With efficiency of catcher Ryder Helfrick essentially stealing strikes for his pitcher, new replay might actually cost Hogs pitchers in tournament.
479 Equipment Ruscin & Zach podcast May 18
Lots to recap from the weekend.
Is 17 seconds a long time?
Bum of the week.
Announcers that refuse to use a pronunciation guide and going to the can shirtless.
Eastside Liquor Halftime Podcast: 5.18.26
Halftime gets a shake-up with a new interim lineup and they recap all the highlight from the weekend and talk NBA playoffs as well.
Guests: Dr. Liggett (River Valley Smile Center)
Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: 5-18-26
Tye and Tommy are live at Hardscrabble Country Club for the 38th Annual Bill Stancil Memorial Golf Tournament supporting River Valley FCA. Recapping a great weekend for Diamond Sports on the Hill!
Errors and blown lead couldn’t stop Razorbacks in wild finale
LEXINGTON, Ky. — The Arkansas bats weren’t the problem Saturday.
After going quiet at times during the week, the Razorbacks came out swinging against Kentucky scoring 10 runs before the Wildcats could record three outs.
They still needed every last one of them to escape with a 16-12 win.
No. 12 Arkansas closed the SEC regular season with the victory, locking up seventh place in the standings and guaranteeing the Hogs a first-round bye at the SEC Tournament in Hoover.
The final record reads 35-19 overall and 16-13 in conference play. Seven SEC series wins.
It wasn’t a smooth finish, but it’s the kind of win that matters heading into October baseball in Alabama.
Ten runs, one inning and it still got scary
Arkansas sent 13 batters to the plate in the top of the first and didn’t stop until the lead read 10-0.
Damian Ruiz singled, Camden Kozeal doubled, Ryder Helfrick singled home the first run and Kozeal came around on a wild pitch. Zack Stewart singled in another.
Then the lineup kept churning. Kuhio Aloy doubled, TJ Pompey got hit by a pitch to force in a run, Carter Rutenbar singled home two more.
Ruiz came back up and cleared the bases with a double to left and suddenly it was 9-0.
Kentucky burned through three pitchers — Connor Mattison, Toby Peterson and Ira Austin — before the first inning was done.
The Hogs pushed the lead to 12-0 through four innings. Then the fifth happened.
Kentucky clawed back with a monster rally that still stings to think about.
Tyler Bell tripled, Luke Lawrence singled him home. Hudson Brown added an RBI single.
Then Carson Hansen who committed to Arkansas stepped up with the bases loaded and launched a grand slam to left. A 12-run lead had shrunk to three.
The Wildcats still weren’t done. Jayce Tharnish doubled and advanced to third on a throwing error by the right fielder, scoring two more.
Lawrence singled to plate Tharnish and tie it at 12-12.
The entire lead was gone in one half-inning and the fielding mistakes that helped Kentucky complete the comeback were a warning sign for a team headed to the postseason.
Kozeal, Stewart and Souza saved the day
Arkansas didn’t panic.
In the sixth, Pompey walked and stole second, Peck walked and Ruiz got hit by a pitch to load the bases.
Kozeal then lined a single to right that scored two runs and pushed the Razorbacks back in front 14-12.
James DeCremer came on and held the lead through the seventh and eighth.
The Hogs put it out of reach in the ninth. Stewart crushed a homer to right to make it 15-12.
Nolan Souza followed with another shot to right-center and the margin was four.
Kentucky went down in order and Arkansas walked out of Lexington with a series win.
Hoover is next
The throwing error in the fifth wasn’t the only defensive miscue of the afternoon.
Completing routine relay throws — the kind that should be automatic from second to first — was a recurring issue in a game that got messier than it needed to be.
Those mistakes get magnified in tournament baseball and the Hogs know it.
But Saturday also showed something worth keeping. When Arkansas needed its offense to answer, it answered.
When the bullpen needed to hold a two-run lead through two innings, it held.
When the game needed to be put away, Stewart and Souza delivered back-to-back.
