Fassi captures Honda Sport award for golf; finalist for top woman athlete

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas’ Maria Fassi won the Honda Sport Award for Golf, announced Thursday by Chris Voelz, executive director of THE Collegiate Women Sports Award.

With her win, Fassi is now a finalist for the Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year and the 2019 Honda Cup, which will be presented live in Los Angeles on June 24.

The show will air on CBS Sports Network at 8 p.m.

Fassi is just the second Razorback ever to win a Honda Sport Award, and the first to do so in nearly 20 years.

She joins Amy Yoder-Begley, who won Cross Country’s Sport Award back in 2000. Arkansas Women’s Golf Head Coach Shauna Taylor has produced several finalists for the award, including Gabriela Lopez (2015), Emily Tubert (2012), Kelli Shean (2011) and Stacey Lewis (2007 & 2008), but Fassi becomes the first winner in Arkansas Women’s Golf history.

“For Maria to win this award, it says a lot about her impact on the college game and on our program here at Arkansas,” Taylor said. “From the day I met Maria, I knew she was going to change the game and accomplish so many amazing things.

“She has been a model student-athlete on and off the golf course; winning the Honda Award is just further proof of that.  I am so proud of the way she has led our team, but I am even more proud of the woman she has become.”

The Pachuca, Hidalgo, Mexico, native was spectacular in her final collegiate season, winning both the SEC and NCAA Individual Titles in her last two events played.

Fassi was also the runner-up at the inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur in April.

Due to her masterful performance in her final season in Fayetteville, Fassi won Ping WGCA Player of the Year honors, while also becoming the first golfer ever to win back-to-back ANNIKA awards.

The Honda Sport Award has been presented annually by the CWSA for the past 43 years to the top women athletes in 12 NCAA-sanctioned sports.

All nominees were chosen through a combination of their NCAA Championship finishes and national golf rankings.

Cronin not focused on draft selection, but advancing in NCAA

Razorbacks’ reliever Matt Cronin was taken in the fourth round of the MLB draft Tuesday, but is focused more on finishing this season with the championship as the goal.

Kostyshock on being selected by Colorado on second day of draft

Razorbacks pitcher Jacob Kostyshock on Wednesday after being selected in the eighth round of the MLB draft by the Rockies, previewing Super Regional.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Thursday

John & Tommy discuss Jimmy Buffett weekend, changes in college basketball, interview Richard Davenport and more!

Scroggins on being picked by Red Sox in MLB draft

Hogs pitcher Cody Scroggins talked Wednesday morning about his journey from infielder to Tommy John surgery to pitcher and being taken in the ninth round of the draft Tuesday.

Fletcher briefly Wednesday morning on Diamondbacks, Rebels

Arkansas center fielder Dominic Fletcher talked about being drafted by Arizona in the MLB draft and looked ahead to the Super Regional matchup with Ole Miss.

Criswell’s commitment to Tar Heels isn’t any type of warning

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Earlier this week, Jacolby Criswell of Morrilton gave Mack Brown at North Carolina his commitment … and many of the Razorbacks’ Lunatic Fringe went into orbit.

Relax and come back down to earth. It’ll be okay.

Some will complain that losing the top-rated quarterback in Arkansas is a warning sign. Nothing against Criswell, but life goes on and in this day and age that doesn’t mean he’s gone forever.

The way players transfer these days, who knows what’s going to happen over the next few years, especially since Criswell’s not the highest-rated quarterback committed to Brown.

Yes, Brown landed Vince Young and rode him to a national title, but he also couldn’t land some other highly-rated quarterbacks and all this transfer stuff started after he left the Longhorns.

In recruiting coaches win some and lose some. Every coach. At every school.

The days are gone that the Hogs are going to get every player in the state. The truth is they never have gotten every single player. Remember, Clyde Scott from Smackover went to the Naval Academy and Fayetteville looked a lot better when he met a girl from Lake Village.

Even Frank Broyles lost players out of state. Chuck Latourette from Jonesboro went to Rice in 1963 and was All-Southwest Conference and All-American as a defensive back and return specialist. He led the NFL in kickoff returns in 1968.

Ken Hatfield lost several players in 1984 and 1985, just months after taking the Arkansas job. Those included MarK Hutson out of Fort Smith Northside, Eric Mitchell from Pine Bluff and one Keith Jackson out of Little Rock Parkview.

