Hog freshmen Martin, Kjerstad named All-American

FAYETTEVILLE — Infielder Casey Martin and outfielder Heston Kjerstad picked up more postseason hardware earlier this week, earning First Team Freshman All-America honors by the National College Baseball Writers’ Association (NCBWA).

Martin and Kjerstad have been, arguably, the best freshman hitting duo in the nation as they have both notched more than 55 starts each and are hitting .340 or higher.

Martin’s .344 average is tops on the team, while Kjerstad is hitting .340 with a team-leading 14 home runs and 54 RBIs.

Both averages are the highest among all freshmen in the SEC and top 20 in the country.

With their new distinction, Martin and Kjerstad become the 20th and 21st Freshman All-Americans in program history, following teammate Dominic Fletcher, who was the lone Freshman All-American on last year’s squad.

It’s also the first time since 2011 that Arkansas has had two or more players named Freshman All-Americans in the same season.

Kjerstad, who has been at or near the top of all offensive categories this year, was tabbed as the SEC’s Freshman of the Year in May after hitting .322 in conference play with five home runs, 21 RBIs and seven walks.

Overall, his .340 average is good for 10th in the league and he has top 10 totals in runs scored (61), hits (81), slugging (.576), RBIs (54), home runs (14) and total bases (137).

Last week in the NCAA Fayetteville Super Regional, Kjerstad hit his 13th and 14th home run of the year, setting a new Arkansas freshman record for home runs set by Zack Cox in 2009.

He’s also set new freshman records in hits, total bases, and hit by pitches (18).

As for Martin, the Lonoke, Arkansas native has burst onto the scene with similar numbers to Kjerstad.

Entering the College World Series, Martin has played in 61 games and has registered 77 hits, 12 doubles, 13 home runs and 46 RBIs. In seven of his last 12 games dating back to May 19, Martin has notched a multi-hit game and is hitting .373 during that span, leading all Razorbacks.

Martin was named to the All-SEC Second Team and SEC All-Freshman Team at the end of the regular season as his .333 average in conference play was best among all league freshmen.

Kjerstad, Martin and the Razorbacks head to Omaha, Nebraska this week to play in the College World Series with their first game set for Sunday against Texas at 1 p.m.

Arkansas will be playing in its ninth College World Series in program history and fifth under coach Dave Van Horn.

Knight named first team All-American by writers

 — Blaine Knight was named to the All-America first team by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers, it was announced Wednesday.

Knight, a junior right-hander, is one of seven starting pitchers on the NCBWA first team. Other starters are Auburn’s Casey Mize, Florida’s Brady Singer, Oregon State’s Luke Heimlich, Southern Miss’ Nick Sandlin, Stetson’s Logan Gilbert and UC Irvine’s Andre Pallante.

Voters were asked to select eight starting pitchers during the voting process, which ended last week. Other Arkansas players on the NCBWA ballot were second baseman Carson Shaddy, third baseman Casey Martin and outfielder Heston Kjerstad. Martin and Kjerstad were voted to the NCBWA Freshman All-America team.

Knight is 12-0 this season with a 2.84 ERA in 16 starts. He is one win shy of tying the school record for wins in a single season and is expected to start the Razorbacks’ game against Texas on Sunday at the College World Series in Omaha, Neb.

The Bryant native previously was named second-team All-America by Baseball America and Perfect Game, and to the third team by Collegiate Baseball.

Arkansas has had 23 individuals named All-America 28 times. Prior to Knight, Andrew Benintendi, the 2015 winner of the Dick Howser Trophy and Golden Spikes Award as national player of the year, was the Razorbacks’ most recent All-American.

Hogs add graduate transfer receiver from Kansas

Arkansas is adding some immediate help at wide receiver with redshirt sophomore Chase Harrell announcing he’s coming to the Hogs.

Harrell, 6-4, 230,

caught 25 passes for 221 yards and three touchdowns last season, announced Tuesday that he will play his final two season as a Razorback and will be immediately eligible.

He took an official visit to Fayetteville on June 3-5.

