Guests- Mike Irwin & Connor O’Gara
MBB loses at home to Kentucky, Diamond Hogs Sweep Wright State
Guests- Mike Irwin & Connor O’Gara
MBB loses at home to Kentucky, Diamond Hogs Sweep Wright State
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Guests- Mike Irwin and Connor O’Gara
Tye, Tommy and Chuck recap the loss to Kentucky on Saturday, Baseball’s hot start despite injuries and more!
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FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — It’s getting tough for Dave Van Horn to make a lot of pitcher decisions these days.
Mainly because injuries keep happening.
“Somebody’s going to have to step up or we’re going to have to make some adjustments,” Hogs coach Dave Van Horn said after a 6-2 win Sunday.
After losing the planned opening-day starter in Jaxon Wiggins before the first game, then having reliever Brady Tygart have a problem awaiting a second opinion, reliever Koty Frank made everybody groan Sunday at Baum-Walker.
After throwing five pitches to start the seventh inning, Frank grimaced and grabbed under his right (throwing) shoulder. He then threw a warmup pitch in front of trainers and the pain was clearly obvious.
“It’s not his arm,” Van Horn said. “That’s about all I can tell you.”
The Razorbacks closed a series sweep over the Panthers on a sun-splashed (but windy) afternoon in front of over 9,703 who came looking for a lot to cheer about.
That took awhile.
“One of those games,” Van Horn said. “It took us awhile to figure it out.”
The Hogs didn’t get a run until Caleb Cali scored in the fifth inning to tie the game at 1-1, then they added another in the sixth on a homer by Jace Bohrofen.
In the seventh, Parker Rowland led off with a homer, then Jared Wagner delivered an RBI single followed by Bofrofen’s 2-RBI single and the Hogs cruised to the win with that four-run inning.
Hunter Hollan started and got the win, despite some adventures in the first inning that led to a Panthers’ run that mystifies Van Horn, but not the junior pitcher.
“I’ve been doing that since the first grade,” he said later. “I don’t know if it’s trying to do much or what.”
Van Horn just wants it figured out.
He’s got enough problems with pitching as it is.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Arkansas will finally get some rest.
No doubt the Razorbacks need it riding a three-game losing streak after getting physically hammered in losses for two straight games against Tennessee and Kentucky.
Now they get a break until Thursday when they meet Auburn in the SEC Tournament at 6 p.m.
Hogs coach Eric Musselman doesn’t make excuses, but he probably knows this young team is still figuring out a lot of things and handling the physical grind is part of it.
“We just got fatigued,” freshman Nick Smith Jr. said Saturday after the physical loss to the Wildcats. “We played really hard the hold game. It was just making smart plays throughout the stretch that really hurt us.”
And missing free throws in addition to struggling around the rim on even layups.
“We missed a lot of free throws,” Smith said. “That’s very unacceptable for a team. We’ve got to come in tonight into the gym and work on finishing through contact and free throws.”
The winner will face No. 2 seed Texas A&M in the quarterfinals on Friday at 6 p.m.
Arkansas is 29-29 all-time in the SEC Tournament. This will be just the second time Arkansas has faced Auburn in the SEC Tournament.
The Razorbacks defeated the Tigers, 75-67, in the 2000 title game at Atlanta’s Georgia Dome for the Hogs’ lone SEC Tournament championship. (Arkansas has finished runner-up five times.)
This will be the 11th year the SEC Tournament will be held in Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena. Arkansas is 8-9 all-time in Bridgestone Arena, reaching the finals twice (2015 and 2017) and the semifinals twice (2001 and 2021).
