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Razorbacks all business on first day of NCAA Championships

EUGENE, Ore. — On the opening day of the men’s NCAA Track & Field Championships, Arkansas competed in front of a crowd of 9,767, the largest day one attendance since 2010, advancing two relays and four individuals to their respective event finals.

Coach Chris Bucknam:

“We have the second-most qualifiers into the finals. We have two decathletes who are battling to get back into scoring position in Gabe [Moore] and Derek [Jacobus]. Derek set a personal best after day one, and Gabe tied a personal-best in the quarter. We’re hoping for those guys to get back into scoring position and bring home some points, that’s the main goal. Kenzo had a tough draw in the 100-meters, he ran a phenomenal time into a negative wind and then the next two heats had positive wind and he ended up missing the final by the smallest of margins, it was just unfortunate. But overall it was an outstanding day, I’m pleased with the effort our guys put out there today. I’m looking forward to the guys having a rest day tomorrow and keeping our foot on the accelerator when we return to the track on Friday.”

Derek Jacobus and Gabe Moore opened the meet for the Razorbacks in the men’s decathlon. Jacobus and Moore are currently in 11th and 14th-place, respectively with their day one totals of 4,010 and 3,983 through five events.

Jacobus’ total is a day one personal best for the senior from Palo, Iowa.

In the opening event on the track for the Razorbacks, Arkansas fielded a sprint relay group of Kristoffer Hari, Kemar Mowatt, and Kevin Harris, placing Kenzo Cotton on the anchor leg.

Entering the meet having recorded the fastest time in the NCAA this season, the Razorbacks finished with an auto-Q time of 38.54 trailing only Florida who eclipsed Arkansas’ NCAA-leading seed time finishing in a new collegiate-leading time of 38.49.

With the qualification through to the final in the 4-x-100-meters, this marks the fourth-straight year Arkansas will be in the final of the event at the NCAA Championships.

In the prelims of the 1,500-meters, Cameron Griffith ran a strategic race, running with the pack for the first 1,200-meters before swinging wide with 300-meters to go and making a move into third-place.

Griffith held put for 200-meters before cementing himself in the top-five earning an auto-Q spot to Friday’s final finishing with a time of 3:47.93Q.

Obi Igbokwe had a breakthrough performance in the prelims of the men’s 400-meters where the junior finished the one-lap race with the third-fastest time in program history.

Igbokwe posted a time of 44.94 to finish second in his heat grabbing an auto-Q spot into Friday’s final.

Kemar Mowatt returns to the finals of the men’s 400-meter hurdles following a heat-winning time of 49.98. The senior from St. Elizabeth, Jamaica looks to capitalize on his return trip to the final of the 400-hurdles after finishing third last season at this meet.

Cotton, who already advanced to the finals as a member of the 4-x-100-meter relay, bounced back from a non-advancing run of 10.14 in the 100-meter prelims to advance to the finals in the 200-meters grabbing the final spot in with a season-best run of 20.38 in the prelims.

Closing out the meet for Arkansas was the 4-x-400-meter relay. The Razorback worked their way back to the NCAA final running a time of 3:03.98 earning an auto-Q finishing second in the final heat of prelims.

Also competing on day one of the NCAA Championships was Larry Donald in the 110-meter hurdles running a time of 13.93 in the prelims to finish in 17th-place, and Harrison Schrage in the men’s long jump capping the competition with a personal-best jump of 7.70m (25-3.25″) for 14th-place.

Washington Nationals take Shaddy in 10th round of draft

FAYETTEVILLE — Senior infielder Carson Shaddy was the fifth Razorback taken in the 2018 Major League Baseball first-year player draft, as he was selected in the 10th round, 311th overall, by the Washington Nationals on Tuesday afternoon.

Shaddy is the fifth Razorback selected on the draft’s second day and the second infielder. He joins Blaine Knight, Eric Cole, Grant Koch, and Jax Biggers as the other Arkansas selections today.

With his selection, Shaddy also joins the rank of his father and former Razorback infielder Chris Shaddy, who was selected in the eighth round by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 1982 MLB Draft.

Shaddy has had quite the career at Arkansas since arriving in 2014 from nearby Fayetteville High School.

Shaddy redshirted his true freshman year and then was the Hogs’ primary catcher at the tail end of the 2015 season which ended in a trip to the College World Series.

He hit .337 that year, second highest on the team in 44 games, including 14 starts as a catcher and an outfielder.

The Fayetteville native underwent Tommy John surgery on his throwing arm prior to his redshirt sophomore season and made the move to third base for the 2016 season.

That year, he led the team with a .332 batting average that included 70 hits, 41 runs scored, and a .521 slugging percentage.

