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Hogs players recapping series-clinching win over A&M

Arkansas players Grant Koch, Luke Bonfield and Carson Shaddy talk about the 3-1 win over the Aggies on Saturday that clinched the SEC series.

Knight’s big game, Shaddy, Cole lift Hogs to win

VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK
FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas’ offense put up two big innings Friday night at Baum Stadium and starting pitcher Blaine Knight remained undefeated on the year, tying a career-high 11 strikeouts over seven innings to help the Razorbacks to a 9-3 series-opening win over No. 20 Texas A&M.

Arkansas (34-15, 15-10 SEC) jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the first inning capped by a three-run home run by Carson Shaddy, his 10th of the year.

Then, it added five more runs in the fifth to force Texas A&M starter Mitchell Kilkenny out of the game in what ended up being his shortest outing of the year.

In that frame, the Hogs scored runs on a bases-loaded walk and a bases-loaded hit by pitch.

Junior Eric Cole finally broke through in the next at-bat with a two-RBI single with two outs, breaking the game wide open.

It was Cole’s only hit but came at a crucial point where the Aggies couldn’t answer.

The win is the Razorbacks’ eighth straight at home and ups their total home record to 28-3, which includes a win at Dickey-Stephens Park in North Little Rock.

In just home games this year, the Hogs are averaging 8.6 runs per game and have scored five or more in their last six home contests.

Arkansas continues to hold strong to the lead in the SEC Western Division with the victory. Now at 15-10, the Razorbacks are a half-game up on the Ole Miss Rebels, who have already won two games against the Auburn Tigers this week after starting their series on Thursday.

The Hitting

Arkansas’ offensive production came from much of the top half of the lineup Friday night. Arkansas’ Nos. 2, 4, and 5 hitters came away with seven of the team’s 10 hits in the game.

Freshman Casey Martin quietly came away with a 3-for-4 night and one RBI, leading all hitters. It was his fourth game with three or more hits this year.

Luke Bonfield and Dominic Fletcher also turned in multi-hit performances with two hits apiece.

Bonfield’s first hit of the game was huge in the first inning as it came with two outs. Two batters later, Shaddy cleared the bases with his three-run bomb to put the Hogs up early.

Friday’s game was Arkansas’ 28th with 10 or more hits and it is now 23-6 in those games. In eight of their last 12 games, the Hogs have totaled 10 or more hits, six of those games have been victories.

The Pitching

Knight gave his strongest performance of the season, working a season-high seven innings with only three runs allowed, all off the home run.

He also tied his career-high with 11 strikeouts and moves up to eighth all-time in school history with 22 career strikeouts, passing Rob Quarnstrom (216), DJ Baxendale (217), and Charlie Isaacson (219).

Tonight’s outing was also Knight’s 10th of five innings or more. He has only gone short of five innings twice this year and has yet to give up more than three runs in each of his last four starts.

Knight came out before the start of the eighth inning and gave way to junior Jake Reindl, who struck out four over two innings with one hit allowed.

Reindl has been one of Arkansas’ best options out of the bullpen lately as he’s allowed just three runs in his last eight appearances and has now struck out two or more batters in six straight games.

Razorback Quotables

“I thought he really commanded his fastball, in and out. His cutter, they were having trouble hitting it. It was running from those right-handers. That breaking ball, the slower breaking ball, about 72 mph every time you look up there. Then he mixed in a few sliders. He had it all going.”  Coach Dave Van Horn on Blaine Knight’s dominant pitching.

“(Luke) Bonfield got a big hit in the first to keep some stuff going. He sees a lot of pitches, he had full counts, he just battles. I thought he had a tremendous approach. Obviously, Shaddy’s swing gave us a four-run lead at the time, gave us a chance to relax a little bit. Those are two of the older guys that we hope to lead us down the stretch.” — Van Horn on Senior players performances.

“(Mitchell) Kilkenny doesn’t throw the ball in the middle of the plate much. He can really throw to his glove side, which is away to the right-handed hitters. I think the pitch that Shaddy hit was just left over the plate a little bit and he got it. He’s a good pitcher, throws the ball with downhill tilt. I don’t think he had the command he normally has. I think our approach was to stay aggressive and that’s what he did” — Van Horn on hitting Mitchell Kilkenny so well.

