Arkansas gets win to split weekend series with Tennessee

Junior setter Gracie Ryan hit a career-milestone on Sunday afternoon, notching her 1,500th career assist in the third set as she led Arkansas to a 3-1 win over Tennessee (25-21, 25-22, 17-25, 25-17).

The Razorbacks split the weekend series with Tennessee and improves to 12-8 on the season.

“A wonderful accomplishment for Gracie,” said coach Jason Watson, “Reaching 1,500 assists is a milestone for her and its recognition of the increased ownership she’s had to have over the setter position this season. It’s been a tough year; the competition level is extremely high and for her to maintain her composure while providing direction and leadership to her teammates over the season is remarkable.”

Ryan recorded a total of 55 assists in four sets, tied for the fifth-best performance by an SEC setter this season. She now claims two of those top five performances after recording 59 assists in five sets in Starkville last fall.

“It speaks to her character and it speaks to her commitment to this program,” Watson said. “What I hope people are starting to appreciate about Gracie is just how much she grinds. She just works, and works, and works. We’re very fortunate to have someone like her at the University of Arkansas, representing the Razorbacks like she does.”

Ryan led a trio of Hogs to double-digit kills in the victory over the Volunteers. Freshman Jillian Gillen posted 20 kills with an impressive, match-high .410 hitting percentage.

Gillen’s 20 kills led all players in the match and is her fourth performance of 20 kills or more this season.

Joining Gillen with double-digit kills was sophomore Maggie Cartwright, who tallied 12 kills and eight digs for the Razorbacks.

Cartwright’s 12 kills are the second-most by the Wisconsin-native this year. Senior Devyn Wheeler also tallied 12 kills against Tennessee.

She committed only four errors in 18 attempts, bouncing back from night one and improving her hitting percentage a whopping 711 points after hitting negative at the net in night one.

Gillen and Ryan played a crucial part of the Razorback defense as well, registering 15 and nine digs, respectively. Gillen was second only to Tennessee’s libero, Madison Bryant, in total digs on the day.

“This was a really tough series for us,” said Watson. “I’m really proud of our team and their commitment to growth and ability to find solutions when things aren’t necessarily going our way. To come out of this series with the split after last night’s loss shows that these Hogs still have some life in them and we’re still giving ourselves the opportunities to be successful.”

Arkansas will close out the regular season, when it hosts South Carolina for the Razorbacks’ final home series of the spring next weekend. Game one of the two-match series is slated for Friday, March 19 at 5 p.m. at Barnhill Arena.

Smith happy about finally getting into NCAA Tournament

Razorbacks’ Justin Smith looking forward to returning to Indiana for NCAA Tournament matchup, confident they’ll bounce back after loss to LSU in SEC semifinals.

Hogs’ hearing selection for NCAA, Musselman glad to be there

Arkansas watched the NCAA Tournament selection show from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Eric Musselman talked about how hard it was just to get into the tournament.

Tate on third time heading to NCAA Tournament in his college career

Arkansas’ Jalen Tate with the media following the announcement of a No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament on Sunday afternoon.

Sills can’t contain happiness over Hogs’ selection in tournament

Hogs’ guard Desi Sills, from Jonesboro, couldn’t quit smiling after finally getting to play in the tournament after selection on Sunday.

Hogs’ Moody on getting into NCAA Tournament on Sunday

Moses Moody looking forward to facing Colgate in first round of NCAA Tournament on Friday, coming back from getting knocked out of SEC in semifinals.

Hogs upset No. 12 Aggies for for first time since 2016

Arkansas upset No. 12 Texas A&M at home for their first win over the Aggies since 2016.

The Razorbacks clinched the doubles point and followed with three singles wins for the 4-3 win at the Billingsley Tennis Center on Sunday afternoon.

It’s the second straight season the Hogs have upset a top-five team (No. 5 Baylor in 2020) in Fayetteville.

The Razorback duo of Nico Rousset and Alex Reco picked up the first doubles win for the Hogs over Pranav Kumar and Noah Schachter, 6-4, on court three. Rousset and Reco are currently on a five-match winning stream as a pair.

Melvin Manuel and Adrien Burdet clinched the doubles point for the Razorbacks by defeating the Aggies duo of Valentin Vacherot and Pierce Rollins at the No. 2 position, moving to 3-0.

In singles, Aleksa Bucan gave the Razorbacks its first singles point with a straight sets 6-3, 6-1 win over No. 116 Noah Schachter in the No. 3 position.

