Arkansas
Sports world mourns death of legendary Arkansas sportswriter Bob Holt
The sports world is mourning the death of legendary Arkansas sportswriter Bob Holt, who passed away late Wednesday night at the age of 65.
Holt’s Arkansas Democrat-Gazette colleague Wally Hall confirmed the news on X.
“Bob Holt, one of the last great true Journalist passed at 10:38 tonight,” Hall wrote. “Ironically the doctor on duty was a former Razorback baseball player. Bob was an amazing person. Kindest most gentle man in the world, always lifting people up and helping them.”
Bob Holt, one of the last great true Journalist passed at 10:38 tonight. Ironically the doctor on duty was a former Razorback baseball player. Bob was an amazing person. Kindest most gentle man in the world, always lifting people up and helping them.
— Wally Hall (@WallyLikeItIs) December 5, 2024
A native of Missouri, Holt has been a staple of the Arkansas sports scene for the past four decades. After graduating from the University of Missouri, he began covering Razorbacks athletics in 1981 and went on to develop a cult-like following among fans and media members alike thanks to what Alabama.com’s Michael Casagrande described as his “folksy midwest charm and aggressive interviewing methods.”
If you’ve attended or watched an SEC Media Days before, you’re likely familiar with Holt, who once famously asked Nick Saban if he can control the weather. He had reportedly been hospitalized in recent days, prompting Arkansas basketball coach John Calipari to call for prayers for “one of the good guys in this profession.”
Holt’s final byline came following the Razorbacks football team’s loss to his alma mater, Missouri, on Saturday.
As news of Holt’s death spread across social media on Thursday morning, many responded with tributes and memories of the four-time Arkansas Sportswriter of the Year.
I’m devastated hearing the news about the passing of a truly incredible friend in Bob Holt.
Bob was one of my favorite people to be around. Getting to know him personally over the last few years was one of the greatest honors I could ever have.
Words cannot describe the… pic.twitter.com/i83RxE75zn
— John Nabors (@JohnNaborsShow) December 5, 2024
This view at SEC Media Days will never be the same without my dear friend Bob Holt. 💔 We lost Bob late last night. He was a great journalist but an even better person & friend. You never came away from talking with Bob without feeling better about life. You will be missed ❤️🙏🏻 pic.twitter.com/IItJvsRVwz
— Kevin Trainor (@KTHogs) December 5, 2024
Prayers with Bob Holt’s family and friends. A true SEC institution. https://t.co/d9Wl8Sx4wd
— Pete Thamel (@PeteThamel) December 5, 2024
We lost Bob Holt, the nicest man in sports writing. A tribute to a unicorn we’ll miss more than he’d ever realize. https://t.co/HfoTE8ZoCE
— Michael Casagrande (@ByCasagrande) December 5, 2024
For a man who wrote millions of words and asked thousands of questions, no words really do his impact justice – as a journalist or as a man. Bob Holt was kind, generous, caring, and just an overall gem.
Rest in peace to a legend. Praying for him, his family, and his friends.
— JC Hoops (@JacksonCollier) December 5, 2024
This is one of my favorite Bob Holt moments. pic.twitter.com/wyWecWU8TK
— Mason Choate (@ChoateMason) December 5, 2024
Bob was the GOAT.
Bob was the kindest person I have ever met.
Bob was funny, witty, inquisitive, talented, and real.
He loved his job. He loved his cats. He loved his Packers.On Thanksgiving we were joking with each other about the Dolphins-Packers game and he goes “I hope… pic.twitter.com/xQEkqH4F5m
— Alyssa Orange (@AlyssaOrange) December 5, 2024
Waking up to this news hurts. Everybody loved Bob, he was kind, cared about everyone and loved his job.
I will miss every single one of our funny conversations. I remember telling him one time that “Nobody will ever be Bob Holt.” That’s true. There isn’t anybody like him. Press… https://t.co/F1oTJqK66P
— Courtney Mims (@MimsCourtney) December 5, 2024
Terribly sad news to wake up to. Bob was a beat writer’s beat writer, an SEC institution, a great Mizzou grad and an incredibly nice man. https://t.co/RIW4IWjN0d
— Pat Forde (@ByPatForde) December 5, 2024
Every interaction with Bob Holt was an experience in itself. Wicked smart, insightful , funny and always thought out. He was a journalistic legend and was respected and you looked forward to talking to him. I’m sorry for his loss and am praying for his Family and Friends.