“I don’t think A&M was really ready for the curveball as much as they were for the cutter. I think if you look back at my past games I only throw that curveball a handful of times. I threw it way more tonight and I think that caught them off guard a little bit. Everything was working good.” — Blaine Knight on his strong secondary pitches.

“First pitch I took was a ball outside, and I was telling myself cover the outside corner and look for a slider up. He made a good pitch it was just low and inside. My instincts took over and I didn’t really think about I just put my bat on the ball and good things happened.” — Carson Shaddy on his three-run home run in the first inning.

“I fed off (Jack) Kenley and Hunter (Wilson) in front of me. They both had good at-bats and both got down two strikes real quick and fought off pitches. I fed off that and knew it was my turn. Seeing what they did really helped me out and he had a good pitch on me and I just capped it, luckily it fell.” — Eric Cole on his bases loaded two-RBI single in the fifth inning.

Up Next

Arkansas and Texas A&M will be back on the field for game two of the series tomorrow starting at 1 p.m.

The game will be televised on ESPN2. Saturday will also be Senior Day for Luke Bonfield, Carson Shaddy, Jared Gates.

Those recognition ceremonies will start at roughly 12:30 p.m.

10k yields 10 points for Hogs on opening day at SEC meet

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — On the opening day of the SEC Outdoor Track and Field Championships, No. 8 Arkansas handled business, qualifying four athletes through to the finals as well as scoring 10-points in the men’s 10K and three in the javelin throw.

The Razorbacks are currently in fourth-place with 13-points.

“I saw a great team effort today,” said coach Chris Bucknam.

“I saw some great efforts by all of our kids, the only mishap on the day was Travius Chambers having a little trouble negotiating hurdle seven in the 400-hurdles, I thought he had a great shot at quaifying for the final. I thought our kids performed well and were dialed in today. Hats off to the 10K guys that stuck around and ran a grueling 10K race in the heat and humid conditions. Alex Springer finishing sixth in the javelin was a huge performance after entering the meet ranked No. 10 in the conference and going out there and battling for important points. Across the board we’re really pleased with how our kids came out and battled today, picked up some points, and got the ball rolling for us.”

Gabe Moore and Derek Jacobus accounted for the majority of the action for Arkansas on day one as the duo kicked off the meet with the first half of the decathlon.

Moore sprinted to a personal-best in the 100-meters crossing the line in 10.69 seconds, well under his previous best of 10.96 from last year’s NCAA Championships in Eugene, Ore.

Jacobus followed Moore across the line breaking the plane in 10.88 seconds.

The second event in the decathlon saw Jacobus and Moore finish second and third, respectively, with marks of 7.35m (24′-1.50″) and 7.20m (23′-7.50″) in the long jump.

Jacobus posted a personal-best in the shot put finishing with a best of 12.96m (42′-6.25″) in fifth-place, while Moore took third with his best of 14.23m (46′-8.25″).

Event four of the competition featured identical marks by the pair as each cleared a best of 1.91m (6′-3.25″) in the high jump.

Only 400-meters stood between Moore and Jacobus and the end of day one in the decathlon. Moore took second in the one-lap race stopping the clock at 49.33, while Jacobus was close behind with his time of 50.20.

Moore is currently in second-place trailing the leader by 96-points with his day one total of 4,104.

Jacobus is currently in fourth-place trailing the leader by 221 points sporting a total of 3,979-points after five events.

Though it was the last event of the day, the event that yielded the most points Friday was the men’s 10,000-meters where the Razorbacks racked up 10-points with a 5-6-7-8 finish.

Gilbert Boit (29:48.24), Austen Dalquist (29:53.31), Matt Young (30:05.09), and Ryan Murphy (30:10.68) rounded out the scoring in the event for Arkansas while Andrew Ronoh finished ninth in 30:30.96.

Alex Springer collected points for the Razorbacks in the men’s javelin with a best of 65.18m (213′-10″) that he posted on his final attempt in the event. The sixth-place finish added three points to the team total.

Kenzo Cotton and Obi Igbokwe punched tickets to the final in the men’s 200-meters, each recording a time of 20.52.

Cotton earned an Auto-Q spot in the final by winning his heat, while Igbokwe advanced to the final on time finishing with the second-best at-large time in prelims that was also a personal-best in the event.

Moving up to the 400-meter intermediate hurdles, Kemar Mowatt, the defending SEC champion in the event, secured his spot in the final taking the opening heat of prelims running the second-fastest time on the day at 51.03.

