Helfrick Does It Again: Arkansas Is One Win from SEC Glory

0

There’s a fine line between a team that’s hard to beat and a team that just flat-out refuses to lose.

No. 12 Arkansas hasn’t just crossed that line. They’ve made a habit of living on the other side of it.

On Saturday night in Hoover, Ala., the Hogs did it again. They found a way.

They scratched out a 2-1 victory over Auburn in the SEC Tournament semifinals at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium and now they’re one win away from their first SEC Tournament championship since 2021.

Sunday’s title game against No. 4 Georgia is set for a 1 p.m. first pitch and can be seen on ABC.

Nobody handed Arkansas a thing to get here. The Razorbacks came in as the No. 7 seed with a 39-19 record, the kind of résumé that doesn’t exactly make opposing coaches shudder.

Yet here they are, standing in the doorway of something special.

Helfrick Comes Through Again

If you needed one image to capture what this Arkansas team is about, it’d be Ryder Helfrick’s swing in the top of the eighth inning Saturday night.

The junior catcher, who had gone 0-for-10 at the SEC Tournament coming into that moment, stepped into the batter’s box with two outs and launched a 446-foot solo home run to left field off a slider.

It put the Razorbacks ahead 2-1 and it held up as the final score.

It wasn’t Helfrick’s first time delivering the knockout blow against Auburn, either.

He hit a go-ahead homer in the ninth inning against the Tigers as a freshman at Plainsman Park to clinch a series for Arkansas and then did it again in the eighth inning on April 3 in the second game of a series at Auburn this season.

All three of those home runs ended up setting the final score. All three happened in the state of Alabama.

Coach Dave Van Horn wasn’t at all surprised.

“He was pretty frustrated and he took it all out on that slider,” Van Horn said. “And it was great to see. Our dugout was electric.”

Helfrick kept it simple when asked about what was running through his mind before one of the biggest at-bats of his season.

“That’s not going through my mind,” he said. “I just try to get a pitch you can handle, get a pitch you can hit. That’s what’s going through my mind and I got one I felt like I could do damage on.”

McElvain Slams the Door

The home run wouldn’t have mattered without the pitching that followed it and Ethan McElvain delivered one of the most important relief stints of Arkansas’s season.

McElvain entered in the fifth inning with runners at first and second and not a single out recorded.

He got out of the jam by stranding runners at the corners, then proceeded to throw 4 1/3 scoreless innings, giving up just 2 hits while striking out 6 without issuing a single walk on 48 pitches.

His final inning came after he worked around a two-out single in the eighth, getting a flyout to deep center field to end the threat.

“McElvain came in and we were just hoping that he would get through that inning and then give us what he had,” Van Horn said. “And we thought maybe 60 pitches, if it went well. He had one really quick inning and it started looking like it could happen.

“He went through their lineup the first time pretty good. Then the second time they had seen him a little bit and the swings were maybe a little better. He was getting a little tired. He’s not used to getting up and down so much, but he did a great job throwing strikes and letting our defense work.”

Van Horn also credited the little things that carried Arkansas through.

“Tonight was about positioning your defense correctly, it was about making some pitches in tough situations and we turned a nice double play that helped us,” he said. “I just thought our pitchers did a tremendous job.”

The Razorbacks struck out 11 and walked just 1 all game.

A Game Within a Game

Things didn’t come easily and it certainly wasn’t particularly quick.

A fierce thunderstorm rolled into Hoover around 6 p.m. and caused a 2-hour and 15-minute rain delay in the fourth inning that disrupted the flow of the game entirely.

Starter Alex Petrovic had thrown 71 pitches in 4 innings before the delay shelved him for good despite allowing just 2 hits and 2 walks while striking out 7.

Cooper Dossett got the start in a two-inning, 27-pitch outing while James DeCremer handled the third and didn’t return once the tarp came off.

The Hogs trailed 1-0 going into the rain delay after giving up a solo home run in the second inning.

Reese Robinett doubled and then scored on Camden Kozeal’s two-out RBI single in the fifth to tie the game.

It was Kozeal’s seventh RBI of the tournament and it was the kind of clutch hit that’s defined this Arkansas club when things get tight.

After that, it was all about Helfrick’s blast and McElvain’s arm.

