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Jones names SEC’s co-player of year with Mississippi State’s Perry

FAYETTEVILLE — Mason Jones was voted SEC co-Player of the Year by the league’s media and selected first team All-SEC by the league’s media and coaches, it was announced Tuesday morning.

Jones shared the media’s Player of the Year award with Mississippi State’s Reggie Perry. Jones and Perry were the only unanimous selections to the AP All-SEC team.

This is the fourth time (third player) a Razorback has been named SEC Player of the Year, joining Bobby Portis (consensus in 2015) and Corliss Williamson (consensus 1994 and 1995).

This is the 10th time (eighth player) an Arkansas player has been consensus first team All-SEC.

The others are Daniel Gafford (2019), Bobby Portis (2015), Ronnie Brewer (2006), Scotty Thurman (1994-95), Corliss Williamson (1994-95), Todd Day (1992) and Lee Mayberry (1992).

The following are highlights of Jones’ season:

• 1 of 5 finalists for the Jerry West Award given to the nation’s top shooting guard

• Was SEC Player of the Week four times, tying a league record (1 of 3 and first since 2009)

• SEC Scoring Leader – 22.0; 8th in the NCAA and looking to be the 1st Razorback to lead the SEC at season’s end

• Leads the NCAA in both free throws made (223) and attempted (271)

• Scored at least 30 points nine times – most by an SEC player over the last 20 years; 4th most in the NCAA this season

• SEC Scoring Leader (SEC Games) – 23.6 ppg; Arkansas season record for SEC games

• Set Arkansas record for Points Scored (SEC Season) – 424

• Set Arkansas record for FT made in a season – 223, 7th on SEC single season list and most since 1980 (233 by Jon Stroud – Ole Miss)

• Set Arkansas record for FT made (SEC Season) – 146

• The only player in the SEC to lead his team in scoring, rebounding, assists and steals

• The only player in the SEC to rank among the league’s top 24 in scoring (1st), rebounding (21st), assists (10th) and steals (7th)

• Was 1 of 2 players in the SEC to lead his team in scoring and rebounding

• 1 of 3 players in the SEC over the last 30 years to have multiple 40-point games in a season

SEC Media All-SEC selections

AP first team All-SEC
Kira Lewis Jr., Alabama, 6-3, 165, So., Meridianville, Alabama
u-Mason Jones, Arkansas, 6-5, 200, Jr., DeSoto, Texas
u-Reggie Perry, Mississippi State, 6-10, 250, So., Thomasville, Georgia
Nick Richards, Kentucky, 6-11, 247, Jr., Jamaica
Immanuel Quickley, Kentucky, 6-3, 188, So., Harve de Grace, Maryland

AP Second team All-SEC
Samir Doughty, Auburn, 6-4, 195, Sr., Philadelphia
Anthony Edwards, Georgia, 6-5, 225, Fr., Atlanta
Keyontae Johnson, Florida, 6-5, 231, So., Norfolk, Virginia
Skylar Mays, LSU, 6-4, 205, Sr., Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Breein Tyree, Mississippi, 6-2, 195, Sr., Somerset, New Jersey

AP SEC individual awards
Coach of the year — Buzz Williams, Texas A&M
Player of the year — Mason Jones, Arkansas, and Reggie Perry, Mississippi State
Newcomer of the year — Anthony Edwards, Georgia

SEC Coaches All-SEC selections

Coaches First Team All-SEC
Kira Lewis Jr., Alabama
Mason Jones, Arkansas
Samir Doughty, Auburn
Keyontae Johnson, Florida
Immanuel Quickley, Kentucky
Nick Richards, Kentucky
Skylar Mays, LSU
Breein Tyree, Ole Miss
Reggie Perry, Mississippi State

Coaches Second Team All-SEC
John Petty Jr., Alabama
Isaac Okoro, Auburn
Kerry Blackshear Jr., Florida
Anthony Edwards, Georgia
Tyrese Maxey, Kentucky
Maik Kotsar, South Carolina
John Fulkerson, Tennessee
Saben Lee, Vanderbilt

Coaches All-Freshman Team
Jaden Shackelford, Alabama
Isaac Okoro, Auburn
Scottie Lewis, Florida
Anthony Edwards, Georgia
Tyrese Maxey, Kentucky
Trendon Watford, LSU
Jermaine Couisnard, South Carolina
Scotty Pippen Jr., Vanderbilt

Coaches All-Defensive Team
Herbert Jones, Alabama
Isaac Okoro, Auburn
Ashton Hagans, Kentucky
Nick Richards, Kentucky
Yves Pons, Tennessee

SEC Coaches Induvial Honors
Coach of the Year: John Calipari, Kentucky
Player of the Year: Immanuel Quickley, Kentucky
Scholar-Athlete of the Year: Skylar Mays, LSU
Freshman of the Year: Anthony Edwards, Georgia
Sixth-Man of the Year: Tyson Carter, Mississippi State
Defensive Player of the Year: Yves Pons, Tennessee

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Musselman not interested in SEC Tournament past opening game

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman said Monday afternoon he didn’t know who they would play after Vanderbilt at the SEC Tournament on Wednesday … but he does know now.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Mase or IJ coming back, baseball recap and more!