Harrell, a former Huffman, Texas, three-star prospect who caught five passes for 81 yards as a redshirt freshman after choosing Kansas over Houston, has had a rough few months.

Harrell was at party in December in Houston where his older brother, Cole, was shot and killed. He was arrested on suspension of driving under the influence in month.

He announced on April 13 that he had decided to use his remaining two years of eligibility elsewhere.

“So blessed to say I will be the first person to GRADUATE from college this summer,” Harrell tweeted. “With that being said, with everything I have been through this past 6 months, I’m looking for a FRESH start and have decided to transfer from KU and play my FINAL TWO years at another D1 University.

“To Jayhawk nation, my KU teammates, and coaching staff I want to say thank you for everything and I love y’all. This has nothing to do with the KU program, this is just something I need to do for myself to truly start FRESH and REFOCUS.

“I just want to honor my brother Cole on the football field every time I step on it and I feel the best way to do that is with a FRESH start and a New Beginning.”

Kansas coach David Beaty noted he was fond of Harrell at the time of his transfer announcement.

“He’s done a terrific job of doing everything that we’ve asked him to do and things that we’ve encouraged him to do,” Beaty told the Kansas City Star. “He’s a kid that we all love. He’s adored in our program. The No. 1 goal for us is to help Chase.”

Baum Stadium leads nation in attendance for NCAA’s

FAYETTEVILLE — Baum Stadium hosted nine games during the NCAA Regionals and Super Regionals over the past two weeks, welcoming more fans than any other ballpark in the nation with 89,852 packing the stadium during the two rounds that saw Arkansas advance to the program’s ninth College World Series.

Baum Stadium was one of only five ballparks to host both Regionals and Super Regionals and the only one to surpass 80,000 in total attendance.

In the games featuring the Razorbacks, the average attendance was 10,594 — including 11,473 during Super Regionals.

All three Super Regional crowds exceeded 11,000 and are three of the largest postseason attendances in stadium history.

Including the postseason, attendance at Baum Stadium this season climbed to 311,828.

Arkansas wrapped up the 2018 season with the most home wins in program history, going 34-4 at Baum Stadium.

The Razorbacks open play in Omaha, Nebraska at the College World Series against Texas on Sunday at 1 p.m. at TD Ameritrade Park on ESPN.

Razorbacks blast South Carolina to advance to Omaha

VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK
FAYETTEVILLE — For the ninth time in program history and fifth time under coach Dave Van Horn, Arkansas is headed to the College World Series after Monday night’s 14-4 win over South Carolina in Game 3 of the NCAA Fayetteville Super Regional.

Carson Shaddy homered early and Luke Bonfield led a quartet of Razorbacks with at least two hits as the No. 5 national seed secured its ticket to Omaha.

Arkansas is paired up with Texas for the first game of the College World Series. Game information including date and time will be announced later.

Razorbacks right fielder Eric Cole slides into second base as South Carolina shortstop LT Tolbert takes a throw in the Hogs’ 14-4 win Monday evening. PHOTO BY JAMIE VARNELL

The Big Inning

It started early for the Razorbacks’ offense, scoring five runs in the bottom of the first inning including three on one big swing by Shaddy.

With two runs already across the plate and two on base, the Fayetteville native hammered a 2-0 pitch from SC starter Carmen Mlodzinski into the Hog Pen to give Arkansas a 5-0 lead.

The big fly was Shaddy’s 13th of the season — and third during the NCAA Tournament — and pushed the Razorbacks’ season total to a program-record 93 home runs.

The Hitting

Casey Martin celebrates with Eric Cole during the Razorbacks’ romp over South Carolina on Monday night to win the Super Regional. PHOTO BY JAMIE VARNELL

Bonfield drove in four runs with three hits, picking up an RBI in each of his first four plate appearances. He had RBI singles in the first, second and fifth innings, adding a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to center field in the fourth.

From his leadoff spot in the lineup, junior Eric Cole was 3-for-3 with two walks and five runs scored.