What’s Ahead Sunday

The Razorbacks now face a No. 4-seeded Georgia program that went 45-12 during the regular season and won the SEC regular-season title outright.

The Bulldogs aren’t just good — they’ve been dominant.

Georgia beat Arkansas 26-14 in Fayetteville on April 16 to win a series 2-1 and on Saturday the Bulldogs came back from a 5-0 deficit to beat Florida 8-7 in the first semifinal.

Georgia is also coached by Wes Johnson, a native Arkansan and former Razorbacks assistant, which gives the matchup its own layer of storyline.

It’ll be the Bulldogs’ first chance at an SEC Tournament title.

According to BetSaracen, Arkansas enters Sunday’s game as a +145 underdog on the moneyline while Georgia is listed at -190.

The Hogs have been counted out before. That hasn’t stopped them yet.

Fans can listen to Sunday’s championship game on the Learfield Razorback Sports Network with Phil Elson calling the action. You can hear the game at HitThatLine.com online or ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

The Bigger Picture

This Arkansas team entered the SEC Tournament as the seventh seed. Nobody expected them to make a championship run.

That makes where they are right now worth appreciating.

Van Horn’s team is 39-19 and playing its best baseball when it matters most.

The pitching staff has found answers every time the Razorbacks needed one. Helfrick keeps delivering in the moments that count.

The Hogs are now one win away from a title that, even a week ago, most people outside of Fayetteville wouldn’t have seen coming.

That’s the thing about this team. They don’t need you to believe in them.

They’ve got enough belief in their own dugout.

“I just thought our pitchers did a tremendous job,” Van Horn said after the win. High praise in a tight game and completely earned.

Now it’s Georgia’s turn to figure out how to stop them.

Rain Delay Tried to Ruin Arkansas’s Night But Ryder Helfrick Didn’t Get Memo

0

HOOVER, Ala. — The rain tried. It really did.

Somewhere between the bottom of the third inning and a weather delay that pushed first pitch back into primetime, Mother Nature apparently decided she had strong opinions about the Arkansas-Auburn SEC Tournament semifinal.

She stalled things. She made everyone wait. She did everything short of canceling the whole affair.

Then the Razorbacks just went right ahead and won anyway.

Arkansas beat Auburn 2-1 Saturday night to reach the SEC Championship game for the first time since 2021 and the rain delay — dramatic as it tried to be — turned out to be about as relevant to the outcome as a pregame weather app.

Ryder Helfrick hit a go-ahead home run to left in the eighth inning, the bullpen slammed the door and the Hogs punched their ticket to the title game.

Simple as that. No weather system was going to stop it.

The rain delay’s big moment

To be fair to the delay, it had excellent timing.

Auburn led 1-0 on a Bub Terrell homer to right in the second inning and the skies opened up just before the bottom of the fourth.

Play was set to resume at 8:15 p.m., which meant everybody got to sit around and think about things for a while.

Arkansas thought about how to score some runs. Auburn thought about how to protect a one-run lead.

The rain just kept coming down, blissfully unaware that neither team was going to let a little precipitation write the ending to this story.

When play finally resumed, it became apparent almost immediately that the rain delay was going to go down as the least interesting thing to happen in this game.

Cooper Dossett’s big adventure

It’s worth noting that Arkansas sent Cooper Dossett to the mound as a starter for the first time all season.

His ERA as a starter coming in was 7.90, which is the kind of number that makes a pitching coach reach for antacids.

Dossett hadn’t faced Auburn at all during the regular season, so the Tigers didn’t know much about him. That was either a strategic masterstroke by Dave Van Horn or a creative way of saying the options were limited.

Either way, Dossett didn’t make it out of the third and James DeCremer took over to keep things from unraveling.

Then Colin Fisher came on in the fourth. Then Ethan McElvain in the fifth.

The Razorbacks were essentially running a relay race out there on the mound, passing the baton and daring Auburn to do something about it.

Auburn’s Alex Petrovic had come in at 9-2 with a 3.38 ERA, the kind of résumé that makes a lineup uncomfortable.

He’d actually beaten this Arkansas squad back in the regular-season series finale, going five innings in an 8-3 Auburn win. The Tigers felt good about him on the hill.

He was gone by the fifth inning too. Ryan Hetzler came on and that’s when the Hogs found the crack in the wall.

