Kopps’ beet-juiced bionic arm, Welch’s hitting keeps Hogs playing

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Kevin Kopps carried Arkansas on his right arm Monday into a Super Regional later this week along with another pinch-hit homer by Charlie Welch.

The final score was 6-2. Jaxon Wiggins started for the Razorbacks and got two batters out in the third before Kopps came in and Nebraska pushed across a run on baserunners he inherited for a 2-0 lead.

He finished the game, throwing 90 pitches. It was his third appearance in the regional and he threw 185 pitches by my count over four days.

“What an incredible, incredible college pitcher,” Dave Van Horn said later about Kopps.

Kopps’ drinking beet juice lately is what he jokingly refers to as the secret. Actually it’s a 24-year-old arm that is mature and a smart pitcher that is the age of a lot of pitchers in pro ball.

He’s the biggest part of this year for Van Horn and he knows it. He’s also not speculating on where the Hogs would be right now without him.

“I don’t even want to think about it,” he said.

Bringing in Kopps so early, Van Horn’s plan became get to the seventh or eighth inning and bring in Patrick Wicklander, who was chomping at the bit to get into the game.

“He wouldn’t let us take him out,” Van Horn said.

After the Hogs put up four in the eighth inning to seal the deal on what was a game that was looking like extra innings for sure (mainly on Welch’s three-run pinch-hit homer), Kopps simply told Van Horn he was going back out for the ninth.

“I’ve never seen anything like it as long as I’ve been involved in college baseball, to have a guy that’s able to go out there and compete at such a high level in such an environment on this stage and to do it over and over and over,” Nebraska coach Will Bolt said later. “There’s a reason he’s a national pitcher of the year.”

Well, he might end up being the player of the year as that vote is coming in the next few days.

For now, though, he’s carried the Hogs into a Super Regional matchup later this week against North Carolina State, who is hitting the ball a lot winning the Ruston Regional.

And there will be more standing-room-only crowds. They exploded on Welch’s homer in the eighth, which was a massive shot that was one of those no-doubters when he connected on a fastball he was waiting on.

“It was surreal,” Welch said later. “You could feel it on your body. It’s so loud you’re shaking. Your helmet is trembling. I’ve never experienced that.”

Van Horn noticed, too.

“That’s the loudest I’ve ever heard this stadium and I’ve been in some crazy games here,” he said. “That was incredibly loud.”

Now they’ll be needed again against the Wolfpack, who is on a roll. The Hogs are just two wins away from going back to Omaha to play for a national title.

Which has been the goal for Van Horn and this team all year long.

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Nobody wanted a game Monday, but that’s what Hogs have

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Arkansas’ inconsistency at the plate finally caught up with Dave Van Horn’s team Sunday night and now they have a win-or-end game Monday night.

“We haven’t swing the bats well this whole weekend,” he said after the 5-3 loss to Nebraska that sets up a regional final Monday at 6 p.m.

The winner goes to a Super Regional. The loser goes home.

“We just have to be better,” Van Horn said.

After falling behind by a run in the first, the Razorbacks used two singles, an error and a wild pitch to score three times in the top of the third.

The Hogs blew that two-run lead when the offense struggled to produce against Huskers reliever Spencer Schwellenbach, who started the game at shortstop then came on in the fifth to pitch.

Arkansas couldn’t get a run after that.

All five of Nebraska’s runs came against Arkansas starter Lael Lockhart, who allowed four earned while striking out five in 4.1 innings. A throwing error in the bottom of the third led to the first of four unanswered runs, helping the Cornhuskers chip away at the Razorbacks’ lead.

Ryan Costeiu and Connor Noland followed Lockhart out of the bullpen, combining for five strikeouts in 2.2 innings of relief work. Noland faced the minimum in two innings, retiring the Nebraska side in order in the bottom of the seventh.

“They just out-played us,” Van Horn said. “It was just sloppy at times.”

Nebraska didn’t use a lot of pitching in down NJIT 18-4 earlier on Sunday and just two pitchers against the Hogs.

Van Horn didn’t bring Kevin Kopps in, so he may actually be ready for some work Monday.

Connor Noland came on in relief and got a previous bad outing out of his system, working the final two innings, giving up just a single hit and walking nobody.

After the game, he said the Hogs’ pitching staff was ready to do it with guts Monday if necessary.

“Every pitcher on that staff has something left in the tank,” he said. “We all want to be out there and we’ll do anything to win the game.”

Hog fans have been making reservations in Omaha, but they now will have to sweat out an elimination game against a Nebraska team that was Big 10 champions that is in a position to pull off the biggest upset in the regionals.

If nothing else, though, this team has shown the ability to shake off a bad game to win a series matchup.

That’s how you go undefeated in series throughout an SEC season.

Now they just have to do it on a bigger stage.

With bigger stakes.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.