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Hogs set to go after 13th straight SEC Championship this weekend

FAYETTEVILLE — No. 4 Arkansas will be in the hunt for its 13th-consecutive SEC Conference title this weekend in Knoxville, competing at the 2018 SEC Outdoor Championships May 11-13 at the Tom Black Track at LaPorte Stadium.

The final day of the championships will be televised live on the SEC network beginning at 5 p.m. on Sunday, May 13.

Fans will be able to live stream Friday and Saturday’s action on the SEC Network plus beginning at 10 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., respectively.

The broadcast talent includes Dwight Stones, Larra Overton, Jill Montgomery and John Anderson.

Date/Time: Friday, May 11-Sunday, May 13
Venue: Tom Black Track at LaPorte Stadium
Important Links: Meet Notes | Meet Schedule | Entries/Heat Sheets | Live Results | SEC Network+ Stream

Nationally Ranked SEC Teams

In the most recent USTFCCCA NCAA National Rankings, 10 SEC programs were among the top-25 best teams in the country led by No. 1 LSU.

Following the Tigers are No. 4 Arkansas and No. 5 Kentucky, No. 6 Georgia, No. 8 Texas A&M, No. 9 Florida, No. 15 Tennessee, No. 17 Alabama No. 18 Missouri and No. 23 Ole Miss.

The women’s track & field team is currently ranked No. 4 in the nation, according to the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) and boast 10 performances in the Top-20 of the NCAA with five of those falling inside the Top-10 including a nation-leading heptathlete in Taliyah Brooks.

No. 1 | Taliyah Brooks – Long Jump 6.78m (22′-3″)
No. 2 | Lexi Jacobus – Pole Vault 4.55m (14′-11″)
No. 3 | Tori Hoggard – Pole Vault 4.51m (14′-9.50″)
No. 4 | Janeek Brown – 100-meter hurdles 12.73
No. 4 | Taliyah Brooks – Heptathlon 5,946-points
No. 7
 | Taliyah Brooks – 100-meter hurdles 12.82
No. 7 | 4-x-100-meters 43.38
No. 9 | Jada Baylark – 100-meters 11.09
No.19 | Carina Viljoen – 1500-meters 4:16.07
No. 19 | Devin Clark – 3,000-meter steeplechase 10:08.17

All-SEC Returners
The Razorbacks return five individual All-SEC performers from the 2017 squad including Taliyah Brooks, Nikki Hiltz, Lexi Jacobus, Tori Hoggard.

Arkansas also had four student-athletes named to the 2017 SEC All-Freshman Team that includes two who will compete for the Razorbacks this weekend in Carina Viljoen and Rachel Nichwitz.

2018 SEC Outdoor Championships Entries –
100-Meter Dash

Athlete/Career Best
Jada Baylark 11.10/11.02w
Janeek Brown 11.34/11.19w
Tamara Kuykendall 11.54/11.44w
Kiara Parker 11.26/11.14w

200-Meter Dash
Jada Baylark 23.00/22.91w
Tamara Kuykendall 23.82
Kiara Parker 23.41

400-Meter Dash
Morgan Burks Magee 52.20(i)
Sydney Davis 54.99
Sydney Hammit 54.81

800-Meter Run
Kailee Sawyer 2:08.04

1,500-Meter Run
Nikki Hiltz 4:10.80
Micah Huckabee 4:33.66
Carina Viljoen 4:16.07

3,000-Meter Steeplechase
Devin Clark 9:49.25
Regan Hime 10:08.23
Rachel Nichwitz 10:14.59

5,000-Meter Run
Devin Clark 16:15.09
Regan Hime 16:12.46
Micah Huckabee 18:16.96
Rachel Nichwitz 16:33.27
Maddy Reed 16:04.43
Carina Viljoen NT