This year has been a career year for Shaddy as he’s hit .331 with career highs in home runs (11) and RBIs (43) en route to an All-SEC First Team selection.

He opened the season with a big weekend performance against Bucknell, totaling nine RBIs in 12 plate appearances, including two-straight four-RBI days and two homers, as he was named the SEC Player of the Week.

At the end of the regular season, Shaddy was leading the team with a .354 batting average and in the top-10 among all league players in batting, slugging, and on-base percentage.

He’s made 47 starts in 50 games at second base and only committed eight errors in 206 chances this season.

Day two of the draft concluded today on MLB.com. Wednesday will be the final day of the draft and will include rounds 11-40 starting at 11 a.m. All selections can be followed on MLB.com.

Shaddy and the Razorbacks will resume action this weekend at the NCAA Fayetteville Super Regional against league foe South Carolina. Game one is scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. Saturday.

Rangers take Razorbacks’ Biggers in eighth round

FAYETTEVILLE —Junior infielder Jax Biggers was the fourth Razorback taken in the 2018 Major League Baseball first-year player draft, chosen in the eighth round, 239th overall, by the Texas Rangers on Tuesday afternoon.

Biggers becomes the 13th shortstop in school history to be selected in the draft and first since Michael Bernal went to the Giants in 2016.

With Biggers’ selection, it marks the second-straight season the Razorbacks have had four or more players drafted in the first 10 rounds and fourth time since 2000.

The Missouri City, Texas native has received high marks since taking over the shortstop position for the Razorbacks last year after transferring in from Cisco Junior College.

Last year, Biggers hit .338, which led all Arkansas hitters and shortstops in the SEC. It was also the highest batting average by a Razorback shortstop since Scott Hode hit .309 in 2005.

Biggers went on to be named to the All-SEC Second Team and was named a Brooks Wallace Award semifinalist, an honor for the nation’s top shortstops.

This year, the junior has hit .281 in 53 games with nine doubles, four home runs, and 22 RBIs. His .388 on-base percentage is attributed to his 33 walks, the fourth-highest total on the team.

Biggers suffered a fractured finger on his left hand at the beginning of the Texas A&M series last month, but since coming back from that injury (May 25), he’s hit .333 (5-for-15) with two multi-hit games and one home run.

Defensively, Biggers has only made 17 errors in 420 chances for a .960 combined fielding percentage over the last two years. He’s also helped turn 30 of Arkansas’ conference-leading 56 double plays this year.

Day two of the draft continues today on MLB.com. Rounds 3-10 will be conducted today. Wednesday will be the final day of the draft and will include rounds 11-40 starting at 11 a.m. All selections can be followed on MLB.com.

Biggers and the Razorbacks will resume action this weekend at the NCAA Fayetteville Super Regional against league foe South Carolina. Game one is scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. Saturday.

Razorbacks’ Koch tabbed by Pittsburgh in MLB draft

FAYETTEVILLE — Junior catcher Grant Koch was the third Razorback taken in the 2018 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft, selected in the fifth round, 144th overall, by Pittsburgh on Tuesday afternoon.

Koch becomes the 18th Arkansas catcher to be drafted and the first since James McCann was taken in the second round by the Detroit Tigers in 2011.

With Koch’s selection, the Razorbacks have had three or more players drafted in the first five rounds of the MLB Draft for the fourth time in program history, joining the years of 2007, 2010 and 2013.

The Fayetteville, Arkansas native was stellar behind the plate in 2018, recording 433 putouts with a .998 fielding percentage, with just one error on the year, while starting 53 games for the Hogs.

Koch was errorless in league play this season, earning a nod on the Southeastern Conference’s All-Defensive Team.

Offensively, Koch is currently batting .250 with 34 RBIs and 32 runs scored and is second on the team with 34 walks on the year.

He has posted seven home runs on the season, including five in conference play, with just 34 strikeouts, good for the third-lowest in the Razorbacks’ starting nine.

Day two of the draft continues today on MLB.com. Rounds 3-10 will be conducted today. Wednesday will be the final day of the draft and will include rounds 11-40 starting at 11 a.m. All selections can be followed on MLB.com.

Koch and the Razorbacks will resume action this weekend at the NCAA Fayetteville Super Regional against league foe South Carolina.

Game one is scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. Saturday.

Razorbacks head west to Eugene for NCAA Championships

EUGENE, Ore. – Arkansas will start its final challenge of the season this week against best programs in the country at the 2018 NCAA Outdoor Championships at historic Hayward Field on the campus of the University of Oregon.

