Razorbacks can’t close sweep, falling to LSU on Saturday

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas and LSU went scoreless for six of the seven innings in LSU’s game three, 3-1 win, but the Razorbacks took the series, 2-1.

Driving the defensive performance, the Razorback pitching staff combined for nine strikeouts, a weekend-high against the Tigers.

Mary Haff recorded the loss and is now 16-10 on the season. Junior Autumn Storms entered in relief for Haff and pitched the four, final innings.

Behind Haff and Storms, the Arkansas defense held the league’s best offense to a 0-for-3 record with the bases loaded and held off 14 stranded base runners.

Junior Sydney Parr recorded a career-high five putouts in the contest, making five crucial catches in center field for the Razorbacks. Parr recorded the final out of the inning three times, twice with runners in scoring position.

LSU scored all three of its runs on a three-run home run by Amanda Doyle in the third inning. Doyle finished the contest with three hits in four at bats.

Arkansas gave its best run at the Tiger lead in the sixth inning. The Hogs put a runner on base after pinch-hitter Aly Manzo reached on a fielder’s choice.

Junior Keely Edwards reentered for Arkansas before advancing to second on a wild pitch and scoring on a sacrifice fly by sophomore Danielle Gibson.

Up next

Arkansas will hit the road for the final road series of the regular season next weekend at Texas A&M before returning to Fayetteville for the final home series against Auburn.

Big innings lift Hogs to series win, sets up Saturday matchup for sweep

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas jumped on second-ranked Mississippi State early and never looked back Friday night, winning 12-5 to claim the series and move into sole possession of second place in the SEC West.

The win is the Razorbacks’ (29-10, 11-6 SEC) fourth in a row and third in conference play as they used a four-run second inning and five-run seventh innings to pull away from the Bulldogs for the seven-run victory.

It’s the sixth-straight home series win over Mississippi State dating back to 2007.

Four different Razorback hitters recorded multi-hit games led by catcher Casey Opitz, who went 3-for-5 with three RBIs, all from a bases-clearing single in the seventh that was misplayed by the Bulldogs’ right fielder.

Over the last three games, Opitz has had the hot bat going 7-for-12 (.583) at the plate with six RBIs and one home run.

Sophomore infielder Casey Martin turned in another strong line, going 2-for-3 with two runs scored and four RBIs. His big swing came in the second inning when he took Peyton Plumlee deep to centerfield for a grand slam, his first of his career.

It was the third grand slam hit by a Razorback this season and the eighth home run of the year by Martin.

Dominic Fletcher and Christian Franklin also had two-hit games. Neither drove in a run in the ballgame, but it’s the second-straight two-hit game for Franklin and fourth-straight multi-hit game for Fletcher.

Patrick Wicklander PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Wicklander steadies pitching staff In early innings

Freshman Patrick Wicklander, making his first career conference start at home, did a good job holding a good Mississippi State offense in check, allowing only two runs on three hits in four innings.

He struck out six and walked only three on 81 pitches. He’s thrown three or more innings in his last four outings and has struck out five or more batters six times, including four of his last six appearances.

Kopps stops Bulldogs momentum in late innings

Mississippi State showed some signs of life after scoring two runs off Wicklander in the third and then three off of Kole Ramage in the fifth to cut Arkansas’ lead to 7-5.

Coach Dave Van Horn went to the bullpen at the start of the sixth inning and brought in redshirt junior Kevin Kopps, who was practically untouchable for the sixth, seventh and eighth innings.

Kopps gave up just one walk in what was his longest outing of the year and struck out three on 47 pitches. He did hit the first batter he faced, but went on to retire nine of the next 10 batters.

Hogs use walks to advantage

Arkansas drew 16 walks against Mississippi State Friday night, its most walks against an opponent this year and third of 10 or more.

The Hogs reached their leadoff batter in the first eight innings of the game, four by walks. The 16 free passes is the most since they set the school record for 19 against Alabama A&M in 2013.

