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Hogs get good midweek test against No. 4 Texas Tech

FAYETTEVILLE — No. 7 Arkansas is back home this week to start a five-game homestand at Baum Stadium.

In what will be its final midweek games of the 2018 season, the Hogs will get its toughest midweek test of the year as they welcome No. 4 Texas Tech starting on Tuesday.

First pitch on Tuesday between the Razorbacks and Red Raiders is set for 6:30 p.m. on SEC Network+. Game two will be on Wednesday at 6 p.m. and televised nationally on the SEC Network.

This week’s series marks the first multi-game series between the two schools since they were both part of the old Southwest Conference in 1991.

Arkansas won that series, 2-1, in Lubbock, Texas and this week’s slate of games will be the first in Fayetteville since 1990.

This week’s series will also be the fourth time this year that the Hogs will face off against a top-five opponent, and the second time at home.

In the previous nine games against top-five opponents, the Razorbacks are averaging just under eight runs per game, and have won five of those nine games.

Freshman pitcher Jackson Rutledge with be making his second mid-week start of the season, his first coming against Louisiana-Monroe on April 3.

In that game, he gave up just two hits over three innings and struck out two. Rutledge is currently 3-0 on the year with wins over USC, Memphis, and Grambling State, and has only given up three earned runs in 10 appearances

FOLLOW LIVE

Both games this week can be seen online via Watch ESPN. Game one will only be on SEC Network+ as Brett Dolan (PxP) and Troy Eklund (Analyst) will be bringing you the action. Game two will be broadcast on the SEC Network as Tom Hart (PxP) and Mike Rooney (Analyst) will cover that game.

Phil Elson will call both games on the radio with former Razorback Bubba Carpenter for the Razorback Sports Network from IMG. Those radio broadcasts are also available on the Razorback Gameday app.

IMPORTANT LINKS (ALL TIMES CENTRAL)

Tue, April 24 – Arkansas vs. Texas Tech – 6:30 p.m. – LIVE STATS | WATCH (SECN+)
Wed, April 25 – Arkansas vs. Texas Tech – 6 p.m. – LIVE STATS | WATCH (SEC Network)

PROBABLE STARTERS

TUE: ARK RHP Jackson Rutledge (2.08 ERA, 3-0, 11 K, 8 BB) vs. TTU RHP Ryan Sublette (8.62 ERA, 0-1, 13 K, 11 BB)

WED: ARK TBA vs. TTU TBA

RAZORBACK PRIME 9

• Arkansas starts a new homestand on Tuesday when it welcomes No. 4 Texas Tech for a two-game midweek series at Baum Stadium. This will be the fourth top-five opponent for the Hogs this year.

• The Razorbacks have won five-straight midweek games dating back to the March 27 contest at Memphis. Overall, Arkansas is 10-1 in midweek games this season.

• This week’s two-game series will be the first multi-game series between Arkansas and Texas Tech since 1991. The last meeting game on Feb. 28, 2016 at the Houston College Classic at Minute Maid Park.

• Sophmore Matt Cronin has nine saves on the season, which is currently second in the SEC. He needs just four more to tie the single-season Arkansas record set by Colby Suggs (13) in 2013.

• Heston Kjerstad (.368, 9 HR) and Casey Martin (.338, 8 HR) are the only Division I freshmen with a .315 average or higher and eight or more home runs.

• With his RBI-single in the first game of the doubleheader with South Carolina, Carson Shaddy hit the 200-hit mark for his career. Now at 204 hits, he needs just 25 more to crack the Arkansas all-time top 10.

• The Razorbacks are currently the best hitting team in the SEC with a .308 combined batting average. Heston Kjerstad (.368) and Carson Shaddy (.356) lead the team in hitting and are fifth and seventh in the league, respectively.

• Arkansas recorded 10 or more hits in a game twice during the Mississippi State series. This year, the Hogs have totaled 10 or more hits in 24 of 41 games and are 18-6 in those games.

• Junior Eric Cole hit a grand slam in Friday’s series opener with Mississippi State. He’s the second Razorback to hit a grand slam this year and is currently tied for the team lead with nine home runs.

