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Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball

The Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team represents the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, Arkansas in NCAA Division I men's basketball competition. The team competes in the Southeastern Conference. Arkansas plays its home games in Bud Walton Arena on the University of Arkansas campus. The Razorbacks are a top-twenty-five program all-time by winning percentage (.641), top-twenty program by NCAA tournament games played, top-twenty program by NCAA Tournament games won, top-fifteen program by Final Four appearances, and despite playing significantly fewer seasons than most programs in major conferences, top-thirty by all-time wins.[2] Under the coaching leadership of Nolan Richardson, the Hogs won the national championship in 1994, defeating Duke, and appeared in the championship game the following year, finishing as runner-up. The Razorbacks have made six NCAA Final Four appearances (1941, 1945, 1978, 1990, 1994, and 1995).

Arkansas Razorbacks
UniversityUniversity of Arkansas
First season1923–24
All-time record1763–983 (.642)
Head coachEric Musselman (5th season)
ConferenceSEC
LocationFayetteville, Arkansas
ArenaNolan Richardson Court at Bud Walton Arena
(Capacity: 19,200)
NicknameRazorbacks
Student sectionThe Trough
ColorsCardinal and white[1]
   
Uniforms
Home
Away


NCAA tournament champions
1994
NCAA tournament runner-up
1995
NCAA tournament Final Four
1941, 1945, 1978, 1990, 1994, 1995
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1941, 1945, 1949, 1978, 1979, 1990, 1991, 1994, 1995, 2021, 2022
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1958, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2021, 2022, 2023
NCAA tournament round of 32
1977, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2008, 2015, 2017, 2021, 2022, 2023
NCAA tournament appearances
1941, 1945, 1949, 1958, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2021, 2022, 2023
Conference tournament champions
Southwest
1977, 1979, 1982, 1989, 1990, 1991

SEC
2000
Conference regular season champions
Southwest
1926, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1935, 1936, 1938, 1941, 1942, 1944, 1949, 1950, 1958, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1989, 1990, 1991

SEC
1992, 1994
Conference division season champions
1992, 1993, 1994, 1995

History edit

Early success under Schmidt (1923–29) edit

Arkansas had a relatively late start in basketball; it did not field its first team until 1923. Francis Schmidt coached the Razorbacks from the 1923–24 season until the 1928–29 season, while also coaching the football and baseball teams.

 
The 1926–27 Razorbacks

Schmidt oversaw the construction of the gymnasium that was home to the Razorbacks from the inaugural season through the 1936–37 season. The project was headed by Schmidt and Jay Fulbright (father of future United States Senator from Arkansas, J. William Fulbright). Schmidt and Fulbright organized a group of businessmen that facilitated the transfer of a former car showroom to the university to serve as the gym for the Razorbacks. The wooden gym, made out of surplus World War I material and officially named Schmidt Gymnasium, became known as "Schmidt's barn," in reference to its makeshift nature and lack of accommodations.[3][4]

After a difficult first year that resulted in a 17–11 overall record and a 3–9 conference record, Schmidt quickly led the Hogs to success and a dominating run in the Southwest Conference during his tenure. Building off the program's first season, the 1924–25 team finished third in the conference, quickly turning their record around to 9–3 in conference play. This second season laid the groundwork for tremendous success with Schmidt, as the Razorbacks won the conference championship outright in just the third year of the program's existence with a record of 23–2 (11–1). The 1925–26 season kicked off a string of four straight Southwest Conference championships under Schmidt, and five straight overall. Schmidt also coached the Hogs to the first of three perfect SWC seasons in program history in 1927–28, with a conference record of 12–0 and a 15.25-point average margin of victory in conference play. The 1927–28 season also marked the beginning of a school record 31-game winning streak that ran until the last few games of the next season.[5] Schmidt's last four teams at Arkansas went a combined 75–6 (42–4).[6]

The last couple years of Schmidt's dominant SWC run were marked by serious star power, with future Razorback basketball coaches Eugene Lambert Sr. and Glen Rose earning First-Team Helms Athletic Foundation All-American recognition during Schmidt's last two seasons (1928–29 and 1927–28, respectively), along with Tom Pickel earning First-Team honors from College Humor Magazine in Schmidt's final season as coach.[7] Schmidt's Razorbacks had four of the five All-SWC selections in 1928 (Rose, Pickel, Lambert, and Wear Schoonover).[8] During Schmidt's time at Arkansas, the Razorbacks finished first in the SWC four out of six years, and compiled an overall record of 113–22 (.837), the highest winning percentage of any Arkansas coach ever.[9] Schmidt left Arkansas to take the football and basketball jobs at TCU, where he was coach until 1934.[8]

Bassett years (1929–33) edit

In the 1929–30 season, Charles Bassett took over as head coach, leaving the head coaching job at Texas A&M that he held for two years without finding much success, going a paltry 16–18 (5–15) in his two years as head coach in College Station, including a last-place finish in conference play for the 1927–28 Southwest Conference season.[10][11] Arkansas's success under Bassett was limited to his first season as coach, when the Hogs won the Southwest Conference Championship with multi-sport star and current College Football Hall of Fame member Wear Schoonover garnering Second-Team All-American recognition from College Humor and earning First-Team All-SWC honors for the third straight season.[12] The Razorbacks did not finish above third place in the Southwest Conference standings for the rest of Bassett's tenure. Aside from the SWC Championship in 1930, the other major bright spot in Bassett's tenure came on January 8, 1931, when the Razorbacks defeated rival Texas, 29–21, the day UT dedicated its new gym.[13] Bassett's last season was the 1932–33 season, when the Razorbacks went 14–7 overall with a 6–6 conference record, the first time since the inaugural 1923–24 season that the Hogs did not finish the year with a winning record in conference play.[6] After four seasons, Bassett's overall record was 62–29 (.681).[9]

First Glen Rose era (1933–42) edit

 
John Adams was an All-American in 1941 and one of the first players to use the jump shot.

Glen Rose took over in the 1933–34 season and returned the program to a competitive position within the SWC. Named a Helms Athletic Foundation First-Team All-American as a Hog in 1928, Rose was the first former player to coach the Razorbacks. Rebuilding the program after the decline under Bassett, Rose's first season as coach produced a .500 conference record (6–6) and a tie for third place in the final SWC standings. The Hogs finished with a winning conference record and no lower than second place in the conference standings for the rest of Rose's first stint with Arkansas, save for one season.

The 1935–36 season ended with the Hogs competing for the right to represent the United States in the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin for the first year of basketball being an official medal sport. The Razorbacks swept the other NCAA teams they played in the NCAA Olympic Playoffs, but lost in the first round of the U.S. Olympic Trials to the Universal Pictures Amateur Athletic Union team that went on to win the gold medal.[14][15]

The following season, 1936–37 featured the last game in Schmidt Gymnasium, or "Schmidt's barn."[16] Construction of the new building, (originally known as the Field House) that came to be known as the Men's Gymnasium was under way in 1936, and was completed in the fall semester of 1937, with a capacity of 2,500.[17][18][19][20] The new home for the Razorbacks was dedicated on February 4, 1938, in a 53–26 win over TCU.[21] The Men's Gymnasium served as home for the basketball team until Barnhill Arena was completed in 1954 and the Razorbacks began playing games there in the 1955–56 season.[22]

The Razorbacks won the Southwest Conference outright three times and tied for first two more times during this nine-year run. In the 1940–41 season, Rose led Arkansas to its second perfect conference record ever (12–0) en route the NCAA Final Four in the Razorbacks' first NCAA Tournament appearance. The 1940–41 season is also notable for the outstanding play of John "Johnny" Adams, a Helms First-Team All-American who is credited as being one of the players responsible for the proliferation of the jump shot in basketball.[23] Adams set the single-game SWC scoring record that season with 36 points against TCU in Fort Worth on February 21, 1941.[24] Rose finished this nine-year run with a record of 154–47 (.766). Rose went on to coach the football team for the 1944 and 1945 seasons, without much success. Rose returned to coach the basketball team a decade after he left.

Eugene Lambert (1942–49) edit

 
Eugene Lambert circa 1947.

Former Razorback and All-American Eugene Lambert took the coaching job starting in the 1942–43 season. Lambert found moderate success in his first season as head coach, posting a winning record and overseeing a first in program history by coaching the first freshman to play for the Razorback varsity squad, Paul Coleman.[25] After winning a share of the Southwest Conference Championship for the 1943–44 season, Lambert and Arkansas were selected for the NCAA tournament for the second time in program history. However, the team was forced to withdraw after tragedy struck when a car accident injured two of their starters, Ben Jones and Deno Nichols, and killed Eugene Norris, a physical education teacher that accompanied the players on their trip.[26][27] The next year the Hogs earned another tournament berth and advanced to the Final Four, losing to eventual champions Oklahoma A&M.[28] The Razorbacks did not make the tournament again until the 1948–49 season, when the Hogs shared the SWC crown with Baylor and Rice. The Hogs lost in the first round of the regional, but won the third place game. The 1948–49 season was Lambert's last season coaching the Hogs. During Lambert's seven seasons, Arkansas won a share the Southwest Conference Championship twice, with three second-place finishes and never fell lower than third in the conference. Lambert's final record was 113–60 (.653).[9]

 
George Kok was an All-American in 1948.

