Paint and boards undo Hogs in 95-73 road loss at Auburn

AUBURN, Ala. — Arkansas walked into Neville Arena on Saturday afternoon hoping to add another SEC road data point worth circling.

Instead, the Razorbacks walked out with a 95-73 loss and a reminder that conference margins are rarely polite.

This one didn’t unravel all at once. It pressed, leaned, and eventually tipped. Auburn kept applying pressure until the math stopped favoring the visitors.

The Hogs arrived at 12-4 overall and 2-1 in league play, carrying momentum from a recent win over Ole Miss.

That momentum held just long enough to confirm it existed.

The Tigers wasted little time establishing their identity. The ball moved, shots fell, and the paint belonged to the home team from the opening stretch.

Junior guard Darius Acuff Jr. led Arkansas with 19 points, working through traffic and contact to keep the offense functional when possessions tightened.

Meleek Thomas added 17 points off the bench, providing needed scoring bursts when the Razorbacks searched for answers. Malique Ewin chipped in a double-double with 13 points and 12 rebounds.

Trevon Brazile contributed 12 points and five boards, but the Hogs shot just 43 percent overall and struggled to string together defensive stops.

Auburn, meanwhile, shot 57 percent and turned clean looks into steady damage. The Tigers’ efficiency never let the game breathe.

By halftime, Arkansas trailed 49-34, the product of a 15-3 run that quietly tilted the floor. The Razorbacks weren’t finished, but the climb was already steep.

Paint control sets the tone early

The second half followed a familiar script. The Hogs pushed pace, tried different looks, and briefly trimmed the margin, but Auburn answered with baskets at the rim.

The Tigers scored 48 points in the paint, an area Arkansas couldn’t consistently protect without giving something else away.

Rebounding told the rest of the story. Auburn won the glass 37-28 and converted those extra possessions into 18 second-chance points.

For the Razorbacks, those numbers turned effort into frustration. Stops were there in moments, just not in sequence.

Keyshawn Hall made sure those moments didn’t linger. He finished with 30 points on 11-of-14 shooting, including 4 of 5 from three, and added five assists.

Hall said afterward the Tigers focused on being aggressive and finishing plays, a simple formula Arkansas couldn’t disrupt once it took hold.

Tahaad Pettiford added balance with seven assists and eight points, keeping the offense organized while the Hogs chased.

By the final stretch, the outcome felt settled. Auburn closed cleanly, extending the margin to 22 and turning the closing minutes into maintenance work.

The Razorbacks leave Neville Arena at 12-4 overall and 2-1 in SEC play, carrying a road lesson that won’t need much explaining back home.

Arkansas returns to Fayetteville next, where the conversation will center on paint defense, rebounding discipline, and how quickly the Hogs respond when the league exposes gaps.

Key takeaways

  • Auburn’s control of the paint and the glass shaped the game from the opening stretch and never loosened its grip.
  • Arkansas received needed scoring from its bench, but defensive stops never arrived in enough sequence to matter.
  • SEC road games punish small mistakes, and the Razorbacks learned that lesson quickly at Neville Arena.

Razorbacks analyst Matt Zimmerman on relationship between former coaches

How current Hogs coach John Calipari and former coach Nolan Richardson interact on a regular basis and Arkansas headed to Auburn.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: 1-9-26


Tye and Colton talk Ole Miss and Miami from last night, make their picks for the weekend, and the road trip for the Razorbacks to Auburn.

Guests: Matt Zimmerman!

Razorbacks’ Dave Van Horn looking ahead to preseason starting

Previewing season and updating media on roster changes, including player he was counting on to boost the bats.

Democrat-Gazette’s Tom Murphy on where Acuff’s’ start ranking with Hogs

In a line of good guards, how freshman’s start to season stacking up with some of the biggest names in program history.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: 1-8-26

Tye and Colton break down all the action in SEC hoops last night, talk about more additions in the transfer portal and more!

Razorbacks use late free throws to finish off Ole Miss on road

OXFORD, Miss. — Arkansas didn’t need a perfect night to win on the road Wednesday.

It needed composure, free throws and a guard willing to slow everything down when Ole Miss tried to speed it up.

The Razorbacks checked those boxes and left Oxford with a 94-87 Southeastern Conference win over the Rebels, leaning on late execution rather than momentum or noise.

Darius Acuff Jr. scored 26 points and handed out nine assists as Arkansas improved to 12-3 overall and 2-0 in league play.

Ole Miss fell to 8-7 and 0-2 in the SEC after another competitive game that slipped away late.

Arkansas never fully pulled away, but it also never let the game tilt out of control.

Razorbacks build lead before halftime

The tone was set late in the first half.

After an even opening stretch, Arkansas put together a 10-2 run that created a 42-32 halftime lead. The Razorbacks didn’t overwhelm Ole Miss offensively, but they were efficient and limited mistakes.

That margin mattered the rest of the night.

Ole Miss spent much of the second half trying to chip away at the deficit rather than playing from even footing.

Arkansas never trailed after the early minutes.

Free throws decide the final minutes

As Ole Miss made its push late, the difference came at the free-throw line.

Arkansas went 22 of 30 from the stripe, repeatedly slowing the game and preventing the Rebels from finding rhythm. Acuff led the way, hitting 11 of 12 free throws and answering each Ole Miss surge with calm possessions.

When the Rebels cut the deficit to 91-87 in the final minute, Acuff knocked down a short jumper, then added free throws to close the game.

Trevon Brazile scored 18 points and also converted key free throws down the stretch to keep Arkansas in control.

Balanced scoring gives Arkansas options

Arkansas placed five players in double figures, a balance that prevented Ole Miss from focusing on one scorer.

Billy Richmond III and Meleek Thomas each finished with 13 points, while Karter Knox added 10.

That depth allowed Arkansas to maintain spacing and patience even when shots weren’t falling consistently.

The Razorbacks didn’t rely on a single run to finish the game.

They relied on options.

Rebels rally but come up short

Ole Miss received solid production across the lineup. Ilias Kamardine and Malik Dia scored 16 points each, AJ Storr added 12, Eduardo Klafke scored 11 in the second half and Patton Pinkins finished with 10.

The Rebels stayed within range most of the night and briefly made the final minutes uncomfortable.

What they couldn’t do was string together enough stops to flip the game.

Each push was met by free throws, clock control or both.

Arkansas starts conference play with control

Arkansas opened last season’s SEC slate with five straight losses before recovering late. This year’s group is taking a different approach.

The Razorbacks are winning close games early by limiting mistakes and closing at the line.

Wednesday’s win wasn’t flashy, but it was effective — especially in a league where road wins are scarce.

Arkansas travels to Auburn next, while Ole Miss returns home to face Missouri still searching for its first conference win.