Arkansas
Arkansas basketball’s Trevon Brazile set for reunion after tearing ACL vs. UNC-G in 2022
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Trevon Brazile was in the midst of a breakout season for the Arkansas basketball team last year when he suffered a torn ACL against UNC-Greensboro on Dec. 6, 2022.
On Friday night, 346 days after the injury, Brazile will see the navy and gold of UNC-Greensboro again.
The No. 14 Razorbacks (3-0) will welcome the Spartans to Bud Walton Arena for a second-straight year. Brazile is healthy again, and head coach Eric Musselman doesn’t want his star player reflecting on the trauma from a year ago.
“I hope (Brazile) just comes out and plays,” Musselman said. “I think it’s always hard for a player knowing there was an injury against a certain team.”
Through three games, Brazile is still finding his footing and role on a team filled with transfers and high expectations. He’s been starting games slow, with four combined shots in the first halves of the last two games against Gardner-Webb and Old Dominion.
But Brazile has shown his best stuff in flashes. He’s averaging 11.3 points and 5.7 rebounds a game while shooting 57.1% from the three-point line. Brazile is also averaging three blocks a game, which ranks ninth in the country, and he’s put together some highlight-reel dunks that show the type of explosiveness NBA general managers might covet in the upcoming draft.
For Musselman, those dunks and blocks show a player who is fully comfortable in his body coming off a major injury.
More: ‘His best game’: Eric Musselman heaps praise upon Makhi Mitchell as Arkansas basketball tops ODU
More: ‘His best game’: Eric Musselman heaps praise upon Makhi Mitchell as Arkansas basketball tops ODU
“He’s done a great job of playing fearless,” Musselman said. “He’s dunking the ball. Trying to dunk on people. He took a hard foul at the rim tonight trying to dunk on somebody. If it was in your head, so to speak, you wouldn’t have however many blocks he’s had because leaving your feet is where the fear might come in and he leaves his feet a lot.”
Before the season started, Brazile said he didn’t want to start playing until he was “110 percent.” After the Razorbacks 86-68 win over Gardner-Webb Friday, Brazile provided a confident outlook on his health, both physically and mentally.
“I feel like I’m probably at 120 probably now,” he said.
Brazile’s progress will be something to monitor all season. For now, he can pick his spots offensively, but Arkansas needs Brazile to be one of the best players in the country if it wants to accomplish goals like an SEC title and a run to the Final Four.
Perhaps Friday’s reunion with UNC-Greensboro is a chance for Brazile to put the injury chapter behind him officially.
The Razorbacks will need to play much better than they did in Monday’s 86-77 win over Old Dominion. The Spartans nearly pulled off an upset over Arkansas a year ago, and they’ve already played Vanderbilt down to the wire this season.
“UNC-G is good. We were down five last year in this game at halftime. The game was a single-digit game,” Musselman said.
“They’ve got some guys back from last year that really, really hurt us. We need to play our best game of the season on Friday.”
Arkansas
Takeaways from No. 20 Arkansas' win over Pacific
The No. 20 Arkansas Razorbacks (3-1, 0-0 SEC) took care of business down the stretch in a 91-72 win over the Pacific Tigers (3-3, 0-0 WCC) on Monday night.
The final score doesn’t necessarily indicate how close the game was. With just under 13 minutes to go in the game, the Razorbacks were in the middle of a dogfight and only up 59-57 after Pacific had scored five straight points.
Arkansas’ defense was able to suffocate the Tigers down the stretch though, as Pacific only made two of its last 16 field goals in the game and the Hogs were able to pull away with the win.
Here’s some of HawgBeat’s takeaways from what ended up being a much tighter contest than expected on Monday night…
Arkansas
Arkansas’ Ongoing Wide Receiver Issues Continue to End
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Arkansas is in the same position it was last year. Sam Pittman opted not to bring in anyone of note to supplement the existing receivers on the roster. Monte Harrison and Jordan Anthony, the two biggest offseason acquisitions have a combined 140 yards on the season.
Despite Arkansas ranking fifth in the SEC in passing yards (2,780), it is part of a larger mirage for the offense running up the score against subpar FBS defenses.
Perhaps even more concerning, Arkansas has left one of the best receivers in the country on an island to fend for himself. Andrew Armstrong ranks second in the SEC in both yards (931) and catches (61). Both also rank top-25 nationally.
Armstrong accounts for 33.5% of Arkansas’ receiving yards, the most of any SEC schools for a single receiver other than Dane Key of the Kentucky Wildcats. The Wildcats have just 1,834 passing yards as a team.
Isaiah Sategna, currently second on the Hogs in receiving, falls short of half of Armstrong’s production at 431 yards. Isaac TeSlaa just reached exactly half of his catch total from last year (17) with his lone catch for 7 yards against the Texas Longhorns.
Even tight end Luke Hasz has been held to just 278 yards through 10 games after putting up 253 yards as a true freshman in four games plus a drive before suffering a season-ending injury. Only one other tight end on the team has 25 yards receiving and he’s not even on the team anymore (Ty Washington).
Tyrone Broden, a breakout star in camp, lags even further behind at just 15 catches for 197 yards.
Pittman believes the poor wide receiver play is starting to have spillover effects for Taylen Green and his decision making with the football.
“We had a couple of missed routes that Taylen had to hold the football because we weren’t running the right route,” Pittman said. “Then we got whipped on the edge a couple times.”
Arkansas will look for just its second 100-yard performance from a receiver not named Armstrong of the season against Louisiana Tech. TeSlaa had 120 yards against Texas A&M, 75 of which came on one catch early in the game.
Kickoff between the Razorbacks and Louisiana Tech is scheduled for 3 p.m. Saturday. The game will be streamed on SEC+.
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Arkansas
Arkansas gas prices tumble
JONESBORO, Ark. (KAIT) – While the national average trickled down, Arkansas gas prices tumbled dramatically last week.
GasBuddy.com reported Monday that average prices in the Natural State fell 6.8 cents a gallon to $2.61.
That’s 21.4 cents a gallon less than a month ago and 24.4 cents lower than last year.
Meanwhile, the national average price of gasoline fell just 0.7 cents a gallon last week to $3.02.
“Several states saw gas prices jump or ‘cycle’ last week, a behavior in which gas prices climb significantly after falling below a station’s replacement price,” said Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy. “This led the national average to see little meaningful change from last week, with many states experiencing a slow decline, offsetting the few states that did see big jumps.”
However, he said those states that saw large jumps at the pumps should see huge declines this week.
De Haan expects the national average to fall below $3 per gallon just in time for Thanksgiving.
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