Brady Tygart starts, but Will McEntire delivers enough to clinch series

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Brady Tygart will get most of the headlines, but after throwing 20 pitches in the first inning, he turned things over to Will McEntire did most of the work in Arkansas’ 10-4 win over Texas A&M on Friday night at Baum-Walker Stadium. It clinched the series against the Aggies.

Now the Razorbacks will look for a series sweep Saturday at 11 a.m.

“His breaking ball is usually always good,” Hogs coach Dave Van Horn said later. “I don’t know if he threw much else. He’s got a good changeup now. He has a two-seamer that takes off, but we just wanted to see him go out and compete and kind of get his feet wet again. Kind of give us a little bit of hope, honestly.”

For a pitching staff that has been trying to figure things out most of the season due to injuries and last weekend’s sweep on the road it was a huge, albeit brief, appearance from the sophomore right-hander from Bryant.

Thursday night’s 8-4 win over the Aggies may have been bigger, though.

“Last night was so big for us,” Van Horn said. “Tonight we knew we were going to throw our starter one inning. Then McEntire came in and was getting ’em out. Our hitters did a great job. Our guys fouled off pitches, got hits and scored runs. We wouldn’t give ’em the momentum.”

When they had the momentum in the seventh inning on a two-run homer by Jordan Thompson that cut the Hogs’ lead to 6-4, but it was answered. Ben McLaughlin’s two run homer in the bottom of the inning gave the Hogs an 8-4 lead and they added a couple of more for insurance in the bottom of the inning for the win.

The Hogs’ only homer was by McLaughlin, so they created a lot of it just playing ball. They also got some really good defense.

“The old-school small ball,” Van Horn said. “I’ve had teams that played that a little bit. It’s been a while. Especially down in the order there, we needed to play it. Those guys are more defenders than they are offensive guys. And turn it over to the top, it was good the way we just kept passing it down the line. Everybody did their job.”

Tygart’s brief outing was clean. He didn’t give up any hits, walked just one and was about as good as Van Horn could wanted. McEntire threw 91 pitches, giving up just three earned runs, striking out eight and only walking three.

The Razorbacks can sweep the Aggies when the two teams wrap up their three-game set at 11 a.m. Saturday in a contest that will air on the SEC Network. Neither team has officially announced a starting pitcher, although Schlossnagle said he will likely turn to left-hander Justin Lamkin, and Van Horn ruled out righty Ben Bybee.

Maybe later than expected, Razorbacks’ Sanders picked in NFL Draft

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — It took a little longer than most people projected, but Arkansas’ Drew Sanders finally heard his name called at the NFL Draft in Kansas City, Mo., on Friday night.

Some had projected Sanders to go in the first or early second rounds, but that cooled a little bit. Offensive lineman Ricky Stromberg was also taken in the third round, about where most people figured it was the best-case scenario.

Many more third round picks survive training camp, but Sanders will likely be expected to contribute on special teams while Stromberg isn’t in a bad situation going to Washington.

Sanders was the first Razorback to hear his name called, being selected in the third round (67th overall) by the Denver Broncos on Friday night to extend Arkansas’ streak to 28 consecutive drafts with at least one player being called. Just 30 picks later, another Hog was called when Ricky Stromberg was picked by the Washington Commanders with the 97th overall pick (third round).

Sanders became the first Arkansas linebacker to be selected since Dre Greenlaw in 2019 and the highest selected linebacker since Quinton Caver was taken 55th overall by Philadelphia in 2001. Sanders is the first Razorback taken by Denver since McTelvin Agim was also taken in the third round in the 2020 draft. Pro Football Hall of Famer and former Razorback Steve Atwater was the first ever Hog taken by Denver in 1989.

In his lone season at Arkansas, Sanders was phenomenal in 12 games that earned him unanimous All-America status and became the first Arkansas linebacker to be named First-Team All-America by the Associated Press since Ronnie Caveness in 1964.

Sanders is the first linebacker and eighth player in program history to achieve unanimous All-America status, earning honors from all five outlets used to determine unanimous All-Americans: Associated Press, American Football Coaches Association, Football Writers Association of America, The Sporting News and Walter Camp Football Foundation. He is the first Razorback to earn the nod from all five since running back Darren McFadden in 2003, and the first Arkansas defender to do so since defensive end Billy Ray Smith Jr. in 1982.

