Report: Former McDonald’s All-American Wolfenbarger leaves Hogs

Wolfenbarger, a Fort Smith native, was a regular part of the rotation the last two years, but never quite cracked to full-timers minutes.

Junior Jersey Wolfenbarger has left to the Arkansas women’s basketball team, according to reports.

Wolfenbarger’s name was not listed on the Razorbacks’ roster Tuesday morning, sparking curiosity. Courtney Mims at Pig Trail Nation was the first to report Wolfenbarger left the team and will enter the transfer portal when it opens again in the fall.

A Fort Smith Northside graduate, Wolfenbarger, a 6-foot-5 guard/forward, averaged 3.9 points and 3.3 rebounds for Arkansas last year. She spent a bulk of her two seasons with the Razorbacks in the playing rotation, but never found a solid position.

Wolfenbarger was part of a prized recruiting class coach Mike Neighbors landed in 2021. Bentonville High’s Maryam Dauda, another McDonald’s All-American, and Florida guard Samara Spencer also came with Wolfenbarger. Spencer has been one of Arkansas’ best guards since arrival and Dauda broke into the rotation at forward last year.

Arkansas opens its regular season November 7 against Louisiana-Monroe.

 

Arkansas senior Makayla Daniels nets preseason second-team All-SEC honors

SEC coaches also picked Arkansas to finish seventh in the league.

If the Arkansas women’s basketball team wants to reach expectations in 2023-24, the Razorbacks will need their senior leader.

The SEC’s coaches are figuring she will provide.

Makayla Daniels was named second-team All-SEC on Tuesday by the league’s coaches. Daniels averaged 13.2 points per game while chipping in a team-leading 56 steals and another 98 assists from her shooting guard spot. Tuesday’s announcement marked the second time Daniels earned the honor as she was named to the same team at the beginning of last season, too.

She is set to re-write the Arkansas record books in her final season with the Razorbacks, too. Daniels is 10th on the school’s all-time scoring list and already third in school history in starts with 122. She’s seventh in 3-pointers and free throws and 13th in assists.

Her team was picked seventh in the preseason coaches poll. The league’s media picked Arkansas sixth in their poll last week.

“These polls get fans talking a couple weeks before everyone opens their season,” coach Mike Neighbors said. “Finishing in the top half of the SEC has means you hear your name on the Selection Sunday Show in March. That’s what we will be focusing on between now and then.”

Arkansas women’s hoops picked to finish sixth in SEC by media

The Arkansas women’s basketball team has been picked to finish sixth in the SEC this season by the media.

The Arkansas women’s basketball team is picked to finish sixth in the SEC this season, according a media poll released by the conference this week.

This marks the fifth straight year that the Lady Razorbacks were chosen to finish in the top half of the conference, under seventh-year Head Coach Mike Neighbors. It is also the ninth time in the program’s 33-year conference history.

The panel of media members from the SEC and national media outlets selected defending national champion LSU to, once again, finish atop the standings. Tiger star Angel Reese was projected to be the SEC Player of the Year,

Arkansas is coming off its fifth straight trip to the postseason, and fourth straight year being ranked inside the RPI/NET Top 50 – one of only two SEC schools to accomplish that feat. The Razorbacks are returning eight players – including three starters – from last season’s squad that finished 24-13 and advanced to the WNIT’s Elite Eight.

The program also welcomes the No. 17 recruiting class in the country, as ranked by ESPN.

SEC media Tip Off ’24 will be held Thursday in Mountain Brook, Ala., with Neighbors joining Arkansas players Makayla Daniels and Samara Spencer for the event.

The season tips off on Nov. 7, when Louisiana-Monroe visits Bud Walton Arena.

The SEC Preseason Coaches’ Poll and Preseason Team will be unveiled next week.

Mike Neighbors’ Razorbacks picked to finish sixth in SEC

Arkansas has finished eighth-or-better in each of the last four seasons.

If the media’s preseason SEC projections hold, Arkansas will be back in the NCAA Tournament.

The Razorbacks, of the women’s basketball variety, were picked to finish sixth this year in the SEC after the league’s media predictions were released Tuesday. Arkansas finished eighth in the conference last year.