Presley Askew (1949–52) edit

Presley Askew took over for the 1949–50 season and coached through the 1951–52 season. Arkansas tied for first place in the Southwest Conference in Askew's first season, but bottomed out in his third and final season, posting the program's first losing record of 10–14 (4–8). The Razorbacks did not make the NCAA Tournament during Askew's tenure. Askew's overall record was 35–37 (.486), the first basketball coach to finish his career at Arkansas with a losing record, despite having a winning conference record of 19–17. Askew's three-season tenure is the shortest in Razorback basketball history.[6]

Second Glen Rose era (1952–66) edit

Glen Rose returned for the 1952–53 season; his second stint with the Hogs lasted until 1966. Rose did not reach the heights of his previous run, with the only real success being in the 1957–58 season, when Arkansas tied for first place in the Southwest Conference with SMU and made the NCAA tournament, losing to an Oklahoma State team whose starting point guard, Eddie Sutton, eventually became head coach of the Razorbacks.[29][30][31] Rose's teams in his second spell as head coach posted a winning conference record only five times, to go along with six losing records overall.[6]

For the second time in his career as head coach, Rose oversaw a transition from one home court to another. Eighteen years after the transition from "Schmidt's barn" to the Men's Gymnasium, the Razorbacks began playing their home games in Barnhill Arena (then known as Razorback Fieldhouse) in the 1955–56 season. With a capacity of 3,500 at the time of the first game, the transition to Razorback Fieldhouse represented more investment and interest in the program, even if the results of Rose's second run with the Hogs were lackluster.[32] Razorback Fieldhouse's capacity was 5,000 once it was fully completed, and remained at that number until 1977.[8] Razorback Fieldhouse would also be the site of the first televised home game for the Hogs, with Rose coaching the Hogs to a 61–57 victory over Texas Tech on January 3, 1959.[33]

Rose finished his second run with the Hogs (fourteen seasons) with a record of 171–154 (.526). Rose's overall record for his time at Arkansas (twenty-three seasons) was 325–201 (.618). Rose's twenty-three seasons as head coach remain the longest tenure of any Razorback basketball coach, and his fourteen continuous seasons as coach from 1952 to 1966 is second only to Nolan Richardson for longest continuous tenure as Razorback basketball coach.[6]

Decline under Waller and Van Eman (1966–74) edit

After Glen Rose's teams continually failed to be competitive in the SWC during his second stint as coach, he retired following the 1965–66 season. The next eight years proved to be much worse than the lows experienced under Rose's leadership.

Duddy Waller became head coach for the 1966–67 season, but only lasted until the 1970–71 season. All of Waller's teams posted losing records, including two of the three worst winning percentages for a season in school history and the second most losses in a season in school history.[34] Waller's record during his four seasons was 31–64, which is the worst overall winning percentage (.326) of any Arkansas basketball coach ever.[9]

Waller was replaced by Lanny Van Eman, who coached the Hogs from the 1970–71 season through the 1973–74 season. Van Eman started his career as head coach of the Razorbacks with the worst season in school history, a 5–21 (1–13) campaign that still holds the record for most losses in a season, lowest winning percentage for a season, most SWC losses in a season, and fewest conference wins in a season.[34] Despite such an awful first season, Van Eman did manage to lead Arkansas to its first winning conference record in a decade, when the Hogs finished with a 9–5 record in the SWC for the 1972–73 season and tied for second place in the conference. Van Eman finished his career at Arkansas with a 39–65 record (.375).[9]

 
Dean Tolson as a sophomore

Despite the major shortcomings of Waller and Van Eman's teams on the court, of note is the fact that these coaches oversaw the gradual integration of African-American players into the basketball program under their leadership. Thomas A. Johnson was the first African-American to play for the Razorbacks on the 1967 team headed by Waller.[35] Following in the footsteps of Johnson were the first African-American stars of Razorback basketball, guard Martin Terry and center Dean Tolson.[36] Playing under Van Eman, Terry and Tolson put up huge numbers and set school records that still stand today, while also collecting All-SWC and All-American recognition. Terry owns the Arkansas records for highest season and career scoring averages, was a two-time First-Team All-SWC selection in 1972 and 1973, and picked up an All-American Honorable Mention nod from Helms in 1973, the same season he was named Southwest Conference Player of the Year.[37] He was taken in the third round of the 1973 NBA draft, the second-highest pick in Arkansas history at the time.[8] Tolson is the school record holder for single-game field goals made and attempted, as well as career rebounding average. Tolson would follow Terry and get drafted in the fifth round of the 1974 NBA draft.

Arkansas failed to finish above second place in the Southwest Conference during these eight seasons, posting a winning record only once, and did not receive any invitations to the NCAA Tournament. The combined overall record of these two coaches was 70–129 (.352) and 39–73 (.348) in conference play.[6]

New heights in the Eddie Sutton era (1974–85) edit

After coaching at Creighton for five mostly unremarkable seasons that culminated in an NCAA tournament bid and a first round victory, Eddie Sutton found himself on Frank Broyles's radar, as the longtime head football coach and new athletic director wanted to invest in the basketball program to get it out of the depths of the Waller and Van Eman years.[38][8]

Broyles hired Sutton starting with the 1974–75 season, and the hire proved to be a turning point in the program's history. Sutton's first campaign with the Hogs turned out to be a mildly successful one that put fans on notice, with an 11–3 conference record that was good for second place in the SWC, as high as the program had finished in conference play in seventeen years.[6] Sutton's second team did not perform as strongly in conference play, but improved its overall record. The excitement behind Razorback basketball was palpable as renovations began on what was then officially Barnhill Arena after it was renamed in 1973 for former athletic director and head football coach, John Barnhill.[39] Sutton's second team also had the core players that would elevate the Razorbacks to a national power under his leadership, the famed in-state players known as the "Triplets," Ron Brewer, Marvin Delph, and Sidney Moncrief (who later became the first player in program history to have his number retired).[40]

 
Sidney Moncrief during the 1976–77 season

The 1976–77 Razorbacks were the team that established Arkansas as a basketball power in the modern era. Beginning play in a renovated Barnhill Arena with an expanded capacity of 6,200, the Hogs won the SWC with a perfect 16–0 conference record, going 26–1 overall in the regular season and spent more weeks in the AP Poll that season than every season prior, combined, with a peak ranking of #6.[8][41] The Hogs earned their first tournament invitation in nearly two decades, but fell in the first round, while still finishing ranked in the AP Poll for the first time in school history.[6] The Hogs would follow the 1976–77 season with Sutton's most successful season at Arkansas and one of the best seasons in school history. Barnhill Arena was expanded further prior to the 1977–78 season, this time to a capacity of 9,000.[8] The Hogs started the season ranked #7 by the AP Poll, and lived up to the high expectations of their recent success by winning their first fourteen games and never falling out of the top ten of the AP Poll the whole season. Arkansas ascended to the top spot in the AP Poll for the first time in program history on February 13, 1978. The Hogs received an at-large bid to the tournament after winning a share of the SWC Championship and beat AP #2 UCLA in the Sweet Sixteen before falling to eventual champion, Kentucky, in the Final Four in St. Louis. The fifth-ranked Hogs won the third place game against AP #6 Notre Dame, 71–69.[42]

Sutton's 1978–79 team still managed a great campaign, despite the loss of two of the "Triplets," All-American Brewer and Delph. Repeating with a share of the Southwest Conference crown, the Hogs won the SWC tournament to clinch the bid to the tournament. The Razorbacks advanced to the Elite Eight, where they lost a close game marred by a controversial last-minute missed tripping call to Larry Bird and undefeated Indiana State, 73–71.[43][44]

While Sutton's other teams would not be as high achieving as the 1977–78 and 1978–79 squads, he would still coach the Razorbacks to successful seasons, never finishing lower than second in the Southwest Conference standings after his second season, while also producing highlights ranging from U.S. Reed's game-winning, last-second half court shot against defending champions Louisville in the second round of the 1981 NCAA tournament, ending back-to-back national runner-up Houston's thirty-nine game SWC winning streak, having a player drafted in the first round of the NBA draft three straight years from 1983 to 1985 (Darrell Walker, Alvin Robertson, and Joe Kleine), and the Razorbacks' first win over an AP #1 team against Michael Jordan and North Carolina in Pine Bluff, Arkansas on February 12, 1984.[6][45]

Sutton's eleven seasons remain the third longest tenure in Razorback basketball history. During these eleven seasons, Arkansas won or shared the Southwest Conference Championship four times. The Hogs finished ranked seven times, including four top-ten finishes and two top-five finishes. The Razorbacks were invited to the NCAA Tournament during each of the last nine seasons of Sutton's tenure. Sutton finished with a 260–75 (.776) overall record at Arkansas, including nine NCAA Tournament appearances, four Sweet Sixteen appearances, two Elite Eight appearances, and one Final Four berth.[6]

Nolan Richardson era and a national championship (1985–2002) edit

Tulsa coach and former Texas Western player Nolan Richardson replaced Sutton beginning with the 1985–86 season. After two years without a winning conference record, Arkansas finished tied for second in the Southwest Conference standings in Richardson's third season. The Razorbacks won the SWC regular season and tournament titles each of its last three seasons in the SWC (1989, 1990, and 1991).[6] Arkansas joined the Southeastern Conference for the 1991–92 season and won the regular season conference championship in 1992 and 1994, also winning the SEC Western Division title in 1992, 1993, 1994, and 1995. The Razorbacks also won the 2000 SEC tournament. Arkansas made the NCAA Tournament thirteen times during Richardson's seventeen seasons, and made the Final Four during the 1990, 1994 and 1995 seasons. They won their first national championship in 1994 by beating Duke in the title game. The next season, they returned to the championship game and finished as runner-up, losing to UCLA. Richardson was fired in 2002 after making controversial public statements against the university and then-athletic director Frank Broyles. Assistant coach Mike Anderson coached the rest of the season, going 1–1. Richardson holds the school record for most wins by a head coach, with an overall record of 389–169 (.697). Coach Richardson led Arkansas to four NCAA Tournament Elite Eight appearances (1990, 1991, 1994 and 1995) and six NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen appearances (1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995 and 1996). Between the 1989–90 and 1995–96 seasons, Arkansas won more games than any other school in the nation.

Stan Heath years (2002–07) edit

Stan Heath coached the Hogs beginning with the 2002–03 season and remained in Fayetteville through the 2006–07 season. During Heath's five seasons, the Razorbacks did not enjoy the success that they achieved under Richardson. They never finished higher than third place in the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference. They were invited to the NCAA Tournament in Heath's final two seasons, although they were eliminated in the Round of 64 each trip. Heath's final record was 82–71 (.536).

Dana Altman (2007) edit

Dana Altman was hired as the head coach of the Arkansas Razorbacks on April 2, 2007. However, Altman had a change of heart, resigning the next day to return to Creighton, where he had coached since 1994.

John Pelphrey (2007–11) edit

 
Key players for Pelphrey's early teams include Courtney Fortson (far left), Mike Washington (#00), and Rotnei Clarke (far right).

