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New coaches main focus at SEC Media Days next week

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For the first time, the second-largest gathering of media people interviewing other media people, gets underway next week in Atlanta with SEC Media Days.

For actual news, it will be a relatively tame week. It’s hard to remember the last time some really breaking news came down during that week involving players.

Oh, there was Phillip Fulmer being served with legal papers in 2008 when he arrived. That was from a lawsuit filed several years earlier over allegedly turning in Alabama to the SEC on some recruiting stuff.

For the last couple of years we had everybody asking anybody connected with or covering Ole Miss about the NCAA investigation, but that’s over with now. Remember, it was shortly after the event last year when the Hugh Freeze scandal broke.

We don’t even Steve Spurrier around for entertainment any more.

Oh, Nick Saban will probably be ticked off at some question and try to bully somebody that asks something, but it won’t be anything of much importance.

Most of the attention will be focused on the new coaches in the SEC, five of whom will be walking into the chaos for the first time. Florida’s Dan Mullen has been there a few times, but as coach of Mississippi State.

Texas A&M’s Jimbo Fisher will be the spotlight new coach. Arkansas’ Chad Morris, Ole Miss’ Matt Luke, Mississippi State’s Joe Moorhead and Tennessee’s Jeremy Pruitt will be novelty items.

If Morris holds true to form, he may hit more spots on radio row than anybody since the SEC stopped making the coaches go down the gauntlet of stations interviewing anything that looks remotely interesting.

Then there will be the predictions.

The national media guys will tiptoe at almost every stop. To be honest, they simply don’t have the time to deep-dive into every school and most don’t step back and get a big-picture view. That’s why most thought Bret Bielema was a home-run hire back in 2013 when anybody looking at the big picture figured it was going to never work.

But there will be some constants.

Alabama will be favored in the West and Georgia in the East. Since 1992, I’ve picked Alabama to win the West and Florida the East every single year and been perfect nine times over 25 years and half-right five more times. Over half of the time those picks have hit on one side or the other.

That’s the pick again this year. No one will argue about the Crimson Tide, but probably raise eyebrows about the Gators. I’m playing the numbers.

Arkansas will likely be sixth or seventh in the West. The Hogs aren’t getting a great deal of respect for the coming season.

Few expect a banner year.

Razorback fans should rejoice. When picked low, Arkansas tends to finish higher. When they are picked to contend, the bottom falls out most of the time.

I’ve got an idea what I think, but I’m not making any predictions just yet.

Later this week, I’ll give you my prediction for what the media will pick. Oh, there won’t be any surprises at the top because I think Alabama and Georgia will be favored in each division.

It’s the rest of the pecking order that may be a little different.

Hey, what else do we have to discuss?

Razorbacks’ 2018 soccer schedule set; opens August 4

FAYETTEVILLE — Coming off its fourth NCAA Tournament appearance in the last five years and its second-straight SEC Tournament final appearance, the Razorbacks are roughly a month away from beginning its 2018 campaign with a top-notch schedule on the calendar.

Head coach Colby Hale enters his seventh season at the helm of the program and is the only coach in program history to take the team to an NCAA Tournament.

Last year’s team won 11 matches and made a miraculous run to the SEC Tournament final after coming in as the eight seed. Arkansas was the lowest-seeded team to ever reach the tournament final. With its run, Arkansas secured its ninth 10-win season in school history and third under Hale.

The Razorbacks will open the home portion of its schedule on Friday, Aug. 24 against Nebraska-Omaha before traveling to McNeese State (Aug. 26) on the back end of the weekend.

Arkansas will then have three-straight home matches coming against Baylor (Aug. 31), FAU (Sept. 7) and UConn (Sept. 9), which will lead right into its SEC opener at Georgia (Sept. 13).

Arkansas has set a single-game attendance record during the home-opening weekend in each of the last five seasons, including last year’s record-setting 3,401 fans that watched the Razorbacks take on top-ranked Penn State.

Seven teams from last year’s NCAA Tournament field will make up part of this year’s schedule, five coming from the SEC. Arkansas will open the year with two matches in State College, Pennsylvania against Duquesne (Aug. 17) and West Virginia (Aug. 19) as part of a tournament hosted by Penn State.

West Virginia finished 2017 with a 16-4-3 record and made it to the third round of the NCAA Tournament before bowing out to Penn State. The Mountaineers will be one of three Big 12 foes the Razorbacks will face this year.

