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Arkansas blasts three homers in doubleheader split at Notre Dame

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Arkansas belted three home runs during Saturday’s doubleheader at Notre Dame but couldn’t complete the sweep, winning game one in a run-rule decision before a seventh-inning rally came up short in game two.

Nicole Schroeder, Loren Krzysko and Tori Cooper were responsible for the Razorbacks’ home runs against the Fighting Irish. Arkansas is now 30-19 entering Sunday’s rubber game.

Game 1: Arkansas 13, Notre Dame 2 (5 inn.) | Box Score

Taking a patient approach at the plate in the opening frame, the Razorbacks drew five walks in the first on their way to three runs.

Junior shortstop A.J. Belans had the only hit of the inning, an RBI single up the middle to score Russell for the game’s first run.

Shelby Hiers and Ashley Diaz drove in runs two and three with bases-loaded walks. It was the 20th time Arkansas scored in the first inning this season.

After a quick first inning by starter Autumn Storms, the offense got right back to work with a five-run outburst in the second.

The inning was highlighted by Schroeder’s three-run shot, good for her 14th home run of the season. She moves to within one home run shy of the program’s single-season record of 15 currently shared by Jessica Bachkora and Devon Wallace.

The big fly also pushed Arkansas’ season total to 50, the sixth time the program has reached that figure.

With two runs in the third, the Razorbacks reached double figures for the second-consecutive game and 10th time this year.

Belans pushed the 10th run across the plate with a sacrifice fly to right field.

The home team put a run on the board in the fourth but Arkansas responded with three of its own in the top of the fifth. With the bags full of Razorbacks, Madison Yannetti doubled to left center to clear the bases.

Storms picked up the win with her 11th complete game and becomes the third freshman in program history to reach 15 wins and the first since Heather Schlictman (2001).

On her way to victory, Storms allowed two runs on six hits and didn’t walk a hitter for the 13th time in 28 starts. Her 15 wins are tied for the eighth most in a single season by a Razorback pitcher.

Game 2: Notre Dame 6, Arkansas 5 | Box Score

After two scoreless innings, Krzysko opened the scoring in game two of Saturday’s doubleheader with a solo shot off the netting around the outfield at Melissa Cook Stadium.

The home run was Krzysko’s second of the season. The redshirt junior continues to thrive since earning a spot in the batting order, reaching safely in 11 straight and hitting .375 as a starter in the past 13 games.

Notre Dame (29-19) tied the game with a run in the bottom of the third and took a 5-1 lead after a four-run fifth inning which including a three-run homer by Morgan Reed.

The Razorbacks answered immediately with three runs in the top of the sixth, all on one swing by Cooper. The three-run shot down the line in left field, her 10th of the year, cut Notre Dame’s lead to one. Cooper and Schroeder are the first Razorback teammates with double-digit home runs since 2012 (Wallace/Navarro).

The home team added an insurance run in the sixth which proved to be a difference maker in the game. Trailing by two to start the seventh, Arkansas got a rally started with a one-out hustle double by Ashley Diaz who slid in just ahead of the tag.

Pinch hitter Katie Warrick swapped places with pinch runner Haydi Bugarin on an RBI double to the wall in center and once again, the deficit was down to one.

However, Notre Dame starter Rachel Nasland retired the next two to end the game.

Up Next
The weekend finale between Arkansas and Notre Dame scheduled for Sunday was cancelled due to bad weather.

Hogs’ women wrap up SEC Relays with some solid performances

• SEC Relays Results

BATON ROUGE, La. — The third-ranked Razorback women wrapped up their weekend with one event title, four runner-up finishes, an improved program record and a seasons’ best in the 4-x-400.

In a field saturated with talent, Arkansas sophomore Lexi Weeks emerged as the pole vault victor on Saturday afternoon at the SEC Relays in Baton Rouge.

Weeks was the only vaulter able to get over a 14-foot bar with her clearance of 4.37m/14-4. The two-time NCAA champion closed out the competition with three solid attempts at 4.61m/15-1 1/2 but was unable to sail over cleanly.

Silver Hogs
Redshirt sophomores Sydney Brown (1,500) and Desiree Freier (pole vault) led Arkansas’ solo efforts as each managed to finish among the top-two most talented performers in their respective events.