Three straight series wins to close the regular season. A top-8 seed.
The SEC Tournament starts soon and the Razorbacks are headed there with momentum they had to earn the hard way.
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Razorbacks survive Kentucky scare with SEC Tournament seeding hanging in balance
Nobody said the last weekend of the SEC regular season was going to be easy.
After Friday night’s results filtered in from across the league, the standings picture heading into Saturday is about as tight as it gets and Arkansas is sitting right in the middle of it.
The Razorbacks beat Kentucky 5-4 Friday to move to 16-13 in SEC play, but the win came with an immediate reality check.
Florida demolished LSU 11-1 to reach 17-12 and plant itself one game ahead of the pack. Mississippi State fell to Texas A&M 11-9, dropping to 16-13.
Ole Miss knocked off Alabama 9-0 to climb to 15-14.
That leaves three teams in Arkansas, Mississippi State and Ole Miss separated by just one game heading into the final day of the regular season, with Hoover and the SEC Tournament bracket waiting on the other side of Saturday.
The Hogs didn’t just need to win Friday. They needed to win and get some help. They got the win. The help was partial at best.
Standings race with no room to breathe
Let’s put the numbers in plain terms.
Florida sits alone at 17-12, having already taken care of business against LSU. Arkansas and Mississippi State are both at 16-13. Ole Miss is one game back at 15-14.
For Arkansas, Saturday’s series finale against Kentucky is no longer just about winning a series.
It’s about whether the Razorbacks finish the regular season at 17-13 which keeps them within striking distance of Florida in the seeding race or slip to 16-14 and potentially get swallowed by whatever Mississippi State does in its finale against Texas A&M.
Every game across the league Saturday carries real consequences.
That’s the situation Arkansas woke up to Saturday morning and it’s the situation the Hogs can still influence with one more win.
One game. One afternoon. Everything still unsettled.
Gaeckle steadied a shaky night
Before any of Saturday’s stakes can be addressed, it’s worth understanding how Arkansas got here because Friday night wasn’t comfortable.
A lot of the credit for keeping the Razorbacks in it belongs to starter Gabe Gaeckle.
Gaeckle worked 5 1/3 innings, finishing with 2 runs allowed, 7 hits, 3 walks and 7 strikeouts on 101 pitches.
In a game Arkansas couldn’t afford to lose, that’s a starter doing his job eating innings, managing trouble and keeping the bullpen from being burned too early heading into a decisive series game the very next day.
His steadiest moment came in the second inning when Kentucky put runners on base after Will Marcy walked and Hudson Brown singled.
Gaeckle picked off Marcy at second base and got Caeden Cloud to strike out, escaping without damage.
Pitching out of trouble in the second inning of a must-win game, before the offense has fully settled in is the kind of performance that doesn’t show up in the box score but shapes everything that follows.
Then came an 18-minute delay in the third inning after a violent collision between Braxton Van Cleave and shortstop Camden Kozeal on the base path.
Van Cleave was taken off the field on a stretcher with apparent concern about a head and neck injury after both teams’ training staffs spent several minutes attending to him.
Gaeckle returned from the delay, got a groundout and stranded two Kentucky runners to close the inning without further damage.
He kept Kentucky at bay through five clean innings before running into trouble in the sixth on back-to-back singles by Hudson Brown and Owen Jenkins.
His night ended at 101 pitches, the right call, and Steele Eaves came in and immediately made his presence felt by striking out Caeden Cloud and then fanning Kentucky star Tyler Bell on three pitches to leave the bases loaded.
That sequence, against one of Kentucky’s better hitters with the game in the balance, was as important as anything that happened all night.
Gaeckle’s final line: 5 1/3 innings, 2 runs, 7 hits, 3 walks and 7 strikeouts. In a week when Arkansas needs its pitching staff as fresh as possible for Hoover, that’s a number worth keeping.
Stewart and Kozeal did the heavy lifting
Arkansas didn’t generate much sustained offense Friday as the Hogs left 11 runners on base, but Zack Stewart and Camden Kozeal made sure the Razorbacks had enough to work with.
