Men's Basketball
Pringle embracing final season with Razorbacks knowing his role
Sixth-year senior transfers to Arkansas, ready to mentor younger teammates and chase team success in his final collegiate campaign
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — For Nick Pringle, the road to this moment has been winding from junior college to the NCAA Final Four, then a new home in Fayetteville with Arkansas.
But as the sixth-year senior gears up for his last collegiate season, his focus isn’t on individual stats. It’s on elevating the group around him.
Rather than start with lofty goals, Pringle is zeroing in on the process and perspective.
“I just can’t wait to see us at our full potential,” he said. “We’re high on the scale, but we’re just scratching the surface. And I don’t think we understand how good we really can be.”
Pringle’s journey has been far from conventional. At Wofford, he experienced a winning freshman season, then helped Dodge City Community College reach the national tournament.
At Alabama, he played for a Final Four-bound team before transferring to South Carolina, where his lone season ended without a winning record. Through it all, Pringle has learned what winning basketball requires.
“Being the elder statesman has made me something of a teacher for the Razorbacks,” he said.
That showed in a 45-minute Zoom press conference that may be one of the longest in memory if not the record.
Pringle arrived in Fayetteville during the offseason and has already been part of exhibition wins over Cincinnati and Memphis. Though his minutes and role will matter less than the culture he brings, Pringle believes the group is poised.
“We know it,” he said of the team’s potential. “But it’s all part of not being complacent and continuing day by day to compete with each other and make the most out of it.”
As a vocal and energetic presence, he has embraced the role of mentor to younger players.
The shift from being the one coached to being the one coaching younger teammates is one he welcomes. His leadership complements a roster blending transfers, veterans and underclassmen under second-year Arkansas head coach John Calipari.
Arkansas opens the season at home Monday against Southern University, winners of last year’s Southwestern Athletic Conference regular-season title. Tip-off is at 6 p.m. at Bud Walton Arena.
“We want to focus 100% on them,” Pringle said of Southern. “We want to showcase to our fans what we want to do for this first game and throughout the season. Little do people know, that’s the type of team that would shock you.”
Southern coach Kevin Johnson has shown in past seasons that his team can win in SEC venues, including an upset over Mississippi State in 2023.
The Jaguars return three of their top four contributors from last year — Cam Amboree, Michael Jacobs and AJ Barnes — and were picked second in this year’s SWAC preseason poll.
More than anything, Pringle views this season as personal redemption. After a year at South Carolina in which he felt he didn’t fulfill his goals, he transferred to Arkansas to pursue one last run.
“I didn’t think I did enough at South Carolina. Yes, my stats got better, but I didn’t feel like a winner,” he said. “I want my story to be better. I want other people to be involved with my success.
“Choosing to come here, I did not know it would be as good as it is now, but putting the pieces together and seeing how things [have] been going and us challenging each other day by day, it’s really a dream come true.”
Given what he’s experienced across college stops, Pringle is approaching this season with a clear role to not just to produce numbers but elevate the team.
With the Razorbacks entering the season ranked 14th in some preseason polls, the program is aiming higher.
Calipari is hoping the experience pays off.
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
-
Brazile’s second-half run powered Arkansas back from a deficit and set the tone for the win.
-
Acuff Jr. and Knox added 20 points each, giving the Razorbacks needed balance.
-
Calipari says the team is “more connected,” and late-game execution showed that progress.
Men's Basketball
Razorbacks’ guard Karter Knox previewing game against Texas Tech
Facing Red Raiders means a little more to players that lost Sweet 16 game in the NCAA Tournament last year
Facing Red Raiders means a little more to players that lost Sweet 16 game in the NCAA Tournament last year.
Men's Basketball
Democrat-Gazette’s Tom Murphy on new Razorbacks’ football staff
Looking at new staff joining Ryan Silverfield with Hogs and what coaches might be able to stay in overhauling program
Looking at new staff joining Ryan Silverfield with Hogs and what coaches might be able to stay in overhauling program.
-
Football3 months agoRussell, Brown returning to Razorbacks, boosting 2026 roster stability
-
Football3 months ago
Who Brett Dolan of Touchdown Radio likes in first round of college playoffs
-
Football3 months ago
Razorbacks face steep 2026 climb as new SEC format offers no soft landings
-
Men's Basketball3 months ago
Razorbacks’ guard Karter Knox previewing game against Texas Tech
-
Podcasts3 months agoRuscin and Zach Podcast
-
Men's Basketball3 months ago
Brazile’s second half lifts Hogs past Texas Tech in comeback win
-
Podcasts3 months agoRuscin and zach Podcast Dec 11
-
Football3 months ago
Trickett emerges as key hire in Silverfield’s new Arkansas staff
