Brooks takes heptathlon title to kick off Texas Relays

AUSTIN, Texas — Taliyah Brooks took the heptathlon title at the Texas Relays on Thursday, recording 5,946 points to begin Arkansas’ trip in Austin, marking her second heptathlon title at the event.

She has finished in the top two in the event at the Texas Relays each of the last three seasons.

“I was decently happy with the results,” said Brooks. “We used this meet as more of a training session, we were trying to just get a qualifying mark for nationals.

“I think overall I had a good two days, we will use the rest of the season for training, sharpening up on my individual events, and preparing for the next heptathlon during championship season”

Brooks, who won the event in 2016 and was runner-up in 2017, began her run to the title Wednesday with with a first place finish in the 100 meter hurdles.

She followed that up with a fourth place finish in the high jump and a ninth place finish in the shot put.

She trailed just once during the event following the shot put, by 17 points, but ended the day with a strong showing and another first place finish in the 200 meters with a time of 23.99 to pull her back ahead.

She was just one of two athletes to break the 20′ mark in the heptathlon long jump, posting a mark of 6.30 (20-8), placing first by more than four inches.

Her day ended with a sixth place finish in the javelin throw and an eighth place finish in the 800 meters.

Brooks’ title marks the 24th at the Texas Relays for Arkansas and fourth in the heptathlon.

Clyde Littlefield Texas Relays Heptathlon
1. Taliyah Brooks – 5,946 pts.
(1) 100-Meter Hurdles – 13.28, 1,083 pts.
(4) High Jump – 1.72m, 879 pts.
(9) Shot Put – 11.72m, 643 pts.
(1) 200 Meters- 23.99, 982 pts.
(1) Long Jump – 6.30m, 943 pts.
(6) Javelin- 36.91m, 608 pts.
(8) 800 Meters – 2:21.17, 808 pts.

Brooks’ Career Heptathlon Results 
2018 Texas Relays – 5,946 pts (1st)
2017 NCAA Outdoor Championships – 5,795 pts (3rd)
2017 SEC Outdoor Championships – 6,099 pts (1st) – School Record
2017 Texas Relays – 6,075 pts (2nd)
2016 SEC Outdoor Championships – 5,855 (4th)
2016 Texas Relays – 5,991 pts (1st)
2015 NCAA Outdoor Championships – 5,717 pts (16th)
2015 SEC Outdoor Championships – 5,681 pts (7th)
2015 Texas Relays – 5,482 pts (4th)

The Razorbacks field and relay teams will return to action in Austin tomorrow, while the distance crew will begin action in Palo Alto, Calif. at the Stanford Invitational.

Cook named top coach, Shaffer top freshman in SEC this year

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Arkansas coach Mark Cook was named the league’s Coach of the Year, while freshman standout Sarah Shaffer was tabbed as Freshman of the Year by the SEC.

The awards were voted on by the league’s head coaches following last weekend’s SEC Championship.

Mark Cook | Coach of the Year

In his 16th season as the head coach at Arkansas, Cook led the Razorbacks to a record season that was capped by a first place finish in the first session at the SEC Championship and a fifth place finish overall, its highest since 2011.

It was also just the third time in program history that the Razorbacks have scored over 196 or higher at the event.

At the SEC Championship last week, Cook’s Razorbacks led the first session with 10 All-SEC performances from six athletes, along with three All Freshman Team performances.

Cook led Arkansas to the largest turnaround in the Southeastern Conference this season. From this point last season, Arkansas has improved its RQS (Regional Qualifying Score) by 1.245 points, and its season average by 2.045 points.

No other school in the conference has improved its RQS by more than 0.33 from this point last season.

The team was ranked No. 27 heading into regionals last season, compared to No. 10 this year.

Under Cook’s leadership, the Razorbacks set multiple records this season while dependent on six underclassmen competing 15 routines

This season, Arkansas posted scores of 197 or higher in three meets for the first time in program history, including breaking its program record score against Arizona with a 197.275, and then again in Arkansas’ Tri meet against Denver and Iowa State with a 197.300.

The team has set a record high RQS three times this season, including its final score of 196.820.