They will also host Baylor at Razorback Field, their second home match of the season, and Kansas State (Aug. 4) as the first of two exhibitions prior to the regular season.

This year’s conference slate is full of tournament teams as Texas A&M (Sept. 20), Alabama (Sept. 23), Ole Miss (Oct. 7), Auburn (Oct. 21), and Florida (Oct. 25) make up five of the 10 teams Arkansas will face in the league coming off NCAA Tournament appearances.

Including Texas A&M and Auburn, the rest of the home conference schedule will be against Missouri (Sept. 27), LSU (Oct. 4) and Kentucky (Oct. 11).

Once again, the SEC Soccer Tournament will be played in Orange Beach, Alabama at the Orange Beach Sportsplex.

The top 10 teams in the conference will make the field and the top six will have a bye to the quarterfinals. The tournament is slated to start on Oct. 28 and run through Nov. 4.

2018 Razorback Soccer Schedule

Date Opponent Location Time (CT)
Sat, Aug. 4 Kansas St. (Exh.) Razorback Field 6:30 p.m.
Thu, Aug. 9 at Nebraska (Exh.) Lincoln, Neb. 7 p.m.
Fri, Aug. 17 vs. Duquesne State College, Pa. 4 p.m.
Sun, Aug. 19 vs. West Virginia State College, Pa. 11 a.m.
Fri, Aug. 24 Nebraska-Omaha Razorback Field 7 p.m.
Sun, Aug. 26 at McNeese St. Lake Charles, La. 6 p.m.
Fri, Aug. 31 Baylor Razorback Field 7 p.m.
Fri, Sept. 7 Florida Atlantic Razorback Field 7 p.m.
Sun, Sept. 9 UConn Razorback Field 1 p.m.
Thu, Sept. 13 at Georgia Athens, Ga. 6 p.m.
Sun, Sept. 16 Providence Razorback Field 6 p.m.
Thu, Sept. 20 Texas A&M Razorback Field 7 p.m.
Sun, Sept. 23 at Alabama Tuscaloosa, Ala. 6 p.m.
Thu, Sept. 27 Missouri Razorback Field 6:30 p.m.
Thu, Oct. 4 LSU Razorback Field 6:30 p.m.
Sun, Oct. 7 at Ole Miss Oxford, Miss. 2 p.m.
Thu, Oct. 11 Kentucky Razorback Field 6:30 p.m.
Thu, Oct. 18 at Mississippi St. Starkville, Miss. 7 p.m.
Sun, Oct. 21 Auburn Razorback Field 1 p.m.
Thu, Oct. 25 at Florida Gainesville, Fla. 6 p.m.
Sun, Oct. 28 SEC Tournament Orange Beach, Ala. TBD
Tue, Oct. 30 SEC Tournament Orange Beach, Ala. TBD
Thu, Nov. 1 SEC Tournament Orange Beach, Ala. TBD
Sun, Nov. 4 SEC Tournament Orange Beach, Ala. TBD

Tatlow selected to serve in Peace Corps in Dominican Republic

FAYETTEVILLE —Arkansas graduate Chelsea Tatlow has been selected to serve as a Peace Corps Volunteer, earning an invitation to serve as a Spanish Literacy Promoter in the Dominican Republic beginning March 5, 2019.

The Columbia, Missouri native dedicated much of her college career to service, earning a career sweep of the Southeastern Conference Community Service Team honors.

She completed the sweep after serving as the team’s swimming and diving community service coordinator, having made a lasting impact on the Northwest Arkansas community with her involvement throughout her career as a Razorback.

The social work and sociology graduate traveled to Belize in the summer of 2017 to participate in the Summer Service Learning program.

Tatlow is a three-time CSCAA First Team Scholar All-American and a 2017 SEC Winter Academic Honor Roll selection.

She was named to the Dean’s List all eight semesters and to the Chancellor’s List six semesters.

The 2015 Hogspy Rookie of the Year, Tatlow qualified and competed at the NCAA Championships each of her first three seasons as a Razorback.

Tatlow has worked with the Equestrian Bridges Church, the Equestrian Bridges Therapeutic Riding Center, the Yvonne Richardson Center and a member of the Leadership Academy.

