Arkansas
Cold rain stunts early planting in Arkansas
MATT MILES – MCGEHEE, ARKANSAS
Matt Miles is a fourth-generation farmer in southeast Arkansas who grows corn, soybeans, rice, and cotton.
These previous couple of weeks have been tough. From March 31 by means of Easter, every single day introduced some form of rain and nothing however clouds. The each day rain and lack of daylight created some flooding points that left about 35 acres of soybeans and corn beneath a few toes of water for about 60 hours. Fortunately, we didn’t have any tornados or excessive winds like among the farms round us skilled, however we did get the heavy rains.
Replanting goes to be a problem, it’s about 10-15% of a 1600-acre block in each subject that’s now chilly, moist sand. Our corn has not seen a dry day because it was planted on April 1. Our greatest setback proper now could be a block of corn that was planted between the tip of March and first of April. The higher ends within the deep sand have been sitting in chilly, moist soils since they have been planted. Now the issue is can we replant 10% of the tops, replant entire fields, or go away or not it’s? This determination will likely be made on April 17. Replanting isn’t all the time enjoyable, however a minimum of we’ll get some knowledge on yield drag from ultra-early corn in comparison with later planted corn that we will use in future seasons.
KELLY GARRETT – ARION, IOWA
A fifth-generation farmer, Kelly Garrett farms corn, soybeans, and winter wheat in western Iowa.
We at the moment are midway by means of planting. We began with soybeans on April 7, stopped for Easter, then went proper again to work planting corn and beans on Monday. We now have had a few points with the corn planter getting began, however have two planting corn now. Typical first day stuff.
The climate has been good for planting in our a part of Iowa. Soil temps have been hovering round 56° F. in western Iowa, and the seeds are germinating quick because of this. We’re speculated to be receiving some rain this week, so we hope the soil temperatures don’t drop once more.
We simply completed the small quantity of spring anhydrous utility we needed to do and now we’re ready for the soil biology to heal as a lot as attainable earlier than we start to plant on that floor. We now have been in a position to flip down our nitrogen charges upon utility and plan to show it up later within the season utilizing Source. Source from SoundAg is a grower normal to assist with the carbon to nitrogen ratio steadiness.
Our cattle are beginning to calve, so we’re additionally within the means of placing up fencing to maneuver the herds accordingly. There may be all the time one thing to do with the cattle.
KEVIN MATTHEWS – EAST BEND, NORTH CAROLINA
Kevin and his spouse, Cindy, personal and function Matthews Household Farms of North Carolina, Inc., Precision Nutrient Administration, Inc., and Deep Creek Grain, Inc. in East Bend and Yadkinville.
Management the controllable is a saying I usually say. I might have cherished to have had extra acres within the floor by this level, however circumstances got here up stopping it from occurring. It was a blessing in disguise, as we had a chilly spell at Easter with freezing temperatures for a number of hours. The coldest temperatures near the river have been accompanied by a chilly rain. If corn was within the floor, the yield would already be restricted from imbibitional chilling from the acute low temperatures together with the 2 inches of rain. The situation of our wheat had a lightweight frost with no injury to the flag leaf. The bottom dried up for someday permitting us to place the primary corn within the floor. One other rain got here by means of over the weekend and we hope to be full swing within the subject quickly.
An thrilling mission we’re wrapping up is putting in ADS (Superior Drainage Methods) double wall culvert pipe to maintain the planters and sprayers from folding as much as cross into the subsequent subject. Our Farms with a number of ditches in them create corners for weeds and additional mowing to maintain ditch banks clear, creating hidden price. By putting pipe, in some instances 200 toes, within the cross ditches you flip three fields into one. Most pipe sizes are 18 to 24 inches whereas being certain to permit 18 to twenty inches of soil above the pipe to make sure tillage exercise and never injury the pipe. To some it might not appear to be a lot, however to us saving half-hour on a farm, simply not having to cease and fold/unfold the planter and sprayers between ditches is big. This eliminates flip rows and makes harvest a lot simpler, too.
XtremeAg.farm is a workforce of the nation’s prime producers who’ve come collectively to share their expertise, experience, data, and farming practices with different farmers. Members get entry to unique content material from the workforce in addition to one-on-one assist for their very own farming operation. Go to XtremeAg.farm for extra data.
Arkansas
Diggs '100% cleared' for big return to Arkansas lineup
Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn gave a long-awaited update Wednesday on the status of senior outfielder Kendall Diggs, who suffered a torn labrum during the 2024 season.
