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Inconsistencies in bullpen pop up in walk-off loss to Vols

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You kind of figured pitching inconsistencies were going to bite Arkansas sooner or later this season against a good team.

That’s exactly what happened Saturday.

Don’t be too quick to blame Jaxon Wiggins, who served up the walk-off three-run homer to Tennessee’s Max Ferguson that tied them with the Razorbacks for the best record in the SEC.

Wiggins started the season on a hot streak, then disappeared for 22 days before starting against Arkansas State on Tuesday and had enough success to give Van Horn some confidence to bring him into a tight spot.

“We had a chance to win the series right there,” Dave Van Horn said later. “He was the obvious guy. If we had brought somebody else in and it didn’t go well we would have second-guessed ourselves.”

Don’t blame Van Horn, either. He didn’t have a lot of proven options after Kevin Kopps threw 66 pitches to nail down Friday night’s win. Wiggins’ four saves are second-best on the team behind Kopps.

It might not have even come down to that if Caleb Bolden hadn’t come in and settled things down after Peyton Pallette’s rough 3.1 innings to start the game.

Bolden lasted 3.1 innings and gave way to Ryan Costieu gave up one run in 1.1 innings and the bullpen was already starting to get thin.

“Costeiu, he was done,” Van Horn said. “That’s what he does. Four outs maybe. Every time we’ve sent him back out (after that) it hasn’t gone real good.”

Kopps was never going to pitch today.

“I didn’t even have his name on the board,” Van Horn said.

So Wiggins was the obvious choice.

“We went with a guy that had closed some games,” Van Horn said of the decision. “He had some saves in some big games early.”

Now a Razorbacks’ team that was gut-punched when they thought a series win was almost in the bag, they have to come back Sunday at noon against a Tennessee team that has some confidence and has jumped out to a 5-0 lead both days of this series.

And Van Horn wasn’t saying who was going to start even he even knew Saturday afternoon.

“There’s a couple of guys we have in mind,” Van Horn said. “One left, one right.”

Now he’s got to get a team ready to come back from an emotional loss they haven’t had to deal with this season.

“Just told them that’s the way the game works every now and then,” was Van Horn’s message after the game. “Just have to get over it. Tomorrow’s a big game.”

All that’s on the line is the No. 1 ranking in the league heading into the final weekend of the regular season and a series matchup with Florida at a Baum-Walker Stadium that won’t have any restrictions on crowd size.

Van Horn is confident.

“They’re going to be fine,” Van Horn said about the players. “We just need to go out and play ball.”

Finding some pitching will help, too.

First pitch is at noon and Phil Elson will be on the air with the pregame show starting at 11:30 Sunday morning that you can listen to online HERE or on the radio at ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

Vols burn Razorbacks with ninth-inning walk-offer homer

Three outs away from a ninth consecutive SEC series win, top-ranked Arkansas was burned by a three-run, walk-off homer in the bottom of the ninth, falling to No. 4 Tennessee in a heartbreaker, 8-7, on Saturday afternoon at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

The Razorbacks are now 38-10 overall on the year and 18-8 in SEC play. The Hogs and Vols will enter tomorrow’s series finale tied atop the conference standings.

For the second day in a row, Arkansas spotted Tennessee a couple of runs in the first inning.

The Razorbacks’ deficit grew to three in the bottom of the fourth as Arkansas was kept scoreless through the first five innings of Saturday’s contest.

The comeback bid began in the sixth on Braydon Webb’s two-run shot to left. The outfielder’s fifth home run of the year brought the Hogs within one.

A few batters later, Christian Franklin hammered a no-doubter over the wall in left center. Franklin’s 11th blast of the season, punctuated by a magnificent bat flip, tied the ballgame at three.

Arkansas’ offense would not stop there. Jalen Battles doubled home Casey Opitz for the Razorbacks’ first lead of the afternoon before Webb dropped down a textbook RBI bunt single to extend the advantage to 5-3 in the seventh.

From there, the Razorbacks and Volunteers exchanged runs for the remainder of the game. Arkansas would enter the bottom of the ninth with a 7-5 lead, handing the ball to Jaxon Wiggins to close it out.

A leadoff bloop single and full-count walk set the stage for Tennessee’s dramatic finish. Volunteer second baseman Max Ferguson homered on the first pitch he saw for the 8-7 walk-off win.

Despite the loss, Caleb Bolden (3.1 IP) and Ryan Costeiu (1.1 IP) were strong in middle relief for the Hogs. The duo combined to strike out five, limiting the Volunteers to only two runs over 4 2/3 innings and allowing Arkansas to dig itself out of the early deficit.

The Razorbacks still have an opportunity to clinch their ninth straight SEC series in tomorrow’s finale at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

First pitch from Knoxville is set for noon Sunday on SEC Network+.

Van Horn after Hogs give up walk-off homer to Tennessee

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn wasn’t particularly pleased with losing a two-run lead on a walk-off home run against Jaxon Wiggins.

Early hole not too deep for Razorbacks in 6-5 win over Vols

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Even the hole Patrick Wicklander found himself in after one inning wasn’t too deep for this Arkansas team to claw out to a 6-5 win in the first game against Tennessee on Friday night.

Vols radio announcer John Wilkerson had said on ESPN Arkansas’ Halftime on Friday afternoon this was the biggest series in the history of the program.

And after one inning Tennessee was leading 5-0 and appeared set to run it up higher.

But they couldn’t get another single run the rest of the way.

“It was a good win,” Dave Van Horn said later.

Wicklander started and had his worst outing in awhile, not making it out of the third inning. He gave up six hits, walked two and struck out just two.

“They did a good job against Wicklander and the zone was really tight tonight,” Van Horn said. “He got behind in the count and they did a good job. They were on the ball.”

