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Are people under-estimating Connor’s potential in football?

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Despite the fact it was, at times, a rough freshman campaign for Connor Noland for Arkansas in baseball, there are many that think his future is on the mound, not behind center.

There is a prevailing thought among many pundits out there he got too far behind in spring practice and won’t be able to crack what is becoming a large group in the quarterback room come August.

Some are too young to remember when Barry Lunney, Jr., was spending his springs pitching, then starting out so far down the depth chart in the fall no one counted on him.

And every year he ended up starting before the season got too far along.

In today’s world of college football, I’m not sure spring practice is as critical for quarterbacks and other skill position players as it once was. Some have told me the summer workouts are more important.

It’s interesting how many of these two-sport players seem to do pretty well. There’s a pretty logical reason that many don’t get at all.

A lot of folks don’t seem to remember Chad Morris actually prefers two-sport players.

“If I have players that are dead equal and one plays one sport and the other plays two sports, I’m going to go after the two-sport first,” he said before his first spring practice with the Razorbacks back in 2018.

He was answering questions about Noland, then a signee, playing two sports. He correctly sees more positives than negatives in players handling two sports in college.

“I feel like that does a couple things,” he said then. “One is it develops an overall, well-rounded skill set. Two, it shows me that this young man can be coached in different ways. Every coach that he deals with in a different sport coaches him a little bit different.”

Like some other coaches the Hogs have had over the years, playing quarterback in Morris’ offense requires maybe more ability above the shoulders than below. Offensive coordinator Joe Craddock confirmed that to me back in the spring.

The ups and downs Noland had in baseball has matured him in ways that didn’t happen during the disastrous 2018 football season.

Frank Broyles, Lou Holtz, Ken Hatfield and Danny Ford didn’t have big years with dumb jocks at quarterback. Houston Nutt had Clint Stoerner and Matt Jones, then came as close as the Hogs have in the SEC of winning a title with Casey Dick. Bobby Petrino won the most games in one season in his time with Tyler Wilson in 2011.

In football, the biggest arm or fastest legs usually don’t win championships unless they also have a huge football IQ combined with a level of maturity that is not common.

Often you get that when a player can handle two sports and juggle a classroom load.

“I want players that play multiple sports,” Morris has said.

My guess is we haven’t seen the last of Noland in football. It’s just a hunch, but he’ll have his timing and rapport down with the receivers and offense by August.

Don’t fall for guesses he’s done playing football.

He didn’t come to Fayetteville to only play baseball.

???? Tuesday Halftime Pod — featuring Nikki Chavanelle

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Phil & Tye hit on the disappointing part of the season, interview Nikki Chavanelle, and more!

 

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday

John & Tommy discuss the Texas Tech loss, the team reflects, Hog sports better next year and more!

Hogs’ quick exit from Omaha shows how hard titles are to get

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Within minutes of the stories being posted here following Arkansas’ loss to Texas Tech on Monday afternoon, one fan apparently thought I was going to produce a negative piece.

Bless his heart, he implored that I not be allowed to write a certain way … and added for the umpteenth time I be fired.

It’s almost disappointing to tell him no one has told me in the five decades of doing this what to (or not to) write or talk about.

In the biggest of markets I’ve been in (top five in the country), no one has ever so much as hinted at it … to me or anyone else that I know.

Even more, there’s nothing to really be negative about, even with an 0-2 run in Omaha at the College World Series this year.

It’s baseball. Winning a national title in that sport is as hard as any sport.

Yes, that’s one of Dave Van Horn’s sayings that filters down to his players, but it’s an accurate statement. It also applies to just about every other team sport, but especially in baseball, which is (at least in my opinion) the most difficult sport.

Baseball, unlike any other sport, celebrates someone who accomplishes their task of hitting a round ball with a round stick four out of 10 times. Most would crucify a quarterback who completed an average of four-of-10 passes.

The sport creates more “what if” moments than any other form of competition. For a fan base that is still playing that card 60 years after some games in various sports, baseball is often a maddening experience.

Yes, there are questions on decisions. Van Horn knows that’s a gigantic part of baseball, too.

And there were mistakes made in the field and at the plate. That’s part of baseball, too.

“It was a good year,” Van Horn said later.

This Hogs team over-achieved from what a lot of folks were expecting back in February. Van Horn said it. Many ignored him saying and assumed another trip to Omaha, which turned out to be correct, and has become the expectation every year.

