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Fayetteville

Hogs should also play Arkansas State, UCA … at home in Fayetteville

With the announcement Wednesday the Razorbacks will host Arkansas-Pine Bluff in football a couple of years down the road they might as well set games with the other schools.

And, yes, that includes the community college in Jonesboro. The UA should have been playing them for years except Frank Broyles was scared to death losing once every 20 years was somehow going to affect the Razorbacks.

New athletics director Hunter Yurachek seems to have a pretty good respect for history while not letting it hold you back from improvement.

It was a ridiculous paranoid position because if it did have an effect, then the problem could be easily fixed with a personnel change. None of those are getting in the SEC which will dwarf anything they will ever be able to do financially. That’s not a knock on them, but simply the numbers.

While they’re at it, might as well throw in a game with Central Arkansas, too.

The guess here is that might not be as far-fetched of an idea as you might have previously thought.

It will likely — and should — happen in every sport.

Paranoid folks in Fayetteville for decades have held the misguided view that playing them might somehow elevate them to a dangerous stature, which means they obviously can’t do basic math with a modest amount of forethought.

Think about it … if one of these schools beats the Hogs they aren’t going to miraculously start out-recruiting them in any sport or getting close to revenue. Little Rock’s coach said after the Trojans beat up on the Hogs at Baum-Walker they couldn’t compete in recruiting even after a 17-7 win earlier this year.

Playing the Hogs will do nothing but help the smaller schools from a financial standpoint, which could benefit the UA if you follow the money. The UA could even argue for a little bigger piece of the state budget appropriations because they are kicking back to the other schools.

But let’s not get carried away with this.

If the state schools want to play the Hogs, well, load up and come to Fayetteville. No, the Hogs should not play Arkansas State in Little Rock. They should never play another game there, but they’ve got to go through the charade for a few more years because some can’t drop the romantic notion that dilapidated War Memorial Stadium is fit for an SEC game.

But, like UAPB is doing in 2021 and 2024, come on up to Fayetteville. When the fans of the Golden Lions and Little Rock came here for baseball earlier in the year, it was an event for the fans that came to Baum-Walker.

When the Razorbacks play the other state schools they should keep the biggest share of the money. It’s probably not a wild guess they will make more as the visiting team in Fayetteville than they would make for a home game.

Yes, I’m aware that in one column I’ve now ignited the passions of people on the Hogs-ASU playing each other AND the whole War Memorial thing.

I’m in favor, though, of playing every college in the state of Arkansas they can schedule (and if they could play DII schools I would encourage that). It’s a simple matter to me that, quite frankly, I’m surprised the state legislature hasn’t jumped squarely in the middle of.

Broyles took care of that decades ago with his political prowess and it still carries some weight, but a lot of things have changed over the last 50 years … especially in Northwest Arkansas.

More importantly, though, is the economic consideration.

This year the Hogs have home games against Portland State, Colorado State, San Jose State and Western Kentucky, which is the closest of those opponents (591 miles away from Razorback Stadium).

The Hogs’ band will be bigger than any of those visiting fans’ groups.

Money is the ultimate reason why the UA should consider playing every in-state school at least once a year (it probably should be two games, but baby steps first).

ASU, UCA and UAPB will bring more fans than any of the teams coming in this year. Safest bet for 2021 is Golden Lions’ fans will buy every ticket they can get. The same would be true for the other state schools.

Don’t throw out the argument the Hogs get nothing from playing these schools unless you can answer one simple question:

What do they get playing any of the schools on the schedule the last two years?

Photos from Arkansas’ win over Grambling State in North Little Rock

Photos by Ted McClenning | HitThatLine.com

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Razorbacks schedule home games against Golden Lions in ’21, ’24

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas is set to play an in-state school on the football field for the first time in more than 65 years when the Razorbacks host UAPB in 2021.

The two University of Arkansas system schools will meet in Fayetteville on October 23, 2021 and again on August 31, 2024.

The games against the Golden Lions will represent the first games against an in-state school for the gridiron Hogs since 1944 when Arkansas defeated Arkansas-Monticello, then known as Arkansas A&M, 41-0 in Fayetteville in head coach Glen Rose’s first season.

“As the flagship institution within our state, scheduling games with our sister institutions is an opportunity for us to enhance interest in college football throughout our state while supporting other schools within the University of Arkansas system,” Hogs’ athletics director Hunter Yurachek said. “We have already witnessed the anticipation these meetings have created in a number of our other sports. This new football series between Arkansas and UAPB will only add to the excitement for these matchups.”

The Razorbacks began playing University of Arkansas system schools in the fall when the baseball team traveled to Little Rock to take on the Trojans in a fall baseball game.

The two teams followed up with a regular season game in early April at Baum Stadium with the Hogs also taking on UAPB in mid-April.