John Pelphrey was hired as the head coach of the Arkansas Razorbacks on Monday, April 9, 2007. Pelphrey was hired after Dana Altman accepted the job and resigned within a day.[46][47] Arkansas went 23–12 in Pelphrey's first season, defeating Indiana by 14 points in the first round of the NCAA Tournament before being put away by overall #1 seed North Carolina in the second round. The Razorbacks had an SEC regular season record of 9–7. In Pelphrey's second year, the Razorbacks struggled in conference play after starting the season 12–1 in non-conference games with two notable wins over the nationally ranked Oklahoma Sooners (#4) and the Texas Longhorns (#7). Conference wins were few and far between giving the Razorbacks a final conference record of 2–14. On March 13, 2011, John Pelphrey was dismissed as the head coach of the Razorbacks after an 18–13 season in which the Hogs missed postseason play for the third consecutive season, despite an impressive incoming recruiting class. Pelphrey finished his career at Arkansas with a record of 69–59 (.539).

 
Mike Anderson's Razorbacks defeated the Missouri Tigers in their first matchup since Anderson returned to Arkansas

Mike Anderson (2011–19) edit

On March 23, 2011, Mike Anderson signed a 7-year contract with Arkansas. Anderson previously coached the UAB Blazers and Missouri Tigers, and had already been an assistant coach at Arkansas under coach Nolan Richardson for 17 years. On March 26, 2011, Anderson was introduced in front of 5,000 fans in Bud Walton Arena.[48] Anderson made three NCAA tournaments in his eight seasons, including a 27-win season in 2014–15 that resulted in a 5 seed in the tournament, the program's highest since 1999. The Razorbacks made another tournament two years later but lost to top-seeded North Carolina, the eventual national champion, in the second round. The following year saw them make the tournament for the final time in Anderson's tenure at Arkansas, but a loss to Butler ended the Hogs' season in the first round. Following an up-and-down 2018–19 campaign that culminated in an NIT berth, new athletic director Hunter Yurachek relieved Anderson of his duties on March 26 a little over a week after Arkansas lost to Indiana in the second round of the NIT. Anderson finished his career at Arkansas with a record of 170–103 (.623), including his 1–1 record as interim coach in 2002.

Eric Musselman era and a return to national prominence (2019–present) edit

On April 7, 2019, Yurachek announced the hiring of Eric Musselman, then the four-year head coach at Nevada, who had previous experience as head coach in the NBA with the Golden State Warriors (where he was runner up for the NBA Coach of the Year Award) and the Sacramento Kings, as well as college assistant coaching stops at Arizona State and LSU.[49] Musselman's first Arkansas team finished the season with a record of 20–12, with Musselman becoming only the second coach in school history to finish his first season with at least 20 wins and the first since John Pelphrey in 2007–08. Musselman was also only the second head coach at Arkansas to finish his debut season with a winning percentage above 61% since Gene Lambert during the 1942–43 season. After Arkansas beat Vanderbilt in the first round of the 2020 SEC men's basketball tournament, the SEC Tournament, as well as the entire NCAA tournament, was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, making this the final Southeastern Conference men's basketball game of the 2019–2020 season. Arkansas junior guard Mason Jones was named the SEC Co-Player of the Year by the AP.

In only his second year, Musselman led the Razorbacks to the Elite Eight of the NCAA tournament, losing to eventual champion Baylor. This was Arkansas's deepest postseason run since their 1995 title game appearance. The team finished the 2021 season with a record of 25–7 (.781), and a conference record of 13–4 (.765). Freshman guard Moses Moody was named the SEC Freshman of the Year, and became the first "one-and-done" player in program history when he was drafted in the first round (14th overall) of the 2021 NBA draft by the Golden State Warriors. Arkansas advanced further in the NCAA Tournament than any other Southeastern Conference team, and finished with an overall ranking of #6 in the USA Today Coaches Poll.[50] In his third year, Musselman led the Razorbacks to the Elite Eight again, losing to the Duke Blue Devils. Arkansas finished the 2022 season with a record of 28–9 (.757), and a conference record of 13–5 (.722). Again, Arkansas advanced further in the NCAA tournament than any other Southeastern Conference team, and finished with a ranking of #8 in the Coaches Poll, the highest in the SEC.[51] Arkansas also won the early season Hall of Fame Classic tournament championship. In his fourth year, Musselman signed the #2 recruiting class in the nation, but the team slipped in SEC-play, finishing 8–10. But the team recovered late in the season and made it to their third consecutive Sweet 16 in the 2023 NCAA Tournament, losing to eventual national champion Connecticut. Musselman's fifth season as head coach began with a resounding "Thud". Arkansas started the season 9–4 through the non-conference portion of the schedule that saw the Razorbacks lose to lowly UNC-Greensboro at home 72–78, yet they upset #7 Duke in Bud Walton Arena 80–75. But it was the conference schedule that was Arkansas' undoing, as the squad began SEC play 1–5 through January 24, and showed very few signs of cohesive play and teamwork, much to Musselman's chagrin.

Postseason edit

NCAA tournament results edit

The Razorbacks have appeared in the NCAA tournament 35 times. Their combined record is 50–35. They were National Champions in 1994.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1941 Elite Eight
Final Four
Wyoming
Washington State
W 52–40
L 53–64
1945 Elite Eight
Final Four
Oregon
Oklahoma A&M
W 79–76
L 41–68
1949 Elite Eight
Regional 3rd Place Game
Oregon State
Wyoming
L 38–56
W 61–48
1958 Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd Place Game
Oklahoma State
Cincinnati
L 40–65
L 62–97
1977 Round of 32 Wake Forest L 80–86
1978 Round of 32
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National 3rd Place Game
Weber State
UCLA
Cal State Fullerton
Kentucky
Notre Dame
W 73–52
W 74–70
W 61–58
L 59–64
W 71–69
1979 #2 Round of 32
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#7 Weber State
#3 Louisville
#1 Indiana State
W 74–63
W 73–62
L 71–73
1980 #10 Round of 48 #7 Kansas State L 53–71
1981 #5 Round of 48
Round of 32
Sweet Sixteen
#12 Mercer
#4 Louisville
#1 LSU
W 73–67
W 74–73
L 56–72
1982 #4 Round of 32 #5 Kansas State L 64–65
1983 #4 Round of 32
Sweet Sixteen
#5 Purdue
#1 Louisville
W 78–68
L 63–65
1984 #2 Round of 32 #7 Virginia L 51–53 OT
1985 #9 First Round
Second Round
#8 Iowa
#1 St. John's
W 63–54
L 65–68
1988 #11 First Round #6 Villanova L 74–82
1989 #5 First Round
Second Round
#12 Loyola Marymount
#4 Louisville
W 120–101
L 84–93
1990 #4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#13 Princeton
#12 Dayton
#8 North Carolina
#10 Texas
#3 Duke
W 68–64
W 86–84
W 96–73
W 88–85
L 83–97
1991 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#16 Georgia State
#8 Arizona State
#4 Alabama
#3 Kansas
W 117–76
W 97–90
W 93–70
L 81–93
1992 #3 First Round
Second Round
#14 Murray State
#6 Memphis State
W 80–69
L 80–82
1993 #4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#13 Holy Cross
#5 St. John's
#1 North Carolina
W 94–64
W 80–74
L 74–80
1994 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship Game
#16 North Carolina A&T
#9 Georgetown
#12 Tulsa
#3 Michigan
#2 Arizona
#2 Duke
W 94–79
W 85–73
W 103–84
W 76–68
W 91–82
W 76–72
1995 #2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship Game
#15 Texas Southern
#7 Syracuse
#6 Memphis
#4 Virginia
#2 North Carolina
#1 UCLA
W 79–78
W 96–94 OT
W 96–91 OT
W 68–61
W 75–68
L 78–89
1996 #12 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#5 Penn St
#4 Marquette
#1 Massachusetts
W 86–80
W 65–56
L 63–79
1998 #6 First Round
Second Round
#11 Nebraska
#3 Utah
W 74–65
L 69–75
1999 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 Siena
#5 Iowa
W 94–80
L 72–82
2000 #11 First Round #6 Miami (FL) L 71–75
2001 #7 First Round #10 Georgetown L 61–63
2006 #8 First Round #9 Bucknell L 55–59
2007 #12 First Round #5 USC L 60–77
2008 #9 First Round
Second Round
#8 Indiana
#1 North Carolina
W 86–72
L 77–108
2015 #5 First Round
Second Round
#12 Wofford
#4 North Carolina
W 56–53
L 78–87
2017 #8 First Round
Second Round
#9 Seton Hall
#1 North Carolina
W 77–71
L 65–72
2018 #7 First Round #10 Butler L 62–79
2021 #3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#14 Colgate
#6 Texas Tech
#15 Oral Roberts
#1 Baylor
W 85–68
W 68–66
W 72–70
L 72–81
2022 #4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#13 Vermont
#12 New Mexico State
#1 Gonzaga
#2 Duke
W 75–71
W 53–48
W 74–68
L 69–78
2023 #8 First round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#9 Illinois
#1 Kansas
#4 UConn
W 73–63
W 72–71
L 65–88

NIT results edit

The Razorbacks have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) four times. Their combined record is 6–5.

