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COACHING SEARCH: Mullen heading to Gators?

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We told you to get ready for a wild ride and apparently it’s already starting with Dan Mullen possibly heading to Florida after all.

Gainesville sports radio host and author Buddy Martin has been going live for about two weeks now (okay, not all the time, but a lot of it) and he’s reporting that the Mississippi State coach is headed there.

He is reporting this morning that Mullen has been offered the job and that Florida athletics director Scott Stricklin was in Mississippi for most of the holiday weekend, including slipping into the Egg Bowl on Thanksgiving night.

How does this affect Arkansas’ coaching search?

You can bet the Bulldogs will be going hard after Memphis coach Mike Norvell, who is reportedly on the Razorbacks’ radar as well.

It also means Central Florida coach Scott Frost, who will meet Memphis in the All American Conference championship game Saturday morning, is likely headed to Nebraska.

With the news that former Rutgers coach Greg Schiano is being offered the Tennessee job Sunday morning that takes one of the premier jobs off the market (raise your hand if you saw that coming).

All of which means the game of musical chairs has started.

And you don’t want to be the one left standing at the end.

Barford earns All-Tournament honors at PK80 Tournament

FAYETTEVILLE — Senior guard Jaylen Barford put Arkansas on his back at the Phil Knight Invitational over the weekend, leading the Razorbacks to a pair of wins to earn PK80 Victory Bracket All-Tournament team honors.

Barford averaged 21.3 points per game to guide Arkansas to a nine-point win against Oklahoma, followed by a 35-point blowout of UConn to hand the Huskies their worst loss in the last 40 years.

The Jackson, Tennessee, native scored 19 points against the Sooners, poured in 21 points against No. 9 North Carolina and added a 24-point performance against UConn.

He shot 50 percent from long range, going 9-for-18 from behind the arc, including a 4-for-5 performance against UConn.

Against the Huskies, Barford scored the first five points of the game and hit back-to-back threes to score Arkansas’ first six points of the second half to fuel the rout

Barford currently ranks second in the Southeastern Conference in points per game at 21.3, scoring 150 points through the first six games.

The Razorbacks return to action on Saturday, traveling to the state of Texas to play Houston. Tip-off is set for 6:30 p.m. on CBS Sports Network.

PK80 Victory Bracket All-Tournament Team
Cassius Winston, Michigan State (MVP)
Jaylen Barford, Arkansas
Trae Young, Oklahoma
Luke Maye, North Carolina
Joshua Langford, Michigan State

Dallas-area talk show host thinks Gus going to Hogs

Newy Scruggs, who does a fine mid-day sports radio talk show for NBC Sports Radio, apparently thinks Gus Malzahn is headed to Arkansas.

As we’ve said elsewhere, we’r’e a long way from it becoming reality.

Malzahn could still be in picture for Razorbacks

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Chaos reigns supreme in the world of college football.

And Tuesday night we find out just how chaotic it is as we close in on the Final Four of college football with the playoff committee rankings.

Auburn has thrown a gigantic monkey wrench into what was humming along nicely.

Beating Alabama 26-14 just two weeks after drubbing Georgia 40-17 a couple of weeks ago.

And now, with an official opening at head coach, many Arkansas fans have started to tear up their tickets they had purchased to get on the Gus Bus of Malzahn coming to Fayetteville.

They might want to hold up on that. And don’t take that as any sort of prediction that Malzahn will be the next coach, but this is going so crazy, who knows?

There was a report shortly after Auburn beat Alabama at AL.com that outgoing athletics director Jay Jacobs was trying to deflect talk of Malzahn going to Arkansas.

“Gus and I, we haven’t spoken about a new contract,” Jacobs said. “We spoke about his future here and he’s very happy here and I expect him to be here for quite some time. … Gus and I will talk about (a new contract), but the way Gus is, he doesn’t like to talk about things until everything is over.

“He’ll be completely focused on playing Georgia again. When Gus is ready to talk about it, we’ll talk about it. He knows; I’ve already mentioned it to him. He said he’s perfectly happy here at Auburn and wants to stay here. We’ll see how things go, it’s a competitive business we’re in and in order to stay in this business you got to be competitive. So we’ll just see how it all unfolds.”

To summarize that standard adminstrative doubletalk: Jacobs doesn’t know how it’s all going to come out.

There’s still a week to go before anything will be done. I know, you were hoping for a press conference Monday or Tuesday to announce a coach, but it would be completely surprising to see that happen.

