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Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: 2-10-26

Goodbye football! Bediako TRO no longer in effect, ruled ineligible. Super Bowl Streaking. Arkansas peaking? Talk of the town.

Guests: Bruce Stanton (Pradco Outdoors)

Pig Trail Nation’s Mike Irwin on Razorbacks’ largest X-factor this year

The obvious one is Trevon Brazile, but Billy Richmond’s energy and results really can’t be overlooked for developing team.

Saturday Down South’s Connor O’Gara on strong position in SEC this year

Taking an early look at the players on the rosters, what is the strongest position group national columnist headed into 2026.

AP Poll Week 14: Arkansas steady at 21 as rankings tighten

The Arkansas Razorbacks didn’t budge in Monday’s Associated Press men’s college basketball poll, remaining No. 21 as the rankings entered Week 14.

Arkansas sits at No. 21 with a 17-6 record, holding position while teams around the Hogs shuffled after recent wins and losses.

The middle of the poll remains tightly packed, leaving little separation between the high teens and low 20s.

One note tied directly to Arkansas stood out in the poll reaction. The Hogs’ 88-68 win at Mississippi State marked just the second time in 33 games the program has won by double digits in Starkville, an unusually lopsided result in that series.

That context helped explain why Arkansas stayed ranked despite not climbing. The win carried weight because of how rarely it happens in that venue.

The poll also points forward. Arkansas is listed with a Tuesday night road game at LSU, set for 9 p.m. on SEC Network, a matchup that could influence next week’s rankings.

Little separation around the Razorbacks

Just behind Arkansas, BYU followed in the rankings after recent struggles, while Miami (Ohio) continued its unbeaten run near the bottom of the Top 25.

Kentucky re-entered the poll at No. 25, with Louisville also remaining in the mix. The congestion reinforces how quickly movement can happen for teams in Arkansas’ range.

Within the SEC, Arkansas remains one of several ranked teams navigating a schedule that offers little margin. Staying planted at No. 21 reflects stability more than stagnation as February pressure builds.

National picture sets the context

At the top, Arizona remained the unanimous No. 1 team for a ninth straight week, continuing one of the season’s most consistent runs.

Michigan followed at No. 2, while Houston made one of the week’s biggest moves, climbing into the top five. Duke and Iowa State rounded out the upper tier as conference play tightened nationally.

For Arkansas, No. 21 feels less like a snapshot and more like a checkpoint. The Hogs held their ground. What comes next will decide whether they climb — or fight to stay put.

Latest AP Top 25 Rankings

  1. Arizona
  2. Michigan
  3. Houston
  4. Duke
  5. Iowa State
  6. UConn
  7. Nebraska
  8. Illinois
  9. Kansas
  10. Michigan State
  11. North Carolina
  12. Gonzaga
  13. Purdue
  14. Florida
  15. Virginia
  16. Texas Tech
  17. St. John’s
  18. Saint Louis
  19. Vanderbilt
  20. Clemson
  21. Arkansas
  22. BYU
  23. Miami (OH)
  24. Louisville
  25. Kentucky

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: 2-9-26


Tye returns to recap a Super Bowl he did not watch and the Razorbacks 20-point win in a historically tough road venue. Baseball starts this weekend!

Hobbs takes over, pitching carries Razorbacks through scrimmage weekend

Matt Hobbs never introduced himself as the head coach this weekend.

He didn’t have to. Dave Van Horn was in Waco, Texas, watching his jersey go up at McLennan College, and somebody still had to run Arkansas baseball.

That somebody was Hobbs, the pitching coach who suddenly found himself handling lineups, managing arms, and answering questions like the man in charge.

The Razorbacks wrapped up their offseason with a three-game Cardinal vs. Black scrimmage, and even without the usual skipper, the weekend didn’t drift. It moved with purpose. Pitching dictated the tempo, mistakes mattered, and nothing felt rushed.

That wasn’t accidental.

Before the weekend began, the talk inside the Fowler Center was that pitching had taken over practices. Closed doors and bad weather kept it quiet, but the reputation stuck. Once fans got access, the message didn’t change.

Hobbs didn’t sell it. He didn’t oversell anything, really. He watched pitches, watched reactions, and let the arms speak first.

By the end of the weekend, they’d said plenty.

Cole Gibler | Nilsen Roman-HitThatLine Images

Friday Set Tone, Even When Ball Flew

Game One opened with noise.

Cole Gibler and Gabe Gaeckle matched up, and it didn’t take long for Arkansas to show power. Nolan Souza reached. Ryder Helfrick crushed a homer to center.

A few pitches later, Kuhio Aloy turned a fastball into a 479-foot reminder that Baum still has room for tape-measure shots.

The Razorbacks jumped ahead quickly, but Hobbs never treated it like a highlight reel. Black answered back. Tyler Holland homered. Carson Willis tripled. The lead tightened, and evaluation replaced excitement.