The Razorbacks also seized runner-up finishes in the shuttle hurdle relay and the distance medley relay. Arkansas’ shuttle hurdle relay team was comprised entirely of multis including, Kelsey Herman, Payton Stumbaugh, Ashlee Moore and Leigha Brown.

The hurdle squad completed the event in 55.25. The Razorback DMR team included Carina Viljoen, Sydney Hammit, Alex Byrnes and Taylor Werner.

The young group, which featured three freshman, put up a solid fight against a veteran Mississippi State team and completed the race in 11 minutes, 30.83 seconds.

SEC Competition Leads to New Record
4-x-100-meter relay squad of Taliyah Brooks, Stumbaugh, Daina Harper and Kiara Parker were pulled to an improved program record of 43.57 by stiff SEC competition courtesy of LSU, Texas A&M and Alabama.

LSU won the event, tying the NCAA collegiate record of 42.12, which was set earlier this year by Oregon.

Parker & Harper Pull Double Time
Primarily a short sprints specialist, Parker rose to the occasion at the end of the meet as lead leg for the Razorbacks’ 4-x-400-meter relay team.

The group, which included Harper, Damajahnee Birch and Ceara Watson, placed fourth with a seasons’ best of 3:32.11. The performance is the seventh best in the NCAA West region.

Additional Notable Performances
Freshman Jada Baylark moved up to No. 12 on the NCAA West 100-meter performance list with a PR of 11.38. Baylark was the fastest freshman at the meet and finished fifth overall.

Her time also earned her a place in Razorback history as fifth-best performer of all time.

Arkansas will close out the regular season with the Arkansas Twilight on Friday, May 5 at John McDonnell Field.

A small group of Hogs will also journey back out West for the Payton Jordan Invitational in Stanford, California.

SEC Relays

100 Meters: 4. Jada Baylark – 11.38

1,500 Meters: 2. Sydney Brown – 4:27.45, 3. Valerie Reina – 4:28.29, 6. Abby Gray – 4:31.65, 7. Maddy Reed – 4:34.38, 9. Kailee Sawyer – 4:40.06

4-x-100 Meter Relay: 4. Brooks, Stumbaugh, Harper, Parker – 43.57

Shuttle Hurdle Relay: 2. Herman, Stumbaugh, Moore, Brown – 55.25

Distance Medley Relay: 2. Viljoen, Hammit, Byrnes, Werner – 11:30.83

4-x-400 Meter Relay: 4. Parker, Harper, Birch, Watson – 3:32.11

Pole Vault: 1. Lexi Weeks – 4.37m/14-4, 2. Desiree Freier – 4.22m/13-10, 4. Tori Weeks – 4.07m/13-4¼

Triple Jump: 10. Jada Baylark – 11.81m/38-9

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Hogs split doubleheader with Ole Miss, winning series’ final game

Game 2 Box (PDF) | Game 3 Box (PDF)

Utilizing a strong relief performance by sophomore Jake Reindl and some clutch hits late in the game from Jax Biggers and Eric Cole, Arkansas was able to split its doubleheader with Ole Miss Friday afternoon with a 7-4 victory at Baum Stadium.

Reindl, who came into the game in relief of Kacey Murphy in the second inning, went a career-long 6.1 innings, allowing just one earned run and scattering six hits with five strikeouts.

Biggers and Cole recorded their only hits in the game as part of the three-run eighth, but they both game with two outs to help Arkansas take the lead and hold it for good.

Grant Koch came away with the best day at the plate among all Razorbacks, going 3-for-8 (.375) with two home runs, a double, and four RBIs. Carson Shaddy and Chad Spanberger also added two hits each in the victory. Spanberger hit his 10th home run of the year in the fifth inning to tie the game at the time at 3-3.

Game 1: Ole Miss 4, Arkansas 1

Arkansas struggled to get the bats going again Friday, recording only four hits on Ole Miss starter Ryan Rolison.

The lone run came from a solo homer by catcher Grant Koch in the fifth inning, his only hit in the game. For Koch, it was his team-leading 10th home run of the year and first since April 8 against LSU.