The Razorbacks have also met the Golden Lions on the softball field and tennis courts this academic year.

“We’re excited to further expand our connection with the University of Arkansas in another historic competition,” said UAPB athletics director Melvin Hines. “This matchup in football creates a significant opportunity to grow the UAPB brand within the state as well as nationally while strengthening our overall University System.”

Never really in doubt, Hogs blast Tigers in North Little Rock, 17-3

NORTH LITTLE ROCK — A near-record crowd of 10,463 were on hand to see Arkansas pouns our 17 euna on 15 hits and blast Grambling State, 17-3, on Tuesday night at Dickey-Stephens Park.

It’s the final non-conference game of the regular season.

The 17 runs scored by Arkansas (35-11) is the largest run output by the Hogs in 10 games played at Dickey Stephens Park since 2010 and is the second-most runs scored in a game this year.

Trevor Ezell. PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Redshirt senior Trevor Ezell went 3-for-3 in the game with three RBIs and three walks. It was his 16th multi-hit game of the season and eighth three-hit game.

He also tied the school record for runs scored in a game by crossing the plate six times, tying him with Jeremy Jackson and Todd Zacher, who each scored six runs in a game in 1997 and 1981, respectively.

Ezell was one of five Razorbacks to record a multi-hit game on Tuesday. Casey Martin, Heston Kjerstad, Dominic Fletcher and Curtis Washington, Jr., all reached via hit twice in the game.

Martin led all RBI totals as he drove in four, two off an inside-the-park home run in the fourth inning. It was Martin’s fourth game of four or more RBIs this year.

After a shaky first inning, sophomore Kole Ramage settled in and looked good for four innings, giving up only two earned runs and scattering five hits, while striking out a career-high seven on 86 pitches.

Arkansas pitcher Kole Ramage came to the mound replacing Jake Reindl and kept the Beavers at bay. PHOTO BY JAMIE VARNELL

He was followed by Marshall Denton, Elijah Trest, Collin Taylor and Jacob Burton for the final five innings. The four-pitcher combo allowed just one hit the rest of the way and struck out a combined eight.

Six-run first inning sets tone

Grambling State had taken a one-run lead going into the bottom of the first inning, but the Razorback offense took back that lead pretty quickly in the bottom half.

Arkansas batted around to score six runs on just two hits as Grambling starter D’Quan Matthews struggled with command, walking three and making it just 0.1 innings with four runs allowed on no hits.

Arkansas didn’t get its first hit until Jordan McFarland hit a slow roller down the third-base line that he beat to first. Zack Plunkett followed with a blast into the left field berm for a three-run home run.

Martin races around for inside-the-park home run

Sophomore Casey Martin tried to leg out a triple in the second inning after knocking a hit down the third-base line, but was thrown out at third base on a good throw from the outfield.

In his next at-bat in the fourth inning, he made sure he not only made it to third, but got a little extra. Martin smashed an easy triple to right-centerfield gap and never stopped running, scoring standing up for his second inside-the-park home run this year.

His last one came on March 10 against Louisiana Tech and he now has 10 home runs for the season, three in his last eight games.

Razorback quotables
“Casey’s (Martin) done a really good job the last two weeks of raising his batting average because he’s hitting the ball the other way. He’s staying through the middle of the field and that ball was really hit hard to right center.” — Coach Dave Van Horn on Casey Martin’s approach as of late and his inside-the-park home run

“Just trying to hit the other way and take the ball the other way. They’ve been throwing a lot outside and I really struggled with that last year. I’m kind of taking that approach now.” — Casey Martin on what he’s done differently with his approach

“It’s definitely fun to be back in this kind of atmosphere, especially with a lot of fans that don’t get to come out. It kind of gives them a chance to come out here and watch. It’s definitely fun. It gets me excited.” — Martin on getting to play close to home (Lonoke, Ark.)

“It’s good to be back close to home where I graduated high school. I had a lot of friends in the stands, so it was good to see some of them.” — Trevor Ezell on getting to play close to hometown (Bryant, Ark.)

“I think it’s a great spot. We’re approaching the end of SEC play and we’re hot. There’s no reason… We feel like we can carry that out through the rest of the season.” — Ezell on if the team might be peaking too early

Up next

Arkansas heads to Lexington, Kentucky and will start a three-game series with the Kentucky Wildcats on Friday at Kentucky Proud Park.

First pitch is slated for 5:30 p.m. CT on SEC Network+.

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Receivers will be best playmakers for Razorbacks in long, long time

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Others can say what they want, but the biggest problem for Arkansas’ offense for the last seven years has been the lack of playmakers.

In college football these days you better have the guys that can make plays with the ball in their hands if you want to win games.