Burdet followed with a 6-4, 6-4 victory on court five for his ninth win in his rookie campaign. Rousset clinched the upset at the No. 2 position for the Razorbacks with a 7-5, 6-3 win over No. 33 Carlos Aguilar.

It was Rousset’s second win over a nationally ranked opponent this spring. On court one, Reco battled back to force a third set tiebreaker against No. 4 Valentin Vacherot, but eventually fell 2-6, 6-2, 6-7.

“Obviously, a good win for us. They’re ranked twelfth but beat No. 2 Baylor on Thursday so they will likely by ranked in the top-10. I’m proud of our team for keeping their heads down and believing,” said coach Andy Jackson. “We have a big challenge ahead with three top-15 teams on the road, but we are looking forward to it.”

The Razorbacks return to action in a non-conference matchup when they travel to Orlando, Fla. to face No. 21 UCF on Wednesday, March 24.

Hogs drop second straight road matchup, shut out at Florida

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Arkansas dropped a 4-0 decision at Florida on Sunday, dropping to 10-3 on the season and 4-3 in SEC play.

In doubles play, Arkansas had the lead on both courts one and three before Florida rallied back to win on both and clinch the doubles point for the Gators.

On court one, No. 28 duo Lauren Alter and Tatum Rice took a 4-3 match lead, sweeping the fourth game point from No. 26 McCartney Kessler and Marlee Zein. Kessler and Zein used three-straight game points to take the set 6-3.

Battling on court three, Razorback pair Laura Rijkers and Kelly Keller dropped their match to Sydney Berlin and Sara Dahlstrom in a 6-4 decision.

In singles play, Arkansas fell in straight sets on courts 4-6, giving Florida the four points it needed to clinch the win.

Senior Lauren Alter dropped her match against Berlin 6-3, 6-1 just before freshman Morgan Cross recorded a loss on court four, a 6-3, 6-0 defeat to No. 65 Layne Sleeth.

The match-clinching point came on court five, as Netherland-native Rijkers made the right adjustments after dropping the first set to Sarah Dahlstrom 6-3, but ultimately fell to Dahlstrom 6-3, 6-4.

Arkansas was in third-set tiebreakers on courts two and three when the match was clinched. Keller defeated Zein 6-4 in the first set before dropping the second to Zein, 6-3.

Keller was giving her best fight in the third, leading her Gator counterpart 1-0 in the tiebreaker. Senior Rice bounced back from a 6-1 set-one loss to Jarlskog to tie the match with a 6-3 win in the second set.

Rice was leading 1-0 in the tiebreaker when the match ended.

The Razorbacks return home to Fayetteville and have a bye-week before resuming action for their final home series of the season on March 26 against Auburn and March 28 against Alabama.

Hogs sweep South Carolina with 3-2 win Sunday afternoon

COLUMBIA, S.C. — For the first time since 2009, No. 19 Arkansas swept an SEC series on the road as it won the weekend finale, 3-2, over No. 20 South Carolina in Columbia on Sunday afternoon.

Two Razorback (20-2, 3-0 SEC) home runs by infielder Braxton Burnside and outfielder Linnie Malkin proved to be the difference in the team’s 19th straight win.

How it happened

Outfielder Sam Torres took a four pitch walk to leadoff the game, and on the fifth pitch delivered by South Carolina starter Kelsey Oh, Burnside smashed a two-run dinger to dead center, giving Arkansas a 2-0 lead.

Burnside homered four times in the series and has totaled 15 bombs this season, which is tied for second-most in a single-season in school history.

Throughout the year, Arkansas has outscored its opposition, 37-6, in the first inning.

Much like it has all series South Carolina fought back, tying the game at 2-2 in the bottom of the third on a two-run double to left.

Malkin gave Arkansas all in it needed in the top of the fourth, launching a no-doubt solo homer to left for her ninth bomb of the campaign.

The Hogs loaded the bases in the fifth on Torres’ single and walks issued to Burnside and infielder Danielle Gibson, but struck out twice, leaving the bags full.

The Gamecocks (13-6, 0-3 SEC) put a runner in scoring position in the bottom of the fifth, but never threatened beyond that as Mary Haff closed the door in the final two innings.

Redshirt freshman hurler Jenna Bloom (4-1) recorded the first SEC win of her career and tossed 4.1 innings allowing four hits, two earned runs and three walks with three strikeouts.

Haff did not allow a batter to reach base over 2.2 innings of relief and recorded eight outs on just 17 pitches to earn her second save of the year. Haff struck out two and lowered her season ERA to 0.90. Oh (1-4) was the loser going 4.0 innings and allowing all three runs.

