Arkansas downs Missouri to advance on first day at SEC Tournament

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Arkansas defeated Missouri on Wednesday afternoon to open the SEC Tournament, advancing to the second round to face Kentucky on Thursday morning.

The Hogs continued their strong doubles play, once again clinching the point in straight sets. Lauren Alter and Tatum Rice gave Arkansas a one-set advantage with a 6-1 victory before Miruna Tudor and Jackie Carr clinched the point at the No. 3 position.

The Razorbacks quickly went up 3-0, as Tudor earned a 6-2, 6-1 win and Alter defeated Lisa Fukutoku at the No. 3 position.

The Tigers earned their lone point of the match as Laura Rijkers fell 7-6, 6-0, before No. 85 Martina Zerulo clinched the match with a 6-0, 6-2 victory over Mackenzy Middlebrooks.

Arkansas will face No.27 Kentucky in the second round of tournament play, with first serve against the Wildcats set for 10 a.m. at the George P. Mitchell Tennis Center.

No. 44 Arkansas 4, Missouri 1

Doubles Results – Order of Finish (1,3)
1. Lauren Alter/Tatum Rice (ARK) def. Ellie Wright/Lisa Fukutoku (MIZ) 6-1
2. Martina Zerulo/Thea Rice (ARK) vs. Marta Oliveira/Macken Middlebrooks (MIZ) 4-3, unfinished
3. Miruna Tudor/Jackie Carr (ARK) def. Gabrielle Goldin/Taylor Gruber (MIZ) 6-2

Doubles Results – Order of Finish (4,3,5,1)
1. No. 85 Martina Zerulo (ARK) def. No. 114 Mackenzy Middlebrooks (MIZ) 6-0, 6-2
2. No. 76 Tatum Rice (ARK) vs. Serena Nash (MIZ) 6-1, 4-6, 0-0, unfinished
3. Lauren Alter (ARK) def. Lisa Fukutoku (MIZ) 6-1, 6-2
4. Miruna Tudor (ARK) def. Taylor Gruber (MIZ) 6-2, 6-1
5. Marta Oliveira (MIZ) def. Laura Rijkers (ARK) 7-6 (7-3), 6-0
6. Jackie Carr (ARK) vs. Vivien Abraham (MIZ) 6-1, 3-5, unfinished

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Wednesday

John & Tommy discuss the mindset for Chad Morris in Year 2, Eric Musselman’s impact, and more!

Razorbacks keep hot streak going at plate in 16-4 win over UAPB

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas got off to a quick start Tuesday against Arkansas-Pine Bluff and never slowed down, cruising to a 16-4 run-rule victory in seven innings, for its second win in a row.

Arkansas (27-10, 9-6 SEC) scored its first 12 runs in the first three innings and was in control from, seemingly, the first pitch as Trevor Ezell led off the game with a triple and was brought in to score on a Casey Martin single.

Seven of Arkansas’ nine starters recorded at least one hit in the game, with six getting two hits or more.

With 16 hits in the game against the Golden Lions (6-28), Arkansas’ offense has 38 hits in its last two games with 22 coming in Sunday’s 14-12 win at No. 6 Vanderbilt.

It’s the 19th game with 10 or more hits this season and sixth with 15 or more.

For the fifth time this year, the Razorbacks hit three home runs in the game as Dominic Fletcher, Jack Kenley and Martin all went deep. Martin and Kenley both are now tied for second on the team with seven home runs, while Fletcher now has five on the year and 27 for his career.

Ezell and Martin led all Razorback hitters with three hits each. Ezell’s other two hits in the game were both singles, coming in the second and fifth innings.

Martin singled again in the fourth before hitting his seventh home run of the year in the fifth inning, driving in three more runs for a season-high four RBIs.

Martin now has at least one hit in 12 of his last 14 games and has recorded two or more hits in four of his last five games.

Ezell has had a similar run as of late as he finished Tuesday’s game 3-for-4 with a season-high four runs scored and one walk.

He’s tallied 14 hits in his last nine games with seven extra-base hits in that span. His first-inning triple was his second of the year.

