Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Six for the road

Razorbacks notch another SEC victory away from home.

- TOM MURPHY

AUBURN, Ala. — Arkansas Razorbacks Coach Mike Anderson brought an unbeaten streak and a large gathering of friends and family into Auburn Arena on Saturday.

Anderson and the Razorbacks kept Arkansas’ winning streak at Auburn Arena alive with a workmanlik­e 79-68 victory over the Tigers before a crowd of 8,098.

The University of Arkansas at Fayettevil­le (22-7, 11-5 SEC) improved to 5-0 at Auburn Arena and remained in a tie for third place in the SEC with their fifth consecutiv­e victory.

“I’m from Alabama, so I’ve got a lot of family here, Anderson said. “I’ve been fortunate our teams have played well here, and as a coach, you enjoy coaching in a competitiv­e closed-in environmen­t.”

Arkansas improved to 6-2 in SEC road games and avenged a 90-86 loss to the Tigers (17-12, 6-10) last season

at Walton Arena in Fayettevil­le.

“Arkansas is better than us, but they’re not that much better than us,” Auburn Coach Bruce Pearl said. “They came in here and controlled this game in our building.”

The Razorbacks shot 50 percent from the field (29 of 58) and limited Auburn to 37.1 percent on 23-of-62 shooting.

Arkansas never trailed after a layup in transition from Jaylen Barford made it 29-28 with 4:39 left in the first half, led 40-31 at the half and repelled the young Tigers, who twice cut the deficit to six points in the second half.

Dusty Hannahs played a pivotal role in rebuilding the lead, scoring eight consecutiv­e Arkansas points after Auburn pulled within 55-49 with 11 minutes to play.

“As time has gone on, as a player I’ve recognized the crucial moments of a game,” said Hannahs, who finished with 18 points, including 3 of 7 on three-point attempts. “They were making a run right there and I was just thinking ‘ Be aggressive and some baskets could break their back.’ We got those baskets and held serve on the defensive end and pulled off the win.”

Barford led Arkansas with 20 points, and contribute­d six points during a second eightpoint spurt to fend off another Auburn run.

“We just made some plays and dug in on defense and rebounded the ball,” Barford said. “This means a lot. It’s another big road win with just two more games left.”

The Razorbacks got strong contributi­ons from Trey Thompson, who played a career-high 29 minutes, and Arlando Cook, who scored eight points off the bench, as starting center Moses Kingsley was limited to 15 minutes due to foul trouble.

Thompson had a gamehigh 11 rebounds, 10 on the defensive end, and Arkansas outrebound­ed Auburn 41-33. Cook went 3 of 3 from the field and scored all eight of his points in the first half.

“You look at Trey Thompson’s board work,” Anderson said. “Those were career minutes for him, and how he rewards me is he gets 11 rebounds and has some tremendous assists. Just his presence on the floor is huge for our basketball team.”

Auburn guard Jared Harper scored 17 points, and fellow freshman Mustapha Heron added 16. Heron has scored 10 or more points in 28 of 29 games.

“One of the things that I’m probably most disappoint­ed in is the fact that we just haven’t defended our home floor, particular­ly in conference play,” said Pearl, whose Tigers dropped to 3-5 in league home games. “Our kids really wanted this one, and I thought we were ready. We just didn’t execute.

“We prepared for their zone and in practice we were lights out. Then in the game we just didn’t execute our spacing and our timing.”

The Tigers, who rely on three-point shooting as much as any team in the SEC, made 10 of 24 from three-point range. Arkansas was 5 of 17 on three-pointers.

Arkansas has won 11 conference games for the sixth time in 26 SEC seasons and for the second time in the past 19 seasons.

The Razorbacks also improved to 10-5 in their past 15 games away from Walton Arena.

Arkansas made 10 of 10 from the line in the final 3:58 to stay comfortabl­y in front. The Razorbacks were 16 of 20 (80 percent) for the game, while the Tigers were 12 of 23 (52.2 percent) on free throws.

Kingsley had no points and one rebound in the first half after going to the bench for good at the 17:01 mark after his second foul.

Arkansas extended its nine-point halftime lead to 13 on two occasions early in the second half.

Barford and Kingsley hit consecutiv­e baskets to put the Hogs on top 44-31 to start the half. A dunk by Dustin Thomas on a pass by Kingsley made it 46-33 moments later.

Arkansas led 55-49 at 10:51 when Hannahs outscored Auburn 8-3 in a span of 1:16 to push the Razorbacks’ lead to 63-52. Barford’s step-back jumper made it 65-52 with 8:24 to play.

Kingsley finished with 8 points, 6 rebounds, 2 blocked shots and 4 fouls in a season-low 15 minutes, but Arkansas outscored Auburn 36-24 in the lane.

The teams traded the lead six times in the first half, which ended with Arkansas outscoring Auburn 13-3 to lead by nine at halftime.

 ?? AP/TODD J. VAN EMST ?? Arkansas Razorbacks guard Dusty Hannahs tries to drive the lane while defended by Auburn’s Jared Harper (left) and T.J. Dunans on Saturday night in Auburn, Ala. Hannahs scored 18 points in the Razorbacks’ 79-68 victory over the Tigers.
AP/TODD J. VAN EMST Arkansas Razorbacks guard Dusty Hannahs tries to drive the lane while defended by Auburn’s Jared Harper (left) and T.J. Dunans on Saturday night in Auburn, Ala. Hannahs scored 18 points in the Razorbacks’ 79-68 victory over the Tigers.
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 ?? AP/TODD J. VAN EMST ?? Arkansas Razorbacks guard Jaylen Barford scored 20 points Saturday night against Auburn in Auburn, Ala.
AP/TODD J. VAN EMST Arkansas Razorbacks guard Jaylen Barford scored 20 points Saturday night against Auburn in Auburn, Ala.

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