The Sentinel-Record

Hogs finally get to host Aggies tonight

- BOB HOLT

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Texas A&M is the University of Arkansas’ most common basketball opponent with the schools being long-time Southwest Conference rivals and then the Aggies following the Razorbacks to the Southeaste­rn Conference.

But getting together for a 161st time this season has been a challenge.

Arkansas and Texas A&M originally were scheduled to play four weeks ago in Walton Arena, but the game was postponed because of positive COVID-19 tests, contact tracing and quarantini­ng within the Aggies’ program. The teams’ game scheduled two weeks ago in College Station, Texas, also was postponed because of Texas A&M’s

COVID-19 issues.

The No. 12 Razorbacks (20-5,

12-4 SEC) and Aggies (8-8, 2-7) finally will be able to make up one of their games when they play at 4 p.m. today in Walton Arena.

It will be Arkansas’ regular-season finale and last time the Razorbacks play before opening the SEC Tournament on Friday in Nashville, Tenn., in a quarterfin­al game as the No. 2 seed.

“I’m just glad that our guys get to compete again,” Arkansas coach Eric Musselman said. “The last thing that the team wants to do is go into practice with me for a week this time of year.

“So I think we’ll get right into our normal prep and continue to have accountabi­lity and player ownership. I think that’s important. Kind of re-establish our focus as well.”

While the Razorbacks — who lead the series 103-57 — are taking a 10-game SEC winning streak into today’s game, the Aggies (8-8, 2-7) are playing for the only the second time since Jan. 30 when Texas A&M beat Kansas State 68-61.

The Aggies went 32 days — including all of February — without playing because of COVID-19 issues.

Texas A&M finally got to play again on Wednesday night when Mississipp­i State beat the Aggies 63-57 in College Station.

“I couldn’t see any fatigue from them,” Mississipp­i State coach Ben Howland said. “They were playing their hearts out.”

Senior guard Quenton Jackson was among the Aggies who played his final home game on Wednesday night.

“I would say that us coming out here the way we did, we fought as hard as we could not playing a game in a month,” Jackson said. “Anticipati­on was high. I think everybody was really ready to come out here and play. I think we showed it out there on the floor.”

Texas A&M coach Buzz Williams praised his players’ effort.

“Just incredibly thankful for the resilience they showed,” Williams said.

The Aggies shot 31.9% (22 of 69) from the field, including 4 of 25 on

3-pointers, but had just five turnovers — their fewest since having three against Alabama in 2019.

“The game could’ve gone either way,” Musselman said. “That’s the staple of coach Buzz Williams’ teams, playing hard and competing.”

Williams was SEC coach of the year last season when he led the Aggies to a 16-14 record, including

10-8 in conference play. Before taking the Texas A&M job last year, he led Marquette and Virginia Tech to eight NCAA Tournament appearance­s in a 11-year span.

“Coach Williams is a great coach,” Musselman said. “I loved

watching his teams play whether it was this year or in the past. He gets his guys to play really, really hard. They understand their roles.”

Last season Arkansas beat Texas A&M 69-59 in Walton Arena and the Aggies beat the Razorbacks 77-69 in Reed Arena.

“We expect it to be like the last year’s games,” Musselman said of today’s matchup. ‘They were hard-fought games, and they’ve got some good pieces.”

The Aggies’ best piece is 6-7 sophomore forward Emmanuel Miller, who had 24 points and 13 rebounds on Wednesday night. He hit 9 of 17 shots and 6 of 6 free throws.

“Miller was fantastic,” Howland said. “We had no answer for him most of the game. He is a monster.”

Miller is averaging 15.4 points and 8.1 rebonds. “Miller is a really, really good basketball player,” Musselman said. “He draws fouls for them. Excellent rebounder. Can really, really score the basketball. They’ve isolated him a lot in the post, mid-post and the elbow area. A really tough cover for sure.”

The Razorbacks won 101-73 at South Carolina on Tuesday night when they shot 55.2% from the field, including hitting 15 of 33 3-pointers, and held South Carolina to 37.5 shooting.

“To be honest, I feel like we can do anything we want as long as we keep on playing the way we’re playing, keep moving the ball and keep having chemistry,” Arkansas junior guard Desi Sills said. “Keep doing what we’re supposed to do on and off the court.”

Williams said the Aggies wouldn’t practice Thursday. The team planned to have light workout on Friday in Walton Arena after arriving in Fayettevil­le and a shoot-around today.

“Are we in great shape? Absolutely not,” Williams said of his players after Wednesday night’s game. “Do I think they literally emptied their gas tank? For sure.

“Are we going to be able to practice tomorrow? No. They’re fried, they’re cooked, as they should be. They gave everything they had in the game.

“We’ll need every second between now and when we play on Saturday afternoon to be able to recover from this, because we’re not in the rhythm of, ‘Let’s play two games a week and practice 3 1/2 times a week.

“Nobody’s in that rhythm if you’ve been through what we’ve been through.”

If the Razorbacks win today, they’ll match Arkansas’ 1994 national championsh­ip team, which won its final 11 SEC regular-season games.

“Just worry about the next game,” Musselman said. “Right now we’ve got to worry about our preparatio­n.

“It’s the third time we’ve prepped for (the Aggies), so hopefully the guys will remember the other two preps and that will help us from a mental standpoint potentiall­y.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Q Arkansas head coach Eric Musselman communicat­es with players and coaches on the bench during the first half of Tuesday’s game against South Carolina in Columbia, S.C. The Razorback host Texas A&M tonight at Bud Walton Arena.
The Associated Press Q Arkansas head coach Eric Musselman communicat­es with players and coaches on the bench during the first half of Tuesday’s game against South Carolina in Columbia, S.C. The Razorback host Texas A&M tonight at Bud Walton Arena.

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