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Hogs open SEC play with win on road at Missouri

COLUMBIA, Mo. — No. 27 Arkansas opened SEC play Friday with a convincing 4-1 win at Missouri.

The Razorbacks (5-5, 1-0 SEC) started fast and finished strong, earning the doubles point with back-to-back wins at the top two spots and securing three of four singles victories.

“It’s always great to get a strong start in conference play,” head coach Michael Hegarty said. “It took a total team effort tonight as the crowd was a big factor in the tight four court indoor.”

The No. 36 ranked doubles duo of junior Ana Oparenovic and freshman Tatum Rice improved to an SEC-best 9-0 in dual matches and sealed the opening point with a 6-4 win at No. 1. Senior Mia Jurasic and sophomore Giulia Pairone were first off the court, winning 6-2 at No. 2.

Arkansas’ energy carried into singles action, where Pairone, No. 76 Oparenovic and Rice each earned victories in straight sets.

Pairone made quick work of her opponent, winning 6-0, 6-2 to improve to 8-0 this spring, including a 3-0 mark at the top spot.

The Tigers’ (11-4, 0-1 SEC) lone win came next at the No. 3 position.

Rice made the score 3-1 with her 6-4, 6-4 victory at No. 4, and then Oparenovic delivered the clinch, besting her opponent 6-3, 6-4 for her fourth straight win.

Van Horn pleased overall with win to start USC series

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn met with the media following a strong overall team performance in blanking USC, 4-0.

Knight, Henley, Bonfield talk about Hogs’ shutout

Arkansas pitchers Blaine Knight and Jackson Henley along with designated hitter Luke Bonfield talk about the win over USC.

Hogs in striking distance on first day at ‘Darius Rucker’

HILTON HEAD, S.C. — Third-ranked Arkansas is in striking distance in third place after round one of the 2018 Darius Rucker Intercollegiate in Hilton Head, South Carolina, on Friday.

The Razorbacks are just four shots off the lead after shooting a 6-over 290 at the Long Cove Club course.

Junior Maria Fassi continued her strong play and leads the Razorbacks after the first day. Fassi posted a 1-under 70 (35–35) and is tied for seventh overall.

Her round was just one of 10 rounds that were under par on the 6,265-yard, par-71 course.

Fassi played the front side 1-under with birdies on holes six and seven. She made the turn and birdied No. 10, moving to 2-under for the round. Fassi went on to bogey the next two holes and finished with two birdies and a bogey for her 70.

Junior Dylan Kim was even on the day, counting a 71 (38–33) and is tied for 10th overall. Kim turned 2-over and moved to 3-over with a bogey on No. 11.

Four Razorbacks bogeyed the 11th hole on the course. Kim rallied with three consecutive birdies on holes 13, 14 and 15 to finish even.

Senior Alana Uriell shot a 2-over 73 (36–37) and is tied for 23rd in the 93-player field.

Uriell’s scorecard was clean through the first 10 holes but she picked up bogeys on the 11th and 16th holes.

Junior Kaylee Benton (39–37) and senior Jordy LaBarbera (40–36) both shot 76 and are tied for 53rd with two rounds to play.

The Lineup

PLACE PLAYER SCORE TO PAR
T7 Maria Fassi 70 -1
T10 Dylan Kim 71 E
T23 Alana Uriell 73 +2
T53 Kaylee Benton 76 +5
T53 Jordy LaBarbera 76 +5

 

The Razorbacks moved up and down the leaderboard all day on the challenging course before finishing ahead of four of the top-10 teams in the country.

Second-ranked Alabama leads the field with a 2-over 286. No. 13 Northwestern is second shooting 287 followed by Arkansas.

The Razorbacks are one stroke up on LSU who shot 291 and No. 9 Furman and Mississippi State round out the top five teams with 292.

The Field

PLACE TEAM SCORE TO PAR
1 No. 1 Alabama 286 +2
2 No. 13 Northwestern 287 +3
3 No. 3 Arkansas 290 +6
4 LSU 291 +7
T5 No. 9 Furman 292 +8
Mississippi State 292 +8
T7 No. 6 Arizona State 293 +9
No. 33 North Carolina 293 +9
9 Georgia 294 +10
T10 No. 5 Duke 295 +11
No. 29 Vanderbilt 295 +11
12 No. 28 Wake Forest 296 +12
13 No. 8 South Carolina 298 +14
14 No. 37 Baylor 299 +15
15 No. 35 Tennessee 300 +16
16 No. 20 Virginia 301 +17
T17 No. 34 Auburn 304 +20
No. 14 Oklahoma State 304 +20

 

From Shauna Taylor

“I’m really proud of Maria and Dylan. Dylan made birdies on 13, 14 and 15 and she, Maria and Alana did a nice job. Jordy and Kaylee fought all day as well.

“The Long Cove Club is a championship golf course and it demands your attention on every shot. I love the way it prepares us and exposes us to the things we work on and practice every day.

“We are in a position to give ourselves a chance at the ultimate goal.

“This course is one that will require all five players to be present and pay attention to the details. If they do that, their strengths will shine.

