33.8 F
Fayetteville

Knight will start first game of regional for Razorbacks

0

 — Dave Van Horn wouldn’t say it earlier in the week, but Arkansas announced Wednesday Blaine Knight will be the starter against Oral Roberts on Friday.

Honestly, it would have been a surprise if anyone else started.

“We play really good (defense) behind him,” Van Horn said Monday. “It seems we make play after play and he makes pitch after pitch, and when he gets in a jam he seems to find a way out of it and keep us in the game. He doesn’t give up big innings.”

Even thought Van Horn had dropped some hints that Kacey Murphy, normally the second-day starter, might go in the first game, nobody was really buying it.

Knight, who is 10-0 with a 2.78 ERA this season, has been steady all season.

“He’s very mature and whether it’s going good or bad, you really can’t tell,” Van Horn said. “A couple of years back it wasn’t that way. I think he realizes he has the stuff to get out of jams and stay under control.”

The Razorbacks are 12-3 when Knight has started this season. They haven’t lost with him pitching since April 20 at Mississippi State.

“He’s very mature on the mound and whether it’s going good or bad, you really can’t tell,” Van Horn said last week. “A couple of years back it wasn’t that way. I think he realizes he has the stuff to get out of jams and stay under control.

A year ago most felt Knight was headed to the major leagues, but the demand for a big signing bonus dropped him to the 29th round of the draft and he decided to stay in school another year.

“I’m happy I’m back and I’m happy that we got a regional here again,” he said this week.

Van Horn, too.

“I’m just glad he came back,” he said.

Oral Roberts (38-18) is expected to throw senior left-hander Miguel Ausua against Arkansas on Friday.

Ausua was the losing pitcher in the Golden Eagles’ 3-0 regional-opening loss to the Razorbacks last season when he went 6-1/3 innings and allowed one earned run. He is 8-1 on the season with a 3.27 ERA.

“He held us down pretty good last year,” Van Horn said. “It was a tight game. He’s a good pitcher.”

Hogs make final three for Georgia defensive lineman

Defensive lineman Mataio Soli announced via Twitter on Wednesday his final three schools and Arkansas is in that mix.

Mataio????Soli™ on Twitter

ALL GLORY TO GOD????????????????‼️ Here it is…

 

“First off, I want to thank God for blessing me with the opportunity to be able to live out my dream of playing college football at so many different colleges. I want to thank all of the coaches that have recruited me and for all that they’ve done for me and my family. With that being said, these are my Top 3 schools!”

Soli is the son of former Razorback defensive lineman Junior Soli, who had a standout career for the Hogs in the mid-1990s before he was drafted in the fifth round of the 1996 NFL Draft by the San Diego Chargers with the No. 155 pick.

The Douglasville (Ga.) prospect has been a high target for the Hogs and defensive ends coach Steve Caldwell has been recruiting him. Caldwell visited Douglasville during the spring evaluation period.

Soli made an unofficial trip to Arkansas in the spring and has also been to Clemson, Alabama and Vanderbilt this spring.

His other offers include Notre Dame, Florida, Florida State, Louisville, Wisconsin, Michigan State, Stanford, Kentucky, Virginia Tech, Washington and several others.

Auburn making the newly-released top three is definitely notable considering the Tigers just offered last week.

CBS looking for other teams to play on Black Friday?

0

FAYETTEVILLE — CBS released it’s broadcast schedule for the 2018 college football season Wednesday, but hasn’t specified a game for the Friday after Thanksgiving.

That’s right, Arkansas fans, the annual tradition of a game on that date may not be in the cards this year for the Razorbacks.

The CBS release usually coincides each year with the SEC’s spring meetings and the past four years has included the network’s intention to broadcast the Arkansas-Missouri game.

Not this year, at least right now.

“We will have additional TV details come out in coming weeks and I believe that Friday game would be announced between now and media days,” SEC director of communication Chuck Dunlap said in an e-mail.

Since the Hogs entered the league in 1992, they have played on the Friday after Thanksgiving 20 of the last 22 seasons. The first time they moved the LSU game to that date was in 1996.

Arkansas and LSU played on that date every year from 1996-2008. The network talked Alabama coach Nick Saban into moving the Iron Bowl game with Auburn to that date for two years, but he didn’t like it and the Hogs-Tigers were back there for the 2011-13 seasons.

Then the network wanted LSU-Texas A&M on the final weekend of the season as Missouri moved into the Razorbacks’ permanent East opponent and the game moved to the final week of the season.

Arkansas and Missouri have played on the Friday date the last four years. There are some who believe that matchup is still under consideration for the national television date that does have some value in exposure to the program, which is why Frank Broyles lobbied to get it for the Hogs back in the mid-90’s.

With the delay, it is safe to assume CBS and the SEC are at the very least exploring options.

Here are the other games for that final weekend:

• Ole Miss at Mississippi State (Thanksgiving Day)
• Arkansas at Missouri
• Auburn at Alabama
• Florida at Florida State
• Georgia Tech at Georgia
• Kentucky at Louisville
• LSU at Texas A&M
• South Carolina at Clemson
• Tennessee at Vanderbilt

Out of the eight possible matchups, we can eliminate the Iron Bowl because neither Saban or Gus Malzahn wants the change in their regular schedule. Both detest any change of routine and have enough clout to avoid moving the game.

