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Clutch hitting, complete game pushes Hogs past Tulsa

Box Score

FAYETTEVILLE — In a top-30 RPI matchup Tuesday evening at Bogle Park, freshman Caroline Hedgcock produced a complete-game performance to lead Arkansas to a 3-1 win over Tulsa.

The victory was the Razorbacks’ 25th of the season, and marked the program’s first home win over Tulsa since 2005, and its first ever at Bogle Park.

Offensively, Autumn Russell and Loren Krzysko each had two hits and scored a run.

Hedgcock, in the Razorbacks’ 13th complete game of the year, allowed just four hits and an unearned run to go along with two strikeouts and no walks.

The Downers Grove, Ill., native needed just nine or fewer pitches to get through four of the first five innings including a four-pitch fifth frame. Hedgcock retired 15 of the first 16 hitters she faced before Tulsa (26-13) scored its run in the sixth.

The teams combined for just one base runner each through three innings but Arkansas (25-14) opened the scoring with a run in the fourth.

Russell got things started with a one-out double to center field, her second hit of the day. She came around to score during the next at-bat when Ashley Diaz knocked a single through the middle of the infield.

Russell’s first-inning hit was her team-leading 40th of the year, and the junior infielder now has 13 multi-hit efforts this season.

Nicole Schroeder started a two-run rally in the fifth inning with a single to left field. Krzysko dropped a single in to right field to put runners on first and second.

After a one-out walk to Haydi Bugarin, the bases were loaded with Shelby Hiers coming to the plate. The senior catcher delivered with a ground ball up the middle that plated pinch runner Sydney Parr.

Arkansas scored its third run of the game when a wild pitch allowed Krzysko to scamper home from third.

Up Next
The Razorbacks continue their home stand and jump back into SEC play this weekend, hosting No. 5 Texas A&M beginning Friday at Bogle Park.

Game one of the series will be televised on ESPNU with first pitch scheduled for 5 p.m.

General admission is free for all home games. In addition to television coverage, Friday’s opener will also be available through the WatchESPN app.

Razorbacks roll to easy mid-week win over Missouri State

Box Score (PDF)

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Arkansas scored at least one run in all but three innings Tuesday night, including a five-run fourth, to cruise past Missouri State, 12-4, at Hammons Field.

The win is the Hogs’ 26th of the year, matching its total from a year ago with still a month and a half of the season left as they are now 26-8.

The Razorback bats started out hot and never cooled off as they tallied a season-high 18 hits in the game, with five players recording multi-hit performances. The hit total by the Hogs is the 17th game with 10 or more hits this year and fifth game of 15 or more. This season, Arkansas is 17-1 when collecting 10 or more hits.

Juniors Chad Spanberger, Luke Bonfield, sophomore Grant Koch, and freshman Jordan McFarland each tallied a team-high three hits in the game. Spanberger reached base in five of his six plate appearances, walking twice to go along with his three RBIs.

For Bonfield, he went 3-for-6 at the plate with three RBIs, his team-leading fifth game with three or more driven in. He also hit his first triple of his career in the seventh inning, one of two triples hit in the game by the Razorbacks.

Koch had the only perfect day in the batter’s box, as he was 3-for-3 with two walks and two RBIs, marking his fourth game with three hits or more.

The Razorbacks used eight pitchers in the game, each throwing no more than 1.2 innings. Sophomore Kacey Murphy got the start and gave up just a single earned run in the first inning off a Jake Burger home run. Murphy finished with two strikeouts and just three hits given up in 1.2 innings.

Freshman Matt Cronin earned the win after holding the Bears scoreless from the end of the third inning and into the fifth inning. At that time, Missouri State had already come back twice from one-run deficits. After Arkansas scored five runs in the top of the fourth, Cronin worked out of a lead-off single and two-out walk to prevent the Bears from coming back a third time.

In the previous half inning, the five-run fourth was enough to put the Razorbacks well ahead for the remainder of the game. In that inning, seven batters reached base before the first out was recorded. The big hit coming from Spanberger, who laced a two-RBI double off the left field wall, missing a home run by a few feet.

Tuesday’s game was Spanberger’s second three-hit performance in four days and he extended his hitting streak to seven games, the longest active streak on the team.

Up Next
Arkansas returns home for a three-game Southeastern Conference series with Georgia starting on Thursday at Baum Stadium. First pitch between the Razorbacks and Bulldogs for game one is set for 6:30 p.m. and will be broadcast on SEC Network+ and on the radio on the Razorback Sports Network.

