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2020 UA Sports Hall of Honor Class

Corey Beck
Men’s Basketball


Corey Beck, who played at the University of Arkansas from 1993-95, was a 1995 All-SEC selection as he drained 49 percent of his 3-point shots, second on the school’s single-season list, while handing out 207 assists, which ranks third. Both of those totals are records by a Razorback for a senior season. For his career, Beck had 483 assists, third on the Arkansas all-time list as he led the team in the category in each of his three years with Razorbacks. In SEC games only, Beck made 54 percent of his shots for his career, which ranks second on the school’s all-time list. Beck had a double-double – scoring 15 points and snagging 10 rebounds – in the 76-72 victory over Duke to secure the 1994 NCAA Championship. The Memphis, Tenn., native would also be named to the 1994 NCAA Final Four All-Tournament Team. While Corliss Williamson and Scotty Thurman garnered most of the attention, Beck was described as the “blue-collar leader” of that squad. Beck went on to play in the NBA with the Charlotte Hornets and Philadelphia 76ers. In 2019, Beck was named Arkansas’ Allstate® SEC Basketball Legend.

Jon Brittenum
Football


Jon Brittenum quarterbacked the Razorbacks from 1963-66, leading a pair of top 10 teams in his final two years on the Hill. He threw for over 1,100 yards in both 1965 and 1966, earning All-Southwest Conference honors both years. Brittenum led the Hogs to a No. 1 ranking in ’65 entering the Cotton Bowl as the second-ranked team in the country, and possibly might have led to the program’s second consecutive national championship if not for separating his shoulder in the bowl game vs. LSU. The 1965 season included a 27-24 victory over No. 1 Texas with Brittenum calling the plays, propelling the Hogs to the top spot in the country after the halfway point of the season. Head Coach Frank Broyles penned in his autobiography that Brittenum was, “the best passer on the move that I’ve ever seen. He could throw it like a frozen rope on the sprint-out series. He was the perfect passer-runner for the system that we played at the time.” Brittenum ran for 494 yards over his three years at the helm of the Razorback offense. He would go on to play one year for the San Diego Chargers in 1968.

Ralph Kraus
Baseball


An All-American outfielder in 1986, Kraus also earned All-SWC and SWC All-Tournament honors that year. He was named to the College World Series all-tournament team in 1985 and received the George Dickey Award in 1986. He led the team with a .397 average in 1986 and tied for the team led with 91 hits. He helped the Hogs go 51-15 and reach the College World Series in 1985 and 43-17 and reach the NCAA regionals in 1986. His 245-career hits rank fifth all-time while his 58 doubles and 400 total bases are fourth and his 96 extra base hits are sixth. Kraus will live in the Arkansas record books for several amazing moments on the field, including finishing off the program’s first triple play in school history during the 1983 SWC Tournament. He also helped usher in the school’s first night game in 1985 in classic style, launching a home run in the bottom of the ninth to defeat Texas. In 1986, Kraus was selected as the recipient for the Frank Broyles Award, recognizing the top male Razorback student-athlete. He was drafted in the 10th round of the 1986 MLB Draft by the New York Yankees, playing four years of pro ball in the organization from 1986-89.

Amanda McCurdy
Women’s Golf


Amanda McCurdy, who played for Arkansas from 2002-06, played a major role in helping make the Razorbacks a team recognized nationally on the course. Along with Courtney Mahon, McCurdy helped Arkansas make its first two NCAA Championship appearances in 2005 and 2006. She was Arkansas’ first multiple-event winner, taking home multiple titles in both 2003-04 and in 2005-06. In all, McCurdy ended up winning four individual medals during her time on the Hill, one of just four Hogs to ever accomplish the feat, joined by fellow Razorback legends Stacy Lewis, Emily Tubert and Maria Fassi. For her efforts, the El Dorado, Ark., native was selected to an All-SEC team three times during her illustrious career, including a First-Team appearance in 2006. McCurdy also earned national acclaim following her 2005-06 campaign, as she was recognized as an All-American Honorable Mention by both the National Golf Coaches Association and Golfweek.