We’re not talking about one or two plays that have been made, but consistently getting a third-down catch on a slant for 5 yards when you need 4 to move the chains as you get hammered by a safety or linebacker.

When Joe Adams, Jarius Wright and Greg Childs left in 2011 they were the best offensive playmakers in a while and even The Great Playcaller didn’t have an answer on hand … even before he flew through the handlebars over by Elkins.

They had guys with abilities but lacked the knack to make THE play WHEN it had to be made. Let’s face it, some in that group made stepping out of bounds a yard short of the first down on third down an art form.

The group on hand this year may be better than that one.

While C.J. O’Grady was the most consistent threat last season after getting his act together after the first three games, the wide receivers were only consistently inconsistent.

Based on what we heard in limited doses at practices three days a week, wide receivers coach Justin Stepp was apparently on the verge of blowing a gasket half the time.

It wasn’t surprising to see several in that group leave. You got the idea there wasn’t a lot of objections to them vacating.

Watching that crew I kept remembering what Jimmy Johnson used to say starting with his first season in Dallas back in 1989 (and has often repeated), “hit me in the head with a hammer the next time I sign a dumb player.”

You get the sneaky feeling Chad Morris feels the same way.

That’s why there are new guys coming that are smarter and better than what was here last year. By smarter that’s not even talking about their grades, but how smart they are in football.

We saw some of it in the spring with Trey Knox and Shamar Jackson. Morris personally spent a lot of practice time personally working with Koilan Jackson, who hasn’t played much since getting to Fayetteville, a lot of which was due to a knee injury his freshman year.

As a freshman last year, Mike Woods showed flashes of what he could do in a season where chaos might have been an upgrade at times for an offense that had big games offset by some equally bad outings in the other direction.

It will be better this year.

Treylon Burks is the highest-rated incoming wide receiver since Springdale’s Damian Williams in 2006. The only receiver rated higher was tight end Hunter Henry in 2013 and his little brother, Hudson, is not far behind and coming in this year, too.

The group that this Hogs’ staff rounded up coming into this year is rated higher overall in the 247Sports.com composite rankings than any group since they started keeping up with such things.

Arkansas’ entire football history has shown the overwhelming majority of great teams also had great playmakers, heavily weighted at the receiver positions.

Don’t believe it?

Ask any of the guys on the 1964 team that claimed a version of the national championship if they would have been able to get there without Jim Lindsey, Bobby Crockett and Jerry Lamb catching passes in clutch situations.

That year everyone likes to talk about Ken Hatfield’s punt return against Texas being THE play in that game, but that’s subjective.

To me the biggest play came late and it was back-to-back passes from Fred Marshall to Crockett (who still may be the best player to ever come out of Dermott) on the same playcall in the huddle.

Marshall, not really the greatest passer in school history, threw the first one outside and low and Crockett caught it off the top of his shoes.

Two plays later the same play was called in the huddle, but when Crockett made his break the Texas defensive back came up hard, both read it correctly and Marshall (after nearly fainting when he saw how open Bobby was) threw it good enough for a 34-yard score that ended up being the difference in that magical season.

In the Cotton Bowl against Nebraska, Lindsey made a catch on the game-winning drive that Marshall had no idea he could make. Jim basically put his hands up and made the catch over his shoulder almost without looking.

A lot of fans miss or forget all that. They tend to put all the blame on the quarterback, but in reality the wide receiver has to be reading the same thing with the defensive backs.

It’s nothing really new, but you got the idea last year that may have been a big problem with the Hogs’ offense.

Nothing was working and you wonder if that’s why there are so many new faces.

Knowing how to make those reads is why this receivers’ group is going to be better. Being a considerable improvement physically, the guess here is the technical improvement is going to be apparent immediately.

Why?

Because every one of these guys have been making the same reads for years and doing it well. There may be a new wrinkle or two, but every one of these guys comes out of an offense that did the same basic things.

Now they just have to do it at a higher level.

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Missed opportunities cost Razorbacks in game three loss at A&M

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Arkansas dropped the series finale at Texas A&M, 4-1, on Monday night at Davis Diamond.

The rubber match cruised into the third inning scoreless but the game swung the Aggies’ way in both the top half and bottom half of the frame.

A pair of two-out singles from Hannah McEwen and Sydney Parr put Razorbacks on first and second but the pair were left stranded when Ashley Diaz flew out to center field.

The Aggies, however, did not miss their opportunity to score in the bottom of the inning. Kelbi Fortenberry’s double scored the game’s first two runs before Arkansas starter Mary Haff could get Arkansas out of the inning.

The Razorbacks bounced back in the fourth to put runners on thanks to singles from Danielle Gibson and Kayla Green. A pinch hit single from Linnie Malkin looked to put the Hogs on the board but pinch runner Sam Torres was thrown out at the plate to end the threat.