10,000-Meter Run
Regan Hime NT

100-Meter Hurdles
Taliyah Brooks 13.14/12.82w
Janeek Brown 13.21/12.73w

4-x-100-Meter Relay
Janeek Brown, Jada Baylark, Kiara Parker, Morgan Burks Magee

4-x-400-Meter Relay
Morgan Burks Magee, Sydney Davis,
Kiara Parker, Jada Baylark

High Jump
Carmen Sitz 1.70m (5’-6.75”)

Pole Vault
Morgan Hartsell 4.02m (13’-2.25”)
Tori Hoggard 4.61m (15’-1.50”)
Lexi Jacobus 4.66m (15-3.25”)
Elizabeth Ramos Mata 4.05m (13’-3.25”)
Rylee Robinson 4.17m (13’-8”)

Hogs open SEC Tournament against Kentucky on Wednesday

COLUMBIA, Mo. — Arkansas begins its postseason Wednesday afternoon against No. 19 Kentucky in the first round of the SEC Tournament.

First pitch is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. on the SEC Network.

2018 SEC Tournament (Columbia, Mo.) | Tournament Central | Game Notes
No. 18 Arkansas (37-14) vs No. 19 Kentucky (31-18)
TV: SEC Network
Radio: Sirius XM SEC (Ch. 347)
WatchESPN | Live Stats

Arkansas and the SEC Tournament

This year marks the program’s 11th appearance at the SEC Tournament and the second straight under coach Courtney Deifel.

Arkansas, looking for its first tournament win since 2001, will face Kentucky for just the second time in an SEC Tournament game.

All-Time Series vs Kentucky

Wednesday’s game marks the 56th meeting in the all-time series between Arkansas and Kentucky but just the second at the SEC Tournament.

The two teams did not play during the 2018 regular season.

Last Time Out

The Razorbacks couldn’t come up with a timely hit and left seven runners stranded on base in Sunday’s 5-0 road loss at No. 13 LSU.

Autumn Buczek picked up a single to tie her career high with 58 hits in a season while Autumn Storms pitched 3.1 innings of scoreless relief in the setback.

A Look at the Stat Sheet

Arkansas is fourth in the SEC and tied for 31st in the NCAA with 52 home runs this season. The team also carries top-50 national marks in K/BB ratio (seventh/4.88), staff ERA (38th/2.26) and slugging percentage (41st/.459).

Rankings Watch

The Razorbacks fell one spot to No. 19 in the May 7 release of the NCAA RPI.

In last week’s round of top-25 rankings, Arkansas reached a program-high No. 15 in the ESPN-USA Today poll while staying put at No. 16 in the NFCA top 25.

Senior Surge

Loren Krzysko entered her senior season with three career home runs.

With her solo shot in game two at LSU, she hit her seventh long ball of the year which is third on the team.

Third game of Georgia series changes time, TV

Arkansas will have one more regular-season game in front of a national audience next week as the series finale at Georgia has been picked up by the SEC Network as part of the Wildcard Weekend.

The Arkansas-Georgia series is still set to run from Thursday, May 17 through Saturday, May 19 at Foley Field in Athens and games one and two of the series will still be available online on SEC Network+.

The network pickup for game three will change the first pitch time to 11 a.m.

Arkansas-Georgia Series Schedule (All Times Central)

Game 1 – 6 p.m./SECN+
Game 2 – 6 p.m./SECN+
Game 3 – 11 a.m./SEC Network

As part of the Wildcard Weekend coverage, the SEC Network will be providing SEC Bases Loaded coverage on Thursday night (May 17), beginning at 6 p.m. with whip-around coverage of all seven league games.

All league games are available via the Watch ESPN app and WatchESPN.com.

Up Next

Arkansas returns home for its final regular-season series of the 2018 season at Baum Stadium when it plays host to Texas A&M for a three-game set starting this Friday.

First pitch is set for 6 p.m. and will be televised on the SEC Network.

Low scores push Razorbacks into lead at NCAA regional

AUSTIN, Texas — Hot temperatures and strong winds fueled low scores for Arkansas as it moved into the lead after second-round action at the 2018 NCAA Austin Regional Championship on Tuesday.