— Tom Crean (@TomCrean) December 5, 2024
And that’s just a fraction of the tributes that are out there.
Whether it’s his colleagues or the people who Holt covered, everyone seems to have a lasting memory and nothing but kind things to say about him. Our condolences go out to his family, friends and many, many fans.
Arkansas
Arkansas’ John Calipari becomes 5th Division I men’s coach to reach 900 victories
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Arkansas coach John Calipari became the fifth Division I men’s basketball coach to reach 900 career wins with the Razorbacks’ 88-84 victory over Missouri on Saturday.
Arkansas (23-8, 13-5 SEC) delivered Calipari the milestone victory without Southeastern Conference leading scorer Darius Acuff Jr., who missed the game with an undisclosed injury.
“If it meant anything, do you think Darius would have been playing today?” Calipari said. “I would have played him. That stuff, when you do this a long time, that’s the kind of stuff that happens if parents entrust you with their child.”
Calipari joins Mike Krzyzewski, Jim Boeheim, Rick Pitino and Roy Williams as the only coaches with 900 Division I victories.
Calipari, at 67, is the second-youngest coach to win 900 games behind Krzyzewski, who reached the milestone at the age of 64.
Calipari is also the third-fastest coach to reach the 900-win mark, accomplishing the feat in his 1,185th career game.
Calipari has coached five Final Four teams and won a national championship with Kentucky in 2012.
Arkansas head coach John Calipari talks to his assistant coaches during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against LSU in Baton Rouge, La., Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026. Credit: AP/Peter Forest
Missouri Coach Dennis Gates said that while he has not had the experience of coaching under Calipari, he still has a lot of respect for what Calipari has accomplished.
“Being able to be a coach that wins a national championship, that’s one of my goals,” Gates said. “Being able to be a Hall of Fame coach, that’s one of my goals. Obviously, compared to him, I’m in the infant stages of my career.”
Calipari is wrapping up his second season at Arkansas after spending 15 years coaching Kentucky. Prior to his time in Lexington, Calipari coached at Memphis for nine seasons after starting his collegiate head-coaching career with an eight-year stint at Massachusetts.
Arkansas
Gymbacks Set SEC Attendance Record on Senior Night; Fall to Sooners
It was a historic night at Bud Walton Arena on Friday as the No. 8 Gymbacks went toe-to-toe with the No. 1 Oklahoma Sooners. While Arkansas fell to Oklahoma 197.925-197.500, there were 15,512 fans in attendance, a new Arkansas and SEC gymnastics attendance record.
Despite the loss, Arkansas’ score of 197.500 was its best at home this season, propelled by the energy of the crowd in the building. The previous SEC gymnastics attendance record, 15,162, was set by Alabama and took 20 years to break.
The Gymbacks closed out the meet with a season-high 49.650 on floor, matching the third-best floor score in program history and besting the Sooners’ 49.375 on the event.
Both Joscelyn Roberson and Morgan Price had record nights, as each matched the program high of 9.975 on floor and bars, respectively. Roberson became the second-ever Gymback to score 9.975 on floor with the mark, along with teammate Frankie Price. Morgan is now the only Arkansas gymnast to score 9.975 on bars two times.
Roberson and Morgan Price’s scores were good for the event titles, and Arkansas also had four more top three finishes on the night: Cami Weaver tied for second on vault with a 9.925, Leah Smith earned shares of second on floor (9.950) and third on bars (9.900) and Allison Cucci tied for second on floor (9.950) and third on beam (9.900).
Vault
Weaver got things started out strong on vault with a big Yurchenko full that score 9.925, including a perfect mark of 9.950 for the vault from one judge. Smith went next and got a 9.850, and Cucci matched it midway through the lineup. Klein scored 9.800 for her Yurchenko 1.5 up fourth. After Lauren Williams scored a 9.750 in the five spot, Morgan Price anchored the rotation with a 9.850 for a total vault score of 49.275.
