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.

 

Razorbacks get early runs, but can’t hold off Alabama in second game

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Arkansas posted two first inning runs, but ultimately fell 10-2 in six innings to Alabama on Saturday afternoon.

The Crimson Tide out-hit the Razorbacks, 12-4, as junior Braxton Burnside was able to extend her hitting streak to a career-best nine games.

Junior Hannah McEwen setup the Arkansas run scoring first inning by drawing a leadoff walk and was immediately followed by a Burnside single down the third base line.

After a deep flyout, junior Danielle Gibson drove a double off the base of the right field wall to plate McEwen from second.

Junior Kayla Green followed by punching a two strike sacrifice fly down the right field line to grab a 2-0 edge.

In the bottom half of the frame the Alabama offense responded to tie the game. The Tide scored their first run on a rundown after a bunt and sent a second runner across the plate via a base hit to left.

Alabama capitalized in the bottom of the third on a bases loaded walk to give the hosts a lead they would not relinquish. Junior Mary Haff entered the game and inherited a bases loaded nobody out jam.

She struck out the first batter she faced, but a sacrifice fly and a single scored two more. The Razorback defense cut a run down at the plate to end the side on an 8-3-2 relay and trailed, 5-2.

The Tide swelled the lead to eight in the bottom of the sixth to shorten the game. Only one of the five runs were earned as two errors led to four tallies.

Freshman pitcher Jenna Bloom (3-2) was tagged for five hits and five earned runs in her first career Southeastern Conference start over two innings.

Haff tossed three innings of relief and surrendered four hits with two earned runs. Errors hurt freshman pitcher Rylin Hedgecock as she allowed three unearned runs in 0.2 innings.

Alabama’s Lexi Kilfoyl (5-4) racked up the complete game win and struck out six.

Arkansas and Alabama will square off in the rubber match of the series Sunday at 1:30 p.m. on SEC Network+.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Hogs blow first-half edge, can’t catch Aggies in 77-69 road loss Saturday

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Texas A&M used a 12-2 run to take a 3-point advantage at halftime and never relinquished the lead to hand Arkansas a 77-69 loss in the regular-season finale Saturday afternoon.

The loss spoiled Mason Jones’ ninth 30-point game of the season while Isaiah Joe added 22. The two combined to make 14 3-pointers.

Next up for Arkansas is the SEC Tournament in Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Van Horn didn’t expect offensive explosion like Hogs had Saturday in win

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn said after Friday’s game he expected the team to turn things around, but he didn’t even think they would bombard South Alabama on Saturday, 15-2.

Bolden, Austin, McEntire recapping Hogs’ 15-2 win over Jaguars on Saturday

Razorback pitcher Caleb Bolden (6 innings, giving up just 4 hits), reliever Will McEntire (2 innings, 0 runs allowed) and first baseman Cole Austin (2-for-2, 3 RBI) on big win.

Arkansas sweeps to pair of wins over Golden Lions on Saturday afternoon

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas picked up a pair of wins over Arkansas-Pine Bluff on Saturday afternoon at the Billingsley Tennis Center, sweeping both matches, 7-0.

The Razorbacks earned their fourth and fifth doubles point in the last six matches after winning at the No. 1 and 2 spots in both matchups. The Hogs then took all singles matches in straight sets, winning 96 games compared to just one by the Golden Lions.

The Hogs get back to SEC play when they travel to Lexington to face Kentucky on Friday, Mar. 13. First serve against the Wildcats is scheduled for 5 p.m. CT.