She has worked with Special Education at the Springdale Junior High, the Book Hogs Read to Win Program at Butterfield Elementary, the Relay For Life Cancer Society and the Sweat Hogs Salute to Excellence Program at Folsom Elementary.

She has donated funds to the Salvation Army and the 7Hills Homeless Shelter. She has filled backpacks for Girls On The Run and volunteered for Habitat For Humanity, the Veteran’s Hospital, the Bentonville Half Marathon, Special Olympics, the Operations Baton Rouge Flood Victims, and the Shop With Razorbacks at Toy-r-Us.

She has also worked with the Razorback Reads at Springdale Public Library, the Fayetteville Food Hub, the Fayetteville Underground, and the Fayetteville Park and Recreation.

Hogs, Long each get needed fresh starts with new job

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Arkansas athletics, politics, and, well, pretty much the entire state has run on tradition for decades.

That’s a nice way of terming it. Some call it the “good ol’ boy network” and while many denounce it the fact of the matter is few outsiders in the history of Razorback athletics have broken through it.

Getting into it is a little like joining a fraternity back in the day. You’re either a legacy (born in the state), do a blood oath-type thing (playing for the Hogs in some sport) … or buy your way in.

When it comes to the Razorbacks, if you come in without playing you better win — a lot — and get along with the boys already in the network. Of course, being a legacy won’t buy you a lifetime job without winning, either. Ask Ken Hatfield or Houston Nutt about that little aspect.

Jeffrey P. Long had little interest in being part of the network in any way, shape, form or fashion. He found out — apparently with little warning — that might not have been the best approach.

In the minds of some, he was — at best — a carpetbagger talking out of both sides of his mouth, saying one thing in interviews and then being completely different in person. Some donors felt the only people he cared about, in order, were million-dollar donors in the luxury suites and ESPN.

The recurring theme from many Arkansas-based donors was Long took a baseball bat to many time-honored traditions. That included what some felt was a lack of civility. He allegedly made disparaging comments about southern people accidentally within earshot of some boosters, who weren’t really happy about it.

Some felt he played favorites in the media. There are some who say he instructed UA personnel that only certain media people would be notified in advance of some breaking stories. That didn’t exactly make a lot of friends and he had little to no support from that corner when things fell apart.

Before anyone accuses me of doing anything on a personal level, I interviewed Long maybe three or four times during his entire tenure. The two or three requests I made of him directly, he obliged. To be honest, it’s doubtful he even knew who I was … or cared. That’s perfectly fine with me.

In the end, it was time for him to move on. He may have done some positive things in his 10 years. The problem was for every positive you heard about him, there were 10 negatives.

Now he’s on to another adventure. A decade ago, we were told by people here and in Pittsburgh he left town as the executioner was sharpening the axe. No telling now if that’s accurate or not and now it doesn’t matter.

Long has a new gig in Kansas, which has fallen to being relevant in just a single sport — college basketball.

With a coach there in Bill Self, that’s the only person on the staff that Long has to get along with. For a university that is the home of James Naismith’s original rules of basketball (after a Kansas graduate purchased them at auction), it’s clear which sport is king.

The Jayhawks also were, at one point in time, as big in track and field as Arkansas now and had some good runs in football with a couple of Orange Bowl appearances. But not a lot lately. It’s even the alma mater of Gale Sayers and John Riggins, two Hall of Famers, but Kansas hasn’t exactly been a hotbed of NFL stars in the last 50 years or so.

Lately, though, well they made the Hogs look like a dominant force in football.

Many are saying Long’s biggest charge is getting football to be respectable. If he can accomplish that, he should make millions if he writes a book about how that transpires.

In the final analysis, Long’s new job in Kansas helps Arkansas by several million dollars. Whether it helps the Jayhawks is anybody’s guess.

Razorback fans can now move on. Long was a hot-button issue with many longtime donors that got extremely emotional at times.

But it’s time to move on. While some were not completely ecstatic with the hiring of Hunter Yurachek to replace Long, many have said they are willing to at least “see how it goes.”

In Arkansas terms, that’s giving him a chance. Time will tell on that one, too, but Hunter likely won’t have a grace period the length of what Long had. By all appearances, he’s handling it very well and understands he was given two ears, two eyes and only one mouth to use in proportion.

Hog fans will have a Long memory. That won’t go away for a few years and it will be a bitter taste for some fans every time they hear the name.

And that may last awhile.

