News

Razorback mascot caretaker passes away Arkansas Athletic Director Hunter Yurachek says Tusk VI's caretaker has died. To stream THV11 on your phone, you need the THV11 app.
Arkansas’s Razorback Mascots History. The University of Arkansas has had a rich history of Razorback mascots. It all began in 1909 when Coach Hugo Bezdek exclaimed that his team played like a ...
Tusk I looks through its cage during a football game in 2006. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images) Tusk is the name of the official live mascot for the Razorbacks, with the current mascot being Tusk VI.
Retired UA mascot Tusk IV, 9, dies. Tusk IV, a Russian boar that was the longest-serving live mascot in the history of the University of Arkansas, died Sunday at the age of 9.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – If Sam Pittman is to be believed, the Stokes family will have Tusk, the beloved Arkansas live mascot, at Razorback games this year despite the recent death of his primary ...
FAYETTEVILLE – As a former mascot and graduate of the University of Arkansas, successful Northwest Arkansas businessman Bill Woodie Adams is like most Razorback sports fans in that he simply ...
We had talked about Stokes' death and the history of how the Razorbacks ended up with one of the Russian boars for a live mascot this week by Kent Smith. It will be something missed by many of the ...
Keith Stokes (left) talks to fans about Arkansas live mascot Tusk V as Teresa Wheeler of Camden and Daniel Pranger of Benton walk up to see the animal on Saturday, Nov. 29, 2019, before a football ...
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Shortly after announcing the launch of Tyson Razorback Nuggets, the Razorbacks are looking to expand further into the world of food and beverages. "We are excited to welcome ...
No predictions for size of Arkansas' crowd at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock on Saturday morning, but Tusk won't be there after the death of Keith Stokes, the guy who made the live mascot ...
While the University of Arkansas officially switched its mascot from the Cardinal to the Razorback in 1910, the iconic “Woo Pig Sooie” cheer did not get its start until more than a decade later.