Arkansas
MBB Preview: Arkansas vs Fresno State at North Little Rock
Who: #25/23 Arkansas Razorbacks (6-2, 0-0 SEC) vs Fresno State Bulldogs (6-3, 0-0 MW)
What: Arkansas makes its annual trip to Simmons Bank Arena.
When: Saturday – Dec. 6 – 3:00 pm (CT)
Where: North Little Rock, Ark. • Simmons Bank Arena (18,000)
How (to follow):
– TV/Stream: SEC Network Plus/Watch ESPN (Brett Dolan and Joe Kleine)
– Radio: Learfield Razorback Sports Network (Chuck Barrett and Matt Zimmerman)
– Sirius/XM: Sirius: 160 || XM: 192 || SXM App/Online Channel 962
– Arkansas Live Stats
– Razorback Gameday App
– Purchase Tickets
– Arkansas Game Notes
– Fresno State Game Notes
– SEC Men’s Basketball Release/Stats
FAYETTEVILLE – For the 26th time since its opening in 1999-2000, Arkansas will play in North Little Rock’s Simmons Bank Arena when the #25/23 Razorbacks face Fresno State on Saturday (Dec. 6). Tipoff is set for 3 pm and the game will be broadcast on SEC Network Plus.
Arkansas is 15-10 in Simmons Bank Arena and 19-10 all-time in the city of North Little Rock. Last year, Arkansas defeated Central Arkansas, 82-57, in Simmons Bank Arena. The Razorbacks have played in NLR in 21 of the last 23 years, with a 20-year streak of playing in North Little Rock snapped in Dec. 2020 due to COVID. The only other year Arkansas did not play in NLR was the 2000-01 season.
After Fresno State, Arkansas will stay on the road to face #19 Texas Tech in Dallas on Dec. 13 (Sat.).
NOTES:
- Arkansas and Fresno State have met on two previous occasions and the Razorbacks won both.
- The first meeting was Nov. 29, 1997, in Phoenix. Arkansas upset the #12 Bulldogs, 70-69, in the Premier Classic. With Fresno State down one with four seconds left, Demetrius Porter’s shot in the lane as the buzzer sounded rattled around the rim but didn’t fall. Nick Davis led the Hogs with 15 points and 13 rebounds. Kareem Reid and Pat Bradley combined for 11 assists – 6 from Reid and 5 from Bradley – Bradley added four steals. Arkansas was just 4-of-20 from 3-point range but forced 24 turnovers. The Bulldogs were led by Avondre Jones’s 23 points and 14 rebounds while Rafer Alston added eight assists and Tremaine Fowkles had 14 rebounds.
- The second meeting was Nov. 17, 2017, in Fayetteville. Arkansas won, 83-75 as Daniel Gafford came off the bench to score 25 points with eight rebounds and three blocked shots. Jaylen Barford added 18 points and Anton Beard 15. Bryson Williams led the Bulldogs with 22 points and nine board while Jaron Hopkins had nine points and 10 boards. Neither team was particularly good at the line, but Arkansas was 25-of-38 compared to 131-of-22 for Fresno State.
- With an 89-80 victory over #6 Louisville on Wednesday, Arkansas improved to 3-0 in the three-year ACC/SEC Challenge. In the three years of the Challenge, the SEC leads 30-16, thanks to a 14-2 record last season and a 9-7 mark in 2025. The leagues tied, 8-8, in year one of the series.
- After its 89-80 win over #6 Louisville, Arkansas climbed 12 spots in the NCAA NET, going from #45 to #33.
- Arkansas and its opponents have both made 67 3-pointers. However, Arkansas has only attempted 190 (35.3%) and its opponents have attempted 230 (29.1%).
For more information on Arkansas Men’s Basketball, follow @RazorbackMBB on X, Instagram and Facebook.
Arkansas
Rising costs of operations threaten northwest Arkansas senior centers
BERRYVILLE, Ark. (KY3) – Changes could be coming to senior centers in northwest Arkansas after a funding crisis threatened operations.
The organization Our Healthy Communities works with the Area Agency on Aging of northwest Arkansas to operate senior centers in Benton, Madison, and Carroll counties, but OHC leaders said their programs are in jeopardy.
The government shutdown caused funding delays in November, and rising food and operating costs only made that struggle more intense.
Now, OHC executive director Susan Moore is raising awareness for what these centers can do.
“It gives the seniors a place to go for socialization, for food,” Moore said. “We offer transportation. We provide Meals on Wheels, so that’s a very important program for senior centers and the seniors that we serve, because really, we see a lot of times that may be the only meal they receive in a day is what they get from our centers. It’s also a welfare check for our Meals on Wheels clients.”
The Carroll County Senior Center in Berryville has been holding fundraisers with the community, but even for those who can’t donate monetarily, donating time is another way to raise awareness and keep these centers going.
“Just give at your local senior center,” said Moore, “wherever that may be. I would hope and pray that senior services would never go away because it’s a much-needed service for the seniors.”
Despite what a previous Facebook post by OHC said, Moore says the senior centers would likely not close if they lost funding. Still, control would be handed over to the Area Agency on Aging of Northwest Arkansas.
If this does happen, Moore says they will ensure there is no interruption of service because she recognizes the many ways these resources are vital.
“Whether you’re in your 20s or you’re in your 40s,” she said, “you have parents out there, you have grandparents out there that are aging, and so think of it as a service to your grandparents and what that means to them and help keeping them in their home and out of an institutional facility. I would just look at it as how it would impact your grandma or your grandpa.”
To report a correction or typo, please email digitalnews@ky3.com. Please include the article info in the subject line of the email.
Copyright 2026 KY3. All rights reserved.
Arkansas
Legislators OK Arkansas college’s request for lawmaker to serve as part-time interim director of Hope venue | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Michael R. Wickline
Mike Wickline covers state politics, and he has covered the state Legislature for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette since November 2000. He previously spent several years covering the Idaho Legislature for the Lewiston Morning Tribune.
Arkansas
OPINION | JOHN BRUMMETT: Reasons to be skeptical on Arkansas’ PBS claims | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
John Brummett
John Brummett’s career in news began when he was in high school, as a part-time reporter for the Arkansas Democrat. He moved to the Arkansas Gazette in 1977.
He wrote a political column for the Gazette from 1986 to 1990. He was an editor for the Arkansas Times from 1990 to 1992.
In 1994, his book, “High Wire: From the Back Roads to the Beltway, the Education of Bill Clinton,” was published by Hyperion of New York City. He became a columnist with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette in 1994. In 2000, he signed a deal with Donrey Media Group, now known as Stephens Media, and wrote for them for 11 years.
He rejoined Democrat-Gazette as a columnist on Oct. 24, 2011.
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