Fletcher and sophomore Matt Goodheart also turned in perfect nights at the plate as Goodheart was 2-for-2 with three walks. The three walks was a career-high and he is 19 for his last 40 at-bats (.475) and extended his hitting streak to 10 games.

Fletcher was 3-for-3 with a season-high four RBIs, three coming from his home run in the third inning. It was his fifth game with three hits or more this year.

Freshman Connor Noland picked up his first win of the season, giving up only two hits over two scoreless innings in his 10th start of the year.

Noland, who was on a pitch count, faced seven batters over the first two innings and struck out two while throwing 23 pitches.

Razorback quotables

“It was contagious. I think it was contagious on Sunday (at Vanderbilt). They guys didn’t want to let each other down. They kept fighting and I mean we had 22 hits on Sunday and another 15 of 16 today. That’s hard to do and I think the offense is clicking a little bit now and it’s going to need to with the team that’s rolling in here on Thursday.” — Coach Dave Van Horn on the offensive surge over the last two games

“He’s just continued to get better really the last month when he realized he needed to see a little better. The more at-bats he gets, he’s been patient, he’s fouled off a lot of pitches and works to get one he can handle a little bit. He’s just doing a good job. Going the other way, up the middle, if he gets a pitch in, he’s pulled them. He’s a mature hitter doing a great job.” — Van Horn on Matt Goodheart

Up next

Arkansas remains home for an important SEC series against Mississippi State starting on Thursday at Baum-Walker Stadium.

The series opener is set for 8 p.m. on ESPNU, while game two will follow on Friday at 6:30 p.m. on SEC Network+. The series finale will be played on Saturday at 2 p.m., also on SEC Network+.

Van Horn on solid hitting, Goodheart’s streak, previewing MSU series

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn talked about the 16-4 win over Arkansas-Pine Bluff on Tuesday night, Matt Goodheart’s continued solid hitting and the series with Mississippi State.

Martin, Goodheart on after win over UAPB; Campbell looks ahead

Razorbacks Casey Martin and Matt Goodheart talked about the win over the Golden Lions and the “contagious” hitting while Isaiah Campbell looked ahead to Bulldogs’ opener Thursday.

Razorbacks take first-ever in-state matchup with UAPB on Tuesday evening

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas took advantage of five extra-base hits in the second and third innings on Tuesday, scoring nine runs off two home runs and three doubles to take a mid-week contest from Arkansas-Pine Bluff, 10-0, in five-innings.

Hannah McEwen and Haydi Bugarin were the two Hogs to go long in Arkansas’ ninth run-rule victory of the season.

McEwen reached base safely in all three trips to the plate. As a 46-game starter in the leadoff position, McEwen has extended her on-base streak to eight games, finding a way to the bag in 42 of 46 games this season.

She put up the first run for the Hogs in the first inning after reaching on a Lady Lions error and scored on a single up the middle by Katie Warrick.

It was the first of 10 hits for the Hogs.

Arkansas scored four more runs in the second inning to take a 5-0 lead. Sydney Parr and Keely Edward both contributed hits in the home-half of the inning, scoring with help from Bugarin’s home run and a double by McEwen.

The Razorbacks held steady at the plate in the third, as Kayla Green drew a leadoff walk, then reached second on a single by Parr. Carley Haizlip came on as a pinch-runner, then scored on on a double to left field by Bugarin.

Nicole Duncan connected on the 0-2 count and singled to left to score Parr. Bugarin scored on a sacrifice fly by Edwards and the Razorbacks took an eight-run lead in the third inning.

The final two runs of the night came from McEwen’s home run in right center, only her second of the season, but good for her 54th hit of the year, a team best.

Arkansas looked to Autumn Storms and Lauren Graves for support in the circle, as the duo combined for the shutout, recording six strikeouts. Storms recorded her 17th win of the season, starting in her 84th game as a Razorback.

Up next

The Razorbacks close out on their homestand with a three-game conference series against No.9 LSU starting on Thursday at 6 p.m.

The Hogs and Tigers 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.

