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Arkansas opens softball season at ‘Troy Cox,’ splitting pair of games

LAS CRUCES, N.M. — Arkansas split a doubleheader at the Troy Cox Classic hosted by New Mexico State on Friday, opening with a run-rule shutout, then falling to Bradley later.

The Razorbacks rolled over UTEP, 10-0, in the morning contest and out-hit Bradley, fell in the nightcap, 5-4.

Game 1: Arkansas 10, UTEP 0 (5 innings)

The Razorbacks used a patient approach at the plate and coaxed 12 walks against UTEP pitching.

The 12 free passes are tied for third-most in a game in program history and equaled the mark for the fourth time.

The Razorbacks scored in every inning and posted multi-run frames in the third, fourth and fifth. Arkansas plated a run in the first after it loaded the bases on two hit by pitches and a walk.

Senior designated player Ryan Jackson worked a bases loaded RBI walk to plate junior outfielder Hannah McEwen. In the bottom of the second, McEwen lifted a base knock toward right to plate sophomore infielder Audrie LaValley.

Once again, the Hogs took advantage of UTEP miscues and scored three runs in the third without recording a hit.

With Jackson standing on third and one out, the UTEP catcher fired a snap throw to third that was dropped by the third baseman which allowed a run to score.

Junior infielder Braxton Burnside was plunked by a pitch with the bases loaded and a wild pitch allowed Sydney Parr to cross the plate. In total, Arkansas hitters walked five times in the stanza and took a 5-0 lead.

In the fourth, Parr doubled in a run and Burnside drew a bases loaded walk to extend the Arkansas lead, 7-0. Two reached in the bottom of the fifth and freshman Rylin Hedgecock was called to pinch hit.

In her first collegiate plate appearance, Hedgecock launched a towering three-run blast over the centerfield fence to earn the 10-0 walk-off run-rule victory.

Razorback pitching breezed through the UTEP lineup and only tossed 72 pitches. Senior Autumn Storms (1-0) earned the win and coasted through four innings.

She allowed just three hits and struck out two. Freshman Jenna Bloom made her collegiate debut and recorded a strikeout in a scoreless fifth inning.

Allie Johnson (0-1) worked 4.1 frames for the Miners and allowed seven hits, 10 earned runs, 12 walks and struck out three. Arkansas totaled 16 free bases on 12 base on balls and four hit by pitches.

The Hogs improved to 4-1 in season openers during coach Courtney Deifel’s tenure.

Game 2: Bradley 3, Arkansas 2

Arkansas was first on the scoreboard for the second straight game and plated a solo tally in the first inning.

In the first plate appearance of the game, Parr placed a bunt hit down the third base line to reach and then swiped second base. McEwen deposited her first double of the campaign to center to give the Hogs an early 1-0 edge.

Both pitchers found their grove until the bottom of the fourth inning when Bradley scored two runs. A two-out Razorback error proved costly as the next batter hit a two-run homer to left to give the Braves the lead, 2-1.

Bradley added another run in the bottom of the fifth inning on a wild pitch that allowed a run to score from second.

The Razorbacks mounted a comeback attempt in the seventh inning as Kayla Green and Hedgecock both pinch hit and reached base on a walk and hit by pitch to leadoff the frame.

Parr laid down another bunt single to load the bases with nobody out. McEwen then hit a flyout to right and the runner from third tagged and attempted to score but was cut down on a perfect throw from Bradley rightfielder Jillian Navarro.

With two outs Burnside reached on an error, which allowed a run to score and bring the Razorbacks within one, 3-2.

Junior Mary Haff (0-1) threw all six innings for the Razorbacks and allowed just one earned run.

The righthander allowed four hits, did not walk a batter and struck out three. Emma Jackson (1-0) went the distance for the Braves and gave up five hits, two earned runs, and three walks while striking out six.

Up next

Arkansas is back in action tomorrow, Feb. 8 for another doubleheader day at the Troy Cox Classic.

A rematch against Braves begins the twinbill at 12:30 p.m. will conclude against host New Mexico State at 5:30 p.m.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Pittman will continue to take chances on in-state recruits like Towers

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There’s nothing that J.T. Towers can’t handle. Not even a snarling SEC offensive lineman.