Joey Lorenzini entered and flashed the electric fastball Hobbs has been waiting to unleash. Even when runs crossed, the stuff stayed firm, and the delivery stayed aggressive.

Later, Steele Eaves gave up a pair of long balls. Errors finished the night. The scoreboard favored Cardinal, but Hobbs’ eyes stayed on the mound.

Final: Cardinal 7, Black 5.

Tate McGuire-Andy Hodges-HitThatLine Images

Saturday Looked Like a Pitching Coach’s Daydream

Saturday slowed everything down.

Hunter Dietz and Tate McGuire turned the second scrimmage into a test of patience. Hits were scarce. Defense decided the scoring.

A right-field error helped Black strike first. Luke Cornelison delivered the RBI. Cardinal answered with a sacrifice fly from Helfrick. Another misplay brought home another unearned run.

That was it.

From there, Hobbs’ bullpen closed the door without drama. James DeCremer, Mark Brissey, and Ethan McElvain combined to pitch the final four half-innings, allowing just two hits and striking out eight.

There were no fist pumps. No long talks. Just clean work.

Final: Black 3, Cardinal 1.

Matt Hobbs
Matt Hobbs | Nilsen Roman-HitThatLine Images

Hobbs Flipped the Teams and Let Sunday Breathe

Sunday felt deliberate.

With Van Horn still away, Hobbs flipped the rosters. Black now wore the starter label. Cardinal became the chase group. The message wasn’t hidden. Roles were still flexible.

Colin Fisher and Peyton Lee matched zeros early. Lee struck out five of the first six batters he faced, leaning on a slider that didn’t stay in the same zip code twice.

Fisher worked quicker. He pitched to contact, trusted the gloves behind him, and didn’t waste pitches.

The starters broke through in the fourth. Reese Robinett doubled home two after a hit batter and a fielding error. The lead grew to 3-0, and Fisher kept cruising.

Jordan Martin followed with clean innings. The arms stayed sharp. The pace stayed steady.

Scrimmages Don’t End Early for a Reason

Cardinal didn’t fold.

Carson Willis homered again, cutting the lead to one. Steele Eaves allowed traffic. Errors extended innings. The pressure shifted back.

In the seventh, Christian Turner singled and was picked off. Carter Rutenbar reached after an error. Brendan Kleiman doubled to tie it. Zack Stewart ended it on a misplayed ball to right, ruled an error on Aloy.

Final: Red 4, Black 3.

Bobby Wernes
Bobby Wernes | Nilsen Roman-HitThatLine Images

Right Field Was Loudest Issue

Nothing drew more attention than right field.

Kuhio Aloy committed three errors across three games. Two were routine fly balls. One ended the weekend. Every ball hit his way looked uncomfortable.

Hobbs didn’t dodge the topic.

When asked, he pointed to the lack of outfield work during recent weeks because of weather. He didn’t exaggerate. He didn’t excuse it away.

Aloy will likely remain in right to keep the lineup intact, but Hobbs made it clear improvement comes from reps, not patience alone.

Peyton Lee
Peyton Lee | Nilsen Roman-HitThatLine Images

Freshman Arms Gave Hobbs Plenty to Talk About

This is where Hobbs leaned in.

Peyton Lee didn’t just survive. He dominated early Sunday, striking out eight in 3.2 innings. His slider missed bats, and his fastball lived on the edges.

Joey Lorenzini flashed mid-90s velocity from the left side and touched 97. Hobbs didn’t hype it, but outings like that don’t stay quiet.

Jordan Martin and Mark Brissey combined for 10 outs without allowing a hit. Luke Cornelison handled two-way duties, pitching Friday and Sunday without unraveling.

For a pitching coach, that’s depth you trust.

Colin Fisher
Colin Fisher | Nilsen Roman-HitThatLine Images

The Rotation Hint Came With a Smile

Hobbs never announced a rotation.

He didn’t need to.

When asked about Colin Fisher starting, Hobbs smiled and said the media members were “pretty smart” for figuring that one out.

That was the answer.

Arkansas will likely open with Gabe Gaeckle on Friday night against Oklahoma State, followed by Hunter Dietz and Fisher against TCU and Texas Tech in some order.

Hobbs let the silence finish the thought.

Nolan Souza
Nolan Souza | Nilsen Roman-HitThatLine Images

Clean Exit, Real Tests Waiting

The Hogs left the weekend healthy. Christian Turner stayed in after a scary ankle roll. Helfrick returned after getting hit in the wrist.

Nolan Souza led off nearly every lineup he appeared in, a quiet hint about what Friday night could look like.

Next comes Globe Life Field. Big 12 opponents. Real lineups and real consequences.

Dave Van Horn will be back.

But for one weekend, Matt Hobbs ran the dugout, guided the pitching, and didn’t need to call it coaching.

Arkansas heard him anyway.