Coach Mike Neighbors is heading into his seventh season at Arkansas. He’s led the Hogs to two NCAA Tournaments in his six seasons. It would be three out of six if it weren’t for the tournament’s cancellation because of COVID-19 in 2020.

That season the Razorbacks finished tied for third in the SEC during the regular season. They haven’t finished worse than eighth since.

You can see the 2023-24 SEC Women’s Basketball Preseason Poll below.

2023-24 women’s basketball schedule unveiled this week

Arkansas women’s basketball team will be looking to make a trip back to the NCAA Tournament after narrowly missing out on it a year ago.

Mike Neighbors’ seventh team already knew its nonconference schedule going into this week, but the SEC slate was announced on Wednesday.

Arkansas will begin league play January 4 at Kentucky, but the arena location hasn’t been set yet since renovations are ongoing at Memorial Coliseum in Lexington. The game will either be at Rupp Arena or an arena at a neighboring university.

The SEC home opener is January 7 against Georgia.

Other highlights of the league schedule include visiting defending national champion LSU on January 21, and then a trip to Knoxville on Feb. 12.

Arkansas closes out the league at Ole Miss.

The SEC Tournament, as always, is in Greenville, South Carolina at Bon Secours Wellness Arena and will be March 6-9 this year.

Nonconference schedule set for Arkansas women’s basketball

Games at Florida State and at home with UCLA highlight the Arkansas women’s non-conference schedule released Thursday.

Mike Neighbors’ seventh Arkansas team will begin its season on November 7 in Bud Walton Arena against Louisiana-Monroe.

Murray State follows on Friday, Nov. 10, before the Razorbacks play a trio of in-state opponents.

Little Rock will invade Bud Walton on November 14, Arkansas will trek to Jonesboro to face Arkansas State on November 17 and then Central Arkansas comes to Fayetteville on Nov. 20.

The already known Elevance Health Women’s Fort Myers Tip-Off is still on Nov. 24-25 against Wisconsin and then either Marquette or Boston College.

On Thursday, November 30, Arkansas will face off with Florida State in the ACC-SEC Challenge in Tallahassee.

A home meeting with UCLA on Sunday, Dec. 3 will be a highlight of the schedule.

The rest of the schedule is Louisiana Tech at home on Dec. 7, UAPB at home Dec. 10, Samford on Dec. 16 in North Little Rock, the West Palm Beach Invitational on Dec. 20-21, where the team will play Illinois and either Loyola Chicago or San Diego State.

Incarnate Word on Dec. 31 will be the final game before SEC play begins.

Lawrence making nice transition from preps to college basketball

Arkansas freshman Jenna Lawrence is making the adjustments to a faster game and bigger players at the collegiate level;.

After making it to four straight state championship games during her high school basketball career – winning three – Arkansas freshman Jenna Lawrence is finding the level of play in college more difficult, but very rewarding.

The versatile 6-foot-3 forward brings a solid set of skills to the Razorbacks, with the ability to shoot from the perimeter, handle the ball and rebound on both ends of the court.

She has shined so far in the preseason, leading Arkansas in scoring in one game overseas. The Razorbacks recently returned from a European tour where they went 3-0 against foreign competition.

Lawrence was one rebound shy of collecting a double-double, with 15 points and 9 rebounds in the opening 124-12 victory over the InCroatia All-Stars on Aug. 7, then poured in a game-high 15 points, with 2 assists and a blocked shot, in the final game on Sunday, a 100-61 win over Regina University in Greece.

“I’m excited to be here at Arkansas and just trying do what Coach (Mike) Neighbors and the team needs me to do,” Lawrence said. “I’m from Arkansas, so playing for my home state is awesome.”

The 4-star recruit was ranked the No. 61 high school player in the country last season, and finished her entire prep career with a 101-5 record. She led Farmington to a 27-1 regular season mark last year, averaging 18 points, 9.3 rebounds, 2.3 steals and 1.7 blocks per game.

“My winning streak in high school was pretty high up there, so I’m just trying to bring that winning mentality here,” she added. “And this team is really bonding together. The trip to Europe was really great for all of us getting to bond with each other. I got to know a lot of my teammates better, and really developed some new good friendships.”

Lawrence led Melbourne to back-to-back 2A state titles her freshman and sophomore seasons, before transferring to Farmington before her junior year. The Lady Cardinals lost a heart-breaker to Nashville on a buzzer-beater in the 2022 championship game, before returning to defeat the Lady Scrappers for the title this past March. She was named the state tournament’s Most Valuable Player..