Coming in at No. 10 in this week’s ranking, the Razorbacks hold its highest ranking heading into regional competition since 2012. Cook was previously named SEC Co-Coach of the year in 2008 and 2016, making 2018 the first time he’s the sole owner of the award.

Sarah Shaffer | Freshman of the Year

Shaffer ranks as the highest ranked freshman in the conference on floor, coming in at 26th-nationally and seventh overall in the SEC.

She has competed in the all-around in 9-of-12 meets this season, and is the only nationally-ranked freshman from the conference in the all-around, coming in at 40th nationally.

She ranks in the top-100 on two more events, coming in at 53rd nationally on vault and 67th on bars.

The Tyler, Texas native has recorded scores of 9.900 or higher 10 times this season, and leads the league’s freshmen with six scores of 9.900 or higher on the floor.

Her score of 9.950 on floor in Arkansas’ Tri meet against Denver and Iowa State marks the highest score on the floor among the league’s freshmen.

In that meet, she posted a season high 39.500 in the all-around, tied for the highest all-around score among freshmen in the conference.

In five meets she has recorded an all-around score of 39.300 or higher which is tops among the conference’s freshmen. In four meets she has recorded multiple 9.900’s and was named the Freshman of the Week three times this season to lead the league.

Shaffer is the third Razorback in program history to be named Freshman of the Year, joining Amanda Wellick, who won the award in 2014, and Paige Zaziski who took the honor in 2015.

It’s a different approach with Morris on nearly everything

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Wednesday showed just how different things are around Arkansas football these days.

The Razorbacks practiced outdoors in a misting rain and over 100 people stood around watching it.

“I was a little bit disappointed,” Chad Morris said later. “I was really disappointed. I was hoping it was raining harder.”

With the fancy indoor workout facilities most teams have these days, they choose to work out indoors, out of elements like water coming out of the sky and other things.

Not Morris, who looks at some things with an old-school view. Apparently staying indoors wasn’t considered much … if at all.

“There was no way in the world we were going to stay indoors,” he said. “I was really hoping for an absolute torrential downpour to see how our guys responded.”

In Morris’ view, they may have to play in it so they may as well have some experience in it. You get the idea he doesn’t make excuses and the weather dang sure ain’t going to be one he’ll even consider.

But the main priority in Fayetteville these days is recruiting … always recruiting.

“As of the last count, and I believe it was Monday, we were sitting at about 850 high school coaches that have come on campus this spring, coming in and out,” he said.

No one knows (or if they do they aren’t saying) but it may be a safe bet there haven’t been 850 high school coaches on campus to visit the football offices over the last 10 years combined.

That is a noticeable difference. At almost every practice it’s not uncommon to see school buses from Tyler, Texas, Tennessee or other states.

And coaches are coming just about every day of the week.

“We welcome them every day,” Morris said. “We’ve got a portion of our day set aside that our offensive and defensive staff goes and meets with these high school coaches. We didn’t have a clinic, we we just opened our doors and said, ‘come on, we’re going to talk ball.’

“We’ve got some that come back every day, some that come back once a week. That’s been very beneficial. It’s a little bit more of a personal touch.”

Morris is counting on it paying dividends with good players choosing to be Razorbacks.

“We’ve had some top-tier recruits … we had some here today,” he said. “We’ve had a LOT of people on campus. When you get ’em here — I’ve said it before — we’ve got a beautiful campus, we’ve got something great to sell.”

The sales pitch is to come to the Hogs and be the one that puts them on the map in what Morris is planning to be a return to the world of relevancy in the SEC.

“We tell recruits you can come here and be THE guy, be the reason,” he said. “Some guys like that and some guys don’t. They don’t want to be THE guy. They want to go where someone else has been THE guy and already done it and that’s okay.

“We’re going to get great players here and then when you get ’em here, you’ve got to develop ’em.”

Like I said, things are very, very different.

Oh, and Morris is expecting a big turnout for the Red-White game in Little Rock on April 7.

“Let’s pack that place out,” Morris said. “We’re going to have some phenomenal recruits there that are just going to be in attendance, just like a normal fan.

“Unfortunately we can’t have them on the field and we can’t put them in a certain section. They’re going to be all over the stadium and we have to bring that passion that I’ve seen since the day I walked in here to the spring game on April 7 because that’s going to be a big day for us.”