Tye & Tommy on who is more likely to return to Arkansas, Clay recaps the baseball series, plus Pittman heads to the Hogpen!

Kjerstad’s homer in bottom of ninth gives Hogs series win over South Alabama

FAYETTEVILLE — With two outs in the ninth inning Sunday, Arkansas got a two-out homer from Heston Kjerstad for a 5-3 victory in Sunday’s series finale against South Alabama at Baum-Walker Stadium.

The two-run bomb was Kjerstad’s sixth of the year and marked Arkansas’ first walk-off win of 2020. It is the first walk-off homer for the Razorbacks since James McCann’s against LSU on April 9, 2011.

Kjerstad’s 353-foot dinger came with two outs in the ninth, as Christian Franklin kept the inning alive with a first-pitch single through the left side of the infield to bring up the Amarillo, Texas, junior.

Facing a 2-2 count, Kjerstad uncorked a pitch over the right field wall to put a bow on a series win for the Razorbacks (9-5). Franklin (three) and Kjerstad (two) made up five of Arkansas’ six hits in the game, with junior outfielder Braydon Webb tallying the other knock.

Junior right-handed pitcher Kole Ramage started Sunday’s contest against the Jaguars, going three innings with three runs allowed on six hits, walking one and striking out four.

He gave way to RHP Elijah Trest, who entered with the game tied at three in the fourth. He tossed three scoreless, racking up four strikeouts with two walks and a hit batter.

Another righty, Zebulon Vermillion took over in the seventh with the game still tied at three. He worked three shutout frames of his own, striking out six, earning his first win of the year in the process.

The duo of Trest and Vermillion did not allow a hit beyond the fourth inning of Sunday’s game.

For the third time in the series, South Alabama struck first with a run in the opening frame. Ethan Wilson sent a one-out single to left-center field, moved to second on a wild pitch, then scored on a single from Reid Powers made it a 1-0 game.

The Hogs got the run back in the bottom half of the inning thanks to a leadoff triple to right field from Franklin, followed by a sacrifice fly to deep left field from Matt Goodheart to even the score.

After a scoreless second inning, the Jags added two runs in the third to take a 3-1 lead. An RBI triple from Kaleb DeLaTorre, plus an RBI groundout from Dakota Dailey put South Alabama ahead by two.

Once again, Arkansas answered with two of its own in the home half of the third to knot it up at three.

Franklin smacked a solo homer 382 ft. and over the left field wall to make it 3-2, then a two-out single with runners on the corners from Webb brought in Kjerstad from third to bring the score to 3-3.

The two sides played five shutout frames before Kjerstad’s walk-off home run in the ninth inning.

The Razorbacks continue their six-game home stand with a two-game set against Grand Canyon with the Hogs’ first night-time game, starting at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Kjerstad on game-winning two-run homer in bottom of ninth to down Jaguars

Razorbacks right-fielder Heston Kjerstad with the media after blasting a homer into a stiff breeze to down South Alabama on Sunday. It gave the Hogs the series win.

Van Horn after Razorbacks rally to get past Jaguars on Sunday to win series

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn said the objective was to win the weekend series with South Alabama and was glad to accomplish that with Heston Kjerstad’s homer in the ninth.

Franklin, Vermillion on Hogs battling back to take series on homer in ninth inning

Razorback center fielder Christian Franklin and reliever Zebulon Vermillion talking after coming fr0m behind to down South Alabama on Sunday to win series.

South Carolina too much for Razorbacks to handle in SEC Tournament semifinals

GREENVILLE, S.C. — Arkansas’ run in the 2020 SEC Tournament came to an end Saturday night in a 90-64 loss to South Carolina.

The Gamecocks advance to the championship game to face Mississippi State while Arkansas awaits its NCAA Tournament fate.

Redshirt junior guard Amber Ramirez returned to form against the Gamecocks, leading the Hogs with 18 points, making six three-pointers in the game.

Ramirez’s six treys in the game gives her 106 on the season, the most ever by a Razorback in a single season, breaking Wendi Willits’ record of 104. That record had stood at Arkansas since 1999.

Freshman guard Makayla Daniels had another big game, going for 16 points, two assists and three rebounds, while Chelsea Dungee reached double figures once again, going for 12 points.

