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Down On The Farm: Former Hogs finish seasons

FAYETTEVILLE — Many former Razorbacks littered rosters throughout the minor league systems in 2017 and many had major impacts on their teams and made moves up the pro baseball ladder.

Here’s a look at some of the best minor league compiled by former Razorbacks who look to be some of the next Major League #ProHogs in 2018.

Complete #ProHogs List (Major and Minor Leagues)

Knockin’ on the door | Jalen Beeks – LHP Pawtucket Red Sox (Triple-A – BOS)
The 2014 Boston Red Sox draft pick had a breakout year splitting time between Double-A Portland and Triple-A Pawtucket. Beeks is the Red Sox 17th-overall prospect and looks to be on the short list to make the big club in 2018.

Beeks combined for a 3.29 ERA over 145.0 innings this year, his second-most innings in a year in his four-year professional career. Before being promoted, he went 5-1 with a 2.19 ERA and a 1.16 WHIP in nine starts with Double-A Portland. He baffled opposing batters, who managed a .199 batting average against him.

In 17 starts with Pawtucket, Beeks won six times and threw 95.2 innings with 97 strikeouts, the second-most strikeouts on the Pawtucket squad.

Expect Beeks to get a good look by the big club during spring training and possibly get a chance to add an arm to the Red Sox bullpen in 2018.

Picking up where they left off | Chad Spanberger – 1B Grand Junction Rockies (Rookie – COL) and Trevor Stephan – RHP Staten Island Yankees (Rookie – NYY)

The Razorbacks enjoyed an eventful 2017 spring that included a trip to the SEC Tournament final and hosting an NCAA Regional, led by first baseman Chad Spanberger and right-handed picture Trevor Stephan.

Both Spanberger and Stephan were part of the Razorbacks MLB Draft class last summer and continued their high-level play at the minor league level, becoming some of the steals of the draft.

Spanberger was part of a trio for Grand Junction that combined for 58 home runs, 19 of those coming from the former Hog, which tied for second in the league. Coming off a year with the Razorbacks where he played a career-high 60 games and hit 20 home runs with 67 RBIs, Spanberger played 60 more games at the Rookie ball level for Grand Junction, hitting .294 with 51 RBIs and a .617 slugging percentage.

On the East Coast, Stephan was coming off one of the best seasons for a Razorback pitcher, leading the team with a 2.97 ERA in 16 appearances. He was selected in the third round of the MLB Draft by the New York Yankees and quickly become of the Yankees best selections.

Stephan was used primarily as a starter in his first year at Staten Island, throwing 34.1 innings with 44 strikeouts and a 1.31 ERA. In his last five appearances this year, Stephan gave up just three hits and no earned runs and struck out six batters on two separate occasions during the final month.

Bullpen Hogs

Arkansas’ bullpen over the last few years has always been one of its strongest assets over the years and it seems those same pitchers are starting to make impacts.

Zach Jackson – RHP Dunedin Blue Jays (Single-A Advanced – TOR)

Right-hander Zach Jackson reached Advanced Single-A Dunedin with the Toronto Blue Jays organization on June 3 and didn’t disappoint. Jackson threw 31 innings for the Blue Jays and compiled a 2.03 ERA with four saves and 43 strikeouts. His strikeout total was the second highest among Dunedin relievers and his ERA was the third lowest among pitchers with 30 or more innings.

James Teague – RHP Aberdeen Ironbirds (Single-A Short – BAL)

Right-hander James Teague didn’t have a sophomore slump in 2017 as he was one of the top pitchers for the Aberdeen Ironbirds at the Single-A Short level for the Baltimore Orioles. Teague compiled a 1.02 ERA over 17.2 innings with 29 strikeouts.

Over his last 10 appearances, he gave up three hits and allowed one earned run, while striking out two or more batters four times. Teague did start the year with Single-A Delmarva before being sent down, but should start 2018 with a high chance of reaching Double-A.

What is that light at the end of tunnel that is coming?

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In a fine and time-honored tradition, Arkansas football fans have always maintained a strict pecking order for blame when the fortunes don’t match expectations.

Whether Bret Bielema and Jeff Long are remotely aware of this, they are figuring it out. The assumption is they weren’t aware as neither appears to have much of a working knowledge of this fan base.

The Hogs Order of Blame:

1. The Coach … He’s always the first one that gets blamed. It has a long and rich history that dates back to Frank Broyles, who was under a lot of heat after subpar 1972-74 seasons.

He won the Cotton Bowl in 1975 after a threeway tie for the Southwest Conference championship (with Texas and Texas A&M) and when they appeared headed to another title in 1976, athletics director Broyles decided it was time to let the coach Broyles go.

By the time that decision became public when former Arkansas Gazette sports editor Orville Henry broke the story (and ruining what was shaping up to be a good night’s sleep for some newspaper people that had to be at work at 6 a.m.), that public was ready to revolt.