Camden Kozeal ties it up

Reese Robinett doubled to center to lead off the fifth.

Two outs later, with Robinett perched at second and Arkansas needing something to happen, Camden Kozeal singled to right and Robinett scored.

Just like that it was 1-1, the rain delay felt like a distant memory and the game had a pulse again.

Helfrick struck out swinging to end the threat that inning, so the drama wasn’t going anywhere yet.

The sixth and seventh innings came and went without a run scored by either side. Auburn actually turned a nifty double play in the seventh to escape a potential jam and for a few innings this thing looked like it might need extra frames to settle.

Helfrick doesn’t miss

Then came the eighth and Ryder Helfrick made the whole night irrelevant. The rain, the delay, the bullpen carousel, all of it.

After a Lucas Steele error on a foul ball opened the inning, Damian Ruiz flied out and Kozeal struck out looking. Two outs, nobody on. Helfrick stepped in.

He hit it to left. It didn’t come back. Arkansas 2, Auburn 1.

Zack Stewart struck out to end the inning, but no matter.

The Hogs had what they needed. The bullpen finished it off in the ninth as Terrell popped out, Brandon McCraine struck out swinging and Mason McCraine flied out to left. Done.

Finally back where they belong

That’s the part worth savoring here.

Arkansas is 38-19 overall and 17-13 in SEC play, a record that doesn’t exactly scream “dominant.”

This has been a season with enough turbulence to keep meteorologists busy which, given the rain delay, feels appropriate.

But the Razorbacks are headed to the SEC Championship game for the first time since 2021 and they got there by beating a team that had knocked them around twice during the regular season in Auburn’s own backyard.

That’s the kind of win that means something regardless of the weather, the starting ERA or anything else that tried to get in the way Saturday night.

The rain had its moment. Helfrick had his. The Hogs are moving on.

Razorbacks Need SEC Tournament Win Saturday to Stay in Hosting Talk

It’s the question Razorback fans keep asking heading into Saturday’s SEC Tournament semifinal: Has Arkansas done enough to bring an NCAA Regional to Fayetteville?

Maybe not. That will probably get Arkansas fans into an argument, even the ones that don’t know more than I do about baseball (and that’s a low bar).

According to Baseball America’s updated projected field of 64, the answer right now is no. But it’s closer than it’s been in a while.

The good news is the Hogs control their own destiny in the short term.

The bad news is the margin for error is razor-thin and the opponent standing in the way Saturday afternoon isn’t going to be looking at doing them any favors.

Baseball America slotted Arkansas as its top two-seed in the latest update, specifically acknowledging how close the program is to cracking the hosting conversation.

The publication noted that the Razorbacks sit at 19 aggregate SEC wins, a number that lands them right on the edge.

The math is straightforward with 20 total wins over SEC opponents tends to be the threshold that gets a team into hosting consideration.

One more win. That’s the gap between where Arkansas is and where it needs to be.

The Hogs put together a strong week in Hoover, beating both Tennessee and Texas to advance to the semifinals.

That 8-1 victory over Texas on Friday night pushed Arkansas two spots forward in the RPI rankings up to No. 21.

The newer Diamond Sports Ranking, a metric the NCAA Tournament committee will factor in this year, has the Razorbacks looking even better at No. 14.

Those are real numbers. They represent real progress. But they haven’t been quite enough … yet.

Baseball America put it plainly in its update, writing that Arkansas “is now positioned as our top two-seed to reflect its proximity to hosting” and that the program’s current win total “is right on the fringe of sneaking into the hosting picture.”

The publication was equally clear about what it’d take to move the needle. Apparently now 20 total wins over SEC competition carries the kind of weight that opens the door to hosting.

It’s worth noting the hosting picture isn’t just about what Arkansas does.

Baseball America pointed out directly to Hogs fans that beyond picking up a win Saturday, they’d also want to see West Virginia and Oregon lose.

That’s the crowded nature of the two-seed tier right now. It isn’t just about earning it, it’s about others not earning it at the same time.

Auburn Stands in the Way

None of that context changes what Arkansas has to do Saturday.

The Razorbacks face Auburn at 4 p.m. in the SEC Tournament semifinals and it’s a matchup that won’t be easy. The Tigers hold the No. 3 spot in the RPI and rank fourth in the DSR, two marks that make them one of the better teams in the country by either measure.

