Pompey’s homer ignites Razorback explosion in Alabama blowout

Arkansas wasn’t going to let this one slip away.

Trailing No. 8 Alabama through the middle innings in Tuscaloosa, the Hogs caught fire at the plate in the late innings and didn’t stop swinging until the final out.

By the time the dust settled, Arkansas had put together one of its most productive offensive games of the SEC season, winning in dominant style to clinch the series over the Crimson Tide.

The final score was 15-6, and it wasn’t as close as that sounds.

Clinching this series moved the Razorbacks back to .500 in SEC play and gave the program a road series win it can build on heading into the rest of the year.

The Hogs also picked up 11 spots in the RPI heading into the game, moving into the top 50. a sign they are trending in the right direction.

Gibler Makes History on the Mound

To get this win, Arkansas turned to lefthander Cole Gibler, who entered with a 3-0 record and a 2.57 ERA.

What made the start even more notable was that it was Gibler’s first career start. He’d been used in other roles before, but Saturday marked a new chapter for the lefty.

Alabama countered with Zane Adams, a lefthander with a 4-2 record and a 4.07 ERA. Adams had previously faced the Razorbacks in 2024, throwing a career-high eight scoreless innings while striking out five in that outing.

The Crimson Tide got on the board first in the bottom of the first inning when Justin Lebron stole his way into scoring position and then scored on a throwing error by the Hogs’ catcher, putting Alabama ahead 1-0 before the Hogs had even batted.

Arkansas tied it up in the third inning when Maika Niu grounded into a fielder’s choice with the bases loaded and two outs, allowing Carter Rutenbar to score and knot the game at 1-1.

That momentum didn’t last long, as Alabama pushed ahead again in the third and fourth innings to build a 3-1 lead.

Razorbacks Battle Back to Take the Lead

The Hogs weren’t done. In the top of the fifth inning, Carter Rutenbar singled to center to score Nolan Souza and cut the deficit to one run.

Then things got wild.

TJ Pompey stole third and scored on a throwing error by the Alabama catcher to tie the game at 3-3. Ryder Helfrick then flew out to center to bring home Rutenbar and give Arkansas a 4-3 lead heading into the sixth.

Alabama answered in the bottom of the sixth when a fly ball from Bryce Fowler scored Justin Osterhouse to tie things up at 4-4.

At that point it felt like anyone’s game. It wasn’t going to stay that way for long.

Steele Eaves came on in relief of Gibler in the fifth inning, and Colin Fisher then took over in the seventh before the bullpen handed things off later in the game.

The Razorbacks’ pitching kept Alabama off the board long enough for the offense to blow the game open.

Pompey’s Grand Moment in the Eighth

The floodgates opened in the eighth inning. Camden Kozeal doubled to lead off the frame, and Damian Ruiz singled to center to score him and give Arkansas a 6-4 lead.

After Kuhio Aloy singled and Reese Robinett laid down a bunt single to load the bases, Souza flew out to center to score Ruiz and make it 7-4.

Then Pompey stepped to the plate with the bases loaded and launched a home run to left field, scoring Aloy and Robinett and blowing the game open at 10-4. That three-run blast off Austin Morris was the swing that put the game out of reach.

The Hogs weren’t finished. In the top of the ninth, Aloy singled to center to score Niu and push the lead to 11-5.

Souza then singled to right to score Ruiz and Aloy, stretching the advantage to 13-5.

Pompey added another RBI single to center to make it 14-5 and a fielder’s choice by Christian Turner brought home another run to cap a five-run ninth and set the final score at 15-5 before Alabama scored once more in the bottom half to make it 15-6.

Alexander Peck also made just his second career start, playing first base.

It was his first appearance in the starting lineup since the third game of the season against Texas Tech.

Reese Robinett replaced Peck at first base in the sixth inning and went on to play a role in the late-inning rally.

Series Win Carries Real Weight

This wasn’t just a feel-good win on the road. Clinching the series over a top-10 Alabama team while coming into the game 6-7 in SEC play is a meaningful result for the Razorbacks.

Getting back to .500 in conference play keeps Arkansas in the conversation for postseason positioning and the jump in the RPI adds to that.

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Hogs finally hold on, stun No. 9 Alabama in series opener

For a team that’s had its share of late-game struggles this season, Friday night in Tuscaloosa felt different.

Arkansas built a lead in the eighth inning and this time didn’t give it back.