In 2009, the Hogs swept an SEC three-game series at Mississippi State (March 17-19) 8-3, 5-1, and 3-2. Arkansas has won five of the last six games in the all-time series against South Carolina.

Arkansas returns home to Bogle Park at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, March 16, for a single non-conference game against Liberty.

Louisiana Tech hands Hogs first loss of season Sunday

RUSTON, La. — Undefeated no more.

No. 1 Arkansas’ winning streak ended on Sunday as the Hogs were silenced, 2-0, by Louisiana Tech in the series finale at J.C. Love Field at Pat Patterson Park.

The Razorbacks, winners of their first 12 games to start the year, had won 16 straight dating back to the final four contests of the pandemic-shortened 2020 season.

Starter Lael Lockhart turned in a strong effort, striking out three in five innings of work. He held the Bulldogs scoreless through his first four frames before allowing two runs on soft contact in the fifth.

Right-handers Caleb Bolden and Blake Adams combined for three scoreless innings of the work out of the bullpen. Adams struck out two in his two frames of action.

The Razorback bats, meanwhile, could not get it going. Arkansas scratched out two hits against LA Tech starter Jarret Whorff, including catcher Casey Opitz’s second-inning single.

The base knock extended Opitz’s hitting streak to a team-leading 11 consecutive games.

Arkansas’ best threat came in the top of the ninth. Outfielder Christian Franklin was hit by a 3-0 pitch before designated hitter Matt Goodheart drew a six-pitch walk, putting two on with one out.

It was not meant to be, though. Whorff retired the next two Hog batters to finish off his 10-strikeout complete game and secure the win.

Arkansas faces a quick turnaround, hosting Oklahoma on Tuesday night at Baum-Walker Stadium. First pitch against the Sooners is set for 5 p.m.

Hogs have bad game, still in NCAA, but Muss wanted to win

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One of the things I’ve liked about Eric Musselman is he doesn’t tolerate losing very well and he doesn’t appear to do a whole lot to hide it.

You get the idea he hates losing more than he likes winning. That’s usually what you find in championship-type coaches, by the way.

Saturday, Musselman was about as miserable as he usually is following a loss after LSU knocked Arkansas out of the SEC Tournament, 78-71.

“We just had some guys not play well at all,” Musselman said. “You can’t do that in a tournament setting.”

The Razorbacks had several that were just, well, not sharp at all.

As it does so often, missed free throws made a difference. The Hogs were 11-of-19 and in a seven-point loss that drives coaches crazy.

Players, too.

“I don’t know what it was … a lot of them just weren’t falling,” said Moses Moody later. He had 28 points, but missed four free throws. “Myself and the team, the ball was just going in and out. Sometimes it just goes that way.”

Justin Smith added 21 points, but only four other players registered points at all.

Overall, they just looked sloppy offensively.

“We did a poor job of taking care of the basketball,” Musselman said.. “We had 10 second-half turnovers. We drove the ball into traffic.”

Those were things this team hadn’t done very often while piling up 13 straight SEC wins to become one of the hottest teams in the country by the end of the year.

Jaylin Williams being out for the tournament finally caught up with the Hogs. When they needed a body with some fresh legs, they didn’t have anybody.

“We just didn’t have enough gas in the tank tonight on a back-to-back,” Musselman said.

And through all of that, Arkansas still had a shot to win the game down the stretch.

They cut it to a single point, 72-71, with 37 seconds left but JD Notae had a live-ball turnover when he just flat lost the ball while dribbling and LSU hit free throws to close it out.

“I give our guys a lot of credit for playing until the very end,” Musselman said. “We cut that thing back to one.”

Some coaches don’t mind losing in the conference tournament. When you’re safely in the NCAA, it really doesn’t matter. When Arkansas won the national title in 1994, Kentucky ran them out of The Pyramid in Memphis in the SEC semifinals, 90-78.

Nolan Richardson wasn’t too worried about it. He had a bigger goal in mind.

But Musselman wants to win every single time there is a game. Probably of just about any type. He’s a competitive guy.

Which, for fans, is what they should want and expect. It’s what you have to have to compete for championships.

And should be the goal … in every single sport.

Musselman has that and will have a shot at a bigger championship starting next week.

The Hogs will probably be a No. 3 seed when the rankings come out Sunday, starting at 5 p.m. Winning the entire tournament wouldn’t have improved that seeding, in the opinion of ESPN’s Joe Lunardi on Saturday morning.

That doesn’t change anything for Musselman.

If you’re keeping score, he wants to win.