In the Lane

Hannahs all zeroes in Oxford

Arkansas guard Dusty Hannahs (3) dribbles against Mississippi State in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Starkville, Miss., Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016. Mississippi State won 78-46. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

OXFORD, Miss. -- Arkansas guard Dusty Hannahs came into Saturday's game against Ole Miss with a team-high 396 points.

That's how many points Hannahs left The Pavilion with, too.

Hannahs, who had been averaging 16.5 points, was held scoreless for the first time in 25 games this season in Ole Miss' 76-60 victory over Arkansas. He failed to score in five of 62 games in two seasons at Texas Tech before transferring to Arkansas and redshirting last season.

Hannahs, a junior guard from Little Rock, was limited to 16 minutes Saturday because of foul problems and was 0 of 4 from the field without a free-throw attempt.

"We caught a lucky break in that Dusty Hannahs got in foul trouble and never really got into a flow," Ole Miss Coach Andy Kennedy said. "This kid's a prolific shooter, so that took one of their weapons away."

Hannahs picked up three fouls in the first half at the 15:32, 5:54 and 5:35 marks.

"He got his third foul, and the next you know he's a nonfactor," Kennedy said.

Hannahs picked up his fourth foul with 17:07 left in the second half and went back to the bench. He didn't draw a fifth foul.

In the past two games, including Arkansas' 78-46 loss at Mississippi State on Tuesday night, Hannahs is 2 of 15 from the field.

"When your shot's not falling, you've got to be able to do other things," Arkansas Coach Mike Anderson said. "It's something he's got to figure out."

Mr. T

Arkansas junior center Moses Kingsley was whistled for his third technical foul of the season -- and each one came after an opposing player was called for fouling him.

Kingsley and Ole Miss guard Martavius Newby were called for a double technicals with 13.3 seconds left -- and the Rebels leading 76-58 -- when they appeared to exchange heated words.

Kingsley then hit both free throws resulting from an original foul call on Newby for the final margin.

Kingsley's other technical fouls this season came in losses to Kentucky and Florida.

Series swing

Arkansas leads the all-time series against Ole Miss 43-32, but the Rebels have won 11 of the past 14 meetings and have a 24-23 lead since the Razorbacks joined the SEC for the 1991-1992 season.

Ole Miss is 19-6 against Arkansas in Oxford.

Half good

Arkansas freshman Jimmy Whitt provided a spark in the first half when he scored 9 points in 5 minutes on 3-of-3 shooting from the field and the free throw line.

Whitt's three-point play on a strong drive to the basket put the Razorbacks ahead 26-17 with 8:37 left in the half, but seven seconds later he picked up his second foul and went to the bench for the rest of the half.

Whitt didn't score in the second half, when he was 0 of 2 from the field in 11 minutes. He finished with four fouls.

Roadblocked

Arkansas fell to 1-11 in games away from Fayetteville, including 1-8 in road games. The Razorbacks' only victory outside of Walton Arena games was at Missouri, 94-61, on Jan. 12.

No 3s for Moody

Ole Miss senior guard Stefan Moody was 0 of 7 on three-pointers Saturday, ending his streak of hitting at least one three-pointer at 37 games.

Moody, the SEC's leading scorer at 23.3 points per game, shot 4 of 17 from the field, but hit 9 of 10 free throws.

"When he's going to the free-throw line, you might as well count them," Arkansas guard Anthlon Bell said. "He's got multiple ways to get his points."

Moody came into the game shooting 84.4 percent from the free-throw line.

Turnover issues

Arkansas center Moses Kingsley matched his season-high with five turnovers against Ole Miss.

"That's not acceptable," Anderson said. "He wasn't strong with the ball."

Four of Kingsley's turnovers came in the second half.

"I think I was too loose with the ball," Kingsley said. "I've got to get better next practice."

Kingsley had five turnovers at Florida.

Tying Bobby

Anthlon Bell scored 16 points Saturday to give the senior guard 1,047 for his career to tie Bobby Portis and Eric Ferguson for 34th place on the all-time list.

Portis played two seasons at Arkansas before entering the NBA Draft and becoming a first-round pick by the Chicago Bulls after last season.

Sports on 02/14/2016