Arkansas shot a 17-under 271, a program best score in regional action for the Razorbacks. Arkansas came out of the gates strongly, paced by senior Alana Uriell who turned 3-under and continued to ride the birdie train on the back nine.

Uriell had three birdies in a row on holes 9, 10 and 11 and finished with a 7-under 65, moving up 61 spots on the leaderboard. She finished the day tied for 16th overall with scores of 78–65—143.

The senior’s 7-under 65 is a program record for the Razorbacks at an NCAA Regional. The score bested Uriell’s 4-under in 206 and former Razorback Emma Lavy’s 5-under 67s in 2013.

The Razorbacks recorded 21 birdies and had two eagles, both from Maria Fassi.

Dylan Kim, Fassi and Kaylee Benton also posted under-par rounds at the University of Texas Golf Course.

Kim moved up one spot into second place overall and is in the clubhouse shooting 70–68—138 (-6). She is one shot back of the leader with one round to play.

Fassi counted her second consecutive round under par and is in third place shooting 69–70—139 (-5) while Benton carded a 4-under 68 moving up 19 spots to fourth place with a 72–68—140 (-4).

Junior Cara Gorlei rounds out the Razorback scoring with a 4-over 148 (73–75) and is tied for 39th overall.

From Alana Uriell:

My putting was the key today. I shot 78 yesterday, and I think I just let go of the expectations and pressure and played my game. When I got out of my own way, I was a lot better. I was on the putting range practicing before the round, and my putting felt really good. I could feel the ball come off the (club) face. I birdied the first two holes and that helped get me going. After my round yesterday, I was looking to even it out today. Coming up 18, I was really going for that last (birdie) putt. I’m so happy that I could contribute to our team score today. I was really disappointed yesterday that I was the last player on the team. I wanted to play the way I could, so that my team could succeed.

From Coach Shauna Taylor

I always tell our team that when you play with a purpose, you play with intensity and precision. They did a fantastic job of that today. They were all out there fighting for each other and it was great to see. Alana’s round today, what great leadership from a senior to come back like she did. Maria, Kaylee and Dylan were just solid as a rock. It was pretty tough today and they did a great job of sticking to the plan and fighting for each shot. We are in a position to do what we came here to accomplish.

Final Round

When: Wednesday, May 9, 2018
Location: Austin, Texas | University of Texas Golf Course (Par 72 | 6,341 Yards)
Live Scoring: http://bit.ly/2FUESnR
Format: This is the third and final round of stroke play. The top six teams from this regional move on to the NCAA Championship

Notes

• Top-5 Finishes: 5 (3rd-2x; 4th-1x; 5th-2x)
• Best Individual Finish: T2 (2015)
• Arkansas has six team titles including the program’s first SEC Championship this year
• Alana Uriell’s 7-under 65 is a program record for score and versus par at an NCAA Regional Championship. It ties for second in program history for low round and score versus par.
• Arkansas was just one of three teams to shoot under par finishing the day with a 17-under 271. That score is the Razorbacks’ best team score at a regional and the second-best score in program history.

The Leaderboard

PLACE PLAYER SCORE TO PAR
2 Dylan Kim 70–68—138 -6
3 Maria Fassi 69–70—139 -5
4 Kaylee Benton 72–68—140 -4
T16 Alana Uriell 78–65—143 -1
T39 Cara Gorlei 73–75—148 +4


The Field

PLACE TEAM SCORES TO PAR
1 No. 3 Arkansas 284–271—555 -21
2 No. 8 Texas 281–285—566 -10
3 No. 14 Florida 291–287—578 +2
T4. Virginia Tech 288–293—581 +5
T4. No. 35 Baylor 288–293—581 +5
T4 No. 21 Oklahoma 299–282—581 +5
T4. No. 38 Texas A&M 295–286—581 +5
8 No. 19 Auburn 292–291—583 +7
T9. No. 41 Brigham Young 291–296—587 +11
T9. No. 11 Michigan State 285–302—587 +11
11 UTSA 287–295—593 +17
12 No. 48 East Carolina 299–152—451 +19
13 No. 25 Houston 300–297—597 +21
14 No. 49 Texas Tech 300–299—599 +23
15 Houston Baptist 301–299—600 +24
16 No. 30 Miami 298–306—604 +28
17 Georgetown 302–304—606 +30
18 Missouri State 318–319—638 +62