And that was Broyles, who put Arkansas football on the map. Fans were upset after a four-year winning percentage of 62 percent, helped by a 10-2 season following three years of winning at a 54 percent clip.

2. The Quarterback … Don’t bog the argument down with facts, please. It never has really mattered.

Which was why Bill Montgomery was rightfully a little offended in the 1970 opener against Stanford when Broyles put sophomore Joe Ferguson in the game to jump-start an offense that was backfiring.

When Ferguson got close to the goal-line, Broyles put Montgomery back in the game. The fans in Little Rock booed the decision.

Never mind that all Bill had done to that point had a 19-3 record over two seasons. The only losses were two to Texas’ best teams of all time and Ole Miss when they had Archie Manning’s best season ever.

It’s happened to just about every Hog quarterback at one time or another. Remember, we’re not talking fair here, just the facts.

3. The Athletic Director … People tend to forget Broyles was only athletic director for only three years while also the head football coach.

John Barnhill dealt with it for years. When the football team struggled (and it did with some hiring blunders … read about the Otis Douglas tenure … or Jack Mitchell), it came down on the athletic director.

When Broyles took over as athletic director, not just football coaches, but all sports knew the leash was short. Winning was the reason you played the games.

As Ken Hatfield said one time before he ever coached a game, he jokingly asked Broyles to tone down the expectations.

“Coach, if I only win four or five games, you won’t feel so good about me,” Hatfield said.

“And I’ll miss you,” was Broyles’ reply.

Long either doesn’t have the guts or care enough to adopt that position, apparently.

With Arkansas football sitting at 1-2 a quarter of the way through the current season with a coach that has a 26-28 overall record and now 10-23 in the SEC, you have to wonder if there is any pressure applied from above.

While both Long and Bielema tend to talk out of both sides of their mouth at times, the record is what it is.

The struggling part is, once again, following yet another loss to Texas A&M, we heard Bielema talk about how close yet another team is.

He didn’t say exactly say they were close, but he, well, got close.

“There’s nothing out there that is not correctable,” he said at one point.

He wrapped up the question-and-answer session with the media following the A&M loss with a “same song, different verse,” type of answer.

“So our breaks will come,” he said. “They’re going to come. I know it’s painful to live through and I know it’s hard as fans and loved ones and the kids involved, but it’s coming.”

Bielema at least get some new material. We’ve heard it before.

For going on five years now.

Some fans have come to the conclusion if it was coming it would already be here or maybe it has.

And that light at the end of the tunnel was an oncoming train.

Things I think I know — Week Four

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Another week in our state having to live with a Razorback loss. I am convinced the weather is worse here during weeks like this. In any event, here are some thoughts on college football after an exciting week four.

  • Bret Bielema is 10-23 in SEC play and has never won the opener in conference play. As the Tuna once said, “you are what your record says you are.”
  • I believe there is zero heat from Long on Bielema so we are all stuck in this football purgatory until who knows when. The Razorback football boat is going the wrong way, but nobody in charge seems to see it that way … yet.
  • Georgia is a legit threat to knock off Alabama to win the SEC. Will the Notre Dame non conference win hold up? This year, unless someone is undefeated, I do not think it’s an automatic an SEC team gets in the playoff.
  • Never talk crap about Alabama before the game.
  • Kentucky is just destined to never beat Florida in football.
  • My favorite quarterback in college football is Trace McSorley from Penn State. Franklin is a tremendous coach too.
  • I love the fire from Barry Odom after a loss. Can he send some of that “give a damn” attitude down to Fayetteville?

  • The Battle Line Rivalry game is shaping up to be one of the least interesting football games of our lives and that is a shame.
  • Florida State does not have a quarterback.
  • Butch Jones is in trouble.
  • Kevin Sumlin is still in trouble.
  • I’m still not sure TCU is a contender for the playoff.
  • South Carolina stuck with a kicker that had not made a field goal all year and he won the game for them against Louisiana Tech. Muschamp was apparently not “done with this.”
  • Austin Allen’s body language is terrible, but I think he cares more than anyone.
  • PHOTO BY RAZORBACK SPORTS COMMUNICATIONS

    I do not think the New Mexico State game is a “gimme” for the Razorbacks.

  • I have no clue how the offensive line at Arkansas is this bad. Someone should wave a skunk in front of Kurt Anderson.
  • There has never been a larger divide between regular fans and the powers that be in Fayetteville.

Sumlin recaps Aggies’ overtime win over Hogs

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Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin recapped the Aggies’ 50-43 win over Arkansas after the game.

Aggies Kirk, Watts, Ford talk about win over Hogs

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Texas A&M players Christian Kirk, Armani Watts, Landis Durham, Keith Ford talk about the overtime win over Arkansas.

Another loss to Aggies may have Bielema’s seat warm

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ARLINGTON, Texas — After beating Arkansas in overtime for the third time in four years and sixth year in a row, Texas Aggies coach Kevin Sumlin isn’t off the hot seat.

