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+.

Van Horn on Campbell’s performance, coming back on strong MSU team

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn was very pleased with starting pitcher Isaiah Campbell’s getting to the eighth inning and hitting coming together for opening win over Bulldogs.

Campbell, Fletcher, Martin on big plays in win over Mississippi State

Arkansas pitcher Isaiah Campbell (7.2 innings, 10 strikeouts), centerfielder Dominic Fletcher and shortstop Casey Martin recapping win over Bulldogs.

Diaz gets 200th career hit as Razorbacks pound ninth-ranked LSU, 8-5

FAYETTEVILLE — Senior Ashley Diaz left no record untouched Thursday night in the Arkansas’ 8-5 series-opening win over No.9 LSU.

Diaz was 1-for-3 at the plate, but made her at-bats count.

She recorded her 200th career hit on a first-inning home run, her program-best 10th career sacrifice fly in the fourth and recorded four RBIs to make her second all-time at Arkansas for career RBI.

Starter Autumn Storms opened up the contest with a scoreless showing in the first, shutting down LSU’s top batters in the order.

Arkansas fired up the bats in the bottom of the inning, as sophomores Hannah McEwen and Danielle Gibson went back-to-back with base hits against the Tiger starter, Shelby Wickersham.

Diaz followed with her big hit, soaring the 1-2 count out over the left-center wall, giving the Razorbacks a 3-0 lead.

LSU (36-10, 13-6) quickly responded with five unanswered runs in the second and third innings. The Tigers capitalized on a home run by Shemiah Sanchez and a Razorback wild pitch to score two in the second, and three in the third with runs batted in by Sanchez, Amanda Doyle and Michaela Schlattman.

Sophomore Mary Haff entered for Arkansas in the third inning and pitched 4.2 scoreless innings for the Razorbacks. Haff recorded the victory, her 16th of the season.

Haff gave up only four hits to the league’s leading offense, walking one Tiger and striking out three. Haff faced 20 batters and recorded eight at-bats with at least two strikes.

Now trailing 5-3, the Hogs took advantage of a Tiger error in the fourth to cut LSU’s lead to 4-3. Nicole Duncan scored on the play, as Gibson’s ball came off the second baseman’s glove and trailed off into right field.

Diaz scored McEwen from third on a first-pitch sacrifice fly and Arkansas and LSU were tied at 5-5 through four frames.

Sophomore Linnie Malkin and senior Katie Warrick got in on the fun as well, as Malkin hit the game-winning home run in the fifth inning and Warrick followed with a solo home run to left center in the sixth.

The win over the Tigers is monumental for the Razorbacks, as they defeated LSU for the first time under head coach Courtney Deifel.

Notables

• Hannah McEwen reached based for the 43rd time this season and extended her on-base streak to nine games.

• Nicole Duncan was hit-by-pitch for the 15th time this season, tying former Razorback Shelby Hiers for 10th all-time at Arkansas for career hit-by-pitch. Duncan is only one call away from tying the single-season record of 16.

• Diaz’ seven putouts of the contest rank her third all-time at Arkansas for career putouts with 1,303.

Keep up with the Hogs

Game 2Watch | Live Scoring
Game 3Watch | Live Scoring

Up next

The Hogs and Tigers will play Friday at 6 p.m. and on Saturday for the series finale at 1 p.m.

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.

Clark, Gregory put up best lifetime marks for Razorbacks’ women at ‘Bryan Clay’

AZUSA, Calif. — The Arkansas women’s distance team got the weekend’s slate underway as they competed on the west coast at the Bryan Clay Invitational.

Indoor All-Americans Devin Clark and Lauren Gregory finished Thursday night with lifetime-best performances in the 5,000-meters with Gregory’s performance finishing as the No. 2 time in program history.

Clark finished in 16:00.92 for ninth-place in her heat while Gregory ran 15:42.45 for fifth-place and now trails only Dominique Scott (15:25.10) for the fastest time in Arkansas history.

Maddy Reed (16:09.61) and Sydney Brown (16:49.78) finished 15th and 20th, respectively, in their heats of the 5k.

Freshman Quinn Owen recorded a time of 10:41.62 for 24th-place in her collegiate debut in the 3,000-meter steeplechase.

The Razorbacks will continue action at the Bryan Clay Invitational where the distance crew will compete in the 1,500-meters.

Cates, Young post lifetime bests at Bryan Clay Invitational in California

AZUSA, Calif. — The Arkansas distance crew got the weekend’s slate underway as they competed on the west coast at the Bryan Clay Invitational.

Preston Cates officially got competition for Arkansas going at the meet on Wednesday night as the junior finished in a lifetime-best 30:01.04 in the 10,000-meters taking fourth-place in his heat.

Matt Young followed in his footsteps Thursday night posting a lifetime-best of his own in the 5,000-meters finishing 10th in his heat with a time of 13:59.94.

