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Come on, not many of you expected this in January

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When Monday’s media poll dropped with Arkansas jumping eight spots to No. 12 there was a wave of excitement for a fan base needing something.

In the coaches’ poll they are 13th.

The last time the Razorbacks were that high in a poll was 1998.

Coming on the same day the baseball team is ranked No. 1 in the country and the women’s team likely to be highly ranked later in the day, spirits are high.

Oh, and before we forget, both track teams took SEC Indoor league titles over the weekend and will be hosting the NCAA Championships in a few weeks.

But for the men, let’s not forget there was the Lunatic Fringe of the Razorbacks’ fan base back in mid-January that were ready to pack up the Muss Bus, aim it out of town and put the hammer down (sorry, couldn’t resist that).

We cautioned you then to just calm down and relax because there were a lot of games left and the guess was Eric Musselman would have it straightened out pretty quick.

It’s called coaching and that’s why college sports sells the coaches, who are the most consistent face of any sport at any school. Players come and go, but coaches either win or the face of the program changes … quickly these days.

The Hogs may be the hottest basketball programs in the SEC and maybe the country.

Last week they ran away late from sixth-ranked (eighth in today’s poll) Alabama, then rallied from a halftime deficit to sail past LSU in a second half that wasn’t as close as the final 83-75 score indicated.

Musselman knows how to coach and there is a segment of folks that race to be first on social media to declare the program is in shambles and changes have to be made.

One sports radio talking head even brought up the idea over the weekend that Musselman might be headed to another job in Minnesota where he spent part of his youth with his dad coaching there.

Maybe it’s good speculation, but there hasn’t been any indication Musselman is looking to go anywhere else.

The knee-jerk reaction is he really wants to be back in the NBA or in the Big Ten or anywhere other than Fayetteville. Okay, Eddie Sutton crawled to Kentucky back in 1985 but no other coach has left for another job.

That’s a combination of a different Northwest Arkansas and higher expectations. Having the financial resources helps keep good coaches in Fayetteville … as long as they are winning games and staying off Harleys on the Elkins highway.

As of now there is zero evidence Musselman viewed Arkansas a stepping-stone to something else. With Sutton there was always the feeling it wasn’t big enough.

Nolan Richardson wasn’t going anywhere even after things fell apart in 2001.

The feeling is Musselman won’t, either.

Especially considering he’s gotten the Hogs back in the national conversation with nothing approaching two normal seasons. Covid has been an issue for a year and has thrown college basketball with curve balls and changeups all year long.

How Musselman has handled it probably speaks as much to why he’s have success. He has that “it” factor. Knows it, gets it, understands it … whatever you want to call it.

But for now he has the Hogs No. 12 in the country.

And he knows it won’t mean a lot if he doesn’t win games this month.

 

Hogs move to No. 1 in polls, but Van Horn probably doesn’t care

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It’s a good bet Dave Van Horn knows Arkansas was moved to the top spot in Monday morning’s college baseball polls and probably shrugged it off.

Fans will care about a March poll that means nothing in May.

Van Horn probably doesn’t.

“I’ll be more than happy to comment if it happens,” he said after finishing the sweep of Southeast Missouri over the weekend. “I don’t have anything to say about it because it hasn’t happened.”

He was smiling when he said that, by the way. Van Horn knew.

But the truth is he knows it’s a long way to May.

“We need to work on some things,” Van Horn said Sunday. “I feel good about where we’re at.”

The latest edition of both the D1 Baseball and Baseball America Top 25 polls has the Hogs ranked No. 1 in the country after Ole Miss lost two of three games over the weekend to Central Florida.

Arkansas was ranked No. 8 in the preseason by D1 Baseball and slotted in at sixth by Baseball America but has earned a spot at the top of the rankings quickly after an impressive opening weekend at the State Farm College Baseball Showdown.

Van Horn, who is building what has become probably the most consistently strong team in college baseball over the last few years and the last piece to the puzzle is closing out a national championship.

Right now, though, he’s just trying to figure out this team.

“I feel good about our team, where we’re at,” Van Horn said. “Obviously, the bottom line is you need to win games, and we’ve been winning them. Whether we played real well or just OK, we found a way to win a couple games where were were behind these first seven.”

Arkansas will play next against Murray State in a three-game series starting Friday at Baum-Walker Stadium.

The Hogs travel to Louisiana Tech for a weekend series March 12-14 and play a single game on Tuesday, March 16, at home against Oklahoma before opening SEC play at Alabama March 19-21.

Murphy expects Hogs to move up in week’s hoops polls

Democrat-Gazette writer Tom Murphy doesn’t have a vote in the writer’s poll for college basketball, but expects the Hogs to move up.

Go back to Baton Rouge and take your Corn Dogs with you

Tye & Tommy on the win over LSU, sweeping SEMO, best Bachelor trip locations and more!

 

Hogs’ seniors finish with night to remember, big SEC win

No. 16 Arkansas finished the regular season with a game to remember, blasting Alabama behind a combined 72 points from three seniors for a 94-76 win.