Schultz takes bronze medal at Bolzana FINA Grand Prix in Italy

BOLZANO, Italy — Arkansas rising sophomore Brooke Schultz scored bronze in the women’s 3-meter final at the Bolzano FINA Grand Prix, to secure one of six medals for Team USA Sunday afternoon.

Place Team Athlete Score
1  CHN Yiwen Chen 341.50
2  CHN Xiaohui Huang 323.25
3  USA BROOKE SCHULTZ 283.60
4  GBR Alicia Blagg 281.10
5  CAN Ashley McCool 251.60
6  USA Alison Gibson 214.15

Schultz began competition in fifth-place following a front 2 1/2 somersaults with 1 twist that landed her 49.50 points, a spot she would hold for the following two rounds. The fourth round saw Schultz make her move up to third place with her most successful dive of the day, a back 2 1/2 pike for 67.50 points. She held the position through the final round.

The competition is her first since she clinched a national title at the USA Diving Senior National Championships on May 18 in the 3-meter synchro, along with Murphy Bromberg of Texas. The pair posted 287.40 points to take first.

This past spring, Schultz claimed Arkansas’ third national title, and first since 1985, with a school and personal-record 399.45 points in the three-meter finals of the 2018 NCAA Division I Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships. In conference competition, Schultz took the first and second Southeastern Conference titles in school history in the one and three-meter springboard.

Ortiz concludes solid week at 2018 Palmer Cup matches

EVIAN-les-BAINS, France — Arkansas graduate Alvaro Ortiz wrapped up match play at the 2018 Palmer Cup at Evian Resort Golf Club on Sunday.

The United States claimed 18 of 24 points in the final round singles matches to pull away for a 38.5-21.5. This year’s edition of Team USA is the first side to win as the visiting team since the 2010 Americans. Neither side had retained the cup since the US in 2011. The United States now leads the all-time series 12-9-1.

Ortiz played his way to three match wins in four events. He opened pairing with fellow Razorback Maria Fassi and the duo won the Mixed Four-Ball match on day one. They were again paired in round two for the Mixed Foursomes but dropped the match.

Ortiz rebounded that same afternoon teamming with KK Limbhasut picking up the 5&4 win in Four-Ball pairings. Ortiz dropped the final match of the tournament on Sunday, 1-up. It was a match that saw Ortiz hold as much as a two hole lead through the first nine holes. His opponent squared the match on the 15th hole and birdied the 16th hole. He would hang on for the one-hole win.

Arnold Palmer Cup
Evian Resort Golf Club
July 6-8
United States 38.5 Defeats International 21.5

Mixed Four-Ball Results
Match 6: Jiwon Jeon/Lorenzo Scalise, International def. Sahith Theegala/Alana Uriell, United States, 3&2
Match 8: KK Limbhasut/Pimnipa Panthong, International def. Zach Bauchou/Dylan Kim, United States, 4&3
Match 12: Maria Fassi/Alvaro Ortiz, International def. Sophia Schubert/Justin Suh, United States, 2&1

Mixed Foursomes Results
Match 19: Dylan Kim/Justin Suh, United States def. Maddie Szeryk/Andy Zhang, International, 5&3
Match 20: KK Limbhasut/Pimnipa Panthong, International def. Brad Dalke/Alana Uriell, United States, 2-up
Match 23: Stephen Franken/Emilia Migliaccio, United States def. Maria Fassi/Alvaro Ortiz, International, 5&4

Four-Ball Pairings
Match 31: Wenyung Keh/Patty Tavatanakit, International def. Jamie Freedman/Alana Uriell, United States, 5&3
Match 33: Dylan Kim/Emilia Migliaccio, United States def. Jaravee Boonchant/Pimnipa Panthong, International, 1-up
Match 34: KK Limbhasut/Alvaro Ortiz, International def. Stephen Franken/SM Lee, United States, 5&4
Match 35: Kristen Gillman/Kaitlyn Papp, United States def. Maria Fassi/Ainhoa Olarra, International, 5&4

Final Round Singles Results
Match 37: Sophia Schubert, United States def. Maria Fassi, International, 2&1
Match 49: Alana Uriell, United States def. Pimnipa Panthong, International, 2&1
Match 50: Zach Bauchou, United States def. Alvaro Ortiz, International, 1-up
Match 60: Dylan Kim, United States def. Ainhoa Olarra, International, 1-up

Kim, Uriell, Team USA all get wins at Palmer Cup in France

EVIAN-les-BAINS, France — Arkansas graduate Alana Uriell picked up a 2&1 win that clinched Team USA’s 2018 Palmer Cup victory at Evian Resort Golf Club on Sunday.