Towers’ young life has already been full of tumult and adversity, and he’s still standing. Playing football at Arkansas is a challenge but not near as tough as what he’s faced.

His older brother Zack died of a football-related brain injury when Towers was in grade school. He missed his entire sophomore season due to a horrific car accident that has left him with noticeable scars.

A foot injury nearly derailed his senior season at Joe T. Robinson, but he played through it recently having surgery on his big toe.

A year ago, Towers was a quarterback at Class 3A Glen Rose, but he transferred to Class 4A Robinson for his senior season and found a home at linebacker racking up 171 tackles including 47 tackles for loss, 11 sacks and 5 forced fumbles.

He played with a reckless abandon you’d expect from a guy who shrugs off catastrophic car accidents. Former Arkansas coach Chad Morris didn’t offer him a scholarship, but new coach Sam Pittman re-evaluated in-state recruits and offered Towers.

The 6-foot-4, 210-pounder chose Arkansas over Utah, Tulsa, Army, and Louisiana-Lafayette, Illinois State and more.

“It’s a day I anticipated for a long time,” emotional Towers told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on Wednesday. “It’s been a long time coming for me, and being able to put the pen to the paper and getting the recruiting process over with and moving on to the next stage. I’m just looking forward to it.”

Towers is a roll of the dice. You didn’t see any other Power 5 schools on his list. Oklahoma and Texas Tech offered preferred walk-on spots.

However, it appears Pittman is going to have a place in his classes for some in-state diamonds in the rough, reminiscent of former Hogs coach Houston Nutt. Nutt, an Arkansas native, saw value in recruiting and developing in-state players, who he claimed were tougher when the chips were down as they were fighting for their home state.

Nutt transformed skinny Little Rock Parkview receiver Jamaal Anderson into a hulking all-American defensive end. Former coach Bret Bielema didn’t value that as much but did do a nice job of flipping star receiver Drew Morgan from Arkansas State.

The Greenwood native was a staple in the Bielema Era.

Morris did not follow suit, and focused his efforts on blue chip players in his native Texas. From a recruiting standpoint, he turned in a great class. However, so many other problems existed that we will never know how that formula would have worked.

Pittman probably realized from his first tour at Arkansas as Bielema’s offensive line coach that the Hogs will never get as many four- and five-star players as more than half of the SEC.

Even Morris’ stellar class was not atop the SEC.

So, to beat those teams you need to develop players. Players who have a lot of untapped potential and a desire to win. There isn’t a better place to pluck those than inside the state borders.

Like Nutt, Pittman knows you need to snag big-time recruits, too, a lot of times in Texas to balance out the class. This is where Pittman can outshine Nutt.

He has already proven as an assistant to be an outstanding recruiter. He proved it again Wednesday when out of nowhere, he inked Missouri City, Texas, quarterback Malik Hornsby, who is one of the more highly regarded QBs in the nation.

Hornsby chose Arkansas over Baylor, Texas A&M and Purdue among others. He is a big-time quarterback prospect Arkansas needed, but didn’t seem likely considering Pittman’s limited time to recruit.

Pittman was also able to flip talented offensive linemen Jalen St. John and Marcus Henderson. Both seem primed to fill spots quickly.

When Morris left several recruits decommitted and the stock of the class plummeted. Pittman was able to rescue it to around 30 nationally among most pundits.

This should be encouraging for Hogs fans.

Pittman sold a program that was 4-20 the past two seasons and convinced some big-time players to take a chance on him and his staff. That is how you build a program. Pittman laid the first bricks of that foundation.

However, if Arkansas is going to crash the SEC West party like Nutt did a few times, Pittman will need some underdogs such as Towers to bring major contributions.

The more diamonds Pittman mines with a longer list of blue chippers than Nutt’s, the better the chance he will have to bring Arkansas back.

Hogs pick up another road win, downing UNLV on Friday afternoon

LAS VEGAS — Arkansas picked up a third victory on the road with a 5-2 win over UNLV Friday afternoon at the Frank and Vicki Fertitta Tennis Complex.

Doubles

The Razorbacks came out focused and claimed victories on courts two and three to secure the doubles point.