Darren McFadden
Football


McFadden, one of the nation’s most electric running backs of his era, tormented opposing defenses to the tune of a school record 4,590 rushing yards and 41 rushing touchdowns over just three seasons from 2005-07. He became only the second back-to-back recipient (2006, 2007) of the Doak Walker Award, given to college football’s premier running back, and finished as the Heisman Trophy runner-up in both campaigns. McFadden garnered Walter Camp Player of the Year recognition in 2007 and is one of only two running backs in the last 12 years to earn the award. The Little Rock product joined USC’s Reggie Bush as the only Consensus All-American halfbacks of the 2000s and was selected First Team All-SEC every year of his career while grabbing SEC Offensive Player of the Year honors in 2006 and 2007. In his final year, McFadden set the single-season school record with 1,830 rushing yards and ran for 16 scores. During the season, he equaled the single-game conference rushing record set in 1978 streaking for 321 yards against South Carolina. Later that season, he accounted for four touchdowns and 206 rushing yards in an epic 50-48 triple-overtime triumph at LSU. His 4,590 career yards on the ground is third in SEC history and 5,881 career all-purpose yards rank second. The fourth overall selection by Oakland in the 2008 NFL Draft, McFadden tied defensive tackle Dan Hampton (1979) for the highest Razorback draft choice of the post NFL-AFL Merger era. He enjoyed a 10-year NFL career with the Raiders and Dallas Cowboys. In 2019, he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

Coach Ken Turner
Football


Ken Turner joined the Razorbacks’ coaching staff in 1970 as a graduate assistant for head coach Frank Broyles’ staff after serving as the head coach at West Memphis, where he was 36-10-4. Coach Broyles promoted Turner in 1972 to run the B-Team for the Hogs before making him the team’s offensive line coach in 1973. Turner oversaw the offensive line, tight ends, receivers and kickers for Broyles. Turner worked in the same capacity for Lou Holtz during his tenure from 1977-83 and coached the tight ends and kickers during Ken Hatfield’s first five seasons as the Head Hog. Turner coached six first-team All-Americans for the Razorbacks – K/P Steve Little (1976, 77), OL Leotis Harris (1977), K/P Bruce Lahay (1981), OL Steve Korte (1982), P Greg Horne (1986) and K Kendall Trainor (1988). Including second-team All-American K Ish Ordonez (1979), Turner has coached all but one of Arkansas’ eight All-American kickers and punters. Turner left in 1989 to return to his alma mater – Henderson State – to serve as the Reddies Director of Athletics. He added head coaching duties to his agenda from 1990-93 before retiring as the AD in 2000. He led the Reddies from NAIA to the NCAA and was inducted into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame in 2001.
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Random Thoughts: DL catching up to rest of conference

The SEC is Big Boy football and in terms of pure mass it just hasn't seemed like Arkansas has fit that stereotype in the trenches the last few years. Now though it definitely feels like that mindset has changed. Bringing in a new coaching staff with ties all around the conference is playing a major part in that change as well. The DL in particular is an area I want to focus in on as they've been the most upgraded position in comparison to the conference standard in my opinion. Here are the numbers in regard to that, analyzing last years Arkansas team vs this years Arkansas + the rest of the normal opponents (SEC West + Mizzou):
Last years starting DL at Arkansas: Soli, Sosa, T.J. Smith, Gabe Richardson. Average 6'3.25" 269.25 lbs.
This years starting DL at Arkansas: Coates, Marshall, Kelly, DG. Average 6'4.25" 295.5 lbs.
This years starting DL at LSU: Andre Anthony, Tyler Shelvin, Glen Logan, Travez Moore. Average 6'3.25" 295.75 lbs.
This years starting DL at Alabama (3-4 + Buck): Christian Barmore, D.J. Dale, LeBryan Ray, Chris Allen(B). Average: 6'4.25" 290.5 lbs.
This years starting DL at Ole Miss: Tariq Tisdale, Ryder Anderson, K.D. Hill, Brandon Mack. Average: 6'4" 282.5 lbs.
This years starting DL at MSU (3-3-5): Kobe Jones, Marquiss Spencer, Nathan Pickering. Average: 6'4" 290 lbs.
This years starting DL at Texas A&M: Demarvin Leal, Bobby Brown, Jayden Peevy, Tyree Johnson. Average: 6'4.5" 287.5 lbs.
This years starting DL at Auburn (3-4 + Buck): Big Kat Bryant, Tyrone Truesdell, Coynis Miller, Derick Hall(B). Average: 6'3" 282 lbs.
This years starting DL at Missouri: Tre Williams, Akial Byers, Markell Utsey, Chris Turner. Average: 6'4.25" 282.5 lbs.