Razorback quotables

“That’s all we’ve been doing. That’s all we’re doing in practice. It’s pretty obvious what we need to do, and then it’s up to them to do it. Buy in, and Casey’s done a great job. He’s raised his average in the last four or five games because he’s hit the ball through the middle. It’s good to see.” — Coach Dave Van Horn on Casey Martin’s opposite way approach

“He brought some normalcy to the game. The game was going crazy. For both sides, people weren’t throwing the ball over the plate, walking people, and it’s game two of an SEC series, you’re supposed to have some decent pitching on a Game 2 but everybody’s scattering and pitching behind in the count. Kevin came in, but you think about and he comes in and hits a guy then walks the next batter and you’re thinking, ‘oh baby here we go again.’ Then he got under control. He had the quick second inning and then the third inning, not that bad. He was up to 50 pitches, though, so we got him out. We haven’t taken him above there so we’re just trying to take care of our guys.” — Van Horn on Kevin Kopps

“My approach was just put the bat on the ball. I’ve been seeing it a lot better lately. So, I was just going up there trying to take a good swing on a pitch and got two knocks out of it.” — Casey Opitz on his bases-clearing single in the seventh inning

“When you get a lot of walks, you tend to get a lot of runs. I know the guys in our lineup top to bottom can hit. It doesn’t matter who you put in there, but when we get walks, that can determine a game. We kept driving them in and driving them in and that just goes to our approach. Guys taking pitches and swinging and attacking inside the zone.” — Casey Martin on the team’s patience at the plate

“That just shows the grit this team has. Even though we really didn’t have the weekend we wanted at Vandy, we came back and we worked on some things and got right back after it. I think that’s what it takes to be good in this league.” — Opitz on bouncing back after the series loss at Vanderbilt

Up next

Arkansas and Mississippi State finish the three-game series on Saturday at Baum-Walker Stadium with first pitch set for 2 p.m.

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 game will be televised on SEC Network+.

 

Van Horn talks about ‘patience’ by Hogs in winning series over MSU

Razorbacks coach Dave Van Horn liked his team’s patience at the plate Friday night in the 12-5 win over the Bulldogs to clinch the SEC series

Kopps, Opitz, Martin recapping series-clinching win over Bulldogs

Arkansas pitcher Kevin Kopps, catcher Casey Opitz and shortstop Casey Martin on Friday night’s 12-5 win over second-ranked Mississippi State to clinch the series.

McEwen’s 4-for-4 night at plate propels Arkansas past LSU, 11-1

FAYETTEVILLE — Sophomore Hannah McEwen went 4-for-4 at the plate on Friday night as Arkansas needed only five innings to defeat LSU, 11-1.

McEwen recorded four singles in the victory, driving in three runs as the Razorbacks recorded their eighth consecutive win.

McEwen was a part of an offense that scored seven runs in the first inning alone, the most in a single inning by the Razorbacks this season.

It’s the second time this season McEwen recorded a four-hit performance and the 14th time she finished with multiple hits.

Arkansas (34-14, 8-9) rolled into the bottom of the inning already trailing by one, but the Razorback bats came live quickly and early, taking the lead with a home run by senior Ashley Diaz to go ahead, 2-1.

Diaz sparked a rally that included runs scored by Kayla Green, Sydney Parr, Haydi Bugarin, Nicole Duncan, and Keely Edwards.

The lineup stayed hot throughout the night, as four more Hogs scored when Arkansas batted around for the second time in three innings.

Sophomore Danielle Gibson connected on the 1-1 pitch and sent it over the right-field wall for her 11th home run of the season.

After allowing the single run in the first, junior Autumn Storms and the Razorback defense held strong, keeping LSU scoreless.

In fact, not a single Tiger would make it safely to third base for the remainder of the contest.

Notables

• Hannah McEwen reached based for the 44th time this season and extended her on-base streak to 10 games.

• Nicole Duncan was hit-by-pitch for the 16th time this season, tying the single-season record of 16.

• The win marks the first time in the series history that Arkansas has defeated LSU in back-to-back meetings.

• Arkansas’ 11 runs was the most by an LSU opponent since 2014.

Keep up with the Hogs

Game 3Watch | Live Scoring

Up next

The Hogs and Tigers will play on Saturday for the series finale at 1 p.m. The game will air live on ESPNU and stream on the WatchESPN app. Jenn Hildreth and Jenny Dalton-Hill on the call.

Arkansas has only three conference series remaining, with a road series to follow next weekend at Texas A&M and the final home series of the season against Auburn.

Fassi places first, Benton second as Hogs finish third at SEC Championship

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Arkansas senior Maria Fassi posted a 1-under 71 winning her first SEC individual title at the Legends Course at Greystone Country Club on Friday.

Fellow senior Kaylee Benton birdied two of her final three holes playing to a tied for second with a 3-under 69 leading the Razorbacks to a third-place finish. The Hogs move on to face Auburn in the first round of match play to determine the team title.