Nutt inducted into Cotton Bowl’s Hall of Fame

ARLINGTON, Texas — Former Arkansas quarterback, receivers coach and head coach Houston Nutt was one of six individuals inducted into the Cotton Bowl Hall of Fame during enshrinement ceremonies at AT&T Stadium on Tuesday.

In addition to Nutt, the honorees in the 11th Hall of Fame Class include Texas A&M linebacker Quentin Coryatt, USC coach John Robinson, Penn State halfback-linebacker Wallace Triplett, Texas running back Ricky Williams, and Oklahoma strong safety Roy Williams.

A judging committee comprised of media representatives and athletic administrators voted from a list of 60 nominees that included former players, coaches, bowl administrators and others who have made special contributions to the Classic.

Voting was based solely upon an individual’s performance in, or contribution to, the Classic rather than on the person’s overall college or professional career.

An individual is eligible five years after their final Classic appearance.

Nutt coached the Razorbacks to Cotton Bowl appearances in 2000 and 2002, including a 27-6 win over Texas in 2000. He is one of five coaches to lead more than one school to the bowl. He also took Ole Miss to back-to-back Cotton Bowls in 2009-10 against Texas Tech and Oklahoma State, winning both.

In 10 seasons as Arkansas head coach (1998-2007), Nutt compiled a 75-48 record becoming the third coach in program history to lead the Razorbacks to a bowl game in each of his first six seasons.

He led Arkansas to three SEC Western Division titles (1998, 2002, 2006), eight bowl games, three final top 25 national rankings and four nine-win seasons.

Nutt ranks second in school history with 75 coaching victories and eight bowl appearances, trailing only the legendary Frank Broyles (144 wins and 10 bowl appearances).

His 8-0 start in 1998 marked the best debut ever for a Razorback head coach and helped the program reach its first New Year’s Day game since 1990.

In 2001 and 2006, Nutt was voted SEC Coach of the Year by the Associated Press and conference head coaches.

The last player signed to a scholarship by Broyles, Nutt was a quarterback at Arkansas in 1976 and 1977 and was a member of the team that upset No. 2 Oklahoma in the 1978 Orange Bowl.

Razorback freshmen receive league honors

FAYETTEVILLE — On the eve of Arkansas’ postseason opener, freshmen Mary Haff and Hannah McEwen have been recognized by the league’s head coaches with a pair of All-SEC accolades as announced Tuesday by the conference office.

Both Haff and McEwen have earned spots on the All-SEC Second Team and SEC All-Freshman Team.

With Tuesday’s release, Haff and McEwen are the 16th and 17th all-conference performers in program history, and the third and fourth for coach Courtney Deifel, now in her third season in Fayetteville.

Haff becomes the fifth Arkansas pitcher to collect All-SEC honors while McEwen is the first outfield selection for the program since Jessica Bachkora in 2010.

Arkansas (37-14, 12-12 SEC) is the No. 7 seed in this week’s SEC Tournament which begins Wednesday in Columbia, Missouri.

The Razorbacks face Kentucky in the opening round at 1:30 p.m. on the SEC Network.

This marks Arkansas’ 11th appearance in the conference tournament and second straight under Deifel. The team’s 12 SEC wins are the program’s most since the 2013 season.

Multiple All-SEC Honors in One Season

Jessica Bachkora (2010) – All-SEC Second Team, Scholar-Athlete of the Year
Devon Wallace (2012) – All-SEC First Team, SEC All-Freshman Team, Freshman of the Year
Mary Haff (2018) – All-SEC Second Team, SEC All-Freshman Team
Hannah McEwen (2018) – All-SEC Second Team, SEC All-Freshman Team

In 19 appearances during SEC play, Haff posted a 10-5 record with 87 strikeouts and just 18 walks in 88.0 innings of work.