Don’t expect to see anything approaching the complete package for the Hogs to be on display at War Memorial Stadium.

“Offensively, we’re at about 25 percent install to be honest with you and that’s okay,” he said. “I’m fine with that. It’s not how much we can get in, but how much we can do. I want to get really good at something and these guys are and right now it’s getting an understanding how to play fast and just get the base system down.

“All that other stuff will come. We’ve still got a lot of time ahead of us. We’ve got summer workouts and these will be player-led workouts.”

Playing fast has been the biggest thing Morris and his staff has been pushing during the spring. For Razorback fans, it will appear to be at warp speed.

“We were snapping today with about 27 seconds on the play clock,” he said. “We want to be snapping it with 30 or even 32 seconds on the clock at times.”

He didn’t appear too concerned, though.

“From where we started to where we are right now, I would say we’re right on schedule,” he said. “Again, I knew we had a long way to go. You can talk to me after the 15th practice and I’ll tell you the same thing … we’re not there and we’ve got a long way to go, but we’ve come a long way, too.

“These guys are learning us, learning the staff, they’re learning our expectations and learning what our standard is. It’s about the little things.

“If you can’t take care of the little things how can we expect you to step on the field on third-and-2 and make a stop. We’re getting there. I feel like we’re on track.”

Like we said earlier, things are changing.

Morris on loving rainy practice day, spring quarterback battle

Arkansas coach Chad Morris talked about wishing it would have rained harder at spring practice Wednesday as he took the team outside to scrimmage.

Hogs, Rebels to battle for SEC West lead starting Thursday

OXFORD, Miss. — Arkansas heads into the final stretch of its eight-game road trip this week as it begins a three-game series with fourth-ranked Ole Miss on Thursday at Swayze Field.

First pitch on Thursday and Friday are set for 6:30 p.m. each day, while Saturday’s series finale will be at 1:30 p.m. All games can be viewed on SEC Network+.

Ole Miss will be Arkansas’ third-straight top-five opponent to begin SEC play (No. 4 Kentucky, No. 2 Florida) and it will also be a battle for early-season advantage in the Western Division.

Both the Rebels and Razorbacks have a 4-2 record after the first two weeks of the conference season and boast a couple of the best offenses in the SEC and the nation.

Arkansas and Ole Miss are two of three teams with a combined team batting average of .300 or higher. The Razorbacks currently sit second in the league at .311, while the Rebels are hitting an even .300, which is good for third.

The Razorbacks will look to curb that strong Ole Miss offense when it sends Blaine Knight to the mound for Thursday’s game one. Knight holds a 1.83 ERA after six starts, his best six-game start of his collegiate career.

Last week against No. 2 Florida, Knight struck out 10 over 6.2 innings to earn his fourth win of the year. His 10-strikeout performance was his first of the year and made him only the second pitcher to record 10 or more strikeouts against the defending national champions this season.

Arkansas is coming off an 8-7 victory over Memphis at AutoZone Park on Tuesday, snapping a two-game losing streak it had going in.

The Hogs scored all eight of its runs and recorded eight of its nine hits with two outs, winning its third one-run game this year.

Follow Live

All games will be streamed via SEC Network+, the online-only arm of the SEC Network on WatchESPN.com and the Watch ESPN app.

Richard Cross (PxP) and Brady Bramlett (Analyst) will have the call for all three games.

Phil Elson will call all three games on the radio for the Razorback Sports Network from IMG. That radio broadcasts are also available on the Razorback Gameday app.

Important Links (All times Central)

Thu, March 29 – Arkansas vs. Ole Miss – 6:30 p.m. – LIVE STATS | WATCH
Fri, March 30 – Arkansas vs. Ole Miss – 6:30 p.m. – LIVE STATS | WATCH
Sat, March 31 – Arkansas vs. Ole Miss – 1:30 p.m. – LIVE STATS | WATCH

Probable Starters

THU: ARK RHP Blaine Knight (1.83 ERA, 4-0, 35 K, 9 BB) vs. OM LHP Ryan Rolison (2.88 ERA, 3-2, 46 K, 15 BB)

FRI: ARK LHP Evan Lee (5.19 ERA, 1-1, 7 K, 3 BB) vs. OM RHP Brady Feigl (2.08 ERA, 5-1, 38 K, 7 BB)

SAT: ARK LHP Kacey Murphy (2.28 ERA, 3-1, 22 K, 6 BB) vs. OM RHP James McArthur (1.93 ERA, 3-0, 23 K, 13 BB)

Razorback Prime 9

• Arkansas finishes off its eight-game roadtrip with a three-game series at No. 4 Ole Miss, starting on Thursday. The Hogs will have been on the road for 13-straight days after Saturday’s game three.