If, in fact, Malzahn and Memphis coach Mike Norvell are the top two candidates, they each still have a game to play.

The Tigers will play Georgia in the SEC Championship Game on Saturday in Atlanta while Memphis plays Central Florida (who’s coach, Scott Frost, is a prime target of Nebraska and Florida).

No coach is going to make a move before those conference championship games.

Central Florida doesn’t have a shot at the playoff. Auburn has an outside shot … a longshot, based on precedent of what the committee does picking the final four teams.

No two-loss team has made it to the playoff. Auburn has two losses, but they’ve got to beat the Bulldogs, who will be the third big-time opponent in a month of do-or-die games for Malzahn.

There are many that think Malzahn wouldn’t leave Auburn now that he won the Iron Bowl and beat Alabama for the second time in five years. They feel Auburn will offer him a contract extension and a raise and some folks feel completely confident that will keep him on The Plains for a while longer.

And they may be right.

But don’t be surprised if they aren’t. Gus has always marched to the beat of a different drummer. Don’t forget in 1999 he left Shiloh for much larger Benton and stayed about two weeks before going back to Springdale.

Applying your logic and assuming Malzahn uses the same logic might not be reality.

Making the playoff MIGHT be the deal-breaker, but that’s not guaranteed, even if Auburn beats Georgia on Saturday.

In fact, if the Tigers do win the game, it will be surprising here if they get into the playoff. I would think they’ll take Alabama over a two-loss Auburn team, regardless of the head-to-head outcome.

They did it last year with Ohio State over Penn State, remember. The Nittany Lions were a two-loss conference champion, yet the committee took a one-loss Ohio State team that LOST to Penn State in the regular season.

That’s precisely why I’m saying if you want Malzahn, don’t give up hope yet.

They still have to beat Georgia and may not have their best running back (Kerryon Johnson injured a shoulder in the fourth quarter).

When they beat the Bulldogs a few weeks ago, it was on The Plains. This one will be in Georgia’s back yard in Atlanta, although Auburn is almost as close, but the guess is this is going to be a pro-Georgia crowd.

If Auburn loses, Malzahn is available immediately.

If the Tigers win, then we all have to wait until 11 a.m. Sunday to find out about the playoff picture and I’m not sure they get in even with a win.

Of course, this is going to be a case of what-if’s and what-about’s are going to be flying all across the world of college football.

But for those that want Norvell, he’s not available any sooner.

Now, if Julie Cromer Peoples has someone already lined up that’s not Malzahn or Norvell, we’ll know this week, but if there’s no announcement, I think one of those two will be the primary targets.

Get ready for a wild ride this week.

Bielema’s firing handled only way it could have been

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FAYETTEVILLE — Bret Bielema was going to be fired at the end of the Missouri game.

What we had heard after the infamous Board of Trustees meeting a couple of weeks ago was Chancellor Joe Steinmetz was instructed to let athletics director Jeff Long go and Bielema was to be fired in a time period after the LSU game and the end of the Missouri game.

Well, interim athletics director Julie Cromer Peoples handled that last part with a press release handed to media members awaiting Bielema at the end of Missouri’s 48-45 win Saturday night.

Clearly the decision had been made long before Tucker McCann’s 19-yard field goal with five seconds left secured the win for the Tigers.

In reality, the decision wasn’t that hard if Arkansas cared anything at all about being winners.

Bielema, hired in December 2012 amid much fanfare, hadn’t done much in his five seasons, finished 11-29 in the SEC and a 29-33 overall record.

Like I said, it wasn’t that hard of a decision if the Razorbacks wanted to be able to say winning mattered with anything resembling a straight face.

Immediately after the game there was some grumbling among media members about letting him go that quickly.

Bielema’s official termination letter is here.

“I was informed coming off the field that I’ll no longer be the coach at Arkansas,” Bielema said later.

Well, that wasn’t exactly right.

He clarified it later when asked. Bielema gets a little slack here because, in a profession where you are hired to be fired, he had never been terminated before or even been on a staff where the head coach was fired.

“I have a little office over here,” he said when asked about it later. “So it was private. I’ve never been let go before.”

He remained as mystified by the entire process as most things he’s encountered in the last year or so. That’s understandable, too.

Bielema did a lot of positive things in his time at Arkansas. Unfortunately, though, most of it wasn’t winning games.