Unfortunately, the Hogs were put in a hole early after starting pitcher Trevor Stephan labored through the first, giving up four runs on four hits.

Ole Miss batted around before the Razorbacks were able to escape the inning with the big hit coming on a double down the left field line by Nick Fortes.

Even though he needed 40 pitches to get out of the first, it was the only inning the Rebels were able to muster any offense. Just three baserunners reached off Stephan for the next five innings, all singles.

In the second, third, and fourth innings, the junior needed 10 pitches or less to retire the side.

Stephan finished with three earned runs allowed over six innings, striking out five and walking one. It’s his ninth outing this year with five or more strikeouts and a good bounce-back start after lasting just 1.1 innings last week at No. 10 Auburn.

Game 2: Arkansas 7, Ole Miss 4

Ole Miss again jumped out to a lead early in game two of the doubleheader, this time scoring three runs over the first two innings off starting pitcher Kacey Murphy.

Murphy who had just two runs given up in his last 16.1 innings of work, struggled out of the gate when Ole Miss’ Tate Blackman led off the game with a solo home run.

Murphy finished the inning strong with a strikeout and a double play, but ran into more trouble in the second when the Rebels got another home run, this time from Thomas Dillard down the left field line to make it 2-0.

Murphy walked the next batter and gave up a double before it was time to go to the bullpen.

With Reindl coming out of the bullpen in the second, the Razorback offense was able to respond with a two-run third inning from Koch’s second home run of the day.

It was the first of three RBIs for the Fayetteville native in the game, as he had a double in the fifth inning that brought in the go-ahead run for the Hogs.

Koch’s clutch double came right after junior Chad Spanberger hit his 10th home run of the year into the right field bullpen to tie the game at 3-3. Spanberger finished the game 2-for-3 with two runs scored and he was one of three Razorbacks to record a multi-hit game in the tail end of the doubleheader.

Reindl was the key hurler that gave the Hogs a chance in the middle innings. Not only was his outing a career-long, but he kept Ole Miss off the board in the third and sixth innings after runners were put into scoring position, giving Arkansas a chance to take the lead.

Ole Miss was able to tie the game in the top of the seventh inning as it was the first run giving up by Reindl in the game, but the Razorbacks were able to put together a big inning in the bottom of the eighth to pull away.

Carson Shaddy led off the inning with a single, his second hit of the day. Then, Dominic Fletcher reached on an error to put runners on the corners with one out.

Biggers followed with a two-out single to retake the lead before Cole provided the two-run insurance with a single to right field, giving Arkansas a 7-4 lead.

Freshman Evan Lee closed out the game in the ninth to earn his first collegiate save, needing just six pitches to get the final three outs.

Razorback Quotables
“This is the biggest game of the year that we have had so far, just because of the way it has gone. We really needed a win and we put (Evan) Lee in the lineup because he’s a winner. I’m pretty excited to be honest with you about Lee. He came in, he got three outs. He threw the ball over the plate and that’s what we want you to do when you have a three run lead in the ninth.” — Dave Van Horn on Evan Lee

“I just wanted to do my role. They told me ‘Hey, you’re coming in.’ I had to attack those hitters coming up, I had runners on first and second and, thankfully, I got a few breaks here and there and we got the job done.” — Lee on closing out the game in the ninth to earn his first collegiate save

“I’ve been seeing the ball the same and just made some minor tweaks, minor adjustments and stuff like that. Never lost any confidence or anything like that. I’ve been seeing the ball well and trying to get those hits. It’s confidence for sure, but nothing has really changed for me. I’m just trying to put together good at-bats.” — Grant Koch on breaking out of his slump at the plate

Up Next
Arkansas will get a nice break before going back on the field for its next series.

The Hogs will travel to Knoxville, Tenn., next weekend for a three-game series starting on Thursday at 6 p.m. The Razorbacks and Volunteers will play games two and three on Friday and Saturday, at 5 p.m. and Noon, respectively.

Thursday’s and Saturday’s games will be televised on the SEC Network.

Mowatt hurdles to top of NCAA in 400-meter race at Relays

SEC Relays Results

BATON ROUGE, La. — Day one of the inaugural SEC Relays proved extremely fruitful for the No. 15 Arkansas men’s track and field team as the Razorbacks walked away with one national lead, two event titles and several PRs on Friday afternoon.