• Arkansas is coming off an 8-7 victory over Memphis on Tuesday at AutoZone Park. The Hogs scored all eight of their runs and tallied eight of nine hits with two outs in the game.

• Arkansas hit five home runs over the weekend at No. 2 Florida and one more at Memphis on Tuesday, upping its season total to 47, which still leads the SEC and is second most in the nation.

• Freshman Heston Kjerstad hit two home runs in the loss to Charlotte last week. He’s the fifth different Razorback to record a multi-home run game this season (C. Shaddy, G. Koch, C. Martin, J. McFarland, H. Kjerstad).

• Four of Arkansas’ five home runs against Florida came from the left side of the plate last week. 20 of the season’s 47 homers have been from left-handers, while 27 have come from right-handers.

• Last week, Heston Kjerstad went 9-for-16 (.563) at the plate leading all Razorbacks with six extra- base hits, including three home runs. He slugged a staggering 1.313 and struck out just two times. He upped his hit streak to nine games on Tuesday at Memphis, the longest-active streak on the team.

• Arkansas owns the advantage in the all-time series with Ole Miss, 46-42, but hasn’t won a series in Oxford since 2010.

• The Razorbacks won their third one-run game of 2018 on Tuesday after rallying to beat Memphis on Tuesday. Arkansas is 3-3 in games decided by one run this year including wins over Arizona and USC.

• The Razorbacks have hit at least one home run in 11-straight games dating back to the March 11th doubleheader against Kent State. Arkansas has only gone homerless in three games this year.

Knight Keeps Rolling

Junior Blaine Knight has clearly shown why he is the ace of the Arkansas pitching staff this year.

Knight currently leads all Razorback hurlers with a 1.83 ERA over six starts, good for a top-10 total in the SEC. He had a sub-1.00 ERA through his first four starts and has struck out four or more batters in all six of his appearances.

Last week against Florida, Knight outdueled Brady Singer, going 6.2 innings and holding the Gator offense to just three runs with 10 strikeouts.

It was Knight’s first 10-strikeout performance of the season and he’s the second pitcher to notch 10 K’s on the defending national champions this season.

The Silent Assassin With The Silent J

Freshman Heston Kjerstad has shown no growing pains in his first season at the collegiate level.

Kjerstad currently has the fourth-highest batting average in the SEC (.395) and is coming off a strong week where he turned in four-consecutive multi-hit games, including a multi-home run game against Charlotte.

Over his last 10 games, the Amarillo, Texas native has hit .444 (16-for-36) with four home runs and 13 RBIs.

He’s only gone hitless once during that span and has at least one hit in 17 of his last 19 games.

SEC Hitting Leaders

Rank Player (Team) Average
1. Jonathan India (UF) .430
2. Kameron Misner (MIZ) .413
3. Michael Helman (TAMU) .400
4. Heston Kjerstad (ARK) .395
5. Tristan Pompey (UK) .394


Call In The Baum Squad

In 2017, Arkansas crushed an SEC-best 83 home runs. It was the most home runs by a Razorback team since 2010.

The Hogs have picked up where they left off with 47 home runs after 25 games, 13 more than they had after 25 games last year.

Casey Martin leads the team with seven homers on the year, but four other Razorbacks have five or more on the year (Kjerstad, Shaddy, Cole, Koch).

78 of Arkansas’ 209 runs in 2018 have come from the home run ball, making 37 percent of the team’s total run production.

Most Home Runs Hit (NCAA)

Rank Team Home Runs
1. Tennessee Tech 51
2. Arkansas 47
3. Kentucky 45
4. NC State 42
5. Florida 41

Razorbacks women’s tennis headed for pair of road matches

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas will hit the road for a pair of matches starting at 4 p.m. Thursday at No. 12 Florida before a Saturday showdown at No. 6 South Carolina at 11 a.m.

