The good news for Arkansas basketball on Monday? The Hogs didn’t need Grant Nelson, anyway.
Sure, landing the 6-foot-10, multi-talented forward from North Dakota State out of the transfer portal would have been nice. He was the best player in the portal, after all, and may have been one of the top five in the country who entered it this offseason, period. Instead, per reports, Nelson is off to play at Alabama (he hasn’t yet confirmed himself). But it’s not as though Arkansas is lacking talent, exactly.
Coach Eric Musselman had already picked up five transfers in the spring to help bolster his roster. The Razorbacks lost guards Anthony Black and Nick Smith – both all but guaranteed to go to the NBA as first-round picks later this summer – and wings Jordan Walsh and Ricky Council, two players who are likely to be taken in the second round. Musselman filled those spots with guards El Ellis from Louisville and Keyon Menifield from Washington in the backcourt and wings Jeremiah Davenport from Cincinnati, Tramon Mark from Houston and Khalif Battle from Temple.
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Arkansas Basketball Still Stacked
Arkansas will also get back forward Trevon Brazile, who was one of the Hogs’ most dynamic players before being lost for the season in December because of a knee injury. Starting center Makhi Mitchell will also be back as a pure post and Mr. Arkansas Devo Davis will return to the backcourt for his leadership and, apparently, his shooting.
Frankly, Arkansas’ is a good problem to have. Kudos belong to guard Joseph Pinion, a Morrilton native who chose to stay instead of enter the transfer portal, especially as he will almost certainly be the last scholarship player off the bench in 2023-24, what with freshmen Layden Blocker and Baye Fall also joining the fold. The insertion of Nelson would have delivered aforementioned talent and perhaps impressive numbers (he averaged almost 20 points and 10 rebounds per game last year with the Bison), but at what cost?
The Razorbacks already have a glut of good-to-great players vying for a limited number of minutes. Jalen Graham, who reportedly has been showing out in the limited practice time so far this summer, hadn’t even been brought up until just now.
Where Grant Nelson Could Have Helped
One area that could use some help, though, is bruising. Mitchell can bring it at 6-foot-9 and 230 pounds. He rarely leaves the paint. But last year he had twin brother Makhel and Kamani Johnson available in reserve, both of whom were about equal in weight and nearly in height, too. Now Arkansas doesn’t have such a player.
Graham is 6-foot-9, but he’s a skinny 225 pounds and Musselman didn’t play him regularly because of Graham’s lack of physicality, especially with rebounding and defense. Moving Brazile exclusively to the inside limits some of his skill-set, too.
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Normally, it won’t be much of a problem. The game is so perimeter-orientated nowadays that teams really only need one center/power forward at a time, not two. The teams that have two on the court simultaneously, though, gave Arkansas problems last year. Texas A&M and Connecticut, especially, dominated the Razorbacks on the interior and proved to be two of the best teams Arkansas played. In case you forgot, UConn won the national title just several days after making the Hogs look like a middle-school team in the Sweet 16.
Nelson would have provided that toughness along with his scoring ability. Instead, either Mitchell or Brazile will have to face him as opposition.
Grant Nelson and Alabama Basketball
With Alabama, Nelson will no doubt have the opportunity to duplicate his NDSU numbers at Alabama, at least, more than he would at Arkansas, where the Hogs aren’t a one-man-dominant team. The good news for Arkansas is that Nelson is the only such player the Crimson Tide will have after forwards Brandon Miller, Noah Clowney and center Charles Bediako entered the draft. The Aggies, though, will return Julius Marble and Harry Coleman III, two players who dominated Arkansas in both games last year.
Let’s take a second to look at Arkansas’ depth chart. At least, the way it looks from here:
That, folks, is a dynamite basketball team on paper. Granted, it’s a better one with Nelson. Either way, Arkansas is a lock in all the too-early Top 25s this offseason. And because of the way that it’s built, Mitchell may not even be a starter once he recovers from whatever issue recently put his left foot into a walking boot, according to Pig Trail Nation’s Kevin McPherson.
If Musselman goes the route of the “five best players on the floor” the way his football coaching brethren do with their offensive lines, then the starting lineup would be Brazile, Mark, Battle, Davis and either Ellis or Menifield. Mitchell would likely come in when needed to bang bodies. And one can presume there’s a good chance a big man transfer will end up with the roster spot Nelson would have filled.