Auburn also took two of three from the Hogs earlier this season in the regular season, which means Dave Van Horn’s team is walking into Saturday’s game with something to prove beyond just a tournament win.

If Arkansas loses, it’s not the end of the season. The Razorbacks will still be in the NCAA Tournament field.

But the path to Fayetteville hosting a regional gets significantly harder.

Baseball America’s current projection, if the bracket held today, has the Hogs traveling to Morgantown to play in West Virginia’s regional alongside The Citadel and South Dakota State.

That’s a long way from Baum-Walker Stadium. Ole Miss is pretty much in the same position being projected to play in Kansas or Oregon.

The framing is simple. Arkansas has knocked off Tennessee and Texas this week. It’s moved up in the RPI.

The DSR likes what it sees. But one more signature win — over a top-five RPI team in Auburn — could be the piece that finally pushes the Razorbacks into the hosting bracket.

Anything short of that and the road to the College World Series probably starts on someone else’s field.

What to Watch

The SEC Tournament semifinal between Arkansas and Auburn tips off Saturday at 4 p.m.

For Hogs fans tracking the hosting picture, the results from West Virginia and Oregon’s games Saturday matter just as much as the final score in Hoover.

Arkansas has done enough to stay relevant. It hasn’t yet done enough to host.

Saturday’s the chance to change that.

Arkansas looks to avenge Auburn in SEC Tournament Saturday

Despite all the projections and expectations, the Hogs aren’t done yet.

No. 12 Arkansas (38-19) has a chance to make a huge statement Saturday afternoon when it faces No. 6 Auburn (38-18) in the semifinal round of the SEC Tournament at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Ala.

First pitch is set for 4 p.m. and the game will air on SEC Network.

A trip to the SEC Tournament Championship is on the line.

Arkansas enters Saturday as the lowest remaining seed in the bracket at No. 7, but the Razorbacks have played like anything but an underdog this week.

The Hogs knocked off Texas 8-1 on Friday to advance, while Auburn took care of Texas A&M with a 7-0 shutout to set up this highly anticipated matchup.

For Arkansas, Saturday isn’t just about a championship berth. It’s about redemption.

Auburn took the regular season series from the Razorbacks during the first weekend of April, so Dave Van Horn’s team will have plenty of motivation stepping into the box at Hoover Met.

The Hogs know what’s at stake and they know who’s standing in their way.

Starting pitchers

One significant storyline heading into Saturday’s game is the pitching matchup.

Auburn will send RHP Alex Petrovic to the mound and he’s been one of the better starters in the SEC all season.

Petrovic carries a 9-2 record and a 3.38 ERA into the start, giving the Tigers a proven arm with experience in big moments.

Arkansas has yet to announce its starter for the semifinal.

That’s a storyline worth monitoring as first pitch approaches and Razorback fans will want to keep an eye on any pregame news coming out of Hoover.

How to watch Arkansas-Auburn

If you’re planning to tune in Saturday, here’s everything you need to know to catch the game.

How to Watch-Listen
When: Saturday, May 23 at 4 p.m.
Where: Hoover Metropolitan Stadium — Hoover, Ala.
TV: SEC Network
Radio: Learfield Razorback Sports Network statewide with Phil Elson on the call including ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

The SEC Network is available through most cable and satellite providers.

Fans can also stream it through the ESPN app.

What’s at stake

It’s been a strong tournament run for the Razorbacks, who’ve now won back-to-back games to reach the final four of the SEC Tournament bracket.

A win Saturday puts Arkansas in the championship game and keeps its postseason momentum rolling heading into NCAA Tournament selection.

The Tigers are no pushover. Auburn’s pitching has been dominant this week and Petrovic gives them a genuine ace to lean on in a single-elimination format.

But the Hogs have answered every challenge thrown at them so far in Hoover and they’ll be eager to return the favor after dropping the regular season series to Auburn in April.

Saturday’s semifinal is a measuring stick game for both programs. Whoever advances will have earned it.

Razorbacks Sstun Texas with dominant 8-1 SEC Tournament blowout

Let’s be honest. Razorback fans don’t really need perspective when it comes to beating Texas.