Jackie Carr and Martina Zerulo cruised to a 6-2 win over Connie Li and Sam Smith, notching their second road win this dual match season.

The No. 22 pair of Lauren Alter and Tatum Rice dropped a 6-1 decision to No. 13 Izumi Asano and En-Pei Huan on court one.

The attention shifted to court three, where Thea Rice and Laura Rijkers took on Samantha Li and Olivia Elliot.

Thea Rice and Rijkers surged out to a 5-3 lead but saw the UNLV tandem counter to make it a 5-5 match. With their backs against the wall, the Arkansas sophomore combo rallied back and won in a tiebreak 7-6 (7-1), to provide the Hogs with the early momentum.

Singles

The Razorbacks corralled the momentum gained in doubles and took it over to singles play, claiming four of the first six sets.

114th-ranked Carr picked up her second win of the weekend as she battled to a 6-1, 6-1 victory over Connie Li. Carr’s victory from the No. 3 position gave Arkansas a 2-1 edge.

Alter registered her second straight win against Sam Smith, 6-3, 6-3, with freshman Kelly Keller following not too far behind clinching the singles point for the Hogs defeating Elliot 6-3, 6-3.

The two teams played all six singles matches to completion. In the No. 2 slot, Tatum Rice pulled out a gritty 7-6, 6-3 verdict over Huang.

Rijkers on court five was the last match of the day. The sophomore was defeated in a tiebreak battle of 6-7, 7-5, 1-0 (11-9).

Up next

The Hogs take the court again Saturday at noon facing Virginia Tech. This will be the second time in series history the two schools have met.

Singles competition
1. Izumi Asano (UNLV) def. Martina Zerulo (ARK) 2-1, retired
2. Tatum Rice (ARK) def. En-Pei Huang (UNLV) 7-6, 6-2
3. 114 Jackie Carr (ARK) def. Connie Li (UNLV) 6-1, 6-1
4. Lauren Alter (ARK) def. Sam Smith (UNLV) 6-3, 6-3
5. Kelly Keller (ARK) def. Olivia Elliott (UNLV) 6-3, 6-3
6. Samantha Li (UNLV) def. Laura Rijkers (ARK) 6-7, 7-5, 1-0 (11-9)

 Doubles competition
1. 13 Izumi Asano/En-Pei Huang (UNLV) def. 22 Tatum Rice/Lauren Alter (ARK) 6-1
2. Martina Zerulo/Jackie Carr (ARK) def. Connie Li/Sam Smith (UNLV) 6-2
3. Laura Rijkers/Thea Rice (ARK) def. Samantha Li/Olivia Elliott (UNLV) 7-6 (7-1)

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Razorbacks’ game with Notre Dame set for Week 2 kickoff at 1:30 on NBC

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas and Notre Dame will kick off at 1:30 p.m. on NBC on September 12 in the first-ever match-up between the two schools.

The Razorbacks and Fighting Irish will play the first game of a home-and-home series inside Notre Dame Stadium this fall before Razorback Stadium hosts the second game of the series on October 4, 2025.

Information on tickets for all Arkansas road games will be available later this spring. Season ticket holders receive the opportunity to purchase tickets to away games.

Season ticket holders will be able to submit purchase requests for tickets and orders will be filled based upon priority in Razorback Foundation membership status while supplies last.

Renewal for 2020 season tickets is ongoing along with new ticket sales.

The Razorbacks will host seven games in Fayetteville for the first time ever this fall. The Sam Pittman era begins with Nevada (Sept. 5) before beginning Southeastern Conference games starting with Alabama (Oct. 10).

Defending national champion LSU visits Fayetteville on Oct. 17 followed by Tennessee (Oct. 31) and Ole Miss (Nov. 14). The Hogs will also host non-conference tilts against Charleston Southern (Oct. 3) and UL-Monroe (Nov. 21).

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Neighbors on Hogs never able to catch talented top-ranked South Carolina

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors said the Gamecocks were just as good as expected as they simply overwhelmed the Hogs, 86-65, on Thursday night.