Year Round Opponent Result
1987 First Round
Second Round
Arkansas State
Nebraska
W 67–64
L 71–78
1997 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd Place Game
Northern Arizona
Pittsburgh
UNLV
Michigan
Connecticut
W 101–75
W 76–71
W 86–73
L 62–77
L 64–74
2014 First Round
Second Round
Indiana State
California
W 91–71
L 64–75
2019 First Round
Second Round
Providence
Indiana
W 84–72
L 60–63

Current coaching staff edit

  • Eric Musselman – Head Coach (San Diego, 1987)
  • Anthony Ruta — Assistant Coach (Arizona State, 2014)
  • Gus Argenal – Assistant Coach (UC Davis, 2004)
  • Keith Smart – Assistant Coach (Indiana, 1995)

Arkansas's All-Americans edit

Player Position Year(s) Selectors
Glen Rose 1928 Helms Athletic Foundation
Tom Pickell 1929 College Humor Magazine
Gene Lambert 1929 Helms Athletic Foundation
Wear Schoonover Forward 1930 College Humor Magazine
James "Doc" Sexton (2) 1931, 1932 College Humor Magazine
Ike Poole Forward 1936 Helms Athletic Foundation, Converse Yearbook
Jack Robbins 1938 Newspapers Enterprise Association
John Adams Guard/Forward 1941 Helms Athletic Foundation, Converse Yearbook
Clayton Wynne 1943 Pic Magazine
Bill Flynt 1946 Helms Athletic Foundation
George Kok (2) Center 1946, 1948 Associated Press, The Sporting News
Fred Grim Guard 1958 Associated Press
Clyde Rhoden Forward 1960 Converse Yearbook
Jerry Clayton (2) Guard 1961, 1962 Converse Yearbook
Tommy Boyer Guard 1963 UPI, Converse Yearbook
Martin Terry Guard 1973 Helms Athletic Foundation
Ron Brewer (2) Guard 1977, 1978 Associated Press, Helms Athletic Foundation, Converse Yearbook, United States Writers Basketball Association, Basketball Weekly
Marvin Delph (2) Guard 1977, 1978 Associated Press, The Sporting News, Converse Yearbook
Sidney Moncrief (3) Guard 1977, 1978, 1979 The Sporting News, Associated Press, UPI, NABC, Helms Athletic Foundation, Converse Yearbook, United States Writers Basketball Association
Scott Hastings (2) Center 1981, 1982 Helms Athletic Foundation, Associated Press
Darrell Walker Guard 1983 Associated Press, UPI, Helms Athletic Foundation, Converse Yearbook
Todd Day (3) Guard 1990, 1991, 1992 John Wooden Award, The Sporting News, Associated Press, UPI, NABC, Helms Athletic Foundation, United States Writers Basketball Association, Basketball Weekly, Basketball Times
Oliver Miller (2) Center 1991, 1992 Associated Press
Lee Mayberry Guard 1992 Associated Press, NABC, Basketball Times
Scotty Thurman (2) Guard 1994, 1995 Associated Press, Basketball Times
Corliss Williamson (2) Forward 1994, 1995 Associated Press, John Wooden Award, The Sporting News, Basketball Weekly, NABC, UPI, United States Writers Basketball Association, Basketball Times
Pat Bradley Guard 1999 Associated Press
Joe Johnson Guard/Forward 2001 Associated Press
Ronnie Brewer Guard/Forward 2006 Associated Press, Basketball Times, CollegeBasketballInsider.com
Bobby Portis Forward 2015 Associated Press, United States Basketball Writers Association, Sporting News
Daniel Gafford Forward 2019 Associated Press
Mason Jones Guard 2020 Associated Press
Moses Moody Guard 2021 Associated Press
JD Notae Guard 2022 Associated Press, Sporting News
Source: Arkansas Razorbacks Media Guide. Arkansas Razorbacks. Archived from the original on May 28, 2008. Retrieved January 11, 2015.

Retired numbers edit

The University of Arkansas athletic department has seen fit to retire only two jersey numbers in honor of former outstanding players:

Arkansas Razorbacks retired numbers
No. Player Pos. Tenure Ref.
32
Sidney Moncrief G 1975–79 [52]
34
Corliss Williamson F 1992–95 [52]

Moncrief (6'4" 190 lbs.) led the Razorbacks to the 1978 Final Four and is, so far, Arkansas' only Consensus 1st team All-American player (1979). Moncrief also led the Hogs to three straight Southwest Conference regular season titles from 1977 to 1979, as well as the 1977 and 1979 SWC Tournament championships. He was a three-time All-SWC performer, and was also the SWC Player of the Year in 1979. Moncrief finished his career as the school's all-time leading scorer, until his record was broken in 1992.

Williamson (6'7" 245 lbs.) led Arkansas to the 1994 National Championship and a runner-up finish in the 1995 Final Four. Corliss also lead Arkansas to three straight SEC West Division championships from 1993 to 1995, plus the 1994 SEC regular season title. Williamson was a two-time All-SEC performer, was the 1994 and 1995 SEC Player of the Year, and was named Consensus 2nd team All-American in both seasons.

Razorbacks after the University of Arkansas edit

NBA edit

 
Joe Johnson, 7× NBA All-Star, while playing for the Brooklyn Nets

Other professional leagues edit

 
Dusty Hannahs

Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame edit

Olympians edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Color Palette & Fonts". Arkansas Razorbacks Brand Style Guide (PDF). June 16, 2021. Retrieved October 2, 2021.
  2. ^ "Division I Men's Basketball Records" (PDF). ncaa.org. NCAA. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  3. ^ Stuck, Dorothy D. (1997). Roberta: a Most Remarkable Fulbright. Fayetteville, AR: University of Arkansas Press. p. 38. ISBN 1610753518. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  4. ^ Hancock, Hank (1976). A history of Arkansas Razorbacks. Abilene, TX: H. Hancock. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  5. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1927–28 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "HogStats.com :: Year-by-Year Results". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  7. ^ "HogStats.com :: Arkansas Basketball Players :: Arkansas basketball All-Americans". HogStas.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g "2019–20 Arkansas Media Guide-Razorback History" (PDF). arkansasrazorbacks.com. University of Arkansas. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  9. ^ a b c d e "HogStats.com :: Arkansas Basketball Coaches". hogstats.com. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  10. ^ "1927–28 Southwest Conference Season Summary | College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com". sports-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  11. ^ "1928–29 Southwest Conference Season Summary | College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com". sports-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  12. ^ "HogStats.com :: Player Information :: Wear Schoonover". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  13. ^ "HogStats.com :: Box Score :: 1930–31 :: Texas vs. Arkansas in Austin, TX (1/8/1931)". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  14. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1935–36 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  15. ^ Kessler, Martin. "Universal Pictures, 'Frankenstein,' And Basketball: The Story Of The First U.S. Olympic Team | Only A Game". wbur.org. WBUR. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  16. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1936–37 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  17. ^ "About | Faulkner Performing Arts Center | University of Arkansas". uark.edu. University of Arkansas. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  18. ^ Story, Kenneth. "WA0350.nr.pdf" (PDF). arkansaspreservation.com. Arkansas Historic Preservation Program. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  19. ^ "Men's Gymnasium--University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR - U.S. National Register of Historic Places on Waymarking.com". waymarking.com. Groundspeak, Inc. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  20. ^ Beckmann, Robert (October 13, 2006). "The construction of a rich tradition". The Arkansas Traveler. Retrieved January 24, 2021.
  21. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1937–38 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  22. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1955–56 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  23. ^ Christgau, John (1999). Origins of the Jump Shot: Eight Men Who Shook the World of Basketball. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 135–55. ISBN 0-8032-6394-5.
  24. ^ "HogStats.com :: Box Score :: 1940-41 :: TCU vs. Arkansas in Fort Worth, TX (2/21/1941)". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  25. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1942–43 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  26. ^ Chipman, Kit (April 30, 2010). "University of Utah 1944 NCAA Basketball Championship". Utah Communication History Encyclopedia. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  27. ^ Reed, William F. (April 1994). A Barn Raising. Sports Illustrated. p. 8.
  28. ^ "HogStats.com :: Cool Stuff :: Arkansas vs. Defending and Eventual National Champions". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  29. ^ "1957–58 Southwest Conference Season Summary | College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com". sports-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  30. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1957–58 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  31. ^ "1957–58 Oklahoma State Cowboys Roster and Stats | College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com". sports-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  32. ^ Schaeffer, Rick (September 1, 2014). 100 Things Arkansas Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die. Triumph Books. p. 144. ISBN 9781623689520. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  33. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1958–59 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  34. ^ a b "HogStats.com :: Arkansas Basketball Records :: Season Wins & Losses". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  35. ^ "Trailblazers: Thomas A. Johnson". arkansasrazorbacks.com. University of Arkansas. February 21, 2017. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  36. ^ "Arkansas Razorbacks, 1970s – Enter the Razorback". entertherazorback.com. January 26, 2016. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  37. ^ "1972–73 Southwest Conference Season Summary | College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com". sports-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  38. ^ "Eddie Sutton Coaching Record | College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com". sports-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  39. ^ Jones, Matt (September 11, 2019). "Razorbacks to hold open basketball scrimmage at Barnhill Arena". arkansasonline.com. Arkansas Democrat Gazette. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  40. ^ "Razorback Basketball Greats to Be Honored in February". University of Arkansas News.
  41. ^ "Arkansas AP Men's Basketball Poll Summary – College Poll Archive – Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings". collegepollarchive.com. College Poll Archive. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  42. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1977–78 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  43. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1978–79 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  44. ^ "The Road To The 1979 Final Four". thesportsnotebook.com. TheSportsNoteBook. May 10, 2014. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  45. ^ "HogStats.com :: 1983–84 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". HogStats.com. Retrieved March 14, 2020.
  46. ^ Katz, Andy (March 13, 2011). "Arkansas fires coach John Pelphrey". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 13, 2011.
  47. ^ Pelphrey to leave South Alabama after five years Associated Press, accessed January 14, 2008
  48. ^ . Archived from the original on August 31, 2011. Retrieved January 19, 2012.
  49. ^ "Musselman Named Head Men's Basketball Coach". April 7, 2019.
  50. ^ "2021 Ferris Mowers Coaches Poll". USA Today. April 6, 2021.
  51. ^ "2022 Ferris Mowers Coaches Poll". USA Today. April 5, 2022.
  52. ^ a b Retired jerseys a rare sight for Razorbacks by Wally Hall at Arkansas Democrat Gazzette, September 15, 2016