“We are excited about where we are at. I love being around this team and having two more days with them to accomplish our goals.”

Hogs go for season sweep of Mizzou on Saturday

FAYETTEVILLE — Looking to finish in the top three of the SEC standings for the third time in four seasons, Arkansas will put a lid on the regular season Saturday in Columbia, Missouri, as the Razorbacks go for a season sweep of Missouri for the third time in the last four years.

The Rundown
Opponent:
 Missouri Tigers (19-11, 9-8 SEC)
Date: 
Saturday, March 3
Site: Mizzou Arena (Columbia, Mo.)
Tip-off: 5:00 p.m. CT
TV: ESPN2 | WatchESPN
Live Stats: Click Here
Sirius/XM Radio: 137/192

The #Fastest40 Facts
• With Tuesday’s win against No. 14 Auburn, Arkansas has knocked off four ranked teams at home in a season or the first time in program history.

• Arkansas’ 110 dunks are the most in the Mike Anderson era. Daniel Gafford’s 65 dunks this season are more than six SEC Teams.

• At 40.4 percent from behind the arc, the Razorbacks are on pace to record the second-highest three-point percentage by any SEC team in the last 25 years. Florida shot 40.9 percent in 2007.

• Arkansas and Kentucky are the only programs in the SEC to finish .500 or better in league play in each of the last six seasons.

• During the last five years, the Razorbacks have posted a 35-15 (.700) regular season record in the months of February and March.

• Arkansas has won 38 consecutive games when leading at halftime. During Mike Anderson era, the Razorbacks are 123-7 (.946) when leading at the break.

• Jaylen Barford and Daryl Macon are the only two players in the SEC to rank in the top 10 in points per game, three-point FG percentage and FG percentage.

• For the fifth consecutive season, Arkansas has finished higher than it was picked in the preseason poll. After being selected sixth in the SEC, the Razorbacks can finish no worse than T-4th.

• Tuesday against Auburn, Daryl Macon and Jaylen Barford became the 6th and 7th players in program history to score 1,000 career points in just two seasons.

A Win Would…

• Give Arkansas 10 SEC road wins during the last two years, the second-most in the league and only behind Florida with 11.

•  Give the Razorbacks three consecutive SEC road wins for the second time in 20 years. Both times have come under Anderson after winning three straight in 2014-15.

•  Send the Razorbacks to a No. 4 seed in the SEC Tournament, giving Arkansas a double bye for the second straight year and three times in four seasons.

Energy, speed noticeable differences at first practice

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The Chad Morris Era, which as been dubbed RazorFast for marketing purposes, got off to a, well, fast start Thursday.

Morris wasted zero time in setting the pace.

Everybody moved fast.

“I’ve never run so much in my life,” was how tight end Cheyenne O’Grady said as he was leaving the football center.

He was smiling as he said it.

For anyone at a practice the last few years, the pace of this workout was blindingly fast. There was no hesitation.

“I don’t know where I’m supposed go!” one player shouted as one of the four periods the media were allowed to attend ended and another began.

Wherever he was headed, he was going there at a full sprint. Even the head coach at times.

In the changeover from one period to the next, instead of a generic voice announcing the period, it was Morris announcing to everyone the period change. There was some late shifting around as players went the wrong way a couple of times.

“If you’re juiceful, you’re useful and it’s got to start with the head coach,” Morris said. “What I was doing was all about getting movement in the practice, getting them from one place to the next.

He didn’t appear too concerned later with some confusion.

“We are learning to practice and it wasn’t perfect,” he said. “But I didn’t think it would be.”

What didn’t appear confusing was the skill people on offense.

“It looked like they had listened,” Morris said later.

He said they knew the terminology and it went fairly smooth, for the most part.

And, even though the practice ran a little long (Morris was nearly 30 minutes late getting to the postgame interview), it went fast. There is no stopping at Razorback practices now.

“We went long, but I thought they were in shape,” Morris said. “They were excited at the end. I asked them how they felt and they gave (strength coach Trumain Carroll) some applause. They did not taper off at the end.”

Morris and his staff watched every single game the Hogs played last year. A blind man could see how they have tailed off in the fourth quarter the last couple of years.

It’s a priority.

“The overall energy level is exhausting,” he said. “Some of the coaches who hadn’t been with us were awestruck, just like the players.”

Morris has talked several times about finishing. It’s a major point of emphasis and he pushes it in every practice, every drill, every meeting.

The pace will likely change on a fairly frequent basis.

“Some of the things we did as far as pace was over-exaggerated,” Morris said. “We wanted to just let them know how we roll.”

It’s his voice on the speaker between periods. It’s whistle — literally — and he knows who’s loafing and who’s hustling.

“Today, there were a lot of loafs,” he said. “But I expected that. I know it will be better Saturday as they get a better feel for what we expect.

“I do know that at 7:15 p.m. Tonight, then we are a better team than when we stepped on the field today.”

Which should be something Hog fans like hearing.