The point of all this is, quite simply, no Arkansas coach is going to get every player in the state and never will. While fans think it’s an unforgivable sin for any Hogs’ coach to lose a player out of state, the fact of the matter is they keep the overwhelming majority of the best players in Arkansas every year.

Probably the only time there’s really room for criticism is if the Razorbacks don’t recruit a highly-touted player. That didn’t happen in a few cases during a time when some remarkably high academic requirements eliminated some pretty good players that went out of state and onto lucrative pro careers.

That wasn’t the case here.

Chad Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock recruited Criswell. He just made a decision to commit to North Carolina.

It’s not about the other players on campus. Brown earlier landed a commitment from four-star dual threat quarterback Malik Hornsby from Fort Bend Marshall in Missouri City, Texas. He will face competition in North Carolina.

Many think Chandler Morris will join his dad in Fayetteville when he finishes up his senior season at Highland Park, but that decision won’t come until later in the summer (according to Chandler in recent interviews).

They also have an offer to four-star quarterback Haynes King in Longview, Texas.

But remember, it’s a crowded quarterback room for the Hogs already. They have eight in there now with only room for a couple more.

Everybody has a lot of quarterbacks on the roster these days. Injuries are part of it because the numbers show you don’t go through a season with one quarterback healthy for all 12 games. Ask Nick Saban if he’s glad he had Jalen Hurts behind Tua Tagovaila last season.

Some will leave for whatever reason.

But right now Criswell won’t be coming to Fayetteville.

And we won’t know if that’s a big deal or not for a few years.

???? Wednesday Halftime Pod — Featuring Bill King

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Phil & Tye celebrate the Udder Tuggers, interview Bill King, and more!

Kenley on staying with Hogs in utility role, getting drafted Tuesday

Hogs second baseman Jack Kenley was a utility player before moving into a starting role this year and talked Wednesday morning about it paying off with his selection by Detroit.

Kenley has made one of the biggest jumps of a position player on this year’s Razorbacks team, hitting .324 over 61 games with 12 home runs and 50 RBIs.

Over his previous two seasons, Kenley combined to hit just .190, but now has career-bests in average, runs scored (53), hits (71), doubles (10), triples (4), walks (40), home runs and RBIs.

This year, Kenley is second on the team with 23 multi-hit games and third with 13 multi-RBI games.

He’s also second on the team in home runs after not hitting one in his freshman or sophomore seasons.

Van Horn on Super Regional with Rebels, players being drafted

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn talked with the media Wednesday morning previewing the NCAA Super Regional matchup with Ole Miss and players drafted by major league teams.

Campbell on decision to return to Razorbacks for this season

Redshirt junior right-handed pitcher Isaiah Campbell was the second Razorbacks taken in the 2019 MLB first-year player draft Monday night.

Campbell was taken by Seattle, No. 76 overall.

Campbell is the sixth pitcher since 2013.

Arkansas’ previous top picks in the last two drafts were right-hander Trevor Stephan, who went in the third round to the New York Yankees in 2017 as the 92nd overall pick and Blaine Knight, who went in 2018 to the Baltimore Orioles in the third round as the 84th pick.

Campbell was selected in last year’s draft as a redshirt sophomore by the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim (24th, No. 721), but elected to come back to Fayetteville for his fourth year and has had one of the biggest jumps of any pitcher in the nation.

The Olathe, Kansas, native has racked up an 11-1 record this year and has helped the Hogs into their second-straight NCAA Super Regionals, their eighth appearance in supers in school history.

He recently was named an All-American by Collegiate Baseball Magazine and showed his All-American stuff in the NCAA Regional last week with a career-high eight-inning, one-run performance against TCU to put the Hogs into the regional final.

Campbell has racked up a team-best 2.27 ERA among Hog pitchers that have thrown 40 or more innings and has struck out 108 batters over 103 innings, which are all career-bests.

He topped the 100-strikeout mark during his start in the SEC Tournament and is now sitting ninth all-time on the Arkansas single-season charts with 108 strikeouts.

Throughout his career, Campbell has made 48 appearances on the mound since 2016, 39 being starts. He has a 3.29 ERA in 205 innings and has held opponents to a .232 batting average.

Last week, in his start against TCU in the regional, Campbell reached 200 strikeouts in his career, becoming the sixth Razorback under Van Horn with 200 or more strikeouts in a career.