It's safe to say this years team fits in with who they play a bit more from a physical standpoint in comparison to last years first unit being by FAR the smallest in the division. In comparison last years 6'3.25" 269.25 is more than half and inch shorter and 18 pounds lighter than this years opponents average of 6'3.9" 287.25 lbs. where this years Arkansas team is taller on average and heavier by more than a quarter of an inch and 8 pounds. We're finally bringing men to the dinner table.

BB Recruiting 2021 Basketball Recruiting Status Report

@DaltonG started acknowledging some futurecasts of prospects so I thought I'd compile remaining target info into a post:

Two scholarships available for '21:

Michael James - FC Virginia Tech
Jahmai Mashack - FC Tennessee
James White - FC Ole Miss
Carter Whitt - FC Nebraska (six months ago - at this point the Hogs are still in the mix but he is not discussing his recruitment with anyone)
Trey Alexander - Old FC Texas Tech, two FC to Oklahoma a month ago
DaRon Holmes - FC Arizona
Arthur Kaluma - FC UNLV
Jalen Ricks - Fairly certain he's a Tulsa or TAMU lean
Daimion Collins - don't see Arkansas having a shot


Not saying FCs are 100% accurate or set in stone, but if those do hold, options remaining:

Johnathan Lawson
Michael Foster
Moussa Diabate
Alex Fudge
Jordan Nesbitt
David Okwera

I can try to reach out to some of these guys this week, though some of them I have already tried and gotten no response, so I don't want to push too hard. Could also be a possibility that the staff doesn't sign another freshman and fills with two GTs. I mentioned that was the goal in a perfect recruiting cycle: sign Harrison Ingram and Okwera and 2 GTs to load up for '22.

Ranking likely candidates, based on information available, recent FCs, and interviews I've conducted, the most likely freshman prospects for '21 are:

Lawson, Alexander, Okwera.

IDK about Burks on ST, if someone else can handle duties

I go back and forth on this.
yes you want the ball in the hands of your best / most dynamic player as much as possible
yes I believe coach Fountain will improve ST dramatically to help him out
but
I don’t like the thought of him getting hurt on ST, he got destroyed several times last year due to terrible ST plays, once by his own teammate 22 Edwards
We can still be good on ST without him, i don’t beleive we would be as good on offense without him. We need him at WR 100% of time

risk vs reward doesn’t seem to work here for me, can 1 special teams play win us a game (receiving, obviously coverage has cost us a few times), maybe
but him not being 100% at wr would affect this offense dramatically. We can make it without him on ST, not sure we can on O

and yes I realize you can get hurt on any play, anywhere, in game, practice or goofing around

thoughts?

BB Recruiting Conversation with 2021 Johnathan Lawson‘s Dad

Posting as a thread because he didn’t really give me enough to write a full article, and Johnathan never got back with me, so I’ll give y’all the highlights:

- “Johnathan just wants to be on a platform to showcase his talent.“

- Said Muss’s staff and their NBA experience could help Johnathan “achieve his dream” of playing professional ball. Also said the staff would prepare him off the court.

- Recruiting process has been difficult with not being able to see campuses, but “the only good thing was that he had already visited Arkansas” before the pandemic and everything closed.

- said “Coach Muss loves big guards.” Followed that with “Johnathan will fit in his system so long as he trust the process.”

- Blue collar work ethic. Cuts grass any day it’s not raining. Does skill development training or speed/conditioning training every single day.

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