Sports

Gut-Shot Godfather of Hogs Tennis Lobs Pointed Questions Yurachek’s Way in First Meeting

Posted on


Smash That “Follow” Button

Robert Cox didn’t think anything of it when Hunter Yurachek reached out late last week about meeting with him Friday morning. After all, he worked for the Arkansas AD at the tail end of his legendary career before retiring six years ago.

However, the former tennis coach already had plans. After a breakfast meeting, he was set to play in the annual A Club golf tournament, so he asked to meet early the following week because Yurachek didn’t indicate it was urgent.

“He did reach out and wanted to talk,” Cox told Best of Arkansas Sports. “If I would’ve known the topic was this, I would’ve canceled those events. Both of them were very easy to cancel.”

That topic happened to be Arkansas’ shocking decision to cut its men’s and women’s tennis programs, which was announced last Friday.

It makes sense that the AD at least reached out to Cox before that news went public. The 69-year-old has dedicated more than half of his life to the Razorbacks, first as a tennis player from 1976-78 and then as the head coach of the men’s team for 26 years before working in facilities management at the UA for another seven years.

Cox led the Razorbacks to 321 wins and nine NCAA Tournament appearances during his time as head coach, which earned him a spot in the Arkansas Sports Hall of Honor. Simply put, he’s the godfather of modern Arkansas tennis.

That’s why it was stunning to hear him say, in a Tuesday interview on 103.7 The Buzz, he hadn’t talked to Yurachek and that it wasn’t “from (a lack of) trying.” However, he clarified to BoAS that it was because of schedule conflicts.

The meeting between the two men finally happened Thursday morning and they talked for 40-45 minutes at a local coffee shop. During the chat, Cox said he not only felt the weight of his own 33 years of employment at Arkansas, but that of the entire 71-year history of men’s tennis at the school.

“I was emotional and I think he felt that,” Cox said. “We were in a public setting, which was probably good for both of us. I think he knows how we felt really kind of tossed to the side with no warning.”

It also gave Cox an opportunity to ask questions about the decision, something the AD had not yet faced in a public setting.

Multiple sources told BoAS that Yurachek did not take questions when informing the athletes their sport was being dropped and he has not held a press conference to discuss it. He previously declined comment when approached by an Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reporter at a track meet last Friday.

In the absence of answers directly from the source, Best of Arkansas Sports got the next best thing — relayed information via Cox from his chat with Yurachek.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Most Popular

Exit mobile version