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Cronin, Kjerstad, Martin all named to watch list for ‘Golden Spikes’ award

DURHAM, N.C. — Sophomores Heston Kjerstad and Casey Martin, as well as junior reliever Matt Cronin were among 55 players on the 2019 USA Baseball Golden Spikes Award watch list this week.

The award is presented to the top amateur player in the country.

All three Razorbacks were recently named to the Preseason All-SEC First Team and have each been named to numerous preseason All-America teams. Arkansas leads all schools on the preseason watch list with three selections, while Auburn, Baylor, Elon, Florida, Florida State, NC State, Oregon State, Stanford and UCLA each boast a pair of athletes represented as well.

As a conference, the SEC leads the way with 13 representatives, while the Pac-12 Conference garnered 10 selections, the Atlantic Coast Conference claims nine and the Big 12 Conference has five.

Just four years ago, former Razorback Andrew Benintendi won the 38th Golden Spikes Award, joining Philip Stidham as the second Razorback to ever be named a finalist for the prestigious award.

After winning the 2018 SEC Freshman of the Year award, Kjerstad comes into his sophomore season as one of the most highly touted players in the nation. Kjerstad was named a freshman All-American by Collegiate Baseball and the NCBWA, while also making the All-SEC Second Team and the SEC All-Freshman Team.

The Amarillo, Texas native started all 69 games for the Hogs in left field and finished second on the team with a .332 batting average, while leading with 87 hits, 14 home runs and 58 RBIs. His hit total, home runs and RBIs were all Arkansas freshman records.

As for Martin, he practically matched Kjerstad’s numbers as he led the team with a .345 average, an average that also led all freshmen in the SEC. He was named to the All-SEC Second Team and SEC All-Freshman Team at the end of the regular season and was tabbed a freshman All-American by the NCBWA and Collegiate Baseball Newspaper as well.

Martin was a key part in Arkansas’ run to their ninth College World Series appearance last year as he led all Razorbacks with a .352 batting average in the NCAA Tournament, including a .357 clip in the CWS. He totaled 10 of his 19 postseason hits in Omaha and made the CWS All-Tournament Team.

On the mound, Cronin returns as one of the top relievers in the nation after setting a UA single-season record with 14 saves. The save total tied for the second-most in the SEC and was the 14th most in the nation.

Over his 48.1 innings, Cronin struck out 59 batters, which was the sixth-most on the staff and he held opponents to a .154 batting average, which was the lowest on the team for the second-consecutive season.

USA Baseball will announce the finalists on May 29 and fan voting will open at GoldenSpikesAward.com concurrently and will remain open through June 10.

The winner of the 42nd Golden Spikes Award will be named on June 14.

Arkansas will open the 2019 season against Eastern Illinois on Feb. 15 at Baum Stadium.

Neighbors won’t be watching any film of surprising loss at LSU

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors previewed Sunday afternoon’s matchup with Auburn at Bud Walton Arena, but won’t be looking at the loss to the Tigers on Thursday night.

Haff, three teammates named to ‘Softball America’ Top 100 softball players

DURHAM, N.C. — With the start of the 2019 season on the horizon, four Razorbacks find themselves on Softball America’s Top 100 Player Ranking: sophomores Mary Haff, Hannah McEwen and transfer Danielle Gibson, and junior transfer Ryan Jackson.

Haff was the highest ranked player for Arkansas, coming in at number 18. The sophomore recently earned a spot on the All-SEC Preseason team and was listed as part of USA Softball’s Top-50 Watch List for Player of the Year.

The honor is added to Haff’s already impressive list of awards, which include Schutt Sports/NFCA Division I National Freshman of the Year Top-Three Finalist, NFCA All-South Region Second Team, SEC All-Tournament Team, All-SEC Second Team, SEC All-Freshman Team and three-time SEC Freshman of the Week.

Coming in at number 40, McEwen was only one of three players to start all 59 games of the 2018 season. McEwen led Arkansas in multiple offensive categories, including batting average, on base percentage, runs scored, RBI and hits. McEwen’s 57 RBI set a new Razorback single-season record.

Already garnering recognition in the cardinal and white, Arizona State transfer Gibson shined as a freshman for the Sun Devils. She had 16 multi-hit games, including two games in which she recorded multiple home runs.

After a stellar freshman season, Gibson was one of three freshmen to be named to the All-PAC-12 First Team in 2018, in addition to be named to the All-PAC-12 Freshman team.