“Because I didn’t win games, I can brag about my GPA,” he said later.

Many fans criticized the manner he was fired. While it certainly appeared to outsiders they were waiting on him to walk off the field to swing the axe, the guess here everybody — and that includes Bielema — knew how this was going down.

In his rambling sort of way, Bielema pretty much admitted he was on board with the way this went down with my thoughts in parenthes, trying to explain it. The media has had to more or less do this with every press conference for nearly six years.

“Glad I had the chance (to tell his players himself),” he said later. “I did like (being able to do it in person), obviously, everybody’s probably like, oh, they got him right after that.

“But I’d much rather have it this way than think about it. I was going on the road recruiting tomorrow, so that kind of sums that up (no need to pack).

“I got a chance to say goodbye to at least 80 of those players in that locker room. A lot of emotion running through there, and I think that’s a great indication of the trademark or imprint you’ve had on their lives.”

As Cromer Peoples said in the press conference later (which was set up a couple of hours before the kickoff of the Missouri game, we were told later), she wanted Bielema to be able to tell his players personally so they wouldn’t hear about it on social media or television.

While you may not like how it was handled, it really couldn’t have been handled any other way.

In the end, Bielema didn’t have a problem with the way it went down, which is the strongest indicator that everybody involved knew how it was coming.

Which is why the fans shouldn’t be worried about it, either.

Peoples talks about timing of firing, search for new coach

Arkansas interim athletics director Julie Cromer Peoples met with the media Saturday evening at Barnhill Arena to address the firing of football coach Bret Bielema.

Hogs can’t come back on North Carolina, fall 87-68

 

PORTLAND, Ore. — Roy Williams was able to find the one flaw in Luke Maye’s otherwise nearly spotless performance.

Oh, those turnovers.

“The young man is really, really intelligent and he’s finally starting to play basketball with his brain involved too,” the North Carolina coach said. “Except for his turnovers.”

Maye, who committed five turnovers, had career-highs with 28 points and 16 rebounds, Kenny Williams had 16 of his 19 points in the second half, and No. 9 North Carolina slowed down high-scoring Arkansas beating the Razorbacks 87-68 on Friday in the semifinals of the PK80 Invitational.

The Tar Heels were smothering on the defensive end, holding the Razorbacks under 80 points for the first time this season. The Razorbacks shot just 32 percent in the first half and were dominated on the boards getting outrebounded 46-30.

Maye carried the Tar Heels offensively for the first 25 minutes before Williams and Joel Berry II got going. Maye made 11 of 16 shots and 11 of his rebounds came at the defensive end. Berry was just 3-of-12 shooting, but he made 7 of 8 free throws. Williams took just three shots in the first half, but was 6-of-9 shooting in the second half.

It all added up to another impressive performance by North Carolina and specifically Maye. The Tar Heels (5-0) will face either Michigan State or UConn in the “Victory Bracket” championship game on Sunday night.

“We have so many guys that can score,” Maye said. “Theo (Pinson) and Kenny and Joel are all capable of hitting shots, getting to the basket. It’s really tough to guard all four of us at the same time.”

Jaylen Barford led Arkansas (4-1) with 21 points and C.J. Jones added 12 off the bench. Daniel Gafford, who was averaging nearly 16 points per game, was hampered by foul trouble and finished with just five points. The Razorbacks also lost second-leading scorer Daryl Macon to a leg injury midway through the second half.

“We came out and wanted to punch them and they punched back,” Arkansas coach Mike Anderson said. “I thought their defense was really good. They did a good job of guarding us and we got some guys in foul trouble and I thought that limited us.”

North Carolina used two first-half runs to take control. Down early, the Tar Heels rattled off 13 straight points to take the lead for good. They followed with a 14-4 run to close the first half and led 37-26 at the break.

Arkansas had a couple of second-half rallies that fell short. The first came after Macon had to be helped off the court due to his leg injury suffered on a baseline drive. Barford scored five straight points and layups from Dustin Thomas and Gafford pulled the Razorbacks within 55-48 with 13:01 left.

Maye tipped in a miss and the Tar Heels scored nine of the next 13 points to build the lead back to 14 on Pinson’s layup with 9:20 remaining.

The lead remained there until consecutive 3s by Jones. Maye missed in the lane and a three-point play by Barford pulled the Razorbacks within 74-68 with 3:32 remaining. It was the final points for Arkansas. Berry hit two free throws and an offensive foul on Arkansas led to Pinson’s thundering one-handed dunk and a 10-point lead with less than 3 minutes left.