Stewart put Arkansas on the board first with a 395-foot leadoff home run to right-center in the third inning, his 10th of the season and the 54th of his college career.
It was his second leadoff homer in as many nights, having gone deep to start the ninth inning the previous game.
Kozeal answered in the fourth with arguably the at-bat of the night. He worked a nine-pitch sequence against Kentucky starter Ben Cleaver, fouling off three consecutive pitches before driving a 3-2 offering 400 feet to right-center for his team-leading 17th home run of the season.
That kind of disciplined, grinding at-bat in a tight game tells you something about where Kozeal’s head is as the season reaches its most important stretch.
Cleaver finished at 4 1/3 innings for Kentucky, giving up 3 runs on 5 hits with 2 walks and 3 strikeouts on 84 pitches.
Kentucky tied it at 4-4 in the seventh through a Maika Niu fielding error that allowed Lawrence to score and a Hudson Brown squeeze bunt that plated Ethan Hindle.
Arkansas responded in the eighth when Niu — who’d committed the error — walked to lead off, stole second and scored on a Nolan Souza RBI double off the wall in center field.
That put the Hogs back in front 5-4. It held up as the difference.
McElvain closed it out
Ethan McElvain’s final line — 3 innings, 7 strikeouts, 35 pitches — reads much more simple than his night actually was.
He entered in the seventh with the game tied at 4-4 and immediately ran into self-inflicted trouble.
A pickoff throw that sailed away let Hindle advance to third. A walk put runners at the corners and a squeeze bunt tied the game.
McElvain needed 19 pitches to get through that single inning.
The eighth brought more adversity. Reese Robinett dropped a popup off Tyler Bell’s bat that should’ve been the second out of the inning, keeping Kentucky’s lineup alive longer than it needed to be.
McElvain struck out Luke Lawrence, then Hindle doubled to put two runners in scoring position. Kentucky held Bell at third rather than sending him.
That decision may have been the Wildcats’ costliest of the night. Pinch hitter Scott Campbell struck out swinging on a 2-2 fastball to end the threat.
The ninth was a different story entirely. Marcy, Brown and Jenkins went down on strikeouts in order. It was game over at that point.
McElvain’s 35-pitch workload across three innings keeps him available for Saturday if needed, which matters in a series finale that carries this much weight.
What Saturday means
Florida is sitting at 17-12 after Friday’s blowout win over LSU and the Gators have already done what they needed to do this weekend.
The race now is about who finishes closest behind them and whether any of the teams at 16-13 can close that gap to one game before the bracket gets set for Hoover.
Arkansas plays Kentucky in the series finale Saturday at 1 p.m. Mississippi State plays Texas A&M in its finale. Ole Miss is one game back of both.
Every result matters. Every half-game of separation in the final standings means something real when tournament seeding gets sorted out.
The Razorbacks couldn’t have asked for a cleaner situation heading into Saturday.
Gaeckle’s 101-pitch start preserved the bullpen. McElvain’s efficiency keeps his arm available. The Hogs are alive in the seeding race and playing with something meaningful on the line.
Win Saturday and Arkansas finishes at 17-13, puts pressure on Florida at the top and heads to Hoover having taken a series from Kentucky on the road to close the regular season. That’s a strong hand to play entering the tournament.
Lose and the math gets complicated fast.
The Hogs know which outcome they need.
479 Equipment Ruscin & Zach podcast May 15
Zach reads Ruscin’s mind.
Baseball drops game one.
We can read your texts all day long to all the shows.
Plus more stuff.
BetSaracen’s Neal Atkinson on busy time for action from golf to softball
How BetSaracen already planning for football season with multiple sports including baseball, still one of the biggest for action at online sports book.
Former Razorback pitcher James Teague on SEC Tournament
How they handled the extensive road trip to Hoover, Ala., for week-long trip, per diem then compared to going there now with different goals.












