Beyond the Box: Did the officials cost Arkansas in loss to No. 23 Kentucky?

Were the officials to blame for yet another Arkansas loss? Here’s a closer look at Saturday’s 88-79 loss to No. 23 Kentucky.

The Arkansas Razorbacks (19-12, 8-10) just dropped their third straight game to end the regular season after an 88-79 loss to No. 23 Kentucky (21-10, 12-6).

The atmosphere was electric inside Bud Walton Arena and the action on the floor was intense from the opening minutes. That intensity resulted in a very physical game from both teams, which led to a couple of altercations that had implications in the result of the game.

Kentucky’s Oscar Tshiebwe and Arkansas’ [autotag]Makhel Mitchell[/autotag] got tangled up under the basket just three minutes into the game. The replay showed that Tshiebwe threw an elbow which appeared to connect with Mitchell’s head. Despite the video evidence, officials did not assess Tshiebwe a flagrant foul. Instead, they assessed common fouls to both players and one to Anthony Black for getting into a verbal altercation with a couple of other Wildcat players.

Tshiebwe would eventually get a flagrant for contact to [autotag]Kamani Johnson[/autotag] later in the half, but played the majority of the game on his way 12 points and 13 rebounds.

The other crucial moment happened with 18 minutes left in the second half. Kentucky was on a decent run and Arkansas players were becoming visibly frustrated. [autotag]Devo Davis [/autotag] was called for back-to-back fouls and appeared to stomp and yell out in frustration, garnering a technical foul from the official closest to the Wildcat bench.

As Davis continued toward the Arkansas bench he appeared to say something else in the direction of the court and was assessed his second technical foul which meant an automatic ejection.

Both of these situations deserve their fair share of criticism when it comes to the officiating, and there were countless other missed calls and non-calls that could’ve gone the Razorbacks’ way. You can argue that if Oscar Tshiebwe is ejected early in the first half, Arkansas wins. You can argue that if Devo Davis isn’t ejected, maybe that also makes a difference in the final score.

However entertaining those “what if?” scenarios won’t change anything and, quite frankly, they weren’t the reason that Arkansas lost. There were plenty of opportunities that the Hogs failed to take advantage of and it cost them a big win at home.

Let’s go beyond the box score to take a closer look at how Arkansas lost today’s game.

Beyond the Box: Diamond Hogs beat Illinois State, but injuries are beginning to pile up

The Diamond Hogs won on Wednesday night, but was hit by the injury bug again. Here’s some observations from Arkansas’ 10-9 win.

The No. 9 Arkansas Razorbacks (6-2) were able to hold off a stingy Illinois State team in their lone midweek matchup on Wednesday afternoon. Once again, star sophomore [autotag]Kendall Diggs[/autotag] delivered a walk-off double in the 11th inning to give the Diamond Hogs a 10-9 win.

Walking out of Baum Stadium was great, but it came after Arkansas blew a 9-7 ninth-inning lead and saw star closer Brady Tygart leave with an arm injury.

“There was a lot of excitement and that went into ‘oh no’ and then an injury,” [autotag]Dave Van Horn[/autotag] said after the game. “But I thought we held it together, we stayed strong in the dugout and they fought.”

Arkansas will now have Thursday off before beginning their weekend series against Wright State (2-5). The series is set to begin on Friday at 3:00 p.m., but might be subject to postponement due to inclement weather in Northwest Arkansas.

Before moving ahead to Wright State, let’s take a look at some things that stood out in the Razorbacks’ 10-9 win over Illinois State on Wednesday.

Beyond the Box Score: Arkansas has familiar issues in ugly loss to No. 12 Tennessee

Here’s a closer look at where everything went wrong for Arkansas in their brutal loss to No. 12 Tennessee on Tuesday night.

The Arkansas Razorbacks (19-11, 8-9 SEC) are below .500 in conference play once again after their 75-57 loss to No. 12 Tennessee on Tuesday night.

It was a frustrating and ugly performance as the Volunteers (22-8, 11-6) led from wire-to-wire and showed why they arguably the best defense in the entire country. The Razorbacks just couldn’t get anything going offensively in the first half, turning the ball over over 10 times and shooting just 37.5% from the floor.

At the other end, Tennessee owned the paint and offensive glass, making it tough on Arkansas to close out defensive possessions. The Vols had a 12-0 advantage in second chance points and 8-1 advantage in offensive rebounds, which helped them take a 34-25 lead into halftime. Arkansas was able to cut the lead to seven early in the second half, but it was basically more of the same and the result was never in doubt.

Arkansas’ struggles in Tuesday night’s loss were similar to what plagued them in the second half of their loss to No. 2 Alabama this past Saturday. The Razorbacks were outrebounded, overpowered in the paint and missed too many free throws in both games.

Let’s go beyond the box score and take a closer look at what happened to Arkansas in their penultimate game of the regular season.

Beyond the box score: Big plays key Arkansas over Missouri

Arkansas proved itself a special team in its regular-season finale against Missouri.

Future. Predicted.

In our morning pre-game Keys to the Game for Arkansas’ offense, we highlighted the Razorbacks’ need for balance while still exploiting the Missouri defense with the best offensive player Arkansas’ had since Darren McFadden.

Sure enough, the Hogs did exactly that.

Treylon Burks went off in possibly his last home game. KJ Jefferson spread the wealth to his receives and backs. And the Arkansas offense avoided almost any mistake in a 34-17 win over Missouri that was even more dominant than that.

It was quite the capper to Arkansas’ best season in a decade. The Hogs finished the regular season 8-4 and now only wait to see where they’ll play during bowl season.