The ESPN family of networks will live stream and televise the four-day event, beginning Wednesday, June 7 at 5:30 p.m. CT on ESPNU.

Fans are encouraged to participate in the event on social media by using the hashtag #ncaaTF.

2018 NCAA Outdoor Championships | Eugene, Oregon
Date/Time: Wednesday, June 6, 1:30 p.m. | Thursday, June 7, 12:30 p.m. | Friday, June 8, 2:30 p.m. | Saturday, June 9, 1:30 p.m.
Venue: Hayward Field
LIVE Results: ncaa.com

ESPN has exclusive broadcast rights for the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships.
*All times listed in CT

Arkansas Qualifiers
100-Meters – Kenzo Cotton
200-Meters – Kenzo Cotton
400-Meters – Obi Igbokwe
110-Meter Hurdles – Larry Donald
400-Meter Hurdles
 – Kemar Mowatt
1,500-Meters – Cameron Griffith
4-x-100 Meter Relay – Hari, Mowatt, Harris, Cotton
4-x-400 Meter Relay – Stephen, Woodhall, Mowatt, Igbokwe
Long Jump – Schrage
Decathlon – Jacobus, Moore

NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP REPEATS ????
The Razorbacks have four athletes returning to the NCAA Championships in individual events after competing in the NCAA Indoor Championships this past March in College Station, Texas.

Kenzo Cotton qualifies for the outdoor championships following an indoor season that saw the senior grab his 16th All-American honor, finishing seventh in the 200-meters in a time of 20.85.

At last year’s NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, Cotton finished 10th in the 100-meters (10.11), 12th in the 200-meters (20.52) and ran a leg on the seventh-place 4-x-100-meter relay that posted a time of 38.82)

Obi Igbokwe looks to improve during his second NCAA championships this season after posting a 14th-place finish in the 400-meters during the indoor championships this past March.

Igbokwe recorded a time of 45.49, an outdoor PR, at the NCAA West Preliminary that stands as the No. 5 mark all-time in Arkansas’ program history to punch his ticket to Eugene.

At last year’s NCAA Outdoor meet, Igbokwe finished 20th in the 400-meters (46.40) and helped the Razorbacks secure a runner-up finish in the 4-x-400-meter relay running a school record time of 3:01.84 in the final.

Cameron Griffith, who has qualified for every championship meet during the 2017-18 academic year (XC, ITF, OTF), will make his outdoor championships debut in the 1,500-meters after finishing fifth at the NCAA West Prelims running a personal-best time of 3:43.14.

Griffith finished as the bronze medalist in the 3,000-meters (8:05.91) at the indoor championships this past March in College Station, Texas.

Gabe Moore returns to the NCAA Championships following a sixth-place finish at the 2018 NCAA Indoor Championships. Moore posted a total score of 5,874-points to earn All-American honors indoors.

During the 2018 outdoor season, Moore has recorded a program No. 2 mark of 7,901-points that came during a runner-up finish at the SEC Outdoor Championships in Knoxville, Tenn.

The men’s 4-x-400-meter relay returns after their historic run during last year’s NCAA outdoor meet that saw Rhayko Schwartz, Eric Janise, Roy Ejakuekwu, Obi Igbokwe run a school record time of 3:01.84 in an NCAA runner-up finish.

This year’s outdoor squad features Jamarco Stephen, Hunter Woodhall, Kemar Mowatt, and Igbokwe who cruised to an NCAA qualifying time of 3:04.51 at the NCAA West Prelims meet in Sacramento, Calif.

Social Media
Join the championship conversation by using #ncaaTF
and following along on Facebook (NCAA Track & Field) & Twitter
(@NCAATrackField) for results and important meet updates.

On Wednesday afternoon the No. 13 Arkansas men’s track and field team will embark on its final challenge of the season, matching their talents against the best programs in the country at the 2018 NCAA Outdoor Championships at Historic Hayward Field on the campus of the University of Oregon.

The ESPN family of networks will live stream and televise the four-day event, beginning Wednesday, June 7 at 5:30 p.m. on ESPNU. Fans are encouraged to participate in the event on social media by using the hashtag #ncaaTF.