The win finished the regular season with a 19-7 record (9-6 in the SEC. The Crimson Tide finish 15-8 (8-8).

Mike Neighbors’ Hogs went supernova from beyond the arc in the regular season finale, hitting 19 threes as a team, a program single-game record.

That total is also a single-game SEC record. With the win, Arkansas finished with nine SEC wins, only the third time in school history the Razorbacks have reached that threshold (2019-20, 2011-12).

It was a special night for redshirt senior guard Amber Ramirez, who put on arguably her greatest performance as a Razorback in her final game in Bud Walton Arena.

The sharpshooter poured in 35 points, a new career-high, while making eight of her 14 threes, a season-high, and just one make short of tying Wendi Willits’ single-game record.

Fellow seniors Chelsea Dungee and Destiny Slocum got in on the act as well, going for 20 points and 17 points, respectively.

Turning point

The Hogs got off to a blistering start from deep, knocking down eight of their 14 long balls in the first quarter, spearheaded by Ramirez’s five first-quarter threes.

Ramirez sent two more threes home in the second quarter, totaling seven triples in the first half.

Arkansas’ hot shooting helped the Razorbacks build a 51-39 lead over the Crimson Tide heading into halftime.

Alabama started to surge back in the second half, though, winning the third quarter, 19-16, but Arkansas would not be denied on Senior Night.

The Razorbacks dominated the fourth quarter, 27-18, aided by 12 more points from Ramirez in the final frame.

Dungee sealed the three-point record with an incredibly difficult step-back jumper from deep in the game’s final minutes, putting the game on ice.

Hogs highlights

• Dungee went for 20+ yet again, her 12th time in 15 SEC contests going for 20 or more.

• Her double-digit scoring streak also reached 30 games.

• Slocum dished seven assists, a team-high.

• Sophomore Makayla Daniels nearly double-doubled, going for 15 points and a career-best nine rebounds.

• Senior forward Taylah Thomas swatted three shots, her fourth multi-block game this season.

• Despite not scoring a single point, redshirt senior guard Jailyn Mason was a game-high +15.

Next game

With the regular season in the books, Arkansas heads back to Greenville, S.C., where they will take part in the SEC Tournament.

Their first game will come on Thursday, when they will play Ole Miss.

The game will be the nightcap on Thursday, and will be televised on the SEC Network.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

Neighbors surprised at team’s offensive outburst

Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors was a little surprised at shooting nearly 50 percent from the field (and three’s) in overwhelming Alabama.

Ramirez on being ‘in zone’ putting up 35 on Senior Night for Hogs

Razorbacks senior Amber Ramirez (35 points, 3 rebounds, 2 assists) got emotional talking about final game at Bud Walton Arena.

Arkansas falls in long match with four tiebreakers against No. 25 Memphis

Arkansas (6-4) dropped a marathon match on Sunday, falling to No. 25 Memphis (5-1) by a score of 5-2.

The teams played through tiebreaker sets on four of six singles courts.

The Razorbacks fell behind after doubles play, dropping two of the three matchups. Hunter Harrison and Enrique Paya paired up for the first time this season and came out with the Hogs’ lone doubles win 6-3 against Memphis’ Oscar Cutting and David Stevenson on court one.

The Tigers secured straight-sets wins on courts four and three to take a 3-0 lead, but Arkansas continued to fight back. On court one, Alex Reco won the first set against James Story, but ultimately dropped the second and third to Story 4-6, 7-5, 7-5. The loss for Reco clinched the win for Memphis.

Arkansas’ Adrien Burdet improved to 7-3 on the season in the No. 5 position. Burdet battled back after Pau Fanlo of Memphis tied the match at one set apiece, coming out on top 6-1, 4-6, 7-5. Maxim Verboven defeated his Tiger foe, earning a win over David Stevenson 7-5, 4-6, 7-5 on court two.

“Again, our effort and competitiveness were there,” said head tennis coach Andy Jackson. “We have to coach and play better and that is what we plan on doing. We have a good opportunity at top-25 Kentucky on Friday night. The team is looking forward to getting to play again.”

Arkansas looks ahead to back-to-back road matches at No. 15 Kentucky on Friday (March 5) and Vanderbilt on Sunday (March 7).

Razorbacks down Missouri on Sunday for ninth straight win

COLUMBIA, Mo. — No. 24 Arkansas remained undefeated with a 4-2 win over Missouri on Sunday afternoon.

The Razorbacks improved to 9-0 this spring and 3-0 in Southeastern Conference play.

After a weather delay, Arkansas started with singles play and built an advantage early when senior Tatum Rice defeated Missouri’s Valentina Vazquez on court three 6-3, 6-0.

Laura Rijkers followed shortly after with a straight-set win of her own on court six, a 6-3, 6-1 win over Serena Nash. With the win, Rijkers improves to 6-0 on the season in singles play.