The result was it appeared at times in the first inning a track meet had broken out on the bases.

Caden Monke came on, got out of the third inning and didn’t give up a hit over the next 3.1 innings. That helped.

The Hogs also got the offense going.

By the end of the third inning Robert Moore’s two-run homer got Arkansas on the board and Brady Slaven’s two-run homer in the third made it a one-run game in the third,5-4.

“Our offense was able to chip away with a couple of big two-run homers and just enough to get us back in it,” Van Horn said. “The middle of our order did a great job: Wallace, Slavens. Moore drove in three runs.”

Cayden Wallace’s single in the fifth tied the game and Monke wasn’t giving up anything. Then Kevin Kopps came in and even without his usual sharpness, managed to hold off any Tennessee rallies.

“The bullpen was outstanding,” he said.

It was Moore’s deep sacrifice fly to center in the eighth that scored Slavens with the winning run and Kopps managed to do enough with an unusual strike zone for the win.

The Hogs, now 38-9 on the regular season, also got some help in Starkville on Friday night with Missouri downing Mississippi State, 7-6.

Arkansas now has a 1.5-game lead over the Bulldogs in the SEC West and a 1-game lead over Tennessee for the top seed in the SEC Tournament in a couple of weeks.

The two teams will play again Saturday morning at 11 a.m.

Pregame coverage with Phil Elson starts at 10:30 a.m. and you can listen HERE or on radio at ESPN Arkansas 95.3 in the River Valley, 96.3 in Hot Springs and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.

 

Van Horn on Hogs’ win after shutting Tennessee down

The Vols jumped out to a 5-0 lead after the first inning, then couldn’t manage another run against Caden Monke and Kevin Kopps as Hogs get 6-5 win.

Dauda flips to Razorbacks from Baylor after Mulkey’s exit to LSU

Maryam Dauda, the highly touted post player from Bentonville, is coming home to play for Arkansas after signing with Baylor last fall.

Now Mike Neighbors has a roster as talented as any in school history.

LSU coach Kim Mulkey was the coach of the Bears who recruited Dauda there, but left last month for LSU in her home state.

Dauda will be joined by fellow five-star freshman Jersey Wolfenbarger from Fort Smith, five-star redshirt freshman Elauna Eaton, and 2021 signees Emrie Ellis, Ashlyn Sage and Samara Spencer.

Oregon State transfer Sasha Goforth, who was a five-star recruit and McDonald’s All-American coming out of Fayetteville High School two years ago, will also be on the 2021-22 roster.

“Everyone in this state has seen her lead her Bentonville team to great success,” Neighbors said in a press release. “Offensively, she can score on the block and stretch the floor to the three-point line. She’s an 80-percent free throw shooter and is a capable, willing passer. She runs the court like she’s a guard and can finish in transition, making her the perfect fit for our roster.

“Defensively she changes the game in the lane. She has incredible ability to affect shots with her timing, and she also has a knack for blocking shots without fouling. I have no idea how tall they will list her in the program but she plays taller than whatever that number will be.”

Dauda, the 13th ranked player and top ranked center in ESPN’s HoopGurlz Recruiting Top 100 Rankings, put together a sensational high school career at Bentonville.

During her senior season, Dauda was dominant, averaging 17 points, 8.1 rebounds and 2.6 blocks per game while shooting 61.5 percent from the field and 41.5 percent from deep. Her junior season was just as good, as she posted averages of 16.6 points, 8.2 rebounds and 2.6 blocks per contest in 28 games.

Both her senior and junior seasons were cut short, though. A knee injury prematurely ended her final high school season, while covid-19 pandemic shortened her junior season.

For her efforts, Dauda has racked up the accolades during her high school career. The 6-4 post player was a four-time All-Conference selection, a three-time All-State selection, a McDonald’s All-American and a semi-finalist for the Jersey Mike’s National High School Player of the Year Award.

She is also the leading scorer, rebounder, and shot blocker in the history of Bentonville High School.

“She’s a warm, caring teammate that turns into a fierce competitor the second she steps on the court,” Neighbors continued. “I can say with some experience we have never had a player like her in a Razorback uniform.

“And for us, the most exciting part is also what we’ve been saying since we first saw her play — her best basketball is still ahead of her. You don’t often say that about a McDonald’s All American.”

By flipping Dauda, Neighbors has now assembled a roster that features a lot of elite talent from the state of Arkansas.

Over the last two recruiting cycles, all four of the state’s top-50 recruits now call Bud Walton Arena home.

Redshirt junior Erynn Barnum, the 14th-ranked wing player in the 2018 class, and a Little Rock native, and Marquesha Davis, who was a highly touted recruit out of Springdale High School,  are also still on the roster.

Dauda, originally from Nigeria, came to the United State entering her sixth-grade year. She hadn’t played basketball until coming to America.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

Vols’ announcer on biggest series ‘in history of program’

Tennessee baseball radio announcer John Wilkerson said on Halftime this weekend’s series is the biggest in school history.

Smart press conference Friday afternoon on joining Muss’ staff

New Arkansas assistant coach Keith Smart met with the media to talk about being a part of Eric Musselman’s program with the Razorbacks.

Previewing Arkansas’ weekend series on road against Tennessee

Former Razorbacks pitcher Scott Tabor on The Morning Rush with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft looking at big weekend against Vols.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast – Hogs/Vols this weekend and National Buttermilk Biscuit Day

The guys preview this weekend’s huge baseball series vs. Tennessee, plus Scott Tabor gives his thoughts on the matchup of the SEC’s top teams. Also, its National Buttermilk Biscuit Day; what do you like on your biscuit?