W. Smith Football Center.

Photos by Andy Hodges | HitThatLine.com

PHOTOS: Looking at offensive line workouts

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Here’s a look at the offensive line practicing Wednesday, despite struggling with injuries that have created a rotating cast of players in a variety of positions.

Photos by Andy Hodges | HitThatLine.com

O’Grady loving role of tight ends in new offense

Arkansas tight end Cheyenne O’Grady is loving the role of the tight ends in Chad Morris’ new offense as they are playing all over the field and seeing passes coming their way.

Morgan on energy of team’s first day in pads

Arkansas linebacker Grant Morgan talked about how they didn’t even need the halftime break because of the energy and enthusiasm the team had in the first practice in pads.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Wednesday

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No one knows what they don’t know with Hogs now

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With Arkansas now four practices into fall camp, you get the idea even Chad Morris and the coaches don’t really know what they don’t know right now.

You can go ahead and read that again. The first time I heard John Mackovic say that when he took over at Texas in 1992 I kinda had to stop and think about it for a second or two.

It’s not uncommon for new coaches to be that way. In the Razorbacks’ case, Morris and his staff has a few spring practices to evaluate. They spent most of their time since getting here hitting the recruiting trail and the results of that are starting to show.

Now comes the season.

Don’t worry about Morris not understanding what he has to do to keep his job and it’s not just recruiting. In fact, not winning games with maybe the best recruiting class in the last couple of decades could be a bigger problem than not recruiting.

Right now — at least in the limited action we see in the first 20 minutes — everybody’s just trying to figure out what they don’t know.

It’s a lot of basic drills, running some of the offense and just trying to get a read on what guys do well and what they can’t do. In case you’re wondering, they’re watching a lot of film at night of the practices for that evaluation.

Saturday’s scrimmage is closed to just about everybody other than probably a handful of high school coaches and players. It’s not a scrimmage to get ready for a game … they have time before the Sept. 1 opener against Eastern Illinois.

No, the scrimmage Saturday is for evaluation in a different setting.

Tuesday’s de-briefing pretty much confirmed this is all about evaluation.

“We did some situational stuff today, and we’ll continue to add some situational things,” Morris said about the Hogs going into full pads Wednesday. “We’ll get out there and see what our young guys have got.

“There’ll be a few periods where we’ll be live, but a lot of it is just learning how to practice in full pads.”

In case you’re wondering that’s almost the normal approach when a completely new staff takes over. Considering the way the offseason conditioning program went with players’ bodies changing, they aren’t going as much off last year’s film as what they see with their own eyes in the spring and now fall.

The guess here is they aren’t even starting to put together a game plan for the season opener. They likely are putting together a working list for a starting lineup, but even that will have a lot of flexibility at most positions.

It’s the nature when change is made.

But don’t lose the faith. That’s worked out well in Razorbacks history at least once.

When Ken Hatfield took over for Lou Holtz for the 1984 season, it was a complete change in just about everything. It was a new attitude, a new direction.

As one longtime observer said, “we’re replaced nonsense with sense.” That was a direct slap at Holtz and all of the shenanigans he had going on.

No one expected a lot from that 1984 team. Brad Taylor was the No. 1 quarterback and he’d never run a wishbone offense in his life. He was a passer, but he was game and finished up his career running the option and taking the hits.

Hatfield and his staff came in from Air Force. They didn’t complain about what many in the media said was a group without a lot of talent. They had better players than they had at Air Force and learned that complaining was a waste of time.

Those old enough tend to forget that because that team went on to a 7-4-1 record.

The similarities are there at the same point in time.

Few give this Razorback team much credit for having players. It’s a change in system as radical as what Hatfield brought in.

The change in attitude has gone from a coaching staff that appeared completely content to waddle around being mediocre and making excuses to a staff that’s all about being positive and glad to be coaching better players than they had last year in many cases, but knowing that winning games is the main priority.

Morris is showing he can get the Hogs competitive in the recruiting game.

Now he just has to show he can be competitive on the field.

Because without those wins, he knows — more than anyone else — he would just be putting together some good recruits for the next coach.

He’s just gotta figure out what he doesn’t know and he’s gotta do it fast.

Which is pretty much the way he does everything.

 

PHOTOS: Hogs’ Tuesday practice before rains arrived

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There was some rainy weather in the Fayetteville area, but it came after the media had to leave the Razorbacks’ practice Tuesday and here are some of the best pictures.

Photos by Andy Hodges | HitThatLine.com