Everything else is wide open at this point. LSU-Texas A&M is a likely candidate and there is the possibility of ESPN putting an SEC matchup on Friday night.

The Arkansas-Missouri game has drawn an annual average TV audience of more than 2.9 million viewers, according to Sports Media Watch.

Hogs won’t get ANY respect, but they will be better

0

As Steve Spurrier once said, it’s talking season in the SEC.

The official start for what I’ve always called the pre-mumbling part of that is the league’s spring meetings in Destin this week. For the media, it’s the greatest way to get your boss to pay for a week at the beach, but it’s going to be a lot of, well, nothing.

In mid-July we’ll have SEC Media Days in Atlanta this year for the second biggest media waste of time in my opinion. Since process servers quit hanging around the Wynfrey Hotel to serve Phillip Fulmer with court papers it’s gotten completely boring.

Oh, in the days when the league required coaches to hit radio row it was a little more entertaining, but now it’s interviewing the same people year in and year out, mostly involving media people interviewing other media people.

Also during the talking season will be predictions.

“Whadda ya’ think?” is media code for how you think the league will finish this season.

My answer since 1992 (and I think I’ve missed maybe five Media Days over that time, but hopefully that number will start to increase dramatically) has ALWAYS been Alabama in the West, Florida in the East.

Every single year. I don’t even bother to try and figure it out. I’ve been dead on the money nine times, over 34.6% of the time. Three times I hit half of it. That means nearly half the time my scientific method has hit one of the teams.

Preseason predictions are maybe fun for some people, but basically ridiculous. It’s like trying to predict the winner of an automobile race. You have no idea about all of the factors nobody can control.

In a sport where one injury can change most teams’ fortunes dramatically through 12 games, why even bother to figure it out? Just play the odds (which say Alabama and Florida statistically control) and enjoy yourself.

The other thing you can almost always count on is Arkansas getting little to no respect from either the media in the league or nationally.

Hey, don’t knock it. Embrace it, Hog fans.

You can look it up. When the Hogs are picked to do bad is when they do well. The biggest disappointments come when they are favored to win something and then fail to meet expectations that are usually unrealistic.

Since coming to the SEC, the only back-to-back big years were 2010-11 when Bobby Petrino’s last two teams had some great offensive playmakers and went 21-5, played in the Sugar Bowl and Cotton Bowl in consecutive years.

Now the national media and many across the league are once again simply spouting babble about the Razorbacks needing time to get going after a coaching change that involves a change in style, blah, blah, blah.

Some even think the Hogs will go winless in the SEC this year.

Let me go out on a limb here and say that won’t happen. Usually a huge cynic, I’m thinking right now Arkansas will win three to five games in the league this year.

That’s because last year’s team had a conditioning problem far more than a talent problem. There have also been whispers of internal issues within the team. Some players didn’t like some coaches and vice versa. It doesn’t matter now.

What I did see in the spring were players that were quicker than last year, particularly in the offensive line. In today’s world of college football where just about everybody does zone blocking instead of just trying to flatten folks, speed and quickness are as critical as just raw size.

At Arkansas, Chad Morris inherited a team of players that played his style of football in high school, then failed when trying to do something else when they got to college. Bret Bielema didn’t recruit players experienced in his preferred style because, well, nobody in the South plays that way anymore.

Maybe I’m overly optimistic. We’ll see.

No one seems to want to see this team returns a bunch of players that blew fourth-quarter leads late in three games (Texas A&M, Mississippi State and Missouri). Remember, Bielema kept talking about how close that team was.

He was right in one respect. They were losing games they were close to winning. Games they should have won.

Games I think they will win this season.

Morris’ biggest coaching job is within the team. There is a different attitude and a different culture already.

It’s genuine optimism.

What we heard in the spring and offseason has been a belief they are getting better instead of sounding like they’re trying to talk themselves into believing they are better.

And that is why they will be better than most think.

Hoggard, Jacobus named to academic all-district team

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas juniors Lexi Jacobus and Tori Hoggard have been selected to the 2017-18 Google Cloud Academic All-District® Women’s Track/Cross Country Team, as selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA), for their outstanding accomplishments in academics and athletics.

Since joining the Razorbacks in Fall 2015 the Weeks sisters have maintained a remarkable 4.00-grade point average while majoring in chemistry.

The pair not only mirror each other in looks and academics but also match almost identically in athletic prowess.

This past weekend on Saturday, May 26, Jacobus and Hoggard earned their third-consecutive bids to the NCAA Outdoor Championships.

ollowing passes of the first-two bars offered, the duo was clean over the final two bars of the day clearing 4.08m (13?-4.50?) and 4.18m (13?-8.50?) at the NCAA West Preliminary Round in Sacramento, Calif.

The sisters were two of 12 athletes to gain entry into the outdoor national meet and two of four to finish the day with zero misses.

Prior to the outdoor season, Jacobus captured her third-career NCAA title at the indoor championships while Tori finished as the national runner-up at the same meet.

