Vols overpower Razorbacks in SEC semifinals

ST. LOUIS, Mo. — No. 6 seed Arkansas fell to No. 2 seed Tennessee on Saturday afternoon 84-66 in the semifinals of the SEC Tournament.

The shots fell early for the Volunteers and the Razorbacks found themselves in a hole too large to climb out of.

Much like Arkansas’ opponent from the night before, Tennessee started hot from the field, connecting on five of its first six shots to take an 11-7 lead into the first media break.

Unlike Friday night, it did not stop there.

The Volunteers shot 19-of-25 (.760) from the floor in the first half, going 7-of-8 (.875) from deep to take a 48-29 lead at halftime.

After trading a couple three pointers out of the break, Arkansas showed some fight. The Razorbacks forced Tennessee to miss seven of its first eight shots of the second half, as Arkansas used an 8-0 run to cut the deficit to 11.

The Volunteers would hit some timely shots to keep Arkansas from making a run, as 11 is as close the Razorbacks could get in the second half.

Despite slowing down in the second half, Tennessee still shot 57.1 percent from the field for the contest, including a 64.7 mark from behind the arc.

The Razorbacks were led by their three senior guards, as Daryl Macon led Arkansas with 19 points, going 7-of-7 from the free throw line and 5-of-10 from the field.

Jaylen Barford added 14, while Anton Beard posted 11. Freshman guard Darious Hall also added 11 points to go along with seven rebounds.

Arkansas now awaits its selection into the NCAA Tournament, as the Razorbacks will find out its seeding on Selection Sunday.

Chavis talking about defensive improvement

Arkansas defensive coordinator John Chavis talked with the media after Saturday’s practice about how the defense is coming together.

Craddock on quarterbacks, offense in early spring drills

Hogs offensive coordinator Joe Craddock on the “consistently inconsistent” play of quarterbacks in the spring.

Richardson on coming back for Hogs

Arkansas cornerback Kevin Richardson likes the way the secondary is playing with changes.

Hayden on running backs in new Razorbacks offense

Razorbacks running back Chase Hayden says he’s fully healthy after injury suffered during last season.

Hays on dropping weight under new coaches, offense

Arkansas center Dylan Hays talking about being down to 295 and being “in best shape of his life” under new staff.

Curl on making switch from cornerback to safety

Razorbacks safety Kamren Curl on how move to safety from cornerback is progressing through the spring drills.

Photos from Hogs’ practice before Saturday scrimmage

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PHOTOS BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM
Here are photos from Saturday’s practice before the scrimmage. No photography or video was allowed after the first couple of minutes of the scrimmage.

Post-practice video from Coach Chad Morris, coordinators Joe Craddock and John Chavis along with interviews with players will be at HitThatLine.com this afternoon.

Barford, Gafford pace Hogs on to semis at SEC

VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK
VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK

ST. LOUIS, Mo. —  Behind a big night from Jaylen Barford and Daniel Gafford, No. 6 seed Arkansas defeated No. 3 Florida, 80-72, Friday night, advancing to the semifinals of the SEC Tournament for the third time in the last four years.

Using a 16-2 run in the second half, the Razorbacks gained control of the game and defeated the Gators for the first time since 2013.

From the tip, the pace of the game was at one Arkansas feels comfortable with.

Thanks to their hot shooting early, the Gators led 13-10 at the first media timeout and eventually extended it to eight. The Gators drilled six of their first 10 3-point attempts, but Arkansas answered, eventually cutting the Gator lead to 1.

With less than three minutes left in the first half, Florida stretched it back to 7, hitting two of its seven first-half 3-pointers.

Turning up the defense, Arkansas weathered the storm and held Florida scoreless for the final 4:54 of the first half. The Hogs went on an 8-0 run to take a 30-29 lead into the break.

The second half, much like the first, was an absolute battle.

The teams traded baskets for the first couple of minutes before Arkansas ran off a 7-0 run to take its largest lead at that point at 5. The Gators clawed back and to even the score with 12 minutes left.

The Razorbacks would go on a 16-2 run over the next five minutes, scoring 12 straight to take a 14-point lead.

Barford would pick up his second double-double of the season, finishing a point shy of a career high with 27 points and tying his career high with 10 rebounds.

Gafford earned his second double-double of the season, adding 16 points and tying his career high with 12 rebounds and one monster windmill to cap it off.

Daryl Macon posted 13 points, four rebounds and three assists, while Anton Beard added 10 points, three rebounds and three assists.

Arkansas owned the paint, out-rebounding Florida, 43-28, and scored 30 points around the basket.

Game Notes

 Arkansas has advanced to the semifinals of the SEC Tournament in three of the last four years.

 The Razorbacks improve to 26-25 all-time in the SEC Tournament.

 Arkansas is 6-6 in the SEC Tournament since the league went away from divisions after the 2010-11 season, with two victories coming in 2015, 2017 and 2018.

