Razorbacks Must Win Twice Sunday to Survive Lawrence Regional

There’s no safety net left for Arkansas baseball.

One loss Saturday night in Lawrence, Kansas, and the Razorbacks find themselves squarely in survive-or-go-home territory.

Arkansas, the No. 2 seed in the Lawrence Regional at 40-21 overall, dropped a 5-3 decision to host and No. 1 seed Kansas on Saturday.

Now the Hogs have to run the table, winning twice in one day, just to keep their 2026 season going.

First up is a noon matchup Sunday against No. 4 seed Northeastern at Hoglund Ballpark in Lawrence, Kansas. Win that one, and Arkansas turns right back around to face Kansas again at 5 p.m..

Lose to the Huskies, and it’s over.

That’s what the loser’s bracket looks like at this stage of the NCAA Tournament. There’s no margin for error and no days off.

Tough Loss That Didn’t Have to Happen

The Razorbacks didn’t go down without a fight Saturday.

Staff ace Hunter Dietz delivered one of the finest outings of his career, striking out a career-high 14 batters across 6 1/3 innings while scattering five hits and two walks.

But Dietz also allowed four earned runs, and the seventh and eighth innings proved to be the difference.

Kansas pushed across go-ahead and insurance runs in those two frames and didn’t look back.

Camden Kozeal collected multiple hits for Arkansas and Reese Robinett smashed a two-run homer, giving the Hogs life in what was a competitive game throughout.

It just wasn’t enough against a Kansas team playing in front of its home crowd that was loud, even though it was about like a March crowd in Baum-Walker Stadium.

Hunter Dietz
Hunter Dietz | Arkansas Communications

The Path Is Clear and Narrow

The math isn’t complicated.

Arkansas has to beat Northeastern in the morning and then beat Kansas in the evening on Sunday. A trip to the Super Regionals requires both wins. Anything less and the 2026 season ends in Kansas.

The Hogs already know they can compete in this field.

They knocked off No. 3 seed Missouri State 9-5 in their tournament opener Friday, using a big fifth inning to pull away. They pushed to a 5-3 lead over Kansas on Saturday before the Jayhawks pulled away late.

Dave Van Horn’s team hasn’t been overmatched this weekend as much as they just haven’t gotten the late innings to go their way when it mattered most.

Who Are the Northeastern Huskies?

The Huskies come in at 39-21 overall and 22-8 in Colonial Athletic Association play. They’re a team that’s been tested this weekend too.

Northeastern dropped their opener to Kansas 6-3 before bouncing back Saturday with a 5-1 win over Missouri State to earn another shot.

Sunday’s noon game will be the first ever meeting between the two programs, according to available series history.

Northeastern is in their 12th season under head coach Mike Glavine, who carries a 396-241-1 record in Boston, including a 186-92 mark in CAA play.

This isn’t a team short on postseason experience. Last season, the Huskies went 49-11 and reached the NCAA Tournament Regional. They know how to win when the calendar flips to late May.

Starting pitchers for both teams have not been announced.

The Razorbacks enter as heavy favorites.

BetSaracen has Arkansas at -275 on the moneyline with Northeastern listed at +210. The over/under sits at 11.5 with Arkansas listed as a -2.5 spread favorite.

The sportsbook’s Double R prop menu also features Camden Kozeal over 1.5 hits and over 0.5 runs scored at +155, Maika Niu, TJ Pompey and Nolan Souza all recording 1-plus hits at +185, and Zach Stewart and Reese Robinett combining for 2-plus RBI at +165.

Odds are a snapshot of the moment but what happens on the field at Hoglund Ballpark on Sunday afternoon is entirely up to the Razorbacks.

After a season that’s included trips to the SEC Tournament and an 18-win conference slate, Arkansas still has a chance to keep going. It just has to do it twice.

How to Watch/Listen

  • When: Sunday, May 31, 12 p.m.
  • Where: Hoglund Ballpark, Lawrence, Kansas (capacity: 2,500)
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Radio: Learfield Razorback Sports Network across the state — Phil Elson on the call
  • Online: HitThatLine.com (audio only)
  • Fort Smith: ESPN Arkansas 95.3
  • Hot Springs/Mena: ESPN Arkansas 96.3
  • Harrison-Mountain Home: ESPN Arkansas 104.3

BetSaracen Odds

Visit BetSaracen.com and click the Arkansas Specials tab. Must be 21+. If you have a gambling problem, call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit 1800gambler.net.

  • Arkansas moneyline: -275
  • Northeastern moneyline: +210
  • Spread: Arkansas -2.5
  • Over/Under: 11.5
  • Double R Props:
  • Camden Kozeal OVER 1.5 hits and OVER 0.5 runs scored: +155
  • Maika Niu, TJ Pompey and Nolan Souza all to record 1+ hits: +185
  • Zach Stewart and Reese Robinett 2+ combined RBI: +165

 

Razorbacks’ Late-Inning Collapse Sends Hogs to Brink of Elimination

The Razorbacks did everything right for seven innings.