She registered three complete-game shutouts in wins over No. 12 South Carolina, No. 15 Alabama and Ole Miss and held conference opponents to a .191 batting average.

After picking up two wins against the Crimson Tide in the program’s first-ever series win over Alabama, Haff was named the SEC Freshman of the Week. Her ranked second in the league with 10 wins during SEC play.

McEwen tallied a .293 batting average with three home runs, 13 RBI and 16 runs scored in 24 SEC games. She had seven multi-hit performances including a 3-for-3 performance in Arkansas’ series-opening win over Ole Miss.

During the weekend against the Rebels, McEwen powered the offense with a .636 batting average, two home runs and seven RB and went on to earn SEC Freshman of the Week for her efforts.

She also totaled 22 hits and drew 13 walks in league play. Her 16 runs scored tied for the eighth-highest total in the SEC.

Playing games in Little Rock is a ridiculously bad idea

“The less there is to justify a traditional custom, the harder it is to get rid of it,” was how the esteemed Samuel Langhorne Clemens put it as his alter ego of  Mark Twain in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.

That pretty much describes the situation the University of Arkansas finds itself as we get ready for the next — and potentially last — round of debate over the Razorbacks playing football games in Little Rock.

Oh, it’s coming … sooner rather than later.

The time has come to end what has become an almost laughable embarrassment. Yes, War Memorial is an embarrassment for an SEC-caliber team to be playing any kind of game there.

There once was a time when it was an advantage playing there. Most Razorback fans either weren’t alive or too young to recall the glory days when there were four games a year played there. For the last few years it’s become an expensive distraction that has ballooned with the decline of the Hogs in football.

Now at least one former player has let the cat out of the bag, so to speak, about what the players think about the game.

Actually, I’ve had that feeling for a number of years from the players. Nobody’s going to say it, of course. That’s not the correct thing to say.

There is a lot of sentiment from some about tradition and all that. Well, my first Razorback games as a kid were at War Memorial Stadium and sometime about 1978 I realized the place was a dump. I wrote it and said it … and was promptly chastised, but it didn’t change my mind.

When the interstate was completed, the stadium expanded (before the South end zone was completed), I said again it was time to quick the ridiculousness of a game in Little Rock.

As I was south of Little Rock when writing and saying that on the air, everybody raised several kinds of a ruckus. None of it changed the fact that playing home games anywhere but Fayetteville hasn’t made sense for years.

Houston Nutt was the last Hogs coach that really embraced playing in Little Rock. I don’t care what the others said and anything Bobby Petrino said I would want witnessed, notarized and photographed anyway.

You could tell from body language and reading between the lines of what Bret Bielema said he didn’t like playing games at War Memorial. In five years, he had a miserable record in Little Rock (3-3).

John L. Smith was 0-2 and Petrino never lost a game there, going 8-0, beating LSU twice, Mississippi State twice and some lower-tier teams. That was the last of glory years, although Jeff Long didn’t particularly care for the amount of money the UA was losing every time they played there.

And that is the entire crux of the issue.

In the competitive world of the SEC, money is the biggest competition. Winning considerably more than you lose helps accumulate the money. Paying to play there should not even be a consideration.

Also there is a significant disadvantage for recruiting playing games in Little Rock. If potential future Razorbacks want to go to the game, well, they need to have a ticket. Playing the game in Fayetteville makes it a true recruiting advantage.

But it comes back to winning.

If Arkansas is winning enough, it doesn’t matter where the games are played. The stadium will be packed, the tailgate areas will be buzzing hours before kickoff and the atmosphere will be big time.

Fans complain about the seating. In case you don’t know it’s the same seating arrangement as when it seated around just 50,000 fans. Frank Broyles simply made the seats a little narrower and increased the number. That came a few years after they dug down in the stadium and added some seating lower along the sidelines.

Some say there are influential boosters in Little Rock and other areas south that want at least a game every year to be played down there.