“I know there’s a lot of people back home disappointed, but probably like me, if they just take a step back and take a breath and kind of realize what we replaced and how we did after we replaced all those players, it was a pretty good year,” Van Horn said Monday afternoon.

The result against Texas Tech is crushing to some, disappointing to others.

But all Razorback fans should just take a step back, suck in a deep breath and realize it was a year that actually was better than most expected.

Next year will be here soon enough.

In the meantime there is football coming up with practices starting in about six weeks and SEC Media Days in about three weeks.

Yes, it’s that close.

Van Horn, Kjerstad, Martin after falling to Texas Tech, 5-4

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn, right fielder Heston Kjerstad and shortstop Casey Martin with the media after being eliminated from the College World Series on Monday.

Tadlock, players after beating Hogs to advance at Omaha

Texas Tech coach Tim Tadlock and his players recapping the 5-4 win over Arkansas on Monday in an elimination game at the College World Series in Omaha.

Red Raiders’ long ball knocks Hogs out of College World Series

OMAHA, Neb. — Arkansas fell victim to the home run ball Monday and was eliminated from the College World Series by Texas Tech, 5-4, inside TD Ameritrade Park.

The Razorbacks’ appearance in the College World Series caps the program’s 10th trip to Omaha, and its sixth under coach Dave Van Horn.

Arkansas ends the season with a 46-20 record, tying for the second-most wins in a season under Van Horn.

2019 College World Series (Day 3)

Game 1: Michigan 5, Texas Tech 3 | Box Score
Game 2: Florida State 1, Arkansas 0 | Box Score
Game 3: Vanderbilt 3, Louisville 1 | Box Score
Game 4: Mississippi State 5, Auburn 4 | Box Score
Game 5: Texas Tech 5, Arkansas 4 | Box Score

Sophomore Heston Kjerstad jumpstarted the Hog offense with a solo opposite-field home run in the second inning, giving the Razorbacks their first run of this year’s CWS.

Kjerstad now has 17 home runs this year, which ties him for 10th most in a single season in Arkansas history. Kjerstad now has 31 home runs in his two-year Razorback career, just two shy of the top-10 of the Arkansas all-time list.

Casey Martin also put together his third multi-hit performance in his last five games, going 2-for-5 with a double and a triple.

He helped put together the two-run third inning with an RBI triple, his fourth three-bagger of the year, and later scored on an RBI single by Matt Goodheart.

The Razorbacks got a solid start from Connor Noland, as he worked four innings with just four hits allowed and one walk, but the two-run home run by Warren were the only runs he allowed.

It was Noland’s fifth outing in his last six that he pitched four or more innings and 14th where he walked one or less.

What happened

After taking a 3-0 lead after three innings and starting pitcher Connor Noland rolling through his first three frames, the Red Raiders started to chip away, starting with a two-run home run by Cameron Warren in the fourth inning.

That was followed by solo home runs by Easton Murrell and Josh Jung, marking the sixth time this year the Arkansas pitching staff has given up three or more home runs in a game.

Arkansas tied the game in the top of the eighth thanks to a sacrifice fly from Jack Kenley. Dominic Fletcher worked a full-count walk, then ended up on third behind a single from Kjerstad.

After five pitches fouled off, Kenley lifted a fly ball to left field and Fletcher raced home to knot the game up at four.

Texas Tech starter Caleb Kilian seemed to handcuff the Arkansas lineup, giving up just three earned runs in seven innings and striking out nine, tying a career high.

He gave way to lefthander Dane Haveman in the eighth, who gave up the tying run.

However, in the bottom half of the inning, Tech countered with a two-out walk to Warren and a triple to the gap in right-center field from Cody Masters, pushing the Red Raiders back on top, 5-4.

The Razorbacks threatened in the ninth, as Jacob Nesbit was hit by the third pitch he saw, then a single from Christian Franklin put two on with nobody out.

Unfortunately, the Red Raiders were able to leave the duo stranded on the bases to put an end to Arkansas’ run in the College World Series.

Arkansas-Texas Tech game notes

• Saturday marked the third time Arkansas and Texas Tech had squared off in postseason play.

It was the second-straight year the two teams have faced each other in the College World Series, with the Razorbacks picking up the win, 7-4, in the 1-0 game.

• Arkansas moved to 5-3 in NCAA Tournament action this season. The Razorbacks swept the Fayetteville Regional, 3-0, and went 2-1 in the Fayetteville Super Regional.

Overall in postseason play, Arkansas is 6-5 this season.

• Arkansas is 15-20 in the College World Series and 4-10 in CWS elimination games.

• The Hogs are 88-69 (.561) all-time in the NCAA Tournament, including 24 tournament wins in the last six years.

• Heston Kjerstad hit a solo home run to left field in the second inning, his 17th of the season and third this postseason. His other two homers came against Central Connecticut State (May 31) and Ole Miss (June 10), both solo shots.

• Casey Martin ripped an RBI triple to left field in the third inning, his fourth of the year and first this postseason. His triple was the first by an Arkansas player at the College World Series since 1989 (Jim Calhoon vs. North Carolina).

• Connor Noland’s final line: 4.0 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 1 BB, 2 K – the 13th time in 20 starts Noland has pitched four or more innings, including five of the last six.

• With a single in the seventh inning, Trevor Ezell extended his hitting streak to nine games, including every game of the 2019 NCAA Tournament. This postseason, he is batting 17-of-37 (.315) with eight RBIs and eight runs scored.

• Casey Martin recorded his 26th multi-hit game behind a double and triple. He finished tied for the team-lead with Dominic Fletcher.

• Heston Kjerstad also posted two hits to move up to third this season in multi-hit performances with 24.

• Christian Franklin posted his 17th multi-hit game of the season after recording a pair of singles against the Red Raiders. He ranks seventh on the team in multi-hit performances this season. He was the only Razorback to have multi-hit games in both CWS contests.

Razorback quotables

“Well, obviously it was a tough loss. Pretty well-played game by both teams. For the most part, there really wasn’t too many mistakes. Just kind of who got the big hit and who didn’t. But just some big hits. Texas Tech took advantage of a couple of things, and tough loss, two tough losses here for us. Two one-run losses that really could have gone either way.” — Coach Dave Van Horn on the 5-4 loss to Texas Tech

“You know, just really proud of the team. Told them that after the game. Told them to walk out of there with their head high. We were real close to winning two games. We ended up losing two one-run games; kind of hard to swallow. But overall it was a really good year, getting a part of the Western Division championship and getting back here, just proud of them and appreciated the effort they gave us all year. Those guys showed up every day and worked hard, smiled a lot, and it made it fun to work with them. I just appreciate the effort.” — Van Horn on putting the season in perspective

“I thought we had an outstanding year, being counted out from the beginning. We bring in some new guys, Trevor Ezell did more than outstanding for us, and he’s a competitor. Without bringing guys in like that, true leaders for this team, I guess you just could say such a young team we have, that it shows these younger guys what it takes to get here. So they’ve experienced it now, and they know what it takes. We needed that, and I think we’ll be good if we can build off that.” — Casey Martin on how the year played out for Arkansas

“We had a spectacular year getting back here for the second year in a row, but it shows a lot about the incoming guys that came in and replaced a lot of the starters and experience we had from last season, and it took everyone on our whole roster to get us here, and it was just great to be back, and we’ll look back on the season and realize how good we were for the whole season, how good of an experience we had. But for now it’s obviously a little bitter once the season is over.” — Heston Kjerstad on the 2019 season for Arkansas

???? Monday Halftime Pod — Texas Tech preview

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Phil & Tye recap the loss against FSU and preview the Texas Tech game!

Bud Light Morning Rush: Monday

John & Tommy react to Game 1, Connor Noland on the bump today, interview Tom Murphy and more!

Hogs discover good pitching still needs some hits to produce a win

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Nothing in sports may be more frustrating for fans than watching their team come out on the short end of a 1-0 game.

It’s downright maddening for some.

Such was the case for Arkansas fans Saturday evening when starter Isaiah Campbell struck out 10 in seven innings and didn’t allow a single run. That’s good pitching.

But no runs scored cancels that out.

For Razorback fans, this game is one that will have the “what-if” meter pegged at maximum level. Some will spend more time worrying about what didn’t happen than what DOES happen, starting Monday afternoon.

The Hogs couldn’t get the ball to go in the right places when they had scoring chances.

“That’s kinda the way the game works,” Dave Van Horn said later.

It’s small consolation for some fans as frustration mounted with zero runs in Omaha in the last 18 innings they’ve played there.