Uriell was joined by Razorback teammate Dylan Kim who also notched a win in singles action, 1-up. Kim was presented a wild card invitation to The Evian Championship in September after winning four of her five matches.

The United States claimed 18 of 24 points in the final round singles matches to pull away for a 38.5-21.5. This year’s edition of Team USA is the first side to win as the visiting team since the 2010 Americans. Neither side had retained the cup since the US in 2011. The United States now leads the all-time series 12-9-1.

Razorback Maria Fassi and May graduate Alvaro Ortiz both dropped their final matches for the International team.

Arnold Palmer Cup
Evian Resort Golf Club
July 6-8
United States 38.5 Defeats International 21.5

Mixed Four-Ball Results
Match 6: Jiwon Jeon/Lorenzo Scalise, International def. Sahith Theegala/Alana Uriell, United States, 3&2
Match 8: KK Limbhasut/Pimnipa Panthong, International def. Zach Bauchou/Dylan Kim, United States, 4&3
Match 12: Maria Fassi/Alvaro Ortiz, International def. Sophia Schubert/Justin Suh, United States, 2&1

Mixed Foursomes Results
Match 19: Dylan Kim/Justin Suh, United States def. Maddie Szeryk/Andy Zhang, International, 5&3
Match 20: KK Limbhasut/Pimnipa Panthong, International def. Brad Dalke/Alana Uriell, United States, 2-up
Match 23: Stephen Franken/Emilia Migliaccio, United States def. Maria Fassi/Alvaro Ortiz, International, 5&4

Four-Ball Pairings 
Match 31: Wenyung Keh/Patty Tavatanakit, International def. Jamie Freedman/Alana Uriell, United States, 5&3
Match 33: Dylan Kim/Emilia Migliaccio, United States def. Jaravee Boonchant/Pimnipa Panthong, International, 1-up
Match 34: KK Limbhasut/Alvaro Ortiz, International def. Stephen Franken/SM Lee, United States, 5&4
Match 35: Kristen Gillman/Kaitlyn Papp, United States def. Maria Fassi/Ainhoa Olarra, International, 5&4

Final Round Singles Results 
Match 37: Sophia Schubert, United States def. Maria Fassi, International, 2&1
Match 49: Alana Uriell, United States def. Pimnipa Panthong, International, 2&1
Match 50: Zach Bauchou, United States def. Alvaro Ortiz, International, 1-up
Match 60: Dylan Kim, United States def. Ainhoa Olarra, International, 1-up

We always knew Razorbacks were best in college sports

Before anyone jumps out of their seat, we’re talking about a story from Zach Barnett at FootballScoop.com ranking the best brands in college football.

And your Arkansas Razorbacks are right there at No. 1.

It’s by conference and it’s not a ranking by sport. Hey, the Kansas Jayhawk is his pick in the Big 12 so you know it has nothing to do with football, right?

In the SEC, it’s the Razorbacks at the top, which is something we’ve known for quite awhile. Here’s what he said about the Razorback:

What you’ve got here is an sonic masterpiece. Arkansas has named itself after an animal no one else dared choose yet is still highly deadly (get yourself in an Oklahoma drill with a feral pig and see how you come out). They chose a compound word that is two rough, action sounds put together — and then picked a nickname to the nickname that is another word altogether. Bravo.

The only thing the UA’s marketing department should do is send an email requesting the next time please use the actual Razorback logo instead of a wordmark.

It is the MOST unique aspect of all.

 

Social media reacts to Bielema 100x better coach

Is Bret Bielema really 100 times better as a coach than Chad Morris?

A host of a Mississippi sports radio show last week made the comment during a guest spot on the Paul Finebaum Show that Bret Bielema was “100 times better than Chad Morris” and, well, it took off from there.

Paul Finebaum on Twitter

Bret Bielema is a 100x better coach than Chad Morris” – @bobounds

Gamisou on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Who is this douche? Bret was lazy and made no effort to go recruit. This coaching staff and CM are working their ass off. Bret was such a great coach wedsnr even Count how many leads he blew in 5 years. Good coaches adjust

(Rebəl) on Twitter

@BROFESSOR56 @finebaum @bobounds He’s a Mississippi State guy so that makes it self explanatory.