Bars
Roberson led off bars with a 9.825 and Klein followed with a 9.800 up second. Smith started the sticks midway through the lineup and she scored 9.900 to keep the momentum up. Avery King went 9.850 in fourth, and Avalon Campbell dialed up a 9.800 in the fifth spot. Morgan Price ended the lineup with a bang as she earned a 9.975 for the second time this season, putting a bow on a 49.350 bars score.
Beam
Priscilla Park and Weaver earned 9.850s on beam in the front half of the lineup, and Klein scored a 9.800. Cucci went up and got a 9.900 in fourth, delivering a solid routine with stuck dismount. Morgan Price then earned a 9.825 up fifth, and Roberson scored 9.775 as the anchor. The Gymbacks concluded beam with a 49.225.
Floor
Arkansas’ last floor party of the season at Bud Walton Arena did not disappoint, and Klein got it going in a big way with a season high 9.900 first. Cucci went second and earned a new career high of 9.950, and Smith matched it to keep the energy up in a big way for Arkansas. Frankie Price scored 9.775 in the fourth position, and Williams got a 9.875 in fifth. Needing a bit of juice to end the rotation, Roberson put down her best floor score of the season and received a 10 from one judge, notching her second-ever 9.975 on the event to push the Gymbacks’ floor total to a monster 49.650.
Up Next
Arkansas closes out the regular season on the road on Friday, March 13 at No. 2 LSU. The action is set for 7:30 p.m. in Baton Rouge and the meet will be streamed live on SEC Network+.
More Information
Visit ArkansasRazorbacks.com for the latest information on all things Arkansas Gymnastics. You can also find the Razorbacks on social media by liking us on Facebook (Arkansas Razorback Gymnastics) and following us on Twitter and Instagram (@RazorbackGym).
Arkansas
Arkansas man accused of killing daughter’s alleged abuser wins Republican sheriff’s nomination
An Arkansas man accused of killing his teenage daughter’s alleged abuser recently won the Republican nomination for local sheriff while waiting to stand trial for murder in his rural county, where he ran on a message of seeing the failures of law enforcement.
Aaron Spencer defeated Lonoke county sheriff John Staley in a primary election Tuesday, according to unofficial results posted by the Arkansas secretary of state. He would not be able to serve if he is convicted of killing Michael Fosler, 67, who at the time was out on bond after being charged with numerous sexual offenses against Spencer’s then 13-year-old daughter.
Spencer’s attorneys do not deny that he shot and killed Fosler – but maintain he acted within the law to protect his child from a predator.
Spencer won more than 53% of the vote with all precincts reporting, according to unofficial results. Staley, whose department arrested Spencer in 2024, conceded the loss.
“Congratulations to Mr Spencer,” Staley said in a statement posted on Facebook. “Tonight the voters made their decision in the Republican Primary, and I respect the decision.”
Spencer said in a statement that his message of accountability resonated with voters.
“Tonight, the people of Lonoke county stood up and chose transparency and accountability,” Spencer said. “This wasn’t a campaign about me. It was about every family who called for help and got nothing. That betrayal ends tonight.”
He is now set to face Democrat Brian Mitchell Sr in the heavily Republican county in November.
Spencer has pleaded not guilty and is out on bond while awaiting trial, which was originally scheduled to start in January. The trial was delayed after the presiding judge was removed from the case. A new date has not been set.
Court documents show that on the night of the October 2024 shooting, Spencer woke up to find his daughter missing from her bedroom and went searching for her in his truck. He found the girl in the passenger seat of a vehicle Fosler was driving. Spencer eventually forced Fosler’s truck off the highway and, after an altercation, called 911 to report he had shot the man, records show.
Prosecutors argue Spencer had planned to kill Fosler even before that night and that he could have called police while pursuing Fosler.
Spencer’s attorney, Erin Cassinelli, wrote in an email to the Associated Press that the election results have no bearing on the facts of the case.
“Aaron Spencer did exactly what the law allows and exactly what any father would do: he protected his daughter and himself from harm,” Cassinelli said. “At some point, those responsible for this prosecution will have to reckon with that.”
Spencer pledged in a Facebook post in February that if elected he would establish a dedicated team to combat sex crimes against children.
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