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Storms’ pitching, Green’s homers even series with Tide

Autumn Storms threw a complete game two hit shutout and Kayla Green homered twice as No. 8 Arkansas defeated No. 3 Alabama 4-0 to even the series at Bogle Park on Saturday afternoon.

All four of the Razorbacks’ (33-4, 13-1 SEC) runs came via the long ball.

The win improved the Hogs to 33-4 overall (13-1 SEC).

How it happened

Infielder Braxton Burnside’s solo home run to left, her 21st of the season, in the third inning, giving the Hogs a 1-0 lead.

Green hit the first of her two bombs in the fourth, extending the lead to 2-0, and provided even more insurance with a two-run shot in the sixth.

Green hit four home runs this week, which included her first career two home run game on Tuesday against Missouri State.

Storms (6-0) was electric inside the circle and had complete control of the Alabama lineup. She fanned a season-high 10 hitters, the most times the Crimson Tide have struck out this year.

Both hits Storms allowed were singles and Alabama only put two runners on in the same inning in the seventh on a hit by pitch and an error.

Lexi Kilfoyl (11-3) went 5.0 innings surrendering four runs on seven hits and a walk with seven strikeouts.

Arkansas outhit Alabama, 7-2, with both Green and McEwen recording a two-hit game. Storms has thrown two straight complete game shutouts in her starts after defeating No. 25 Auburn, 3-0, last weekend.

The rubber match of the series is set for 1 p.m. Sunday afternoon on SEC Network+.

Moody becomes Hogs’ first one-and-done heading to NBA

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Other programs have feasted on freshman players leaving every year for pro ball, but Arkansas hasn’t done that … until Moses Moody’s announcement Friday.

It was a surprise to no one.

Arkansas Communications released a comment from coach Eric Musselman after Moody’s announcement:

“We fully support Moses and his family in the decision to enter the NBA Draft. We were excited last spring when they trusted us to continue his basketball journey. I’ve said it many times that Moses handles his day-to-day business like a pro and he will be ahead of the curve when he starts his professional career. Moses was able to showcase his many talents in our system – including being our leading scorer and second-best rebounder – and we believe he continued to make improvements throughout the year to put himself in this position. We will continue to work with Moses and his family as well as do all we can with our connections in professional basketball to promote Moses.”

That will give Musselman an additional weapon in his arsenal rounding up players, most of whom come to college with NBA dreams.

For the first time those dreams are actually happening for a Razorback player. Now he gets to find out it’s more about business than basketball, but that’s part of making a grown-man decision.

The 6-foot-6 guard was SEC Freshman of the Year by the coaches and SEC Newcomer of the Year by the media and added AP Honorable Mention All-American honors.

In his only season with the Hogs, Moody led the Hogs and finished third in the SEC in scoring at 16.8 points per game on 42.7 percent shooting from the field, 35.8 percent (58-162) from three-point range and 81.2 percent (151-186) from the free-throw line.

Moody along with Davonte Davis and Jaylin Williams were the youngest starting lineup in the Sweet 16 and key figure in a team that advanced to the Elite Eight.

But, as expected, he’s gone.

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Knox goes against trend in college sports, staying with Hogs

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In today’s world of college athletics where too many players bail at the first sign of problems, Trey Knox stayed put at Arkansas.

If Knox had chosen the revolving door of the transfer portal, nobody would have been surprised.

“It’s just best to stick it out,” Knox said after Thursday’s practice where the Hogs again worked in shorts and no pads. “That goes through a lot of people’s minds. I want to be here, I want to help this program go back to the top, be at the top.”

Like noted earlier, that’s a refreshing change of pace in today’s world.

Knox started fast as a freshman, actually a faster start than Treylon Burks, who was the highest-rated of a talented group of wide receivers that came in before the 2019 season.

He had 21 catches in the first four games, then a hip pointer slowed him and he finished with seven catches in the last eight games. But he started all 12 games.

Last year was a disaster for the rising junior.

“Last year, I had a lot of problems,” Knox said. “Last season didn’t go the way I wanted it to.”

Part of it was being sick, although he didn’t hit that it was covid-related.

“I don’t know … just throwing up and losing weight,” he said. “I lost 10 pounds before fall camp started and was just not feeling myself.”

That wasn’t all of it, he admitted later.

“I was thinking (too much) on the field, but this year I just find myself going and playing,” Knox said. “That’s coach’s (Kendal Briles) biggest thing … he doesn’t care if you mess up, just go fast, play fast.”

Coaches can usually tolerate errors of commission much better than omission. The translation is, simply, make mistakes at full speed.

“I finally figured that out,” Knox said. “I’m fitting in very well, moving a lot better, not thinking as much and just going out there and playing.”

While Knox’s illness may not have had anything to do with covid, a bigger problem for him was not having the regimen of a spring practice. That’s been a question not many people have answered honestly, but Knox did.

“Not having that spring and then being not 100 percent at the beginning of fall camp really put me at a step behind everyone else,” Knox said. “I need repetition, repetition because I want to know exactly what I’m doing play in and play out.”

What he’s done is work on every area.

“This offseason I’ve been focused on getting faster, putting on weight,” Knox said. “I’ve already gained, like, eight pounds. Just trying to better myself, keep my head down and work because I’ve got faith in myself … the coaches have faith in me.”

Other players have noticed, too.

“He’s worked his butt off,” safety Simeon Blair said. “He’s gotten better at running routes, just trying to take his entire game to the next level.”

For an offense that’s going to has questions at quarterback adding an experienced, talented wide receiver that has shown he can make plays will be a welcome addition.

Knox is confident he’s gotten his wagon out of the ditch it sailed into sometime last spring and summer and his words sounded quietly confident Thursday afternoon.

“We’re going to be alright,” he said with a quiet confidence.

If that translates to the field, Knox could form the nucleus of one of the best wide receiver groups in the country with Burks and Mike Woods.

Which will help anybody playing quarterback.

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