Kjerstad, Martin named to Collegiate Baseball All-American team

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas’ Heston Kjerstad and Casey Martin have been named preseason All-Americans by Collegiate Baseball on Tuesday.

Kjerstad picked up first team accolades, while Martin garnered second team honors. It marks back-to-back years Martin has been recognized by the outlet, securing third team recognition heading into the 2019 campaign.

Arkansas has had at least one preseason All-American from Collegiate Baseball in each of the last three years.

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.

Martin, a junior from Lonoke, 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.

The duo’s All-America nods come on the heels of a No. 9 preseason ranking from Collegiate Baseball Newspaper, the first poll revealed for the upcoming 2020 season.

It marks the second time in three years the Razorbacks have received a top-10 ranking from the outlet, beginning the 2018 season in third. Last year, Collegiate Baseball put Arkansas at No. 25 in its first poll.

The Razorbacks are coming off a 46-20 season that produced an SEC West division title and the program’s 10th trip to the College World Series in 2019.

Coach Dave Van Horn, entering his 18th season at the helm of the baseball team, has more appearances in the CWS than any active coach in the nation with eight.

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.

PREPS FOOTBALL: Hornets win overall state title from state media for second straight year

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL RANKINGS
Last year's final Arkansas High School Football poll as voted by a panel of state media. The new poll will be released Sunday night!
OVERALLRecordPtsPrv
1.Bryant (20)13-02001
2.North Little Rock8-51689
3.Bentonville11-11382
4.Pulaski Academy12-21337
5.Searcy12-111210
6.Benton9-4706
7.Joe T. Robinson14-154
8.Bentonville West7-545
9.Little Rock Christian13-1383
10.Harrison11-1324
Others receiving votes: Greenwood 27, Conway 24, Harding Academy 22, Shiloh Christian 10, Fordyce 8, Springdale Har-Ber 8, Fayetteville 6, Morrilton 3, LR Catholic 2.
CLASS 7A
1.Bryant (20)13-01001
2.North Little Rock8-5784
3.Bentonville11-1602
4.Bentonville West7-532
5.Conway8-4213
Others receiving votes: Springdale Har-Ber 5, Fayetteville 4.
CLASS 6A
1.Searcy (20)12-11003
2.Benton9-4792
3.Greenwood10-2611
4.West Memphis7-2324
5.Jonesboro8-4215
Others receiving votes: Lake Hamilton 7.
CLASS 5A
1.Pulaski Academy (20)12-21003
2.Little Rock Christian13-1751
3.Harrison11-1602
4.Morrilton8-541
5.Valley View10-1124
Others receiving votes: White Hall 10, Wynne 1, Vilonia 1.
CLASS 4A
1.Joe T. Robinson (20)14-11002
2.Shiloh Christian14-1773
3.Ozark12-2375
4.Arkadelphia11-2361
5.Crossett9-428
Others receiving votes: Nashville 20, Jonesboro Westside 2.
CLASS 3A
1.Harding Academy (20)15-01002
2.Osceola12-2803
3.Prescott11-3574
4.Camden Harmony Grove11-338
5.Rison11-2161
Others receiving votes: Melbourne 5, Booneville 2, Hoxie 2.
CLASS 2A
1.Fordyce (20)13-21003
2.Junction City11-2801
3.Gurdon10-446
4.Salem10-2315
5.Des Arc9-3204
Others receiving votes: Hazen 17, Foreman 4, Magnet Cove 1, Carlisle 1.

???? Halftime Pod presented by Jeff’s Clubhouse — Connor O’Gara on the Barry Odom hire

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Phil & Tye on Sam Pittman’s MR interview, the Tulsa win, plus Connor O’Gara joins the pod!

Pittman on Morning Rush about excitement of new job, hiring Odom

New Arkansas coach Sam Pittman joined John Nabors and Tommy Craft on The Morning Rush on Monday and talked about getting about four hours of sleep a night right now and his relationship with new defensive coordinator Barry Odom.

