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Hogs put away Rattlers after slow-developing first half

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If you were a little nervous at halftime, join the crowd.

Oh, nobody expected Arkansas to lose to Florida A&M but they did expect things to be a little more separated than the 21-0 score.

Not that it mattered as the Razorbacks put 28 on the board in the second half for a 49-7 win over the Rattlers before a small, intimate gathering announced at 36,055.

That attendance total obviously included a few thousand fans disguised as empty seats.

Bielema was just glad to come out with a win.

“We had some speed bumps in that first half,” he said later, “which was good to overcome, get those out of our way.”

At least the fans are hoping they are out of the way.

The Hogs’ offense sputtered, with three punts and an interception before the first score, a 5-yard run up the middle by Devwah Whaley with 1:15 left in the first quarter that finally produced a 7-0 lead.

Quarterback Austin Allen struggled, mainly with a pass rush that got to him several times and even though Florida A&M had just one sack, many times they were arriving as he delivered the pass.

“He was good, but he’s got some things he needs work through,” Bielema said.

It was attributed to new receivers.

“New wide receivers, new tight ends, a couple new offensive linemen,” Bielema said.

Youth at the wide receiver was cited.

“Those guys need to understand that’s not just a dropped pass, that’s a dropped possession,” he said.

Which goes back to one of our big questions: How is the football IQ of the young wide receivers?

“One of the things that we’re constantly on our guys about is football IQ,” he said. “We have to raise our awareness on third downs, especially offensively.”

Early that was obvious.

It took until midway through the second quarter for the offense to click as Allen found Deon Stewart wide open in the end zone for a 16-yard score and a 14-0 lead with 7:54 before halftime.

“We were a bit rusty early,” Allen said later.

David Williams added a late score with 1:21 left in the half on a 4-yard run, the first of two scores for the graduate transfer. That made it 21-0.

Nobody knows what defensive coordinator said at halftime, but the defense came out charged up in the second half.

On a third-and-20 on the first series of the third quarter, Gabe Richardson blasted the Rattlers’ Hans Supre, Henre Tolliver picked it up and ran in from 18 yards out.

That made it 28-0 and things started clicking.

Hayden added another touchdown on the Hogs’ next possession to make it 35-0, then Williams added his second score on the first play of the final period for a 42-0 lead.

From there it was a matter of playing it out. Cole Kelley got a late 7-yard scoring pass to Cheyenne O’Grady that made it 49-0.

It ended up a big Razorback victory.

But you wonder if some questions were answered.

By seeing the number of times Allen finished passes on his back, that wasn’t a good sign.

No matter what Bielema said, Florida A&M is not even in the same league as a non-Power 5 team.

To be honest, it wasn’t an impressive 49-7 win.

 

 

First win in Manhattan lifts Razorbacks to 4-0

MANHATTAN, Kan. — In search of the program’s first-ever road win at Kansas State, Arkansas delivered with a five-set win Friday night over the host Wildcats.

Redshirt senior Pilar Victoria recorded the fourth 30-kill performance of her career, tallying a match-high 34 kills to go along with 14 digs for a double-double.

Setter Rachel Rippee dished out a career-high 57 assists while Hailey Dirrigl and Reagan Robinson posted 11 and 10 kills, respectively.

Kansas State was the first of two weekend opponents that played in last year’s NCAA Tournament.

The Razorbacks return to the court Friday evening for day two of the K-State Invitational, taking on sixth-ranked Wisconsin at 5:30 p.m.

Sunday’s weekend finale against Syracuse is scheduled for 11 a.m. Arkansas’ next home match is Sept. 5 against Oral Roberts at Barnhill Arena.

FINAL
Arkansas 3, Kansas State 2 (21-25, 25-14, 25-23, 15-25, 15-9) | Box Score
Attendance: 1,528 | Time: 2:13
Ahearn Field House (Manhattan, Kan.)