They got a gutsy start from their ace, scratched out runs when they needed to and held a lead deep into a tight ballgame on the road.

Then the eighth inning swallowed them whole.

Augusto Mungarrieta’s solo homer to left field capped a stunning Kansas comeback and handed Arkansas a 5-3 loss that nobody in the Razorback dugout saw coming when they grabbed a 3-1 lead in the fifth.

Now the Hogs are one loss from watching their season end in Lawrence, a regional they never wanted to be playing in as a visitor to begin with.

This one’s going to sting. The Razorbacks entered with a 40-20 record, had their best pitcher on the mound and were facing a Kansas team that had never hosted an NCAA Regional before.

The stage was set for Arkansas to punch its ticket to the regional final. It’s punching a ticket into must-win territory.

Hunter Dietz came in carrying a 7-3 record and a 3.40 ERA. He’d thrown just 21 pitches the previous Friday after taking a comebacker off his shin against Texas, so the plan was to have him fully armed and ready.

For five innings, that plan looked brilliant. Dietz matched Kansas righty Mason Cook pitch for pitch in a tense, low-scoring duel and the Hogs backed him with the biggest swing of the game.

Robinett’s Homer Gave Arkansas Lead It Needed, Just Not Long Enough

Reese Robinett stepped up in the fifth inning and launched a two-run shot to center field, scoring Carter Rutenbar and giving the Hogs a 3-1 cushion.

It was the kind of swing Arkansas needed in a game where runs were nearly impossible to come by.

Cook had recorded 10 of his first 12 outs on the ground — he wasn’t giving anything away — so Robinett’s homer felt like a genuine turning point.

The Razorbacks had scratched out their first run in the second inning the hard way.

Zack Stewart reached on a fielding error, moved up on a TJ Pompey groundout and scored when Nolan Souza grounded out to first.

It wasn’t glamorous, but it was a run. Arkansas was doing what good teams do in close games of just finding a way.

Kansas tied it in the third on a Tyson Leblanc groundout that scored Dylan Schlotterback, who’d tripled to center.

The game was deadlocked heading into the fifth. Then Robinett went deep and the Hogs had what felt like a working lead.

But Dietz was sitting at 94 pitches through five innings with a season high of 107.

The math was getting complicated for Dave Van Horn with a tied game on his hands and limited runway left with his ace.

Kansas Took Lead and Arkansas Never Got It Back

The fifth inning giveth and the fifth inning taketh away.

Leblanc answered Robinett’s blast with a two-run homer of his own to left field, scoring Brady Ballinger and knotting things back up at 3-3.

Just like that, the Razorbacks’ cushion was gone and Dietz was running out of pitches.

Kansas then turned to reliever Riane Ritter, and the Hogs couldn’t do a thing with him.

Ritter retired seven straight Arkansas hitters going 7-up, 7-down against the Razorbacks after entering the game.

The Arkansas lineup went cold at the worst possible moment.

The seventh inning put Kansas in front for good. The Jayhawks loaded the bases and Tyson Owens drew a walk to plate a run, nudging Kansas ahead 4-3.

Arkansas answered by sending the top of its order to the plate in the eighth but Kansas brought in Bode Rahe, and the Hogs couldn’t solve him either.

Damian Ruiz drew a walk but Ryder Helfrick and Zack Stewart both struck out to strand him. The Razorbacks came up empty when they needed runs the most.

Then Mungarrieta stepped in and ended it. One swing to left field, one run scored and suddenly it was 5-3 with three outs standing between Arkansas and a loser’s bracket nightmare.

The Hogs went quietly in the ninth. TJ Pompey struck out, Nolan Souza grounded out and Maika Niu grounded out to short and just like that, a winnable game was gone.

Arkansas Can’t Afford Another Mistake

There’s no cushion left.

The Razorbacks drop into the loser’s bracket of the Lawrence Regional and have to win every single game from here if they want to keep playing.

One more loss and it’s over with a hard landing for a 40-20 team that battled through a brutal SEC schedule and still believed it had enough to make a deep NCAA Tournament run.

The story of this loss isn’t complicated.

Arkansas held the lead, its offense went cold against Ritter and then Rahe and Kansas capitalized with two big home runs at exactly the right moments.

Leblanc tied it. Mungarrieta broke it open. The Razorbacks had no answer for either of them.

The Hogs have shown all season they can play with anyone. They’ve got the talent and the résumé to back it up.

But this is bracket baseball and in this format, one bad night can define your entire postseason. Saturday in Lawrence was that night for Arkansas.

What happens next is all that matters.

Razorbacks’ Jallow-Lockhart Misses 800m Collegiate Record by a Hundredth

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — It was the closest of misses on one of college track’s biggest stages.