Mowatt glanced over his shoulder throughout the last 50-meters checking on teammate Larry Donald who finished runner-up in the prelim to Mowatt posting a time of 51.18 – the fourth-fastest time from prelims.

Arkansas will return to Tom Black Track at LaPorte Stadium for day two of the SEC Outdoor Championships with the first event for the Razorbacks slated for 11 a.m. in the decathlon 110-meter hurdles.

For more information on Arkansas track and field including in-meet updates, follow @RazorbackTF on Twitter.

SEC Outdoor Championships
Friday Results

Men’s Decathlon 100-meters 
3. Gabe Moore – 10.69
4. Derek Jacobus – 10.88

Men’s Decathlon Long Jump
2. Derek Jacobus – 7.35m (24′-1.50″)
3. Gabe Moore – 7.20m (23′-7.50″)

Men’s Decathlon Shot Put
3. Gabe Moore – 14.23m (46′-8.25″)
5. Derek Jacobus – 12.96m (42′-6.25″)

Men’s Decathlon High Jump
3. Derek Jacobus – 1.91m (6′-3.25″)
3. Gabe Moore – 1.91m (6′-3.25″)

Men’s Decathlon 400-meters
2. Gabe Moore – 49.33
4. Derek Jacobus – 50.20

Men’s Javelin
6. Alex Springer – 65.18m (213′-10″)

Men’s Hammer
16. Erich Sullins – 60.60m (198′-10″)

Men’s 800-meters
19. Kieran Taylor – 1:53.76

Men’s 200-meters
3. Kenzo Cotton – 20.52Q
7. Obi Igbokwe – 20.52q
13. Roy Ejiakuekwu – 20.87
18. Kevin Harris – 21.08

Men’s 400-meter hurdles
2.
Kemar Mowatt – 51.03Q
5. Larry Donald – 51.18Q

Men’s 10,000-meters
5. Gilbert Boit – 29:48.24
6. Austen Dalquist – 29:53.31
7. Matt Young – 30:05.09
8. Ryan Murphy – 30:10.68
9. Andrew Ronoh – 30:30.96

Van Horn liked Knight’s performance against Aggies

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn was pleased with pitcher Blaine Knight’s “stuff” in the series opening 9-3 win over Texas A&M.

Players recap Friday night’s win over Texas A&M

Arkansas players Blaine Knight, Eric Cole and Carson Shaddy talk about the 9-3 win over the Aggies in the series-opener against Texas A&M.

SEC Tournament run for Hogs ends in semifinal loss to SC

COLUMBIA, Mo. — Arkansas’ run in the 2018 SEC Tournament came to an end Friday afternoon with a 3-1 setback to No. 12 South Carolina in the semifinals.

Arkansas had wins over No. 19 Kentucky and No. 8 Georgia in the first two days of the conference tournament.

The team is set to enter NCAA Tournament play with a 39-15 overall record.

Up Next

With their best SEC Tournament showing since the 2001 season, the Razorbacks will learn their NCAA fate Sunday evening with the selection show.

The national bracket will be announced at 9 p.m. on ESPN2 with the regional round scheduled to begin Friday, May 18.

As the lower seed in Friday’s matchup, the Razorbacks opened the game with a scoring threat in the top of the first inning.

Freshman Hannah McEwen drew her team-leading 22nd walk of the season and after a base hit to shallow center by Autumn Buczek, Arkansas had runners on first and second with no outs.

However, South Carolina (45-13) got out of the inning with no runs crossing the plate.

The Gamecocks got on the board with a run in the second inning but sophomore starter Autumn Storms limited the damage and left a pair of runners standing at the corners.

Arkansas put the first two hitters on in the fourth but couldn’t produce a timely hit to get a run home. South Carolina pushed its lead to 3-0 with a two-run shot in the bottom of the fourth that brought Mary Haff into the game.

The top-10 finalist for National Freshman of the Year registered 2.2 innings of scoreless relief and three strikeouts to keep Arkansas within striking distance.

With the three strikeouts Friday, Haff moved into second on the program’s single-season list with 226 strikeouts this season.

That figure is the most by an Arkansas pitcher since Heather Schlichtman set the school record with 305 strikeouts in 2004.

The offense, once again, got its first two hitters on in the sixth inning. The junior duo of Ashley Diaz and Katie Warrick came through with a single and double, respectively, to put runners on second and third with no outs.

