Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Musselman skips bracketolo­gy

- BOB HOLT

FAYETTEVIL­LE — After the University of Arkansas men’s basketball team beat No. 6 Alabama 81-66 on Wednesday night, Coach Eric Musselman was asked wheth- er his Razorbacks’ eighth consecutiv­e SEC victory had clinched an NCAA Tournament bid.

Musselman didn’t want to even discuss it.

“LSU Tigers, Saturday afternoon,” Musselman said. “LSU Tigers. LSU Tigers.”

The No. 20 Razorbacks (18-5, 10-4 SEC) play LSU (147, 9-5) at 1 p.m. today at Walton Arena.

“I think we still feel that we have something to prove,” Arkansas senior forward Justin Smith said. “We’re just a hungry group. We haven’t really been complacent throughout this stretch. There’s still more we want to get done.”

ESPN analyst Dick Vitale, arguably the loudest voice in college basketball, tweeted congratula­tions to Arkansas after the Alabama game and said Musselman must be on Cloud 9.

The Razorbacks continue to climb in NCAA Tournament bracket projection­s, up to a No. 3 seed by Jerry Palm of CBS Sports and a No. 5 seed by ESPN’s Joe Lunardi.

“We’ve got LSU next game,” Arkansas freshman guard Moses Moody said after scoring 24 points against Alabama. “So we’re going to get on that scout and just stay locked in.”

Musselman said he doesn’t pay attention to NCAA Tournament projection­s.

“It’s moment by moment as far as the bracketolo­gy,” Musselman said. “The amount of time, effort and energy that I spend on it is zero.

“If you win a game, it’s going to change. If you lose a game, it’s going to change. What we’ve really got to focus on is LSU.”

Arkansas will be looking for payback after LSU beat the Razorbacks 92-76 on Jan. 13 at the

Maravich Assembly Center in Baton Rouge. The Tigers led by 31 points — 44-13 — in the first half.

“We got fortunate the first time,” Tigers Coach Will Wade said. “I know you look at the final score and stuff, but they missed some layups … they missed some wideopen threes. They didn’t have Justin Smith.

“This one will be vastly different from that game.”

Smith, Arkansas’ best rebounder and interior defender, watched the first LSU game from home as he continued to recover from ankle surgery that sidelined him for four games.

“Watching that game, I was frustrated because I was close to coming back,” Smith said. “In my mind I had wanted to make that game the day that I came back, but the way that my rehab was going and everything, that wasn’t going to be the case.

“So, I was frustrated with that and I was also frustrated with how the game went. I had kind of a helpless feeling. I wanted to be out there and make an impact.

“But I’m excited to play this game. We’re looking forward to it and hopefully we can avenge what happened earlier this season.”

Arkansas avenged a 90-59 loss at Alabama that occurred the game after being blown out at LSU.

The day after losing to LSU, Musselman held a lengthy practice that he called the toughest in his two seasons at Arkansas. The Razorbacks wore weighted vests like they would in a training camp practice.

“I think defensivel­y they’re much improved,” Wade said. “They follow the scouting report and follow the direction of the coaches, and taking away the other team’s strengths is something they’re doing better than anybody in our league.

“I think they’re playing with unbelievab­le belief, unbelievab­le confidence, and it’s a credit to Coach Musselman and his staff.”

Wade lauded the job the Razorbacks have done bouncing back from their back-toback road losses against LSU and Alabama.

“You start staggering like that, it’s not easy to recover,” Wade said. “Arkansas has done a phenomenal, phenomenal job of recovering. I guess that weight vest practice worked.

“They’re playing great.

They’re playing better than anybody in our league right now, and they’ve done it consistent­ly.”

Freshman forward Jaylin Williams, whose physical play inside has been a key in Arkansas’ SEC winning streak, said it’s nice to hear praise for the Razorbacks and about their NCAA Tournament projection­s.

“I mean, of course it’s in all of our heads, but we’re ready for the next game,” Williams said. “We’re thinking about LSU. We’re ready to play them and ready to see what happens next.”

Musselman said the Razorbacks can’t afford to look ahead — at all.

“I mean, I’ll be honest with you, I’m still worried about how do we get in the NCAA Tournament,” Musselman said. “That’s literally my No. 1 concern.

“Crazy stuff happens. Our goal is to try to win the next game on our schedule. That’s the most important thing.”

 ?? (AP/Michael Woods) ?? Arkansas Coach Eric Musselman directs his players during Wednesday night’s victory over No. 6 Alabama. The Razorbacks will be going for their ninth consecutiv­e SEC victory today against LSU.
(AP/Michael Woods) Arkansas Coach Eric Musselman directs his players during Wednesday night’s victory over No. 6 Alabama. The Razorbacks will be going for their ninth consecutiv­e SEC victory today against LSU.
 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Andy Shupe) ?? Justin Smith watched the first LSU game from home as he recovered from ankle surgery that kept him out of four games for Arkansas earlier this season. “I was frustrated because I was close to coming back,” Smith said. “I was also frustrated with how the game went. I wanted to be out there and make an impact.”
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Andy Shupe) Justin Smith watched the first LSU game from home as he recovered from ankle surgery that kept him out of four games for Arkansas earlier this season. “I was frustrated because I was close to coming back,” Smith said. “I was also frustrated with how the game went. I wanted to be out there and make an impact.”

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