Men's Basketball
Razorbacks hosting Cincinnati in exhibition ahead of new season
Arkansas opens the 2025-26 campaign with Cincinnati in exhibition Friday at Bud Walton Arena — here’s how to watch and what to know
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Arkansas opens the 2025-26 season with the Cincinnati Bearcats in an exhibition game Friday at Bud Walton Arena in Fayetteville.
Tipoff is scheduled for 7 p.m., and the contest will be streamed on SEC Network+.
Fans can also listen to the game on espnwa.com/ and on ESPN Arkansas 99.5 in Fayetteville.
Exhibition a dress rehearsal for Arkansas
Arkansas comes off a 22-14 season in 2024-25 under second-year head coach John Calipari, including a Sweet 16 appearance.
The Bearcats enter their fifth season under coach Wes Miller, posting an 82-59 record but yet to reach the NCAA Tournament.
Arkansas freshman guard Darius Acuff said Wednesday he’s eager for the first chance to play in front of Razorback fans.
“I’m very excited,” Acuff said. “Fans and just playing in front of the home crowd, I feel like we’ve got the best fans already, and I haven’t even played a game. I already feel that energy.
“They just came out fighting. We know how they’re going to come. We just have to match their energy.”
Viewing information
• Who: Arkansas Razorbacks vs. Cincinnati Bearcats
• When: Friday, October 24 at 7 p.m. CDT
• Where: Bud Walton Arena, Fayetteville, Arkansas
• TV/Stream: SEC Network Plus
• Radio: Razorback Sports Network (Learfield)
• Odds: Arkansas listed as a 7.5-point favorite
What’s at stake for Arkansas
While this is an exhibition, the game serves as a key opportunity for Arkansas to evaluate its depth, especially under Calipari in year two.
Analysts have said the Razorbacks have “enough to be dangerous” but must improve outside shooting and rim protection.
The preseason roster tracker highlighted the team’s emphasis on returning veteran contributors while adding size and defensive presence through the transfer portal.
Sophomore forward Billy Richmond said the upcoming exhibitions against Cincinnati and later at Memphis are critical tune-ups before the season opener.
“It’s getting us ready for the season,” Richmond said. “We just take it one at a time.”
Cincinnati brings momentum
Cincinnati arrives with confidence after upsetting Michigan 100-98 in Ann Arbor.
That result gives the Bearcats momentum against another Power Five opponent and a chance to test their defensive structure against Calipari’s system.
The Bearcats’ returning core, including guard Day Day Thomas and forward Aziz Bandaogo, will try to match the Razorbacks’ tempo.
Miller’s teams have historically emphasized transition defense and physical rebounding — both areas Arkansas must execute to gain control.
Why the matchup matters
The two programs have met only five times, with Cincinnati holding a 3-2 edge in the series.
This exhibition offers Arkansas a chance to begin developing chemistry and rotation balance ahead of the regular season opener Nov. 3 against Southern University.
For Calipari’s squad, the focus is less on the score and more on establishing rhythm, leadership, and continuity among a roster featuring multiple newcomers.
With Acuff, Richmond, and several transfers expected to play key roles, the exhibition gives coaches a live look at lineup combinations under game pressure.
For Cincinnati, the game provides a high-profile test before Big 12 competition begins.
The Bearcats want to build defensive consistency after finishing middle of the pack in rebounding and turnovers last season.
Key takeaways
- Arkansas gains a valuable home-court exhibition against a quality opponent to assess readiness for the upcoming season.
- Darius Acuff’s debut headlines a retooled roster focused on identity, shooting efficiency, and defensive growth under Calipari.
- Cincinnati’s confidence from an upset win at Michigan could challenge Arkansas’ focus and energy in front of a home crowd.
Looking ahead
After the Cincinnati matchup, Arkansas will travel to Memphis for a road exhibition before beginning regular-season play.
The nonconference schedule includes neutral-site games against nationally ranked opponents, providing early tests for Calipari’s second Razorback team.
The Bearcats, meanwhile, will use this game to assess progress against elite competition before entering a challenging Big 12 slate.
Both programs view the exhibition as a stepping stone toward more demanding matchups once the regular season tips off in early November.
Men's Basketball
Brazile’s second half lifts Hogs past Texas Tech in comeback win
Arkansas used a huge second half from Trevon Brazile and steady guard play to turn a deficit into a 93–86 win over Texas Tech
Arkansas walked into Dallas on Saturday looking like a team that still remembered last March.