Freshman Casey Martin tallied his team-leading 26th multi-hit performance with two hits against South Carolina including a two-run double in the Razorbacks’ five-run fifth.

Martin and fellow freshman Heston Kjerstad each scored two runs Monday. Arkansas’ 14 runs scored are the program’s second-most in a Super Regional game since an 18-4 win over Missouri State in 2015.

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn argues with home plate umpire Billy Haze after a wild pitch call that allowed South Carolina to score two runs. PHOTO BY JAMIE VARNELL

The Pitching

Staked to an early lead after Arkansas’ outburst in the first, redshirt sophomore Isaiah Campbell was solid through four-plus innings of work Monday.

He struck out five while allowing two runs on four hits. After a lead-off walk to start the fifth, Arkansas turned to Barrett Loseke out of the bullpen who, after a walk to the first hitter he faced, retired the next three hitters in order to preserve the Razorbacks’ 8-2 advantage.

Win or Go Home

The Razorbacks are now 3-1 in Super Regional Game 3 scenarios…
2002 — L, 7-4 at No. 2 Clemson (Clemson, S.C.)
2012 — W, 1-0 (10) at No. 4 Baylor (Waco, Texas)
2015 — W, 3-2 vs Wichita State (Fayetteville)
2018 — W, 14-4 vs South Carolina (Fayetteville)

Game Note

Monday’s game marked the seventh meeting against South Carolina this season, the most times Arkansas has played one opponent in a single season.

The Razorbacks played Auburn six times in 1999, Texas six times in 1979, 1980, 1983, 1985 and 1987, and South Carolina six times in 2012.

NCAA Fayetteville Super Regional | Tournament Central
Arkansas wins series, 2-1

Game 1: Arkansas 9, South Carolina 3
Game 2: South Carolina 8, Arkansas 4
Game 3: Arkansas 14, South Carolina 4

Van Horn, players talk about winning Super Regional

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn along with payers Luke Bonfield, Eric Cole and Carson Shaddy talked about the big win over the Gamecocks on Monday night to advance to Omaha.

South Carolina coach, players talk about big loss to Hogs

Gamecocks coach Mark Kingston along with players Ridge Chapman and Jacob Olson after a disappointing loss to Arkansas in the Super Regional on Monday evening.

Oklahoma DE Ford impressed with Hogs on visit

FAYETTEVILLE — Defensive end Trace Ford was one of 73 players at Saturday’s Razorback Night Camp 2 and he liked what he saw.

“It’s definitely in my top five, that’s why I got out here,” Ford said to multiple sites. He has been busy playing baseball as well as looking at schools.

“I just wanted to see it more,” he said. “The baseball and all takes up time, so I wanted to get out and see more. That’s why I wanted to come here and see what it’s about.

“I like them a lot. I like Coach (Steve) Caldwell. He’s kind of quirky. He tries to show you how to do things and interacts with you, so I like that a lot. I know the schools I like and the schools I don’t like. Arkansas is definitely up there.”

Ford, 6-3, 220 pounds, came during the bitter cold and freezing weather in February. He didn’t get to see much.

He wanted to see it in warmer weather and got a good look Saturday.

“I got here at around 2 or 3 and we toured around to get a better feel for the school,” Ford said. “That’s why I came. It was like a freeze-out when I came the first time, so I wanted to get around to the facility and the business center and all. It was amazing, I liked it a lot.”

Ford has owned an Arkansas offer for several months and also holds scholarship opportunities with Oklahoma State, Florida State, Oregon, Missouri, Cal and others.

The Razorbacks are still firmly in his top group as he begins to take more visits following the end of his baseball season.

“It’s definitely in my top five, that’s why I got out here,” Ford said. “I just wanted to see it more. The baseball and all takes up time, so I wanted to get out and see more. That’s why I wanted to come here and see what it’s about.

“I like them a lot. I like Coach (Steve) Caldwell. He’s kind of quirky. He tries to show you how to do things and interacts with you, so I like that a lot. I know the schools I like and the schools I don’t like. Arkansas is definitely up there.”