Gilbert Boit finished eighth in his heat of the 5k with a time of 13:37.74 that falls just outside the Arkansas all-time top-10 list trailing Daniel Lincoln’s 2002 performance by 1.62 seconds.  Austen Dalquist also competed in the 5k running 14:42.30 for 30th-place in his heat.

Kyle Levermore finished the 3,000-meter steeplechase with a season-best time of 9:21.80 for 45th-place while Ryan Murphy also posted a season-best crossing the line in 9:49.23 for 92nd-place in the same heat.

The Razorbacks will continue action at the Bryan Clay Invitational where the distance crew will compete in the 800-meter and 1,500-meter disciplines.

Arkansas falls to Georgia in second round of SEC Tournament on Thursday

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Georgia defeated Arkansas, 4-0, Thursday in the second round of the Southeastern Conference Men’s Tennis Tournament Thursday evening.

After a short delay from the earlier matches, Georgia took a 1-0 advantage by securing the doubles point. The Bulldogs took court three 6-3. Oscar Mesquida and Adam Sanjurjo were able to take court one 6-4, but Georgia took court two 6-4 to take a 1-0 lead heading into singles action.

Georgia would take a 2-0 lead as No. 99 Philip Henning (UGA) defeated Maxim Verboven 6-3, 6-0 on the sixth court. The Dogs would pull within one from clinching as No. 31 Emil Reinberg (UGA) beat Alex Reco 6-1, 6-1 on court two.

The Dogs clinched the match on court four as Trent Bryde (UGA) defeated Enrique Paya 6-3, 6-2.

Doubles Results – Order of Finish (3,1,2)

1. Oscar Mesquida/Adam Sanjurjo (AR) def. No. 18 Robert Loeb/Jan Zielinski (UGA) 6-4
2. Walker Duncan/Emil Reinberg (UGA) def. Maxim Verboven/Enrique Paya (AR) 6-4
3. Alex Diaz/Philip Henning (UGA) def. Alex Reco/Jose Alonso (AR) 6-3

Singles Results – Order of Finish (6,2,4)

1. No. 17 Jan Zielinski (UGA) vs. No. 66 Oscar Mesquida (AR) 5-7, 4-2, unfinished
2. No. 31 Emil Reinberg (UGA) def. Alex Reco (AR) 6-1, 6-1
3. Robert Loeb (UGA) vs. Pedro Alonso (AR) 6-2, 2-2, unfinished
4. Trent Bryde (UGA) def. Enrique Paya (AR) 6-3, 6-2
5. Walker Duncan (UGA) vs. Jose Alonso (AR) 6-2, 1-5, unfinished
6. #99 Philip Henning (UGA) def. Maxim Verboven (AR) 6-3, 6-0

Fassi’s near-perfect round moves Razorbacks to third at SEC Championship

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — A nearly perfect round by senior Maria Fassi and great play from Dylan Kim, Kaylee Benton, Brooke Matthews, and Ximena Gonzalez moved Arkansas into third place in round two of the SEC Championship in Birmingham, Alabama, on Thursday.

Fassi played 4-under on the Legends Course at Greystone Golf and Country Club shooting a 68 and is currently in second place with rounds of 71-68=139.

She trails the leader by just two shots going into the final round of stroke play on Friday.

Kim and Matthews bettered their first-round scores with rounds of 72 and 74, respectively. Benton added a 1-over 73 helping the Razorbacks to a 287 and up one spot to third place on the leaderboard.

Fassi started and ended her round with birdies and had just one bogey on the day. She also birdied holes five, six and 11.

She was one of three Razorbacks to count a four on the par-5 18th hole with Benton and Kim also carding birdies to finish. Benton (72-73) and Kim (73-72) are T15 overall with 1-over 145s.

Matthews made the turn and birdied the 10th and 11th holes erasing a double bogey on the front nine. She parred five of the last seven holes for a 74, three shots better than her first-day number. She and Gonzalez are T50 overall.

The windy conditions increased throughout the round and overnight wind and rain are expected.

Arkansas is currently scheduled to begin play at 9:40 a.m. in the final round to determine the individual winner. The top eight teams advance to match play Saturday and Sunday.

From Shauna Taylor

“I’m super proud of this group. It takes a team effort to have success on this golf course. I’m really proud of Brooke (Matthews). She doubled her second hole and finished 2-over. Obviously (Maria) Fassi had a fantastic round and Dylan (Kim) told me she had 24 putts, so she battled hard today. It really says a lot about our group. We are just trying to take it one day at a time. Tonight, we are going to rest and recover. We want to fuel properly and try to pace ourselves to put ourselves in a position to challenge for a title.”

About Maria Fassi:

“I think experience on this golf course means a lot. This is her fourth year playing here. She knows the hole locations and knows when she needs to be aggressive and when to take her medicine and hit to the middle of the greens. She’s grown so much as a player and her discipline on the golf course is amazing. Her acceptance of dealing with wherever her golf ball goes is the reason she will find herself in contention quite a bit.”