The Razorbacks lost to Texas Tech in the Sweet 16 a year ago, and the feeling stayed with the returners.
This time, the outcome flipped.
A slow first half turned into a 93–86 win after a much better second half built on Trevon Brazile’s power around the rim and long scoring swings from the backcourt.
Texas Tech had control early with Christian Anderson and JT Toppin carrying most of the Red Raiders’ offense. Tech’s inside-outside mix gave Arkansas issues, and the Hogs trailed at halftime.
Still, the second half showed a different approach, one that head coach John Calipari said came from growing trust within the group.
“I’m really proud of the guys,” Calipari said afterward. “My job is to get individual players to play better. That’s a name on the back.”
For the Razorbacks, this wasn’t framed as revenge in the locker room, but the players knew the meaning. Last year’s tournament loss came after Arkansas gave up a lead. This time, they were the ones storming back.
“This was 100% a personal game,” Brazile said. “Especially for the returners. I know we had this one circled.”
His teammates felt it too. The game may not have been circled on a public schedule, but the energy after the final horn said enough.

Arkansas Razorbacks coach John Calipari during game against the Texas Tech Red Raiders at American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas. | Michael Morrison-HitThatLine Images
Brazile and Acuff control stretch run
The turning point came midway through the second half when Brazile and freshman guard Darius Acuff Jr. scored 19 straight for the Hogs. At the time, Arkansas trailed by six, and the game felt like it might drift away.
Instead, the Razorbacks leaned into a two-man rhythm that Texas Tech couldn’t solve.
Brazile finished with 24 points and 10 rebounds, nearly matching his season best. His scoring stretch included drives, put-backs, and free throws, but the bigger impact was the way he forced Tech to shift its defense.
That opened space for Acuff Jr., who added 20 points and eight assists.
The freshman’s calm presence helped Arkansas organize its offense while playing uphill. His playmaking kept possessions steady, something that mattered when Tech’s guards tried to speed up the game.
For a group still learning Calipari’s style, it was important that the ball stayed under control.
Texas Tech’s star duo still posted numbers, but the Razorbacks’ push arrived at the right moment. Anderson finished with 22 points, while Toppin added a double-double with 11 rebounds.
But Toppin’s 2-for-7 showing at the free throw line was a problem as the game tightened. Arkansas, by contrast, shot 26 free throws to Tech’s 10, and that gap mattered.

Arkansas Razorbacks guard Karter Knox drives against the Texas Tech Red Raiders in a game at American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas. | Michael Morrison-HitThatLine Images
Hogs rely on balanced scoring, growing identity
The Hogs didn’t win off one hot hand. They won because three different players reached 20 points.
Karter Knox joined Brazile and Acuff Jr. as Arkansas’ third scorer with 20 on the night, his second such performance against Texas Tech and his third of the season.
Knox hit big shots in the second half, especially when Tech tried to double Brazile in the paint.
Rebounding also tilted in Arkansas’ favor. The Razorbacks won the glass 40–33 and grabbed timely offensive boards that kept possessions alive.
That helped slow down Tech’s pace and allowed Arkansas to string together cleaner trips. The Red Raiders’ struggles at the line, mixed with Arkansas’ success getting there, formed the combination that separated the two teams in the final minutes.
Calipari said the difference was not only physical play but improved timing and trust.
“They’re more connected,” he said. “Each week that goes by, we seem to be more connected, and we can do things out of timeouts and late in the game.”
That connection was visible in Dallas. Even as Arkansas trailed, the group never lost shape.
When the Razorbacks made their push, it looked organized, not rushed. That alone marks progress.
Arkansas sees signs of team turning corner
This win marked three straight for Arkansas and its second win over a ranked opponent this season, following a road victory at Louisville.
For a program trying to establish a steady identity after last year’s uneven play, stacking these performances matters.
The Razorbacks now return home to host Queens on Tuesday night at Bud Walton Arena, another chance to build rhythm before the heart of the schedule arrives.
The Hogs will still need to clean up slow starts, but a strong second half on a neutral floor against a ranked team shows how far they have come in a short time.
Arkansas left Dallas with something more useful than fan chatter about revenge. It left with evidence that when Brazile anchors the interior and the guards play with control, the Razorbacks can handle difficult matchups. That’s the part Calipari wants to bottle.
Key takeaways
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Brazile’s second-half run powered Arkansas back from a deficit and set the tone for the win.
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Acuff Jr. and Knox added 20 points each, giving the Razorbacks needed balance.
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Calipari says the team is “more connected,” and late-game execution showed that progress.
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