Fine. Let them make up the financial difference. Better yet, let them sit in the stands, use the concession stands and bathrooms down below.

To quote Mr. Spock from Star Trek, “Change is the essential process of all existence.”

You may not like it, but the pointy-eared Vulcan has a good point. Yes, there are many, many fond memories for those of us that grew up south of the mountains about Razorback games in Little Rock.

But things change.

In today’s world, players don’t want to play there, coaches don’t want to be there (although, granted, they hate distractions no matter how minor or trivial) and somebody’s going to have to pony up big bucks for renovations to get the stadium to minimum SEC standards. Quite frankly, the only way it should even be considered is if the stadium is upgrade beyond SEC standards and they pay the difference to the UA of playing a game in Fayetteville.

To put it simply, War Memorial Stadium should have been imploded years ago. It’s a half-step above a dump for big time college football games.

And it’s beyond time for Arkansas to change it’s stance on playing football games in Little Rock. Whether you like it or not.

Tradition is nice, primarily for memories

Fassi in lead; Hogs go 4-under at first round of NCAA regional

AUSTIN, Texas — Arkansas junior Maria Fassi led the field with seven birdies and finished round one of the 2018 NCAA Austin Regional tied for second place at the University of Texas Golf Course in Austin on Monday.

Fassi’s seven birdies helped the third-ranked Razorbacks to a 4-under 284 and second place with two rounds of play remaining.

The Pachuca, Mexico, native started her round with five birdies in the first 10 holes that she played. She stumbled a bit on holes 11, 12, and 13 but rallied playing her final five holes 2-under. Fassi’s 3-under 69 ties for the fourth-best round by a Razorback at an NCAA Regional.

Fassi is tied with three other players and they are just one shot behind the leader. The Razorbacks were one of just three teams with more than one player in the top-10 after the first round.

The team effort included a 2-under 70 from junior Dylan Kim and an even-par 72 from junior Kaylee Benton as Arkansas counted its second-best single round team total in program history.

Kim is tied for sixth and Benton is tied for 23rd after round one. Junior Cara Gorlei was 1-over with a 73 and senior Alana Uriell rounded out the Razorback scores with a 78.

The Razorbacks lead the field with 20 birdies in the first round on the par 72, 6,341-yard course.

Eighth-ranked Texas finished the day on top of the leaderboard with a 7-under 281, just three shots better than Arkansas. Michigan State is one shot back with a 285 followed by Virginia Tech and No. 35 Baylor shooting 288 to round out the top-5 team scores.

Play continues Tuesday and Wednesday with the top six teams from each of four NCAA Regional sites advancing to the NCAA Championship in Stillwater, Oklahoma, later this month.

The Lineup

PLACE PLAYER SCORE TO PAR
T2 Maria Fassi 69 -3
T6 Dylan Kim 70 -2
T23 Kaylee Benton 72 E
T32 Cara Gorlei 73 +1
T77 Alana Uriell 78 +6


The Field

PLACE PLAYER SCORE TO PAR
1 No. 8 Texas 281 -7
2 No. 3 Arkansas 284 -4
3 No. 11 Michigan State 285 -3
T4. Virginia Tech 288 E
T4. No. 35 Baylor 288 E
T6. No. 41 Brigham Young 291 +3
T6. No. 14 Florida 291 +3
8 No. 19 Auburn 292 +4
9 No. 38 Texas A&M 295 +7
T10. UTSA 287 +10
T10. No. 30 Miami 298 +10
T12 No. 21 Oklahoma 299 +11
T12. No. 48 East Carolina 299 +11
T14. No. 49 Texas Tech 300 +12
T14. No. 25 Houston 300 +12
16 Houston Baptist 301 +13
17 Georgetown 302 +14
18 Missouri Sate 318 +30

Van Horn addresses first base production for Hogs

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn visited with the media after talking to the Swatter’s Club on Monday and it wasn’t difficult to tell he’s been concerned about the lack of offensive production at first base this season.