External links edit

  • Official website  

arkansas, razorbacks, basketball, women, basketball, team, arkansas, razorbacks, women, basketball, team, represents, university, arkansas, fayetteville, arkansas, ncaa, division, basketball, competition, team, competes, southeastern, conference, arkansas, pla. For the women s basketball team see Arkansas Razorbacks women s basketball The Arkansas Razorbacks men s basketball team represents the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville Arkansas in NCAA Division I men s basketball competition The team competes in the Southeastern Conference Arkansas plays its home games in Bud Walton Arena on the University of Arkansas campus The Razorbacks are a top twenty five program all time by winning percentage 641 top twenty program by NCAA tournament games played top twenty program by NCAA Tournament games won top fifteen program by Final Four appearances and despite playing significantly fewer seasons than most programs in major conferences top thirty by all time wins 2 Under the coaching leadership of Nolan Richardson the Hogs won the national championship in 1994 defeating Duke and appeared in the championship game the following year finishing as runner up The Razorbacks have made six NCAA Final Four appearances 1941 1945 1978 1990 1994 and 1995 Arkansas Razorbacks2023 24 Arkansas Razorbacks men s basketball teamUniversityUniversity of ArkansasFirst season1923 24All time record1763 983 642 Head coachEric Musselman 5th season ConferenceSECLocationFayetteville ArkansasArenaNolan Richardson Court at Bud Walton Arena Capacity 19 200 NicknameRazorbacksStudent sectionThe TroughColorsCardinal and white 1 UniformsHome AwayNCAA tournament champions1994NCAA tournament runner up1995NCAA tournament Final Four1941 1945 1978 1990 1994 1995NCAA tournament Elite Eight1941 1945 1949 1978 1979 1990 1991 1994 1995 2021 2022NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1958 1978 1979 1981 1983 1990 1991 1993 1994 1995 1996 2021 2022 2023NCAA tournament round of 321977 1978 1979 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1998 1999 2008 2015 2017 2021 2022 2023NCAA tournament appearances1941 1945 1949 1958 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1998 1999 2000 2001 2006 2007 2008 2015 2017 2018 2021 2022 2023Conference tournament championsSouthwest1977 1979 1982 1989 1990 1991 SEC2000Conference regular season championsSouthwest1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1935 1936 1938 1941 1942 1944 1949 1950 1958 1977 1978 1979 1981 1982 1989 1990 1991 SEC1992 1994Conference division season champions1992 1993 1994 1995 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early success under Schmidt 1923 29 1 2 Bassett years 1929 33 1 3 First Glen Rose era 1933 42 1 4 Eugene Lambert 1942 49 1 5 Presley Askew 1949 52 1 6 Second Glen Rose era 1952 66 1 7 Decline under Waller and Van Eman 1966 74 1 8 New heights in the Eddie Sutton era 1974 85 1 9 Nolan Richardson era and a national championship 1985 2002 1 10 Stan Heath years 2002 07 1 11 Dana Altman 2007 1 12 John Pelphrey 2007 11 1 13 Mike Anderson 2011 19 1 14 Eric Musselman era and a return to national prominence 2019 present 2 Postseason 2 1 NCAA tournament results 2 2 NIT results 3 Current coaching staff 4 Arkansas s All Americans 4 1 Retired numbers 5 Razorbacks after the University of Arkansas 5 1 NBA 5 2 Other professional leagues 5 3 Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame 5 4 Olympians 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editSee also List of Arkansas Razorbacks men s basketball seasons Early success under Schmidt 1923 29 edit Arkansas had a relatively late start in basketball it did not field its first team until 1923 Francis Schmidt coached the Razorbacks from the 1923 24 season until the 1928 29 season while also coaching the football and baseball teams nbsp The 1926 27 RazorbacksSchmidt oversaw the construction of the gymnasium that was home to the Razorbacks from the inaugural season through the 1936 37 season The project was headed by Schmidt and Jay Fulbright father of future United States Senator from Arkansas J William Fulbright Schmidt and Fulbright organized a group of businessmen that facilitated the transfer of a former car showroom to the university to serve as the gym for the Razorbacks The wooden gym made out of surplus World War I material and officially named Schmidt Gymnasium became known as Schmidt s barn in reference to its makeshift nature and lack of accommodations 3 4 After a difficult first year that resulted in a 17 11 overall record and a 3 9 conference record Schmidt quickly led the Hogs to success and a dominating run in the Southwest Conference during his tenure Building off the program s first season the 1924 25 team finished third in the conference quickly turning their record around to 9 3 in conference play This second season laid the groundwork for tremendous success with Schmidt as the Razorbacks won the conference championship outright in just the third year of the program s existence with a record of 23 2 11 1 The 1925 26 season kicked off a string of four straight Southwest Conference championships under Schmidt and five straight overall Schmidt also coached the Hogs to the first of three perfect SWC seasons in program history in 1927 28 with a conference record of 12 0 and a 15 25 point average margin of victory in conference play The 1927 28 season also marked the beginning of a school record 31 game winning streak that ran until the last few games of the next season 5 Schmidt s last four teams at Arkansas went a combined 75 6 42 4 6 The last couple years of Schmidt s dominant SWC run were marked by serious star power with future Razorback basketball coaches Eugene Lambert Sr and Glen Rose earning First Team Helms Athletic Foundation All American recognition during Schmidt s last two seasons 1928 29 and 1927 28 respectively along with Tom Pickel earning First Team honors from College Humor Magazine in Schmidt s final season as coach 7 Schmidt s Razorbacks had four of the five All SWC selections in 1928 Rose Pickel Lambert and Wear Schoonover 8 During Schmidt s time at Arkansas the Razorbacks finished first in the SWC four out of six years and compiled an overall record of 113 22 837 the highest winning percentage of any Arkansas coach ever 9 Schmidt left Arkansas to take the football and basketball jobs at TCU where he was coach until 1934 8 Bassett years 1929 33 edit In the 1929 30 season Charles Bassett took over as head coach leaving the head coaching job at Texas A amp M that he held for two years without finding much success going a paltry 16 18 5 15 in his two years as head coach in College Station including a last place finish in conference play for the 1927 28 Southwest Conference season 10 11 Arkansas s success under Bassett was limited to his first season as coach when the Hogs won the Southwest Conference Championship with multi sport star and current College Football Hall of Fame member Wear Schoonover garnering Second Team All American recognition from College Humor and earning First Team All SWC honors for the third straight season 12 The Razorbacks did not finish above third place in the Southwest Conference standings for the rest of Bassett s tenure Aside from the SWC Championship in 1930 the other major bright spot in Bassett s tenure came on January 8 1931 when the Razorbacks defeated rival Texas 29 21 the day UT dedicated its new gym 13 Bassett s last season was the 1932 33 season when the Razorbacks went 14 7 overall with a 6 6 conference record the first time since the inaugural 1923 24 season that the Hogs did not finish the year with a winning record in conference play 6 After four seasons Bassett s overall record was 62 29 681 9 First Glen Rose era 1933 42 edit nbsp John Adams was an All American in 1941 and one of the first players to use the jump shot Glen Rose took over in the 1933 34 season and returned the program to a competitive position within the SWC Named a Helms Athletic Foundation First Team All American as a Hog in 1928 Rose was the first former player to coach the Razorbacks Rebuilding the program after the decline under Bassett Rose s first season as coach produced a 500 conference record 6 6 and a tie for third place in the final SWC standings The Hogs finished with a winning conference record and no lower than second place in the conference standings for the rest of Rose s first stint with Arkansas save for one season The 1935 36 season ended with the Hogs competing for the right to represent the United States in the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin for the first year of basketball being an official medal sport The Razorbacks swept the other NCAA teams they played in the NCAA Olympic Playoffs but lost in the first round of the U S Olympic Trials to the Universal Pictures Amateur Athletic Union team that went on to win the gold medal 14 15 The following season 1936 37 featured the last game in Schmidt Gymnasium or Schmidt s barn 16 Construction of the new building originally known as the Field House that came to be known as the Men s Gymnasium was under way in 1936 and was completed in the fall semester of 1937 with a capacity of 2 500 17 18 19 20 The new home for the Razorbacks was dedicated on February 4 1938 in a 53 26 win over TCU 21 The Men s Gymnasium served as home for the basketball team until Barnhill Arena was completed in 1954 and the Razorbacks began playing games there in the 1955 56 season 22 The Razorbacks won the Southwest Conference outright three times and tied for first two more times during this nine year run In the 1940 41 season Rose led Arkansas to its second perfect conference record ever 12 0 en route the NCAA Final Four in the Razorbacks first NCAA Tournament appearance The 1940 41 season is also notable for the outstanding play of John Johnny Adams a Helms First Team All American who is credited as being one of the players responsible for the proliferation of the jump shot in basketball 23 Adams set the single game SWC scoring record that season with 36 points against TCU in Fort Worth on February 21 1941 24 Rose finished this nine year run with a record of 154 47 766 Rose went on to coach the football team for the 1944 and 1945 seasons without much success Rose returned to coach the basketball team a decade after he left Eugene Lambert 1942 49 edit nbsp Eugene Lambert circa 1947 Former Razorback and All American Eugene Lambert took the coaching job starting in the 1942 43 season Lambert found moderate success in his first season as head coach posting a winning record and overseeing a first in program history by coaching the first freshman to play for the Razorback varsity squad Paul Coleman 25 After winning a share of the Southwest Conference Championship for the 1943 44 season Lambert and Arkansas were selected for the NCAA tournament for the second time in program history However the team was forced to withdraw after tragedy struck when a car accident injured two of their starters Ben Jones and Deno Nichols and killed Eugene Norris a physical education teacher that accompanied the players on their trip 26 27 The next year the Hogs earned another tournament berth and advanced to the Final Four losing to eventual champions Oklahoma A amp M 28 