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But it’s June. Conjecture and all that. The reality is that Musselman will need until at least January to have some semblance of legitimate chemistry with his team. And that’s no knock against the guys on the roster. It’s just the reality that Musselman himself has stated each of the last three years as the Razorbacks have been dominated so much by newcomers from the portal.
Either way, when the basketball schedule is released, it would be wise to circle the date(s) featuring the Crimson Tide. Because by then, every side will know what it has and what it doesn’t.
***
Hear more about Mitchell’s apparent injury at 6:40 below:
After last week’s winter storm, several Arkansas school districts have announced that they will remain closed or will open late on Monday because of icy road conditions in neighborhoods and secondary streets:
* Benton School District: Closed.
* Booneville School District: Closed.
* Bryant School District: Closed.
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* Cabot School District: Schools will have a 2-hour delayed start.
* Conway School District: School will start at 10 a.m. after a 2-hour delay. Snow bus routes will be in effect.
* Greenbrier School District: Closed.
* Hot Springs School District: Closed.
* Jacksonville/North Pulaski School District: Closed. District offices and departments will open.
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* Little Rock School District: Closed. However, all 12-month employees, school administration and custodians should report to work at regularly scheduled times.
* North Little Rock School District: Closed. District Central Office sites will open at 10 a.m. Monday.
* Pulaski County Special School District: Closed. District offices will be open for those who can safely report to work, including auxiliary offices. School staff who are 244-day employees will be expected to report to work as well.
* Sheridan School District: Closed.
This list is based on school district news releases and social media posts, and it is not comprehensive. For information on other Arkansas school districts, patrons are asked to consult their school’s website or district app.
While the Arkansas Razorbacks have been hitting the transfer portal hard, it is partially as a result of having more than 20 scholarship players decide to enter the portal after a 6-6 regular season that was capped off with a Liberty Bowl win over Texas Tech on Dec. 27.
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The transfer portal officially opened Dec. 9 and it was open for a 30 day window through Dec. 28. There is also an additional five-day window for players to enter once their season is over, plus there will be an additional 10-day portal window from April 16-25.
ALSO READ: Arkansas Football 2025 Roster Tracker
HawgBeat provides a look at where former Razorbacks have transferred so far…
Note: “GP” denotes games played. Even if a player appears on special teams, that counts as a game played.
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OL Patrick Kutas – Ole Miss
From: Christian Brothers High School (Memphis, TN)
MEMPHIS –While Beale Street is famous for being the Home of the Blues, red was the color of the day Dec. 26 at the Beale Street Parade, where many watchers were clad in red — a team color for both teams playing in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl the following day.
Marching bands, vintage vehicles, cheer squads and floats marched, strutted and cruised down the historic street in downtown Memphis as fans of the Arkansas Razorbacks and the Texas Tech Red Raiders lined the streets, cheering as bands and cheer squads from their schools passed by.
The University of Arkansas Razorback Marching Band, cheerleaders and pep squad brought up the rear of the parade, creating a grand finale as they marched to meet Texas Tech’s Goin’ Band from Raiderland at Beale Street’s Handy Park for a festive Bash on Beale Pep Rally. Both the parade and the pep rally were sponsored by the Beale Street Merchants Association.
— Story and photos by Cary Jenkins
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Maddie Hayley, Kim Hayley, Spphie Haley, Layne Haley, Toomy Haley, orey Hale and Abbie Hayley on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
Caden, Colton, Amber and Drew Cates, all of Little Rock, on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
D.J. Stutts, Shante Stutts and DAnte Stutts of Batesville, mother and siblings of the late Razorback football team member Dion Stutts on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
Aspen Coad, Mattie Grace Fortenberry, Aylin Coad, Milli Fortenberry and Mac Fortenberry on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
Aspen Coad, Mattie Grace Fortenberry, Aylin Coad, Milli Fortenberry and Mac Fortenberry on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
Rhett, Dana Asher and Cooper Daniel of Rogers on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
Jeff Box of Memphis on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
Elivs Moya, Jennifer and Hunter Yurachek on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
Sue E. Pig on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
Sue E. Pig on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)
Jonathan and Brittany Hays with Paxton and Brooke Kellett, all of Jonesboro. on 12/26/2024 on Beale Street, Memphis, Liberty Bowl Parade. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins)