Zeb pitches Hogs back on track holding down Tide in 9-1 win

Zebulon Vermillion after win over Crimson Tide

The Hogs are back on track.

Zebulon Vermillion tossed eight innings of one-hit, one-run ball while striking out four to lift No. 1 Arkansas to a 9-1 win against No. 22 Alabama on Saturday night at Baum-Walker Stadium.

The Razorbacks are now 13-3 on the year, stopping a three-game slide with their first SEC win of the season.

The big righty was untouchable through his first five innings of work, retiring 15 of the first 16 Crimson Tide batters he faced. He did not allow a hit until the sixth inning when Alabama’s Jim Jarvis singled to right field before eventually coming around to score on a sacrifice fly.

Arkansas’ bats, meanwhile, came alive after a quiet day at the plate in the first game of the series. The Razorbacks broke out for 12 base knocks, led by Casey Opitz and Cayden Wallace’s three-hit days.

Opitz put the Hogs ahead early, launching his first home run of the year deep to right in the third inning to open a 1-0 lead. Arkansas would score runs in the fourth, fifth, sixth and eighth innings, steadily extending its advantage throughout the ballgame.

The big blow came in the sixth. After Alabama cut its deficit to two, the Razorbacks scored three in the bottom half of the inning to take control.

An Opitz single, his second hit of the game, scored one and set the table for Cullen Smith and Jalen Battles to each drive in runs of their own.

Up 6-1 in the eighth, the Hogs tacked on three more to put the game away for good. Opitz collected his third hit of the night in the inning and now has five multi-hit efforts on the year.

Vermillion, meanwhile, was cruising on the mound. After allowing a run in the sixth, the right-hander settled down to retire six of the next seven he faced before departing the ballgame after eight innings of work.

He and reliever Zack Morris, who tossed a scoreless ninth with two strikeouts, combined for Arkansas’ second two-hitter of the season.

The Hogs pitching staff also did so against nationally ranked TCU earlier this season at the State Farm College Baseball Showdown at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas.

Tomorrow’s contest will decide the series.

The rubber game is set for 2 p.m. at Baum-Walker Stadium and will broadcast nationally on the SEC Network.

Strong start by Vermillion gives Hogs pitching depth

Dave Van Horn was pleased with Zebulon Vermillion’s strong, deep start in 9-1 win over Alabama to set up good Sunday game to win series.

Vermillion on strong eight innings, getting win over Alabama

Hogs pitcher Zebulon Vermillion (8 innings, 1 hit, 1 earned run, 4 strikeouts) talked about what’s been different last two games for him on mound.

Gibson’s walk-off homer clinches series win over Ole Miss

Danielle Gibson launched a walk-off home run in the bottom of the eighth inning as Arkansas came from behind to defeat Ole Miss, 3-2, in extra innings on Saturday afternoon at Bogle Park.

The Razorback (22-3, 5-0 SEC) offense scored all its runs in the game’s final three innings and improved to 5-0 in SEC play.

How it happened

Ole Miss (18-9, 3-2 SEC) scored their only runs of the game on a two-run homer in the top of the third inning, forcing Arkansas to play from behind most of the game.

Arkansas’ bats came alive when trailing 2-0 in the bottom of the sixth. Outfielder Hannah McEwen led off the frame homering to center, and cut the deficit in half.

After McEwen’s bomb, infielder Braxton Burnside was hit by a pitch, putting a runner on first with nobody out. Gibson followed, lacing a double down the right field line, and Burnside motored all the way home, tying the game, 2-2.

The Rebels had a chance to take the lead in the top of the seventh putting runners on second and third with one out, however, pitcher Mary Haff entered from the bullpen and promptly struck out the next two hitters keeping the game tied.

The Razorbacks almost won the game in the seventh inning, as McEwen shot a ball deep to the wall in center that was caught for the third out.

Haff allowed a runner on a hit by pitch in the top of the eighth but stranded her on first. Gibson hit her 10th homer, and second walk-off blast of the season in the eighth on a 1-1 pitch. She accounted for two of the team’s three RBI.

Pitcher Autumn Storms earned the start and gave the Razorbacks quality innings, tossing 6.1 frames and allowed five hits with a walk. She struck out three in the no decision. Haff (14-2) recorded her nation-leading 14th win in relief, striking out four in 1.2 innings.

Arkansas joined the 12 other SEC softball playing institutions by wearing teal to honor Alex Wilcox, a member of the 2018 Mississippi State softball team who inspired the nation with her courageous fight against ovarian cancer that ultimately took her life in the summer of 2018.

Arkansas looks to sweep the Rebels at 1 p.m. tomorrow, March 21. The game will air on SEC Network+.

Pittman after scrimmage: ‘We saw enough to be encouraged’

Hogs coach Sam Pittman said after Saturday morning’s scrimmage (the first of three this spring) there were some good things, but more to work on.

Muss on difficulty getting to tournament, then advancing

Hogs coach Eric Musselman talked Saturday about the difficulty getting to the NCAA, moving on, facing Texas Tech and getting his hour outside.

Tate on living in NCAA’s bubble, recapping opening-round win

Arkansas’ Jalen Tate said Saturday they have put the win behind them over the Raiders, now looking ahead to playing Texas Tech.

Van Horn after loss to Tide: ‘Obviously that didn’t go very well’

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn said later pitcher Patrick Wicklander’s solid outing, Christian Franklin’s hitting part of few positives.

Haff makes early lead hold up in 5-1 win over Rebels

Arkansas scored four runs in the first three innings and never looked back in a 5-1 win over Ole Miss in the first of three games at Bogle Park.

Pitcher Mary Haff did not allow an earned run and recorded her nation-leading 13th win of the season, and the Razorbacks (21-3, 4-0 SEC) moved to 4-0 in SEC play for the first time since 2009.

How it happened

With one out in the bottom of the second inning, designated player Linnie Malkin cracked a double to right center, becoming the first Razorback batter to reach base.

Cally Kildow pinch ran for Malkin at second, and after taking third on Aly Manzo’s groundout to the pitcher, scored on infielder Valerie Ventura’s two out spinning infield single to short, grabbing a 1-0 advantage.

The Razorbacks posted a three-run third and took control of the game as outfielder Hannah McEwen doubled in a run, infielder Danielle Gibson singled in a run and Manzo plated a run via an error.

Infielder Keely Huffine and outfielder Sam Torres’ back-to-back singles to lead off the frame started the big inning.

Gibson tied Kentucky’s Mallory Peyton for the SEC doubles lead, smacking her 11th two bagger of the campaign to right to lead off the fifth, and was immediately driven home on catcher Kayla Green’s single down the left field line, giving Arkansas a 5-0 lead.

Ole Miss (18-8, 3-1 SEC) tallied a lone unearned run in the top of the sixth after a two-base error, a base hit and a sacrifice fly.

Haff (13-2) scattered seven hits, which included just one extra base hit, across 7.0 innings.

The redshirt junior allowed one unearned run and struck out four with one hit by pitch. Anna Borgen (6-1) lost for the first time this season, tossing 4.0 innings and allowing five runs (four earned) and eight hits while striking out two.

Ava Tillman tossed two scoreless relief innings for the Rebels.

Arkansas outhit Ole Miss, 10-7, with each of the top three hitters in the lineup, Torres, McEwen and Gibson, recording a two-hit game.

The Razorbacks won their first game of the year without hitting a home run. Each team committed one error and left seven runners on base.

The middle game of the series is set for 1 p.m.

Hogs take care of Colgate after nerve-wracking start for fans

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It’s okay if you want to admit you were squirming more than a little when Arkansas started Friday’s game with Colgate by getting down 14 points in the first half.

For a fan base that has a segment that’s not really stable to begin with, there probably was a good deal of hand-wringing, nail-biting or hair-pulling going on.

The Razorbacks put on a 17-0 run to end up with a surprising lead at halftime and kept pulling away for an 85-68 win.

Eric Musselman chalked it up to young guys figuring it out.

“Maybe our inexperience in the tournament showed the first 10 minutes of the game,” he said later. “Then we got a little bit settled in, maybe after the nerves of that first 10 minutes.”

As the commentator said on TV, they did it in a way Nolan Richardson was probably sitting on his couch nodding his head at the scrambling and aggressive defense.

“Our defense was incredible,” he said.

The Hogs went to some full-court pressure and, just like in the last deep tournament run the program had, offense fed off that defensive pressure.

And Musselman talked with his son — assistant coach Michael Musselman — about using it the night before.

“We were going to unleash (the full-court pressure),” Musselman said. “I didn’t know if it was going to be in the second half or if it was going to be in the first half, when it might be, but we were going to do that.”

They were able to do it by moving Justin Smith to the center position.

“My son was in my room last night, and we talked about potentially having to play Justin at some five,” Musselman said. “I hadn’t addressed that with the team much, but Michael and I had discussed it. I thought maybe that would help us speed the game up, and I thought Justin could protect the rim against their bigs.”

A little preparation goes a long way. Smith had a game not seen in the tournament for the Hogs since Corliss Williamson in 1994, scoring 29 points, grabbing 13 rebounds and getting five steals just for good measure.

“I just thought the combination of strength, speed, athleticism would be a lot for their front line to handle,” Musselman said. “I mean, I knew if we went to that, that it might hurt us a little bit on the glass, which it did. We didn’t win the rebounding battle.”

Against Texas Tech on Sunday something else will happen.

“The next game’s going to have a different complexion,” Musselman said. “Somebody else is going to have to step up. We’ll probably have to play bigger than we did tonight.”

Unless you just have a dominating roster, it’s hard to use the same plan every game in the tournament. Everybody’s good just to be in the tournament.

“That’s what this game called for,” Musselman said. “It’s really hard to advance in this tournament against anybody.”

Ask Ohio State. They were upset in overtime by Oral Roberts. Or Florida. They had an overtime nail-biter with Virginia Tech.

The Hogs weren’t celebrating much after the win, either. That’s a good sign, by the way.

“There was none,” Musselman said about celebrating. “When I walked in and asked if they were happy and all right, they said, ‘coach, we were supposed to win,’ which is the mindset that you want your basketball team to have.”

It doesn’t get easier, which is why this may be the hardest championship to win, in my opinion, because you have to play people that are playing at a title-winning level in March that didn’t look like they would win a conference game in November.

“We know that this next game is going to be even more of a challenge,” Musselman said.

Considering how good Chris Beard’s teams have been at Texas Tech that might be an understatement.

We don’t know what time that game will be … at least when this is being written.

But the guess is you don’t want to miss it.

Musselman on team’s slow start with guys playing first tournament

Hogs’ coach Eric Musselman talked after the 85-68 win over Colgate and big run at end of first half to grab momentum, advancing to play Texas Tech.