Arkansas
Calipari on Ark. fans’ ovation: ‘Haven’t lost a game’
As John Calipari entered Bud Walton Arena for his first game at Arkansas on Friday night, the home crowd erupted as the 1990s Chicago Bulls introduction music played in the background.
Although No. 16 Arkansas’ 85-69 win over No. 1 Kansas was a charity exhibition, the buzz surrounding the coach’s arrival in Fayetteville — after a lengthy stint at Kentucky — was palpable.
But Calipari downplayed Friday’s ovation, which he received from the 19,200 fans who attended the sold-out affair.
“I haven’t lost a game,” he said about the crowd’s favorable reaction.
Though both teams were short-handed — Tennessee transfer Jonas Aidoo didn’t play for Arkansas, and Hunter Dickinson and Alabama transfer Rylan Griffen were both out for Kansas — Friday marked a new chapter for Calipari and Arkansas. His rocky exit at Kentucky unfolded after he followed a national title run in 2012 and a string of Final Four appearances with multiple first-round exits in the NCAA tournament.
But he regrouped quickly at Arkansas, where five-star prospect Boogie Fland, former Kentucky guard D.J. Wagner and veteran Johnell Davis, a standout for Florida Atlantic in the 2023 Final Four, anchor his new squad.
Wagner and Fland combined to score 46 points against a Kansas team that arrived without two of its best players. But Arkansas has also dealt with multiple injuries — Calipari said his team has been unable to hold full practices for the past two weeks.
“We’ve played against [graduate assistants],” Calipari said after the game, which helped raise money for a pair of children’s hospitals in the teams’ respective communities.
Although his Kansas team struggled (7-for-23 from beyond the arc) in the four-quarter exhibition, Jayhawks coach Bill Self said he was not concerned about the result because of his team’s personnel challenges.
But he added he was not sure he would face a better backcourt this season than the one Arkansas boasts. He also said Calipari’s 2024-25 Razorbacks might comprise one of the most talented teams of his career.
“I actually think this team is better than some of the ones he’s had at Kentucky,” Self said. “We’ve played them at least every other year for the last 10 years. There were a couple of [Kentucky] teams that were elite, elite, elite. This team, to me, has a chance to be terrific and maybe more talented than some of the teams that [Calipari] had at Kentucky. Not all of them, but some of them. I think they have a real chance.”
Calipari said that analysis might be premature.
“I actually think this team is better than some of the ones he’s had at Kentucky. … There were a couple of [Kentucky] teams that were elite, elite, elite. This team, to me, has a chance to be terrific and maybe more talented than some of the teams that [Calipari] had at Kentucky. Not all of them, but some of them.”
Kansas coach Bill Self
“That’s very early to make that statement,” he said in response to Self’s comments. “Very early to make that statement.”
But the energy in the crowd, and the promise within the roster, was clear Friday, with a victory over the No. 1 team in America in his first game as the new Arkansas head coach.
“All I know is when you have really good guards, you usually have a really good team,” Calipari said.
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.
Arkansas
WholeHogSports Freshman of the Year: Joscelyn Roberson starred for Arkansas gymnastics after Olympics | Whole Hog Sports
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