Diggs, who exited a game against McNeese State in March with the injury, was hitting .357 at the time before finishing the year with a lowly .229 batting average.
It seems, after an offseason of recovery, the SEC veteran is on track for a major return for the Diamond Hogs.
“He’s 100% cleared to do everything now,” Van Horn said Wednesday. “Now, it’s all about timing at the plate. Getting that bat speed back that he’s had in the past. Seeing live pitching and just feeling confident…now it’s not about him being part of the team, because he’s going to be a big part of the team. It’s just a matter of how soon. We know what he can do when he’s full-go.”
A 6-foot-0, 210-pound lefty hitter from Olathe, Kansas, Diggs was named to the All-SEC Second Team in 2023 after slashing .299/.436/.547 with 12 home runs and a team-high 63 RBIs.
“You look at what (Kendall) has done in the past, he played 50-some games last year with major tears,” Van Horn said. “He’s swinging the bat, he’s going to hit live pitching tomorrow. When I say live pitching, not just batting practice, we’re talking live pitching. So, we’ll see how that goes. He’s a little bit behind, but he’ll get there.”
Even after his 2024 injury, many expected Diggs to be selected in the 2024 MLB Draft, and his return gave Arkansas another competitive piece in a loaded outfield full of transfer portal additions.
“He’s stronger than ever, even with the shoulder injury,” Van Horn said. “He’s had a chance to work on his lower half and he’s a full-grown man now. It’s time to go, and I think he’s excited about being out there.”
The Razorbacks will open their season Friday, Feb. 14, against Washington State at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville.
Arkansas
New address, same issues: Why John Calipari's dismal start at Arkansas mirrors his fall from favor at Kentucky
Give John Calipari credit for stumbling upon a foolproof way to avoid extending his streak of early-round NCAA tournament flameouts.
You can’t get Gohlked again if you’re watching from the couch.
Arkansas is in major jeopardy of missing the NCAA tournament in Calipari’s highly anticipated debut season after an unremarkable non-league showing and a nightmare start to SEC play. The preseason No. 16 Razorbacks lost 78-74 at previously struggling LSU on Tuesday night to fall to 11-6 overall and 0-4 in the SEC.
It was concerning when then-No. 1 Tennessee outclassed Arkansas by 24 in Knoxville on the first Saturday of January. The warning signs grew more ominous when the Razorbacks followed that with back-to-back home losses against nationally ranked Ole Miss and Florida last week. Now it’s full-blown panic time in Hog Country after Arkansas went to Baton Rouge for an apparent get-right game against one of the SEC’s only non-NCAA tournament contenders and somehow lost that too.
Despite playing without its third- and fourth-leading scorers due to injury, LSU erased deficits of 12 points late in the first half and eight points a few minutes into the second half. The Tigers (12-5, 1-3) built a nine-point lead of their own with less than five minutes to go, then withstood full-court pressure and a late scoring flurry from standout Arkansas freshman Boogie Fland to close out the victory.
Calipari’s postgame news conference Tuesday night was reminiscent of many that he delivered after losses late in his Kentucky tenure. He shouldered the blame for not preparing his team well enough yet offered few specifics regarding adjustments he intended to make.
Twice, Calipari told reporters in Baton Rouge, “I’ve got to do a better job with my team.” Later, he described himself as disappointed he’s “not getting through to these guys” and claimed he “may have to drag them to the finish line in some of these close games.”
There’s still time for Arkansas to dig its way out of this midseason hole, but the Razorbacks’ road to the NCAA tournament is uphill and obstacle-laden. A neutral-court victory over Michigan is Arkansas’ lone Quadrant 1 or 2 victory this season in seven opportunities. The Razorbacks’ second-best win of the season is … Lipscomb? Troy? Maybe 4-13 ACC doormat Miami?
The historic strength of the SEC could be Arkansas’ salvation or demise. On one hand, plenty of chances for marquee victories remain in a league with nine teams in the current AP Top 25. On the other hand, per Ken Pomeroy, the Razorbacks will only be favored in five of their remaining 14 conference games. At this point, Arkansas is more likely to finish in the bottom third of the SEC than to make the NCAA tournament.