Sanu Jallow-Lockhart of the No. 7 Arkansas Razorbacks crossed the finish line in the 800 meters at John McDonnell Field with a time of 1:57.74 on Saturday.

The collegiate record of 1:57.73 — set by Texas A&M’s Athing Mu back in 2021 — stayed intact by just one hundredth of a second.

One hundredth. That’s thinner than a heartbeat.

Still, what Jallow-Lockhart did on Saturday wasn’t a loss. Her time wiped out the John McDonnell Field facility record of 2:00.80, which Michigan’s Geena Gail had set at the 2009 NCAA Championships held in Fayetteville.

She also bettered her own previous Arkansas and Gambian national record of 1:58.82 set earlier this season. On top of that, her 1:57.74 ranks as the fourth-fastest time in the world in 2026.

The second-best time in the entire NCAA West 800m field that day was 2:00.65 by Stanford’s Juliette Whittaker, more than three seconds behind Jallow-Lockhart.

She wasn’t alone in punching a ticket to Eugene, either. Teammate Analisse Batista also advanced to the NCAA Championships with a time of 2:00.68 in the 800m, making it a double for the Hogs in that event.

Razorbacks’ Relay Rolls Through the Field

If the 800m was the individual highlight, the 4x400m relay was the team moment of the day.

Jallow-Lockhart anchored the Razorbacks to a relay win with a 49.58 split, and the team’s final time of 3:21.83 broke the facility record of 3:21.92, a mark Arkansas itself had set in 2024, which was a collegiate record at the time.

The final time now sits at No. 3 on the all-time collegiate list, behind the Arkansas collegiate record of 3:17.96 from 2024 and the 3:20.04 the Hogs ran to win the 2026 SEC title.

Before Jallow-Lockhart took the baton for the anchor leg, Sanaria Butler (51.31), Batista (51.06) and Kaylyn Brown (49.88) each handled their splits.

Iowa finished second in the first section at 3:28.53 and Iowa State third at 3:28.81. A lightning delay then stopped the meet for about 30 minutes before the second section ran.

Texas (3:27.03), USC (3:27.80) and Nebraska (3:28.40) all finished behind the Razorbacks’ winning time.

That relay win also counts as the fifth facility record the Hogs have broken this season.

Earlier in the year, Arkansas set facility marks at Baylor (3:22.06), Texas A&M (3:24.64), LSU (3:23.68) and Auburn (3:20.04 at the SEC Championships).

Brown and Butler Give Arkansas Two More in 400m

The sprint events produced even more good news for Arkansas.

Kaylyn Brown led the entire 400m field with a time of 49.77, which broke the John McDonnell Field record of 49.93 set by Razorback Nickisha Pryce in 2024.

Butler joined her in the Eugene field by winning her own section in 50.49. Sisters Amirah and Arianna Sharpe also competed in separate heats, posting times of 52.06 and 52.47, respectively.

In the 100m hurdles, Gabriella Cunning turned in a strong performance.

She’d run 13.18 in the prelims, then came back with a 13.02 (+1.8 wind) in the quarterfinals to place third in her section and earn a spot at nationals.

Maria Arboleda added a high jump entry to the Eugene list by clearing 6-1.5 (1.87m), which moved her to No. 3 on the Arkansas all-time list.

Taejha Badal finished eighth in her section of the 200m with a 23.40.

Nine Entries Heading to Eugene

When the final results were sorted, the Hogs had put together a strong day.

Nine entries from eight athletes across six events will represent Arkansas at the NCAA Championships in Eugene.

The 4x400m relay team of Butler, Batista, Brown and Jallow-Lockhart is included in that group, along with Brown and Butler in the individual 400m, Jallow-Lockhart and Batista in the 800m, Cunning in the 100m hurdles, Saira Prince and Morgan Herbst in the 400m hurdles and Arboleda in the high jump.

The NCAA Championships in Eugene will be the next stop, and after Saturday’s performances at John McDonnell Field, the Razorbacks arrive with one of the best résumés in the country heading into the meet.

Watch-Listen: Razorbacks Face No. 1 Kansas in Lawrence Regional

No. 2-seeded Arkansas keeps their NCAA Tournament run alive Saturday afternoon when they square off against No. 1-seeded Kansas in the Lawrence Regional.

First pitch at Hoglund Park in Lawrence, Kansas, is set for 5 p.m., and the game’s on ESPN2 and WatchESPN.

Fans statewide will also be able to listen to the game on the Razorback Sports Network on ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

It’s a winner’s bracket game that could go a long way toward deciding who advances out of the Lawrence Regional and keeps their road to Omaha rolling.

