Ethan McElvain didn’t need much time to make himself one of the most dependable arms in the SEC.
The Arkansas left-hander is now getting national recognition to prove it.
The Razorbacks’ junior reliever has been named one of 14 finalists for the 21st annual National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association Stopper of the Year Award, which goes to the nation’s best relief pitcher.
He’s one of three SEC pitchers on the list, sharing the finalist group with Georgia’s Caden Aoki, Texas’ Sam Cozart and Texas A&M’s Clayton Freshcorn.
McElvain’s numbers this year were tough to ignore. He went 6-0 with a 1.03 ERA across 19 relief appearances, covering 35.0 innings.
He struck out 52 batters while opponents hit just .163 against him. In those 35 frames, he gave up only 21 hits and 10 walks and just four total runs.
That kind of efficiency earned him All-SEC recognition from the league’s 16 head coaches, a testament to how consistently he shut down opposing lineups throughout the regular season.
Two outings in particular stood out down the stretch. On May 15 at Kentucky, McElvain punched out a season-high seven batters over three scoreless innings of relief.
On May 23 in the SEC Tournament against Auburn, he went a season-long 4.1 innings without allowing a run while striking out six more.
His final outing of the year came under different circumstances.
McElvain made a start against Kansas on May 31 in the NCAA Lawrence Regional, giving up four runs in 3.1 innings before the Hogs’ postseason run came to a close.
That start nudged his season ERA from 1.03 to 1.88 and his strikeout total from 52 to 55 across 38.1 total innings.
Even with that final outing factored in, his body of work over the full season puts him firmly in contention for the award.
The winner will be announced June 12 during a news conference at the College World Series at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha, Neb.
Arkansas knows that stage well. Kevin Kopps captured this same award during his dominant 2021 season with the Razorbacks, when he put together one of the most celebrated relief campaigns in college baseball history.
McElvain’s path through this season looked nothing like Kopps’ legendary run, but the junior has carved out his own identity in the Fayetteville bullpen.
A 6-0 record with a sub-2.00 ERA and opponents hitting under .165 against you tends to get attention and it clearly caught the eye of the NCBWA’s voters.
Whether he wins the award or not, the recognition confirms what Arkansas fans have watched all year that McElvain has been one of the most reliable relievers in the country.
The Hogs will find out if the voters agree when Omaha hands down its decision in just over a week.




