Spencer Pitts on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds On what planet?

Patrick J. Williams on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds I’m sure he meant 100 lbs better.

????????y.(870).c???????? on Twitter

@patr1ckw @finebaum @bobounds https://t.co/tdKkFxKH7X

Razorslick on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds that’s good he said that because he is normally wrong, 100 % of the time,

Razorslick on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds just by watching practice Morris is better organized than big boy brent

HOGNADO???????????????????????????????????? on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Well we will find out and have a special plate for you Paul in a couple of years

Laney Briggs on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds That is just yet to be determined Bielema could not get his type of players to come to ARKANSAS!

Seth Travelstead on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds https://t.co/Pxgp5Gv4rA

Jonathan Weaver on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Uhhh. Strongly disagree.

Fake Wally Hall on Twitter

@JonathanKWeaver @finebaum @bobounds Yeah that’s a bit much. Have to go pretty far back in the annals of Arkansas history to find a coach that bookended his tenure with 0 & 1 conference wins. The regression the last 2 years. The blown 4th qtr leads. Total lack of identity as a team.

Brooks Lawrence, MD on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds If my math is right, when Chad Morris goes 1-39 in SEC compared to 11-29, that would be at most 11 times better. Am I right?

Jason Hunter on Twitter

@bblawrence331 @finebaum @bobounds Yeah if you are only counting the wins and losses but what about the size of the mans heart?

Jimmy Caudill on Twitter

@984Hunter @bblawrence331 @finebaum @bobounds Bert’s heart is clearly much larger.

Justin McFadden on Twitter

@jimmycaudill @984Hunter @bblawrence331 @finebaum @bobounds Bert’s heart is working 100X harder for sure

Gamisou on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds I think he just said this because he’s threatened. Bret was good for his agenda…losing to Miss St and competing with ole miss for scraps. By him saying this he is saying it’s not Bret it’s Arkansas. Nobody is buying that dummy

Patrick Sullivan on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds *bigger coach FIFY

DMoe on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Ur gonna hate that statement….

Sam C on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Phyllis is a better coach than Bielema.

B.J. on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds https://t.co/qG1wxdlJZQ

WPS on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Guess he didn’t see the awful coaching that lost the Mississippi State game last year with that 4th down call and countless others during his tenure

Trey McBride on Twitter

@FeauxCraddick @gohogs14 @finebaum @bobounds Guess he didn’t see Bret almost lose to coastal Carolina at home in year 5?

Davis Thomason on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Bielema 11-29 in SEC play….

Joseph Ritchie on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Paul, if Bert is so much better why doesn’t he have a job?

scottishkiltman on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Dude just trying to get a spot on Bo Mattingly this week

Billy Gathright on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds What the hell are u drinking?

Chance Pressley on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Hahahahahaha Bret bielema is a joke !!!

Chris Glidewell on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds When Saban leaves we can count on you to help bring Bilema to BAMA right? Lol

Marcus Carlton⚾️???? on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds File this away as a tweet that will not age well.

Joey Taylor on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds This is a classic example of “just because you have so many folllowers, does not give you credibility” surely surely surely Morris can win more than 11 games in 5 years in the SEC

David Crutcher on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Have followed Coach Morris since his days at Lake Travis. I like CBB, but I guarantee you will never see that all too common “what the f&$@ just happened” look on Morris’s face during a game.

Derek Stokes on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds You sir are not a very relevant source

swinerfine on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds I like coach Bielema. I’ll leave this right here… what was Bielemas’ SEC Record? We will soon find out but The Morris staff are recruiting at a higher level.

Kerry Pitts on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Who is Bob Ounds?

Brandon on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds That’s a dumb statement. Arkansas has already done a lot more to be active in recruiting that Bret ever did.

PJ on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Nah Chief this ain’t it

Fred Dykes on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Wisconsin is winning about two more games a year on average since he left and he completely lost control of the team at Arkansas. Yes that sounds like a hell of a coach.

Keith English on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Noticed that you didn’t @coachchadmorris on this thread. There, I fixed it for you.

