Arkansas
Two positions key for Arkansas’ success
FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas will be at the SEC Media Days on Thursday which is an indication that football season is near again.
Arkansas is looking to be vastly improved over 2023. The addition of four new assistants on offense including Bobby Petrino calling the plays should help tremendously. Here’s a look at two positions, one on each side of the ball, that could help determine the success in 2024.
Offensive Line
This unit wasn’t good last fall. Eric Mateos has replaced Cody Kennedy coaching the unit. The play calling last fall didn’t help the offensive line or any other position on that side of the football. With Petrino it’s a certainty that will improve. Mateos also has brought in three transfers who are in the starting lineup. Fernando Carmona is stationed at left tackle and Keyshawn Blackstock is at right tackle. That allowed Patrick Kutas to move to his more natural position of guard. He and Joshua Braun are the starting guards. Addison Nichols came from Tennessee and is starting at center. That should be a much better unit than the one last year if everyone plays up to their potential. It is a must this unit is much better because last year’s offensive line gave the team no chance at success. As noted that isn’t putting all, or even most of the blame on the offensive line itself, but the predictable play calling made it very difficult for this unit as well as the others on offense. Some depth pieces for the offensive line are E’Marion Harris, Ty’Kieast Crawford, Joe More, Amaury Wiggins and others. If this group plays well under Mateos the chances for success goes up tremendously for the entire team.
Linebackers
Gone from last season are Chris “Pooh” Paul, Jahiem Thomas and others. Travis Williams almost had to completely rebuild the position. Brad Spence returns after a very impressive freshman season. Arkansas also added Xavian Sorey Jr., Larry Worth III and Stephen Dix Jr. from the transfer portal. All three were very successful at their previous schools and should fit in well with this group. Arkansas also returns Carson Dean, Alex Sanford and Kaden Henley from last season. They also added freshmen such as Bradley Shaw, Wyatt Simmons, JuJu Pope and Justin Logan. If Williams can get four of five linebackers he’s comfortable with this group has a chance to avoid the dropoff many expected with Paul and others entered the transfer portal. A key to that may be Spence making the progression many expected, the three transfers all being as good as expected and another young linebacker or two make a move up the depth chart. If all that happens this group should help the defense.
Arkansas
Powerball winner for $1.817 billion jackpot bought lucky ticket in Arkansas. Here are the numbers.
A single winning ticket was sold for Powerball’s Christmas Eve jackpot of $1.817 billion — the second-largest U.S. lottery prize ever. The winner, who has not yet been publicly identified, bought the lucky ticket at a gas station outside Little Rock, Arkansas.
The winning numbers for Wednesday night’s drawing were 4, 25, 31, 52, 59, with a Powerball of 19.
The grand prize had a lump sum cash value of $834.9 million. A rush of ticket sales pushed the final jackpot total even higher than previously expected.
The winning ticket was sold at a Murphy USA in the town of Cabot, lottery officials in Arkansas said Thursday. No one answered the phone Thursday at the location, which was closed for Christmas, The Associated Press reported.
The Powerball jackpot had been won once before on Christmas Eve, in 2011, and four times on Christmas Day, the game says. Powerball started in 1992.
The last time a Powerball jackpot was hit was on Sept. 6 in Missouri and Texas, when two tickets split a $1.787 billion top prize. The nearly four-month stretch between jackpots — 47 drawings — was a record for the most in a Powerball jackpot cycle, the game says.
This is only the second time in the game’s history with back-to-back winning jackpots topping $1 billion, Powerball said.
The $1.817 billion prize is second only to the $2.04 billion jackpot won in 2022 by a single ticket sold in Altadena, California, which was the largest in both Powerball and lottery history.
To win the jackpot, a ticket must match all five white balls and the red Powerball pulled during a drawing. Single winners of the top prize can choose between a lump sum payment or a payout via an annuity of one immediate payment followed by 29 annual payments that increase by 5% each time. Both the lump sum and annuity total are before taxes.
Other ticket-holders will also take home a tidy sum. Powerball says eight tickets in Tuesday night’s drawing matched all five white balls for a “Match 5” prize of $1 million (the prize total varies in California); 114 tickets won $50,000 prizes and 31 tickets won $100,000.
The odds of winning the Powerball jackpot are 1 in 292.2 million, according to game officials. Lottery jackpots have exploded in size over the last decade, while the odds of winning have gotten slimmer.
Tickets cost $2 each and are sold in 45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Drawings take place every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday at 11 p.m. ET.
Arkansas
Time for the annual list of holiday wishes | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Wally Hall
Wally Hall is assistant managing sports editor for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. A graduate of the University of Arkansas-Little Rock after an honorable discharge from the U.S. Air Force, he is a member and past president of the Football Writers Association of America, member of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, past president and current executive committee and board member of the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame, and voter for the Heisman Trophy. He has been awarded Arkansas Sportswriter of the Year 10 times and has been inducted into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame and Arkansas Sportswriters and Sportscasters Hall of Fame.
Arkansas
Children’s Advocacy Center of Southeast Arkansas receives Difference Makers Award
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Hazel Maxey picked out toys at the annual Santa’s Holiday Gift Drive.
“With toys, we can bring a little bit more cheer to a family, especially the children,” Maxey said
The toys might seem like a small gesture, but they’re actually a big deal for the children Maxey’s organization serves.
“We’re able to reach more children, help children and bring more cheer to the children that we serve so we are very grateful,” she said.
Maxey is the executive director of the Children’s Advocacy Center of Southeast Arkansas in Pine Bluff. For the past three decades, the center has served thousands of children who are victims of sexual and physical abuse.
Hazel Maxey, executive director children’s advocacy center of southeast Arkansas:
“We do forensic interviews, sexual assault exams, therapy and advocacy services so that we can help children in their healing process,” Maxey explained.
In 2024, they saw at least 700 children. Maxey believes the numbers will even higher by the end of this year.
“Children should have the right to be heard and believed and supported because children shouldn’t be hurt because of child maltreatment,” she said.
The team’s ultimate goal is to help children heal so they don’t carry their trauma into adulthood. That is why Rainwater Holt & Sexton has named the Children’s Advocacy Center of Southeast Arkansas as this month’s Difference Maker.
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