Ruscin is involved in a car chase.
We want to sponsor the X-Ray room at Razorback Stadium.
Music talk.
Ruscin is involved in a car chase.
We want to sponsor the X-Ray room at Razorback Stadium.
Music talk.
Halftime on a Friday includes Aaron Torres, James Teague, and Neal Atkinson.
Tye and Tommy make picks for the weekend, talk about road trips, Cal’s guys in the NBA Draft and the Hogs vs Horns in the SEC Tournament.
Guests: The Fence Man x Krysten Peek
No. 7-seeded Arkansas (37-19, 17-13 SEC) squares off against No. 2-seeded Texas (40-12, 19-10 SEC) in the SEC Tournament quarterfinal round on Friday afternoon at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Ala., with first pitch set for approximately 3 p.m.
Fans can catch the game on SEC Network with Dave Neal and Kyle Peterson on the call and Phil Elson will handle radio duties through the Learfield Razorback Sports Network statewide and ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.
The Razorbacks enter Friday with momentum from an 8-4 win over No. 10-seeded Tennessee to open SEC Tournament play on Wednesday.
The Hogs went deep four times in that game, with Zack Stewart accounting for two of the home runs and TJ Pompey adding another as part of a three-hit evening.
Before the tournament, Arkansas closed the regular season by taking its series against Kentucky. The Wildcats won Game 1 by a 4-3 score, but the Razorbacks bounced back with a 5-4 victory in Game 2 and sealed the series with a high-scoring 16-12 win in the finale.
Texas hasn’t played yet in this year’s SEC Tournament, coming in with a double-bye after finishing the regular season on a four-game winning streak.
The Longhorns swept Missouri to close things out, winning 6-3, 11-6 and 12-7 across the three games.
Jim Schlossnagle is in his second year leading Texas and has built an 84-26 record in Austin, including a 41-18 mark in SEC play. Last season, his Longhorns went 44-14 with a 22-8 conference record and reached an NCAA Regional.
Dave Van Horn has fared well against the Longhorns throughout his tenure in Fayetteville.
Under Van Horn, the Razorbacks are 11-5 against Texas, including a sweep last season at Baum-Walker Stadium.
The two programs haven’t met at all this season, but Arkansas has won the last five matchups dating back to 2021.
In 93 all-time meetings going back to 1960, the Hogs trail the Longhorns 37-56 overall.
Left-hander Hunter Dietz gets the start for the Razorbacks, carrying a 7-3 record and a 3.32 ERA into the game.
Texas counters with right-hander Cody Howard, who enters at 0-0 with a 7.45 ERA.
Dietz has been one of Arkansas’s most consistent starters this season and he’ll need to keep the Longhorns’ offense in check against a Texas lineup that’s been among the most productive in the conference.
Friday’s winner advances to face either No. 3-seeded Texas A&M or No. 6-seeded Auburn on Saturday.
A win puts the Hogs one step closer to the SEC Tournament semifinals and adds to what’s already been a strong postseason showing.
Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama serves as the backdrop for this quarterfinal matchup, a venue that’s hosted SEC baseball for decades.
• Who: Arkansas Razorbacks (37-19) vs. Texas Longhorns (40-12)
• When: Friday, May 22 at approximately 3 p.m.
• Where: Hoover Metropolitan Stadium, Hoover, Alabama
• TV: SEC Network (Dave Neal, Kyle Peterson)
• Radio: Learfield Razorback Sports Network (Phil Elson) and ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home
• Starting Pitchers: Arkansas LHP Hunter Dietz (7-3, 3.32 ERA) vs. Texas RHP Cody Howard (0-0, 7.45 ERA)
After win over Tennessee, the Hogs will now face the hated Longhorns in Hoover, Ala., but pitching staff in good shape.
Ticket prices are going up again but is lack of funds really the problem? We discuss.
Plus Ruscin is getting new glasses and Zach is mocking him for it.
Lineup this year for Courtney Deifel’s team doesn’t have many weak spots and looking at this chance to go to Oklahoma City compared to past.
