Goins’ equalizer not enough to stop Aggies for title

ORANGE BEACH, Ala. — Arkansas its amazing run come to an end Sunday afternoon as No. 11 Texas A&M scored a go-ahead goal in the 88th minute to win the 2017 SEC Tournament title.

After Arkansas (11-10-2) fell behind in the first half on an own goal, freshman Parker Goins equalized her team in the 81st minute with her ninth goal of the year, possibly sending the match to overtime. Unfortunately, the Aggies took the lead for good in the 88th minute on an individual effort score by Emily Bates, sealing the championship for Texas A&M.

“There’s two ways to look at this game,” Arkansas coach Colby Hale said. “We’ve played five games in 11 days and played well enough to win today, but we’re not a moral victory team. It stinks. This is probably one we’ll need a day or two to recover from, but obviously there were a lot of positives. The work they’ve put in is superhuman and I’m very impressed with that.”

The loss to the Aggies ended an improbable run by the Razorbacks, who were the eight-seed coming into the tournament, but still reached the final for the second-consecutive year.

Arkansas was the lowest-seeded team to ever make the final and was playing in its fourth game in eight days.

Arkansas played Texas A&M tough, taking seven shots in 90 minutes with two going on target. The team even had its chances with set pieces as it won the corners game, 5-4.

Of the four goals scored throughout the tournament, two had come off of either a corner kick or a free kick.

The defense of the Razorbacks was on full display, as well, on Sunday. Even though the Aggies put 11 shots up, only five actually hit the target.

Redshirt junior goalkeeper Jordan Harris made four saves, one away from tying her season high.

For the tournament, the New Mexico native made 14 saves, leading all goalkeepers in the field, and allowed three goals in 380 minutes for a 0.71 goals against average, the second lowest for any keeper in the tournament.

For her strong play, Harris was named to the all-tournament team along with freshmen Taylor Malham and Haley VanFossen.

Both Malham and VanFossen was key components of getting Arkansas to the championship game.

Malham scored the game-winner in the first round against nine-seed Ole Miss, while VanFossen had the game-winning assist in the 1-0 shutout to take out top-seeded South Carolina.

For much of the first half, Arkansas and Texas A&M traded possession balls at midfield, getting multiple looks in each attacking side, but neither team getting a very good look at the net.

A great chance for Arkansas came in the 36th minute when Reid Sibley received a great through ball from Stefani Doyle and just had to beat the keeper on the right side.

Texas A&M goalkeeper Cosette Morche came off her line and disrupted Sibley just enough to not allow a strong shot at the goal.

One minute later, A&M scored the game’s first goal as a cross came in from the right side, but the clearance attempt by Tori Cannata deflected the ball into the right side of Arkansas’ net.

Texas A&M took that 1-0 lead at halftime, but Arkansas came out as the aggressors in the second half. All five of the Razorbacks’ shot attempts went on target, including Goins’ long-range strike from 15 yards out.

With just 10 minutes remaining in regulation, Goins corralled a ball that pinballed around after a throw in and one-timed it past the keeper on the far post to tie the match at 1-1. Goins continues to lead the team in points (25) and goals (9) this season and ranks fourth and fifth in the conference, respectively, in those categories.

Goins’ rocket wasn’t enough as Texas A&M scored its second goal just seven minutes later to re-take the lead for good.

Even with the gut-wrenching loss to end the tournament, Hale believes his team has many more memories to make as the postseason continues next week.

“We came together as a team this week,” Hale said. “We peaked at the right time, got some performances that were pretty good, and I can’t imagine anyone is going to watch that game and say ‘Dear god, I hope we get the Razorbacks.’”

Arkansas sets its sights on what’s to come, as the NCAA Tournament will begin next week. The selection show for the national tournament is set for tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. CT and will be televised on NCAA.com.

Bielema’s won a couple of battles, but not the war

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FAYETTEVILLE — For the second straight week, Bret Bielema got a win he didn’t deserve.

