My Favorite Season

thurman

It’s hard to believe that the start of basketball practice is just a few days away. Time, it does fly. Seems just like yesterday that the Tar Heels were making mincemeat of the Hogs.

And if you go by the pre-season prognostications, it would seem that lots of teams will be making mincemeat of Arkansas this year. Here at Razorback Expats, we’re not ready to give into the gloom and doom just yet. Yes, the Hogs have lost a ton of production from last year’s squad. But, there appears to be some real talent among the newcomers, including a few guys who may even be able to shoot the ball, a skill that there hasn’t been an overabundance of in Fayetteville in recent years.

To some extent, the situation reminds me of the fall of 1992. Back then, the Hogs had lost of ton of seniors (albeit ones that were much more accomplished than Weems, Ervin, Hill, et al.). The incoming recruiting class was fairly well-regarded, but, overall, the team was deemed too small and too inexperienced to pose much of a threat that season. The returning player with the highest scoring average, point guard Robert Shepherd, had averaged a whopping 6.7 points per game the previous season. The best-case scenario seemed to be an NIT invitation.

The result? Seniors Shepherd and Darrell Hawkins and newcomers Scotty Thurman, Corliss Williamson, Corey Beck and Dwight Stewart — to name just some of the heroes from that year — busted their asses, embraced Nolan Richardson’s full-court-pressure style of play like no Hog team before or since, and made it all the way to the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA Tournament. If I had to pick any Hog season as my favorite, this would be the one (although picking my favorite Razorback basketball season is a little like picking my favorite Beatles album, i.e., an agonizingly difficult decision).

The 1992-93 season started off with a bang when the unranked Hogs defeated No. 8 Memphis State (the team that had ended the careers of Todd Day, Lee Mayberry and Oliver Miller several months earlier) after rallying from a 20-point deficit. Four days later, they defeated No. 9 Arizona in Tucson. Surely they’re playing over their heads, many thought. Surely they aren’t this good.

Dwight Stewart

The young Hogs provided further rebuttal to the doubters in mid-December, when they marched into Columbia, Mo., and, behind Thurman’s 34 points, notched an impressive 73-68 win in a very hostile environment. They finished their non-conference record with a thoroughly unexpected 9-1 record, which is even more impressive when you consider that they achieved it largely without the services of Williamson, who broke his foot in the season opener and didn’t return until late January, and Craig Tyson, a well-regarded junior college recruit who injured his knee in pre-season practice and never appeared in a regular-season game for Arkansas.

The conference season produced some bumps in the road – such as a three-game losing streak in January and a two-game skid in mid-February – but the Hogs also notched a thrilling upset of No. 2 Kentucky in Fayetteville and finished the year with an SEC West title.

Strangely enough, two of my favorite memories from that season are games that Arkansas lost. In the SEC Tournament semifinals in Lexington, Ky., the Razorbacks had a rematch with Kentucky. At this point in the season, the Wildcats, who would go on to make the Final Four, seemingly opened every game with a non-stop barrage of three-pointers to rush out to a huge lead.

Against Arkansas, Kentucky opened up a 17-0 lead, and it sounded like the roof was about to blow off of Rupp Arena. The Hogs — showing the same indomitable spirit they had all year — fought back and, at halftime, the Wildcats were only ahead by a score of 42-36. At one point in the second half, Arkansas narrowed Kentucky’s lead to two, 57-55, before they ran out of gas and lost by 11. I don’t know that I’ve ever been more impressed or inspired by a Razorback team.

The Hogs were every bit as inspiring two weeks later, when, in the NCAA East Regional semifinals, they lost to eventual national champion North Carolina, 80-74. As I recall, many pundits were predicting an easy Tar Heel victory, in part because Carolina was so much bigger than Arkansas. However, Corliss proved to be virtually unstoppable in the paint, and the Hogs came within a whisker of pulling off a massive upset. If nothing else, the Razorbacks served notice that night that they would be serious competitors for the national championship in 1994.

I’m not predicting that we have an equally surprising season in store for us this year, but the 1992-93 Razorbacks showed that you can’t always take pre-season predictions to the bank.

Filed under: Basketball, Corey Beck, Corliss Williamson, Dwight Stewart, Nolan Richardson — Stephen at 10:02 am on Tuesday, October 14, 2008

7 Comments »

Comment by J Hawg 3

October 14, 2008 @ 6:41 pm

Stephen, that may have been Nolan’s finest season of coaching. It set the stage for the NC in ‘94 and the run back to the Final Four in ‘95.

Thanks for that memory. We can only hope . . .

Comment by Jim

October 15, 2008 @ 6:33 am

I hope you’re right with the comparison to the 1992-93 season. But I fear a better comparison might be to Nolan’s second season, and his first recruiting class, that included Ron Huery, Phillip McKellar, Larry Marks, Cannon Whitby, and Mario Credit. Nolan was starting over with “his” recruits and that’s what Pelphrey is doing now. I’m depending on my memory for some of this, but the media guide does tell me that our record in 1986-87 was 19-14, 8-8 in the SWC, and a 2nd round NIT exit.

Comment by Whit E. Knight

October 15, 2008 @ 3:27 pm

I have to admit I liked the 1992-93 team too, and I hope they do prove to be a model for this year’s team. Hell, even channeling the 1986-87 record would be OK.

The then-future Mrs. Knight and I saw the only non-conference game the ‘92-93 team lost, at Barton against Northeast Louisiana. I already knew Corliss could play, having watch him best Jason Kidd in the finals of the King Cotton Classic the year before. And I had seen Corey Beck and Dwight Stewart play AAU ball. But Scotty Thurmond made the biggest impression, sinking 30-footers like they were layups. Despite the loss, I could tell this was going to be a good group.

As we were headed back to our car, we were walking next to former Razorback Tim Scott, who commented that there was no way we should have lost to that team.

Comment by robb white ellet

October 15, 2008 @ 3:39 pm

was phillip mckellar better as phillip mckellar, or when he came back as warren lynn? where was william mills in those classes? wasn’t he a nolan guy, or leftover sutton guy? obviously i can’t remember, but that kid sure could dunk.

Pingback by Meet the New Hogs...Same as the Old Hogs | Razorback Expats

October 20, 2008 @ 9:28 am

[...] but somehow doomed to not win the big close ones. Of course that basketball team was followed by one so mentally tough that I always knew they would find a way to pull out a victory in almost any situation (and they [...]

Pingback by Q&A: Bahn on Basketball, Part 1 | Razorback Expats

November 20, 2008 @ 9:04 am

[...] Based on what you’ve seen to this point, what are the strengths and weaknesses of this year’s squad? What Razorback team of the past would you say they most resemble? (Note: we’re hoping you say 1992-93.) [...]

Pingback by Letdown City: Misssissippi State 70, Hogs 56 | MrSEC.com

January 10, 2009 @ 8:31 pm

[...] year’s squad has been compared periodically on this site to the surprising 1992-93 squad. After tonight, the comparison seems more apt than ever. All these years later, it’s easy to [...]

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>