Jones gets second player of week honors from SEC

FAYETTEVILLE — For the second time this season, Arkansas junior Mason Jones has been named the SEC Men’s Basketball Player of the Week, the league announced Monday.

Jones was also named the SEC Player of the Week by College Sports Madness.

Jones scored a career-high 41 points and added six rebounds, while leading the team in assists (4) and steals (4).

He was 12-of-18 from the field (7-of-7 from 2-point range), 5-of-11 from 3-point range and 12-of-13 at the free throw line.

• 41 points ties for 6th-most in the NCAA this season.

• 41 points ties for 7th-most in Arkansas history. It was just the 11th time a Razorback has scored 40 or more in a game and Jones is just the seventh Razorback to score 40-plus.

• 41 points are second-most by a Razorback in Bud Walton Arena in this the 27th year of the facility.

• Only three Razorbacks have scored 40-plus since joining the SEC (Rotnei Clarke and Todd Day).

• Jones’ second 30-plus scoring game of the season and fourth of his career.

In the first half, Jones scored 20 points, including a long 3-pointer at the buzzer for a 16-point halftime lead. He was 7-of-10 from the field (5-of-5 from inside the 3-point line), He also had three steals, two assists and a blocked shot.

In the second half, Jones scored 21 points with two assists and a steal. After Tulsa worked its 16-point deficit to nine (68-59 with 11:49 left), Jones scored 15 straight for the Razorbacks during an 18-5 run to give Arkansas a 22-point lead (86-64) with 6:00 left. (Reggie Chaney scored the first three points of the 18-5 run).

Jones made his first 12 free throws versus Tulsa before missing his last attempt. With that miss, he snapped a streak of 24 consecutive free throws made.

He started the year making 27 straight (36 dating back to last season) and is shooting 93.5 percent (58-of-62) from the charity stripe to rank 11th in the NCAA. Jones ranks sixth in the NCAA in free throws made (58).

Jones leads the SEC in both steals per game (2.22) and total steals (2) while ranking third in scoring (19.6 ppg). He ranks ninth in the SEC in field goal percentage (50.5%).

However, Jones is shooting an impressive 68.6% (35-of-51) inside the 3-point arc this season.

Arkansas will make its annual trip to North Little Rock’s Simmons Bank Arena this Saturday (Dec. 21) to face Valparaiso. Tipoff is set for 7 pm.

Razorbacks will start season with Top 10 ranking by Collegiate Baseball

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas was ranked No. 9 in Collegiate Baseball’s preseason poll, the first set of rankings revealed for the upcoming 2020 season.

It marks the second time in three years the Razorbacks have received a top-10 ranking from the outlet, beginning the 2018 season in third.

Last year, Collegiate Baseball put Arkansas at No. 25 in its first poll.

The Razorbacks are coming off a 46-20 season that produced an SEC West division title and the program’s 10th trip to the College World Series in 2019.

Coach Dave Van Horn, entering his 18th season at the helm of the baseball team, has more appearances in the CWS than any active coach in the nation with eight.

Arkansas returns a number of veterans with experience on the mound, including two-thirds of last year’s rotation in sophomores Connor Noland and Patrick Wicklander.

Noland and Wicklander were among the top freshmen arms in the conference in 2019, as the duo combined for a 4.16 ERA, nine wins, 145 strikeouts and only 51 walks.

Noland was named a Perfect Game freshman All-American while both garnered SEC All-Freshman honors.

Offensively, the Razorbacks return plenty of firepower, including last year’s top hitter in Matt Goodheart, who finished with a .345 batting average as the team’s designated hitter.

Along with Goodheart, the Hogs bring back two of the top bats in the nation in juniors Heston Kjerstad and Casey Martin. Kjerstad hit .325 or higher in each of his first two seasons, matching his hit total (87) from 2018, while driving in another 51 RBIs to go with 17 home runs.

As for Martin, he hit more home runs (15) and had more RBIs (57) than his freshman season, finishing with 81 hits overall last season.

