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Coaching Details Now Looks to Be Petrino’s Approach

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Coaching Details Now Looks to Be Petrino’s Approach


FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Saturday’s practice for Arkansas was moved back a couple of hours to about 7 p.m. to get a safe window to stay outside. Razorbacks coach Sam Pittman prefers that, probably because it gets to spread everybody out and it is better for conditioning.

For offensive-minded folks, it gives an interesting glimpse to watch new offensive coordinator Bobby Petrino and his subtle ways of working with quarterback Taylen Green and the backups. With video being the way everything is broken down these days, he probably doesn’t have to yell as much on the field as he did in histime as head coach from 2008-11.

A lot of people want to see that fire and on-field coaching style the media loves to talk about. With the exception of a normal coaches’ move moving a wide receiver out of a drill that was kinda blown out of proportion, there hasn’t been much to see.

Age also has a little to do with it. Riding around the area around his home in a golf cart with his granddaughter is a side of Petrino most folks couldn’t imagine over a decade ago. On the field, he’s working exclusively with the quarterbacks now and coaching details.

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Razorbacks offensive coordinator Bobby Petrino coaching fine points of throwing motion with left-handed quarterback KJ Jackso

Arkansas Razorbacks offensive coordinator showing quarterback KJ Jackson some finer points on release with the left-hander’s throwing motion. / Andy Hodges-Hogs on SI Images

The little nuances he points out to the players in individual drills is interesting. From release point on passes to fine-tuning footwork, he’s working on them being as close to perfect as it can get. It’s probably never perfect, but right now they are doing touch-ups on offensive install and getting the pattern established for the games.

That will start against UAPB at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock, Ark., on Aug. 29. The offense will be ready for that game. A guess is it will be a chance to get some final evaluations on players working against somebody other than a teammate before taking the trip to Stillwater, Okla., to play Oklahoma State the second week.

Watching Petrino point out to Green one time he needed to throw the ball in a place he didn’t brought back a back a long-ago memory. The pass Green threw was only off maybe six inches or so.

It was almost like watching Bill Walsh coaching the San Francisco 49ers in 1982 and emphasizing Joe Montana needed to throw a pass exactly 6 inches to one side of a receiver on a route. We found out later from Montana that didn’t mean 5 inches, either, which is what he threw.

“I missed it a little,” Montana said with a smile. “He wants it exact.”

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Petrino is probably that way, too. He realizes, of course, most of the time he’s not working with the arm of a Hall of Famer that is as accurate. That doesn’t mean he’s not trying to develop that perfection.

Razorback fans are counting on that offensive magic of 2010-11, which was during a 21-5 run.. The problem is there is no evidence the talent is there right now to do that. This roster isn’t as good as what he had in his first season as the Hogs’ head coach in 2008.

This team may have some folks that develop into that, but nobody knows they are going to be there now. They haven’t shown it in years past and you can’t really gauge practices.

Petrino knows all that. He’s just trying to work with what he’s got and make it the best it can be. In today’s world, nobody knows what’s going to happen with the transfer portal, NIL and the mental state of teenagers these days. Every coach knows they could be developing them for somebody else.

It appears to be a much more relaxed Petrino. We saw that in the spring and now in just four practices of fall camp, it looks to be very detailed instruction for the quarterbacks on little things most folks don’t even think about.

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Which was probably what Pittman was thinking when he hired him in December. After last year’s problems and having a coordinator that was obviously distracted by things we may not have even known about, getting some attention to detail may go a long way to at least making a bowl game. Or even better.

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• Razorback legend makes cameo at latest Hogs’ commitment anouncement

• Oklahoma double dip: Razorbacks gain second 2026 commitment of day from Sooner State

• Razorbacks hold off Georgia, LSU, OK State for top prospect in Oklahoma

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Alabama holds Arkansas women’s basketball to season scoring low in rout | Arkansas Democrat Gazette

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Alabama holds Arkansas women’s basketball to season scoring low in rout | Arkansas Democrat Gazette


Alabama held the Arkansas women’s basketball team to its lowest scoring output of the season and ran away with a 77-48 victory Sunday afternoon at Coleman Coliseum in Tuscaloosa, Ala.