The Aggies tacked on two insurance runs in the sixth to push their lead to four runs. Arkansas mounted a seventh-inning rally to score a run on Gibson’s bases loaded, RBI-single and put the tying run aboard before Katie Warrick popped up to first to end the game.

McEwen led the way for the Razorbacks with three hits from the leadoff spot in the order with Gibson adding a pair to the team’s eight hit total. Haff took the loss allowing two runs on three hits over 3.2 innings.

Up next

Arkansas will return home to Bogle Park for the final SEC series of the season. The Razorbacks will host the Tigers for a three-game series beginning Friday evening (May 3) at 6 p.m.

Saturday’s contest will kick off at 5 p.m. and be televised on ESPNU, while Friday and Sunday’s games will be available via live stream on the SEC Network+.

After the weekend series against the Tigers, Arkansas will hit the road and return to College Station for the SEC Tournament, set to start on Wednesday, May 8.

Hogs face Grambling on Tuesday in annual trip to North Little Rock

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas heads into the final non-conference game of the 2019 season with a three-game winning streak against Grambling State on Tuesday at Dickey-Stephens Park in North Little Rock.

First pitch is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. With no television, you can hear the game on ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

The Razorbacks (34-11, 15-6 SEC) are coming off a big sweep of No. 18 Tennessee last week, their second-straight conference series sweep and now hold a two-game lead in the SEC Western Division over LSU, Ole Miss and Mississippi State.

Tuesday’s game with the Tigers will mark the 10th-straight year that the Razorbacks have played a game in North Little Rock during the regular season.

The Hogs are 8-1 in games played in Dickey-Stephens Park, the minor league home of the Double-A affiliate Arkansas Travelers, with the lone loss coming in 2015 to Memphis.

This will also be the second-straight year Arkansas has played Grambling State in its annual game. Arkansas won last year’s contest, 7-6.

Sophomore Kole Ramage will head to the mound for the Razorbacks, making his second start in as many weeks.

Ramage got the start last Tuesday against Northwestern State and gave up just one run in five innings with five strikeouts. Ramage is currently tied for the team lead with seven wins and has given up just two runs in his last seven innings of work.

Follow live
There will be no television broadcast for Tuesday’s game, but fans can listen to the radio call via the Razorback Gameday app and locally on ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home as Phil Elson and Bubba Carpenter will have the call.

Pregame coverage begins 30 minutes prior to first pitch. There will also be a live radio link available on ArkansasRazorbacks.com.

Important Links
LIVE STATS | LISTEN

Probable Starters
(ARK) RHP Kole Ramage (7-1, 4.91 ERA, 37 K, 16 BB) vs. (GSU) RHP D’Quan Matthews (0-1, 6.17 ERA, 15 K, 13 BB)

Razorback Prime Nine

• Arkansas will play its final non-conference game of the regular season on Tuesday against Grambling State inside Dickey-Stephens Park in North Little Rock, Arkansas. This is the 10th-straight year the Hogs have played a game in North Little Rock.

• The Razorbacks are 8-1 in games played in Dickey-Stephens Park, the only loss coming in 2015 to Memphis. Tuesday’s game will be the second-straight year the Hogs and Tigers have played in North Little Rock.

• Arkansas won its second-straight SEC series by way of sweep last week, taking three-straight from Tennessee, its third sweep in conference play. The Hogs have won seven-straight conference games, it’s longest streak since 2010.

• Arkansas is hitting .366 as a team during its seven-game conference winning streak and averaging 10.1 runs per game during that stretch. Christian Franklin, Heston Kjerstad and Casey Martin are all hitting over .400 during that span.

• Freshman right-hander Connor Noland worked 7+ innings for the second-straight week after going seven innings against Tennessee last week. He struck out a career-high 10 batters and gave up only two hits with one unearned run.

• Sophomore outfielder Heston Kjerstad was named one of the National Players of the Week by Collegiate Baseball on Monday after hitting .450 last week with three home runs. He now has 12 homers on the year, two shy of his total from 2018.

• Casey Martin and Dominic Fletcher lead the SEC in doubles heading into Tuesday’s game with Grambling State. The duo has hit three doubles in the last six games and has 18 for the year.

• Kole Ramage will make his second start in as many weeks on Tuesday in North Little Rock. Ramage is tied for the team lead with seven wins this season and has given up just two runs in his last seven innings of work.

• Redshirt senior Trevor Ezell eclipsed the 300-career hit mark over the weekend after notching seven hits in three games against Tennessee. Ezell had three hits in each of the first two games against the Volunteers and now has 303 hits for his career.

Up next

Arkansas hits the road for its next SEC series, going to Lexington, Kentucky, to face the Wildcats for a three-game series starting on Friday at 5:30 p.m.