Senior A.J. Belans lifted a sacrifice fly to center field that allowed pinch runner Carley Haizlip to score but it was all the offense could muster against the tournament’s No. 3 seed.

Baylark qualifies for 200-meter finals at SEC Championships

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — With only a few athletes in action on the opening day of the SEC Outdoor ChampionshipsJada Baylark took advantage of her opportunity in the 200-meters posting a near-lifetime best in the event for No. 4 Arkansas.

Coach Lance Harter:

“We only had a few events on the track on day one. Ragan came to me and said ‘It’s my senior year, I want to run the 10,000-meters’. So we gave her an opportunity to compete, it didn’t go quite as planned, but she’ll have another opportunity in the steeplechase tomorrow night. Jada [Baylark] advancing to the final of the women’s 200-meters is huge, I’m proud of how she ran today.”

The Razorbacks competed in three events Friday at Tom Black Track at LaPorte Stadium, the prelims of the 200-meters and 800-meters and the 10K to cap the night.

The 200-meter prelims featured sophomore Jada Baylark who raced her way into the final with a time of 22.96 – the second-fastest time ever by the Little Rock native.

Baylark led a group of four that competed in the prelims including Kiara Parker who finished 15th with a personal-best time of  23.19 and Tamara Kuykendall who finished 19th in prelims with a personal-best time of 23.66.

In the women’s 800-meters, Arkansas’ lone athlete in preliminary action, Kailee Sawyer, finished 14th running 2:12.36

Regan Hime finished 11th in the women’s 10K posting a time of 37:01.42.

Arkansas will return to Tom Black Track at LaPorte Stadium for day two of the SEC Outdoor Championships with the first event for the Razorbacks slated for 6:30 p.m. CT in the 100-meter hurdles.

For more information on Arkansas track and field including in-meet updates, follow @RazorbackTF on Twitter.

SEC Outdoor Championships
Friday Results

Women’s 200-meter prelims
8. Jada Baylark – 22.96q
15. Kiara Parker – 23.19
19. Tamara Kuykendall – 23.66

Women’s 800-meter prelims
14. Kailee Sawyer – 2:12.36

Women’s 10,000-meters
11. Regan Hime -37:01.42

Morris’ situation now looks in some ways like Hatfield’s in ’84

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In the modern-day history of Arkansas football, it’s interesting to compare the situation Chad Morris inherits with other coaches.

That takes into account what was thought at the time of the talent available, any other problems and how he dealt with it.

As a forwarning, my opinion differed at the time of some of the changeovers. That opinion was based on talking to former coaches and players that have a good track record of judging these things.

And we’re not going back into the one-platoon days. Things are so different now there’s probably not a single aspect of college football today like it was 40 years ago, much less farther than that.

For us oldtimers, we remember when the 1960’s were called modern-day football, but that’s now simply history. For that reason, we’ll start it with Lou Holtz taking over the reins after Frank Broyles 19-year run after the 1976 season.

Because Holtz started off 11-1 and No. 3 in the country in 1977, folks tend to forget he inherited a team that had academic and racial issues, among others.

But that team did have a tremendous amount of talent and while some in the media were making preseason excuses for an average year, you had the feeling it was going to be a big season in the summer.

No, there’s not that kind of talent walking around for Morris and his staff. For the youngsters, that 1977 team had one NFL Hall of Famer on the roster defensively and several other really good players that simply hadn’t played up to their talent level in 1976.

Word of Broyles’ retirement breaking just past the midway point when they were down to the third-string quarterback just added to the confusion.

Okay, scratch that one.

Jack Crowe took over a team that he admittedly was scrambling to hold together after the announcement of the Hogs’ leaving the old Southwest Conference to join the Southeastern Conference a couple of years.

“Half of the team was ready to quit when they heard that,” Crowe said last summer. “About 75 percent of the team was from Texas and they didn’t like the idea of not playing games there.”

Crowe scrambled and got fired before ever coaching an SEC game. Joe Kines sort of used duct tape and chewing gum in 1992 before turning it over to Danny Ford for 1993.

Ford had served as, well, a consulting assistant coach during the disastrous last 10 games of the 1992 season and said later Arkansas didn’t have enough players to compete in the SEC.

Houston Nutt took over in 1998 and the change in direction from the coaching staff made a huge difference to a group of talented players who had seriously under-achieved under Ford for a variety of reasons.