The Razorbacks did not make the tournament again until the 1948 49 season when the Hogs shared the SWC crown with Baylor and Rice The Hogs lost in the first round of the regional but won the third place game The 1948 49 season was Lambert s last season coaching the Hogs During Lambert s seven seasons Arkansas won a share the Southwest Conference Championship twice with three second place finishes and never fell lower than third in the conference Lambert s final record was 113 60 653 9 nbsp George Kok was an All American in 1948 Presley Askew 1949 52 edit Presley Askew took over for the 1949 50 season and coached through the 1951 52 season Arkansas tied for first place in the Southwest Conference in Askew s first season but bottomed out in his third and final season posting the program s first losing record of 10 14 4 8 The Razorbacks did not make the NCAA Tournament during Askew s tenure Askew s overall record was 35 37 486 the first basketball coach to finish his career at Arkansas with a losing record despite having a winning conference record of 19 17 Askew s three season tenure is the shortest in Razorback basketball history 6 Second Glen Rose era 1952 66 edit Glen Rose returned for the 1952 53 season his second stint with the Hogs lasted until 1966 Rose did not reach the heights of his previous run with the only real success being in the 1957 58 season when Arkansas tied for first place in the Southwest Conference with SMU and made the NCAA tournament losing to an Oklahoma State team whose starting point guard Eddie Sutton eventually became head coach of the Razorbacks 29 30 31 Rose s teams in his second spell as head coach posted a winning conference record only five times to go along with six losing records overall 6 For the second time in his career as head coach Rose oversaw a transition from one home court to another Eighteen years after the transition from Schmidt s barn to the Men s Gymnasium the Razorbacks began playing their home games in Barnhill Arena then known as Razorback Fieldhouse in the 1955 56 season With a capacity of 3 500 at the time of the first game the transition to Razorback Fieldhouse represented more investment and interest in the program even if the results of Rose s second run with the Hogs were lackluster 32 Razorback Fieldhouse s capacity was 5 000 once it was fully completed and remained at that number until 1977 8 Razorback Fieldhouse would also be the site of the first televised home game for the Hogs with Rose coaching the Hogs to a 61 57 victory over Texas Tech on January 3 1959 33 Rose finished his second run with the Hogs fourteen seasons with a record of 171 154 526 Rose s overall record for his time at Arkansas twenty three seasons was 325 201 618 Rose s twenty three seasons as head coach remain the longest tenure of any Razorback basketball coach and his fourteen continuous seasons as coach from 1952 to 1966 is second only to Nolan Richardson for longest continuous tenure as Razorback basketball coach 6 Decline under Waller and Van Eman 1966 74 edit After Glen Rose s teams continually failed to be competitive in the SWC during his second stint as coach he retired following the 1965 66 season The next eight years proved to be much worse than the lows experienced under Rose s leadership Duddy Waller became head coach for the 1966 67 season but only lasted until the 1970 71 season All of Waller s teams posted losing records including two of the three worst winning percentages for a season in school history and the second most losses in a season in school history 34 Waller s record during his four seasons was 31 64 which is the worst overall winning percentage 326 of any Arkansas basketball coach ever 9 Waller was replaced by Lanny Van Eman who coached the Hogs from the 1970 71 season through the 1973 74 season Van Eman started his career as head coach of the Razorbacks with the worst season in school history a 5 21 1 13 campaign that still holds the record for most losses in a season lowest winning percentage for a season most SWC losses in a season and fewest conference wins in a season 34 Despite such an awful first season Van Eman did manage to lead Arkansas to its first winning conference record in a decade when the Hogs finished with a 9 5 record in the SWC for the 1972 73 season and tied for second place in the conference Van Eman finished his career at Arkansas with a 39 65 record 375 9 nbsp Dean Tolson as a sophomoreDespite the major shortcomings of Waller and Van Eman s teams on the court of note is the fact that these coaches oversaw the gradual integration of African American players into the basketball program under their leadership Thomas A Johnson was the first African American to play for the Razorbacks on the 1967 team headed by Waller 35 Following in the footsteps of Johnson were the first African American stars of Razorback basketball guard Martin Terry and center Dean Tolson 36 Playing under Van Eman Terry and Tolson put up huge numbers and set school records that still stand today while also collecting All SWC and All American recognition Terry owns the Arkansas records for highest season and career scoring averages was a two time First Team All SWC selection in 1972 and 1973 and picked up an All American Honorable Mention nod from Helms in 1973 the same season he was named Southwest Conference Player of the Year 37 He was taken in the third round of the 1973 NBA draft the second highest pick in Arkansas history at the time 8 Tolson is the school record holder for single game field goals made and attempted as well as career rebounding average Tolson would follow Terry and get drafted in the fifth round of the 1974 NBA draft Arkansas failed to finish above second place in the Southwest Conference during these eight seasons posting a winning record only once and did not receive any invitations to the NCAA Tournament The combined overall record of these two coaches was 70 129 352 and 39 73 348 in conference play 6 New heights in the Eddie Sutton era 1974 85 edit After coaching at Creighton for five mostly unremarkable seasons that culminated in an NCAA tournament bid and a first round victory Eddie Sutton found himself on Frank Broyles s radar as the longtime head football coach and new athletic director wanted to invest in the basketball program to get it out of the depths of the Waller and Van Eman years 38 8 Broyles hired Sutton starting with the 1974 75 season and the hire proved to be a turning point in the program s history Sutton s first campaign with the Hogs turned out to be a mildly successful one that put fans on notice with an 11 3 conference record that was good for second place in the SWC as high as the program had finished in conference play in seventeen years 6 Sutton s second team did not perform as strongly in conference play but improved its overall record The excitement behind Razorback basketball was palpable as renovations began on what was then officially Barnhill Arena after it was renamed in 1973 for former athletic director and head football coach John Barnhill 39 Sutton s second team also had the core players that would elevate the Razorbacks to a national power under his leadership the famed in state players known as the Triplets Ron Brewer Marvin Delph and Sidney Moncrief who later became the first player in program history to have his number retired 40 nbsp Sidney Moncrief during the 1976 77 seasonThe 1976 77 Razorbacks were the team that established Arkansas as a basketball power in the modern era Beginning play in a renovated Barnhill Arena with an expanded capacity of 6 200 the Hogs won the SWC with a perfect 16 0 conference record going 26 1 overall in the regular season and spent more weeks in the AP Poll that season than every season prior combined with a peak ranking of 6 8 41 The Hogs earned their first tournament invitation in nearly two decades but fell in the first round while still finishing ranked in the AP Poll for the first time in school history 6 The Hogs would follow the 1976 77 season with Sutton s most successful season at Arkansas and one of the best seasons in school history Barnhill Arena was expanded further prior to the 1977 78 season this time to a capacity of 9 000 8 The Hogs started the season ranked 7 by the AP Poll and lived up to the high expectations of their recent success by winning their first fourteen games and never falling out of the top ten of the AP Poll the whole season Arkansas ascended to the top spot in the AP Poll for the first time in program history on February 13 1978 The Hogs received an at large bid to the tournament after winning a share of the SWC Championship and beat AP 2 UCLA in the Sweet Sixteen before falling to eventual champion Kentucky in the Final Four in St Louis The fifth ranked Hogs won the third place game against AP 6 Notre Dame 71 69 42 Sutton s 1978 79 team still managed a great campaign despite the loss of two of the Triplets All American Brewer and Delph Repeating with a share of the Southwest Conference crown the Hogs won the SWC tournament to clinch the bid to the tournament The Razorbacks advanced to the Elite Eight where they lost a close game marred by a controversial last minute missed tripping call to Larry Bird and undefeated Indiana State 73 71 43 44 While Sutton s other teams would not be as high achieving as the 1977 78 and 1978 79 squads he would still coach the Razorbacks to successful seasons never finishing lower than second in the Southwest Conference standings after his second season while also producing highlights ranging from U S Reed s game winning last second half court shot against defending champions Louisville in the second round of the 1981 NCAA tournament ending back to back national runner up Houston s thirty nine game SWC winning streak having a player drafted in the first round of the NBA draft three straight years from 1983 to 1985 Darrell Walker Alvin Robertson and Joe Kleine and the Razorbacks first win over an AP 1 team against Michael Jordan and North Carolina in Pine Bluff Arkansas on February 12 1984 6 45 Sutton s eleven seasons remain the third longest tenure in Razorback basketball history During these eleven seasons Arkansas won or shared the Southwest Conference Championship four times The Hogs finished ranked seven times including four top ten finishes and two top five finishes The Razorbacks were invited to the NCAA Tournament during each of the last nine seasons of Sutton s tenure Sutton finished with a 260 75 776 overall record at Arkansas including nine NCAA Tournament appearances four Sweet Sixteen appearances two Elite Eight appearances and one Final Four berth 6 Nolan Richardson era and a national championship 1985 2002 edit Tulsa coach and former Texas Western player Nolan Richardson replaced Sutton beginning with the 1985 86 season After two years without a winning conference record Arkansas finished tied for second in the Southwest Conference standings in Richardson s third season The Razorbacks won the SWC regular season and tournament titles each of its last three seasons in the SWC 1989 1990 and 1991 6 Arkansas joined the Southeastern Conference for the 1991 92 season and won the regular season conference championship in 1992 and 1994 also winning the SEC Western Division title in 1992 1993 1994 and 1995 The Razorbacks also won