35 F
Fayetteville

Iredale’s bat, Wood’s pitching lifts Hogs to win over Cougars

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Powered by Brent Iredale’s two-homer day, No. 5 Arkansas (3-0) mashed its way to a 5-2 win and an Opening Weekend series win against Washington State (0-3) Saturday afternoon at Baum-Walker Stadium.

With the win, the Razorbacks have now clinched 30 consecutive non-conference home weekend series in a streak dating back to 2015.

The Hogs have not lost or tied a non-conference regular season weekend series at Baum-Walker Stadium since 2014, when Arkansas lost two-of-three games to South Alabama in its final non-conference home weekend series.

Iredale continued his hot start to the season, jacking a pair of solo home runs and collecting two more RBI. Through the first three games, the Sydney, Australia, native is slashing a team-best .545/.571/1.182 with two homers and seven RBI.

True freshman Zane Becker, making his collegiate debut, drove in the first run of the game on a two-out double in the bottom half of the second, scoring Kendall Diggs from second and putting the Hogs ahead, 1-0.

The lead would hold until the top of the fourth when Washington State broke through for a pair of runs against Arkansas starter Gage Wood.

It was the only damage Wood would endure all game. The junior right-hander worked five innings of two-run ball with a career-high seven strikeouts in his first outing of the season, putting Arkansas in position to clinch the weekend series.

Iredale led off the bottom of the fourth with his first of two solo home runs, evening the game at two apiece. In his very next at-bat in the sixth, the Razorback third baseman blasted another solo shot into the Hog pen to put Arkansas up, 3-2.

From there, the Arkansas bullpen silenced the Washington State offense. Dylan Carter (1.2 IP, 1 SO), Parker Coil (1.1 IP, 1 SO) and Carson Wiggins (1.0 IP, 1 SO) combined for four shutout innings with three strikeouts in relief.

Wehiwa Aloy connected on his first home run of the season in the bottom of the eighth to give the Razorbacks some more breathing room. The Wailuku, Hawai’i, swatted a two-run homer to right center, extending the lead to three.

Wiggins locked down the bottom of the ninth, securing his first career save in his highly anticipated debut. The true freshman’s first four pitches were each 100 mph, and he ended the ballgame with his first career strikeout.

Following an off-day tomorrow due to forecasted inclement weather, Arkansas vies for an Opening Weekend series sweep against Washington State on Monday. The four-game set concludes with a noon first pitch on ESPN+.

Turnovers by Razorbacks lead to Texas A&M pulling away for win

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — With the game tied at 50-50,  No. 8/9 Texas A&M went on a 9-0 run and held on for a 69-61 win over Arkansas at Reed Arena.

With the game tied, Wade Taylor IV hit a 3-pointer, Anderson Garcia made two baskets and Henry Coleman capped the run with a layup off a Razorback turnover with 5:08 to play.

Arkansas stayed close but could not make a push despite a pair of 3-pointers by Zvonimir Ivisic down the stretch.

The Razorbacks held Texas A&M in check on the boards and blocked eight shots, including four by Ivisic. However, Arkansas committed 17 turnovers, its second-most of the season as the Aggies outscored the Hogs, 22-7, on points off turnovers.

Arkansas led 10-9 with 12:30 left in the first half and things went the other way after that. At times it was frustrating for Calipari. He took it out on the table at one point when A&M took a seven-point lead early in the second half.

After the Aggies put together their second lead by those seven points in the first two minutes, the Hogs responded and managed to cut things back closer. Karter Knox’s three-pointer with 11:29 left in the game to tie the game at 48-48.

That was the high-water mark for the Razorbacks, who could never get in front. The only tie after that was at 50-50 on Billy Richmond II’s layup. It was all A&M.

The Aggies got the lead to 10 on a couple of occasions and Arkansas would cut back by a couple of baskets, but simply couldn’t get close enough to really case much concern. At times it appeared the Hogs were just trying to avoid getting completely blown out.

Or were desperately throwing up prayers to have any kind of miracle happen, get some momentum to put things away. A&M, one of the top defensive teams in the country, probably wasn’t going to let that happen.