Nutt led the Hogs to a hot start before blowing a game against Tennessee on the road and literally stumbling to a 9-3 finish.

What does compare with Morris’ situation this season is the total change in the atmosphere. Nutt brought in a similar high-energy, positive approach that Morris has injected into everything around the football program. Not sure the talent level is as high now as it was in 1998.

Bobby Petrino inherited a 2008 team that had suffered a little in recruiting and losing a ton of talent (Darren McFadden, Felix Jones, Peyton Hillis, etc.) and the program had been virtually split down the middle in controversy for a couple of years.

Nevertheless, even the Great Playcaller managed to coach a team with 7-5 or 6-6 talent to a 5-7 record that took a miracle win over LSU in Little Rock to get there. That was the first clue of Petrino’s lack of people skills.

When Bret Bielema came in for the 2013 season, he had a new direction and a new way of doing things.

Instead of trying to figure out a way to win games with what he had, he went ahead and dismantled it, but did blow some games he should have won (blowing late leads that continued to plague his five-year tenure).

Nope, completely different situation for Morris.

What is more than a little similar is Ken Hatfield’s homecoming in 1984, taking over a team that was 6-5 the year before and a lot of talented high school players left the state.

Hatfield and his staff more or less shrugged and got down to work. They had less at Air Force where they’d just won 10 games. Sound familiar?

He came in with a sense of urgency. There wasn’t any rebuilding. Hatfield expected to win from the start.

“He was going to do whatever it took to win that first year,” said quarterback Greg Thomas earlier this week. He was a freshman on that first team.

Morris gives off the same vibe.

Oh, he says they still have a long way to go. Morris hasn’t exactly said what that destination is, but the result he’s shooting for isn’t a 6-6 record.

When Morris says that, the guess here is he’s talking about competing for championships. He’s going to do whatever he has to for wins this season and you get the idea he has a sense of urgency not seen in Fayetteville in awhile.

Playing for the title probably won’t happen this year, to be honest.

But this team should win at least six games without a lot of breaks. Some like to warble on about Colorado State, but they’ve got more questions on offense after spring practice than the Hogs. They haven’t played defense in recent memory, either.

They could win seven or eight. Maybe more, depending on how things break across the SEC West. It’s a division with three brand new coaches and one who was on an interim basis last year (Matt Luke at Ole Miss) and another who was an interim coach the year before (Ed Orgeron at LSU).

It’s amazing what a change in attitude can do. Moving a couple of players to a position where they can be more successful is part of it. The attitude is another.

As one longtime observer said in the spring of 1984 when Hatfield took over from Holtz, “we’ve replaced nonsense with sense.”

People tend to forget this team was close. Bielema kept saying it all year and he was right. They probably should have won games against Texas A&M, Mississippi State and Missouri. They could have beaten TCU.

Add those wins to 4-8 and you end up with 8-4 or 9-3. Morris knows this. He’s likely seen every game by now. Probably a couple of times. He also knows he wouldn’t be here if the little things had been done in those close games.

Hatfield knew that, too, in 1984. They lost two games by a total of three points each.

He changed the attitude, the offense, the defense and took care of the little details. It turned into a 7-4-1 team that didn’t lose a single game by more than six points (and one of those came in the Liberty Bowl against Auburn and Bo Jackson).

A lot of that 1984 team looks familiar these days.

Richardson gets sixth year of eligibility from NCAA

It’s official. Arkansas cornerback Kevin Richardson will spend more time with the Razorbacks than their previous coach.

Bret Bielema only got five years. Richardson gets six, granted the extra year by the NCAA on Thursday, according to him on Instagram:

Richardson officially sent in his application to the NCAA for what was once considered a ‘rare’ sixth year of eligibility over the weekend, but there is a new rule that was passed on April 18 by the Division I Council that will allow college football players who redshirted their first year and then missed a year of football due to injury to be accepted for a sixth year of eligibility.

Richardson waited for the amendment to pass before sending in his application.

It is expected he will be a big boost to a secondary that was showing marked improvement in the spring, primarily because of his versatility and ability to play multiple positions.

Belans, Warrick on Hogs’ playing with confidence

VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK
Senior A.J. Belans and junior Katie Warrick discuss the team’s morale as the Razorbacks defeat the Bulldogs and advance to the semifinals.