Quick-Reference Game Info

  • Who: No. 2-seed Arkansas Razorbacks (40-20, 17-13 SEC) vs. No. 1-seed Kansas Jayhawks (43-16, 22-8 Big 12)
  • When: Saturday, 5 p.m.
  • Where: Hoglund Park — Lawrence, Kansas
  • TV/Stream: ESPN2 and streamed on ESPN+
  • Radio: ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home

Coming Off Regional Opener Win

Arkansas got its NCAA Tournament run started with a 9-5 win over Missouri State on Friday night, rallying from a 3-0 deficit with eight unanswered runs.

Gabe Gaeckle got the start and allowed those three early runs before Steele Eaves, Parker Coil and Ethan McElvain came in to hold Missouri State scoreless the rest of the way.

The Hogs now turn the page to a tougher challenge in Kansas, the regional’s top seed and host.

Dietz Gets the Ball

Razorbacks coach Dave Van Horn named lefty ace Hunter Dietz as the Razorbacks’ starter for Saturday’s game.

Dietz carries a 3.40 ERA with 117 strikeouts against just 29 walks across 79.1 innings pitched this season, posting a 7-3 record.

Kansas hasn’t announced a starter, but the Jayhawks will counter with a rotation that’s been solid throughout a strong Big 12 season.

Kansas Is No Easy Out

The Jayhawks enter Saturday’s matchup riding a four-game winning streak that included winning the Big 12 Tournament title.

Kansas took care of No. 4 seed Northeastern 6-3 in the regional opener to earn the right to host the Hogs in Game 4.

Jayhawks coach Dan Fitzgerald is in his fourth season in Lawrence. During his tenure, he’s built a 142-88 record overall and a 65-49 mark in Big 12 play.

A Series With Some History

The two programs don’t meet very often.

Arkansas and Kansas have faced off just 23 times since 1994, with the Razorbacks holding a 17-6 advantage in the all-time series.

Saturday’s game will be the first meeting between the two programs in 15 years with the last came on March 5, 2011, when Arkansas beat Kansas 4-2 at Baum-Walker Stadium.

BetSaracen Odds

For fans who like to follow the lines, Arkansas is listed as the favorite on the moneyline at -135, with Kansas coming in at +110 at BetSaracen.

Some player props are also available through the BetSaracen app, including Maika Niu going over 0.5 extra-base hits and over 0.5 RBI at +155, Ryder Helfrick going over 1.5 hits and over 0.5 runs scored at +175 and TJ Pompey going over 1.5 hits and over 0.5 runs scored at +275. Additional props can be found on the BetSaracen app.

You must be at least 21 years of age to use BetSaracen. If you have a gambling problem, call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit 1800gambler.net.

What’s Next in Regional

The bracket keeps moving on Sunday regardless of Saturday’s result.

The loser of Game 4 between Arkansas and Kansas will face the winner of Game 3 (Missouri State vs. Northeastern) at noon on Sunday, with the survivor of that game facing the Game 4 winner at 5 p.m. Sunday.

If a seventh game is needed, it’s set for Monday.

Arkansas Survived Toughest Test Friday Before Facing Kansas

Don’t sleep on what the Razorbacks just got through Friday night.

Missouri State had Arkansas uncomfortable early and often in a 9-5 Arkansas win that wasn’t nearly as smooth as the final score might suggest to some.

The history between these two programs has a way of making things messy, and Friday was no different. Dave Van Horn wasn’t sugarcoating anything.

The Hogs’ dugout wasn’t exactly buzzing with confidence early, and that’s coming from the coach himself.

“It was kind of quiet, but we kept talking to them and saying ‘we’ve got plenty of time,'” Van Horn said.

That’s the kind of game Missouri State has made a habit of delivering against Arkansas. Van Horn said the outcome was about what he expected before the first pitch.

“I thought it was pretty much the game the coaches thought we were going to have,” Van Horn said. “It was going to be tight, we were going to have to score.”

That cuts both ways, though. The Bears know the Hogs and the Hogs know the Bears, and that tends to raise the level of difficulty on both sides.

Kansas is a different situation entirely. The Jayhawks are a team Arkansas hasn’t had that kind of ongoing back-and-forth with, which can work in the Razorbacks’ favor today.

Van Horn Knew What Was Coming

Starting pitcher Gabe Gaeckle gave up a home run on the second pitch of the game, and Missouri State grabbed a 2-0 lead before most fans had settled into their seats.

Arkansas then gifted the Bears a third run on an error that allowed a runner to advance and come home on a safety squeeze.

Van Horn was clearly grateful Gaeckle didn’t let it spiral further.

“It was huge for Gaeckle to get us four innings,” Van Horn said. “Didn’t have great stuff, didn’t have command, but he gave us four.”

He knew it might have looked a lot worse early.

“It could’ve been 6, 7 to nothing before we had a chance to get him out, really,” Van Horn said. “But he showed his stuff got a little bit better and gave us a chance to win. I told him that in front of the whole team, I appreciated his effort.”

The bullpen then took over and delivered.

Steele Eaves got six outs, Coil got four and Ethan McElvain closed it out over the final inning and two-thirds on just 22 pitches, 16 of which were strikes.