DB Hernandez transferring after redshirt freshman season in 2017

Arkansas defensive back Korey Hernandez is transferring, he announced via Twitter on Monday.

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He becomes the third Razorback player to leave since spring practice ended two weeks ago. Leaving before were tight end Will Gragg and defensive back Reid Miller.

Hernandez spent just a year and a half with the Hogs, enrolling early last spring and redshirting during the 2017 season.

“I have made many unforgettable moments at the University of Arkansas and have met some great people,” Hernandez said in the message on Twitter. “But after taking time to think with my family, I have decided to part ways and continue my career elsewhere.”

Coming out of Decatur (Ga.) Cedar Grove High School, Hernandez was a three-star safety with an .8372 grade in the 247Sports Composite.

He received an offer from the Razorbacks in the summer of 2016 and committed just two days later, picking Arkansas over other Power Five offers from Georgia Tech, Maryland and Wake Forest.

Hernandez failed to crack the two-deep depth chart during spring practice, so his decision does not come as a surprise.

His transfer gets Arkansas down to 86 scholarship players for this season, assuming the Board of Directors doesn’t shoot down the proposal that the Division I Council approved last week which would allow Kevin Richardson to receive a sixth year of eligibility.

That means the Razorbacks will have to lose at least one more scholarship player before the summer.

Van Horn on midweek games with Texas Tech

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn met with the media Monday and talked about the midweek series against Texas Tech and how that came about along with the three-game sweep by Mississippi State last weekend.

Koch on bouncing back after being swept by Bulldogs

Razorbacks catcher Grant Koch talked with the media Monday about coming back after dropping three at Mississippi State last weekend and midweek matchup with Texas Tech.

Knight on team’s dropping three games in Starkville

Arkansas pitcher Blaine Knight met with the media before Monday’s practice at Baum Stadium and talked about not wanting to be pulled in the first game of the series last weekend.

Hogs’ Shaddy feeling better after second hand injury

Arkansas second baseman Carson Shaddy met with the media before Monday’s practice and talked about having both hands hurting now and getting ready for Texas Tech midweek series.

Reaves leaving Wichita State; undecided on next stop

After two seasons at Wichita State, former Cedar Ridge standout Austin Reaves is leaving, but he’s not sure where he’s going.

Wichita State has been one of the premier mid-major programs in the country under Gregg Marshall’s tutelage the last few years and a consistent NCAA Tournament team.

Now Reaves has decided to take his talents elsewhere, and we had the chance to talk to him about his decision.

Q: Why are you leaving Wichita State?

Reaves: I just felt it was time to move on. I loved my time in Wichita and I can’t thank Coach Marshall and his staff enough for the opportunity to play for one of the best programs and for one of the greatest fan bases in sports. I wish nothing but the best for the University, the basketball program and the fans moving forward!

Q: When did you know it was time to leave?

Reaves: It built over time. I was just focused on winning with my teammates and playing as long as we could. But when the season came to an end I talked with family and support system and decided it was time to move on.

Q: Who was the first school to contact you?

Reaves: Either Oklahoma or Northern Iowa.

Q: Any pressure to come back to Arkansas or Arkansas State?

Reaves: No. I’m listening to everyone. But fit and my personal happiness playing basketball is my priority. The state of Arkansas is my home and I hope to represent Arkansas and make people proud wherever I go.

Q: How many visits will you take?

Reaves: I’m not sure. I will take as many as I need to find the right place for me.

Q: Who are your top choices as of now?

Reaves: Oklahoma, Northern Iowa, Michigan, Purdue, Indiana, Iowa State, Kansas State and Texas Tech.

Q: Who is advising you in this process?

Reaves: My mom and dad, my brother Spencer and Dillon Buchanan.

Q: Will an in-state school get a visit?

Reaves: As of right now, no. But I am still listening to everyone. I am fortunate to have a lot of great programs interested in me.

Q: You were under-recruited in high school. Does it mean something to you to finally be recruited the way you should have been?

Reaves: I wouldn’t say I was under recruited. Wichita State is one of the best programs in the country. I was thrilled to be a Shocker! But I’m grateful to know that so many great programs see something in me to pursue my abilities.

