Arkansas
Man in Black springs a leak: Arkansas water tower featuring Johnny Cash vandalized
KINGSLAND, Ark. – Every city has that one factor they’re identified for, and for Kingsland, that’s Johnny Money.
The music legend was born within the southern Arkansas city of 500. However not too long ago, Johnny’s been performing up because of a superbly positioned bullet gap within the city’s water tower.
A silhouette of Money was put up on the 50,000-gallon tank to recollect the artist, full with a guitar and signature stance. However Tuesday, metropolis officers arrived to discover a artistic addition – a bullet gap aimed in such a manner in order to make the define of Money seem as if he’s relieving himself.
“Any individual shot our water tower, shot the silhouette of Johnny Money in a really delicate space,” defined mayor Luke Neal, glancing up on the Man in Black. “It’s been leaking for the final virtually week.”
The picture of Money apparently letting free shortly went viral, with folks driving into city simply to see the leaking tower.
However though the state of affairs is humorous, the affect of the water tank isn’t. Near 30,000 gallons of water are flowing into the dust every single day that Johnny continues to “stroll the road”, loads of water wasted and a adverse affect on residents.
“Folks can search for their water to be discolored,” Neal mentioned, because the city should swap to a water line because the tank is repaired. He provides water strain may additionally be affected.
In response to Neal, the tower is dropping someplace round $200 in water a day, which added with an almost $5,000 restore job involving draining the tower is placing Kingsland’s finances in “the ring of fireside”.
“It may appear small in greater locations,” Neal mentioned of the associated fee, “however for right here it’s a pretty big quantity.”
The Cleveland County Sheriff’s Workplace does have some leads on this case, with the vandal presumably dealing with a felony cost for tampering with the important operations of a metropolis.
An identical incident occurred in 1993, however Johnny wasn’t standing up there again then.
Arkansas
Defense powers offense in Arkansas basketball’s win over Lipscomb to begin Calipari era
FAYETTEVILLE — John Calipari wanted to coach a more physical, defensive-minded team this year with Arkansas basketball, ditching some of the fragilities that cost him over the final chapters at Kentucky.
The Razorbacks have only played one regular season game in the Calipari era, but they’re off to a strong start in providing their new head coach with what he’s seeking.
No. 16 Arkansas (1-0) knocked off Lipscomb 76-60 Wednesday night in its season-opener. The Hogs forced 19 turnovers and held the Bisons (1-1) 22.1 points shy of their season average from last year. Lipscomb shot 37.1% from the field after shooting 52.1% in its first game of the new campaign Monday night.
“If you can guard the ball and you’re not in a bunch of rotations, you’re going to be pretty good,” Calipari said. “If you can guard the ball — are you ready for this statement — occupy your man’s eyes, we’ve got all these guys behind you that will block shots.”
Arkansas’ half-court offense struggled in moments throughout Wednesday night’s win, but nothing was working early on. Lipscomb jumped out to a 17-12 lead midway through the first half.
That’s when Arkansas ratcheted up its defensive pressure — even mixing in a full-court press — carving out an 11-0 run that was powered getting out in transition and forcing turnovers.
“Kenny Payne, he always says defense is our offense, so we once we get a few stops, we can go on our offensive run,” Arkansas guard Johnell Davis said.
Just as he did after each of the preseason exhibitions, Calipari dished out some postgame praise for Davis’ work on the defensive end. The FAU transfer finished with 15 points and forced two turnovers. Only freshman Boogie Fland had more points with 17.
But forcing turnovers is only the first part of the equation. Arkansas was able to successfully turn those extra possessions into made baskets, scoring 25 points off turnovers and 23 fast-break points.
“What we didn’t do down at TCU, they refused to throw it ahead because the guy wants, ‘I’m going to start this’,” Calipari said. “No. Boom, bang and let’s see what happens. Get the ball to the other side and we’ll play.”
And Arkansas’ defense has another gear it can reach. Tennessee transfer Jonas Aidoo only played seven minutes against Lipscomb in his return from injury. Aidoo was a member of the SEC’s All-Defensive Team last year and will be the paint protector for the Hogs this winter.
The hope is that the Hogs’ offense catches up in the coming weeks. Arkansas went 4 of 19 on 3-pointers and coughed up 12 turnovers.
But when the going got tough as Lipscomb cut the deficit to 60-56 with 7:47 remaining, Arkansas fed Zvonimir Ivišić the basketball, and the 7-foot-2 center responded with a personal 8-1 run to stretch the lead back to double figures. It stated with a 3-pointer before Ivišić scored on a pair of post-ups.
That’s a building block for the Arkansas offense moving forward, but in the very early stages of this new era, defense seems to be the foundation.