The Fifth Inning Changed Everything

Arkansas trailed 3-0 heading into the fifth before a six-run frame flipped the game.

Damian Ruiz got it started with a single back up the middle and Van Horn made sure to point that out in his postgame comments.

“Yeah, he got the big hit to get that thing rolling,” Van Horn said. “Hit a ball extremely hard – they had that little shift on for him, but he split them there kind of up the middle, up the six hole. We needed it.”

Ruiz had struggled at the plate earlier in the day, and Van Horn acknowledged the redemption angle.

“He struck out on a curveball and was really frustrated earlier,” Van Horn said. “But for him to get that hit, that was big.”

From there, Ryder Helfrick doubled in a pair, Zack Stewart plated one and Maika Nui lit up a relief pitcher with an RBI-double before Ruiz capped the rally with a run-scoring fielder’s choice. Nui finished 4-for-4 with four RBI.

Why the Bears Were a Real Problem

Van Horn was blunt when he talked about what Missouri State brought to the table. The history between these programs is full of wild, tight games and he rattled off the details without hesitation.

“The games we’ve played against them have been crazy,” Van Horn said. “The first game we lost in that extra innings, they walked us off with a home run, 13-12 or whatever the score was. Then the game we beat them in Fayetteville, it was like 2-2 going into the eighth and we scored like eight runs. Just knew it was going to be a big game.”

He was also complimentary of what Missouri State puts on the field offensively. “They’ve got a really good lineup. Look at the numbers, the home runs, batting average, the experience, size – there’s a lot to that offense.”

One Bears hitter in particular has made life especially difficult for the Hogs over the years. Van Horn didn’t dance around it when asked about Bryce Cermenelli.

“He kills us, let’s just say it. The guy wears us out,” Van Horn said.

Now Comes Kansas

TJ Pompey was quietly one of the best players on the field Friday, making back-to-back defensive stops in the eighth inning to end a Missouri State bases-loaded threat while also scoring twice and driving in a run. Van Horn pointed to a line-drive catch by Pompey as a turning point.

“If the ball gets by him, that’s two in and probably runners at first and third and two outs. Who knows what would’ve happened there, all of a sudden we’re down a lot,” Van Horn said.

With that behind them, the Razorbacks now face a Kansas team that beat Northeastern 6-3 earlier Friday. McElvain’s low pitch count could give Van Horn options out of the bullpen Saturday, though the head coach was characteristically understated about it.

“We’ll just see how he feels tomorrow,” Van Horn said. “I think he threw, what, 22 pitches? He’s a big ol’ boy, he’ll be okay.”

Eaves, who was one of the bullpen heroes Friday, has his eyes wide open about what Kansas brings.

“I also think they’re a really good team and from the first pitch, get after them,” Eaves said. “They’ve got something to prove, they’re going to bring energy, they’re going to bring juice.”

The Hogs got through the team that knew them best Friday night. Now they’ve got to handle one that doesn’t — and in tournament baseball, that can be a very different kind of challenge.

Razorbacks Rally Past Missouri State 9-5 in Regional Opener

LAWRENCE, Kan. — Arkansas wasn’t sharp early, but got the job done when it counted most.

The No. 2 seed Razorbacks used a five-run fifth inning to flip the script on the Missouri State Bears and walked away with a 9-5 victory to open the 2026 Lawrence Regional on Friday night.

The two teams weren’t strangers heading into first pitch having already played twice during the regular season, splitting the series. Missouri State won the first matchup 15-14 in Springfield while Arkansas took the rematch 12-4 at Baum-Walker Stadium.

The Razorbacks have now avoided an opening-round regional loss for more than a decade.

Arkansas hasn’t dropped the first game of an NCAA Regional since 2013, and the team kept that streak very much intact Friday night.

Bears Strike First — Twice

Missouri State wasted no time making Arkansas uncomfortable. In the very first at-bat of the game, Bears second baseman Bryce Cermenelli turned on a pitch and sent it over the left-field wall for a solo home run. That made it 1-0 Bears right out of the gate.

Things got messier from there.

Later in the same inning, Caden Bogenpohl singled to center to score Taeg Gollert, who’d reached second base on a wild pitch.

Arkansas starter Gabe Gaeckle got out of the inning without further damage, but the Razorbacks were already playing from behind at 2-0.

Gaeckle was making his first appearance against Missouri State in this series. He carried a 6-3 record and a 3.99 ERA into the start.

Missouri State countered with lefty Max Knight, who came in at 6-3 with a 4.69 ERA. Knight had faced Arkansas twice during the regular season and allowed five earned runs across just 2⅔ combined innings in those outings.

Knight looked much sharper Friday. Through three innings he’d faced 13 batters and struck out six of them.

Arkansas managed to get a runner into scoring position in the third inning but couldn’t push anyone across.