Live Coverage Links
Thursday at Florida (12-5, 7-1 SEC): Live Video | Live Scoring
Saturday at South Carolina (16-3, 8-0 SEC): Live Video | Live Scoring

Five Things To Know
1. Razorbacks Giulia Pairone and Ana Oparenovic are ranked No. 55 and No. 76, respectively in the national singles rankings.

2. Ranked No. 40 nationally in doubles, Oparenovic and Tatum Rice lead the SEC with an 11-3 record at the top spot.

3. Pairone owns a team-best 9-3 mark in singles play this spring.

4. The Hogs (5-11, 1-6 SEC) have won the doubles point in 12 of 16 matches this spring.

5. Pairone and Mia Jurasic have also been dominant in doubles at 10-3 this spring, the most wins among all SEC doubles duos at the No. 2 position. The pair is 8-2 across their last 10 matches.

Razorbacks looking to continue momentum on road trip

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas heads to both the Stanford Invitational in Palo Alto, California and Texas Relays in Austin, Texas, this weekend looking to continue the momentum it gained in last weekend’s outdoor opener.

The Razorbacks competed at last week’s Arkansas Spring Invitational where it picked up four event titles and six runner-up finishes to open the outdoor season.

“Coach Case is going to take the sprint crew to the Texas Relays and they’re going to do everything,” said assistant coach Travis Geopfert. “Kenzo did a great job this past weekend opening up in the 100 meter dash, but the relays are the main this down in Texas.

“We’ll have a couple open events. The main thing is that those guys are excited about competing and we’re trying to set them up and prepare and perform well at the home staff.”

Senior Kenzo Cotton was named the Southeastern Conference’s Co-Runner of the Week after leading the Razorbacks to wins in the 4×100 meter relay and the 4×400 meter relays to go along with a title of his own in the 100-meter dash at the Arkansas Spring Invitational.

He heads into the Texas Relays with a 10.12 in the 100 meter dash, the fastest time early in the NCAA outdoor season.

The 4×100 meter relay heads to Texas Relays in Austin, Texas with the fifth fastest time in the NCAA outdoor season with a time of 39.31 at the Arkansas Spring Invitational.

Gabe Moore will compete in the 110m Hurdles, 400m and discus throw at the Stanford Invitational as he gets ready to make his decathlon debut at the John McDonnell Invitational in two weeks.

“We are excited to take all the field events out there so,” said Geopfert. “But, we are going to shake the rust off and hopefully be ready to come back here for John McDonnell in two weeks and get some stuff done.

“And, then of course at Texas Relays Coach Case is going to take the sprinters down there and we are going to try and do everything. Just let those guys have some fun.”

Texas Relays Entries

400m Hurdles — Larry Donald, Travius Chambers, Kemar Mowatt
110m Hurdles — Larry Donald, Chattoo
Sprint Medley Relay — Kenzo Cotton, Obi Igbokwe, Jamarco Stephen, Cameron Griffith
Distance Medley Relay — Kyle Hosting, Hunter Woodall, Kieran Taylor, Ethan Moehn
4-X-800 Meter Relay — Kyle Hosting, Ethan Moehn, Kieran Taylor, Chase Pareti
4-X-200 Meter Relay — Kenzo Cotton, Hari, Roy Ejiakuekwu, Obi Igbokwe
4-X-100 Meter Relay — Hari, Kemar Mowatt, Roy Ejiakuekwu, Kenzo Cotton
4-X-400 Meter Relay Invitational — Obi Igbokwe, Kemar Mowatt, Jamarco Stephen, John Winn

* Subject to Change

Stanford Invitational Entries

110m Hurdles — Gabe Moore
100m Hurdles — Harrison Schrage
Javelin — Andrew Henn, Alex Springer
400m — Gabe Moore
3000m Steeplechase – Kyle Levermore, Carter Persyn
Discus Throw — Gabe Moore, Erich Sullins
1000m — Gilbert Boit, Andrew Ronoh, Austen Dalquist, Matt Young, Ryan Murphy
Hammer Throw — Erich Sullins
Shot Put — Sam Kempka
Triple Jump — Rubin Owens, Laquan Nairn
200m — Harrison Schrage