2023 SEC Tournament Schedule
Wednesday, March 8
Game 1: No. 12 South Carolina vs. No. 13 Ole Miss, 6 p.m., SEC Network
Game 2: No. 11 Georgia vs. No. 14 LSU, 8 p.m., SEC Network
Thursday, March 9
Game 3: No. 8 Florida vs. No. 9 Mississippi State, Noon, SEC Network
Game 4: No. 5 Tennessee vs. Winner Game 1, 2 p.m., SEC Network
Game 5: No. 7 Auburn vs. No. 10 Arkansas, 6 p.m., SEC Network
Game 6: No. 6 Vanderbilt vs. Winner Game 2, 8 p.m., SEC Network
Friday, March 10
Game 7: No. 1 Alabama vs. Winner Game 3, Noon, ESPN
Game 8: No. 4 Missouri vs. Winner Game 4, 2 p.m., ESPN
Game 9: No. 2 Texas A&M vs. Winner Game 5, 6 p.m., SEC Network
Game 10: No. 3 Kentucky vs. Winner Game 6, 8 p.m., SEC Network
Saturday, March 11
Game 11: Winner Game 7 vs. Winner Game 8, Noon, ESPN
Game 12: Winner Game 9 vs. Winner Game 10, 2 p.m., ESPN
Sunday, March 12
Championship game, Noon, ESPN
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — No. 8 Arkansas (8-2) blasted three home runs and overpowered Wright State (2-7), 12-6, to clinch its second consecutive weekend series win on Saturday at Baum-Walker Stadium.
Peyton Stovall and Jared Wegner each homered for the third consecutive game, and true freshman Jayson Jones clobbered his second career home run in the Hogs’ series-clinching win.
The Razorback offense pounded the Raider pitching staff for 14 total hits, as seven Arkansas batters finished the ballgame with multiple base knocks.
Stovall’s solo homer in the bottom of the first set the tone offensively. Arkansas would score twice in the frame, tack on five more runs in the second and bring home two more in the third, opening 9-1 advantage entering the fourth inning.
Jace Bohrofen and Caleb Cali both recorded RBI singles in the early offensive onslaught. Bohrofen’s biggest contribution of the day, however, came on the defensive side of the baseball in the bottom of the second inning.
The Razorback captain timed his jump at the wall in right perfectly, robbing Wright State leadoff hitter Justin Riemer of a two-out grand slam. The game-changing catch prevented the Raiders from taking a 4-2 lead in the second and rescued Razorback starter Will McEntire from what would have been a shaky start.
With the defense behind him, McEntire went onto throw five strong innings and pick up his second win of the campaign. The right-hander fanned a season-high six, while allowing three runs (two earned) on eight hits and three walks.
Wegner hit his third home run in as many games in the bottom of the third, clearing the wall in left center for his fifth homer of the young season. The graduate transfer from Creighton finished 2-for-3 with three runs scored, two RBI and a pair of walks, raising his team-leading slash line to .444/.563/.972 through 10 games this year.
The Kearney, Neb., native currently leads the Razorbacks in home runs (5) and RBI (18). He, along with Stovall, has hit a homer in each of the last three games: Illinois State, Wright State.
Stovall, meanwhile, finished 2-for-4 with two RBI and three runs scored, improving his slash line to .353/.465/.676 for the season. The Razorback captain has hit three homers and racked up 10 RBI in nine games played this year.
Right-handed Austin Ledbetter was impressive in relief of McEntire with three scoreless innings on the mound. The Bryant, Ark., emerged from the bullpen and struck out two, allowing just one baserunner via a single in his outing.
Arkansas goes for its first series sweep of the season in tomorrow’s finale against Wright State.
First pitch between the Razorbacks and Raiders is scheduled for 1 p.m. Sunday, March 5, at Baum-Walker Stadium on SEC Network+.
Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Now it’s on to the tournaments and Arkansas coach Eric Musselman is probably glad.
For a coach that thrives in postseason tournaments it may be merciful after an 88-79 loss to Kentucky on Saturday at Bud Walton Arena that wasn’t pretty.
It looked like it could be a lot worse for awhile.
“There was a lid on the rim,” he said later. “That’s what happened.”
That’s the short version.
The story was this team couldn’t make layups or hit consistently from the outside. There was hope at the start when Nick Smith Jr. made a deep corner three-pointer to start the game, but it didn’t take long to fade.