 During the Mike Anderson era, Arkansas is 125-7 in games it led at the half, including 40 consecutive victories. This year, the Razorbacks have led by an average of 9.7 points at the break in 23 wins.

Van Horn not pleased with Hogs’ play in second game

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn wasn’t happy after the second game against Kent State where the Hogs didn’t play well and lost, 10-4, to split with the Golden Flashes.

Brooks’ best performance takes NCAA individual title

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — No. 2 Arkansas wasted no time making its presence felt Friday evening in College Station as redshirt senior Taliyah Brooks opened up the 2018 NCAA Indoor Championships for the Hogs, capturing the pentathlon national title with a season best performance.

“We are right on schedule if not ahead,” head coach Lance Harter said. “I’m super pleased obviously for Taliyah Brooks to finally get to be at the top of the podium. She was in the shadows of a great athlete and NCAA record-holder but now she got the opportunity to be on top.”

Golden Again
“Two-times a bridesmaid, now a bride,” the announcer said as Brooks crossed the finish line, completing the final pentathlon event of the day, the 800-meter run. The Wichita Falls, Texas native had finished second at the SEC and NCAA Indoor Championships two-consecutive years prior but 2018 proved to be her year for gold. The moment was a historic one for the program as Brooks became the first Razorback combined events performer to ever finish first at a national championships. Her season best gold-meriting performance (4,572 points) earned 10 points towards Arkansas’ team total. Brooks finishes her collegiate indoor stead as the fourth-highest career scorer at the NCAA championships in pentathlon.

“I’ve been working real hard for this,” Brooks said. “Coaches, medical staff, everyone has put in so much effort to get me to where I am, I’m so happy I could win for them, more than for myself. Stuff like this just doesn’t happen for people in Wichita Falls. To be able to represent them and win for them makes me happy.”

Program Record for Payton
Her twitter handle once was pay_multis but she now goes by pay_hurdles — a fitting name for the new Arkansas program record-holder in the 60-meter hurdles, Payton Chadwick. Transitioning into open event competition for the Hogs this season proved to be a successful endeavor for the Springdale, Arkansas native who qualified for the NCAA meet in three different specialties. She opened her national campaign clocking a program record of 7.93 in her signature short hurdles before hustling to the center of the oval for the long jump. She is the only hurdler in Arkansas history to record a sub-8 second performance in the event.

NCAA Finalists

  • Janeek Brown – 60-meter hurdles (8.11) Had the third-fastest non-autoqualifying time of the day.
  • Payton Chadwick – 60-meter hurdles (7.93) Fastest time of the day; program record performance.
  • Nikki Hiltz – Mile (4:40.56) Finished among the top-four runners in heat two for auto-qualification.

“Our hurdlers had a fantastic day today,” Harter said. “Huge PR for Payton; Janeek Brown she just continues to be a great competitor. Freshman aren’t supposed to be NCAA finalists, so she raised the standards for us. Nikki Hiltz also took care of business casually in the mile and now it’s just a matter of our three pole vaulters taking care of business as they always do.”

Saturday Scoring Opportunities
Arkansas’ pole vault crew headlined by two-time NCAA champion Lexi Jacobus will lead the scoring charge on the final day of competition at the Gilliam Indoor Track Stadium. Jacobus is one of only two vaulters this year with a 15-foot clearance this season and will look to return to the top of the podium for the third time in her career. Away from the field events, Harter will rely on upperclassmen heavy hitters Payton Chadwick (60-meter hurdles) and Nikki Hiltz (mile) to carry the Arkansas banner on the track. Along with Chadwick, the Razorbacks will have the opportunity to score more points in the hurdles from freshman Janeek Brown. The two-day event will be live streamed on ESPN3 with Saturday’s stream beginning at 4 p.m.

NCAA Indoor Championships
Gilliam Indoor Track Stadium
March 9, 2018

Team Scores
1. Georgia – 33
2. Florida – 13
3. New Mexico – 12
T4. North Carolina – 10
T4. Arizona State – 10
T4. Missouri – 10
T4. Arkansas – 10

60 Meters Semifinal
8. Jada Baylark – 7.28

200 Meters Semifinal
13. Payton Chadwick – 23.25

400 Meters Semifinal
15. Morgan Burks-Magee – 53.45

Mile Semifinal
10. Nikki Hiltz – 4:40.66

60 Meter Hurdles
1. Payton Chadwick – 7.93
7. Janeek Brown – 8.11

Long Jump
9. Payton Chadwick -6.14m/20-1 3/4
14. Taliyah Brooks – 5.95m/19-6 1/4

Pentathlon
1. Taliyah Brooks – 4,572 pts.
(1) 60-Meter Hurdles – 8.05, 1118 pts.
(2) High Jump – 1.84m/6-0 1/2, 1029 pts.
(9) Shot Put – 12.16m/39-10 3/4, 672 pts.
(1) Long Jump – 6.36m/20-7, 934 pts.
(14) 800 Meters – 2:22.44, 791 pts.