Arkansas is set to host 32 games at Baum-Walker Stadium this spring, including home SEC series against Alabama, Florida, Texas A&M, Auburn and Georgia.

During the 2019 postseason run, Arkansas saw 93,868 fans pack Baum-Walker Stadium, the most of any ballpark in the country.

The Razorbacks wrapped up the 2019 season with a 33-7 home record, the second-straight year Arkansas has totaled 30 or more wins at home.

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.

Neighbors on big win, playing time for some, week ahead for LR game

Razorbacks coach Mike Neighbors recapped the 99-39 win over Northwestern State on Sunday afternoon, players getting key minutes in game and looking ahead to week of finals, matchup in NLR.

Daniels, Ramirez on getting 10th win in blowout fashion Sunday

Arkansas players Makayla Daniels (10 points, 3 assists) and Amber Ramirez (21 points) talked about the defensive adjustment that spurred the 99-39 win over Northwestern State.

Musselman’s analytics pays off after practicing to take advantage of them

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It was interesting to note that while everyone wanted to talk about Mason Jones’ 41-point day against Tulsa on Saturday one of the things he talked about was defense.

“We started off with defense that let the defense make your offense,” he said later. “We came back with steal after a steal on the defensive end.”

Eric Musselman had the Razorbacks focusing on defense when the media got to watch a few minutes of practice Thursday. He was emphasizing communication, which resulted in a lot of yelling in one of the last drills of practice.

That carried over to the game. The communication on the floor was much louder than it has been in some recent. At times the Hogs were flying around and diving for loose balls all over the floor.

PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

For a coach that looks at analytics and film study that’s gotten a lot of attention it’s really just garbage unless the players practice to those results, then execute it in the game.

Against the Golden Hurricane they did, especially on the defensive side of the ball.

“Defensively, we got back to being who we are,” Musselman said after the win.

Jones missed a 3-pointer at the end of regulation last week against Western Kentucky, then the Hogs collapsed in overtime. Seeing the response was a question some had going into the game.

“We just had to leap out to bounce back from it,” Isaiah Joe said later. “We had a good week of practice and we were all focused. As you can tell, it showed in the game especially Mason’s performance.”

Joe had a game that normally would get headlines, but his 20 points probably won’t get a lot of headlines because of Jones’ big day.

“He did a great job of finding his own shots,” Joe said. “We did a great job of finding him, too.”

The entire team had a solid week of practices that Musselman talked about, but Jones’ big day didn’t appear to be that surprising.

“His practice habits this week were awesome,” Musselman said. “He was locked in.”

Jones was 12-of-18 from the field (5-of-11 on 3-pointers) and hit 12-of-13 free throw. The missed free throw may have bugged him the most.

“I pride myself on not missing free throws, so that hurt,” he said with a chuckle later.

PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Jones scored 32 in the season opener against Rice. His 41 points against Tulsa tied for the seventh-most points in a game in school history. You have to go back to Joe Kleine back in 1984 for the last time a Razorback hit 41.

Jones’ total was the most by a Razorbacks since Rotnei Clarke hung 51 on Alcorn State back in 2009.

Maybe the single aspect for the Hogs in their 9-1 start to the season was turnovers. We got the indication Saturday they’ve spent some time working on that and the players showed it in the game with just two in the first half, six in the second half.

“Valuing the ball is so important,” Musselman said. “I even talked to the team, and I know my dad would be rolling over thinking about it, but I’d rather take a bad shot rather than turn the ball over.

“We use a soccer term — shots on goal. We have to get shots on goal. They at least have a chance to go in. And your defense can get set up. When you have live-ball turnovers, it’s really difficult to win.”

There’s the analytics talk again that Musselman talks about a lot. There’s a lot of that detail-oriented talk that can gobble up the attention, but you see too often it doesn’t mean much without the players executing to it.

They did Saturday, which we got the idea might happen after watching Thursday’s practice. Musselman coached to the analytics … and the players were able to take it and make it happen on the floor.

Which is what the good coaches do.