#RazorStats
Leaders at Kansas State

Kills: Pilar Victoria – 34 (fourth 30-kill performance, first against a non-conference opponent)

Digs: Okiana Valle – 15

Blocks: Kelly O’Brien – 3.0 (0-3)

On the first point of the decisive fifth set, Arkansas (4-0) set the tone with a tandem block by Rippee and Elizabeth Pamphile.

The teams traded points until the score was tied at 5-all and Robinson put down back-to-back kills to push the lead to 7-5 and force a Kansas State timeout.

The Razorbacks went up 13-9 after a successful challenge by coach Jason Watson reversed a no-net call and gave Victoria her final kill of the night.

With the help of errors by Kansas State (2-2) on the next two plays, Arkansas secured the five-set victory. Robinson tallied three of her 10 kills in the fifth set. Collectively, the Razorbacks posted a .550 hitting percentage in the fifth set with no attack errors.

After a slow start and dropping the first set, Arkansas jumped out to a 6-3 lead in the second set and forced Kansas State into a timeout after an ace by Rippee.

With a pair of Victoria kills and a tandem block by Dirrigl and Kelly O’Brien, Arkansas led 17-9. Robinson served up an ace to give the Razorbacks a handful of set points at 24-13, and on the second opportunity, Victoria evened the match with her 11th kill of the set.

The home team won four of the first five points of the third set before Arkansas steadied and pulled even at 10-all with back-to-back kills by Victoria.

The Razorbacks used a 7-1 run to turn the scoreboard in their favor and won 10 of 12 points for a 17-12 lead after a kill by Dirrigl. The freshman attacker was held without a kill for the first two sets but responded with six in the third set.

Kansas State pulled to within one late but Robinson found the floor on set point for the 2-1 match lead.

The Wildcats controlled the early stages of the fourth set, winning nine of the first 12 points of the frame. Their lead reached 11 at 23-12, and went on to force a fifth set.

Friday’s five setter was the fourth in the all-time series between Arkansas and Kansas State. The Razorbacks have won their last two five-set matches against K-State.

10 things to know for tonight’s opening game

LITTLE ROCK — Arkansas will kick off its 124th season of football, including the fifth under coach Bret Bielema, when the Razorbacks host Florida A&M of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference at 7 p.m. at War Memorial Stadium.

The game will be televised on SEC Network with Tom Hart, Jordan Rodgers and Cole Cubelic on the call.

Below are 10 things to know heading into the season opener:

1. It marks the first time since 2001 that Arkansas will open the season on a Thursday night. Arkansas defeated UNLV in its 2001 season opener. It will also be the program’s first Thursday night game since 2003 when Arkansas took down South Carolina, 28-6.

Both of those games were played at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock. Arkansas is 2-1 in regular-season games on Thursday night since joining the SEC 25 years ago.

2. It will be the first-ever meeting between Arkansas and Florida A&M and the first time since 2009 that the Hogs open the season at War Memorial Stadium.

Florida A&M will be the 12th FCS Bielema has faced during his 11-year head coaching career. He is 11-0 in those contests.

3. Bielema has a staggering 40-4 record against non-conference opponents during the regular season over his 11-year head-coaching career.

Bielema is 10-1 all-time in season-opening games as a head coach at Wisconsin (7-0) and Arkansas (3-1).

Additionally, Bielema has never lost a home opener during his career, posting an 11-0 mark in the first home game of the season.

4. Arkansas is 96-23-4 all-time in season openers and has taken 18 of its last 20. The Razorbacks have also won 10 consecutive home openers and are 99-20-4 (.821) overall in the first home game of the season.

In the past 10 home openers, Arkansas has outscored its opponents by an average of 44.2-14.8.

5. The Hogs return 19 letterwinners on offense with six starters, including the SEC’s leading passer from last year in Austin Allen and All-American center Frank Ragnow.

6. A first-team All-American by Pro Football Focus in 2016, Ragnow has made 26 straight starts heading into his senior campaign. He was also named the nation’s best offensive lineman and best run blocker by PFF last season.