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LSU’s Walker shuts down Arkansas’ bats for 2-0 series-clinching win

• Box Score (PDF)

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas couldn’t get any offensive momentum against LSU starting pitcher Eric Walker Sunday afternoon at Baum Stadium.

Walker threw a complete game shutout, allowing just four hits and two walks in No. 13 LSU’s series clinching 2-0 victory.

The loss drops the Hogs’ overall record to 25-8 and 8-4 in Southeastern Conference play, while LSU moves up to 22-11 and 7-5 in league play.

Even with the defeat, Arkansas remains in a tie for first in the SEC Western Division with Auburn and Mississippi State.

Arkansas’s four hits came from four different players, but the team never managed to get the lead-off batter on base. Chad Spanberger, Luke Bonfield, Dominic Fletcher, and Carson Shaddy all recorded hits in the game.

It’s been a strong 10-game stretch for Spanberger going back to the series against Missouri (March 24-26). The junior has hit safely in nine of those 10 games, including Sunday’s game, and has six multi-hit games during that same span.

Since conference play began, Spanberger leads all Razorbacks with a .340 average and has 19 RBIs to go along with four home runs.

On the pitching side, Josh Alberius got the start and worked into the fourth, allowing just a single run, while scattering just four hits. It’s the third time in his last five appearances that he’s thrown at least three innings and allowed one run or less.

Jake Reindl followed out of the bullpen and had his best outing of his career, going a career-long 5.2 innings, allowing just one run on two hits and tying a career-high with five strikeouts.

Over his last five outings, the sophomore has allowed just one run over 14.1 innings and has struck out 15 in his last four appearances.

LSU got the single run off Alberius in the second inning after Nick Coomes doubled home Josh Smith on the Tigers’ first hit of the day. The insurance run came in the eighth inning after Reindl had already thrown four straight scoreless frames.

LSU took advantage of a hit by pitch to the lead-off batter and then had another batter reach on a throwing error after the attempted sacrifice bunt. Greg Deichmann followed with a base hit through the right side to put his team up 2-0.

Razorback Quotables
“The attitude was good pre-game. We knew what we were getting into today. We were getting into a strike thrower who doesn’t really throw the ball down the middle of the plate and that’s what he did. He threw the ball in and out and was kind of deceptive. Everyone has had trouble hitting him this year. We were disappointed we didn’t win the game last night, but I thought they did a good job. The locker room was good today. We just got beat by a good pitcher. (Eric) Walker stuck it to us.” — Coach Dave Van Horn on the team’s attitude

“That was the positive of the game for us today. Jake Reindl came in and really did a nice job of mixing his pitches, his cutter, slider, threw a few changeups, and his straight fastball that he can throw around 90-91. The cutter was upper and mid 80’s. He just did a really nice job.” — Van Horn on Jake Reindl

“The defense was playing great behind me and Grant (Koch) was calling a great game and that made my job quite a bit easier.” — Reindl on his teammates playing behind him

“We just have to go out and fight next week. It’s not the end of the season for us. We’re a really good team and we know it. We played really good for 18 innings of this weekend and they just had a really good pitcher, who was just on today. This is not the end of the Hogs, this is one weekend and it’s a long season.” — Carson Shaddy on the remainder of the season

Up Next
Arkansas goes on the road for a single midweek game at Missouri State on Tuesday at Hammons Field. First pitch is set for 6:35 p.m. and will be broadcast on ESPN3. Phil Elson will have the radio call on the Razorback Sports Network.

Hogs fall late to Tigers; rubber game matchup Sunday

• Box Score (PDF)

FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas suffered a tough late-inning loss to No. 13 LSU Saturday night, as the Tigers scored five runs in the top of the ninth to come back and beat the Razorbacks, 10-8, inside Baum Stadium.

The loss forces Arkansas to its third-straight rubber match in as many weeks with first pitch on Sunday set for 1 p.m.

On the mound, junior pitcher Trevor Stephan held the Tigers to just two runs over seven innings, his longest outing of the conference season.

LSU scattered five hits in those first seven innings and Stephan retired 13 of the last 15 batters he faced after giving up a home run in the second inning to Jordan Romero.

The Razorback lineup hit multiple home runs, once again, one each from junior Chad Spanberger and sophomore Grant Koch.

It is the 13th multi-home run game of the season for Arkansas and second of the series.

Seven different Razorbacks notched at least one hit in the game. Sophomore Jax Biggers and Spanberger led the way with three hits each, both going 3-for-4 with two runs scored. For Biggers, it was his third three-hit game of the season.