The competition in Europe was not close to what the Razorbacks will face when the SEC slate begins. And although Lawrence is having to adjust to play at a collegiate pace, she is getting all the competition she can handle during Arkansas practices, facing the likes of 6-5 junior Jersey Wolfenbarger.

“Everything is faster, with bigger, stronger girls,” she said. “Obviously, in high school I could overpower girls, but I can’t do that on the college level. Even though the competition over there (in Europe) was not as good, I have been playing against my own teammates all summer. It’s been difficult at times, but it’s helped me a lot prepare for the season and the players I will face when the season starts.

If Lawrence continues to improve and play like she did in the first three preseason games, she will likely be given adequate minutes in the Razorbacks’ rotation as a true freshman when the regular season begins.

“I know it’s going to be tougher at this level, but I am just working hard to prepare myself,” she said. “As long as I keep doing what I need to do, I’ll be ready.”

Arkansas freshman already proving her worth on the court

Jenna Lawrence is bound for big things as a freshman if what she did in Europe is any indication.

It’s been less than six months since Jenna Lawrence led the Farmington girls’ basketball team to the Arkansas Class 5A State Championship in Hot Springs.

Now, the 6-3 freshman is having an immediate impact on the Arkansas women’s team, who recently returned from a successful preseason trip to Europe.

Arkansas went 3-0 on its 9-day tour of Croatia and Greece, dominating lesser competition than what lays ahead in the daunting SEC. But Lawrence made the most of the trip, scoring in double-figures twice in the three games, including 15 points in her first collegiate action, a 124-12 win over the InCroatia All-Stars.

The Razorbacks took control early and finished the first quarter on a 14-0 run, which was sparked by a pair of Lawrence 3-pointers.

Here nine rebounds left her one short of a double-double, while adding six steals on defense.

“I felt like my shooting game was really strong over there, and I’m very happy that it was, because that is what Coach (Mike) Neighbors and all the coaches recruited me to do,” Lawrence said. “So, I’ve really just been concentrating on shooting well and getting my release a little faster. That’s what I have been working on all summer and it paid off.”

She also netted a team-high 15 points in the final game, a 100-61 win over the University of Regina in Athens, Greece.

Arkansas leaves Europe with a new commitment to the roster

Phoenix Stotijn is the first member of Arkansas’ Class of 2024.

The Arkansas women’s basketball team left Europe feeling solid after a 3-0 trip.

They also left with a new player. In a way, anyway.

Phoenix Stotijn, a 5-foot-9 guard from Netherlands committed to Arkansas while the Razorbacks were on their summer trip to Europe. But it didn’t come out of nowhere. Coach Mike Neighbors offered her a scholarship back on April 5.

Stotijn had been stateside to visit the team in Fayetteville and she also took official trips to Central Florida and West Virginia. She held offers from those schools, Arizona, Missouri, Pittsburgh, Texas Tech and Washington State.

“The thing that made Arkansas stand out was really the style of play and all the staff and team everyone was just great and I felt comfortable right away,” she said.

Stotijn averaged 15 points and 2.4 assists in the European Championships earlier in the summer. She is the first member of Arkansas’ Class of 2024.

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Arkansas women finish undefeated on European trip

Three games down, three victories. The Arkansas women enjoyed a fruitful trip to Europe and will return home to prepare for the 2023-24 season.

The Arkansas basketball ladies capped off a 3-0 mark in Europe on Sunday, defeating the University of Regina 100-61 in Athens, Greece.

Jenna Lawrence, the freshman from Farmington, led the team in scoring with 15 points while Maryam Dauda, Sasha Goforth and Makayla Daniels were all in double figures with 14, 13 and 12 points respectively.

Arkansas enjoyed a 50-23 advantage on the glass, with Jersey Wolfenbarger pulling down 7 of those rebounds, five of which came on the offensive end. The Razorbacks had 19 as a team.

Taliah Scott tallied five assists to lead the team. They made 14 of 39 3-pointers and went 10-of-12 at the charity stripe.

The team will take some time off when they return to Fayetteville before beginning practices in preparation for the season, which begins in November.