The Razorbacks (11-6, 0-2 SEC) had a 10-game road winning streak in the series dating to 2008 snapped. It was the first win for the Crimson Tide at home against Arkansas since a 75-73 victory on Jan. 15, 2006.

Alabama never trailed and led by as many as 32 in the wire-to-wire win.

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“I think we could have been more gritty today,” Arkansas coach Kelsi Musick said. “I felt like that’s one thing that we’ve kind of adjusted with our culture so far this season is just playing harder. Today we had some lapses where we weren’t getting any of the 50-50 balls, and that’s got to change.”

The Crimson Tide (15-1, 1-1) found success on both ends of the court, but it was their defense and effort that set the game’s tone.

Arkansas was held to 18 of 57 (32%) shooting from the field, including 5 of 23 (22%) from 3-point range. Alabama owned the boards and outrebounded the Razorbacks 48-37 with 16 coming on the offensive glass.

“Initially I didn’t think we were being as aggressive, especially in the first half,” Musick said. “We gave up 10 of those [offensive rebounds] in the first half, and I think that’s what allowed us to get into such a deficit. We needed to be more physical, and then we had to go initiate that contact to go get the basketball.”

While the Razorbacks were struggling to generate any offense, Alabama was sizzling from beyond the arc. The Crimson Tide knocked down 13 attempts from 3-point range and shot 41% from downtown.

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    Alabama guard Ta’Mia Scott shoots a 3-pointer, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, during a 77-48 victory over Arkansas at Coleman Coliseum in Tuscaloosa, Ala. (Photo courtesy Alabama Athletics)
 
 

Seven different Alabama players made at least one 3-pointer, led by Ta’Mia Scott’s 4 of 6 shooting from range. Scott was the game’s leading scorer with 16 points.

Many of the Tide’s looks were uncontested and were created by solid ball movement and screening actions. Alabama was patient with its possessions and recorded 18 assists as a result.

“First of all, we’ve got to tag that roller quicker so our post player can get back in and our guard can get back out to the 3-point line. And we’ve got to make sure that we’re sprinting. I think there [were] a few times when we could have given a little bit more max effort.”

Alabama seized control of the game in first quarter when it scored 10 unanswered over a 2-minute, 1-second stretch to turn a 15-14 advantage into a 25-14 lead entering the second quarter. During the key run, Waiata Jennings knocked down a pair of 3-pointers for the Tide.

Prior to the momentum-shifting sequence, the Razorbacks were 3 of 6 (50%) from 3-point range. But for the game’s remainder Arkansas was ice cold from deep, finishing 5 of 23 (22%) from outside. The 14 points were the most the Razorbacks scored in any quarter.

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“I didn’t think we shared it, and we didn’t really attack the rim as hard as we needed to on multiple occasions,” Musick said. “We’ve got to get paint touches. We have to knock down threes. That’s just a given. You can’t have a game where we only make five 3s.”

Alabama stretched its lead to 44-24 by halftime, in large part due to establishing itself down low to help balance its scoring. Going into the break, the Tide had scored 21 points from 3-pointers and 18 points in the paint.

Essence Cody was a force around the basket for Alabama, as the Razorbacks struggled to keep her from getting to her spots at the rim. Cody scored 15 points on 5 of 10 shooting, and was strong defensively altering Arkansas’ looks inside.

“She’s a really great 5,” Musick said. “She’s one of the better post players in the league, by far. We just have to make sure that we are making contact early. I think there were a few times whenever we were not tagging that roller early, we let them get too planted deep in the paint, and we weren’t recovering quick enough. You’ve got to get physical early. I think we got physical late, and that was part of the problem.”

The Razorbacks were cleaner than the previous two games when they averaged 25.5 turnovers in losses to Arkansas State and Vanderbilt. But though they committed only 14 against the Tide, they didn’t make their possessions count due to instances of poor shot selection coupled with many misses on open looks.