Bielema let go immediately after loss to Mizzou

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas coach Bret Bielema has been dismissed by the University of Arkansas, it was announced by interim athletics director Julie Cromer Peoples.

Bielema completed his fifth season as the Razorbacks’ head coach on Friday.

“Shortly after the completion of today’s game, I met with Coach Bret Bielema and informed him of our decision to move forward with new leadership in the Razorback Football program,” Cromer Peoples said. “During the course of the past five seasons, we have not been able to sustain the success on the field that is expected and required at the University of Arkansas.

“There is no question that Coach Bielema has been a valued and respected member of our department and has made a positive impact on the lives of our student-athletes, including supporting them in their pursuit of graduation.

“We are grateful for his contributions to our program and most importantly his investment in the lives of our student-athletes. We wish him the very best both personally and professionally.

“Our goal has been and will always be to compete and win in the SEC and nationally.

“I firmly believe that with all that the University of Arkansas has to offer, including our history and tradition, our facilities, our passionate fan base and competing in the nation’s best conference, we will attract the interest of many of the top coaches in the nation.”

Named the 32nd head coach in program history in December of 2012, Bielema compiled a 29-34 record over his five seasons.

He led Arkansas to three straight bowl appearances, highlighted by wins over Texas at the 2014 Texas Bowl and Kansas State at the 2016 Liberty Bowl.

In 2014, Arkansas became the first unranked team in college football history to post back-to-back shutouts over ranked opponents after blanking No. 20 LSU and No. 8 Ole Miss.

Macon, Barford pace Hogs to win over OU in PK80

 

PORTLAND, Ore. — Daryl Macon scored a season-high 27 points, Jaylen Barford added 19 and Arkansas remained unbeaten, holding off Oklahoma 92-83 on Thursday in the opening round of the PK80 Invitational.

Daniel Gafford added 13 points for the Razorbacks (4-0), including a 17-footer with 1:01 remaining for a four-point lead.

Oklahoma missed twice on its next possession and Gafford added two more free throws to clinch Arkansas’s second 4-0 start in the past 11 seasons.

The Razorbacks will face North Carolina on Friday.

Freshman Trae Young led the Sooners (2-1) with 28 points, but Oklahoma had just one field goal in a five-minute span late in the game.

Oklahoma also went cold from behind the 3-point line hitting just 2 of 12 attempts in the second half. Christian James added 13 points and Khadeem Lattin had 10 for the Sooners.

Arkansas was able to slow down Oklahoma’s scoring onslaught to open the season.

After scoring 108 points in each of their first two games, the Sooners shot 47 percent overall and just 42 percent in the second half.

The Sooners were shooting 56 percent through their first two games.

Macon tied his career-high with six 3-pointers. It was his sixth 3 with 7:25 left that gave Arkansas a 72-67 lead.

For a brief period, Young tried to rally the Sooners by himself.

He scored seven straight points, capped by a 35-foot 3-pointer to pull the Sooners within 76-74.

The teams proceeded to exchange free throws for the next three minutes. Dustin Thomas split a pair to give Arkansas an 83-79 lead.

The Razorbacks were unable to take advantage of a careless Oklahoma turnover and Young’s free throws with 1:29 left cut the deficit to two.

But Gafford was open on the baseline and with the shot clock dwindling hit a 17-footer to push the lead back to 85-81.

The Razorbacks were 9-of-18 on 3-pointers, but started the game 7-of-8 from behind the arc. Arkansas was shooting 37 percent on 3s.

The Sooners missed their first six 3-point attempts to start the second half after making 6 of 17 3s in the first half. Young and Jordan Shepherd were the only ones to make 3s in the second half.

Hopefully, Hogs won’t ruin some great holiday meals

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Happy Thanksgiving!

Hopefully you bagged that big ol’ deer and had enough food to make you start checking every available diet out there.

Now there’s a football game left to be played, in case any of your were wondering (and judging by the availability of tickets for as little as $3 online a lot of you aren’t).

It may be one of the worst matchups for Arkansas of the season, which is the bad news.

Since coach Barry Odom basically threw a hissy fit with the Tigers sitting at 1-5, they have won five straight, in convincing fashion.

How convincing? The average score is 52-17. They also beat three straight SEC opponents by an average score of 47-17.

