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Clarke released from Arkansas
By
Matt Jones
This article was published June 20, 2011 at 6:44 p.m.
PHOTO BY RYAN MCGEENEY
Arkansas guard Rotnei Clarke made a second request to be released from his scholarship but told CBSSports.com that Razorbacks Coach Mike Anderson would not grant it.
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FAYETTEVILLE Disgruntled guard Rotnei Clarke has been granted a release from his scholarship at Arkansas, the school announced in a press release Monday.
Clarke, who told CBSSports.com last week he was being denied a request to transfer, has twice led the Razorbacks in scoring and will transfer with only one year of eligibility remaining.
“Upon receiving a written request and meeting with him today, as part of our review process, it is clear to me that it is in the best interests of everyone for Rotnei to continue his academic and athletic career elsewhere,” Arkansas athletics director Jeff Long said in a release. “We wish him well and hope that he finds what he is searching for at a new institution.”
Speaking for the first time publicly since John Pelphrey was fired and Mike Anderson was hired by the school in March, Clarke told CBSSports.com last week he didn’t feel he was a fit for Anderson’s style of play.
“I have spent the last couple of months getting to know Coach Anderson, his staff and his system,” Clarke said. “And I still feel as though it’s best for me to finish my career somewhere else.”
Clarke first requested his release following Pelphrey’s firing, but was asked by Long to reconsider until a new coach was hired. Anderson said in April he expected Clarke to return for his senior season, saying Clarke had a “peace and wants to have a special year, and he wants to do it in a Razorback uniform.”
Arkansas has since cut ties with two players from last season’s roster in forward Glenn Bryant and guard Jeff Peterson, both of whom were given scholarship releases earlier this month. Bryant has since transferred to Eastern Michigan, while Peterson, who graduated in May with a year of eligibility remaining, is expected to transfer as well.
“I love the school and the fans,” Clarke told CBSSports.com. “But I just don’t feel as though it’s the best fit for me basketball-wise – and it’s tough watching guys like Jeff and Glenn be able to go somewhere else, where I’m not able to.”
Anderson said Clarke recently asked for another release from the program.
“Recently, Rotnei informed me of his intent to leave the University of Arkansas,” Anderson said in a release. “At that time, I informed him that he would need to speak with the athletic director regarding his request. I then recommended to Jeff Long that we grant him a release to allow him to speak to other schools.
“We will continue to build our program with student-athletes who are committed on and off the court to being Razorbacks. That is how this program was built, with guys who are dedicated to the hard work, pride and passion it requires to be a part of the championship tradition of Razorback Basketball.
“I wish Rotnei Clarke the best as he moves on.”
Clarke started all 31 games for the Razorbacks last season, averaging a team-high 15.2 points per game. He was one of the Southeastern Conference’s leading 3-point shooters, connecting on 91 attempts as a junior, and he was twice named the league’s player of the week.
Clarke is second in school history with 275 made 3-pointers and might have reached Pat Bradley’s record of 366 next season. He also holds the school’s single-game scoring record with 51 points against Alcorn State in 2009.
Clarke’s departure, along with Bryant’s, will hurt the school’s Academic Progress Rate score for the next reporting period. Peterson’s departure will not affect the APR since he had graduated.
Arkansas was given a “historic penalty” by the NCAA last month, losing one scholarship for one season because of repeated low APR scores.
The guard had reportedly been unhappy with the program multiple times throughout his career. A local TV station reported he was considering transferring following his sophomore season in 2009-10, though Clarke later refuted the report through the university’s media relations department, saying he was happy at Arkansas.
Clarke’s departure leaves the Razorbacks with only 10 qualified scholarship players for next season. Four of Arkansas’ five signees have qualified, with the eligibility of the fifth – Little Rock Parkview forward Aaron Ross – in doubt pending an ACT score.
Because of the lack of scholarship players, Arkansas is expected to take the NCAA penalty limiting scholarships in the 2011-12 season instead of deferring to the following year.
Clarke isn’t the only member of his family to request a release from Arkansas this spring. His younger sister, Cassie, was released from her scholarship with the Razorbacks volleyball program last month and has transferred to Saint Louis University.








Comments on: Clarke released from Arkansas
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jdw139 says... June 20, 2011 at 8:49 p.m.
Wish him well and Godspeed . He is a good kid.
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FreshAir says... June 21, 2011 at 11:18 a.m.
Meh....if he were the kind of player to lead a team to championships, one of two things would be true:
1. He would have already entered the NBA draft.
or
2. Pelphrey would still be the coach.
Since neither of those things have happened, I don't think Clarke was going to make or break our season. He's not good on defense (a must in Mike Anderson's system) and his 3 point percentage was about the same as Julysses Noble's. He just took three times the amount of them.
We'll be fine. Clarke is a good kid, but he can't guard the point and he can't get open or create much at shooting guard. That's a bad combination, but he can obviously shoot it if he's open. The problem is getting him open. Oh well, I think he'll regret leaving when the results are the same somewhere else, but I wish him luck.
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Jfish says... June 21, 2011 at 11:58 a.m.
Freshair, you are the typical bitter hogfan, run him down for three paragraphs and then wish him luck. If you think he and Nobles were equally court smart, you must have been watching different games than me. Everyone is perplexed as to why he is leaving and although Anderson might not have recruited him as a freshman, he could have used him this year. At the end of the day, you need someone who can hit a shot, otherwise everyone is going to sit back in a zone and dare you to shoot. Clarke was the only proven outside shooter on the team.
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MisterBob says... June 21, 2011 at 1:21 p.m.
There is the short term future and the long term future-in human terms--to this saga. How well would Rotnei have done staying with the Hogs or not? Will he average five more points with a team that wins five more games two years from now? Will the Hogs lose a few more games without him next year? Or maybe they win a couple more. We will never know. Even if he had stayed, we would be discussing this year's incoming crew and next year's possible recruits like we always do. Criticizing and praising like we do. Players, even great ones, come and go. The "medium" term for Rotnei will not change in regards to pro ball. The longer term is what the elders who surround him and advise him didn't value or understand. The longer term is what many players only value with hindsight and with time. That is, not everyone can be a "Kentucky freshman". That teams go through difficult times and unforeseen changes, transitions and disappointments --just like in life. And for a young man to see those trials through and to remain loyal to something greater than the player's own short term goals or a specific coach or even the team itself would, in the end, pay dividends that can't be quantified by stats, wins or money. An enduring love and respect from all of us who love Razorback basketball and its tradition. Rotnei would have been one of the all time favorites, certainly for what he did on the court, but even more for what he showed and sacrificed off of it for something bigger than himself. He is still a great young man and will be beloved by many--myself included--but that will always be attached to a disappointment that he left for "his own best interests". Well even that depends a lot on perspective.
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