Rounding out the Razorbacks in the ranks, Jackson begins her first season at Arkansas after playing her first two years at Bethune-Cookman.

As a two-time MEAC Player of the Year,  Jackson led the league in on-base percentage (.467), RBI (50), runs scored (54), total bases (127) and home runs (17) as a sophomore. Her 17 dingers stands as a single-season record at Bethune-Cookman.

Connor would be better off sticking with baseball for Razorbacks

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So far, so good for Arkansas freshman pitcher Connor Noland.

If the preseason is any indication, he may have a successful freshman season on the diamond, which could make him think hard about his football future.

As you know, the Greenwood native is also a UA quarterback. That’s not necessarily a title of distinction these days and frankly the Razorbacks quarterback room is jumbled.

Hogs coach Chad Morris brought his former signal caller at SMU, Ben Hicks, in as a graduate transfer for insurance. He presumably will be the starter with Noland and fellow redshirt freshman John Steven Jones and others competing for backup time.

Hicks’ presence is exactly why if Noland shows baseball promise, he may be wise to walk away from football. Morris is investing in a player that can help him for one season. A season that most likely has a ceiling of 6-6 and could have a basement of 4-8.

The point is, Hicks won’t take Arkansas to great heights. There are too many missing pieces. This is not a team that is 6-6 currently and needs a missing piece to rise to another level.

It makes much more sense to invest in a younger quarterback such as Noland. Let him start next year and as he and the team grow, prepare to make a major climb in 2020. With Hicks starting next year, Noland would have another year to learn the offense and basically use Hicks as a tutor, but he wouldn’t get real game action that he needs to grow and develop.

The good news is Noland played this year and still qualified as a redshirt under the new NCAA rules. So, if he did sit behind Hicks he’d still have three years of eligibility.

Why is Morris so interested in Hicks? I assume because he thinks he has the best chance of all of the quarterbacks to win immediately.

After his 2-10 debut, it is easy to see that Morris and Co. feel a great deal of pressure. Someone on The Hill needs to reassure him that he is going to have at least four years to fix the dumpster fire that Bret Bielema left behind.

There is no quick fix to this situation and it doesn’t seem like a graduate transfer quarterback is the solution, but desperation it appears has set in. It’s also important to note that graduate transfers Nick Starkel (Texas A&M) and Josh Jackson (Virginia Tech) are all considering Arkansas.

That would complicate matters even more.

Contrast football to baseball where Noland has earned the right to play immediately on a team that is ranked in the Top 20 by most polls.

UA coach Dave Van Horn has a solid nucleus returning with high expectations but needs to fill some holes. He is looking for Noland to fill those holes either in the rotation or out of the bullpen.

There is no question Van Horn wants Noland to play immediately if he’s ready, which in preseason workouts it looks like he is.

So, if the baseball season is a success, why waste time with the uncertainty of football? Morris says publicly he supports Noland playing baseball, but maybe the interest in graduate transfers is because Noland is trying to play both sports.

If Noland knew he was the clear-cut starter, would he play baseball?

There’s a ton of uncertainty and potential for big developments in the spring. Look for at least some of it to clear up by June when baseball season ends and summer football workouts begin.

Razorbacks’ slow start, LSU’s fast start combine for whopping 71-34 loss

BATON ROUGE, La. — A sluggish start in Baton Rouge saw Arkansas women’s basketball team fall 71-34 in Southeastern Conference action at LSU.

The Razorbacks (16-8, 5-5 SEC) started the game in a zone defense and LSU’s quick passing got the Tigers (13-8, 4-5 SEC) open looks. LSU shot 55 percent in the first half as Arkansas fell behind 36-10 at the break.

Uncharacteristic turnovers took away important possessions as the Razorbacks had 13 miscues in the first 20 minutes.

Arkansas had a spark to start the third quarter with a 7-0 run that saw LSU turn the ball over five times. The deficit, however, was too much to overcome for the road team.

Chelsea Dungee finished with a team-best 14 points and Malica Monk added 12 points for Arkansas. The Razorbacks finished 0-for-10 from distance, the first time since 2013 that Arkansas did not make a 3-point field goal.

Notes

• Arkansas Starters: Alexis Tolefree, Malica Monk, Kiara Williams, Jailyn Mason, Chelsea Dungee

• Arkansas had eight first quarter turnovers.