2018 NCAA Outdoor Championships | Eugene, Oregon
Date/Time: Wednesday, June 6, 1:30 p.m. | Thursday, June 7, 12:30 p.m. | Friday, June 8, 2:30 p.m. | Saturday, June 9, 1:30 p.m.
Venue: Hayward Field
LIVE Results: ncaa.com

ESPN has exclusive broadcast rights for the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships.
*All times listed in CT

Arkansas Qualifiers
100-Meters – Kenzo Cotton
200-Meters – Kenzo Cotton
400-Meters – Obi Igbokwe
110-Meter Hurdles – Larry Donald
400-Meter Hurdles
 – Kemar Mowatt
1,500-Meters – Cameron Griffith
4-x-100 Meter Relay – Hari, Mowatt, Harris, Cotton
4-x-400 Meter Relay – Stephen, Woodhall, Mowatt, Igbokwe
Long Jump – Schrage
Decathlon – Jacobus, Moore

NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP REPEATS

The Razorbacks have four athletes returning to the NCAA Championships in individual events after competing in the NCAA Indoor Championships this past March in College Station, Texas.

Kenzo Cotton qualifies for the outdoor championships following an indoor season that saw the senior grab his 16th All-American honor, finishing seventh in the 200-meters in a time of 20.85.

At last year’s NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, Cotton finished 10th in the 100-meters (10.11), 12th in the 200-meters (20.52) and ran a leg on the seventh-place 4-x-100-meter relay that posted a time of 38.82)

Obi Igbokwe looks to improve during his second NCAA championships this season after posting a 14th-place finish in the 400-meters during the indoor championships this past March.

Igbokwe recorded a time of 45.49, an outdoor PR, at the NCAA West Preliminary that stands as the No. 5 mark all-time in Arkansas’ program history to punch his ticket to Eugene.

At last year’s NCAA Outdoor meet, Igbokwe finished 20th in the 400-meters (46.40) and helped the Razorbacks secure a runner-up finish in the 4-x-400-meter relay running a school record time of 3:01.84 in the final.

Cameron Griffith, who has qualified for every championship meet during the 2017-18 academic year (XC, ITF, OTF), will make his outdoor championships debut in the 1,500-meters after finishing fifth at the NCAA West Prelims running a personal-best time of 3:43.14.

Griffith finished as the bronze medalist in the 3,000-meters (8:05.91) at the indoor championships this past March in College Station, Texas.

Gabe Moore returns to the NCAA Championships following a sixth-place finish at the 2018 NCAA Indoor Championships. Moore posted a total score of 5,874-points to earn All-American honors indoors.

During the 2018 outdoor season, Moore has recorded a program No. 2 mark of 7,901-points that came during a runner-up finish at the SEC Outdoor Championships in Knoxville, Tenn.

The men’s 4-x-400-meter relay returns after their historic run during last year’s NCAA outdoor meet that saw Rhayko Schwartz, Eric Janise, Roy Ejakuekwu, Obi Igbokwe run a school record time of 3:01.84 in an NCAA runner-up finish.

This year’s outdoor squad features Jamarco Stephen, Hunter Woodhall, Kemar Mowatt, and Igbokwe who cruised to an NCAA qualifying time of 3:04.51 at the NCAA West Prelims meet in Sacramento, Calif.

Social Media
Join the championship conversation by using #ncaaTF
and following along on Facebook (NCAA Track & Field) & Twitter
(@NCAATrackField) for results and important meet updates.

Razorbacks set to compete in NCAA Championships

EUGENE, Ore. — Thursday afternoon, Arkansas embarks on the final challenge of the season, matching their talents against the best programs in the country at the 2018 NCAA Outdoor Championships at historic Hayward Field on the campus of the University of Oregon.

The ESPN family of networks will live stream and televise the four-day event, beginning Wednesday, June 7 at 5:30 p.m. on ESPNU.

Fans are encouraged to participate in the event on social media by using the hashtag #ncaaTF.

2018 NCAA Outdoor Championships | Eugene, Oregon
Date/Time: Wednesday, June 6, 1:30 p.m. | Thursday, June 7, 12:30 p.m. | Friday, June 8, 2:30 p.m. | Saturday, June 9, 1:30 p.m.
Venue: Hayward Field
LIVE Results: ncaa.com

ESPN has exclusive broadcast rights for the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships.
*All times listed in CT

Arkansas Qualifiers
100-Meters – Jada Baylark
100-Meter Hurdles – Janeek Brown
1,500-Meters – Nikki Hiltz
3,000-meter steeplechase – Devin Clark
4-x-100 Meter Relay – Parker, Baylark, Brown, Brooks
4-x-400 Meter Relay – Burks-Magee, Parker, Hammit, Davis
Pole Vault – Jacobus, Hoggard, Robinson

NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP REPEATS

The Razorbacks have three athletes returning to the NCAA Championships in individual events after competing in the NCAA Indoor Championships this past March in College Station, Texas.

Nikki Hiltz qualifies for the outdoor championships following an indoor season that saw the senior grab All-American honors, finishing third in the Mile in a time of 4:32.59.