Arkansas
#16 Arkansas hosts Lipscomb Wednesday night in season opener
The 2024-25 season for Arkansas men’s basketball will officially begin on Wednesday (Nov. 6) when the #16 Razorbacks host Lipscomb. Tipoff is set for 7 pm and the game will be broadcast on SEC Network Plus.
This will mark Arkansas’s season and home opener. Lipscomb began its season on Monday with a win at Duquesne.
Arkansas is opening its 102nd year of basketball. Arkansas is 82-19 in season openers all-time and 91-10 in home openers. Arkansas has won 48 of the last 50 season openers dating back to 1974-75 with both losses coming on neutral courts. The Razorbacks have won 50 straight home openers, including a 31-0 record in openers inside Bud Walton Arena.
John Calipari is 25-7 as a collegiate head coach in season openers and 29-3 in home openers.
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Arkansas
What channel is Arkansas basketball vs Lipscomb today? Time, streaming, gameday info
The day Arkansas basketball fans have been waiting for is here at last.
Head coach John Calipari and the Razorbacks open the 2024-25 season against Lipscomb on Wednesday, starting a non-conference gauntlet that’ll prep Arkansas for a a grueling SEC slate and lead to a hopeful run into the latter stages of March.
Arkansas enters its opener ranked No. 16 in the USA TODAY Coaches Poll. The Hogs went 1-1 in preseason exhibitions against Kansas and TCU, ushering in a new roster with one returnee from last year’s team that failed to make the NCAA Tournament.
Lipscomb (1-0) began its season Monday night with a 77-72 road victory over Duquesne. Jacob Ognacevic led the way with 30 points and 10 rebounds, while the Bisons shot 42.8% from three in the victory.
Here’s how to watch the Arkansas and Lipscomb game, including time, TV schedule and streaming information.
What channel is Arkansas basketball vs. Lipscomb today?
- TV channel: N/A
- Streaming: SEC+ (ESPN+)
Arkansas vs. Lipscomb will not be on TV, but the matchup is available to stream via SEC+ on ESPN.com and the ESPN app.
Arkansas basketball vs. Lipscomb start time
- Date: Wednesday, November 6
- Start time: 7 p.m. CT
The Arkansas vs. Lipscomb game will be played at approximately 7 p.m. CT on Wednesday at Bud Walton Arena in Fayetteville.
Arkansas basketball news
Arkansas basketball 2024-25 schedule
Date | Opponent | Time | TV |
Nov. 6 | Lipscomb | 7 p.m. | SEC+ |
Nov. 9 | Baylor (Dallas) | 6:30 p.m. | ESPNU |
Nov. 13 | Troy | 7 p.m. | SEC+ |
Nov. 18 | Pacific | 7 p.m. | SEC+ |
Nov. 22 | Little Rock | 8 p.m. | SEC Network |
Nov. 25 | Maryland-Eastern Shore | 7 p.m. | SEC+ |
Nov. 28 | Illinois (Kansas City) | 3 p.m. | CBS |
Dec. 3 | at Miami | 6 or 6:30 p.m. | ESPN/ESPN2 |
Dec. 7 | Texas San-Antonio | TBD | SEC+ |
Dec. 10 | Michigan (New York City) | 8 p.m. | ESPN |
Dec. 14 | Central Arkansas (North Little Rock) | 3 p.m. | SEC+ |
Dec. 21 | North Carolina A&T | 1:30 p.m. | SEC Network |
Dec. 30 | Oakland | 7 p.m. | SEC+ |
Jan. 4 | at Tennessee* | Noon | ESPN |
Jan. 8 | Ole Miss* | 6 p.m. | ESPN/ESPNU |
Jan. 11 | Florida* | 3 p.m. | ESPN/ESPN2 |
Jan. 14 | at LSU* | 8 p.m. | SEC Network |
Jan. 18 | at Missouri* | 5 p.m. | SEC Network |
Jan. 22 | Georgia* | 8 p.m. | SEC Network |
Jan. 25 | Oklahoma* | 7:30 p.m. | ESPN/ESPN2/ESPNU |
Feb. 1 | at Kentucky* | 8 p.m. | ESPN |
Feb. 5 | at Texas* | 8 p.m. | ESPN2 |
Feb. 8 | Alabama* | 7 p.m. | ESPN |
Feb. 12 | LSU* | 8 p.m. | ESPN2/ESPNU |
Feb. 15 | at Texas A&M* | 11 a.m. | ESPN/ESPN2 |
Feb. 19 | at Auburn* | 8 p.m. | ESPN/ESPN2 |
Feb. 22 | Missouri* | 7 p.m. | ESPN/ESPN2 |
Feb. 26 | Texas* | 8 p.m. | ESPN2/ESPNU |
March 1 | at South Carolina* | Noon | SEC Network |
March 4 | at Vanderbilt* | 9 p.m. | SEC Network |
March 8 | Mississippi State* | 11 a.m. | ESPN/SEC Network |
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