Last season, Reaves averaged 8.1 points, 3.1 rebounds and 2.0 assists per game for the Shockers with 11 starts.

He will have to sit out the 2018-19 season but he will be eligible for two seasons starting in 2019-20 with whatever he school he ultimately chooses.

Benton’s two-putt clinches Hogs’ first SEC women’s title

HOOVER, Ala. — Arkansas junior Kaylee Benton stood on the 18th green in front of a gallery of people and television cameras and calmly two-putted to win the first SEC women’s golf title in program history.

The third-ranked Razorbacks defeated No.10 South Carolina 3-2 in the inaugural season of match play on the Legacy Course at Greystone Golf and Country Club on Sunday.

The Razorbacks clinched the title when Benton, who won all three of her matches this weekend, hit her second shot to 30 feet. Her opponent was on the fringe of the green and two-putted. Benton rolled her first attempt close and her opponent conceded the match for the 1-up victory.

From Kaylee Benton

“Yah, ya know it was a tough match all day long. I started out 2-down through two and she (her opponent) was just not messing up — throwing some darts. I stayed in it. I stayed patient and kept giving myself some looks, and I got it to 2-up. I lost a hole on 15 and was 1-up with three to go. I made a really good six-footer on 16 and carried that momentum forward on 17. I had another good two-putt before we went to 18.

“I kept telling myself to take a couple of deep breathes and I couldn’t lose it on that hole and I knew that. I knew if I could give myself a look at a birdie I would have it in the bag, and I did. I was pretty nervous, and it was pretty nice.”

Coach Shauna Taylor became the first in conference history to win the SEC title as both a player and as a head coach. The title is the 127th SEC crown for the Razorbacks.

From Shauna Taylor

“It’s everything for this program. These young ladies worked so hard and they put in the time and effort in the gym, in the classroom and on the course. To finally get a championship for our women’s golf program at Arkansas, it’s been a long time coming and gosh, I’m just so proud of our student-athletes.

“Maria (Fassi) has been a rock, an anchor. She has gotten the points when we needed her. She’s such a great leader and I couldn’t say enough about her. It’s 16 years for me at Arkansas. Everyday I wake up trying to think of ways to make these young ladies better – better people and better golfers – and to have a day like this and to experience it with this group is just tremendous.”

Fassi went out first and was the first player finished with a 2 & 1 victory. She won the first hole and led by as much as three on the front nine.

Her opponent cut into the lead, winning the seventh hole but Fassi would remain 2-up for the rest of the match.

Carolina made it interesting winning at the number two and three spots, but Arkansas had the advantage in the final two matches as regulation play wound down.

Junior Dylan Kim picked up a big win on hole 15 to move to 2-up with three to play. She confidently approached No. 17 and halved the hole to get the 2 & 1 win.

Knotted at 2-2, the championship came down to Benton. She trailed most of the match falling behind two holes and remained down until the sixth hole.

Benton won the No. 7 and squared the match winning No. 9. The players remained tied until Benton drained a 25-foot putt on No. 13 taking the lead.

Results
Maria Fassi (Ark.) def. Anita Uwadia (SC) 2 & 1
Marion Veysseyre (SC) def. Cara Gorlei (Ark.) 2-up
Ana Pelaez (SC) def. Alana Uriell (Ark.) 19 holes
Kaylee Benton (Ark.) def. Ainhoa Olarra (SC) 1-up
Dylan Kim (Ark.) def. Lois Kaye Go (SC) 2 & 1

Notes
• Arkansas has finished second or tied for second three times in program history
• This is the first-ever SEC Championship to play match play
• Shauna Taylor is the first person to win an SEC Women’s Golf title as both a player and head coach
• Maria Fassi and Kaylee Benton won all three matches this weekend

Up Next
The Razorbacks await word of an NCAA Regional selection. The selection show is scheduled to air on the Golf Channel on Wednesday, April 25, at 4:30 p.m.

This year’s regional sites include Stanford Golf Course (San Francisco, Calif.), University of Texas Golf Club (Austin, Texas), University Ridge Golf Course (Madison, Wis.) and Southwood Golf Course (Tallahassee, Fla.).