At last year’s NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships, Hiltz finished runner-up in the 1,500-meters (4:13.80) and enters this year’s championships chasing that elusive NCAA Championship in the same event.

Janeek Brown looks to improve during her second NCAA championships this season after posting an eighth-place finish in the 60-meter hurdles during the indoor championships this past March.

Brown recorded a time of 12.90w at the NCAA West Preliminary to punch her ticket to Eugene.

At the SEC Outdoor championships, Brown posted a personal-best time of 12.84 in a third-place finish – the No. 2 time in program history.

Jada Baylark will make her second outdoor championships appearance in the 100-meters after finishing first at the NCAA West Prelims running a personal-best and school record time of 11.04.

Her time of 11.04 seconds broke the 14-year-old Arkansas record held by Olympic Champion Veronica Campbell-Brown.

Baylark finished 15h in the 60-meters at the indoor championships this past March in College Station, Texas.

Social Media

Join the championship conversation by using #ncaaTF
and following along on Facebook (NCAA Track & Field) & Twitter
(@NCAATrackField) for results and important meet updates.

Cole drafted in fourth round by Kansas City

Junior right fielder Eric Cole was selected by Kansas City in the fourth round of the 2018 MLB Draft with the 122nd overall pick Tuesday.

Cole hit .328 with 13 home runs and 47 RBI this season and .  The Southlake, Texas native is tied for the team lead in home runs and is second in RBI entering Super Regional play this weekend.

Cole has a career .299 batting average in 147 career games with 18 home runs and 79 RBI. He is also 9 for 13 in stolen base attempts in his career as a Hog.

Cole and the Razorbacks will be back in action this weekend hosting South Carolina in the Fayetteville Super Regional beginning on Saturday evening at 5:30 on ESPN2.

In four games this season against South Carolina Cole is hitting .267 (4 for 15), 2 runs, RBI and 6 strikeouts.

Razorbacks’ Knight taken in third round by Baltimore

 — Baltimore selected Arkansas right-hander Blaine Knight in the third round of the Major League Baseball Draft on Tuesday.

The lanky junior from Bryant was the 87th pick of the draft. Most feel Knight will sign before the July 6 deadline and forego his final year with the Razorbacks.

Knight is the only pitcher in Division I baseball with an 11-0 record this season, and he was solid again in the NCAA Fayetteville Regional in a 10-2 win against Oral Roberts last Friday.

Knight went eight innings, matching a career high, allowed three hits, two earned runs and walked one.

It marked his eighth start this season of six-plus innings pitched and one walk or less.

Prior to the Fayetteville regional, Knight earned All-America honors from Baseball America and Collegiate Baseball, and became the 42nd All-American in program history, living up to his preseason All-America honors.

Knight was projected to be a high-round selection last June as a draft-eligible sophomore, but fell to the 29th round because of a high asking price for a signing bonus.

Last year’s draft didn’t begin until after the Razorbacks lost their regional championship game against Missouri State at Baum Stadium.

Knight, who started a loss to Missouri State that sent Arkansas into the loser’s bracket two days earlier, asked to pitch out of the bullpen that night, thinking it would be his final college game at home.

Since announcing his return to Arkansas, Knight’s draft stock soared while getting the upper hand in a number of pitching matchups with other projected high draft choices, including Auburn’s Casey Mize, who was chosen as the No. 1 pick in the draft by the Detroit Tigers.

He also secured wins in matchups against Florida’s Brady Singer and Jackson Kowar as well as Ole Miss’ Ryan Rollison. Knight holds a 2.74 ERA in 16 starts this season and has a 4-to-1 strikeout-to-walk ratio while holding opponents to a .224 average against.

Knight is expected to make at least one more start in his Arkansas career as the Razorbacks open super regional play against South Carolina this weekend at Baum Stadium.

Game times announced for this week’s Super Regional

FAYETTEVILLE —After sweeping through the Fayetteville Regional with wins over Oral Roberts, Southern Miss, and Dallas Baptist last week, fifth-seeded Arkansas continues on the road to the College World Series this weekend, hosting the NCAA Super Regional against South Carolina in a best-of-three series at Baum Stadium beginning Saturday at 5:30 p.m.

2018 NCAA Fayetteville Super Regional Schedule
Saturday, June 9, Arkansas vs. South Carolina, 5:30 p.m. (ESPN2)
Sunday, June 10, Arkansas vs. South Carolina, 2 p.m. (ESPN)
Monday, June 11, Arkansas vs. South Carolina (if necessary), 6 p.m. (ESPN)

Arkansas is making its seventh Super Regional appearance in school history. With two wins, the Razorbacks will advance to the College World Series for the ninth time in school history.