Don’t look at what they did prior to that. Whatever happened after the sixth game completely turned this Missouri team around.

Offensively they are balanced and the running game can do as much damage as quarterback Drew Lock, who has benefitted from the running game which ran for 433 yards against Tennessee, a team that has already lost it’s coach, but still may be a better team than the Razorbacks.

Defensively they are averaging holding teams under 100 yards a game for the last five matchups.

For Bret Bielema, none of this is good.

With a running game that has struggled all season, facing a defense giving up less than 100 yards a game is a challenge.

With a defense that gave up 38 points to the worst team in the Sun Belt, well, Missouri could put up another 600 yards like they did against Tennessee.

Hog fans holding out hope can’t even find a motivational reason they like. The only one anybody can come up with is the players putting together one last hurrah in what is likely to be Bielema’s last game.

That might work if the other team doesn’t have much to play for, but Missouri is trying to get to a better bowl game, something they’ve missed the last couple of years as the Odom era got off to a sputtering start.

He was on the hot seat until the last five weeks when he has shown the folks at Missouri he has the Tigers on a forward path.

Bielema hasn’t and, in fact, has nothing to substantiate his promises that things are going to get better. After five years, those promises have become a little hollow.

The final question is how many folks will show up at Razorback Stadium to see this one.

Sadly, the guess here is it won’t be many.

Predicting a score is pointless. Suffice it to say, it will likely play out like so many games this season.

Look for the Hogs to keep it close in the first half. The second half, which has been the problem all season, will be one again.

The Tigers will probably pull away in the second half for whatever final margin they choose.

Victoria reaches 600 in loss to No. 6 Kentucky

FAYETTEVILLE — Redshirt senior and newly named All-SEC selection Pilar Victoria registered a double-double while freshman Hailey Dirrigl put down 12 kills but No. 6 Kentucky came away with a straight-set win Wednesday night at Barnhill Arena.

With 17 kills against the Wildcats, Victoria became the second player in program history to record 600 kills in a single season.

The Razorbacks are now 18-11 this season with an 8-9 mark in SEC play.

Arkansas returns to the floor Saturday afternoon for its season finale, hosting Auburn on Senior Day.

Prior to the match, the Razorbacks’ senior class of Victoria, Krista Kolbinskie and Kori Ortiz will be celebrated. First serve is scheduled for 1 p.m. (CT).

FINAL
No. 6 Kentucky 3, Arkansas 0 (25-16, 25-17, 25-23) | Box Score
Attendance: 958 | Time: 1:29
Barnhill Arena (Fayetteville, Ark.)

#RazorStats
• Leaders vs #6 Kentucky
o Kills: Pilar Victoria – 17
o Digs: Pilar Victoria – 11
o Blocks: Three tied with 4.0
• Double-Doubles
o Pilar Victoria – 17 kills, 11 digs

With Wednesday’s output, Victoria has now tallied at least 15 kills in 25 of 29 matches this season. Her first kill of the match doubled as her 600th of the season.

She and program kills leader Krystal Osborne are now the only Razorbacks to eclipse the figure in a single season.

Victoria completed the 30th double-double of her Arkansas career with a team-high 11 digs. In 29 matches this season, the senior co-captain is averaging 5.45 kills per set.

Sophomore setter Rachel Rippee had 32 assists in the match to go along with five digs, four total blocks, three kills and two service aces.

With her 19th assist against Kentucky, she moved into eighth on Arkansas’ single-season assists list and now has an SEC-leading 1,269 assists this season.

Rippee was one of three Razorbacks with four blocks against UK along with Kelly O’Brien and Elizabeth Pamphile.

With her six digs, junior libero Okiana Valle became the second player in program history with three seasons of 400 or more digs.

She joins program career digs leader Ashley Miller (2004-07) on that short list.

Kentucky (25-3, 16-1 SEC) jumped out to a 2-0 match lead but the Razorbacks had a quick start to the third set, taking the 6-3 lead after an ace by Victoria.

In a frame that featured 12 ties, Arkansas used back-to-back kills from Victoria and Dirrigl to go ahead 20-18 and force a UK timeout.

However, the Wildcats won six of the next seven points to arrive at match point. The Razorbacks saved two match points with a Dirrigl-Pamphile block followed by another kill from Dirrigl but with its lead down to 24-23, Kentucky got a kill off the block to secure the sweep.