Match 1

Doubles
No. 1 | Paya/Bortnick (Ark) def. Ross/Jordan (UAPB), 6-1
No. 2 | Reco/Rousset (Ark) def. Webb/McIntyre (UAPB), 6-0
No. 3 | Harrison/Howard-Tripp (Ark) def. UAPB, by default

Singles
No. 1 | Maxim Verboven (Ark) def. Junius Ross (UAPB), 6-0, 6-0
No. 2 | Josh Howard-Tripp (Ark) def. Isiah Jordan (UAPB), 6-0, 6-0
No. 3 | Jose Dominguez Alonso (Ark) def. Zachary Webb (UAPB), 6-0, 6-0
No. 4 | Melvin Manuel (Ark) def. Michal McIntyre (UAPB), 6-0, 6-0
No. 5 | Aleksa Bucan (Ark) def. UAPB, by default
No. 6 | Josh Bortnick (Ark) def. UAPB, by default

Match 2

Doubles
No. 1 | Howard-Tripp/Harrison (Ark) def. Jordan/Ross (UAPB), 6-0
No. 2 | Reco/Rousset (Ark) def. Webb/McIntyre (UAPB), 6-0
No. 3 | Dominguez Alonso/Bucan (Ark) def. UAPB, by default

Singles
No. 1 | Maxim Verboven (Ark) def. Isiah Jordan (UAPB), 6-0, 6-1
No. 2 | Josh Howard-Tripp (Ark) def. Junius Ross (UAPB), 6-0, 6-0
No. 3 | Jose Dominguez Alonso (Ark) def. Michal McIntyre (UAPB), 6-0, 6-0
No. 4 | Melvin Manuel (Ark) def. Zachary Webb (UAPB), 6-0, 6-0
No. 5 | Aleksa Bucan (Ark) def. UAPB, by default
No. 6 | Josh Bortnick (Ark) def. UAPB, by default

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Gymbacks finish second in quad meet with second-highest score of season

DENTON, Texas — Arkansas bounced back in Denton on Friday, posting a score of 196.300 and earning a second-place finish among the four teams at the meet at Texas Women’s University.

The Razorbacks’ 196.300 is their second-highest road score of the season.

Freshman Kiara Gianfagna claimed her first title since arriving at Arkansas, claiming the all-around title with a final score of 39.000.

The Gymbacks won five total titles, including Sarah Shaffer’s vault title, a bars title for Kennedy Hamrick and Bailey Lovett and a floor title for Sophia Carter.

Rotation One | Beam

Arkansas made it a point to finish strong on their opening event and with the help of Carter and Amanda Elswick, closed out the first rotation in second place with a team score of 48.950. Carter’s back handspring layout, step-out series propelled her to a 9.850 in the fifth spot, followed by a solid anchor score from Elswick, who’s back handspring 1.5 stuck dismount landed her a 9.875. Elswick’s 9.875 ties her season high, as she finished second among all competitors in the event.

Rotation Two | Floor

Two rotations in-a-row, we saw Carter shine. She earned the event title with a 9.925, her sixth score of 9.900 or higher in the event this season. Leading up to Carter’s fiery routine, Shaffer, Hambrick and Lovett all scored a 9.875. Arkansas was holding steady in second place midway through the meet with a combined score of 98.325, the Gymbacks highest two-rotation score of the season.

Rotation Three | Vault

Shaffer’s Yurchenko layout half was the highlight of the vault rotation for Arkansas, earning a perfect score from one judge, Shaffer finished with a career-high 9.925 on the apparatus. It’s the highest score on the vault since 2018 when Braie Speed posted the same score at No. 5 Florida. Freshman Madison Hickey also saw a career-high on the vault, her Yurchenko full complete with stuck dismount landed her a 9.875.

 Rotation Four | Bars

Arkansas closed out the night on a high note, with its highest bars rotation in four weeks (49.150). Gianfagna started strong for the Gymbacks, posting a 9.800 with her full-twisting double-back dismount. Lovett executed her ray beautifully and Hambrick nailed her giant full, double-back as the duo each earned the event title with a score of 9.875.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Van Horn on Hogs dropping fifth straight game in blowout loss to Jaguars

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn said after a 13-6 loss to South Alabama on Friday afternoon that he’s confident things will turn around.

Martin, Goodheart recapping problems in Hogs’ loss to South Alabama

Razorbacks designated hitter Matt Goodheart (2-of-2, 3 walks, 3 runs scored) and shortstop Casey Martin (2-of-3, RBI, 2 walks) on getting past issues in current losing streak.