Razorbacks’ Matthews’s three wins last week earns SEC weekly award

FAYETTEVILLE — Brooke Matthews earned co-medalist honors and won three matches last week earning Southeastern Conference Golfer of the Week honors Tuesday.

Matthews and the No. 6 Razorbacks are in Birmingham, Alabama, for the 2019 SEC Championship Wednesday-Sunday at the Legends Course at Greystone Country Club.

About the SEC Championship

Dates: Wednesday-Sunday, April 17-21
Course: The Legends Course at Greystone Country Club
Live Scoring: SECSports.com and Golfstat.com
Broadcast: The championship match on Sunday, April 21 will be televised live on SEC Network at 7:30 a.m.

The Razorbacks enter the week as the defending SEC Champions winning the program’s first conference title last year when the format changed to include match play.

Maria Fassi was the co-medalist last year and she, along with seniors Dylan Kim and Kaylee Benton, return to lead Arkansas in their defense of the title this week. Matthews and freshman Ximena Gonzalez round out the lineup for Arkansas.

Matthews earned co-medalist honors shooting a collegiate career-best 4-under 68 in the single round of stroke play at the Liz Murphey Collegiate Classic last week.

It is her first medalist honor as a Razorback. The Rogers native, turned 1-under and finished strong with three consecutive birdies on her final holes.

Matthews went on to win all three of her matches defeating players from Louisville, Augusta and the host Georgia. She was the only Razorback to win all three matches at the Liz.

NCAA Championships

The University of Arkansas and Blessings Golf Club are the proud hosts of the 2019 NCAA Women’s and Men’s National Championships.

The women’s event begins May 17 and is immediately followed by the men’s championship beginning May 24.

For more information or to volunteer for the event, log on to www.NCAAGolf19.com.

???? Tuesday Halftime Pod

0

Phil & Tye discuss the pros/cons of playing in-state school, Get Off My Lawn, and more!

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: Tuesday

 

John and Tommy Preview Ole Miss, playing in-state schools, and more!

Tiger’s win shows comparing different eras in sports is, well, impossible

0

Tiger Woods won The Masters on Sunday and the next day it often appeared the media world was in a race to see who cried the most and could proclaim him the greatest of all time.

I’m not sure he’s the best golfer in the world today, but he was on Sunday.

As for the greatest of all time? Stop it. He’s the best of his era, which was a nice little run from 1996-2011 and that’s just going by the numbers. He also had considerably more marketing than any other golfer in history, but that’s not a criiticism.

You can’t even say his resurrection at The Masters was even the greatest comeback in golf’s history. It certainly wasn’t the biggest position comeback at that event (Gary Player coming from eighth place on Sunday to win in 1978 leaps to mind immediately). Tiger started the day in second place just two shots back.

It may not even be the fastest comeback from a serious injury in the sport’s history to win a major.

Ben Hogan, who basically invented most of what golf is today, had a head-on collision with a Greyhound bus down in Texas in February 1949.

The crash nearly killed him, leaving him with a double-fracture of the pelvis, a fractured collar bone, a left ankle fracture, a chipped rib, and near-fatal blood clots. The injuries caused lifelong circulation problems and other physical limitations. His doctors said he might never walk again.

The blood clots were so bad they had to tie off the venae cava, which returns deoxygenated blood from the body into the heart, which is kind of a big deal.

Hogan won the U.S. Open in 1950, gimping around the course basically on one leg less than 18 months after all of those injuries.

In 1953 he became the first golfer to win three major championships in one year. It might have been four, but the PGA and British Open overlapped in those days and going to the Open is considered a bigger deal.

Tiger did it in 2000, but that was a decade before his back problems. Hogan did it 18 months after nearly dying. He played just a year from the accident and tied Sam Snead in the Los Angeles Open to start the 1950 season before losing in an 18-hold playoff. Snead least Tiger by one in total number of tournament victories.

Hogan won 64 tournaments during his career, but didn’t play that many. The 1953 season where he won three majors was half of the total tournaments he entered. He won two of the other three (yes, he won five of the six tournaments he entered).