The final score does all the talking. But when Arkansas dismantled the No. 2 Longhorns 8-1 in the SEC Tournament quarterfinals on Friday, it wasn’t just another check in the win column against a hated rival.

It was a statement. At least for a day.

This wasn’t close. This wasn’t dramatic. The Hogs punched Texas in the mouth in the very first inning and never let up.

Damian Ruiz got things started by reaching on a hit by pitch to lead off the game. What followed next gave Razorback fans something to talk about for a while.

Camden Kozeal sent a ball over the left field wall for a two-run shot and Arkansas was off and running before Texas even had a chance to settle in.

By the time Nolan Souza singled home TJ Pompey later that same inning, the Longhorns were already staring at a 3-0 hole.

Dave Van Horn
Dave Van Horn | Arkansas Communications

Kozeal Makes History in a Big Way

Kozeal wasn’t finished. Not even close.

In the second inning, with Reese Robinett and Ruiz both on base, Kozeal launched a 449-foot shot to dead center field that made the score 6-1 and the game essentially over before the third inning began.

That blast was his 19th and 20th home runs of the season combined across the two first-inning and second-inning shots.

With that second homer, Kozeal became just the eighth player in school history to hit 20 home runs in a season.

He joined a list that includes Andrew Benintendi and Chad Spanberger, among others. That’s real company. Kozeal also became part of a unique two-year stretch with teammate Wehiwa Aloy.

After Aloy hit 21 home runs in 2025, Kozeal’s 20 in 2026 made them the first pair of players to hit 20 homers in back-to-back seasons in program history.

Those five RBIs from Kozeal set the tone for everything that followed.

A Scary Moment That Turned Into Relief

The early fireworks from Kozeal almost got overshadowed by a frightening moment in the bottom of the first.

Arkansas starter Hunter Dietz took a comebacker off his ankle and foot from Texas’ Casey Borba, forcing him out of the game immediately. Given the Razorbacks had already lost Kuhio Aloy likely for the season to a hamate injury, another significant injury would’ve been a real blow.

The good news came quickly. X-rays on Dietz’s foot came back negative with no fracture found.

He was bruised but not broken, which is about the best outcome Arkansas could’ve hoped for given the situation.

The SEC Tournament hasn’t been kind to the Hogs physically this week, but the program dodged a serious bullet here.

Steele Eaves stepped in and gave the Razorbacks 2⅓ innings of scoreless relief to stabilize things after Dietz left. That bridge work mattered.

Gabe Gaeckle
Gabe Gaeckle | Arkansas Communications

Gaeckle Finishes the Job With Authority

Then came Gabe Gaeckle and it wasn’t even a contest from that point forward.

Gaeckle delivered what may have been his sharpest outing since pitching six innings of one-run ball against LSU in the 2025 College World Series.

Against Texas on Friday, he tossed six innings of shutout baseball on just 76 pitches, striking out nine and facing just four batters over the minimum.

The Longhorns couldn’t touch him.

Over his last five appearances spanning 22⅔ innings, Gaeckle’s ERA sits at 3.17. That’s not a hot streak but a pitcher who’s figured something out.

When Arkansas needed him most in a tournament environment against the second seed, he was at his best.

Texas, meanwhile, had chosen to hold its ace Dylan Volantis back and start righty Cody Howard instead.

Howard entered with a 7.45 ERA and didn’t survive the third inning. The mismatch in pitching decisions made a lopsided game feel even more one-sided.

Carter Rutenbar and Robinett added RBIs in the fifth inning to push the lead to 8-1 and that was more than enough cushion for Gaeckle to coast home.

What It Means Going Forward

The win moves No. 7 Arkansas into the SEC Tournament semifinals at 38-19 overall and 17-13 in SEC play.

The Razorbacks will wait to see whether No. 6 Auburn or No. 3 Texas A&M emerges from their quarterfinal matchup, with first pitch Saturday set for 4 p.m. on the SEC Network.

For Arkansas fans, beating Texas by seven runs in the SEC Tournament is the kind of thing that doesn’t get old.

It doesn’t matter if it came against the second seed or Texas held back its best arm.

A lopsided win over the Longhorns in a postseason setting is going to feel good regardless of the circumstances.

The Hogs came into this week as the No. 7 seed.

They’re two wins away from a conference title. Nobody may want to look away now with this team.

