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.

Eric Musselman: “(Arkansas is) going to win again after my time there”

Eric Musselman still believes in Arkansas. He’s just home now.

Eric Musselman was officially introduced as USC’s next basketball coach on Friday, less than 48 hours after word the move was likely.

During his first press conference, the former Arkansas coach was asked about his time with the Razorbacks. He coached Arkansas to two Elite Eights and a Sweet 16 during his five seasons in Fayetteville.

“It’s a proven program that won in the past before I got there with Nolan Richardson and Eddie Sutton. They’re going to win again after my time there,” Musselman said.

The Razorbacks struggled to their worst record since 2009-10 this past season when they went 16-17. Arkansas has since lost all but two scholarship players from last year’s roster and forward Jalen Shelley, the top recruit in the team’s Class of 2024, asked for a release from his national letter of intent on Saturday.

Musselman, a native of southern California, called USC a match.

“We believe that with all the things going on with the USC brand, with going into the Big Ten, that this is an incredible fit for us as a family and an incredible fit for USC. It’s great all around,” he said.

Busy day for Eric Musselman at USC includes Isaiah Collier visit

Eric Musselman spoke to the press, introduced himself as USC coach, and met Isaiah Collier, among other things.

The Eric Musselman era began in an official way at USC on Friday. Musselman was introduced to the media and offered his first remarks to the USC community in Los Angeles. He also did a lot of work behind the scenes, meeting Isaiah Collier before the point guard has made his NBA draft decision. Virtually everyone in the basketball world thinks Collier is gone to the pros as a “one and done” player, and we’re not going to pretend otherwise. However, it’s true that Collier did not get the most from his one season under Andy Enfield. The idea of sticking around one year at USC to play for Musselman and get exposed to not only a different style of play, but also a coach with NBA experience, is not crazy. It’s very unlikely, yes, but it’s not ludicrous.

At any rate, the more important part of all this is that Musselman has to forge relationships, sell Los Angeles and USC as attractive places to play, and make gains relative to what Mick Cronin is doing at UCLA. Cronin has pulled in Kobe Johnson from USC and Skyy Clark from Louisville. Musselman has a lot of work to do in shaping USC’s next roster. Let’s see what the new coach can do.

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Arkansas swings and misses at top two basketball coaching targets

Chris Beard chose to stay at Ole Miss. Jerome Tang was offered an extension at Kansas State. Now Mr. Show-Cause himself is the frontrunner.

Chris Beard was not just Arkansas fans’ top choice to replace Eric Musselman, but Arkansas brass’, too.

He chose to stay at Ole Miss.

Arkansas then moved on to Jerome Tang at Kansas State to be the next Razorbacks basketball coach. Tang was offered an extension to state in Manhattan.

Now, multiple reports have Arkansas going after McNeese State coach, and former LSU coach, Will Wade. Wade was suspended for the first 10 games of the 2023-24 season and was given a show-cause penalty for bribery and recruiting violations dating back from his time as Tigers coach.

McNeese State went 30-4 during the regular season this year and landed in the NCAA Tournament. Before that, Wade took LSU to the Big Dance three times in his five seasons. He was fired in March 2022 when the NCAA served the allegations to the school.

Arkansas lost coach Eric Musselman to USC earlier in the week after he spent five seasons with the Razorbacks. He led Arkansas to two Elite Eights and a Sweet 16, but the the Hogs suffered their worst season this year since 2008-09. Musselman is a California native.

Arkansas targets Jerome Tang to replace Eric Musselman as head coach

Arkansas is targeting Kansas State coach Jerome Tang to replace Eric Musselman after he left to take the job at USC.

When Andy Enfield left USC to take the head coaching job at SMU, many connected Eric Musselman to the open position for the Trojans – and indeed the Muss bus departed Fayetteville and Arkansas to come back out west to help lead USC as they move into the Big Ten.

That puts the Hogs in a tough spot, as many of the top tier coaching candidates have already found new jobs this offseason – including Dusty May (Michigan) Pat Kelsey (Louisville) Darian DeVries (West Virginia) and Mark Byington (Vanderbilt).

However, Arkansas has their sights set on a bigger fish, notably targeting a pair of high major head coaches in Chris Beard and Jerome Tang, as well as former LSU coach Will Wade who is now at McNeese St.

Beard was considered the top candidate until he revealed plans to stay at Ole Miss after a successful first season in Oxford, which elevated Tang to the top of Arkansas’ wish list.

Tang wrapped up just his second season as a head coach, leading Kansas State to an Elite Eight in his first year in 2022-23 but failing to make the NCAA Tournament in year two.

With nearly two decades of experience working under Scott Drew at Baylor, a massively successful first season, and proven adeptness at navigating the transfer portal, it is no surprise to see Arkansas narrowing in on Tang.

Plus, Kansas State and Tang reportedly had a disagreement on the punishment for Nae’Qwan Tomlin earlier this season, which ultimately led to Tomlin entering the transfer portal at midseason and going to Memphis.

Could Tang follow suit? And, if so, could he bring key pieces from this Wildcats team with him to Fayetteville – including Michigan transfer guard Dug McDaniel who committed to the Wildcats earlier this week?

Time will tell, but coming off a disastrous season the Razorbacks could use good news on the basketball front and Tang would represent a promising start.

Arkansas portal exits raise hopes for USC under Eric Musselman

The Arkansas portal exodus has begun. How many players will ride the Muss Bus to USC?

Arkansas basketball players are entering the transfer portal. This raises the possibility that Eric Musselman could bring a number of players with him from Fayetteville to Los Angeles. Former McDonald’s All-American and Arkansas freshman center Baye Fall is one such potential target. Fall has entered the transfer portal. He announced his decision via X on Thursday.

