53.1 F
Fayetteville

Hogs get 4-3 walk-off winner from Welch to wrap up title

1

Kevin Kopps hit his first batter of the season and got a strikeout, then a pitch-hitter delivered the game-winning hit and Arkansas’ 4-3 win Friday night clinched the SEC season championship.

Considering a rain delay of 1:45, that really was about the only way the Razorbacks could wrap up their first outright regular-season title.

“What an accomplishment by this team,” Dave Van Horn said later.

The Hogs got the outright title by winning after Tennessee lost to South Carolina. Kopps closed out a game where Caleb Bolden started and lasted long enough to give them a chance.

After Robert Moore homered to tie the game 3-3 in the eighth, Casey Opitz got a double to center, then ended up at third on an error.

Enter Charlie Welch, a pinch-hitter this year that is hitting something like a ridiculous .500. He took a 3-2 pitch deep into the gap in right-center that was going to score Opitz whether it was caught or not (it wasn’t).

And a raucous Baum-Walker full house of 11,084 (there were more) let loose a year full of emotions built up by cancelling last season and covid restrictions to start this year.

“We hadn’t experienced what we had tonight and last night since 2019,” Van Horn said.

Florida coach Kevin O’Sullivan commented to Van Horn before the game about the strong crowd at Friday night’s game.

“I said ‘you’re probably going to get more of it tonight and probably more,'” Van Horn said. “They were.”

Arkansas clinched the series by coming back from an early three-run deficit, which is nothing really new. They’ve been down that bad a dozen times before this year.

“It seems like we were behind a lot, maybe 75 percent of the time,” Van Horn said. ‘When the other team scores first it doesn’t seem to faze us too much.”

The Razorbacks also clinched their 10th series win of the season. They haven’t lost a single SEC series, something only Vanderbilt did in 2013.

“They’re really hard to get,” Van Horn said of series wins. “So many things have to happen over a 30-game season to have that opportunity. We’ve just played really well every weekend … some better than others, but always just enough. We put together some really good ball games to clinch series.”

Winning all of them in one year is harder.

“It’s very hard to do,” Van Horn said. “You don’t expect it. You just expect that maybe one weekend’s not going to go your way. We always talk to our guys in the fall about league play and how tough it is.

“The new guys, they probably don’t believe it until they see it. The older guys try to tell them that it’s a grind and it’s hard to win.”

Van Horn is taking it just one game at a time. He’s made that clear all season and is probably going to keep it until there’s not another game to play.

“One more game and we can move on to the tournament,” he said Friday night.

You may want to have a roster handy for Saturday’s game that starts at 2 p.m. because Van Horn said there will be some new faces for that game that means basically nothing and Jaxon Wiggins will get the start.

That wasn’t the plan.

“The plan was the start [Lyle] Lockhart tomorrow,” Van Horn said. “See, I gave you some good info there.”

Then he laughed and in case you’re wondering that doesn’t happen often at one of his press conferences, especially after the middle game of an SEC series.

Don’t worry, it probably won’t last long. There’s a bigger goal for this season.

Achieving THAT goal will require another trip to Omaha, though.

Van Horn says changes in lineup possible for series finale after 4-3 win

The Hogs clinched the SEC regular season championship on a walk-off and Dave Van Horn said lineup changes could be in place Saturday.

Welch after delivering a game-winning hit for Hogs to clinch series

Arkansas’ Charlie Welch worked a 3-2 count in the ninth inning and delivered the walk-off hit to hand the Hogs an outright SEC championship.

Brando on changing world of college athletics, plus Hogs being spoilers

Fox’s Tim Brando on Ruscin & Zach on how things have changed for college athletics and he things Hogs can ruin somebody’s football season.

Deifel on job by grounds crew, shutting out Manhattan

Hogs coach Courtney Deifel started by thanking the UA grounds crew for getting field in shape to play as they run-rule Manhattan, 8-0.

Carpenter after Wallace’s big night in series-opening win over Gators

Razorback radio analyst Bubba Carpenter was talking outfielder Cayden Wallace through some homers in Thursday night’s 6-1 win.

Torres says transfer season never ends for Musselman’s Razorbacks

Hogs coach Eric Musselman is always working the NCAA’s transfer portal and that’s not changing anytime soon, says Fox Sports’ Aaron Torres.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush: Wallace … have yourself a night

Tye and Tommy on the win over Florida, jobs they’d do outside of radio, booking flights to Omaha and more!

Wicklander, Kopps pace Hogs to win over Gators in series opener

0

Patrick Wicklander threw just one mistake pitch, Kevin Kopps didn’t throw any and Arkansas’ bats smoothed the way to a 6-1 win over Florida.

The Razorbacks’ win Thursday night to open the final SEC series of the season clinched at least a tie for the SEC West title with Mississippi State. The Bulldogs downed Alabama, 4-2.

Tennessee rolled over South Carolina, 10-4, to stay one game back in the overall.

For the Hogs, though, it was a complete performance, starting with Wicklander and Kopps on the mound.

“Patrick actually got off to a little bit of a slow start, but he gave us some really good innings there in the middle” Dave Van Horn said later. “Third, fourth, got through the fifth and sixth.”

Which is what Van Horn wanted. He and pitching coach Matt Hobbs discussed bringing him out on the seventh, but at 91 pitches and starting to angle for tournament time, they just shrugged and brought on Kopps to seal the deal in the opener.

Wicklander had the door closed on the Gators (giving up just three hits) and Kopps put the lock on it.

“He did a tremendous job and didn’t give up a hit,” Van Horn said about Kopps. “He tried to pitch to contact a little more tonight. He had really good stuff.”

The bats also showed up and in a big way.

“Just a tremendous job by our offense,” Van Horn said.

Freshman Cayden Wallace had a pair of homers (No. 11 and 12 on the season) and Casey Opitz did the damage. Wallace had four RBI and Opitz two.

Some of the 11,084 announced attendance (there were more than that) were still squirming going into the eighth with the Hogs holding a 3-1 lead. They’d seen things change too quickly this year.

“That eighth inning happened very fast,” Van Horn said.

With two outs, Braydon Webb slammed a 3-1 pitch for a double, then Matt Goodheart drew a walk in front of Wallace.

“They didn’t want to throw a right-hander against a lefty, it looked like,” Van Horn said.

That blew up in their face when Wallace hit a three-run homer which let most of the crowd that didn’t leave early to make noise in the ninth.

Photo by Arkansas Communications

“Just a super good job by the team and look forward to coming out again tomorrow and competing,” Van Horn said about Friday’s game where the Hogs can lock down a perfect season with no series losses in the league.

That’s unheard of in the SEC, by the way.

Van Horn can Kall Kopps to lock it down, probably. He’s done it before. Kopps threw just 39 pitches Thursday night.

Van Horn will probably want to nail it down Friday if at all possible. A win there checks some regular season boxes.

But you get the idea Van Horn has a much bigger goal to accomplish with this team.

Van Horn on Razorbacks ‘playing good baseball’ in downing Florida

Hogs coach Dave Van Horn on pitching combo of Patrick Wicklander, Kevin Kopps plus strong hitting and 6-1 win to open series with Gators.