Missouri State Builds the Lead

The Bears kept adding on in the fourth inning. A fielder’s choice off a sacrifice bunt brought home Carter Bergman to push the lead to 3-0.

Zack Stewart’s fielding error on a ball hit to right field helped set up the play.

TJ Pompey made a heads-up defensive play later in the fourth to cut off what could’ve been an even bigger inning, saving a pair of runs on a sharp-hit ball. But Arkansas still trudged off the field trailing 3-0 with five innings played.

The Razorbacks weren’t hitting much at all. Strikeouts were piling up and the offense looked stuck. Then came the fifth.

The Fifth Inning Changes Everything

Missouri State pulled Knight after he got the first out of the bottom of the fifth, bringing in Brock Lucas to try and keep the lead intact. That decision backfired quickly.

Damian Ruiz singled to center. Camden Kozeal walked to put two runners on. Then Ryder Helfrick laced a double to right field, scoring Ruiz and sending Kozeal to third to make it 3-2. Stewart grounded out to first but that scored Kozeal to tie the game at three.

That’s when Arkansas took the lead for good. Pompey singled to left to score Helfrick and put the Razorbacks up 4-3. Nolan Souza walked to load the bases.

Missouri State went to its bullpen again, bringing in Tyler Charlton, but Maika Niu greeted him with a two-run double to left that chased Pompey home and pushed the lead to 5-3.

Owen Slater came on next and Reese Robinett singled to right to score Souza and make it 6-3. Ruiz grounded into a fielder’s choice that scored Niu for the seventh run of the inning.

By the time the dust settled, Arkansas had batted around and scored five runs on the board in a single inning to take a 7-3 lead.

Niu and Razorbacks Keep Rolling

Maika Niu had himself a night. He wasn’t done after his fifth-inning double. In the sixth, Niu singled to left to score Stewart and push the lead to 8-3.

Then in the eighth, with Missouri State having clawed back to trail 8-5, Niu delivered again with a double to right-center that scored Pompey and sealed the win.

Missouri State did make a run in the eighth inning, getting two runners home on a double by Curry Sutherland to cut the deficit to 8-5.

Ethan McElvain came on out of the bullpen to replace Parker Coil and limit the damage before Niu’s insurance double in the bottom half put the game away.

Gaeckle gave way to Steele Eaves to start the fifth inning. Eaves worked through the seventh before Coil and then McElvain took over.

The Arkansas bullpen held Missouri State to just two runs over the final four frames to secure the win.

With the victory, Arkansas advances to the winner’s bracket of the Lawrence Regional and will face Kansas at 5 p.m. Saturday.

For the Razorbacks, it wasn’t always pretty but they’re still playing. That’s what counts at this point.

479 Equipment Ruscin & Zach May 29

Getting the NCAA baseball tournament started and other Friday random stuff.

Former Razorback James Teague Previewing Gabe Gaeckle on Mound First

Hogs don’t go with normal Friday starter to start NCAA Regional instead putting Gabe Gaeckle out first and Missouri State hasnt faced him as a starter.

Watch-Listen: Razorbacks Can’t Lose Again Now Facing UCLA Friday

Arkansas came a long way to get here. Now they’ve got to win or go home.

Arkansas dropped a heartbreaker Thursday night at Devon Park in Oklahoma City, falling 5-3 to Nebraska in 10 innings in the program’s first-ever Women’s College World Series appearance.

The loss drops the No. 5 seed Hogs into the loser’s bracket, where they’ll face No. 8 seed UCLA Friday at approximately 8:30 p.m. on ESPN.

One more defeat and the season’s over.

Tough Exit in Extra Innings

The Razorbacks had plenty of fight in them.

Outfielder Kailey Wyckoff gave Arkansas the early edge with a two-run homer in the second inning, and the Hogs carried that lead into the fourth before Nebraska tied it up.

Both teams then traded runs in the eighth to sit deadlocked at 3-3 heading into extras.

It was Nebraska cleanup hitter Ava Kuszak who ended it, launching a two-run walk-off blast over the center field wall in the bottom of the 10th before a WCWS record crowd of more than 12,600 fans.

Between Wyckoff’s homer and Kuszak’s walk-off, right-hander Payton Burnham had been dominant in relief, retiring 12 straight Huskers before Nebraska center fielder Hannah Coor tied the game with a solo shot in the eighth.

“I thought it was a big time World Series game that we just were not on the winning end of,” coach Courtney Deifel said. “I was proud of our players’ fight and I was proud of how poised they were on this stage. We will turn the page and get ready to fight our butts off.”

What Arkansas Is Up Against

UCLA isn’t a program you want to see in an elimination game.

The Bruins own 12 national championships — the most in Division I softball history — and have made 34 WCWS appearances, also the most all-time.

They fell to top-seed Alabama 6-3 in their opener and carry a 52-9 record into Friday.