Fall has not done much in his career to this point, but he has three years of eligibility left. The former Razorback big man averaged 0.8 points, 1.3 rebounds and had 6 blocks in his limited action this past season.

The freshman from Dakar, Senegal, was a four-star prospect coming out of high school. He chose Arkansas over Auburn, Rutgers, Missouri and Oregon State, Baylor, and several other power five conference programs.

Fall is the seventh Razorback to enter the portal, joining Joseph Pinion, Denijay Harris, Keyon Menifield, Layden Blocker, Khalif Battle, and Davonte “Devo” Davis, with Eric Musselman moving on to USC this week.

Fall has tons of upside. The Trojans could use size up front, too. Look out for USC to possibly be a major player in the recruitment of Fall and some of the other Arkansas players who have entered the portal. Be sure to follow Razorbacks Wire for more on Arkansas player movements in the transfer portal.

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UMass forward Josh Cohen goes with Eric Musselman to USC

Josh Cohen had committed to Arkansas but flipped to USC when Eric Musselman left Fayetteville for L.A.

Former UMass forward Josh Cohen announced on March 30 that he was transferring to the Arkansas Razorbacks. However, you might have noticed that Arkansas’ coach left for USC. Cohen flipped his commitment when the USC Trojans announced Eric Musselman as their next head men’s basketball coach.

Cohen spent just one year with the UMass Minutemen after spending his first four years at St. Francis (PA).

The 6-10, 220-pound power forward averaged a team-leading 15.9 points, 6.8 rebounds, and 1.7 assists. He started all 30 games this past season to earn All-Atantic 10 First Team honors.

Eric Musselman knows he has a gutted USC roster to fill out. Isaiah Collier and Boogie Ellis haven’t made official final decisions, but both men are fully expected to declare for the NBA draft. Kobe Johnson just transferred to UCLA. Kijani Wright and Oziyah Sellers have transferred out of the program. Dramatic, extensive roster changes are occurring, giving Musselman — viewed as college basketball’s portal king — a chance to radically remake the USC roster for the 2024-2025 season as he tries to build upon what Andy Enfield established in Los Angeles.

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Josh Cohen flips to USC, leaving Arkansas with four players

Arkansas has four players left on the team for next year. We’d be shocked if even half of them end up on the roster.

UMass basketball star Josh Cohen committed to play for Arkansas last week. Late Thursday, Arkansas was swapped out with USC.

Cohen’s flipping of commitment from the Razorbacks to the Trojans was hardly a surprise. Coach Eric Musselman had left Arkansas to take the job at Southern California earlier Thursday. Cohen was bound to go with him.

The 6-foot-10 forward was a first-team All-Atlantic 10 player for the Minutemen last year, averaging more than 15 points per game. His exit from Arkansas leaves the Razorbacks with just four scholarship players for next year after reports surfaced that guard Khalif Battle would enter the transfer portal.

Wing Tramon Mark and forward Trevon Brazile are the only two players from last year’s roster, on scholarship, who remain from the winter. Arkansas still has, for now, the commitments of Jalen Shelley and Isaiah Elohim out of high school and both are Top-100 players.

But the odds of Arkansas actually returning all four, with the loss of Musselman, are slim. The question is more which dominoes fall next and when.

Opinion: Watching Eric Musselman leave wasn’t difficult, but not for the reason you think

Watching Eric Musselman leave wasn’t hard, but it’s not for the reason you might think.

If you missed it, Eric Musselman was officially announce as the newest head basketball coach at USC.Watching him leave was a lot easier than I thought it would be, but not for the reason you might think.

Knowing he was actively searching for a way out made it easy. I mean, if a significant other wants to break up with you, what are you really upset about? Is it that they don’t want to be with you anymore, or is it because you’ll miss what you had? So, if he doesn’t want to be here, then I don’t want him here.

If we’re being honest, the writing has been on the wall for some time. After watching his team show glances of greatness throughout the season, followed by some of the worst basketball the program had ever seen, Musselman just looked… worn down by season’s end.

Subsequently, seeing how his demeanor changed over the past year, the move wasn’t exactly surprising. So, not being smacked out of the blue with the news definitely made it easier, too.

However, knowing that Musselman left Arkansas basketball in a far better position than he found it—with the potential of gaining a quality coach—is the biggest reason I’m borderline indifferent.

Since he was hired in 2019, Arkansas has been to the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament three times. The Hogs have played massive, maybe even historic, games like beating No. 1 Auburn in 2022, knocking off No. 1 overall seed Gonzaga in the 2022 tournament, or coming back against No. 1 seed Kansas in 2023. Even in the worst season of his tenure, he had wins against Purdue in a not-so-exhibition game and Duke in Bud Walton Arena.

In addition to the success, Eric Musselman built up the intangible aspects important to today’s game. He pushed the Arkansas basketball brand to new heights, to levels that legends like Eddy Sutton or Nolan Richardson could’ve never touched. Social Media is one reason, but Musselman was as good a promoter as a basketball coach in Fayetteville. Now, Arkansas is one of the top-talked about teams in the country, even after a bad season.

Put together, those two aspects already make Arkansas interesting to a potential hire. Yet, what makes it one of the best open jobs in the country is when you add:

  • A potential top-10 paycheck
  • Amazing athletic facilities
  • A rich history
  • A raging fanbase that sold out a 20,000-seat arena multiple years in a row
  • A top-5 home-court advantage
  • Great in-state talent

So, if you’re a fan upset about Musselman leaving, just chill out. Go grab an ice-cold glass of Tang, or maybe Wade through your local pool to cool off. And if you have one, I hear stroking your Beard relieves an amazing amount of stress. Trust me, there are tons of big fish in the sea.