Column: Arkansas needs to appreciate next basketball coach, not vice versa

Arkansas doesn’t need a coach who appreciates the state. Arkansas needs to appreciate the coach.

Arkansas isn’t what Arkansas basketball fans think it is.

Eric Musselman proved as much late last week when he skedaddled out of Fayetteville for University Park, Los Angeles, to become the next USC basketball coach. The place is basically home to Musselman, who grew up in San Diego and went to the University of San Diego.

One thing about Los Angeles: it ain’t Arkansas.

USC basketball does not have the cachet Arkansas basketball does. It also doesn’t have the same climate, geographically, politcally or with alums. The University of Southern California has loads of monied donors who don’t particularly concern themselves with the outcome of the basketball team.

That might sound like it puts the Trojans down, but an alternate argument is that a small spotlight creates fewer would-be king-makers. Imagine that, a smaller spotlight in LA than Fayetteville. Arkansas alumns, those with money, largely live and breathe Razorbacks athletics. At USC, they’re concerned with different matters.

Musselman is banking on his charisma and the appeal of the city itself – along with its move to the Big Ten, which is regularly better than the SEC in basketball, anyway – to draw in recruits. He has plenty on his resume and combined with his social-media presence and penchant for removing his shirt after big wins, players notice.

Fair or not, college basketball’s best players aren’t looking at the state of Arkansas and saying “That’s where I want to go, for sure!” Certainly high-schoolers and transfers don’t care anything about education rates or cost-of-living. The stereotypes about the state of Arkansas are very real and whether they’re accurate or not is besides the point.

That also isn’t to say they’re always going to be the most important thing a college basketball considers. In fact, they’re probably not. But in an era in which politics enters every single conversation, seemingly, a first word an initial impression can matter.

Think about the way the last several coaches in Arkansas’ two biggest sports have been treated as they’ve exited.

“If Eric Musselman doesn’t want to be here, good riddance.”

“Mike Anderson has taken us as high as he was going to.”

“Bret Bielema only cared about himself!”

At least the animosity about what John Pelphrey did with the basketball team and what Chad Morris did with the football are legitimate, even if some remain way too angry about such things.

Even on Sunday, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette columnist Wally Hall wrote that Arkansas needs to get a chance that won’t just use the school as a stepping stone. That suggests that Arkansas is an elite job. It isn’t and likely won’t be for a good long time. A Tier II job, maybe, but it’s hard to imagine Fayetteville as an ultimate destination for any coach, save maybe Darrell Walker, a Razorbacks All-American in his playing days who has coached at Little Rock for the last six seasons and is interviewing for the job Saturday.

Would Chris Jans want to be at Arkansas permanently? Will Wade?

It’s good to proud of your home, even if your home has its flaws. It’s another, though, to expect others to carry the same affinity.

Arkansas doesn’t need an Arkansas Man, it needs another Musselman.

Report: Arkansas to interview Chris Jans, Darrell Walker for basketball coaching job

Walker is a former Hogs All-American who has been at Little Rock the last half-decade. Jans just took MSU to a second straight NCAA Tournament.

Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek will interview Mississippi State coach Chris Jans and Little Rock coach Darrell Walker for the Razorbacks head basketball coaching job on Sunday, according to a report by the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

Arkansas needs a replacement for Eric Musselman after he left for the job at Southern California late last week. Musselman took Arkansas to two Elite Eights and a Sweet 16 in his five seasons (one of which an NCAA Tournament was not held because of COVID).

Walker was an All-American when he played for the Razorbacks in the early 1980s and has called the state of Arkansas home most of his time since. He was named Ohio Valley Conference Coach of the Year last month after the Rojans won a share of the OVC regular-season title. Walker also won Sun Belt Coach of the Year in 2020 when Little Rock won the regular-season crown outright.

Before coaching Little Rock, where’s he been for the last six seasons, Walker started his career at Clark Atlanta where, in two seasons he took the team to two NCAA Division II national tournaments.

An All-American guard at Arkansas as a senior in 1983, Walker played 10 seasons in the NBA and was an NBA head coach for the Toronto Raptors and Washington Wizards. He also was a long-time NBA assistant coach, and a head coach in the WNBA and CBA.

Jans just completed his second season at Mississippi State where he has taken the Bulldogs to consecutive NCAA Tournaments, both teams winning 21 games in the season.

Before MSU, Jans spent five seasons at New Mexico State and led the Aggies to three NCAA Tournaments. He cut his teeth as an assistant under Gregg Marshall at Wichita State from 2007-14, after which he took a head-coaching job at Bowling Green where he spent one season.

Ole Miss Chris Beard, Kansas State’s Jerome Tang and McNeese State’s Will Wade were all reportedly front-runners for the job before the Jans and Walker news. Beard chose to stay with the Rebels and Tang was offered an extension with K-State shortly after his becoming Arkansas’ leading candidate.