Spring practice opening day: The faces of spring

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Photos by Andy Hodges

Freshmen shine to finish sweep of Dayton; USC next

FAYETTEVILLE — It was another great day for the Razorback freshmen on Thursday as fifth-ranked Arkansas shutout Dayton, 11-0, to complete the two-game sweep.

The win moves Arkansas to 7-2 and drops Dayton to 1-7. The Hogs have scored at least 10 runs in a game four times this year and are now hitting .312 as a team with 15 home runs.

Combined on Thursday, offensively, the first-year Razorbacks were responsible for six of Arkansas’ 11 hits in the game, including two-hit games from infielder Casey Martin and catcher Casey Opitz.

It was the second-straight multi-hit game for Martin and the second in three games for Opitz.

On the mound, the trio of Hunter Milligan, Bryce Bonnin, and Kole Ramage gave up just four hits, two walks, and struck out 13 batters.

Bonnin corralled his first collegiate victory after throwing five no-hit innings with one walk and six strikeouts.

Ramage, who pitched the eighth and ninth innings, gave up two late hits in the final frame, but struck out three with no walks.

He got the opportunity to use the bat in the eighth when coach Dave Van Horn made a double switch and placed him fifth in the batting order. The Southlake, Texas, native came through with a base hit through the left side, driving in the game’s final run.

Moments That Mattered

Arkansas had built up just a two-run lead going into the bottom of the fourth when senior Jared Gates corked his second home run of the year into the visitor’s bullpen.

It helped break a tough streak Gates had going dating back to the Tony Gwynn Legacy where he went just 2-for-13 (.154) with a double and a walk.

In five home games this year, Gates is batting 6-for-12 (.500) with two multi-hit games, nine RBIs, and two home runs.

The Hogs broke the game open in the fifth, getting four runs on four hits with three of those runs coming off the home run swing of freshman Heston Kjerstad.

It’s the second in six games for the Amarillo native and might have been one of the longest of the season as it traveled well past the bullpen in right field. Kjerstad continues to lead all Razorbacks in hitting through nine games with a .448 average and a .724 slugging percentage.

He capped off Thursday’s game with four RBIs in total, which is a season-high, as he had a sacrifice fly in the third inning also.

Dayton’s best chance to score came in the first and second inning as it put multiple runners on against Milligan, but could not bring any of them home.

The Flyers got a hit in each of the first two innings along with a couple of walks, but were only able to get four more baserunners between the third and ninth innings.

Milligan, a Greenbrier native, was limited on Wednesday as he threw just 37 pitches over two innings, but was still efficient as he struck out four of the eight batters he faced.

Once he gave way to Bonnin, the Flyers didn’t have an answer as the freshman set down the first seven batters he faced and then was perfect through the sixth and seventh innings.

So far this year, Bonnin has held opponents to a .048 batting average in three appearances, the second-lowest average among Razorback pitchers with six or more innings thrown.

Razorback Quotables

“When you look at the last two days, we threw five freshman pitchers and I thought they all did a really good job and gave us an opportunity to save some of our more experienced bullpen guys for the weekend. We’ve got some really good midweek games coming up when we have Texas coming in for two and then we go to Charlotte in the middle of the week. We’re going to have to pitch these guys and get some quality innings. They all threw well enough that they gained confidence and we gained confidence in them.” — Dave Van Horn on the freshmen pitchers’ performances against Dayton

“I thought he was outstanding today. With six strikeouts, one walk, and throwing the ball as hard as he does, that’s impressive. He showed me that he was under control and wasn’t stomping around on the mound when he didn’t get a call. He acted like he had done it before and just showed a lot of poise out there. I gained a lot of confidence in him today.” — Van Horn on Bryce Bonnin

“That was fun for the team, I guess. I was just trying to get Eric Cole out of the game. He fouled a ball off his foot last weekend. It’s fine, but it was still bothering him a little bit yesterday and he said he was okay today. I figured if I could save him a couple innings, running around out there, it might help a little bit this weekend. I know I lost our DH when I put Luke (Bonfield) in there, so I asked Coach (Wes) Johnson if he was good with it and he said ‘Yeah.’ I asked (Kole) Ramage and said ‘You hit in high school didn’t you?’ and he said ‘Oh yeah.’ So I said, ‘You know where the batter’s box is then.’ He made his way to it and did a pretty good job. He laid off a curve ball after he saw one they called a strike and got to a full count before getting a single. I think that was his only swing. It was good to see.” — Van Horn on batting pitcher Kole Ramage in the eighth inning

“That’s big for us. We have been working hard and give credit to the upper class pitching staff for really taking us in and kind of showing us what it takes to pitch in this league. You know, we have been rolling really good and we just want to keep that momentum going into these next three days.” — Bryce Bonnin on the success from the freshmen pitchers

“I am having a great time, especially mixed with all the veterans we have that have been there before and guide us through everything we are going through this year. Plus, the talent that we have at the freshman level is just unbelievable to be a part of.” — Casey Opitz on the freshmen class that has shined early this year

Up Next

The Razorbacks go right into their three-game series with USC starting on Friday at 3 p.m. Game two will be at 2 p.m., and game three will be at 12:30 p.m. All games will be televised on SEC Network+.