The Razorbacks simply couldn’t make a layup, free throw or many three-pointers. Since all of that was a key part of Musselman’s plan, it’s a problem.
“Our philosophy, especially with this roster, has been to try to draw free throws attempted and to try to score points in the paint,” Musselman said. “Obviously today 2-for-20 around the rim, you’re not going to win a lot of games.”
With a rowdy packed crowd that showed up looking for blood, they never really got it. The game was about as close as you will see to a fistfight, almost from the beginning.
It had the officials trying to get on top of things early and that pretty much continued throughout the game. Davonte Davis was the only player ejected and that came in the second half for a pair of technical fouls.
In the paint, Makhel and Makhi Mitchell along with Kamani Johnson were locked up in hand-to-hand battles with Kentucky’s Oscar Tshiebwe, Damion Collins and Chris Livingston.
But the Wildcats’ player that did the most damage was Antonio Reeves, who scored 37 points on 12-of-17 from the field and 11-of-11 at the free-throw line. He couldn’t miss, it seemed … and he didn’t miss many.

“He played as good as any player I’ve seen since I’ve been coaching here at Arkansas and I can’t remember anybody in the Mountain West that did that to one of our teams with that percentage,” Musselman said about his time at Nevada.
Reeves had him shaking his head.
“How many guys score 37 points on 17 shots?” he asked. “It doesn’t happen.”
It did Saturday. Combine that with the Hogs’ inability to make layups or free throws and they didn’t have a chance.
Smith had season bests in points (25), assists (6) and steals (4). Ricky Council IV had 16 points and 4 rebounds. Point guard Anthony Black scored 14 with 8 rebounds. Jordan Walsh was the only other Hogs’ player in double figures with 10 points (7 rebounds, 2 steals).
The biggest change in momentum came when Davis scored a three-pointer to cut the Wildcats’ lead to three with less than a minute gone in the second.
That was followed by seven seconds of mass confusion. Devo picked up two personals, along with two technical fouls and got thrown out.
“I’d have to go back and look at it,” Smith said later about that sequence of events. We just don’t…No team needs two technicals,” said Smith. “It hurts a lot. Any good player that goes out for a team, it’s gonna take a toll on your team.
“It what it is.”

Hogs Notes
• Arkansas’ starting lineup was Black, Smith, Davis and both of the Mitchell Twins for the first time this year.
• Arkansas won the tip.
• Smith scored the first points of the game, a 3-pointer at 19:14.
• Council was the first Razorback sub.
• Prior to the game, Arkansas honored its lone senior, Johnson. He had three rebounds, two points and a steal in 8:05 played.
• Arkansas only committed six turnovers. It was just the fourth time this season the Hogs have committed single-digit turnovers. Arkansas is 22-5 under Musselman when committing single-digit turnovers.
• On the flip side, Arkansas forced 15 turnovers. The Razorbacks are 12-3 this year when forcing at least 15 turnovers and Arkansas is 50-19 un the Muss era in such games.
• Four Razorbacks scored in double figures. Arkansas is 8-5 this year when four Razorbacks score in double figures but just 37-8 in the Muss era in such games.
• Council scored 16 points. He is just two points shy of 1,000 for his collegiate career. He has scored 513 this year and 485 in two years at Wichita State.
• Kentucky snapped a three-game losing skid to Kentucky, improves to 34-14 in the all-time series and 9-8 versus the Hogs in Fayetteville.
• Arkansas had eight dunks, tying for the second-highest total for the season.
Notes from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.
Eric Musselman doesn’t have an instant fix to Hogs’ overall poor shooting, especially on free throws after losing to Kentucky.
After shooting just 64.7% at free-throw line, Razorbacks freshman has no answer except getting back in gym to practice.
HitThatLine.com is the website for ESPN Arkansas. Listen at 99.5 in Fayetteville, 95.3 FM in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 FM in Hot Springs and 104.3 FM in Harrison.
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