Taylor: Championship win means everything for Hogs

VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK
SEC Network’s Peter Burns talks with Arkansas women’s golf head coach Shauna Taylor as she reacts to the Razorbacks’ first SEC title.

If Chavis is excited, that should have fans pumped, too

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John Chavis is saying a lot these days.

For someone who’s been a longtime defensive coordinator in the SEC at the highest levels, he’s never been particularly in the limelight, according to people who have followed his career closer than me.

Some longtime SEC football observers told me when he was hired in January that he didn’t do a whole lot of off-campus recruiting and, well, they didn’t know a whole lot more because you never heard from him much.

Apparently Chad Morris has changed all of that.

Chavis is, by all appearances, totally pumped about his new team at Arkansas. More than that, he’s excited about Morris’ vision.

“Obviously, I’m as excited as I’ve ever been,” Chavis told Clay Henry of WholeHogSports.com in a story last week.

That in itself is cause to raise an eyebrow.

Oh, Chavis has always had a burning desire to win. You don’t become one of the top defensive coordinators in college football, heading up two defenses that make it to the national championship game and multiple SEC Championship Games without that.

Morris walks, talks and acts like a winner. In well over 40 years of covering college sports I’ve noticed a trend of coaches who are winners wherever they are. Some coaches win at a certain place as long as they stick with that system.

Others go win wherever they are.

Anybody who dug more than a iittle bit would have had grave doubts in December 2012 that Bret Bielema would be very successful at Arkansas.

Many of the national experts, who have a remarkable track record of not being more than a layer or two deep in their thinking, said it was a home-run hire. As I said on the air at the time and wrote it was the worst fit at Arkansas since Otis Douglas in 1950.

As he waddled through five seasons that had varying degrees of success, but massively under-achieved, he did nothing to change my mind. Bielema actually coached most players down while pointing out the needle-in-a-haystack accidental successes he had at Wisconsin.

Morris has had success simply by working as hard as anybody in college football. Other schools are already taking notice, according to people at various places around the league (and that’s not other media people, but folks inside programs).

Some media wags like to point out that the Hogs were 4-8 last year and probably won’t be any better this year because they’re changing systems, players won’t adjust to it and, well, by golly, those guys just weren’t very good.

They weren’t very good, apparently, because they were overweight, sluggish and out of shape. Oh, they may have been able to life a truck, but they couldn’t outrun one. In the SEC you better be able to at least keep up with the truck.

“You’re either recruiting speed or chasing speed,” Morris said at his very first press conference and he hasn’t altered that stance one bit.

Speed was tied for first as the biggest problem on this team the last few years along with being out of shape. Look no further than fourth-quarter collapses over five years.

It’s easy for fans to forget the Hogs lost three games decided by one score. They won just two, over Ole Miss and Coastal Carolina. Yeah, chew on that one for a bit.

Arkansas was outscored in the second half last season by a whopping 231-165. That’s an average of 5½ points a game for ALL games. Every coach I talked to pointed to conditioning as a key factor when that happens.

No, the Hogs’ talent wasn’t the biggest problem. There were injuries, particularly to feet and ankles during Bielema’s tenure. As players have slimmed down they have gotten quicker, faster and practically eliminated those injuries.

Morris saw all of that and it’s part of his plan to fix quickly, which is already being done.

The other part is that vision. This staff works as hard as any football staff I’ve seen in the SEC recruiting, recruiting and more recruiting. People that follow this staff say the difference there since the coaching change is night and day.

There’s that vision thing again. It’s what has Chavis excited.

“Everyone has to be pulling together and to see the vision the head coach has,” Chavis said in the story in WholeHogSports.com last week. It’s fun being at what I call ground level in terms of building this program and to be part of the Chad Morris era. I’m fired up and excited.”

That should be enough to get the fans excited.

And, if you read between the lines of what every one of the coaches say, they actually believe this team will be better than what most think.

It’s not WHAT they say. It’s HOW they are saying it.

They say it like it’s a fact.

Not like they are trying to convince themselves.