If he’s sidelined for rest of the season, looking at how Dave Van Horn may try to fill the gap and juggle the roster to get more bats.
HOOVER, Ala. — Arkansas came out swinging Wednesday at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium and didn’t let up.
Behind four home runs and a strong pitching effort, the Hogs knocked off Tennessee 8-4 in the second round of the 2026 SEC Tournament, the program’s first tournament win since 2023.
It’s the kind of statement victory the Razorbacks needed.
Entering the tournament ranked No. 7 with a 37-19 record (17-13 in SEC play), the Razorbacks made clear they’re playing their best baseball at the right time of year.
It didn’t take long for Zack Stewart to take over the game.
In the bottom of the first inning, Camden Kozeal started things off with a home run to right center — his 18th of the season — on a hanging slider from Tennessee starter Evan Blanco.
Two batters later, Ryder Helfrick drew a walk and Stewart deposited the very next pitch 447 feet to right field to make it 3-0.
That two-run shot was Stewart’s 12th home run of the season and it extended his home run streak to four straight games. He wasn’t finished, though.
In the third inning, he led off by crushing a first-pitch fastball 447 feet out of Hoover Metropolitan Stadium for his 13th homer of the year.
The blast was his first multi-homer game in an Arkansas uniform and gave him five home runs in his last four games combined with numbers that stand out considering he’d hit only eight in his first 40 games of the season.
TJ Pompey capped the offensive explosion with a 434-foot blast to left field in the bottom of the fifth.
His three-run shot, coming off a pair of walks ahead of him, pushed the lead to 8-3 and put the game away.
Pompey’s homer tied him with Helfrick for second on the team in home runs with 15. Nolan Souza added an RBI double in the first inning to cap a four-run frame.
With ace Hunter Dietz held back to avoid pitching him on short rest a second straight week, Tate McGuire stepped into the spot start role and handled it well.
He worked three shutout innings, striking out four batters while throwing 32 of his 44 pitches for strikes.
Dietz surrendered one hit and one walk before giving way to Parker Coil to start the fourth.
Coil worked 1.2 innings and ran into some trouble, allowing three runs — though only one was earned.
An error by center fielder Maika Niu in the fourth inning let a pair of runs score on a bloop double off the bat of Blaine Brown.
The ball got through Niu on a slick grass surface after both Tennessee baserunners took extra bases on the play. Brown’s hit cut the Razorback lead to 5-2.
Coach Dave Van Horn turned to James DeCremer with runners still on.
DeCremer, who’s been taking on high-leverage situations since returning from injury, stranded Brown at second and went on to pitch 2.1 innings total, allowing just one run on two hits.
Cole Gibler shut the door with two clean innings to finish the game. It was a welcome sign after he’d given up 23 runs across his previous three appearances.
One of the quirkier moments of the afternoon came in the bottom of the fifth.
Ryder Helfrick worked a key at bat before Pompey’s home run and after a pitch was initially called strike one, Arkansas challenged the call using the automatic ball-strike system, the first ABS challenge in program history.
The call was overturned from a strike to a ball, flipping the count from 0-2 to 1-1. Helfrick eventually walked on five pitches, setting the table for Pompey’s three-run shot.
The Razorbacks finished the game 2-for-3 on ABS challenges.
Tennessee’s Blake Grimmer added a run for the Vols with a seventh-inning double that scored Jay Abernathy, but it was too little too late.
Arkansas held Tennessee scoreless over the final two innings to close out the 8-4 victory.
The win means Arkansas moves on to the quarterfinals to face No. 2 Texas on Friday afternoon.
First pitch is set for 3 p.m. and will air on the SEC Network.
A win over the Longhorns could push the Razorbacks into the top 16 of the NCAA Tournament field.
It’s a threshold that typically comes with hosting a regional at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville.
The latest projections from D1Baseball had Arkansas slotted as the No. 19 overall seed heading into Wednesday’s game.
A run through Hoover could change that math in a hurry.
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HitThatLine.com is the website for ESPN Arkansas. Listen at 99.5 in Fayetteville, 95.3 FM in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 FM in Hot Springs and 104.3 FM in Harrison.
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