Sanders led the Hogs in tackles (103), tackles for loss (13.5) and sacks (9.5) while forcing three fumbles, recovering one and picking off one pass. The junior led the team in tackles in seven games during the 2022 campaign and registered double-digit tackles six times.

He jumped onto the national scene in just his second game on The Hill in a victory over South Carolina, making 11 tackles to go with three tackles for loss, including two sacks, to earn SEC Defensive Player of the Week honors along with national recognition as the Walter Camp National Defensive Player of the Week and Bednarik Award Player of the Week. He was later named the Butkus Award Linebacker of the Month for September.

He became just the second Razorback in history to earn multiple SEC defensive player of the week awards after making 10 tackles, including a half tackle for loss, recovering a fumble and intercepting the first pass of his career in the win over No. 14 Ole Miss. Sanders joined the legendary Quinton Caver, who earned three SEC defensive player of the week recognitions in 2000 before being a second-round pick of the Philadelphia Eagles.

Led by Sanders, the Arkansas defense increased pressure on the quarterback during the 2022 season, setting a school record with 42 sacks. Sanders’ 9.5 sacks matched the seventh-most in a single season by a Razorback and are the most since the late Chris Smith’s 9.5 sacks in 2012.

Stromberg is the first Arkansas center selected since Frank Ragnow was the first pick (20th overall) of the Detroit Lions in the 2018 Draft and first offensive lineman drafted since 2019 when New England took Hjalte Froholdt in the fourth round. The Commanders made Stromberg their first Arkansas pick since taking Kam Curl in the seventh round of the 2020 draft.

A staple of the Arkansas offensive line during his four seasons, Stromberg started his final 25 straight games with 44 overall starts during his career. His senior season capped an impressive career as he became the fourth Razorback to earn the SEC’s Jacobs Blocking Trophy — given annually to the league’s top offensive lineman — joining Shawn Andrews (2002, 2003), Jonathan Luigs (2007) and Sebastian Tretola (2015).

Stromberg was named an honorable mention All-American by Pro Football Focus and picked up First-Team All-SEC status from the Associated Press, the league’s coaches, PFF and USA Today. He helped pave the way for an offense that gained 6,128 yards — second-most in school history — and running back Raheim Sanders to rush for 1,443 yards. Stromberg helped the Hogs’ running game eclipse 3,000 yards for the 10th time in school history, powered by nine games of 200+ yards on the ground.

He picked up a pair of SEC Offensive Lineman of the Week accolades after helping Arkansas rush for 295 yards and gain 457 total yards in a win over South Carolina and a second for blocking for an offense that gained 503 total yards, including 335 rushing, in a victory vs. Ole Miss.

As a junior, Stromberg started all 13 games at center on his way to earning Second-Team All-SEC from the Associated Press and third-team honors from PFF and Phil Steele. He blocked for an offense that featured four players to gain 500+ rushing yards, a feat that had not happened at Arkansas since 1975.

During the pandemic-shortened season of 2020, he played in nine games and started eight under first-year coach Sam Pittman. Stromberg’s career started quickly in 2019 when he started his second career game at left guard as a true freshman. He started the final 11 games that season at guard before moving to center as a sophomore.

The NFL Draft continues Saturday with rounds 4-7 beginning at 11 a.m. on ABC, ESPN and NFL Network.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

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Razorbacks announce Brady Tygart starting on mound tonight

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — It’s not really surprising that Arkansas social media released a starter for tonight’s game at 6 p.m. against Texas A&M a little early or that it’s Brady Tygart, who has been out with an injury for a couple of months.

The players have said he would play this week and Razorbacks coach Dave Van Horn said after the loss at Missouri State that he might start Tygart, who had an MCL sprain of his elbow March 1 and has slowly worked his way back into playing.

“Brady’s obviously a dude,” freshman Ben Bybee said Tuesday. ” He’s super excited and working really hard to get back to where he is right now.”

It provides a shot in the arm for a pitching staff that has been struggling with injuries since projected No. 1 starter Jaxon Wiggins was lost for the season before it ever started. They’ve been trying to figure it out since then.

“He threw a ton of innings for us in high-leverage situations last year, so I mean I think everyone’s pumped,” Hagen Smith said after Thursday’s 7-5 win in the series opener at Baum-Walker Stadium.