When the Hogs win they don’t turn the ball over and the Aggies forced them into 17 while just committing 10. Arkansas was forcing things offensively, then turning it over or making a bad decision on the shot selection.

Knox led the Razorbacks with 17 points, Ivisic had 13 and Adou Thiero a quiet 10 points.

A&M, now 20-5 overall, improved to 9-3 in conference play while the Hogs dropped to 15-10 (4-8 in SEC).
The Hogs will go on the road to Auburn on Wednesday night at 8 p.m. (another late night) on ESPN.

Ruscin & Zach February 14

0

Complaining….we mean celebrating Valentine’s Day with Ruscin, Zach and DQ.

Strong pitching, different Aloy lead Hogs to sweep pair on opening day

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Don’t get hung up on the details but Arkansas isn’t going to look back after sweeping a doubleheader against Washington State in an opening-day doubleheader at Baum-Walker Stadium on Friday afternoon.

Even if the first game was a little bit dicey in a 10-inning 3-2 win, things got easier. The Razorbacks jumped out to a quick 2-0 lead and never looked back. Kuhio Aloy, the brother of shortstop Wehiwa Aloy, delivered a three-run homer in the bottom of the seventh to put the finishing touches on a 12-2 run-rule win.

A big part of those first-game issues came when Hogs coach Dave Van Horn finally found out some information about Griffin Smith and how he did in junior college before going to the Cougars.

“I looked at his record last year in junior college,” Van Horn said later. “He was 11-0 with like a 1.99 ERA and you’re kind of thinking, ‘Well, that’s junior college.’ But on the other hand you’re thinking ‘This guy knows how to pitch,’ and he does. He wasn’t overpowering at all but just did a great job.”

It was good that opening-day starter Gabe Gaeckle answered the challenge.

“Gaeckle was outstanding,” Van Horn said. “You take away the, I think it was the third inning when his pitch count got up there. He was cruising after two innings, he’d only thrown 22 pitches and you’re thinking ‘This guy might go 6 or 7 today.’ And give them credit. They fought him a little bit.”

Gaeckle gave up one hit and one walk while striking out seven. He worked two perfect innings to being the game before running into some trouble in the third.

“It’s just a learning curve, ” Gaeckle said. “It helps me to grow as a pitcher and I felt fine after the fifth inning.”

Razorbacks pitcher Gabe Gaeckle delivers a pitch against Washington State
Arkansas Razorbacks pitcher Gabe Gaeckle delivers a pitch against Washington State at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville, Ark. | Andy Hodges-HitThatLine.com

In that first game, the Hogs got down late, but never gave up on a cold day that felt worse than the actual temperature due to a wind that was creating a lot of adventures on fly balls. Van Horn saw what he was thinking about this team.

“Doesn’t surprise me a bit,” he said. “We have a good team. Have some guys that are going to fight to play and are pushing each other, but they all like each other it seems like. I don’t think they’re ever going to shut it down. Your just a walk and a base hit away from having that guy up maybe when you are down a couple and hit a three run homer. I hope this team has that knack cause that’s what pushes you over the top is when you can come back and beat people late.”

Razorbacks third baseman makes an over-the-shoulder catch of a tricky fly ball against Washington State
Arkansas Razorbacks third baseman makes an over-the-shoulder catch of a tricky fly ball in the first game against Washington State. | Andy Hodges-HitThatLine.com

Brent Iredale’s sacrifice fly in the bottom of the 10th inning in game one of Friday’s doubleheader propelled the Hogs in the first game, putting the runners on base for Aloy’s homer.

The Opening Weekend series continues tomorrow afternoon with first pitch set for 1 p.m. on SEC Network+. With a win, Arkansas can clinch its 30th consecutive non-conference home weekend series, a streak dating back to the 2015 season.

The Razorbacks have not lost or tied a non-conference regular season weekend series at Baum-Walker Stadium since 2014, when Arkansas lost two-of-three games to South Alabama in its final non-conference home weekend series.