Fassi was tied for the lead late in the final round but birdied Nos. 9 and 11 and parred the last four holes for the four-shot win over three players, including Benton. Fassi’s outright win is the third in Razorback history. Stacy Lewis won the individual crown as a freshman in 2005 and again as a senior in 2008.

Fassi shot 71-68-71—210 tying the second-best Arkansas score at the SEC Tournament. It is one shot behind her 209 last season that put her in a tie for the lead forcing a playoff.

Benton was equally steady all week shooting 72-73-69—214. Her final round 69 ties her best round of the season and is her fourth round in the 60’s. It is Benton’s second top-10 finish at the SEC Championship after finishing tied for seventh as a sophomore.

Senior Dylan Kim finished tied for 16th overall, shooting 73-72-75—220 while freshman Ximena Gonzalez shot 75-76-75—226 to finish tied for 40th in her first conference event. Freshman Brooke Matthews shot 77-74-78—220 to finish tied for 52nd as all five players contributed at least one round to the team total.

As a team, the Razorbacks had the best round of the day with a 2-over 290 to shoot 291-287-290—868 in stroke play. Florida finished first followed by South Carolina.

Arkansas was third as a team, just five shots back of the Gators. The rest of the top-8 include Vanderbilt, Georgia, Auburn, Mississippi State and Ole Miss.

Match play begins Saturday morning with the winner of the Arkansas/Auburn match meeting the winner of the South Carolina/Mississippi State contest.

From SEC Champion Maria Fassi

“It’s amazing to win the SEC Championship. We are one of the toughest conferences and being able to win and to do it in tough conditions like it was today is just amazing. I enjoy playing in the rain. It kinda brings out the best in me. It keeps me focused on things I need to focus on. I don’t worry as much about if I made a putt or missed a putt. I have to think about keeping my hands dry, keeping my clubs dry – things like that. It is so many things to think about that it makes me stay in the present. I worked hard to hit good shots today and hoped that would be enough at the end of the day. I knew where I was (on the leaderboard) and I just had to stay with my plan.”

From SEC Runner-Up Kaylee Benton

“I knew coming down the stretch I had to finish good for the team. At 16 I had a good look at a birdie and made it. I made a good par on 17 and hit my putt on 18 – it felt really good. The 18th hole has so many good memories for me. It was the final hole to win the SEC Championship (last year). Coming in today I had a nice wedge look at it and a pretty simple up-and-down and I pulled it off.”

Razorback Lineup

1 Maria Fassi (1) 71-68-71=210 -6
T2 Kaylee Benton (2) 72-73-69=214 -2
T16 Dylan Kim (3) 73-72-75=220 +4
T40 Ximena Gonzalez (5) 75-76-75=226 +10
T52 Brooke Matthews (4) 77-74-78=229 +13

 

The Field

1 Florida 284-283-296=863 -1
2 South Carolina 287-286-292=865 +1
3 Arkansas 291-287-290=868 +4
4 Vanderbilt 296-288-293=877 +13
T5 Georgia 293-286-303=882 +18
T5 Auburn 284-298-300=882 +18
7 Mississippi St. 294-298-299=891 +27
8 Ole Miss 298-290-304=892 +28
9 LSU 299-292-305=896 +32
10 Tennessee 294-300-303=897 +33
11 Alabama 301-292-305=898 +34
12 Missouri 299-298-303=900 +36
13 Texas A&M 300-293-311=904 +40
14 Kentucky 304-299-307=910 +46

 

SEC Championship Notes

• Arkansas won the program’s first SEC title and it was the first title under the format that features match play.

• Maria Fassi tied for the individual title but lost the playoff. Fassi finished T5 as a freshman (2016), T63 as sophomore (2017) and as runner-up as a junior (2018).

• Arkansas finished third in stroke play last year and won the match play portion for the SEC title.

• The Razorbacks have 12 top-5 SEC finishes in program history.

Razorbacks’ gymnastics finishes season at NCAA Semifinal

FORT WORTH — Arkansas gymnastics’ 2019 campaign officially concluded as two individuals concluded action at the NCAA Championships Semifinal II in Fort Worth.

Junior Hailey Garner competed on the balance beam and sophomore Sophia Carter competed on the floor exercise. Both gymnasts competed at the end of the Oklahoma Sooners beam and floor rotations, respectively.