the 2000 SEC tournament Arkansas made the NCAA Tournament thirteen times during Richardson s seventeen seasons and made the Final Four during the 1990 1994 and 1995 seasons They won their first national championship in 1994 by beating Duke in the title game The next season they returned to the championship game and finished as runner up losing to UCLA Richardson was fired in 2002 after making controversial public statements against the university and then athletic director Frank Broyles Assistant coach Mike Anderson coached the rest of the season going 1 1 Richardson holds the school record for most wins by a head coach with an overall record of 389 169 697 Coach Richardson led Arkansas to four NCAA Tournament Elite Eight appearances 1990 1991 1994 and 1995 and six NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen appearances 1990 1991 1993 1994 1995 and 1996 Between the 1989 90 and 1995 96 seasons Arkansas won more games than any other school in the nation Stan Heath years 2002 07 edit Stan Heath coached the Hogs beginning with the 2002 03 season and remained in Fayetteville through the 2006 07 season During Heath s five seasons the Razorbacks did not enjoy the success that they achieved under Richardson They never finished higher than third place in the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference They were invited to the NCAA Tournament in Heath s final two seasons although they were eliminated in the Round of 64 each trip Heath s final record was 82 71 536 Dana Altman 2007 edit Dana Altman was hired as the head coach of the Arkansas Razorbacks on April 2 2007 However Altman had a change of heart resigning the next day to return to Creighton where he had coached since 1994 John Pelphrey 2007 11 edit nbsp Key players for Pelphrey s early teams include Courtney Fortson far left Mike Washington 00 and Rotnei Clarke far right John Pelphrey was hired as the head coach of the Arkansas Razorbacks on Monday April 9 2007 Pelphrey was hired after Dana Altman accepted the job and resigned within a day 46 47 Arkansas went 23 12 in Pelphrey s first season defeating Indiana by 14 points in the first round of the NCAA Tournament before being put away by overall 1 seed North Carolina in the second round The Razorbacks had an SEC regular season record of 9 7 In Pelphrey s second year the Razorbacks struggled in conference play after starting the season 12 1 in non conference games with two notable wins over the nationally ranked Oklahoma Sooners 4 and the Texas Longhorns 7 Conference wins were few and far between giving the Razorbacks a final conference record of 2 14 On March 13 2011 John Pelphrey was dismissed as the head coach of the Razorbacks after an 18 13 season in which the Hogs missed postseason play for the third consecutive season despite an impressive incoming recruiting class Pelphrey finished his career at Arkansas with a record of 69 59 539 nbsp Mike Anderson s Razorbacks defeated the Missouri Tigers in their first matchup since Anderson returned to ArkansasMike Anderson 2011 19 edit On March 23 2011 Mike Anderson signed a 7 year contract with Arkansas Anderson previously coached the UAB Blazers and Missouri Tigers and had already been an assistant coach at Arkansas under coach Nolan Richardson for 17 years On March 26 2011 Anderson was introduced in front of 5 000 fans in Bud Walton Arena 48 Anderson made three NCAA tournaments in his eight seasons including a 27 win season in 2014 15 that resulted in a 5 seed in the tournament the program s highest since 1999 The Razorbacks made another tournament two years later but lost to top seeded North Carolina the eventual national champion in the second round The following year saw them make the tournament for the final time in Anderson s tenure at Arkansas but a loss to Butler ended the Hogs season in the first round Following an up and down 2018 19 campaign that culminated in an NIT berth new athletic director Hunter Yurachek relieved Anderson of his duties on March 26 a little over a week after Arkansas lost to Indiana in the second round of the NIT Anderson finished his career at Arkansas with a record of 170 103 623 including his 1 1 record as interim coach in 2002 Eric Musselman era and a return to national prominence 2019 present edit On April 7 2019 Yurachek announced the hiring of Eric Musselman then the four year head coach at Nevada who had previous experience as head coach in the NBA with the Golden State Warriors where he was runner up for the NBA Coach of the Year Award and the Sacramento Kings as well as college assistant coaching stops at Arizona State and LSU 49 Musselman s first Arkansas team finished the season with a record of 20 12 with Musselman becoming only the second coach in school history to finish his first season with at least 20 wins and the first since John Pelphrey in 2007 08 Musselman was also only the second head coach at Arkansas to finish his debut season with a winning percentage above 61 since Gene Lambert during the 1942 43 season After Arkansas beat Vanderbilt in the first round of the 2020 SEC men s basketball tournament the SEC Tournament as well as the entire NCAA tournament was cancelled due to the COVID 19 pandemic making this the final Southeastern Conference men s basketball game of the 2019 2020 season Arkansas junior guard Mason Jones was named the SEC Co Player of the Year by the AP In only his second year Musselman led the Razorbacks to the Elite Eight of the NCAA tournament losing to eventual champion Baylor This was Arkansas s deepest postseason run since their 1995 title game appearance The team finished the 2021 season with a record of 25 7 781 and a conference record of 13 4 765 Freshman guard Moses Moody was named the SEC Freshman of the Year and became the first one and done player in program history when he was drafted in the first round 14th overall of the 2021 NBA draft by the Golden State Warriors Arkansas advanced further in the NCAA Tournament than any other Southeastern Conference team and finished with an overall ranking of 6 in the USA Today Coaches Poll 50 In his third year Musselman led the Razorbacks to the Elite Eight again losing to the Duke Blue Devils Arkansas finished the 2022 season with a record of 28 9 757 and a conference record of 13 5 722 Again Arkansas advanced further in the NCAA tournament than any other Southeastern Conference team and finished with a ranking of 8 in the Coaches Poll the highest in the SEC 51 Arkansas also won the early season Hall of Fame Classic tournament championship In his fourth year Musselman signed the 2 recruiting class in the nation but the team slipped in SEC play finishing 8 10 But the team recovered late in the season and made it to their third consecutive Sweet 16 in the 2023 NCAA Tournament losing to eventual national champion Connecticut Musselman s fifth season as head coach began with a resounding Thud Arkansas started the season 9 4 through the non conference portion of the schedule that saw the Razorbacks lose to lowly UNC Greensboro at home 72 78 yet they upset 7 Duke in Bud Walton Arena 80 75 But it was the conference schedule that was Arkansas undoing as the squad began SEC play 1 5 through January 24 and showed very few signs of cohesive play and teamwork much to Musselman s chagrin Postseason editNCAA tournament results edit The Razorbacks have appeared in the NCAA tournament 35 times Their combined record is 50 35 They were National Champions in 1994 Year Seed Round Opponent Result1941 Elite EightFinal Four WyomingWashington State W 52 40L 53 641945 Elite EightFinal Four OregonOklahoma A amp M W 79 76L 41 681949 Elite EightRegional 3rd Place Game Oregon StateWyoming L 38 56W 61 481958 Sweet SixteenRegional 3rd Place Game Oklahoma StateCincinnati L 40 65L 62 971977 Round of 32 Wake Forest L 80 861978 Round of 32Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational 3rd Place Game Weber StateUCLACal State FullertonKentuckyNotre Dame W 73 52W 74 70W 61 58L 59 64W 71 691979 2 Round of 32Sweet SixteenElite Eight 7 Weber State 3 Louisville 1 Indiana State W 74 63W 73 62L 71 731980 10 Round of 48 7 Kansas State L 53 711981 5 Round of 48Round of 32Sweet Sixteen 12 Mercer 4 Louisville 1 LSU W 73 67W 74 73L 56 721982 4 Round of 32 5 Kansas State L 64 651983 4 Round of 32Sweet Sixteen 5 Purdue 1 Louisville W 78 68L 63 651984 2 Round of 32 7 Virginia L 51 53 OT1985 9 First RoundSecond Round 8 Iowa 1 St John s W 63 54L 65 681988 11 First Round 6 Villanova L 74 821989 5 First RoundSecond Round 12 Loyola Marymount 4 Louisville W 120 101L 84 931990 4 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four 13 Princeton 12 Dayton 8 North Carolina 10 Texas 3 Duke W 68 64W 86 84W 96 73W 88 85L 83 971991 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight 16 Georgia State 8 Arizona State 4 Alabama 3 Kansas W 117 76W 97 90W 93 70L 81 931992 3 First RoundSecond Round 14 Murray State 6 Memphis State W 80 69L 80 821993 4 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 13 Holy Cross 5 St John s 1 North Carolina W 94 64W 80 74L 74 801994 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship Game 16 North Carolina A amp T 9 Georgetown 12 Tulsa 3 Michigan 2 Arizona 2 Duke W 94 79W 85 73W 103 84W 76 68W 91 82W 76 721995 2 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship Game 15 Texas Southern 7 Syracuse 6 Memphis 4 Virginia 2 North Carolina 1 UCLA W 79 78W 96 94 OTW 96 91 OTW 68 61W 75 68L 78 891996 12 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 5 Penn St 4 Marquette 1 Massachusetts W 86 80W 65 56L 63 791998 6 First RoundSecond Round 11 Nebraska 3 Utah W 74 65L 69 751999 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 Siena 5 Iowa W 94 80L 72 822000 11 First Round 6 Miami FL L 71 752001 7 First Round 10 Georgetown L 61 632006 8 First Round 9 Bucknell L 55 592007 12 First Round 5 USC L 60 772008 9 First RoundSecond Round 8 Indiana 1 North Carolina W 86 72L 77 1082015 5 First RoundSecond Round 12 Wofford 4 North Carolina W 56 53L 78 872017 8 First RoundSecond Round 9 Seton Hall 1 North Carolina W 77 71L 65 722018 7 First Round 10 Butler L 62 792021 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight 14 Colgate 6 Texas Tech 15 Oral Roberts 1 Baylor W 85 68W 68 66W 72 70L 72 812022 4 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight 13 Vermont 12 New Mexico State 1 Gonzaga 2 Duke W 75 71 W 53 48 W 74 68 L 69 782023 8 First roundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 9 Illinois 1 Kansas 4 UConn W 73 63 W 72 71 L 65 88NIT results edit The Razorbacks have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament NIT four times Their combined record is 6 5 Year Round Opponent Result1987 First RoundSecond Round Arkansas StateNebraska W 67 64L 71 781997 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals3rd Place Game Northern ArizonaPittsburghUNLVMichiganConnecticut W 101 75W 76 71W 86 73L 62 77L 64 742014 First RoundSecond Round Indiana StateCalifornia W 91 71L 64 752019 First RoundSecond Round ProvidenceIndiana W 84 72L 60 63Current coaching staff editEric Musselman Head Coach San Diego 1987 Anthony Ruta Assistant Coach Arizona State 2014 Gus Argenal Assistant Coach UC Davis 2004 Keith Smart Assistant Coach Indiana 1995 Arkansas s All Americans editPlayer Position Year s SelectorsGlen Rose 1928 Helms