This UCLA lineup has been unlike anything the sport’s seen.

The Bruins are the only team in college softball history to hit more than 200 home runs in a season, sitting at 202. NCAA home run leader Megan Grant has slugged 41 this year while Jordan Woolery has added 34.

On the mound, righty Taylor Tinsley leads the Bruins’ staff with a 3.14 ERA across 221 innings. She’s struck out 184 batters in 46 appearances while walking 86.

Burnham gets the ball for Arkansas. She’s 14-3 with a 1.90 ERA and showed Thursday she can lock hitters down in a big spot.

The Razorbacks showed they belong on this stage. Friday night, they’ll have to prove it again with their season riding on every pitch.

Watch and Listen: Razorbacks-Missouri State Rubber Game in NCAA Regional

It’s tournament time in Lawrence, and the Arkansas Razorbacks are ready to get the road to Omaha started.

The Hogs are entering the NCAA Tournament as the No. 2 seed in the Lawrence Regional and open postseason play Friday against the No. 3-seeded Missouri State Bears at 5 p.m.

The game will be played at Hoglund Ballpark in Lawrence, Kansas and televised on ESPNU. It’s the first step in what Arkansas hopes is a long postseason run.

The Razorbacks bring a 39-20 overall record into the regional, going 17-13 in SEC play. Missouri State checks in at 34-19 on the year with a 20-10 mark in Conference USA.

This won’t be the first time these two programs have seen each other this season. It’ll actually be the third.

Missouri State won a wild extra-inning game on March 31 by a score of 15-14. Arkansas turned things around on April 21 with a 12-4 victory at Baum-Walker Stadium.

The series is tied 1-1 this season, which makes Friday’s matchup the rubber game of a season-long rivalry.

Over the full history of the series, Arkansas leads 60-32 in 92 total meetings. Under coach Dave Van Horn, the Hogs are 22-13 against Missouri State.

Van Horn’s counterpart on the Missouri State side, Joey Hawkins, is in his second year leading the program in Springfield, Mo. Hawkins has compiled a 64-44 overall record with a 37-18 record in Conference USA play.

Before the NCAA Tournament, the Hogs made a strong run through the SEC Tournament. They knocked off Tennessee 8-4 in the second round then beat Texas 8-1 in the quarterfinals.

A 2-1 win over Auburn in the semifinals put them in the title game. Georgia ended their run there in seven innings with an 11-1 run-rule win in the SEC Championship.

Missouri State’s conference tournament path ended a round earlier.

The Bears beat Kennesaw State 6-4 and then edged Dallas Baptist 9-8 before Liberty knocked them out 7-5 in the semifinals of the Conference USA Tournament.

How to Watch and Listen

Arkansas starter Gabe Gaeckle takes the mound for the Hogs in the opener. He’s 6-3 with a 3.99 ERA this season, logging 67.2 innings with 80 strikeouts and 32 walks.

His best showing came in the SEC Tournament, where he tossed six scoreless frames against Texas and allowed just three hits while striking out nine against one walk.

Missouri State will counter with left-hander Max Knight. He’s also 6-3 on the year but carries a 4.69 ERA across 40.1 innings pitched with 57 strikeouts and 32 walks.

Here’s everything you need to tune in Friday:

  • Who: No. 2 Arkansas Razorbacks (39-20, 17-13 SEC) vs. No. 3 Missouri State Bears (34-19, 20-10 CUSA)
  • When: Friday, May 29 at 5 p.m.
  • Where: Hoglund Ballpark — Lawrence, Kansas
  • TV/Stream: ESPNU/WatchESPN
  • Radio: Learfield Razorback Sports Network (Phil Elson) on affiliated stations across Arkansas including ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

Lawrence Regional Full Schedule

The Lawrence Regional features the Razorbacks and Missouri State in Game 2 of opening day, while Northeastern takes on host Kansas in Game 1 at noon on ESPN+.

From there, the double-elimination format plays out over the weekend:

May 30

  • Game 3: Game 1 Loser vs. Game 2 Loser — Noon
  • Game 4: Game 1 Winner vs. Game 2 Winner — 5 p.m.

May 31

  • Game 5: Game 3 Winner vs. Game 4 Loser — Noon
  • Game 6: Game 5 Winner vs. Game 4 Winner — 5 p.m.

June 1 (if necessary)

  • Game 7: TBD

Gaeckle’s SEC Tournament performance gives the Hogs a reason to feel good about their chances in the opener.

Missouri State’s capable of hanging around. That 15-14 extra-inning win earlier this spring proved that much but Arkansas has momentum after the way this season’s gone.

The Razorbacks fell just short of an SEC title, but they got to the championship game by beating Tennessee, Texas and Auburn in three straight days.

That’s not a bad tune-up for postseason baseball. Now the focus shifts to a Bears team they know well.

Omaha’s a long way off, but Friday’s first pitch is where it starts.