Razorbacks shortstop Wehiwa Aloy in the batter's box against Washington State
Arkansas Razorbacks shortstop Wehiwa Aloy in the batter’s box against Washington State at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville, Ark. | Andy Hodges-HitThatLine.com

Game 1: Arkansas 3, Washington State 2 (10)

Making his first collegiate start on the mound,Gaeckle fired a career-long five shutout innings with career-high seven strikeouts to help lead Arkansas to a game one win over Washington State. The Aptos, Calif., allowed only one hit and issued just one walk, throwing 51 of his 78 total pitches for strikes in the Opening Day start.

After Gaeckle departed the ballgame, the Cougars broke through for the first run of the day on a solo home run in the sixth inning to take a one-run lead. The Razorbacks, however, punched back in the bottom half of the frame on Logan Maxwell’s sacrifice fly, scoring Charles Davalan from third and evening the ballgame at one apiece.

Arkansas and Washington State continued to exchange zeroes until the game went to extra innings. In the top half of the 10th, the Cougars capitalized on a pair of Razorback errors and, ultimately, scored the go-ahead run to take a 2-1 lead.

Three consecutive walks to Arkansas hitters to begin the bottom half of the 10th set the table for the heart of the lineup to deliver the final blow. After Ryder Helfrick scored the game-tying run on a wild pitch, Iredale’s sacrifice fly to left brought Justin Thomas Jr. home from third and sealed the Razorbacks’ come-from-behind 3-2 win in extra innings.

Razorbacks outfielder Kuhio Aloy at the plate against Washington State
Arkansas Razorbacks outfielder Kuhio Aloy at the plate against Washington State at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville, Ark. | Andy Hodges-HitThatLine.com

Game 2: Arkansas 14, Washington State 2 (7)

Zach Root dominated in his Arkansas debut, spinning five innings of one-run ball with eight strikeouts to guide the Hogs to a stress-free win in the second game of Friday’s Opening Day doubleheader. The ECU transfer allowed one run on two hits and one walk, throwing 52 of his 75 pitches for strikes en route to earning his first win of the season.

The Razorback offense, meanwhile, scored early and often with two runs in the first, six runs in the fourth and another six runs over the game’s final three frames. Iredale recorded a team-high three hits, including his first double of the season, and drove in a team-leading four runs, while Aloy and Davalan each collected a pair of hits to go with three RBI.

Rocco Peppi’s RBI double in the bottom of the first started the offensive onslaught as Arkansas jumped out to an early two-run lead. The Hogs’ six-run fourth was engineered by timely two-out hitting, beginning with Davalan’s RBI single.

Iredale followed with a two-RBI single of his own before Helfrick delivered the haymaker, as the Razorback catcher tripled down the line in right, clearing the bases and giving Arkansas a commanding 8-1 advantage. Aloy provided the knockout blow with his three-run home run in the bottom of the seventh to punctuate Arkansas’ 14-2 run-rule win.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: 2-14-25


Happy Valentine’s Day! Love or Hate the Hogs chances in College Station on Saturday? Opening Day for Arkansas Baseball!

Guests: The Fence Man, Lang Wittman, and Clay Henry!

Former Razorbacks pitcher James Teague on handling start of season

With Hogs opening season with unique doubleheader Friday morning at 11 a.m. what he’s expecting early in long year.

Ruscin & Zach February 13

0

Court stormings, last second Valentine’s preps (don’t get her a coffee mug with a stuffed bear inside) and Aaron Rodgers needs a job.

Brett Dolan on improvement of Big Z inside for Razorbacks recently

Big man inside making difference as team improving for John Calipari after rocky start to play in SEC.

Finding Value 2.15.25

Mike Lindner, Tracy White and host Scott Blair go beyond picking winners. They try to reconstruct tickets that find value.

Topics: Looking for Value this Saturday at Oaklawn plus The Dixie Belle Stakes. The Buy/Sell segment features the G3 Risen Star

Hogville’s Dudley Dawson on how Calipari keeping Razorbacks on bubble

The combination of SEC’s strength as a league and John Calipari’s reputation putting Hogs in talk for March Madness.

Eastside Liquor Halftime Podcast: 2-13-25

Guests: Dudley Dawson, James Teague, Bubba Carpenter and Brett Dolan