You wonder how long it will take for him to be ready to live up to last year’s All-SEC Freshman status. Maybe the initial projection of 5-6 seeks that turned into now eight weeks was for more preparation and we really have no idea what’s been going on in practices and how he’s been re-habbed.

Considering the move to bring in Smith in the opener (he ended up working the last four innings, giving up just a couple of hits) caught some by surprise, we honestly have little to no idea how Tygart has been prepared.

But pressure situations is something he’s dealt with before. After the Hogs ended a four-game losing streak to finally get a win, Tygart comes along at a good time. After all, postseason starts now in less than a month.

Tonight’s second game is set for 6 p.m. (depending on the weather in the area here) at Baum-Walker Stadium.

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Bohrofen’s homer, Grimes’ big throw lifts Razorbacks to win over A&M

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Jace Bohrofen came through with the go-ahead two-run home run in the bottom of the eighth to lift No. 7 Arkansas (31-11, 12-7 SEC) past Texas A&M (25-17, 9-10 SEC), 7-5, on Thursday night at Baum-Walker Stadium.

That’s the simple lead. Maybe the biggest play, though, was a throw from left fielder Hunter Grimes to catcher Parker Rowland that got a run-saving double play with the scored tied, 5-5.

“The moment wasn’t too big for (Grimes) and he knew before the ball was pitched exactly what he was going to do with it,” Razorbacks coach Dave Van Horn said later. “The good defenders are thinking about it and they’re thinking, ‘If they hit it to me, this is what I’m going to do.’ And there it was. He came firing in, momentum, caught it, released it as quick as you can. I mean, that’s about as good as it gets. Throw was about as nice as it could be. You could go all year, and you won’t see a play like that.”

Bohrofen’s game-winning blast helped the Razorbacks snap their season-long four-game losing streak. The Hogs will look to clinch their fourth SEC home weekend series win of the season in tomorrow night’s game against the Aggies.

He’s on a roll right now, hitting his 11th homer of the year.

“He hits lefties just as good as he hits righties if you look at the numbers,” Van Horn said. “Super job hitting a breaking ball. Maybe he felt like he was going to get it, or he just saw it. He didn’t hit it on the sweet spot, but he hit it solid, and we knew it was gone when it left the bat.”

Arkansas was all over Texas A&M starter Troy Wansing, jumping out to a 5-0 lead in the second inning. John Bolton’s RBI single with the bases loaded set the table for Peyton Stovall’s two-out, two-strike grand slam later in the frame.

Staked with a five-run lead, Razorback starter Hunter Hollan battled for four innings. The left-hander was lifted after allowing four runs on six hits and two walks as the Aggies fought back to close their deficit to one in the fourth.

Texas A&M tied the game in the top half of the fifth on a sacrifice fly after back-to-back single to start the inning. Reliever Dylan Carter would escape without further damage, however, before handing the ball off to Hagen Smith.

Smith was superb in relief, emerging from the bullpen in the sixth and tossing four shutout innings. The Razorbacks’ wildcard struck out four while allowing just two hits and issuing two free passes during his lockdown appearance.

Left fielder Hunter Grimes gave Smith a lift with the defensive play of the game. Grimes recorded an outfield assist in the top of the eighth, catching a fly ball in left and firing home to beat the runner and turn a run-saving double play.

Smith’s work on the mound as well as Grimes’ defensive wizardry in left paved the way for Bohrofen’s heroics at the plate in the bottom of the eighth. After Caleb Cali’s leadoff walk, the Razorback captain hit an 0-1 pitch over the wall in right to put Arkansas up for good.

Smith sat down Texas A&M in order in the top of the ninth to preserve Arkansas’ 7-5 series-opening win. The sophomore earned the win to improve to 6-1 and lowered his season ERA to a team-best 2.64 over 47 2/3 innings.

Bohrofen finished 3-for-4 at the plate with a double, a home run and two RBI to raise his team-leading slash line to .372/.494/.693 on the season. He also drew a walk, recording one of the Razorbacks’ 14 base on balls in the win.

First pitch in the second game of the series between the Hogs and Aggies is scheduled for 6 p.m. Friday on ESPNU with Tom Hart (play-by-play) and Chris Burke (analyst) on the call from inside Baum-Walker Stadium.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.