Garner earned All-American status on the apparatus last season at the national meet in St. Louis, but suffered a wobble in Fort Worth and garnered a 9.6375 from the six-judge panel.

Carter, who was a regular season All-American on the event, competed on the floor and concluded the meet in Fort Worth. The Blue Springs, Missouri, native earned a 9.8375 at the meet, earning a 9.9 from one judge on the panel.

The high score was dropped as she earned 9.8’s and 9.85’s from the remaining five judges.

LSU, UCLA, Oklahoma and Denver were the four teams to advance to the first “Four on the Floor” National Finals tomorrow evening to compete for a national championship.

???? Friday Halftime Pod — featuring Jim Ellis, voice of MSU basball

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Phil & Tye discuss Mike going to St. John’s, plus Jim Ellis talks Hogs/Dawgs

St. John’s makes home run hire with Anderson, ties or not to NY

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When news broke about Mike Anderson finalizing a deal with St. John’s Thursday night, it didn’t take long for the national media to weigh in.

At least two writers condemned St. John’s for hiring a coach with no ties to the area. Since when did that become important?

Off the top of my head, I rattled off several coaches who are coaching at schools that didn’t have a connection to the area. Some of the great all-time coaches didn’t have connections to their programs when they were hired.

But, somewhere along the line, that became somewhat important. Tell that to Hunter Yurachek who just hired Eric Musselman at Arkansas. And don’t tell me he has a connection to the Natural State because he was an assistant at LSU for a year and his wife has family from Magnolia.

Chris Mullin is from New York City and starred at St. John’s and look how that turned out. But some in the national media failed to point that out. St. John’s has just been down this road. Georgetown is realizing the same thing with former Hoyas star Patrick Ewing.

And at least one national website author didn’t point out a lot of things regarding Anderson’s hiring. Instead, he was content to criticize the school for A) Hiring a coach who had been fired and B) Hiring a coach who has roots in the South and not the northeast.
Allow me to fill in the blanks.

First, with Anderson it is very important to note that he was very successful at Alabama-Birmingham and Missouri. Missouri, a Power 5 program he guided to the Elite 8. How can that not be included in a story regarding his hiring?

I know he was mediocre at Arkansas, and I will really never know why, but his entire body of work is pretty good. This stat drove me crazy while he was at Arkansas, but he has never had a losing season in his time as a college coach. Not the way to keep a job you are struggling in but important to point out when taking a job at a struggling mid-major program.

And while I bring up St. John’s let’s talk about the Red Storm. This is not Lou Carnasecca’s St. John’s. This isn’t even Mike Jarvis’ St. Johns. A moppy-headed Mullin isn’t walking through that door and neither is Walter Berry, nor is Malik Sealy or Felipe Lopez.

St. John’s isn’t a top-tier program and the Big East (I’ll get to this later) is not the Big East you tuned into to see Syracuse battle Georgetown on CBS on Saturday afternoons in the 1980s.

So, since St. John’s isn’t relevant why would the national media expect them to secure the services of a big-time coach? Why would Bobby Hurley leave Pac-12 Arizona State to coach St. John’s? Because he grew up in New Jersey? Please. If St. John’s coveted him, there was a probably a reason. His agent could have shown interest to get him a raise in Tempe. Just like Kelvin Sampson did with Arkansas.

As far as these other guys that national pundits think were better fits Anderson – Loyola’s Porter Moser, Iona’s Tim Cluess and UMBC Coach Ryan Odom, tell me what they have on Anderson other than ties?

Have they won in a Power 5 league? How many losing seasons do they have? Moser was fired at Illinois State and failed to get Loyola to the NCAA Tournament, but you won’t read that in the national media storyline.

The bottom line is, St. John’s is lucky to have a coach with Anderson’s experience. They have only hired one coach who was a former Power 5 coach — Steve Lavin, who coached at UCLA.

Carnasecca became a Hall of Fame coach, but he did it there. Jarvis came from Atlantic 10 member George Washington and twice St. John’s has hired former Manhattan coaches (Brian Mahoney and Fran Fraschilla).

Then there’s the Big East — a shell of its former self like I mentioned above.

Can you name any of the head coaches in the league other than Villanova’s Jay Wright, Ewing and maybe former Duke star Steve Wojcechowski at Marquette. Greg McDermott at Creighton. Kevin Willard at Seton Hall. Dave Leitao at DePaul. We saw how Anderson ran circles around Providence coach Ed Cooley in the opening round of the NIT.