Spanberger led all Razorbacks with five RBIs, the third Razorback to have five in a game this season and the most in a conference game since Brian Anderson had five against Missouri in 2014.  Spanberger hit his second home run of the series in the bottom of the second inning, a three-run shot that put Arkansas up 5-1. The long ball gives him six for the season, matching his total from a year ago.

Koch also got in on the home run action, smacking his ninth of the year in the third inning, which continues to lead the team. It was Koch’s only hit, but he had three walks on a 1-for-2 night at the plate. As a team, Arkansas walked a season high 10 times.

Sophomore Eric Cole had two hits for the second consecutive night, after going 2-for-5 including a big double in the bottom of the ninth that nearly got a rally going for the Razorbacks. Cole is now 4-for-10 on the weekend against LSU with three runs and two RBIs.

Razorback Quotables
“We have escaped a couple of these the last few weekends. We didn’t escape tonight, so we just need to learn from it and move on. It’s baseball, you have to have a short memory and move on.” — Coach Dave Van Horn on the loss

“Number one, he is confident. He’s not trying to pull the ball. He is using the whole field. Last night, his home run was almost to dead center. He’s hit home runs and base hits to left. I think the main thing for him, is getting at-bats and getting confidence.” — Van Horn on Chad Spanberger

“For me, I don’t take this any differently than I usually do. I think these guys have good mindsets, no matter what. I think that is something that we have built, kind of, starting in the fall and coming into the spring. I think these guys will be ready no matter what, but I’m going to do my best to keep them up.” — Grant Koch on handling the loss as a team

“Just that he loves this team. That it is just one game. It clicked with all of us, it’s just one game. It’s all about tomorrow right now. We’ve got a good group here and we’ll respond.” — Koch on Van Horn’s message to the team after the game

Up Next
The Razorbacks and Tigers will play the deciding game of the series Sunday afternoon at Baum Stadium with first pitch set for 1 p.m. The game will be broadcast on SEC Network+ and can be heard in its entirety on the Razorback Sports Network on the radio.

Neighbors introduced as Razorbacks’ new women’s coach

Mike Neighbors is coming home.

The coach at the University of Washington and native of Greenwood will be replacing Jimmy Dykes as the coach of Arkansas’ women’s basketball program.

“Everything I needed to know I learned right here in Fayetteville, Arkansas,” Neighbors wrote in a letter posted to the Razorbacks’ website. “I’m going to be able to share and point it out now that I’m living my dream. This is the dream job. It’s always been my dream job and everyone has known it.

“When I hear my name introduced, there will be a lot of people that will tell me my grandad would have been proud. I know how much this means to my family.”

Dykes graduated from Arkansas in 1993 and has worked for the Hogs twice — as director of operations under Gary Blair from 1999-2001 and an assistant coach for Susie Gardner in 2006-07.

Neighbors was an assistant coach at Tulsa, Colorado, Xavier and Washington before being promoted by the Huskies to his first college head coaching job in 2013.

Neighbors was a high school head coach at Bentonville and Cabot in the 1990s.

In 1997 he led Bentonville to a state runner-up finish two seasons after the program had finished with a 1-24 record.

He replaces Dykes, who was the surprise choice for the job in 2014, had three rather dismal years. He had no previous experience coaching women’s basketball and no head coaching experience at any level.

The Razorbacks finished this past season on an 11-game losing streak.

Washington was 29-6 this season and was eliminated by national runner-up Mississippi State in the Sweet 16.

Neighbors guided Washington to four seasons of unprecedented success, highlighted by the 2016 NCAA Final Four and two NCAA Sweet 16 appearances.

Named the program’s head coach after two years as an assistant, Neighbors led the Huskies to a 98-41 record that was fueled by three consecutive 23-plus win seasons and included four postseason appearances (3 NCAA, 1 WNIT).

This time, Arkansas athletics director Jeff Long may have made the right hire.

“Everything that I have done in my career has prepared me to be the head women’s basketball coach at the University of Arkansas,” Neighbors said. “As a native Arkansasan, I understand how special our state and the University are. There is only one Razorback and I’m excited to be able to put that logo on my chest and represent our institution and our state across the country.

“This is my dream job and everyone who knows me, knows that. I grew up wanting to be a Razorback and then a Razorback coach and the four years I spent at Arkansas prepared me for this moment.

“It prepared me for my first job and it prepared me for the head coaching job at Washington four years ago. Now it has come full circle and I’m back at Arkansas.

“Arkansas is a special place.

“We have all the resources in place to be successful on the court and more importantly, to foster the growth and development of the young women who come through our doors.”