Especially now that the margin for error is razor thin.

The Razorbacks play Texas Tech on Monday at 1 p.m. in a loser-goes-home game. They faced one last Monday against Ole Miss in the Super Regional and came through with a whopping 14-1 win.

Which is why Saturday’s lack of offense was puzzling to some, but really shouldn’t be.

Every time in Omaha is quite capable of beating any other team that’s there. It all depends on something nobody wants to mention by name — luck. You can almost rip the cover off the ball, but if it goes right to someone, well, it’s still an out.

That plagued the Hogs against the Seminoles.

“We hit some balls hard early at people,” Van Horn said. “Hit a couple of ball off the end of the bat that just happened to go right at them.”

Coaches say all the time, “that’s baseball.” That’s true.

This team is quite capable of putting up some big numbers against the Red Raiders. Starting pitcher Connor Noland is due for a solid outing after struggling against the Rebels last Sunday.

Part of it is he’s well-rested. Van Horn does have everybody available for this game that is, effectively, a game with the season on the line.

But he’s well aware the Greenwood freshman has responded from a bad outing with a good one this season.

Against Vanderbilt early in the season, Noland didn’t make it out of the first inning. He came back the next week against Mississippi State, not allowing a run in seven innings.

Part of it may be a hunch from Van Horn. As we’ve pointed out before, those tend to work out pretty well.

But as Hogs fans painfully discovered Saturday, you still need the good hitting when the pitching is solid.

And a little bit of luck.

Razorbacks hoping to stave off elimination against Texas Tech

OMAHA, Neb. — Arkansas looks to keep its College World Series run alive Monday against Texas Tech in the first elimination game of the week at 1 p.m. at TD Ameritrade Park.

Arkansas (46-19) is trying to bounce back from a tough 1-0 loss at the hands of Florida State on Saturday.

Right-hander Isaiah Campbell and left-hander Drew Parrish traded zeroes for eight innings before the Seminoles got one of the Razorback bullpen in the ninth.

It was Campbell’s first 10-strikeout performance of the NCAA Tournament and third-straight of seven or more innings.

ESPN will carry Monday’s game and the winner will advance to the next elimination round to face the loser of Michigan and Florida State.

Matchup: No. 5 Arkansas vs. No. 8 Texas Tech
TV: ESPN >> WatchESPNApp
Talent: Tom Hart (PXP), Chris Burke (Analyst), Ben McDonald (Analyst), Mike Rooney (Reporter)
Radio: ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs, 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home and the Razorback Sports Network from IMG
Probable Starters for Game Two: (ARK) RHP Connor Noland (3-5) vs. (TTU) RHP Caleb Kilian (8-3) or RHP Bryce Bonnin (6-1)

The Razorbacks last lost a CWS opener in 2015 when they fell to Virginia, 5-3.

The last time Arkansas lost its CWS opener and followed it up with a win was in 1989 when it lost to Wichita State, 3-2, and then defeated North Carolina, 7-3, in the elimination game.

Monday’s probable starter — RHP Connor Noland

Freshman right-hander Connor Noland will get the nod for Monday’s elimination game against Texas Tech.

Noland suffered a small hiccup last week in the NCAA Super Regional against Ole Miss, making it only one inning with four runs allowed and two home runs.

However, Noland has gone five or more innings in five of his last eight starts and has been one of Arkansas’ most efficient over that same span.

Noland has walked only two batters since May 5, amassing a 7.00 strikeout-to-walk ratio.

Man on a mission — Trevor Ezell

Arkansas first baseman Trevor Ezell’s offense has been on another level since the start of the NCAA Tournament.

Over the course of seven NCAA Tournament games, Ezell is hitting .500 (16-of-32) with six doubles and two home runs along with eight RBIs.

He’s also slugging .875, which leads the team and has only struck out five times. Counting his 10 games prior to the NCAA Tournament, Ezell was only hitting .225 with 16 strikeouts.

We meet again

Monday’s game between the Razorbacks and Red Raiders will be the fourth meeting between the two teams in the last four seasons and second-straight in the College World Series.

Arkansas met Texas Tech once in the regular season last year, winning 5-1, and later in Omaha in a winner’s bracket game with the Hogs winning, 7-4.

In those two games against Texas Tech, Dominic Fletcher was 6-for-9 (.667) with a double, a home run and six RBIs.