Athletic FoundationTom Pickell 1929 College Humor MagazineGene Lambert 1929 Helms Athletic FoundationWear Schoonover Forward 1930 College Humor MagazineJames Doc Sexton 2 1931 1932 College Humor MagazineIke Poole Forward 1936 Helms Athletic Foundation Converse YearbookJack Robbins 1938 Newspapers Enterprise AssociationJohn Adams Guard Forward 1941 Helms Athletic Foundation Converse YearbookClayton Wynne 1943 Pic MagazineBill Flynt 1946 Helms Athletic FoundationGeorge Kok 2 Center 1946 1948 Associated Press The Sporting NewsFred Grim Guard 1958 Associated PressClyde Rhoden Forward 1960 Converse YearbookJerry Clayton 2 Guard 1961 1962 Converse YearbookTommy Boyer Guard 1963 UPI Converse YearbookMartin Terry Guard 1973 Helms Athletic FoundationRon Brewer 2 Guard 1977 1978 Associated Press Helms Athletic Foundation Converse Yearbook United States Writers Basketball Association Basketball WeeklyMarvin Delph 2 Guard 1977 1978 Associated Press The Sporting News Converse YearbookSidney Moncrief 3 Guard 1977 1978 1979 The Sporting News Associated Press UPI NABC Helms Athletic Foundation Converse Yearbook United States Writers Basketball AssociationScott Hastings 2 Center 1981 1982 Helms Athletic Foundation Associated PressDarrell Walker Guard 1983 Associated Press UPI Helms Athletic Foundation Converse YearbookTodd Day 3 Guard 1990 1991 1992 John Wooden Award The Sporting News Associated Press UPI NABC Helms Athletic Foundation United States Writers Basketball Association Basketball Weekly Basketball TimesOliver Miller 2 Center 1991 1992 Associated PressLee Mayberry Guard 1992 Associated Press NABC Basketball TimesScotty Thurman 2 Guard 1994 1995 Associated Press Basketball TimesCorliss Williamson 2 Forward 1994 1995 Associated Press John Wooden Award The Sporting News Basketball Weekly NABC UPI United States Writers Basketball Association Basketball TimesPat Bradley Guard 1999 Associated PressJoe Johnson Guard Forward 2001 Associated PressRonnie Brewer Guard Forward 2006 Associated Press Basketball Times CollegeBasketballInsider comBobby Portis Forward 2015 Associated Press United States Basketball Writers Association Sporting NewsDaniel Gafford Forward 2019 Associated PressMason Jones Guard 2020 Associated PressMoses Moody Guard 2021 Associated PressJD Notae Guard 2022 Associated Press Sporting NewsSource Arkansas Razorbacks Media Guide Arkansas All Americas Arkansas Razorbacks Archived from the original on May 28 2008 Retrieved January 11 2015 Retired numbers edit Main article List of NCAA men s basketball retired numbers The University of Arkansas athletic department has seen fit to retire only two jersey numbers in honor of former outstanding players Arkansas Razorbacks retired numbersNo Player Pos Tenure Ref 32 Sidney Moncrief G 1975 79 52 34 Corliss Williamson F 1992 95 52 Moncrief 6 4 190 lbs led the Razorbacks to the 1978 Final Four and is so far Arkansas only Consensus 1st team All American player 1979 Moncrief also led the Hogs to three straight Southwest Conference regular season titles from 1977 to 1979 as well as the 1977 and 1979 SWC Tournament championships He was a three time All SWC performer and was also the SWC Player of the Year in 1979 Moncrief finished his career as the school s all time leading scorer until his record was broken in 1992 Williamson 6 7 245 lbs led Arkansas to the 1994 National Championship and a runner up finish in the 1995 Final Four Corliss also lead Arkansas to three straight SEC West Division championships from 1993 to 1995 plus the 1994 SEC regular season title Williamson was a two time All SEC performer was the 1994 and 1995 SEC Player of the Year and was named Consensus 2nd team All American in both seasons Razorbacks after the University of Arkansas editNBA edit nbsp Joe Johnson 7 NBA All Star while playing for the Brooklyn NetsCorey Beck Patrick Beverley Anthony Black Ron Brewer Ronnie Brewer Tony Brown Coty Clarke Ricky Council IV Todd Day Courtney Fortson Daniel Gafford Dusty Hannahs Scott Hastings Steven Hill Derek Hood Byron Irvin Chris Jefferies Dontell Jefferson Isaiah Joe Mason Jones Joe Johnson Joe Kleine Andrew Lang Daryl Macon Lee Mayberry Clint McDaniel Mel McGaha Oliver Miller Sidney Moncrief Moses Moody Isaiah Morris Jannero Pargo Bobby Portis Alvin Robertson Nick Smith Jr Dean Tolson Stanley Umude Darrell Walker Jordan Walsh Sonny Weems Jaylin Williams Corliss WilliamsonOther professional leagues edit nbsp Dusty HannahsPat Bradley born 1976 Coty Clarke born 1992 in the Israeli Basketball Premier League Dusty Hannahs born 1993 basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League Rashad Madden born 1992 in the Israeli National League Billy Pharis Ulysses Reed Kareem Reid Darnell Robinson Justin Smith born 1999 in the Israeli Basketball Premier League Dwight Stewart born 1971 Charles Thomas born 1986 player for Maccabi Rishon LeZion of the Israeli Basketball Premier League Scotty Thurman born 1974 Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame edit Gordon Carpenter Sidney Moncrief Marvin Delph George Kok Ike PooleOlympians edit Gordon Carpenter Joe Kleine R C Pitts Alvin RobertsonSee also editArkansas RazorbacksReferences edit Color Palette amp Fonts Arkansas Razorbacks Brand Style Guide PDF June 16 2021 Retrieved October 2 2021 Division I Men s Basketball Records PDF ncaa org NCAA Retrieved March 10 2020 Stuck Dorothy D 1997 Roberta a Most Remarkable Fulbright Fayetteville AR University of Arkansas Press p 38 ISBN 1610753518 Retrieved March 10 2020 Hancock Hank 1976 A history of Arkansas Razorbacks Abilene TX H Hancock Retrieved March 10 2020 HogStats com 1927 28 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 10 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k HogStats com Year by Year Results HogStats com Retrieved March 11 2020 HogStats com Arkansas Basketball Players Arkansas basketball All Americans HogStas com Retrieved March 10 2020 a b c d e f g 2019 20 Arkansas Media Guide Razorback History PDF arkansasrazorbacks com University of Arkansas Retrieved March 11 2020 a b c d e HogStats com Arkansas Basketball Coaches hogstats com Retrieved March 9 2020 1927 28 Southwest Conference Season Summary College Basketball at Sports Reference com sports reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved March 13 2020 1928 29 Southwest Conference Season Summary College Basketball at Sports Reference com sports reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved March 13 2020 HogStats com Player Information Wear Schoonover HogStats com Retrieved March 10 2020 HogStats com Box Score 1930 31 Texas vs Arkansas in Austin TX 1 8 1931 HogStats com Retrieved March 10 2020 HogStats com 1935 36 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 10 2020 Kessler Martin Universal Pictures Frankenstein And Basketball The Story Of The First U S Olympic Team Only A Game wbur org WBUR Retrieved March 10 2020 HogStats com 1936 37 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 10 2020 About Faulkner Performing Arts Center University of Arkansas uark edu University of Arkansas Retrieved March 10 2020 Story Kenneth WA0350 nr pdf PDF arkansaspreservation com Arkansas Historic Preservation Program Retrieved March 10 2020 Men s Gymnasium University of Arkansas Fayetteville AR U S National Register of Historic Places on Waymarking com waymarking com Groundspeak Inc Retrieved March 11 2020 Beckmann Robert October 13 2006 The construction of a rich tradition The Arkansas Traveler Retrieved January 24 2021 HogStats com 1937 38 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 10 2020 HogStats com 1955 56 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 11 2020 Christgau John 1999 Origins of the Jump Shot Eight Men Who Shook the World of Basketball Lincoln University of Nebraska Press pp 135 55 ISBN 0 8032 6394 5 HogStats com Box Score 1940 41 TCU vs Arkansas in Fort Worth TX 2 21 1941 HogStats com Retrieved March 10 2020 HogStats com 1942 43 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 10 2020 Chipman Kit April 30 2010 University of Utah 1944 NCAA Basketball Championship Utah Communication History Encyclopedia Retrieved March 9 2020 Reed William F April 1994 A Barn Raising Sports Illustrated p 8 HogStats com Cool Stuff Arkansas vs Defending and Eventual National Champions HogStats com Retrieved March 10 2020 1957 58 Southwest Conference Season Summary College Basketball at Sports Reference com sports reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved March 11 2020 HogStats com 1957 58 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 11 2020 1957 58 Oklahoma State Cowboys Roster and Stats College Basketball at Sports Reference com sports reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved March 11 2020 Schaeffer Rick September 1 2014 100 Things Arkansas Fans Should Know amp Do Before They Die Triumph Books p 144 ISBN 9781623689520 Retrieved March 11 2020 HogStats com 1958 59 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 11 2020 a b HogStats com Arkansas Basketball Records Season Wins amp Losses HogStats com Retrieved March 11 2020 Trailblazers Thomas A Johnson arkansasrazorbacks com University of Arkansas February 21 2017 Retrieved March 11 2020 Arkansas Razorbacks 1970s Enter the Razorback entertherazorback com January 26 2016 Retrieved March 11 2020 1972 73 Southwest Conference Season Summary College Basketball at Sports Reference com sports reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved March 13 2020 Eddie Sutton Coaching Record College Basketball at Sports Reference com sports reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved March 13 2020 Jones Matt September 11 2019 Razorbacks to hold open basketball scrimmage at Barnhill Arena arkansasonline com Arkansas Democrat Gazette Retrieved March 13 2020 Razorback Basketball Greats to Be Honored in February University of Arkansas News Arkansas AP Men s Basketball Poll Summary College Poll Archive Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings collegepollarchive com College Poll Archive Retrieved March 13 2020 HogStats com 1977 78 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 13 2020 HogStats com 1978 79 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 13 2020 The Road To The 1979 Final Four thesportsnotebook com TheSportsNoteBook May 10 2014 Retrieved March 13 2020 HogStats com 1983 84 Arkansas Basketball Schedule HogStats com Retrieved March 14 2020 Katz Andy March 13 2011 Arkansas fires coach John Pelphrey ESPN com Retrieved March 13 2011 Pelphrey to leave South Alabama after five years Associated Press accessed January 14 2008 Sources Arkansas Razorbacks hire Missouri Tigers basketball coach Mike Anderson College Basketball News FOX Sports on MSN Archived from the original on August 31 2011 Retrieved January 19 2012 Musselman Named Head Men s Basketball Coach April 7 2019 2021 Ferris Mowers Coaches Poll USA Today April 6 2021 2022 Ferris Mowers Coaches Poll USA Today April 5 2022 a b Retired jerseys a rare sight for Razorbacks by Wally Hall at Arkansas Democrat Gazzette September 15 2016External links editOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arkansas Razorbacks men 27s basketball amp oldid 1207311684, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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