• Five first quarter and second quarter point are a season-low for the Razorbacks.

• The halftime deficit, 26 points (36-10) is the most of the season.

• Chelsea Dungee scored in double figures for the 21st time this year.

• Malica Monk scored in double figures for the 19th time this year.

• It was only the fourth time of the season Arkansas had 15+ turnovers.

• Arkansas did not make a 3-point field goal. The last time that happened was an 0-for-10 performance at Mississippi State on Feb. 3, 2013.

• Arkansas has forced double figure turnovers in every game this year.

Up Next

There are only three more chances to see the Razorbacks at Bud Walton Arena during the regular season. The Razorbacks host Auburn on Sunday in a 1 p.m. game televised by the SEC Network.

Arkansas travels to Kentucky and Georgia before back-to-back home games with Ole Miss and Missouri as February winds down.

Sunday’s Promotions 

• Sunday’s game is presented by Mercy and United Healthcare Services.

• Fans are encouraged to wear pink and pink pom poms will be distributed as they enter the arena.

• All tickets are $1 and kids 12 and under get in free with a paying adult.

• Breast Cancer Fighters and Survivors will be recognized during pre-game as well as a special halftime tribute to India Lewis.

Anderson previews Hogs’ road matchup Saturday at South Carolina

Arkansas coach Mike Anderson expecting a “good game” when the Razorbacks travel to Columbia to face a Gamecocks’ team that is playing differently on Saturday at noon.

Four Razorbacks named to coaches preseason All-SEC first team

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Arkansas’ quartet of Casey Martin, Heston Kjerstad, Matt Cronin and Dominic Fletcher were all selected by the league coaches to the Preseason All-SEC First Team.

The four first team selections are the most of any team in the league and it ties with Ole Miss and Georgia for the most selections combined on either Preseason All-SEC team.

Fletcher and Kjerstad make up two of the three outfield positions, while Martin is considered the top shortstop in the league and Cronin is considered the top reliever by the 14 head coaches.

Kjerstad is the reigning SEC Freshman of the Year after hitting .332 with 87 hits, 14 home runs and 58 RBIs, while Fletcher is coming off his second-straight year with 10 or more homers, becoming the first Razorback to achieve that in his first two years since Rodney Nye (1998-99).

Martin is also fresh off a freshman All-America season and hit .357 in the College World Series, totaling 10 of his 19 postseason hits in Omaha. The Lonoke native was named to the CWS All-Tournament Team and take over the shortstop position for the 2019 season.

Finally, on the mound, Cronin enters the year as, arguably, the best closer in the nation after setting a UA single-season saves record (14), tying for the second-most in the SEC and 14th in the nation.

Cronin held opponents to a .154 batting average, the lowest of any Razorback pitcher for the second consecutive year.

As for the poll, the 14 coaches in the SEC voted in the 28th annual preseason SEC poll and the Razorbacks were picked to finish third in the Western Division, but did pick up one vote to win the division. Arkansas also received one vote to win the SEC overall and received 59 points for the overall conference finish, which is sixth-most in the league.

Points were compiled on a 7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis for each division. Coaches were not allowed to vote for their own team. Each coach also voted for one team as an overall conference champion.

Arkansas will open the 2019 season against Eastern Illinois on Feb. 15 at Baum-Walker Stadium.

2019 SEC Baseball Coaches Preseason Poll

Eastern Division
1. Vanderbilt (9) – 87
2. Florida (4) – 81
3. Georgia (1) – 68
4. South Carolina – 53
5. Tennessee – 40
6. Kentucky – 30
7. Missouri – 26

Western Division
1. LSU (10) – 88
2. Ole Miss (1) – 65
3. Arkansas (1) – 59
4. Auburn (1) – 57
5. Texas A&M (1) – 48
6. Mississippi St. – 47
7. Alabama – 21

() – First place votes

SEC Champion: Vanderbilt (6), LSU (5), Florida (2), Arkansas (1)
2019 SEC Baseball Coaches Preseason All-SEC Team

First Team
C: Philip Clarke, Vanderbilt
1B: Cole Zabowski, Ole Miss
2B: Austin Martin, Vanderbilt*
2B: Noah Campbell, South Carolina*
3B: Aaron Schunk, Georgia
SS: Casey Martin, Arkansas
OF: Heston Kjerstad, Arkansas
OF: Dominic Fletcher, Arkansas
OF: Jake Mangum, Mississippi State
DH/UTL: T.J. Collett, Kentucky
SP: Tanner Burns, Auburn
SP: Zack Thompson, Kentucky
RP: Matt Cronin, Arkansas