No. 1 in the SEC, No. 1 in the NCAA
Junior Kemar Mowatt dethroned former NCAA 400-meter hurdle leader Robert Grant (Texas A&M) in a head-to-head competition which saw Mowatt best Grant by .69 seconds. Mowatt was aggressive from the sound of the gun, attacking each hurdle with an unmatched ferocity. The strategy paid dividends earning him the event title, an NCAA lead and the second-best performance in program history with 49.09. The top three 400 hurdlers in the country, inclusive of Grant, all hail from the SEC.

Barriers No Match for Hogs
Arkansas’ second event win of the day came off the heels of redshirt senior Aidan Swain in the steeplechase. Swain finished the race in 9 minutes 12.83 seconds, securing his place atop the podium. Oregon transfer Kyle Levermore placed second with 9:16.98.

Additional Notable Performances
Sprint medley relay squad of Kenzo Cotton, Josh Washington, Obi Igbokwe and Carlton Orange recorded the third-fastest performance in the program history with 3:15.38.

Western Texas transfer Rhayko Schwartz picked up a new PR in the 400 of 46.13, earning him the runner-up spot in the event. Schwartz is now inside NCAA West region’s top-15.

4-x-800-meter relay team of Cameron Griffith, Ethan Moehn, Austen Dalquist and Cale Wallace raced to a second-place finish, clocking 7:33.21 over the eight-lap race.

Freshman Harrison Schrage marked an all-conditions personal best in the long jump of 7.93m/26-0¼, finishing as the second-best collegiate performer in the competition. Schrage is one of nine student-athletes to mark a jump over 26 feet so far this outdoor season.

Arkansas returns to action tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. with program record-holder Erich Sullins kicking off the day in his signature event, the hammer throw. The Razorbacks are currently sitting in second place in the team standings with 27 points. Men’s and women’s points are combined and teams are scored as one unit.

Points Breakdown: M – 14 / W – 13 (27)
M – SMR: 3rd = 6 pts. | W – SMR: 6th = 3 pts.
M – 4-x-800: 2nd = 8 pts. | W – 4-x-800: 1st = 10 pts.

Date/Time: Saturday, April 29, 12:02 p.m. CT (prime time)
Venue: Bernie Moore Track Stadium
Important Links: Meet Schedule | Live Results | Start Lists

Assistant Coach Doug Case Sounds Off

On Day One of the SEC Relays
“So far it’s been a great track meet. There have been a couple collegiate records already. We ran really fast in the sprint medley and got third, so that was pretty good. Kemar [Mowatt] ran the collegiate lead and that was great for him but I know he has more in the tank. Larry [Donald] ran well in the high hurdles, Rhayko Schwartz hit a PR in the 400. The jumpers started us off pretty well with Harrison [Schrage] getting out to 26 and Aidan Swain closed it out with a win in the steeplechase. All in all a pretty good day.”

SEC Relays

200 Meters: 7. Kevin Harris – 21.10

400 Meters: 2. Rhayko Schwartz – 46.13, 6. Eric Janise – 46.66, 7. Jamarco Steven – 46.91, 8. Roy Ejiakuekwu – 47.54, 9. John Winn – 47.68

110 Meter Hurdles: 6. Larry Donald – 13.96, 11. Travius Chambers – 15.16

400 Meter Hurdles: 1. Kemar Mowatt – 49.09, 3. Larry Donald – 51.20, 6. Travius Chambers – 51.57

Steeplechase: 1. Aidan Swain – 9:12.83, 2. Kyle Levermore – 9:16.98

Sprint Medley Relay: 3. Cotton, Washington, Igbokwe, Orange – 3:15.38

4-x-800 Meter Relay: 2. Griffith, Moehn, Dalquist, Wallace – 7:33.21

Long Jump: 3. Harrison Schrage – 7.93m/26-0¼, 4. Andreas Trajkovski – 7.65m/25-1¼, 11. Brandon Workman – 7.07m/23-2½

Discus: 9. Erich Sullins – 52.30m/171-7