Key point of game

Down 19 at halftime, the Hogs once again came out of the intermission with purpose, opening the third quarter on a 12-0 run, cutting the Gamecock lead down to just seven on a lay-in from A’Tyanna Gaulden.

Gaulden, Dungee, Ramirez and Alexis Tolefree would all contribute during the burst.

Carolina responded by going on a 12-0 run of its own to push the lead back out to 19 by the end of the quarter.

Highlights for Hogs

• Ramirez’s 106 threes are the most ever by a Razorback in a single season. She needs just seven more to break the SEC’s record for threes in a single season (112).

• Daniels’ 16 points marked her second straight tournament game going for double-figures.

• Taylah Thomas led the Hogs on the glass, pulling down six rebounds.

Next game

The Hogs await their seeding in the NCAA Tournament. Selection Monday is scheduled for March 16 at 6 p.m. on ESPN.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Baseball delivers some optimism for even lunatic fringe of Hogs’ fans

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After dropping five straight games there were some in the lunatic fringe of Arkansas fans that were casting a pall of doom and gloom over the revenue sports’ best hope in recent years.

How bad was it? When Heston Kjerstad was thrown out in the first inning Saturday, some leather-lunged baseball genius in the right field bleachers kept hollering, “you gotta know your personnel, coach.”

You could hear it plainly above the groans after Friday’s 13-6 loss.

That came on the heels of some fans on social media ready to abandon all hope of any success in any of the major sports.

But for a fan base that is among the most bi-polar in all of college sports, all changed over the course of just nine innings Saturday as the Hogs rather handily subdued South Alabama, 15-2.

As former coach Norm DeBriyn and I were walking down the hall after the eighth inning we were discussing how “that’s baseball” in the change from one day to the next.

For current coach Dave Van Horn it appeared to be some pleasant relief Saturday as much as anything else.

Especially on offense, which had sorta been running like a car trying to run with a cylinder hit-and-miss at best.

“Well, I don’t think I could’ve predicted we’d hit the ball as hard as we did,” he said later. “We hit the ball hard all day.”

They needed to with a brisk wind coming out of the south that made it seem colder than the 65 degrees when you got out of the sunlight.

“You turn that wind around a little bit, we would have hit a few balls out of the park … a few more,” Van Horn said after the Hogs battered three Jaguars’ pitchers for 18 hits.

Curtis Washington, Jr., and Cole Austin both hit their first homers of the year.

“Really proud of our offense,” Van Horn said. “It was kind of relentless, getting the pitchers’ pitch counts up, fouling off pitches. Every inning we hit we were a threat and that was really good to see.”

The five-game losing streak was the third-longest of Van Horn’s time at Arkansas and nobody is really used to that.

“The stuff we’ve been doing the past couple of games is not Arkansas baseball,” starting pitcher Caleb Bolden said later. “What we did today is definitely Arkansas baseball.”

Bolden had his best outing since undergoing surgery that wiped out last season for the lanky right-hander.

He gave up back-to-back singles to start the game, the defense made some plays. First, Casey Martin gave up a run for the sure out, then Bolden snared a grounder back up the middle, looked the runner back to third and made the second out.

The Hogs ended up getting out of the opening inning allowing just one run.

“Once we got in that inning and only gave up one instead of two, that was big for us,” Van Horn said. “Mentally more than anything.”

Maybe the biggest part of that was Bolden’s play on the ball hit right back to him.

“That was a really good play,” Van Horn said. “That ball was hit hard back at him.”

If he doesn’t make the play, the Hogs are down 2-0 and who knows what happens after that.

Bolden responded by putting together a solid 90-pitch outing, going six innings. He struck out six, allowed four hits and walked three.

“He got them to swing … and they like to swing … and he got some quick outs,” Van Horn said. “More than anything, he just kind of pounded the strike zone mostly with fastballs.”

As much as Bolden’s performance, Will McEntire showed in a game what he’s capable of doing and maybe put himself in a mid-week starter’s role.

The freshman from Bryant threw just 19 pitches over two innings and retired the side in order, striking out four and getting Van Horn’s attention.

“Our plan going into the weekend was we may pitch him an inning here, but we’ll probably start him a game at midweek,” he said. “Now there’s no doubt.”

“It felt great to get some work in finally,” McEntire said after the game. “I’ve been waiting for it, but at the same time you’ve gotta understand that there’s upperclassmen who have proven themselves that got to work on their stuff early in the season, so finally getting some innings in feels great.”

Arkansas now will try to win the series Sunday, sending Kole Ramage to the mound in a game scheduled for a noon start after the time was moved up an hour earlier this week.