With eight athletic All-America honors between them, an Academic All-District nod will give them the chance to add academic All-America accolades to their ever-growing collection of awards.

CoSIDA will announce the 2017-18 Academic All-America teams next month.

Cotton, Moore named to academic all-district team

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas senior Kenzo Cotton and redshirt-junior Gabe Moore have been selected to the 2017-18 Google Cloud Academic All-District® Men’s Track/Cross Country Team, as selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA), for their outstanding accomplishments in academics and athletics.

Cotton, a senior Kinesiology–Exercise Science major, has posted season-bests of 10.12 in the 100-meters, 20.52 in the 200-meters and contributed as the anchor leg on the 4-x-100-meter relay that holds the national lead in 2018 (38.59).

Cotton graduated from Arkansas with his degree in early May and will close out his athletic career at Arkansas at the NCAA Championships next week in Eugene, Ore.

Moore, a Biomedical Engineering major, qualified for the NCAA Championships in the decathlon holding a season-best total of 7,901 from the SEC Championships that is the second-best total in program history.

CoSIDA will announce the 2017-18 Academic All-America teams next month.

Fassi granted sponsor’s exemption to Walmart NWA Championship

FAYETTEVILLE —Arkansas junior Maria Fassi will be joining the field of the Walmart NW Arkansas Championship presented by P&G as a sponsor’s exemption through the tournament’s Road to the #NWAChampionship partnership, it was announced today.

Fassi paced Arkansas to a record-setting season that included the program’s first Southeastern Conference and NCAA Regional titles.

The Pachuca, Mexico, native played to six individual titles and tied for the win at the SEC Championship. She earned SEC Golfer of the Year honors and was a first-team All-SEC and Women’s Golf Coaches Association All-American this season.

The Road to the #NWAChampionship awards the top ranked University of Arkansas player a sponsor’s exemption into the event with additional players receiving an exemption into the Monday Qualifier based on stroke averages from the season.

This year Dylan Kim, Alana Uriell and Kaylee Benton will have the opportunity to join the tournament field through the Monday Qualifier.

This is Fassi’s second sponsor’s exemption to the event. She earned the spot as a true freshman in 2016 shooting 73-69=142.

Fassi carded a 68 in last year’s Monday qualifier finishing third overall. Benton also played in the Monday qualifier last season. Uriell was part of Monday’s qualifying round in 2016 and advanced to the weekend.

She earned the sponsor’s exemption for the Razorbacks last year.

Fassi will join fan favorites and former Razorbacks Stacy Lewis and Gaby Lopez in the field of 144 to compete in the 12th annual #NWAChampionship.

Official tournament play will begin on Friday, June 22 at Pinnacle Country Club.

SEC Now says Arkansas could have tough matchups

VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK
SEC Now breaks down why the Fayetteville Regional could be difficult for Arkansas, which includes Dallas Baptist, Southern Miss and Oral Roberts.

Razorbacks’ season ends with 12th-place finish at NCAA

STILLWATER, Okla. — Arkansas again tamed the tough back nine of Karsten Creek, but could not make up any ground in the final round of stroke play at the 2018 NCAA Championship in Stillwater, Oklahoma, on Monday.

The Razorbacks played the challenging back nine 2-over, their best performance on that side of the course all week.

William Buhl paced Arkansas turning 3-under with a bogey-free start to his round. Arkansas was consistent on the front side of the course but couldn’t catch the leaders as their season came to a close.

The normally scorable front nine holes didn’t help Arkansas in the fourth round. Pin positions made it hard for players to get the ball close and teams battled increased winds in the final round.

Arkansas finished the day shooting a 15-over 303 for a four-round 1179 (296-289-291-303) to finish 12th overall.

Individually, Buhl and Luis Garza finished with four-day 296s. Buhl posted rounds of 72-79-71-74, while Garza shot 76-72-70-78. Tyson Reeder and Mason Overstreet also tied each other shooting 299. Reeder’s rounds included 77-67-77-78 and Overstreet carded rounds of 76-76-73-74. Lone senior Alvaro Ortiz rounded out the Razorback scores with a 300 shooting 72-74-77-77.

Notes

• This is the sixth NCAA Championship appearance under coach Brad McMakin
• Mason Overstreet was NCAA runner-up last year at Rich Harvest Farms in Illinois
• Arkansas was the NCAA runner-up in the first year of match play in 2009
• William Buhl turned 3-under with no bogeys
• This is the 14th top-15 finish in 22 NCAA Championship appearances
• Tyson Reeder’s second round 67 ranks T-3rd in program history for a Razorback at the NCAA Championship

The Lineup

Player Scores To Par Season Stroke Average
William Buhl 72-79-71-74=296 +8 72.5
Luis Garza 76-72-70-78=296 +8 72.7
Tyson Reeder 77-67-77-78=299 +11 74.6
Mason Overstreet 76-76-73-74=299 +11 71.5
Alvaro Ortiz 72-74-77-77=300 +12 71.2

Van Horn on regional selection, players, home edge

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn met with the media Monday for the first time in awhile and talked about the Hogs’ regional, the SEC Tournament and more.