Arkansas Softball Arrived at WCWS Like It Planned to Stay Awhile

Nobody told Arkansas they were supposed to be nervous.

For a program playing in its first-ever Women’s College World Series game Thursday night at Devon Park in Oklahoma City, the Hogs sure didn’t act like first-timers.

They took the lead. They lost it. They took it back. They lost it again.

When regulation ended with the score tied, they kept right on playing, forcing No. 4 Nebraska all the way to the bottom of the 10th inning before the Cornhuskers finally walked them off 5-3 in front of a Women’s College World Series record crowd of 12,605.

If this is what Arkansas looks like in its very first WCWS appearance, the rest of the field’s been warned.

The No. 5 national seed Razorbacks didn’t come to Oklahoma City to take a photo and go home. They came to compete.

For nine-plus innings on Thursday that’s exactly what they did against one of the tournament’s top programs. Nebraska needed a walk-off two-run home run from shortstop Ava Kuszak in the 10th just to close the door.

Johnson Made History Before the First Out

The Hogs’ first-ever WCWS at-bat set the tone perfectly. Reagan Johnson stepped in to lead off the game and singled to shortstop, becoming the first player in program history to record a hit at the Women’s College World Series.

It wasn’t a fluke. Johnson finished the night 2-for-5, picking up infield singles in the first and eighth innings and moving her to the top of the Arkansas record books with 80 career multi-hit games, the most in program history.

She was the perfect player to write that page of history. Cool, consistent and unaffected by the moment.

That calmness spread through the entire lineup. Dakota Kennedy singled to center in the second inning. Brinli Bain rolled one down the first-base line for a hit in the sixth.

Tianna Bell singled through the left side to open the seventh. Kennedy Miller went up the middle in the eighth.

Wyckoff Spotted Arkansas a Lead Early

Kailey Wyckoff made sure the Hogs didn’t just hang around, they took charge.

With two outs in the top of the second inning, Wyckoff drove a 1-0 pitch from Nebraska’s Jordy Frahm over the wall in left-center field, scoring Kennedy ahead of her for a two-run homer that put Arkansas on top 2-0.

Wyckoff’s blast gave Arkansas the team-high two RBIs on the night and sent a message that the Hogs had every intention of being difficult to beat.

Nebraska tied it at 2-2 in the bottom of the fourth on an RBI single from Samantha Bland and an RBI fielder’s choice from Bella Bacon, with a Johnson throwing error helping set the table.

It was the first time all night the Hogs had trailed, but they responded.

Burnham Gave Arkansas a Chance to Win

When Robyn Herron exited in the fourth inning after 5.2 frames, Payton Burnham walked into a tied game and proceeded to make Nebraska’s lineup look very ordinary for the next four innings.

She gave up just one run on three hits, walked nobody and struck out a batter.

Her best stretch came in the fifth, when Ella McDowell made a play that had no business working: fielding a hard grounder and firing across the diamond from her knees to record the second out of the inning.

Burnham followed with a strikeout to end the inning.

Herron’s final line showed 5.2 innings with four runs allowed on five hits and two walks.

She struck out one and kept the Hogs within striking distance long enough for Burnham to take over and do the rest.

McDowell Put Arkansas Back in Front in Eighth

The Hogs kept finding ways to lead. In the top of the eighth, Kennedy Miller singled up the middle to get things started.

After some shuffling on the bases that included a pinch runner and a fielder’s choice, Johnson moved to second on a Bain groundout.

Then McDowell lined an RBI single down the left-field line to score Johnson and put Arkansas back in front 3-2.

Three times the Razorbacks had led in this game. Three times they’d refused to let Nebraska breathe easy.

Nebraska answered in the bottom of the eighth when Hannah Coor hit a solo home run to center to tie it at 3-3.

Herron came back on in relief, and after a Hannah Camenzind double rattled the right-center gap, she got two groundouts and a walk to escape without further damage.

The game went to the ninth tied, then to the 10th.

Kuszak Finally Ended It in 10th

In the bottom of the 10th, with one out and Coor on second after a wild pitch, Kuszak stepped in and hit a 1-0 pitch over the wall in center for the walk-off.

Frahm, who went all 10 innings for the Huskers, struck out nine and allowed three runs on eight hits to improve to 21-4. She’s one of the best pitchers in the country and she needed all 10 innings to get past Arkansas.

It was the first extra-inning game the Razorbacks played all season and the program’s first 10-inning contest since a win over Alabama on March 20, 2023.

The loss drops Arkansas to 47-12 on the year, but this group is far from finished.

The Hogs face UCLA on Friday night at 8:30 p.m. on ESPN in an elimination game, with Kevin Brown and Amanda Scarborough on the call.

Win it and they’re back Sunday. Lose it and the season ends. Don’t expect them to go quietly.

They didn’t come to Oklahoma City for one game. Thursday just confirmed it.