Michael on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Extremely unfair comparison. Bielema is a good coach, but Chad Morris hasn’t even had the chance to prove how good he really is

Jim Murphy on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Bielema Did nothing for Arkansas but dig them a deep grave! He was apparently too busy stuffing his gut and drinking like a sailor at an upscale private club off dickson street.

RangersCynic on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Did ‘fatter’ autocorrect to ‘better?’

Red on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Puff puff pass

Justin Rademacher on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Are you high ????????????

OneSlowDude on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Everyone shhh…don’t you know @bobounds is the most knowledgeable world renowned authority on coaching hires

Jeff on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds Ur an idiot

M. D. D. on Twitter

@finebaum @bobounds https://t.co/Dvku7LtGpW

Well, you get the idea, right?

 

Kim wins twice, Ortiz once, in Palmer Cup match play in France

EVIAN-les-BAINS, France — Arkansas senior-to-be Dylan Kim notched two match play wins helping the United States extend its lead in Palmer Cup action at Evian Resort Golf Club on Saturday.

Kim helped the Americans take a 20.5-15.5 advantage with Team USA needing just 30 points to retain the cup. The International team needs to 30.5 to reclaim the cup.

Morning play began with mixed foursomes and Kim teamed up with Justin Suh to defeat Maddie Szeryk and Andy Zhange, 5&3. Kim and Suh won the first hole and never trailed in the match.

Despite the win by Kim, the International Team closed the gap, winning seven of the 12 morning matches.

Team USA rebounded in the afternoon Four-Ball session where Kim was again victorious. She paired with Emila Migliaccio to defeat Jaravee Boonchant and Pimnipa Panthong, 1-up.

The match was all square through the first three holes before Kim and Migliaccio won the fourth hole of the round. They held the lead through 13 holes when Panthong and Boonchant squared the match with an eagle.

Kim and Migliaccio answered winning No. 15 and hanging on for the victory.

PHOTO BY RAZORBACK SPORT

Recently graduated men’s golfer Alvaro Ortiz was also a winner on Saturday.

He and Razorback senior-to-be Maria Fassi dropped their first match in the morning, but Ortiz returned in the afternoon pairing with K.K. Limbhasut to defeat Stephen Franken and S.M. Lee of Team USA 5&4.

The duo opened on the 10th hole of the golf course and overcame a quick hole win by the Americans. Ortiz and Limhasut squared the match on the fourth hole of the round and took the lead on No. 17.

They also won No. 18 moving to 2-up. They put together a streak of three holes in a row winning Nos. 3, 4, and 5 to clinch the match.

Alana Uriell, who graduated in May, dropped both of her matches, first 2-up and the afternoon match by a score of 5&3.

Fassi and Ortiz were defeated in the morning, 5&4, and Fassi dropped her afternoon contest by the same score.

Play concludes on Sunday with singles match play action. See below for the complete schedule and tee times.

Evian Resort Golf Club
July 7
USA 12.5, International 11.5
Mixed Foursomes Results
Match 13:
Jovan Rebula/Albane Valenzuela, International def. Jennifer Kupcho/Matthew Wolff, United States, 4&2
Match 14: Lauren Stephenson/Braden Thornberry, United States halved Jiwon Jeon/Lorenzo Scalise, International
Match 15: Chandler Phillips/Lilia Vu, United States halved Hurly Long/Patty Tavatanakit, International
Match 16: Stefano Mazzoli/Dewi Weber, International def. Andrea Lee/Collin Morikawa, United States, 1-up
Match 17: Shintaro Ban/Mariel Galdiano, United States def. Viktor Hovland/Olivia Mehaffey, International, 1-up
Match 18: Ronan Mullarney/Chloe Ryan, International def. Jamie Freedman/Sahith Theegala, United States, 1-up
Match 19: Dylan Kim/Justin Suh, United States def. Maddie Szeryk/Andy Zhang, International, 5&3
Match 20: KK Limbhasut/Pimnipa Panthong, International def. Brad Dalke/Alana Uriell, United States, 2-up
Match 21: Luis Gagne/Ainhoa Olarra, International def. Kristen Gillman/Davis Riley, United States 2-up
Match 22: Harry Hall/Wenyung Keh, International def. Zach Bauchou/Sophia Schubert, United States, 3&1
Match 23: Stephen Franken/Emilia Migliaccio, United States def. Maria Fassi/Alvaro Ortiz, International, 5&4
Match 24: Jaravee Boonchant/Fredrik Nilhen, International halved SM Lee/Kaitlyn Papp, United States

