Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

18 games reshuffle schedule

- BOB HOLT

FAYETTEVIL­LE — This looks like the perfect time for the Arkansas men’s basketball team to end its 13-year losing streak at Mississipp­i State.

“We’re all the way up to a booming seven scholarshi­p players,” said Bulldogs Coach Rick Ray, whose injury-depleted team is 5-7, including losses to Troy and Alabama A&M. “We were playing with six scholarshi­p guys for a while, but having Jalen Steele back puts us at seven.”

The Bulldogs also have two walk-on players.

“We haven’t had a chance to get better in practice a lot because we’re playing against managers and coaches,” Ray said. “Sometimes it’s hard to hold our guys accountabl­e as far as

what we want to do on the court.”

So the Razorbacks surely are in line to win at Humphrey Coliseum in Starkville, Miss., for the first time since they beat the Bulldogs 87-81 on Feb. 2, 2000, right?

Just one problem. For the first time in 22 seasons since joining the SEC, Arkansas isn’t playing at Mississipp­i State.

Teams still played a 16game schedule even after the SEC abolished divisions last season, and Arkansas faced all of five of its old West rivals — Alabama, Auburn, LSU, Ole Miss and Mississipp­i State — in home-and-home series.

This season’s SEC schedule, which begins tonight when Alabama plays at Missouri, has expanded to 18 games with the addition of Missouri and Texas A&M.

Arkansas plays twice against five teams — Auburn, Texas A&M, No. 10 Missouri, No. 11 Florida and Vanderbilt. Auburn is the only team from the old West division the Razorbacks play more than once.

“It’s new for everybody,” said Razorbacks Coach Mike Anderson, whose team opens SEC play Wednesday night against Texas A&M at College Station. “We’ll see how it unfolds.

“I was fine with 16 [games], but when you add two more teams in, I guess the math didn’t add up.”

The new format means some teams will have a tougher road to winning the SEC championsh­ip depending on which opponents they’re facing twice and where the other games are played.

“There’s a part of me that thinks we should just play 26 league games, just have it out,” Georgia Coach Mark Fox said. “We’ve always had balanced scheduling, at least within your division, and now we don’t have that.

“That’s what kind of makes the double round-robin and all those games appealing.

“I know no one would ever go for that, but the schedules are very skewed now, and there’s no way around that with 14 teams and only playing 18 games.”

Florida Coach Billy Donovan said every SEC team “is going to have to sacrifice a little bit” as a result of expansion.

“I think right now the league is doing the best it can to create a competitiv­e, fair and balanced schedule under the circumstan­ces,” Donovan said. “But it will be very interestin­g how this goes considerin­g it’s the first time playing 18 games.”

Coaches favored doing away with divisions because they believe having one conference race is more fair for SEC Tournament seedings and helps the conference get more NCAA Tournament bids.

Having 18 SEC games, coaches agree, also should boost teams’ strength of schedule.

“We kind of stubbed our toe and lost some games we probably shouldn’t have lost,” said Alabama Coach Anthony Grant, whose Crimson Tide are 8-5 with home losses to Mercer, Tulane and Dayton.

“So having more games in the conference I think gives us a chance to try to put ourselves in position to play in the postseason.”

LSU Coach Johnny Jones said it can be difficult to schedule home- and- home series with teams from other major conference­s.

“Having an additional [SEC] home game is going to be great for our fan base, and at the same time going on the road and playing another difficult team is going to help us out at the end of the day,” Jones said.

“It’s difficult to get it to a balance that’s going to satisfy everybody. It’s just going to be important to play the schedule that’s in front of us.”

Arkansas junior guard Rickey Scott said he likes the idea of playing 18 SEC games.

“The way I look at it, more games mean more fun,” Scott said.

The Razorbacks went 1-5 in their last six SEC games last season to finish 6-10.

“Last year I felt like we hit a wall, but this year I think we’ve got a lot more pieces to our team, a lot more talent,” Arkansas sophomore guard BJ Young said.

“So we’re going to be ready to keep going throughout the season and stay strong as a team.”

Missouri Coach Frank Haithe went through an 18game schedule in the Big 12 last season — when the Tigers went 14-4 — after having 16game schedules in the Atlantic Coast Conference­s for seven years with Miami.

“It’s just was such a grind on you, but it is what it is,” Haithe said of going from 16 to 18 games. “Now with these megaconfer­ences, I think everybody eventually is going to go to 18 league games .

“It’s two more high-powered teams to play, but we’re looking forward it. You’ve just got to buckle up and go after it.”

The 18- game schedule means no open weeks for SEC teams during conference play.

“It’s going to be two hard games every week,” Fox said. “It seems much longer than playing 16 games. I think staying healthy and managing your energy level is going to be important.”

Ole Miss Coach Andy Kennedy has led the Rebels to victories at Arkansas in each of the previous four years, but Kennedy said he won’t miss playing at Walton Arena this season.

“We’ve had some success there for whatever reason, but that’s a challengin­g environmen­t and Mike’s got a very good team,” Kennedy said.

“So I would prefer to get the Razorbacks in Oxford.”

Ole Miss also gets to play Mississipp­i State in Oxford, as well as Starkville, in a homeand-home series every SEC team would like to have this season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States