Compare the Big East programs and coaches to the SEC, and it isn’t even close. John Calipari at Kentucky, Rick Barnes at Tennessee, Bruce Pearl at Auburn, Ben Howland at Mississippi State and Tom Crean at Georgia.

Anderson has had to match wits with some of the game’s best. Going into Omaha, Neb., to face McDermott is a walk in the park compared to Coach Cal at Lexington or Barnes at Knoxville.

This is a step up for St. John’s and a step down for Anderson.

The league is filled with so-so coaches at programs that haven’t been relevant in decades. It’s a perfect place for Anderson to get his mojo back and rev his engine like he did at Mizzou and UAB.

The two keys for Anderson? 1) Reload with a new staff or at least one assistant who can pull in dynamic athletes, possibly from the back yard of New York but not necessarily. 2) Get back to playing a frenetic pace with lockdown, pressure defense. That formula worked well at Anderson’s two previous stops but was his downfall in Fayetteville.

If he can pull of those two feats, he will bring St. John’s back to prominence and contend with Villanova for a conference title.

St. John’s may have not conducted this search flawlessly being spurned by the likes of Hurley, Moser and possibly Odom. The national media wants to paint the picture that Anderson was the fifth or sixth choice while in actuality he may have been the one that showed interest after the process had begun.

Who knows, but Anderson is a good hire regardless. St. John’s has stuck with a formula of hiring New York City guys with mixed results. Now, they have hired the best available coach with a solid overall track record, and that should pay big dividends.

Anderson ‘negotiating’ with St. John’s; exactly what is Bielema doing?

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Reports broke Thursday that former Arkansas coach Mike Anderson is in negotiations to land the position at St. John’s, which would certainly be welcomed by those paying him to not coach the Hogs.

ESPN.com reported Anderson is “in negotiations” to be the next Red Storm coach, replacing Chris Mullin, who stepped down earlier in April.

It’s been a tough position to fill with Arizona State coach Bobby Hurley, Loyola Chicago’s Porter Moser and Iona’s Tim Cluess all backing away from the job in New York after being named as top candidates.

Anderson reportedly is in the mix along with Yale’s James Jones and former George Mason and Georgia Tech head coach Paul Hewitt, according to the ESPN report.

Mullin, probably the greatest player in St. John’s basketball history, reportedly had a bad relationship with athletics director Mike Cragg and it appears he may have just thrown his hands up over all of it.

That may be the same reaction some responsible for paying former Hogs football coach Bret Bielema, who apparently has only been able to get a rather undefined role with the New England Patriots.

Some in the Boston area have said Bielema’s role with the defending Super Bowl champions’ defense is much larger than what anyone knows. That actually makes some sense considering the Patriots are the most buttoned-down organization in the NFL. There aren’t a lot of leaks there.

You wonder if Bielema has taken advantage of his rather significant buy-out from the Razorback Foundation to, well, work for NFL minimum wage, sticking Arkansas fans with a rather monthly check.

Whether the Patriots knew — or cared — is known only in Boston … and they don’t talk.

There has been speculation in league circles that Bielema could become the defensive coordinator for the Patriots. They currently don’t have one.

The only defensive coach listed on their website is Bill Belichick’s son Steve.

Seriously, the defending Super Bowl champs list only the coach’s son as a defensive coach. Go ahead and giggle. Nobody believes that.

The only reason this comes to mind is that Bielema’s buyout calls for his payments from the UA to be offset by any job he gets … and he’s required to be trying to get one.

Being Belichick’s assistant could pay just about anything and the Patriots aren’t subject to telling anybody what he’s making if they don’t want to.

Maybe the fastest way to find out what’s going on is stop sending the checks. That could get things in the legal system where the lawyers could do a little work and find out exactly what’s going on.

Of course it could also open an interesting can or two of worms.

Which would be interesting, wouldn’t it?

Campbell’s strong effort, timely hitting paces Razorbacks over Bulldogs

FAYETTEVILLE — Redshirt junior Isaiah Campbell out-dueled Mississippi State ace Ethan Small Thursday night, helping Arkansas defeat second-ranked Mississippi State, 5-3, at Baum-Walker Stadium.

It was the Razorbacks’ 10th conference victory of the year.

Arkansas (28-10, 10-6 SEC) now moves into a tie for second in the SEC Western Division with Mississippi State (32-7, 10-6 SEC). Texas A&M, which won Thursday night also, is solely in first place with a 10-5-1 record.