7. Allen, who is back for his senior campaign and second season as the starting signal caller, took the reins at QB from his older brother Brandon a year ago and immediately made his mark.

He led the SEC with 3,430 passing yards, including a league-best 2,291 in conference play and finished with 25 touchdown passes, which ranked second in the conference.

8. One of Allen’s top targets will be senior Jared Cornelius, the veteran of the receiving corps.

Highlighted by three straight 100-plus yard receiving performances, Cornelius recorded 32 receptions for 515 yards and four touchdown catches, while adding a rushing score, last season.

9. After backing up regular-season rushing champion Rawleigh Williams III last season, sophomore Devwah Whaley will be counted on for more carries in 2017 and looks to become the featured running back in the Razorbacks’ offensive attack.

Whaley rushed for 602 yards and three touchdowns on 110 carries in 13 games played a year ago.

10. Led by new defensive coordinator Paul Rhoads, the Razorbacks’ 2017 defense will feature a new 3-4 scheme. Defensively, Arkansas returns 23 letterwinners, including five starters.

Led by captains Santos Ramirez and Kevin Richardson II, the secondary is arguably the most veteran unit on the roster, having combined for 84 starts heading into this season.

Rhoads’ defense also includes Butkus Award candidate middle linebacker Dre Greenlaw, a freshman All-American in 2015 who played only seven games last year due to injury, cornerback Ryan Pulley, who tallied the second-most pass breakups in the SEC, and 2016 SEC All-Freshman Team selections defensive lineman McTelvin Agim and middle linebacker De’Jon Harris.

Arkansas opens season at Pebble Beach again

FAYETTEVILLE — For the fourth straight year, Arkansas will open its fall season at historic Pebble Beach Golf Club, taking part in the seventh annual Carmel Cup.

Ranked No. 33 in the Golfstat preseason poll and receiving votes in the Preseason Bushnell Golfweek Coaches Poll, the Razorbacks return their top six players from a season ago and will send them all to the season-opening tournament in California.

Unlike traditional collegiate tournaments, the Carmel Cup format features six players per team with the top five counting scores contributing to each round’s total.

In golf’s version of the Big 12/SEC Challenge, four programs from each league make up the field that features three of the top six teams in the country.

Live hole-by-hole scoring for all three rounds is available at Golfstat.com or via the Golfstat Live app.

Returning for his sophomore campaign, Mason Overstreet recorded the second-best finish in program history last season, finishing runner-up at the NCAA National Championship as an individual to earn PING All-America honorable mention honors from the Golf Coaches Association of America.

He became the second player in school history to finish inside the top five at the National Championship and was a combined 5-under in three postseason events.

As the only upperclassmen on the traveling squad, senior Alvaro Ortiz and junior Charles Kim will look to capitalize on their experience, combining to play in 53 events, five NCAA Regionals and two NCAA National Championships.

Both players recorded victories during their sophomore seasons and Ortiz finished runner-up at Pebble Beach last season at 12-under.

Coach Brad McMakin enters his 12th season at the helm of the program and has led Arkansas to 10 straight NCAA Regional bids and five NCAA Championship appearances.

He has guided the Razorbacks to 24 tournament titles, including 19 during the last seven years, averaging over 2.7 wins per season.

Arkansas will tee off Friday morning starting at 10 a.m. CT with Vanderbilt, Texas Tech and Oklahoma.

The Rundown
Schedule: Sept. 1-3 | 54 holes, 18 each day
Course: Pebble Beach Golf Club
Yardage: 6,828 – Par 72
Format: Play 6, count 5

Razorback Lineup
1. Mason Overstreet, So.
2. Luis Garza, So.
3. Alvaro Ortiz, Sr.
4. Charles Kim, Jr.
5. William Buhl, So.
6. Dylan Naidoo, So.

The Field
No. 33 Arkansas
No. 31 Georgia
No. 57 Ohio State
No. 6 Oklahoma
No. 3 Oklahoma State
No. 14 Texas Tech
No. 60 TCU
No. 1 Vanderbilt