At one point the television cameras caught Bielema with that sort of dazed and confused look he has at times in close games.

“That’s your interpretation,” he said. “I didn’t want them to see the word I was going to say. If you’re good at interpreting my facial reactions, I’m all for you.”

Well, of course, everybody’s getting good at it.

Especially when his teams tend to come out and stumble around against teams they should be handling.

Oh, the 39-38 squeaker over Coastal Carolina will go into the victory column, giving Arkansas a 4-5 record that looks better on paper than it actually is. That comes on the heels of a 39-38 win over Ole Miss last week.

Yeah, they are wins and nobody will dispute it beats a loss, but they don’t pass the eye test and more and more Bielema isn’t passing the eye test.

Just to give you a quick perspective, Arkansas has now won back-to-back one-point games where it had to come from behind against the worst team in the SEC West and a team that lost to Arkansas State, 51-17.

Bielema is starting to look like the guy that gets a beer poured over his head and he asks if it’s raining. He was in full spin control.

“Obviously, it was a game that our guys battled through,” he said later. “In the first half, anything that could go wrong did go wrong.”

Whether he intended to or not, Bielema more or less pointed the finger at himself and the coaching staff when asked about playing down to the level of a 1-7 opponent.

“Well, there’s no doubt in my mind we didn’t play as clean as we wanted to,” he said. “But we had a good week of preparation. I thought our guys were engaged.”

To interpret the coach-speak there, that means one of two things:

• The talent level isn’t there if they did have a good week preparing.

• The motivation isn’t there.

“The think I learned in this business a long time ago is anybody can beat anybody on either side,” he said, which is the standard fallback line when coaches don’t win a game the way they should.

Even LSU has had that problems. Bielema tried to point that out, I think. He had one of those half-sentence moments where the thought doesn’t make it to the finish line.

“LSU, they beat earlier by somebody they didn’t think — or the outside world thought that,” he said.

Don’t worry. You get used to figuring it out.

“Football is football, man,” he said. “You get a couple of big plays, it goes against you, you don’t catch a break, bad things can happen.”

Yeah, they can. It’s kinda like a war, which is made up of a lot of individual battles.

The win over Coastal Carolina one wasn’t as close as the one at Ole Miss, mainly because the Chanticleers panicked after Cole Kelley’s 1-yard run finally put the Razorbacks ahead, 39-38, with 1:55 to play.

“They got the momentum and we couldn’t get it back,” interim Coastal Carolina coach Jamey Chadwell said later. “We were trying to make a play.”

That was when the Hogs fumbled the ball on the 1-yard line when Austin Cantrell dropped it, but Johnny Gibson was able to fall on it.

Were there chances for Arkansas to put this one away? Yes.

Kelley came within inches of completing a 54-yard Hail Mary pass to Jonathan Nance at the end of the first half, but replay ruled the ball never crossed the goal, despite initially being ruled a touchdown.

That left the Hogs ahead 17-14 at the half.

Then Coastal Carolina proceeded to win the second half. Yes, a Sun Belt team won the third and fourth quarters against an Arkansas team that apparently still hasn’t gotten the hang of handling things after halftime.

Arkansas won the game because, simply, they had much better players.

And T.J. Hammonds.

After the Chanticleers had gone up 38-25 early in the final period, Hammonds took a simple handoff to the left, found a hole big enough for Bielema to run through and out-raced everyone 88 yards for the socre with 10:09 to play.

Coastal Carolina folded at that point.

Arkansas won this battle the same way they won the one at Ole Miss.

The Hogs had a little better luck against a team with lesser talent both weeks.

More than luck may be needed the rest of the way.

LSU has more players who are bigger, faster and stronger.

“It should be a fun week of preparation and we don’t have many of these left,” Bielema said.

We’ll see if he feels that way next Saturday evening.

Even though he’s won these last two battles, he hasn’t done a whole lot of convincing anyone he can win the war, which has three big obstacles left.