Storms’ pitching, Gibson’s hit lifts Razorbacks over Crimson Tide on Friday

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Arkansas got some clutch pitching from Autumn Storms and a key seventh inning RBI hit by Danielle Gibson in a 1-0 SEC opening victory at Alabama on Friday afternoon.

The Razorbacks won their first game in Tuscaloosa since 2000 and defeated their first ranked opponent this season.

The Hogs threated to score throughout the game and finally broke through in the top of the seventh.

Junior Hannah McEwen walked and took second base on a passed ball. Junior Braxton Burnside singled to center to advance McEwen to third.

Gibson followed and bounced her fourth hit of the game through the right side to score the only run Arkansas needed.

Storms (10-2) was sensational inside the circle and kept the Crimson Tide bats off balance all night. She went the distance and allowed five hits, all singles, while striking out three.

The righthander also induced two important double play balls in the first and seventh innings to keep Alabama off the scoreboard.

A pivotal 6-4-3 twin killing ended the bottom of the first inning and took away any potential momentum from the home team.

The Tide put the potential game tying run on base with a base knock down the left field line in the bottom of the seven inning, Storms again induced a 6-4-3 double play to end the game.

The Hogs outhit Alabama, 8-5 and Gibson tied her career-high of four hits. Junior catcher Kayla Green made a return to the lineup and went 1-for-2 with two walks, while Burnside extended her hitting streak to eight games.

The Razorbacks and Crimson Tide will play the middle game of a three game series tomorrow, March 7 at 2 p.m. and it will air on SEC Network+.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.

Razorbacks shock Texas A&M to advance to SEC semifinals Saturday

GREENVILLE, S.C. — Arkansas completed the second-largest comeback in SEC Tournament history on Friday afternoon, storming back from 17 down to stun No. Texas A&M, 67-66.

Arkansas led for just over eight seconds. Two huge Kiara Williams free throws with 8.6 ticks left on the clock proved to be the difference.

Freshman guard Makayla Daniels played a great game under huge pressure, leading Arkansas with 13 points.

Daniels was also tasked with guarding first team All-SEC guard Chennedy Carter, who would finish the game with 23 points, but only made nine of her 20 shot attempts.

Williams was fantastic all game as well, going for 11 points and four rebounds, all of which were on the offensive glass, off the bench. She also collected two steals and an assist.

Key point of game

The Hogs were slow out of the blocks once again in this game and trailed 24-10 after the first quarter.

The Razorbacks chipped away in the second quarter, but trailed at halftime, 38-26.

The Hogs punched back in the third quarter, though, opening the frame on a 10-2 run to cut the lead down to just four with 8:07 to play and the Aggies led going into the final quarter, 51-46.

The fourth quarter started with the Aggies reextending their lead, pushing it to seven with 8:19 left to play.

The Hogs kept coming, though, pulling to within two several times down the stretch. A floater from Amber Ramirez with 1:07 left would cut the lead to one and a stop on the other end gave Arkansas a chance to take its first lead of the game.

Following a Carter turnover, Williams made the play of the game, grabbing two offensive rebounds, one off her own miss, before getting fouled on her second shot attempt.

The senior would calmly knock down both free throws to give Arkansas a 67-66 lead with just over eight seconds to play. Carter had a look to win it, but a great contest from Rokia Doumbia forced the miss.

Razorbacks’ highlights

• Arkansas’ 17 point comeback was the second largest in tournament history. The Hogs came back from 16 down last year vs. A&M at the SEC Tournament.

• Arkansas’ All-SEC duo of Alexis Tolefree and Chelsea Dungee both got into double figures, going for 11 and 12 points, respectively.

• Dungee led the Hogs on the glass, pulling down five rebounds, while Tolefree led the team in assists, dishing three of them.

South Carolina next

The Hogs advanced to the semifinals, meeting No. 1 South Carolina for the third time this season.

That game will tip Saturday at 4 p.m. and will be broadcast on ESPNU.

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.