Was he better than Tiger? Nobody knows. Bobby Jones may have been better than all of them but he never played professionally, but there would no Masters without him.

Hogan didn’t play with metal woods or finely-engineered clubs with scientifically-developed balls that traveled maximum distance.

Oh, and Tiger didn’t have to go into military service five years into his pro career flying planes for the Army during World War II like Hogan did.

Then you get to Jack Nicklaus. You can even get a pretty good debate from some he wasn’t the best in his era, but nobody else has his numbers (including Tiger). Again, his total tournament wins came in a time when they didn’t play 10 months a year with the overall number of events they have now.

Nicklaus still has the most major tournament titles, though. He is probably still a better putter than nearly everybody on the tour today and Jack is nearly 80.

Golfers in Hogan’s entire era and the early part of Nicklaus’ time had to have real jobs in addition to playing golf.

“Golf was kind of our hobby,” one Byron Nelson told me one time. He was part of the Hogan era and a fairly well-renowed ball-striker. “It didn’t pay enough to feed the family back then.”

Don’t start the GOAT talk. That’s ridiculous in any sport because rules changes, technology, training and medical advances render it impossible without a set of common environments.

Tiger’s win on Sunday was a nice win that had a feel-good ending. He basically saved golf from itself in 1996 when the sport was in dire need of diversity and a personality. The ones who had carried it previously were getting old and doing more hobbling than walking.

Television needed Tiger as much as anything. They really didn’t have anybody that got folks terribly interested. He filled that void.

His win, in perspective, could just end up being an interesting Masters that delivered monster television ratings, especially on CBS on Sunday morning followed by a replay. Some unexpected weather helped there.

Tiger’s win was a nice accomplishment and he deserves all the accolades for coming back from a back issue that threatened to put him in the gallery for good, but it was one win in one tournament.

I’m not real sure, though, it was even the greatest comeback in golf history.

But calling him the greatest in the history of the sport is an impossible evaluation.

Razorbacks, Golden Lions meet Tuesday for first time in program history

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas looks to build on its five-game winning streak on Tuesday, hosting Arkansas-Pine Bluff for an mid-week non-conference contest.

The Razorbacks and Golden Lions will be meeting for the first time in program history with first pitch slated for 6 p.m.

Arkansas (31-14) is coming off an eventful week with five wins over Wichita State and Furman.

The Razorbacks most recently secured two run-rule victories over Furman on Sunday (April 14), outscoring the Paladins 11-0 in game one and 9-1 in game two.

The five wins were highlighted with a 12-inning 6-5 victory over Furman on Saturday (April 13).

The Golden Lions are headed to Fayetteville after they dropped two games to Grambling State, 11-2 and 5-4, on Friday afternoon.

UAPB (4-25) is one of four teams that Arkansas has faced or will face in 2019 for the first time in program history this season (UAPB, Campbell, Furman, Lipscomb).

UAPB is the only SWAC team to face the Razorbacks this season.

Arkansas is 17-1 against SWAC teams in program history. The last SWAC team to defeat the Hogs was Jackson State in 2014 (L, 3-1 in Jackson).

Just keep running, just keep running

Arkansas has looked to their dugout multiple times this year to add speed to the bases, scoring 34 runs off pinch runners.

Sam Torres, Sydney Benz, Maggie Hicks, Ryan Jackson, Carley Haizlip and Keely Edwards have all scored runs as pinch runners for the Hogs. Torres currently leads the pack with 11 runs.

Razorback notables

• Nicole Duncan’s 14 hit-by-pitch calls in 2019 is two-short of the single-season high of 16, set by Kim Eiben in 2002.

• As a team, the Hogs have been hit 49 times at the plate, a single-season high in program history.

• Kayla Green is only one of four SEC catchers to catch eight or more runners stealing – of those four, Green has the least number of stolen bases allowed (4) and therefore the best SBA% (.333).

• Green’s 23 career runners caught stealing is one away from ranking 10th for CSB in a career at Arkansas.

10 years at Bogle

The 2019 season marks the 10th season in Bogle Park. Since its opening, the Hogs have played 251 games there for a combined 141-110 record.