The Tigers fired back on courts one and four to tie the score at two match wins apiece. Kelly Keller fell to Bronte Murgett 6-3, 6-4 on court one and Morgan Cross dropped her set to Marta Oliveira on court four 6-3, 6-3.

The Razorbacks regained the lead with a win from Lauren Alter 6-4, 6-4. She defeated Mizzou’s Elys Ventura on court five to put Arkansas out in front, 3-2.

Clinching the win for Arkansas on court two was freshman Indianna Spink. She secured a 6-3 set-one win over her opponent, Ellie Wright, and then found herself trailing 5-2 in the second. Spink made an impressive comeback and ultimately defeated Wright 6-3, 7-5.

The Razorbacks return to Fayetteville for a Friday-Sunday series against SEC foes, No. 10 Vanderbilt and Kentucky. Friday’s match against the Commodores at the Billingsley Tennis Center is set to begin at 3 p.m.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

Rain shortens Hogs’ 11-4 win to finish sweep over Blackhawks

Only the rain could stop the Razorback offense.

Arkansas picked up its first series sweep of the season, defeating Southeast Missouri State in a rain-shortened, five-inning game on Sunday afternoon at Baum-Walker Stadium.

The Hogs broke out for 11 runs over the first four innings before the elements wreaked havoc.

With the win, the Razorbacks start the season with a perfect 7-0 record for the second straight year and for the eighth time in the Dave Van Horn era (19 seasons).

Arkansas’ offense was hot from the start despite the steady rain, launching three home runs and collecting double-digit hits for the second game in a row.

Right fielder Cayden Wallace and first baseman Brady Slavens hit back-to-back dingers in the second inning to give the Hogs an early 2-0 lead.

Shortstop Jalen Battles’ second-inning RBI single made it 3-0, providing starter Lael Lockhart an early cushion. The left-hander went 3.2 innings on Sunday, striking out five while allowing three runs on three hits and three walks.

Arkansas’ bats, however, were not done. The Hogs tacked on two more in the third, including one on third baseman Cullen Smith’s RBI double to center, and led 5-1 entering the next inning.

SEMO narrowed the gap with two runs of its own in the top half of fourth, but the Hogs had even more in them.

The Razorbacks exploded for six additional runs, led by designated hitter Matt Goodheart’s two-run homer to right center, and staked an 11-3 lead at the conclusion of the fourth inning. SEMO got one back in the fifth via a home run, but the weather had begun to take a turn for the worse.

After right-hander Kevin Kopps recorded the final out in the top of the fifth on a strikeout, the game entered a rain delay. The umpires reconvened after an initial 30-minute pause and called it for good. The ballgame, which lasted five innings, is ruled an official contest.

Arkansas will take a seven-game winning streak into next weekend’s series against Murray State.

The Racers come to town for a three-game set, which gets started at 3 p.m. Friday, March 5, at Baum-Walker Stadium.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

Burnside, Haff lead Razorbacks to run-rule win over Texas Tech

Infielder Braxton Burnside hit two home runs, and pitcher Mary Haff threw a shutout as No. 24 Arkansas run-ruled Texas Tech in six innings, 8-0, in the Razorback Invitational finale at Bogle Park on a rainy Sunday afternoon.

The Razorbacks (11-2) finished the event a perfect 6-0, and in two games against Texas Tech (5-6), outscored the Red Raiders, 17-0.

The Hogs entered the day leading the SEC in home runs and increased their season total to 33, with Burnside’s eight bombs pacing the club.

Infielder Hannah Gammill and infielder Audrie LaValley each reached on walks in the second inning before outfielder Sam Torres laid down a sacrifice bunt, plating Gammill on a throwing error by the Texas Tech pitcher.

Burnside hit the first of her two bombs in the third, putting Arkansas ahead, 2-0. A five-hit, four-run fifth inning blew the game open and gave the Razorbacks a 6-0 lead.

Infielder Danielle Gibson smashed a three-run homer to right center, and catcher Kayla Green lined a two out double to the right centerfield gap, plating another run.

The offense went right back to work in the sixth, with Burnside crushing her second solo jack of the day to left. Gibson and designated player Linnie Malkin both singled, and Gammill walked, setting up LaValley to be hit by a pitch and force across the game-ending run.

Arkansas won three of its six Razorback Invitational games in run-rule fashion.

Haff (6-1) pitched tremendously, scattering three hits — two singles and a double — while not walking a batter. She struck out four and pitched to contact well, registering 11 flyouts.

The redshirt junior did not allow a run over 18.1 innings pitched for the week and struck out 20 with just two walks. Megan Hornback (0-1) allowed all the damage for Texas Tech, pitching 5.2 innings while walking three and striking out two.

Both Burnside and Gibson went 3-for-4 and outfielder Hannah McEwen was 2-for-4 with a pair of singles.

Arkansas continues its homestand hosting the Wooo Pig Classic next weekend and will play five games from Thursday, March 4, through Saturday, March 6.