Arnold Palmer Cup
Evian Resort Golf Club
July 7
USA 20.5, International 15.5
Third Round Four-Ball Pairings
Match 25: Jennifer Kupcho/Lilia Vu, United States def. Jiwon Jeon/Chloe Ryan International, 2&1
Match 26: Stefano Mazzoli/Lorenzo Scalise, International def. Braden Thornberry/Matthew Wolff, United States, 4&3
Match 27: Olivia Mehaffey/Maddie Szeryk, International def. Mariel Galdiano/Andrea Lee, United States, 1-up
Match 28: Shintaro Ban/Collin Morikawa, United States def. Luis Gagne/Andy Zhang, International, 2&1
Match 29: Sophia Schubert/Lauren Stephenson, United States def. Albane Valenzuela/Dewi Weber, International, 3&2
Match 30: Justin Suh/Sahith Theegala United States def. Hurly Long/Ronan Mullarney, International, 1-up
Match 31: Wenyung Keh/Patty Tavatanakit, International def. Jamie Freedman/Alana Uriell, United States, 5&3
Match 32: Zach Bauchou/Chandler Phillips, United States def. Hary Hall/Jovan Rebula, International, 3&2
Match 33: Dylan Kim/Emilia Migliaccio, United States def. Jaravee Boonchant/Pimnipa Panthong, International, 1-up
Match 34: KK Limbhasut/Alvaro Ortiz, International def. Stephen Franken/SM Lee, United States, 5&4
Match 35: Kristen Gillman/Kaitlyn Papp, United States def. Maria Fassi/Ainhoa Olarra, International, 5&4
Match 36: Brad Dalke/Davis Riley, United States def. Viktor Hovland/Fredrik Nilehn, International, 1-up

Sunday Singles Pairings
Final Round Singles Pairings
Match 37: 7:30 am (#1) Maria Fassi, International vs. Sophia Schubert United States
Match 38: 7:30 am (#10) Viktor Hovland, International vs. Brad Dalke, United States
Match 39: 7:40 am (#1) Lorenzo Scalise, International vs. Chandler Phillips, United States
Match 40: 7:40 am (#10) Olivia Mehaffey, International vs. Jamie Freedman, United States
Match 41: 7:50 am (#1) Patty Tavatanakit, International vs. Kaitlyn Papp, United States
Match 42: 7:50 am (#10) Andy Zhang, International vs. Sahith Theegala, United States
Match 43: 8:00 am (#1) Stefano Mazzoli, International vs. Collin Morikawa, United States
Match 44: 8:00 am (#10) Jiwon Jeon, International vs. Andrea Lee, United States
Match 45: 8:10 am (#1) Maddie Szeryk, International vs. Lilia Vu, United States
Match 46: 8:10 am (#10) Luis Gagne, International vs. Stephen Franken, United States
Match 47: 8:20 am (#1) KK Limbhasut, International vs. Justin Suh, United States
Match 48: 8:20 am (#10) Dewi Weber, International vs. Jennifer Kupcho, United States
Match 49: 8:30 am (#1) Pimnipa Panthong, International vs. Alana Uriell, United States
Match 50: 8:30 am (#10) Alvaro Ortiz, International vs. Zach Bauchou, United States
Match 51: 8:40am (#1) Fredrik Nilehn, International vs. Braden Thornberry, United States
Match 52: 8:40 am (#10) Chloe Ryan, International vs. Emilia Migliaccio, United States
Match 53: 8:50 am (#1) Wenyung Keh, International vs. Kristen Gillman, United States
Match 54: 8:50 am (#10) Harry Hall, International vs. SM Lee, United States
Match 55: 9:00 am (#1) Ronan Mullarney, International vs. Shintaro Ban, United States
Match 56: 9:00 am (#10) Albane Valenzuela, International vs. Lauren Stephenson, United States
Match 57: 9:10 am (#1) Jaravee Boonchant, International vs. Mariel Galdiano, United States
Match 58: 9:10 am (#10) Jovan Rebula, International vs. Davis Riley, United States
Match 59: 9:20 am (#1) Hurly Long, International vs. Matthew Wolff, United States
Match 60: 9:20 am (#10) Ainhoa Olarra, International vs. Dylan Kim, United States