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Dauda flips to Razorbacks from Baylor after Mulkey’s exit to LSU

Maryam Dauda, the highly touted post player from Bentonville, is coming home to play for Arkansas after signing with Baylor last fall.

Now Mike Neighbors has a roster as talented as any in school history.

LSU coach Kim Mulkey was the coach of the Bears who recruited Dauda there, but left last month for LSU in her home state.

Dauda will be joined by fellow five-star freshman Jersey Wolfenbarger from Fort Smith, five-star redshirt freshman Elauna Eaton, and 2021 signees Emrie Ellis, Ashlyn Sage and Samara Spencer.

Oregon State transfer Sasha Goforth, who was a five-star recruit and McDonald’s All-American coming out of Fayetteville High School two years ago, will also be on the 2021-22 roster.

“Everyone in this state has seen her lead her Bentonville team to great success,” Neighbors said in a press release. “Offensively, she can score on the block and stretch the floor to the three-point line. She’s an 80-percent free throw shooter and is a capable, willing passer. She runs the court like she’s a guard and can finish in transition, making her the perfect fit for our roster.

“Defensively she changes the game in the lane. She has incredible ability to affect shots with her timing, and she also has a knack for blocking shots without fouling. I have no idea how tall they will list her in the program but she plays taller than whatever that number will be.”

Dauda, the 13th ranked player and top ranked center in ESPN’s HoopGurlz Recruiting Top 100 Rankings, put together a sensational high school career at Bentonville.

During her senior season, Dauda was dominant, averaging 17 points, 8.1 rebounds and 2.6 blocks per game while shooting 61.5 percent from the field and 41.5 percent from deep. Her junior season was just as good, as she posted averages of 16.6 points, 8.2 rebounds and 2.6 blocks per contest in 28 games.

Both her senior and junior seasons were cut short, though. A knee injury prematurely ended her final high school season, while covid-19 pandemic shortened her junior season.

For her efforts, Dauda has racked up the accolades during her high school career. The 6-4 post player was a four-time All-Conference selection, a three-time All-State selection, a McDonald’s All-American and a semi-finalist for the Jersey Mike’s National High School Player of the Year Award.

She is also the leading scorer, rebounder, and shot blocker in the history of Bentonville High School.

“She’s a warm, caring teammate that turns into a fierce competitor the second she steps on the court,” Neighbors continued. “I can say with some experience we have never had a player like her in a Razorback uniform.

“And for us, the most exciting part is also what we’ve been saying since we first saw her play — her best basketball is still ahead of her. You don’t often say that about a McDonald’s All American.”

By flipping Dauda, Neighbors has now assembled a roster that features a lot of elite talent from the state of Arkansas.

Over the last two recruiting cycles, all four of the state’s top-50 recruits now call Bud Walton Arena home.

Redshirt junior Erynn Barnum, the 14th-ranked wing player in the 2018 class, and a Little Rock native, and Marquesha Davis, who was a highly touted recruit out of Springdale High School,  are also still on the roster.

Dauda, originally from Nigeria, came to the United State entering her sixth-grade year. She hadn’t played basketball until coming to America.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

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Baum-Walker will be open for full capacity for Florida series

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Shortly after the national updated guidelines regarding masks and other covid stuff, Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek wasted little time opening up next weekends final series against Florida.

The Razorbacks’ final regular-season series will be against Florida next weekend and tickets go on sale Friday morning at 9 a.m.

The CDC revised guidelines Thursday and said fully vaccinated people do not have to wear masks outdoors or indoors. The complete vaccination cycle includes all required shots and the two-week waiting period.

Exactly how it’s determined whether someone is fully vaccinated or not isn’t known, yet.

But the guess is probably pretty good there will be a large crowd with the last series of the year being the first one fully open in Fayetteville.

Other schools have either officially or unofficially open for several series for over a month. Masks have been required to get in, but pretty much ignored once fans got in at many schools across the league.

Tennessee will be fully open for the Razorbacks’ visit this weekend, but compared to Baum-Walker Stadium that will seem like a small, intimate, gathering of just over 4,700 fans.

The listed capacity for Baum-Walker is 10,737, but the record attendance is when 13,472 crowded in for a game against Southern California back on March 3, 2018.

Hogs can’t get bats working in 1-0 loss to Lady Vols

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Tennessee’s solo home run in the fifth inning was all the Lady Vols needed to eliminate Arkansas in the SEC Tournament quarterfinals.

Razorbacks (40-9) pitcher Mary Haff allowed just two hits and struck out five in the tough-luck loss.

How it happened

Both pitchers sailed through the first three innings as Haff did not allow a baserunner, while Tennessee’s Ashley Rogers surrendered just two walks to outfielders Sam Torres and Hannah McEwen in the third.

Haff retired 12 batters in a row to begin the game, but in the top of the fifth, Ally Shipman yanked a solo home run to left for the contest’s first hit, giving the visitors a 1-0 lead.

Outfielder Aly Manzo broke up Rogers’ no-hit bid by singling to right leading off the fifth inning. After an unsuccessful sacrifice bunt attempt, infielder Keely Huffine’s hit by pitch put runners on first and second with one out.

Back-to-back strikeouts ended Arkansas’ best scoring threat.

The Lady Vols collected a harmless double in the top of the seventh for their only other hit. Catcher Kayla Green drew a walk to leadoff the bottom of the seventh, but a popped-up sacrifice bunt, a flyout and a groundout ended the game.

Haff (23-6) did not walk a batter and threw just 79 pitches. Tennessee’s Ashley Rogers (25-8) allowed just one hit, walked three and fanned 12 hitters.

Arkansas dropped to 2-2 all-time in the SEC Tournament against the Lady Vols, with every game decided by one run.

The Razorbacks will find out their NCAA Tournament assignment at 8 p.m. on Sunday as part of the selection show on ESPN2.

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Bob Holt on press conference earlier Thursday with Vols coach Tony Vitello ahead of big series plus Eric Musselman adding another NBA presence.

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Craft thinks Hogs ‘want to finish what they started’ at tournament

KTHV’s Dorian Craft is not expecting Arkansas to back off at SEC Tournament waiting for NCAA to finish successful season.