And if he doubts that, all he had to do Saturday was look in the stands.

By the end of the game, the 35,000 that started out (ignore the 61,476 announced attendance, which was an outright lie) had dwindled to less than 20,000.

When the fans don’t care how you do in the battle, they’ve already given up hope in the war.

Which may be Bielema’s biggest November battle.

Bielema on getting needed win over Coastal Carolina

Arkansas coach Bret Bielema talked with the media after the Razorbacks’ nail-biting 39-38 win over Coastal Carolina on homecoming.

Hammonds on run that got Arkansas going in fourth

Arkansas running back T.J. Hammonds talked about the 88-yard run he had in the final period, getting the Hogs back from a two-score deficit.

Williams talked about Hogs’ offensive effort in win

Arkansas running back David Williams was named the winner of Crip Hall Award, given to a senior in the homecoming game.

Ramirez didn’t feel defense played sharp in win

Arkansas safety Santos Ramirez wasn’t happy with the way the defense played in win over Coastal Carolina.

Hogs get win in final exhibition tuneup, 88-74

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas concluded exhibition play Friday night, defeating the Missouri Western Griffons 88-74 inside Bud Walton Arena.

With the combination of a slow start offensively by the Razorbacks and hot shooting by the Griffons, Arkansas found itself down as many as eight early.

The Hogs turned up the pressure, creating four turnovers to spark an 11-0 run to take a three-point lead with 7:25 left in the first half.

Arkansas used a 7-0 run to close out the half, as senior guard Jaylen Barford scored five, to hold a 41-35 lead at the break. Barford scored 12 first-half points, while senior guard Daryl Macon led all scorers with 14 of his own.

The Griffons kept the contest close with their three-point shooting, hitting 14 in the contest, going 14-of-27 from behind the arc for an astounding 52 percent.

Missouri Western was able to get within one during the second half but Arkansas never gave up its lead, in large part to its free throw shooting. The Razorbacks went 26-of-31 from the line as a team, as 16 of their final 32 points came from the charity stripe to put the Griffons away.

Freshman big man Daniel Gafford’s presence down low was on full display, as he finished with 15 points on 5-of-6 shooting from the floor, to go along with a game-high eight rebounds and five blocks. Gafford helped Arkansas control the paint, edging the Griffons 34-16 in paint points.

When Arkansas needed to, it created havoc Friday night, forcing 19 turnovers, turning them into 32 points on the other end. The Razorbacks outscored Missouri Western 14-0 on fast break points.

Four Razorbacks finished in double-figures as Barford led the way with 23 and Macon followed with 22, who was a large part in Arkansas’ free throw shooting, going 9-9 from the free throw line. Senior guard Anton Beard also finished in double figures with 12 of his own.

Arkansas opens regular season play next Friday, Nov. 10, as the Razorbacks host the Samford Bulldogs for a 7 p.m. tip off in Bud Walton Arena. The game can be streamed on SEC Network Plus.

Hogs In Exhibitions
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Arkansas improves to 14-0 in exhibition games under head coach Mike Anderson.

 The Razorbacks have won those 14 games by an average of 29.9 points.

 During Anderson’s 15-plus years as a head coach, he is 32-0 all-time in exhibitions.

 Dating back to a 74-47 victory over Texas A&M Commerce to open the 2004-05 season, Arkansas has won 28 consecutive exhibition games.

Anderson on Hogs’ play in final exhibition tuneup

Arkansas coach Mike Anderson met with the media after the Razorbacks’ 88-74 win over Missouri Western in the final exhibition game of the preseason.

Gafford, Mason on Hogs’ getting win Friday night

Arkansas’ Daniel Gafford and Daryl Macon visited with the media after the Hogs’ 88-74 win over Missouri Western in the final exhibition game Friday night.

Weiberg talks about Hogs turning up defensive pressure

Missouri Western coach Matt Wieberg talked about how when they needed to, the Razorbacks turned up the pressure and pulled away.