For the second-straight week, Campbell worked 7.2 innings and didn’t walk a batter as he struck out 10 on 105 pitches and scattered five hits with two earned runs allowed.

PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

The righty worked around a solo home run in the fifth by Rowdey Jordan and settled back in for the sixth and seventh innings before struggling to get the first two outs in the eighth.

Junior closer Matt Cronin took over in the eighth and closed out his eighth game of the year, giving up a solo home run of his own in the ninth, but striking out three over 1.1 innings.

Campbell now has seven wins on the year and has pitched six or more innings in eight consecutive starts. He’s also totaled eight-consecutive quality starts dating back to March 1 and has struck out 10 or more in four of those outings.

Hog hitters rally past Small in late innings

Arkansas’ offense was held in check by Ethan Small through the first four innings as the Bulldog hurler had a perfect game until Dominic Fletcher’s lead-off single in the fifth.

The Hogs didn’t score in that inning, but finally started to figure out Small by the sixth.

Casey Opitz led off that inning with a walk, followed by a Christian Franklin single and a Trevor Ezell sacrifice bunt.

The flood gates opened when Casey Martin doubled home the go-ahead runs and then Matt Goodheart singled home the third run of the game.

Matt Goodheart PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

It was Martin and Goodheart’s only hit of the game and extended Goodheart’s hitting streak to 11 games. The three runs allowed by Small were the most he’s given up in a game this season.

Fletcher’s long ball provides insurance

In the eighth inning, MSU had pulled within one after Campbell struggled with command and gave up a lead-off double to Dustin Skelton, who later scored on a RBI groundout after a wild pitch.

However, in the bottom half, the Hogs got two more runs off the bat of Dominic Fletcher, who deposited his sixth home run of the year into the visitor’s bullpen, making it 5-2.

Fletcher now has at least one hit in 16 of his last 19 games and has driven in at least one run in five of his last eight games.

He finished Thursday’s game 3-for-4 with two RBIs, his sixth game with three or more hits and third multi-hit game in a row.

Christian Franklin PHOTO BY ANDY HODGES | HITTHATLINE.COM

Razorback quotables

“I thought we did just a really good job of staying calm. We were calm in the dugout. We knew what we were up against. We were up against a quality pitcher that doesn’t really give you a whole lot. We talked about when we get a chance to get him, we’ve got to get him because it might be one shot. We got a leadoff man on, then Franklin got the big two-strike hit and we were kind of off and running there. Just a really good job by the offense of hanging in there and not getting too frustrated and we put together a big inning.” — Coach Dave Van Horn on what his hitters did well against Ethan Small

“I thought he was outstanding. At the end of six innings, he kind of made the comment he started feeling a little bit tired. We punched in some runs and it’s almost like he got a second wind out there and we thought, ‘well, if he can get us through the sixth’ and he did. He said I think I can go another and when he got us through the seventh real quick he said ‘hey I don’t want to come out yet.’ No walks, 10 strikeouts, I mean, what more could you want? And limited one of the best hitting teams, if not the best hitting team in the league to five hits. That’s a great outing.” — Van Horn on Isaiah Campbell’s outing

“Well, it’s always big to win the first one. It gives you an opportunity to kind sit back and evaluate your pitching for the weekend. Our pitching, we’re still figuring it out a little bit. We’ve had a few guys banged up and we have (Jacob) Kostyshock back now. It’s just a good feeling, obviously. Your mindset now is if we find a way to win game one, we can win the series. If you lose that game, you tell your team you’re fighting and we can still win this series.” — Van Horn on the importance of winning game one of a series

“My mindset didn’t change. I knew if I just kept making pitches and keeping us in the game, our hitters would get to him and get the lead and that’s what we did in the sixth. It gave us some momentum and we carried it on until the end of the game.” — Isaiah Campbell on his mindset going up against a good Mississippi State offense

“That guy throws a bunch of cutters, so I took one and then he threw a slider down in the dirt. I kind of had a feeling another cutter was coming and I got on time with it. I think it’s huge to score late and give your bullpen another couple of runs for cushion.” — Dominic Fletcher on his eighth-inning home run

Up next

Arkansas and Mississippi State return to the field on Friday for game two of the three-game series.

First pitch from Baum-Walker will be at 6:30 p.m. and will be broadcast on SEC Network+.