Van Horn’s Razorbacks ride six-game streak into SEC showdown with Georgia

There’s a reason Dave Van Horn has lasted as long as he has in Fayetteville.

When things get hard, when the losses start stacking up and the fan base starts grumbling, his teams have a habit of finding themselves.

Thursday night at Baum-Walker Stadium, in front of 10,320 fans who badly needed something to cheer about, the Arkansas Razorbacks gave Van Horn another chapter worth remembering.

The Hogs beat fifth-ranked Georgia 6-3. It’s their sixth win in a row.

Not long ago that kind of run felt like a long shot.

The man behind the streak

Van Horn didn’t have an easy hand to play heading into this week.

His team had stumbled through a losing skid that left Arkansas sitting in uncomfortable territory in the SEC standings.

He’d watched his ace left-hander Hunter Dietz throw more than 100 pitches in back-to-back weeks and now he needed him again on short rest. He had a top-five opponent coming into Fayetteville for the Hogs’ first home SEC series in 18 days.

Most coaches would’ve played it safe with Dietz.

Van Horn sent him back out there.

Dietz answered with 5 1/3 innings of two-run ball, striking out 6 and throwing 61 of 85 pitches for strikes before giving way to right-hander Gabe Gaeckle in the sixth.

That’s the kind of roster decision that separates coaches who manage rosters from coaches who know their players.

Fast start that set the tone

Van Horn’s teams tend to be aggressive and opportunistic and Thursday’s first inning was a perfect example of what that looks like when it works.

Georgia right-hander Joey Volchko walked Carter Rutenbar and Ryder Helfrick on just 10 pitches to open the game and both runners moved up on a wild pitch.

Camden Kozeal’s sacrifice fly to right scored Rutenbar. Damian Ruiz followed with an RBI double and then advanced on a passed ball.

When Volchko’s second wild pitch of the inning scored Ruiz the Razorbacks led 3-0 before Georgia had recorded a single out after that chaos settled.

Volchko threw 16 of his first 32 pitches out of the strike zone. Arkansas made him pay for every one of them. That’s not accident — that’s a Van Horn-coached lineup doing what it’s been trained to do.

Georgia got one back in the third when Ryan Wynn hit a leadoff homer to left to make it 3-1 and remind everyone the Bulldogs came in at 30-9 for a reason. But the Razorbacks answered in the fourth and it looked like a Van Horn special.

Execution when it counts

Ruiz led off the fourth with a single and Souza drew a walk.

Then the two pulled off a double steal to put runners in scoring position with nobody out — exactly the kind of aggressive, smart baserunning that defines what Van Horn wants from his offense.

Maika Niu’s sacrifice fly to right scored Ruiz and moved Souza to third.

Reese Robinett came through with a 2-out infield single to score Souza and push the lead to 5-1.

Volchko finished the night having allowed 5 runs on 5 hits with 4 walks and 8 strikeouts across his outing.

The runs were a season high. Arkansas had gotten to him early and never let him settle.

Bullpen management done right

When Dietz gave up a 340-foot leadoff homer to Daniel Jackson in the sixth to make it 5-2 and Rylan Lujo followed with a single Van Horn turned to Gaeckle.

It proved to be the right call. Gaeckle retired every batter he faced over the first 1 2/3 innings of his outing and threw just 24 pitches — efficient enough that he should be available again later in the series.

That’s the kind of bullpen management that wins SEC series.

Then came the freshman moment Van Horn has been waiting to see from Carter Rutenbar.

In the bottom of the seventh the freshman launched a 404-foot home run off the top of the video scoreboard in right-center field — his second career homer and his first in SEC play — to push the Hogs ahead 6-2.

Closer Ethan McElvain slams door shut

It wasn’t clean at the end. Closer Ethan McElvain walked a pair and had a wild pitch score a Georgia run in the eighth to cut the lead to 6-3.

He loaded the bases and briefly made Fayetteville nervous but got out of the jam when pinch hitter Cole Koniarsky grounded out to third on a 3-2 pitch.

McElvain came back for the ninth worked around a walk to Kolby Branch and got Tre Phelps to fly out to right with Branch stranded at third base.

It was McElvain’s third save of the season. He walked 2 and struck out 2 in 1 2/3 innings.

What Van Horn has built

Arkansas is now 26-13 overall and 9-7 in SEC play. The Bulldogs came in at 30-9 and 11-5 in conference and this was no soft opponent.

Beating them in a series opener in front of a packed Baum-Walker crowd is exactly what Van Horn needed from his team at exactly the right moment.

Six straight wins doesn’t erase a rough stretch overnight.

But it’s the kind of run that reminds everyone in Fayetteville that when Dave Van Horn’s teams find their footing they’re dangerous. Game 2 is Friday at 6 p.m. and the Hogs will be looking to make it seven.

479 Equipment Ruscin & Zach podcast April 16

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We have thoughts on Taylen Green’s visit with Jon Gruden and why Ruscin needs people that care and are hungry.

Then we all settle in for a special edition of “cook Colton”

Brett Dolan previews Georgia series after quick trip to Ohio this week

After Razorbacks get surprising three straight wins on road at Alabama to get back on right track with better pitching.