With five straight losses in Jerry Jones’ AT&T Stadium, Bret Bielema may have put himself on it squarely.

And it’s a place he’ll stay for a couple of weeks after the Razorbacks’ 50-43 loss in yet another overtime game to A&M.

“It’s just gut-wrenching,” he said later.

This one maybe more than any other and while he once again talked about how close this team is to winning, there were enough blunders to make you wonder.

Maybe the biggest came in a wild final five minutes that left everyone drained and made up for a game that was a 28-27 yawner.

After the Aggies had taken a 33-28 lead after the Hogs’ defense allowed A&M running back Keith Ford (14 carries for 102 yards, two touchdowns) to blow through a gaping hole and ramble 44 yards for his second score.

He would have added a 2-point conversion but bumbled a lateral out of bounds, leaving it at 33-28 in the Aggies’ favor with 8:46 to play.

Arkansas answered, though.

Austin Allen hit key passes, first to Cheyenne O’Grady for 15 yards on a third-and-7, then 44 yards down the left sideline to Jonathan Nance for a score with 5:21 to play, then hit tight end Jeremy Patton for the 2-point conversion and it was 36-33, Hogs.

Then Christian Kirk, who had a monster game for the Aggies, got loose … again (he had scored earlier on an 81-yard scoring pass).

Kirk gathered in Connor Limpert’s kickoff and went 100 yards to immediately put the Aggies back on top, 40-36.

“We haven’t had a kick return for a touchdown in, I think it’s about seven years,” Kirk said later. “I don’t know what it is, the exact number. But, you know, Coach (Jeff) Banks is always emphasizing, we need to get one, we’re going to hit one. And we were close last weekend.

“He’s able to see, you know, what they’re running throughout the game. So he saw what their scheme was, he drew up a new return in the game and the guys up front just went out there and executed. All I had to do was just hit the hole and go.”

The Aggies side went wild. The Hogs side went numb.

But not for long.

Allen got the ball back and needed just four plays to march 75 yards, completing passes to tight end Austin Cantrell for 31 yard,s, then David Williams for 20 and a 45-yarder to Nance on the same route he scored on earlier.

Williams got the final 4 yards and it was 43-40, but you got the feeling the Hogs left too much time on the clock.

They tried to pop the kick to the middle, not wanting to give Kirk another chance, and the 12th Man, Cullen Gillaspia snatched it out of the air, bounced off a tackler and rumbled for 14 yards to the Arkansas 49 with 3:39 to go.

“We were trying to get it on the SEC logo right there in the middle, trying to get in a nice open area,” Bielema said. “The kid did a nice job of catching it. And a couple of guys already thought the play was down and he ran for about 10, 15 yards.”

You had the feeling if the Aggies scored too quickly, the Hogs would still have time, but they didn’t.

A&M quarterback Kellen Mond, who went the distance, hitting 14-of-27 for 216 yards and two touchdowns converted a fourth-and-3 on a 7-yard pass to Damion Ratley for 7 and the Aggies were getting close.

They started playig the clock then, getting it to the Arkansas 9 with eight second left and Daniel LaCamera hit a 27-yard field goal and it was overtime again.

Sumlin knew exactly what we was thinking going into overtime.

“I knew that, if we had our druthers, we wanted to play on that that end of the field,” he said, pointing to the west side where the Aggie band and fans were.”Your probably know why.”

A&M got the ball first, headed towards their fans, and got a pass interference call against Hogs corner Kamren Curl that will be argued for awhile and scored on a pass from Mond to a diving Kirk in the end zone. That gave the Aggies a 50-43 lead.

Arkansas tried, getting to the Texas A&M 12, but on third-and-8, Austin Allen’s pass was intercepted by Aggies defender Armani Watts in the end zone, ending the game.

For Sumlin, he knows he’s not off the hot seat. The Aggies want at least nine wins and right now he’s six short with a bunch of SEC games left to play.

“It’s more about week to week and not what’s out there in front and everybody is going to try to paint this picture or paint that picture,” he said.

Bielema didn’t address his situation, but he did get choked up towards the end.

“It’s hard because we put a lot into it and my kids put a lot into it,” he said. “You get a lot of negativity, and I wish I could do something for them.

“I know this. We’re going to be all right.”

Considering the Hogs are now 1-2 on the season with nine more games staring at them, including seven SEC opponents, fans aren’t so sure.

And Bielema’s seat will warm up considerably.

Not to mention others.

Nance on big catches late in A&M loss

Hogs wide receiver Jonathan Nance on his touchdown catch, then another big catch right after it on nearly same play.

Austin Allen after ‘disappointing loss’

Hogs quarterback Austin Allen with the media after the 50-43 overtime loss to Texas A&M.

Hogs running back David Williams after A&M loss

Arkansas running back David Williams talks about the overtime loss to Texas A&M.