Staley on Boston getting healthy, win over Hogs, facing UConn this weekend

South Carolina coach Dawn Staley talked with the media Thursday after an 86-65 win over Arkansas about Aliyah Boston (18 points, 15 rebounds, 7 blocked shots) and marquee matchup with Huskies.

Dungee, Ramirez on some of problems in loss to South Carolina

Arkansas players Chelsea Dungee (16 points, 7 rebounds) and Amber Ramirez (8 points, 4 assists) on problems posed by No. 1-ranked Gamecocks in 86-65 loss Thursday night.

SEC coaches pick Razorbacks atop SEC West; four players named to first team

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas was picked to finish first in the SEC Western Division by the league’s coaches in the first preseason poll and all-SEC squads released by the league.

In addition to the division projection and one overall SEC Champion vote, four Razorbacks were recognized on the coaches preseason all-SEC first team, the most of any program in the conference.

Catcher Casey Opitz, shortstop Casey Martin, outfielder Heston Kjerstad and designated hitter Matt Goodheart were all honored by the SEC coaches.

No other program had more than two first team honorees.

Opitz, from Centennial, Colorado, recorded 43 hits, three doubles and three homers, to go with 33 RBIs and 31 runs scored over 50 starts as he moved into the starting catching role last season.

He had a memorable Super Regional in Fayetteville, tallying four hits in nine at-bats, with one homer, five RBIs and two runs scored as the Razorbacks advanced to the College World Series for the 10th time in program history.

He put together a strong year behind the plate, throwing out 22-of-24 runners attempting to steal a base, while committing only four errors in 531 chances. The Hogs were 36-14 in 2019 when Opitz was part of the starting battery.

Martin, a junior from Lonoke, Arkansas, finished his sophomore season with a .286/.548/.364 line at the plate, starting all 66 games.

He tallied 81 hits, 40 for extra bases with 21 doubles, four triples and 15 homers. Martin also recorded 57 RBIs and scored 67 runs, both figures ranking second on the squad last season.

He earned All-SEC Second Team honors as a sophomore after hitting .295 in conference play with 38 hits, 28 runs and a team-high nine homers and 22 RBIs.

Martin tied for the team lead in multi-hit performances with 26 and was second in multi-RBI games with 16. Overall, his 155 total bases were good enough for 15th in the NCAA last season.

A junior from Amarillo, Texas, Kjerstad put together a .327 batting average last year over 65 starts, leading the team in hits (87) and home runs (17).

It was the second consecutive season he’s tallied 87 knocks, as he drove in 51 RBIs and scored 53 runs in 2019.

With his 58 RBIs in 2018, the feat made him the first Razorback to have 50 or more in his first two seasons since Rodney Nye in 1988 and 1999.

He finished the year with 24 multi-hit performances, good for third on the team, with half of his multi-hit games consisting of three or more. Kjerstad finished the 2019 season as a Second Team All-SEC honoree.

Goodheart, from Magnolia, Arkansas, led the team at the plate last season with a .345 average over 58 games as the designated hitter.

He recorded 70 hits, 16 doubles, two triple and five homers, with 47 RBIs and 35 runs scored.

In conference play, Goodheart hit .369 with 14 extra-base hits, leading to an All-SEC Second Team designation. He also earned SEC All-Tournament Team honors, leading the Hogs with a .273 clip.

Overall in NCAA postseason play, he went 11-for-33 with homers against TCU and Ole Miss in the Regional and Super Regional rounds, respectively.

The 2020 slate kicks off with Eastern Illinois for the second-straight season, beginning on Friday, Feb. 14, at 3 p.m. at Baum-Walker Stadium.

Western Division

1. Arkansas (5) – 82
2. Mississippi State (4) – 73
3. Auburn (2) – 67
4. LSU (3) – 67
5. Texas A&M – 44
6. Ole Miss – 38
7. Alabama – 21

() – First place votes

SEC Champion: Vanderbilt (8), Florida (2), Arkansas (1), Auburn (1), Georgia (1), Mississippi State (1)

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Odom on coaching Razorbacks’ defense less than a month after playing them

New Razorbacks defensive coordinator Barry Odom’s last game at Missouri was a win over the Hogs in Little Rock and he talked Thursday about now coaching in Fayetteville.