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“I thought we settled in the first half for some mid-range when we could have got to the rim a little bit more, or we could have pitched it for more wide-open 3s,” Musick said on the Razorback Sports Network postgame radio show. “I thought we settled a little bit…. We did a much better job of turnovers. That was a focus. That’s one positive, is that we didn’t turn it over against the press. We actually took care of the basketball, but we just didn’t shoot it very well when we got the open looks.”

Arkansas got no closer than 17 points in the second half and trailed by as large as 67-35 with 35 seconds left in the third quarter. The Razorbacks went deep in their bench for most of the final 20 minutes, as Musick opted to keep most of her usual rotation on the bench.

“I thought [Danika Galea] came in and did a really good job for us,” Musick said. “I think we have three post players that are very different, that we can kind of bring in and mix up. I thought Jada [Bates] came in and did a really good job. I think we’ve got to as a whole get better defensively, but she really did a lot of good things of getting to the rim and getting to the free-throw line.”

Taleyah Jones and Bonnie Deas led the Razorbacks in scoring with 9 points apiece, followed by Harmonie Ware with 8.

Player of the Game: Alabama G Ta’Mia Scott

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Scott set the tone for Alabama’s strong shooting game, as she knocked down both 3-pointers she took in the first quarter. 

It was a new season high in scoring for the Middle Tennessee State transfer, whose 16 points came on an efficient 6 of 10 (60%) shooting from the field.

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Arkansas is scheduled to host No. 3 South Carolina (15-1, 2-0) at 6:30 p.m. Thursday.

The Gamecocks routed Alabama 83-57 in their SEC opener Thursday, then won at Florida 74-63 on Sunday.

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Entering Sunday, South Carolina was No. 2 in the NCAA’s NET Rankings. It will be a Quadrant 1 game for the Razorbacks.

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Arkansas prison fight to overshadow elections and legislative session in 2026

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Arkansas prison fight to overshadow elections and legislative session in 2026


Building a maximum-security, 3,000-bed prison was supposed to be a crowning achievement for Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders as she touts her bonafides as a law-and-order Republican. Debate over the project is instead casting a shadow on this year’s primary elections and legislative session, with a special election this week in the Senate district where […]



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Acuff scores 29 points to lead No. 18 Arkansas to a 86-75 win over No. 19 Tennessee

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Acuff scores 29 points to lead No. 18 Arkansas to a 86-75 win over No. 19 Tennessee


FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Freshman Darius Acuff Jr. scored a career-high 29 points, including a key 3-pointer with just over two minutes left in the second half, to help No. 18 Arkansas to an 86-75 win over No. 19 Tennessee in the Southeastern Conference opener for both teams on Saturday.

Arkansas (11-3) used a 18-5 run over a 6-minute, 37-second span midway through the second half to turn a five-point deficit into an eight-point lead with 5:40 left. Tennessee shot just 2 for 10 from the field during Arkansas’ run, missing eight shots in a row before finally scoring.

The Volunteers (10-4) took advantage of an Arkansas cold shooting spell — the Razorbacks picked up 12 of their 18 points during the run from the free-throw line — to close within two points with under four minutes to play. Acuff made a 3-pointer from the wing with 2:09 remaining to give the Razorbacks a 79-68 lead.

Tennessee shot 49% from the field and was outscored at the line, going 12 for 23 while Arkansas shot 29 for 33.

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Acuff was the only Arkansas player to shoot better than 50% from the floor, going 9 for 16. The Razorbacks shot 42% overall. Acuff was joined in double-digit scoring by Meleek Thomas, who scored 18 points. Malique Ewin added 12 points and Karter Knox 11.

Amari Evans’ 17 points on 7-for-7 shooting led three Tennessee players in double figures.

Arkansas won its opening SEC game for the first time since the 2020-21 season. The Razorbacks have reached the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament in four of the five seasons since and made two Elite Eight appearances.

Arkansas guard Meleek Thomas (1) shoots over Tennessee defenders Ja’Kobi Gillespie, left, and Felix Okpara, right, during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026, in Fayetteville, Ark. Credit: AP/Michael Woods

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Arkansas: At Ole Miss on Wednesday.

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Tennessee: Hosts Texas on Tuesday.



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