Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Razorbacks belong to all of Arkansas

From every corner of the state and all in between, Arkansans unite in Hog-calling for the Razorbacks.

- NATE ALLEN

FAYETTEVIL­LE — The Arkansas Razorbacks’ last two basketball games exemplify what most longtime Razorbacks fans know deep down to be true.

Even if called a stadium debate, there truly is no Arkansas statewide debate when the Razorbacks play as they played during their last Saturday basketball games in Fayettevil­le and North Little Rock.

From every corner of the state and all in between, Arkansans unite in Hog-calling for the Razorbacks.

Technicall­y, call them representi­ng the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le. But whether it’s the alum coming back to campus, the fan who never gets to Fayettevil­le except to see them play, or the fan who never sets foot in Fayettevil­le but gets to the annual football game at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock and/or the annual basketball game at Verizon Arena in North Little Rock, the Razorbacks represent and belong to Arkansas. All of Arkansas.

All of Arkansas seems to be passionate­ly embracing Coach Mike Anderson’s basketball Razorbacks these last two Saturdays. Fans filled Walton Arena in Fayettevil­le to see them manhandle Minnesota. Fans then packed Verizon to see the Hogs trounce Troy.

How best physically and fiscally to keep the Razorbacks belonging to all of Arkansas besets brand new Arkansas Athletics Director Hunter Yurachek.

Basketball is easy. With 18 home games, it’s no problem scheduling one at Verizon.

It’s different for football. Always has been.

It used to be that some UA students in Fayettevil­le griped that four games were played in War Memorial and only three on campus though the state’s economics dictated deferring to central and eastern Arkansas.

Things changed. Upon putting the Razorbacks into the SEC, then-Arkansas Athletics Director Frank Broyles knew the Razorbacks needed to play big-time catch-up on their campus football facility in a league increasing­ly hosting football only on its campuses.

Houston Nutt’s 9-3 1998 Razorbacks galvanized a state, the economy of which most boomed in Northwest Arkansas. An expanded, renovated Reynolds Razorback Stadium debuted in 2000.

It shined in sharp contrast to the deteriorat­ing, smaller War Memorial.

That contrast has only increased. So did the program’s desire under 2008-17 Athletics Director Jeff Long for the bigger money netted playing football in Fayettevil­le.

The fiscal pressure only increases for more in Fayettevil­le.

Long, who was fired last month, launched an ongoing minimum estimated $160 million luxury seating expansion in the Reynolds Razorback Stadium north end zone.

A national tax bill nearing passage so threatens tax write-offs accompanyi­ng season-ticket purchases that universiti­es nationally are franticall­y extending invitation­s to purchase 2018 season tickets now before tax rules change.

Garnering every football cent in Fayettevil­le seems essential but not the most essential.

Above all costs, the statewide unity that the Razorbacks provide always is their best abiding asset.

So whatever the UA brass decides after the 2018 Arkansas vs. Ole Miss game fulfills the current War Memorial contract, they must convincing­ly convey that it’s all about unity and not the money.

For without the Razorbacks belonging to all of Arkansas, much of Arkansas might cease buying into a program that would risk wasting what money can’t buy.

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