The Razorback Lineup

2 Maria Fassi (1) 71-68=139 -5
T15 Kaylee Benton (2) 72-73=145 +1
T15 Dylan Kim (3) 73-72=145 +1
T50 Brooke Matthews (4) 77-74=151 +7
T50 Ximena Gonzalez (5) 75-76=151 +7

 

The Field

1 Florida 284-283=567 -9
2 South Carolina 287-286=573 -3
3 Arkansas 291-287=578 +2
4 Georgia 293-286=579 +3
5 Auburn 284-298=582 +6
6 Vanderbilt 296-288=584 +8
7 Ole Miss 298-290=588 +12
8 LSU 299-292=591 +15
9 Mississippi St. 294-298=592 +16
T10 Texas A&M 300-293=593 +17
T10 Alabama 301-292=593 +17
12 Tennessee 294-300=594 +18
13 Missouri 299-298=597 +21
14 Kentucky 304-299=603 +27

 

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.

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

• Rain is expected overnight and play may be delayed in the morning for the final round of stroke play.

Arkansas falls to Kentucky in second round at SEC Tournament in Texas

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Arkansas fell, 4-1, to Kentucky on Thursday afternoon in the second round of the SEC Tournament.

The Razorbacks opened the match strong, clinching the doubles point for the sixth-straight match. Lauren Alter and Tatum Rice defeated No. 13 Justina Mikulskyte and Akvile Parazinskaite before the Wildcats evened doubles play with a 6-4 victory over Martina Zerulo and Thea Rice.

Miruna Tudor and Jackie Carr clinched the point at the No. 3 position for the second-straight match.

Kentucky took the lead quickly, as Alter was defeated 7-6(4), 6-2 and Tatum Rice fell at the No. 2 position. The team got within one of the clinch with a 6-3, 6-3 win at the No. 5 position, before winning the match with a victory over Tudor. The final two matches were suspended due to the clinch.

The Hogs will learn their postseason fate at 5:30 p.m. on April 29, with the individuals and doubles selection announcement to be made the following day.

No. 44 Arkansas 4, Missouri 1

Doubles Results – Order of Finish (1,2,3)
1. Lauren Alter/Tatum Rice (ARK) def. Justina Mikulskyte/Akvile Parazinskaite (UKW) 6-2
2. Lesedi Jacobs/Diana Tkachenko (UKW) def. Martina Zerulo/Thea Rice (ARK) 6-4
3. Miruna Tudor/Jackie Carr (ARK) def. Brianna Tulloch/Alexis Merrill (UKW) 7-5

Singles Results – Order of Finish (3,2,5,4)
1. Justina Mikulskyte (UKW) vs. Martina Zerulo (ARK) 3-6, 6-1, 1-2, unfinished
2. Lesedi Jacobs (UKW) def. Tatum Rice (ARK) 6-4, 6-3
3. Tiphanie Fiquet (UKW) def. Lauren Alter (ARK) 7-6 (7-4), 6-2
4. Akvile Parazinskaite (UKW) def. Miruna Tudor (ARK) 6-3, 7-5
5. Diana Tkachenko (UKW) def. Laura Rijkers (ARK) 6-3, 6-3
6. Anastasia Tkachenko (UKW) vs. Jackie Carr (ARK) 3-6, 2-5, unfinished

Hogs finally land former Pulaski Academy lineman Jones from Irish

Chad Morris lost Pulaski Academy offensive lineman Luke Jones less than three weeks after getting the job at Arkansas … but now Jones is coming back home.

Apparently it didn’t work out in South Bend and the 6-foot-5, 303-pounder announced he was coming back to the state Thursday afternoon on Twitter:

Considering the NCAA is making a lot of these transfers eligible immediately, it could be a boost for an offensive line situation struggling with numbers.

Jones had been competing for the backup center spot at Notre Dame in the spring and it’s a spot the Razorbacks have been filling by committee the last few years.

Ty Clary, the projected No. 1 coming out of spring, has struggled with snaps at times. His backups are redshirt-sophomore Shane Clenin (seven career games played), redshirt-freshman Silas Robinson and true freshman walk-on Austin Nix.

Jones was the fourth-rated player overall in the state his senior year, but flipped his commitment from the Hogs to the Irish 20 days after Morris was named as the coach, replacing Bret Bielema.

He is the fifth transfer addition along with quarterbacks Ben Hicks and Nick Starkel, running back Trelon Smith and kicker Jared Sackett.

Hicks and Starkel are graduate transfers and eligible immediately. Smith and Sackett are expected to sit out this season.

With the NCAA granting waivers right and left, though, nothing is for certain.

He will be the fourth player from Pulaski Academy on the roster along with junior linebacker Hayden Henry. Incoming freshman tight end Hudson Henry and freshman wide receiver John David White are the others.

Jones was a heavily-recruited three-star with offers from Arkansas, Notre Dame, Missouri, Oregon, Virginia and over a dozen others.