479 Equipment Ruscin & Zach podcast May 22

Ruscin is involved in a car chase.

We want to sponsor the X-Ray room at Razorback Stadium.

Music talk.

Eastside Liquor Halftime Podcast: 5.22.25


Halftime on a Friday includes Aaron Torres, James Teague, and Neal Atkinson.

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: 5-22-26


Tye and Tommy make picks for the weekend, talk about road trips, Cal’s guys in the NBA Draft and the Hogs vs Horns in the SEC Tournament.

Guests: The Fence Man x Krysten Peek

Watch-Listen: Razorbacks Take on Texas in SEC Tournament Quarterfinal

No. 7-seeded Arkansas (37-19, 17-13 SEC) squares off against No. 2-seeded Texas (40-12, 19-10 SEC) in the SEC Tournament quarterfinal round on Friday afternoon at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Ala., with first pitch set for approximately 3 p.m.

Fans can catch the game on SEC Network with Dave Neal and Kyle Peterson on the call and Phil Elson will handle radio duties through the Learfield Razorback Sports Network statewide and ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

The Razorbacks enter Friday with momentum from an 8-4 win over No. 10-seeded Tennessee to open SEC Tournament play on Wednesday.

The Hogs went deep four times in that game, with Zack Stewart accounting for two of the home runs and TJ Pompey adding another as part of a three-hit evening.

Before the tournament, Arkansas closed the regular season by taking its series against Kentucky. The Wildcats won Game 1 by a 4-3 score, but the Razorbacks bounced back with a 5-4 victory in Game 2 and sealed the series with a high-scoring 16-12 win in the finale.

Longhorns Enter Fresh Off a Double-Bye

Texas hasn’t played yet in this year’s SEC Tournament, coming in with a double-bye after finishing the regular season on a four-game winning streak.

The Longhorns swept Missouri to close things out, winning 6-3, 11-6 and 12-7 across the three games.

Jim Schlossnagle is in his second year leading Texas and has built an 84-26 record in Austin, including a 41-18 mark in SEC play. Last season, his Longhorns went 44-14 with a 22-8 conference record and reached an NCAA Regional.

Dave Van Horn has fared well against the Longhorns throughout his tenure in Fayetteville.

Under Van Horn, the Razorbacks are 11-5 against Texas, including a sweep last season at Baum-Walker Stadium.

The two programs haven’t met at all this season, but Arkansas has won the last five matchups dating back to 2021.

In 93 all-time meetings going back to 1960, the Hogs trail the Longhorns 37-56 overall.

Dietz Gets the Ball for Arkansas

Left-hander Hunter Dietz gets the start for the Razorbacks, carrying a 7-3 record and a 3.32 ERA into the game.

Texas counters with right-hander Cody Howard, who enters at 0-0 with a 7.45 ERA.

Dietz has been one of Arkansas’s most consistent starters this season and he’ll need to keep the Longhorns’ offense in check against a Texas lineup that’s been among the most productive in the conference.

What’s at Stake

Friday’s winner advances to face either No. 3-seeded Texas A&M or No. 6-seeded Auburn on Saturday.

A win puts the Hogs one step closer to the SEC Tournament semifinals and adds to what’s already been a strong postseason showing.

Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama serves as the backdrop for this quarterfinal matchup, a venue that’s hosted SEC baseball for decades.

Quick-Look Game Details

Who: Arkansas Razorbacks (37-19) vs. Texas Longhorns (40-12)
When: Friday, May 22 at approximately 3 p.m.
Where: Hoover Metropolitan Stadium, Hoover, Alabama
TV: SEC Network (Dave Neal, Kyle Peterson)
Radio: Learfield Razorback Sports Network (Phil Elson) and ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in Fort Smith and the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home
Starting Pitchers: Arkansas LHP Hunter Dietz (7-3, 3.32 ERA) vs. Texas RHP Cody Howard (0-0, 7.45 ERA)

Razorbacks’ analyst Bubba Carpenter previewing Texas game in SEC

After win over Tennessee, the Hogs will now face the hated Longhorns in Hoover, Ala., but pitching staff in good shape.

479 Equipment Ruscin & Zach podcast May 21


Ticket prices are going up again but is lack of funds really the problem? We discuss.

Plus Ruscin is getting new glasses and Zach is mocking him for it.