No. 15 Arkansas gymnastics set to unveil 2024 team Sunday in Barnhill

Arkansas gymnastics is set to compete with a lineup that includes All-SEC returners and a loaded class of freshmen.

The No. 15 Arkansas gymnastics team will showcase its new lineup for the first time this season, during the Gymback Preview intrasquad event Sunday inside Barnhill Arena.

The event is free to the public and set to begin at 2 p.m., with doors opening at 1 p.m. Free parking is available in lots surrounding Barnhill, including lots 44, 72, 73, 74, and 76.

This will be Arkansas’ fifth season under head coach and Olympic gold-medalist Jordyn Wieber, and have begun each of the previous four seasons ranked inside the top 15.

The Gymbacks finished last season with their 19th straight regional appearance, and ended up 17th nationally, which extended their 18-year streak of finishing in the Top 20. They barely missed the regional final, but finished with a new regional team score record of 197.275, and a new regional floor record of 49.500.

“The last two or three seasons, we have done a really good job of improving the level of gymnastics — doing harder gymnastics, making it cleaner — and you can see those changes,” Wieber said. “But what we are craving this year is just that consistency piece. They were able to see those sparks, and what they were capable of, but they were missing the belief in themselves to do it consistently.”

Arkansas has a loaded lineup of returners this year including all-SEC honorees Frankie Price, Cami Weaver, and Lauren Williams. The Gymbacks also added All-American Sirena Linton from Arizona as a graduate transfer, in addition to four stellar freshman – Chandler Buntin, Dakota Essenpries, Hailey Klein and Priscilla Park.

Wieber has gone back to her roots as a budding gymnast, to teach her team the intricate details it takes to reach the top. She was introduced to the sport at the age of 2 and was competing at the Junior International Elite by age 11, when she was named to the 2006 US National Team for the first time. By age 16, she had won her first two gold medals in the Tokyo World Championships, including the all-around title. A year later she won gold in the 2012 London Olympics as one of the USA’s renowned “Fierce Five.”

“I don’t think it’s just me, but it is really our coaching staff, as a whole,” Wieber said. “We complement each other really well, and we’ve all made it to that top level of our sport. It’s about all of the lessons we learned to get us there — how to train, how to compete at a high level, how to build that confidence. Our entire staff is really passionate, really energized and really dynamic, and we all bring a little something different to the table.”

Sunday’s event will also include a Toy Drive, so fans are encouraged to bring a new, unwrapped toy, to benefit children in Northwest Arkansas. Fans in attendance will also be the first to get the 2024 team poster, with autographed versions given out at Barnhill.

Arkansas will open their regular-season slate on Jan. 12, as the Gymbacks host Georgia in Barnhill, beginning at 6:45 p.m.

Arkansas volleyball to host NCAA Tournament for first time since 2006

Arkansas volleyball will be hosting NCAA Tournament action at Barnhill Arena this weekend.

Just like the soccer team, the Arkansas volleyball team will be hosting the NCAA Tournament.

This is the first time since 2006, however.

By virtue of the Razorbacks’ 25-5 season, they earned a 3 seed in the Lincoln, Neb. regional.

Arkansas will host Stephen F. Austin on Friday at 7 p.m. CT. The match preceding it will be TCU and sixth-seeded Florida State.

Winners will play on Saturday afternoon at 7 p.m. as well.

On Sunday, it was announced that Jason Watson was named co-SEC Coach of the Year, while outside hitters Jill Gillen and Taylor Head and setter Hannah Hogue joined him in earning all-SEC honors.

Hogue, a Fort Smith native, was also named Co-SEC Scholar-Athlete of the Year for her accomplishments in the classroom.

Barnhill once again will host Red-White game

The Razorbacks’ former home, Barnhill Arena, will host the Red-White game on Wednesday, Oct. 4 at 6:30 p.m.

For the fourth time in five years, Arkansas will kick off its season in its former confines.

Barnhill Arena will host the intrasquad scrimmage three weeks from today, on October 4 at 6:30 p.m.

Admission is free, and the doors will open an hour before tipoff and seating will be first-come, first-served.

Arkansas is coming off a 22-14 season in which it finished in the bottom half of the Southeastern Conference but still managed to make the Sweet 16 for the third consecutive season.

This will be fans’ first chance to look at the team and the only opportunity until they host Purdue for a charity exhibition on October 28.

The season opener will be against Alcorn State on November 6.

Arkansas Basketball: The All-80s Team

The 1980s saw the Arkansas basketball program go from a regional to a national program.

The 1980s were mostly all about football in the southern region of America. Arkansas was perennially one of the contenders in the Southwest Conference, led by two legendary coaches.

The basketball program had already transformed into one of the best programs in the country.

Like the football program, two elite coaches led the Hogs on the hardwood, Eddie Sutton and Nolan Richardson. Sutton took the Razorbacks to the NCAA tournament in the decade’s first half to end his eleven-year tenure.

Nolan Richardson took Sutton’s foundation and added to it Richardson missed the tournament in his first two years but followed that with nine consecutive trips to the dance.

Who were the players that helped these legendary coaches achieve success? Let’s check them out.

Arkansas drops ANOTHER Top 10 team as Hogs race up polls

At what point does Arkansas considered a contender for a deep NCAA Tournament run?

Just get out of their way at this point.

Arkansas volleyball is on a roll like no other in this, the 2022 season. The Razorbacks, which cracked the Top 25 for the first time in seven years earlier this week, beat their second Top-10 team this year on Thursday.

No. 7 Georgia Tech visited Barnhill Arena having lost only two games of their 20 so far this year en route to a 6-0 record. But after falling to sixth-ranked Ohio State on Sunday, 3-1, the Hogs went ahead and handed the Yellow Jackets a second straight loss by the same score, 3-1.

Arkansas knocked off then Top-10 team Washington in August, which, combined with Thursday’s victory gives the program their first-ever season with two victories over teams within that Top 10.

Knocking off the seventh-ranked Tech team gives Arkansas an upset over the highest ranked opponent the team has had since 2007.

The Razorbacks are back at it Friday night against North Carolina State.