That Calipari’s former program is flourishing in his absence only highlights Arkansas’ struggles. Kentucky coach Mark Pope didn’t inherit a single returning player from Calipari, yet the roster he rebuilt on the fly via the transfer portal is 14-3 overall and 3-1 in the SEC. Fueled by its sleek, modern offense, Kentucky boasts impressive victories over Duke, Gonzaga, Louisville, Florida, Mississippi State and Texas A&M. If the season ended today, the Wildcats would be no worse than a No. 3 seed in the NCAA tournament.
Deep-pocketed Arkansas boosters envisioned a similar outcome when they plunked down big money to lure Calipari from Kentucky last spring. The fresh start appeared to be a win-win for both parties with Calipari in need of an offramp out of Lexington and Arkansas in search of a jolt of excitement.
Calipari’s tenure at Kentucky was perfect, until it wasn’t. For almost a decade, he fulfilled Big Blue Nation’s wildest dreams. The revolving door of one-and-done talent he recruited won SEC titles, made deep NCAA tournament runs and even captured the 2012 national title. But the program that was two wins away from a historic 40-0 season in 2015 never approached those heights again. The atmosphere in Lexington turned especially toxic after Calipari’s Wildcats lost to 15th-seeded St. Peters in the first round of the 2022 NCAA tournament and to 14th-seeded Oakland last year.
What observers have since learned is that a fresh start requires more than a change of address and an influx of red blazers and quarter-zip pullovers. You can’t hire a 65-year-old coach, allow him to bring over an assortment of longtime assistants and then expect different results.
Armed with a war chest of NIL money that few other programs could match, Calipari assembled a roster that doesn’t mesh well with one-another or fit the modern game. Fland and fellow perimeter players DJ Wagner, Johnell Davis and Karter Knox can all hit a 3-pointer but are best with the ball in their hands attacking downhill. The spacing gets worse with forward Adou Thiero and center Jonas Aidoo in the frontcourt together, as neither are a threat from 3-point range.
Arkansas is shooting 33.7% from behind the arc as a team and is 248th nationally in percentage of points scored from 3-point range. Opposing defenses can afford to clog driving lanes, pack the paint and dare the Razorbacks to hoist contested jumpers early in the shot clock.
The hallmark of Calipari’s best Kentucky teams were long, athletic defenses that aggressively hounded 3-point shooters yet surrendered nothing easy at the rim. This Arkansas team is better defensively than some of Calipari’s most recent Kentucky teams, but it commits too many fouls and surrenders too many second-chance points to make up for the Razorbacks’ offensive woes.
Against LSU, it also didn’t help that a tough call went against Arkansas at a key juncture of the second half. LSU led 53-52 when referees called this a flagrant foul on Arkansas’ Trevon Brazile. The Razorbacks trailed 58-52 by the time they got the ball back.
How will Arkansas respond to a dismal SEC start made worse by the LSU loss? With effort and energy, Calipari says, despite a difficult upcoming schedule. Arkansas visits Missouri on Saturday, then hosts Georgia and Oklahoma. Matchups with Kentucky, Alabama, Auburn, Texas and Texas A&M await in February.
“I told them after the game, ‘I’m not cracking so let’s just keep going,’” Calipari said Tuesday.
The Razorbacks have no choice.
Either they turn their disappointing season around now, or Calipari’s debut campaign in Fayetteville will end shy of the NCAA tournament.
Arkansas
UL prepares to face Troy, Arkansas State twice in 11-day stretch
LAFAYETTE — The Louisiana women’s basketball team is off to its best Sun Belt Conference start since 2020, holding a 4-1 record as they aim to replicate the success that led them to a regular-season title just three years ago.
However, the Cajuns face a critical 11-day stretch as the team will take on Arkansas State and Troy twice, both teams boasting potent offenses ranked second and fourth in the conference, respectively.
Head coach Garry Brodhead emphasizes that defense will be the key to weathering this challenging stretch.
“Anytime that you have any type of system, if the kids believe in it, it seems like it works a little bit better or a lot better,” Brodhead said. “On the road, that’s one of the things that we really, really preach. You know, we may not be making shots like we’re capable of… but you can always defend.”
The coach acknowledged the difficulties posed by Arkansas State and Troy, pointing out changes in the Red Wolves’ system, which now prioritizes a faster pace, three-point shooting, and relentless pressing.
“Troy is a tough team to play,” Brodhead added. “Both games will be tough. Can we withstand that, especially from the first game to the second game?”
The Cajuns’ pivotal run begins Wednesday in Jonesboro, where they’ll face Arkansas State at 7 p.m. A strong showing could position Louisiana for second place in the standings, trailing only James Madison.
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