Second Team
C: Mason Meadows, Georgia
1B: Tanner Allen, Mississippi State
2B: LJ Talley, Georgia
3B: Tyler Keenan, Ole Miss
SS: Braden Shewmake, Texas A&M
OF: JJ Bleday, Vanderbilt
OF: Antoine Duplantis, LSU
OF: Daniel Cabrera, LSU
DH/UTL: Aaron Schunk, Georgia*
DH/UTL: Chase Cockrell, Ole Miss*
SP: John Doxakis, Texas A&M
SP: Tyler Dyson, Florida
RP: Parker Caracci, Ole Miss

*Tie (ties are not broken)

Chad Morris talks NSD, the 2019 season, and more!

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Chad Morris talks NSD, the 2019 season, and more!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Thursday

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Tommy & Tye discuss NSD, Chad Morris’ press conference, plus Richard Davenport joins the show!

Hogs add playmakers, linemen, but some fans still won’t be happy

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Hopes were high among Arkansas fans that Chad Morris would lift football recruiting into the discussion among the elite in his second class.

Considering he only had a couple of weeks last year this is really the first real look at it.

The Razorbacks are No. 23 in the ESPN recruiting rankings and that’s, well, about where they’ve normally been. While this class does feature more four-stars than they’ve signed in any year, overall it’s going to be judged as much on expectations as results.

Which is the problem now. Some fans will spend more time talking about players that aren’t coming to Fayetteville while Morris has to deal with what he’s got.

The Hogs lost defensive back Adonis Otey to USC, linebacker Lakia Henry to Ole Miss and linebacker Chris Russell to Texas A&M. It happens.

Here are the players who signed Wednesday:

• Mansfield, Texas, Legacy 4-star safety Jalen Catalon (5-9, 188)
• Pulaski Academy 4-star tight end Hudson Henry (6-5, 230)
• Warren 4-star wide receiver Treylon Burks (6-3, 225)
• Phenix City, Alabama, 3-star running back A’Montae Spivey

“We got better today as a program without a doubt,” Morris said Wednesday. “The new additions to an already extremely strong class for 2019.”

While the numbers may not provide immediate gratification for some fans, this class is full of what this team has been missing: Playmakers and linemen.

Surprisingly, that was the two areas the previous staff didn’t recruit well in the last few years they were around. It created a depth issue Morris inherited last year that combined with the typical departures surrounding a new staff to produce a 2-10 record that will live in infamy.

Morris is doing it differently. He said about all four players, “he loves the Hogs.”

“If I have to beg you to come here, then I’m going to have to beg you to play on third and short and I’m not going to beg you for that,” Morris said.

It’s that culture thing we hear about so much these days.

“We want people that want to be here and want to make an impact on this program,” Morris said. “You have to love the Hogs. There’s too many people in this state that Razorback football, basketball, Razorbacks in general, it’s a big, big, big deal.”

While most over the last couple of years paid lip service to loving the Hogs, you didn’t really get the idea they felt that way, especially after losses, which is when you can get a good idea of who it meant something to.

At times last season there appeared to be too many players that got comfortable being losers. Some also didn’t seem too concerned with their impact to an entire state where many people are totally affected by whether the football team wins or loses.

“The more our players can understand the impact that they have in every household and every kitchen table and every garage in this state, the more they understand the appreciation for what they have to earn,” Morris said.

During early conditioning workouts for the last month, Morris has had the team in plain gray attire. No logo. No using the new lockers in the Smith Center. The old ones were sent to Arkansas-Pine Bluff and it may have been a convenient public relations move, but Morris was trying to make a point.

They did get logos on their shorts this week after earning that, according to Morris on Wednesday.

All of that is what Morris says is the change in culture he’s trying to build. Time is the only way to tell if it will work, despite what you’ll see and hear from some of the psychotic internet trolls.

Morris was, predictably, high on this signing class again Wednesday. What coach isn’t?

But the guess here is this is a group that could be the foundation for something bigger, providing they continue to develop after getting to Fayetteville.

At least we’re guessing that’s Morris’ plan.

All of which is why fans should wait for the results before making judgements and not compare with expectations.