The 22nd-ranked Razorbacks survived a ninth-inning scare to beat ninth-ranked Alabama 7-5 in the SEC series opener at Sewell-Thomas Stadium, snapping the Crimson Tide’s 18-game home winning streak in front of 5,075 fans.

The Hogs improved to 22-13 overall and 6-7 in SEC play. Alabama dropped to 26-9 and 8-5 in conference games.

The Crimson Tide hadn’t lost at home since Opening Day against Washington State, the longest such streak in college baseball this season.

Arkansas can take the series Saturday with first pitch set for 4 p.m. on SEC Network.

Parker Coil Slams Door

What made Friday different from so many close losses this year was closer Parker Coil getting the final three outs when it mattered most.

Alabama made things interesting in the ninth when left-hander Ethan McElvain hit Bryce Fowler with a 2-2 pitch and Justin Lebron and Brady Neal followed with singles.

Neal’s two-run hit pulled the Tide within 7-5 and sent the Razorbacks to the bullpen for the third time.

Coil came on and didn’t flinch. He stranded Neal by striking out Eric Hines swinging to end the game and earn the save.

It was the kind of finish Arkansas had been searching for — a lead built late, tested immediately and ultimately defended.

Six Runs, One Inning, One Statement

The rally that gave the Razorbacks the lead they’d eventually protect started with a bang from Camden Kozeal.

He led off the eighth with an opposite-field home run 350 feet to left field against Alabama left-hander Matthew Heiberger, cutting the Crimson Tide’s lead to 3-2.

Brennan Holt then made a strong defensive play at second base to take a hit away from Ryder Helfrick, keeping the inning alive.

Nolan Souza followed with a double down the right field line and scored on Zack Stewart’s one-out RBI single through the right side to tie the game.

After Heiberger struck out Reese Robinett for the second out, Kuhio Aloy smashed a double past third base and Alabama turned to closer Hagan Banks.

He made the pitch he needed — but Baseball America’s No. 4 MLB Draft prospect, shortstop Justin Lebron, couldn’t handle it, committing both a fielding error and a throwing error on the same two-out ground ball.

Lebron’s fielding miscue allowed pinch runner Landon Schaefer to score from third. His errant throw to first let Aloy come home and Arkansas led 5-3.

TJ Pompey made sure there was no doubt. He took Banks deep on the second pitch he saw, a two-run shot 383 feet to left field — to push the lead to 7-3 and cap the six-run frame.

Van Horn’s Challenge Answered

Hogs coach Dave Van Horn had called out his upperclassmen at the start of the week, saying they needed to step up at the plate.

Friday night in Tuscaloosa, they did exactly that — just later than anyone might’ve hoped.

Arkansas had managed just one run through the first seven innings despite starter Hunter Dietz doing his part.

Dietz was sharp in a career-high 107 pitches, allowing three hits and three walks while striking out nine.

The only runs charged to him came on solo home runs when Hines launched one 425 feet over the scoreboard in left field in the second inning with a 110 mph exit velocity and Neal connected for a 379-foot shot to left-center in the sixth to put Alabama ahead 2-1.

Freshmen Flash, Tide Retakes Lead

Arkansas got its first run in the fifth inning thanks to a pair of freshmen.

Christian Turner beat the shift with a single to left field and moved to third when Carter Rutenbar singled in an eight-pitch two-out at-bat.

Turner scored on Kozeal’s RBI double to right-center but Rutenbar was thrown out at the plate trying to score the go-ahead run.

It’s a sequence that summed up the Razorbacks’ offensive frustrations through most of the night.

Alabama reliever Gabe Gaeckle then got into trouble in the seventh. Luke Vaughn drew a leadoff walk and Holt singled after failing twice to lay down a bunt.

Vaughn scored on Fowler’s fielder’s choice RBI to push the Tide’s lead to 3-1 with runners stranded at second and third when Jason Torres struck out to end Gaeckle’s 28-pitch inning.

That’s when Gaeckle was replaced and the Razorbacks finally caught fire.

Alabama Starter Kept Hogs Quiet

Credit goes to Alabama starter Tyler Fay for keeping Arkansas off the board for most of the night.

He allowed one run on four hits with two walks and four strikeouts across six innings on 98 pitches.

The Crimson Tide’s formula was working until the eighth inning unraveled with errors, hard contact and a two-run homer that shifted all the momentum.

Heiberger took the loss, allowing four runs — two earned — on four hits and a walk. Gaeckle earned the win after his one-inning appearance in which he allowed one run on one hit and two walks.

The Razorbacks held on when it counted Friday.

Now they’ll try to back it up Saturday.

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