Razorbacks announcer Bubba Carpenter on surprising sweep of Alabama

Pitching staff came together well with some double outings last week against the Crimson Tide and how it affects rest of season.

Georgia radio announcer David Johnston on bouncing back on road at Arkansas

After dropping first SEC series of season last week against Florida what he thinks Bulldogs can do against Razorbacks this weekend.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: 4-16-26


Tye is in Nashville, but we’re talking Georgia as the Bulldogs visits Arkansas at Baum Walker, Egg talk, and discussion’s on LIV Golf and Spring Football.

Guests: Tom Murphy!

Calipari hears Razorbacks fans, signs Bowser to anchor the paint

Since John Calipari arrived in Fayetteville, the conversation among Arkansas faithful has followed a familiar track. Fans want the Hogs to play bigger.

They want muscle in the paint. They want a forward who can catch a lob, hold his ground on the block and make opposing bigs earn every inch they get near the basket.

Cooper Bowser isn’t just a response to that conversation. He’s one of the most direct answers Calipari could have given.

On Wednesday night, the Razorbacks officially signed Bowser, a 6-foot-11, 215-pound forward out of Furman, making him the first transfer portal addition for the 2026-27 Arkansas roster.

He committed just one day earlier, right after wrapping up his official visit to Fayetteville, and the program wasted no time getting the paperwork done.

For the fans who’ve been loudest about wanting size and physicality up front, the message from the coaching staff is clear: they heard you.

Built for the Paint, Not the Perimeter

Everything about Bowser’s game is designed around interior dominance.

In three seasons at Furman he attempted exactly one three-pointer. One.

His entire offensive value comes from positioning, footwork and the ability to finish when the ball finds him near the basket and he finishes at a rate that’s nearly unheard of at any level.

This past season, Bowser shot 76.6% from the field across 25 games. Over three college seasons combined, he’s converted 71.3% of his field goal attempts. Those aren’t typos.

That’s what happens when a big man who understands his role stays disciplined, stays in his spots and doesn’t force anything outside of what he does best.

He scored in double figures 20 times this season and was perfect from the field on six separate occasions, going a combined 41-of-41 in those performances.

He posted at least five rebounds in 18 games.

The big frame and 215 pounds of physical presence he brings to Bud Walton Arena is exactly the kind of foundation Arkansas fans have been asking the program to build around.

Fans who have watched the Hogs get pushed around in the paint during physical SEC nights know what’s been missing.

Bowser isn’t a finesse player who drifts to the three-point line.

He’s a post presence who plants his feet, catches the ball in traffic and converts. That’s a different kind of player than Arkansas has featured recently and it’s the kind many Razorbacks supporters have been asking for since Calipari arrived.

Road to Fayetteville Ran Through Southern Conference

Bowser didn’t arrive at this level of interior dominance overnight.

He spent three seasons at Furman steadily building the kind of résumé that makes programs like Arkansas pay attention.

As a freshman in 2023-24, he played in 32 games and led the team with 27 blocked shots while averaging 3.9 points and 1.6 rebounds in just 12.4 minutes per night.

His sophomore year was a significant step forward. He started 34 of 35 games, averaged 8.3 points and 4.7 rebounds and led the entire Southern Conference with 57 blocked shots.

The Paladins went 25-10 and earned an at-large NIT bid. Bowser was named to the SoCon All-Defensive Team.

His junior season was when the full picture came into focus. Furman won the Southern Conference Tournament, and Bowser was the engine behind it.

In the championship game against top-seeded East Tennessee State, he delivered 21 points and 11 rebounds on 9-of-12 shooting to help the Paladins win 76-61 and punch their ticket to March Madness.

He was named to the SoCon All-Tournament first team for his efforts.

Then came the NCAA Tournament, where Furman drew No. 2 seed UConn in the first round. The Huskies won 82-71, but Bowser wasn’t overwhelmed by the moment or the matchup.

He posted nine points, five rebounds, four assists and two blocks in 31 minutes against one of the country’s best frontcourts.

For the fans who want to know whether their new big man can hold up against elite competition — he’s already been tested and he didn’t flinch.

Calipari’s First Move Sets a Tone for the Offseason

There’s always meaning in the first move a coach makes in the portal. It usually signals what he’s prioritizing, what he thinks the roster needs and what kind of identity he wants to build going forward.

Calipari’s first addition for 2026-27 is a physical, 6-11 interior forward who’s never tried to be something he isn’t.

That choice isn’t lost on the Razorback fan base.

Arkansas also received a commitment from Georgia guard Jeremiah Wilkinson on Tuesday night, giving the Hogs two portal additions in a single day.

But it’s Bowser who carries the most symbolic weight with a fan base that’s been asking for toughness and size up front.

He comes from a household that knows college athletics. His brother Cole was a freshman at Furman last season and his sister Madison played volleyball at Texas A&M.

He entered the portal on April 2 after announcing his departure from Furman, and his recruitment moved quickly once the Razorbacks got involved.

Across his three seasons with the Paladins, Bowser totaled 761 points at an 8.3 average, grabbed 363 rebounds and swatted 115 shots.

He’s not a project. He’s a proven producer who’s also barely scratched the surface of what a player his size can do with better talent around him.

Arkansas fans wanted a big who could change the interior game.

Calipari’s first portal signing this offseason is exactly that.