Arkansas baseball vs Mississippi State – Game 3: How to watch, stream, listen

Arkansas clinch the series against Mississippi State, but they will attempt to capture the sweep.

Arkansas baseball has found its groove again.

The Diamond Hogs knocked off Mississippi State, 14-2, to claim their sixth SEC season series thanks to the run-rule in the seventh inning. This is also the fourth consecutive series victory over Mississippi State.

Arkansas jumped out to an 8-0 lead by the fourth inning. It wasn’t until the sixth inning that the Hogs began to send the ball over the fence. Brady Slevins hit his second home run of the series in the sixth inning. In the next inning, Kendall Diggs and Caleb Cali had two home runs combining for five RBIs which sealed the game.

Diggs had a great day at the plate, leading the team with three hits and five RBIs.

On the mound, Will McEntire pitched five innings, giving up seven hits and two runs while striking out four batters in relief duty. Brady Tygart started the game by giving up zero hits and runs in two innings of work.

Arkansas tosses two-hitter, takes Game 1 vs Mississippi State

Arkansas’ staff had trouble working, well, out of trouble all season. Not on Friday.

Arkansas’ pitching staff has largely been middle-of-the-pack in the SEC this season.

On Friday, though, the triumverate of Hagen Smith, Cody Adcock and Gage Wood gave the Diamond Hogs perhaps one of their better games of the season. They combined for a two-hitter in Arkansas’ 6-2 win at Mississippi State to open the series in Starkville.

Smith worked the first five innings and gave up both hits and runs. The first came on an RBI single in the fourth after a walk and a hit batter. The second run after two walks and a single loaded the bases, Mississippi State scored on a wild pitch.

The second run tied things as Arkansas scored its first two runs in the first inning on a two-run home run by Jace Bohrofen. Brady Slavens broke the tie in the sixth with a two-run shot and the Diamond Hogs tacked on two more in the ninth on a wild pitch and an RBI single from Kendall Diggs.

Arkansas’ staff’s stuff wasn’t their best of the season. Mississippi State walked eight times, too. But working out of the trouble had been a Razorbacks issue all season. The Bulldogs ultimately left nine runners  onbase.

Caleb Cali had the best day at the plate for Arkansas, collecting three hits in four at-bats with a double and a run. No other Razorbacks hitter had more than a knock.

Arkansas will look to take the series on Saturday when the teams meet at 6 p.m.

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Arkansas baseball vs Mississippi State – Game 2: How to watch, stream, listen

Arkansas will attempt to claim their fourth consecutive series win over Mississippi State Saturday night. Here’s how to catch the action.  

It was a good Friday Night for the Diamond Hogs.

They opened their series against Mississippi State with a 6-2 victory, improving to 10-1 against the Bulldogs since 2019. Dave Van Horn got a complete game from his squad, with thirteen strikeouts and two home runs.

Hagen Smith, Cody Adcock, and Gage Wood combined for 13 strikeouts in the two-hitter, the first of its kind under Van Horn.

Jace Bohrofen and Brady Slevins contributed the two home runs. Bohrofen’s two-run bomb came in the first inning, bringing home Kendall Diggs to build an early 2-0 lead. The Bulldogs attempted to make a comeback, but Slevins put the Hogs ahead once more with a two-run bomb of his own in the top of the sixth.

Arkansas will attempt to claim their fourth consecutive series win over Mississippi State Saturday night. Here’s how to catch the action.

Dave Van Horn returning Hagen Smith to Arkansas’ rotation

Hagen Smith has been Arkansas’ best pitcher this season by far, so he’s headed back to the rotation for Mississippi State.

Injuries have beset the Arkansas baseball team as bad in 2023 as they have any season in recent memory.

Coach Dave Van Horn is having to be more clever than usual when it comes to making adjustments because of it. That includes returning the team’s best and most consistent pitcher back to the rotation.

Hagen Smith is set to start Friday’s opener against Mississippi State with first pitch scheduled for 6 p.m. in Starkville. The start will be Smith’s seventh this season, but he also has six relief appearances. He has a 6-1 record, the team’s best, and a 2.64 earned-run average – also best among qualifiers – in 47 2/3 innings.

In other words, Van Horn wants to maximize the innings total for the best pitcher on his roster.

The move will hurt a bullpen that is already stretched thing and hasn’t pitched well more often than not. Among the five players with the most outings in relief this season, their invidivual ERAs are 3.00, 6.58, 5.06, 8.18 and 9.74 in order of most relief appearances to fewest. For the record, that’s Gage Wood, Austin Ledbetter, Cody Adcock, Christian Foutch and Zack Morris.

Arkansas enters its eighth SEC series of the weekend in second in the Western Division, two games in the loss column behind LSU, but four games in front of Alabama for third in the division.

Arkansas baseball vs Mississippi State – Game 1: How to watch, stream, listen

Arkansas travels to Mississippi State looking to claim their sixth SEC series.

The college baseball season is coming to a close for the Diamond Hogs, with only three series left before the SEC tournament.

First, the Diamond Hogs must travel to Starksville for a weekend series against Mississippi State.

Mississippi State is at the bottom of the SEC, with only six wins in league play. We all know that doesn’t mean a guarantee for Arkansas after the debacle in Athens. Arkansas is also fighting off the injury bug, who just took another pitcher for the rest of the season. 

Arkansas still has a chance o be a top seed in the SEC Tournament, especially if they can pull off another sweep to claim their sixth conference series win.

Arkansas pitcher Dylan Carter suffers season-ending injury

The injury bug strikes again for Dave Van Horn and Arkansas baseball’s pitching staff

The injury bug has struck Arkansas baseball yet again. The Diamond Hogs lost another important bullpen piece when RHP [autotag]Dylan Carter[/autotag] suffered a season-ending UCL tear.

The sophomore from Bentonville shared the heartbreaking news to Twitter with a short statement.

“Razorback Nation: It is with a heavy heart that I announce my 2023 season has come to an end due to a UCL tear,” Carter’s announcement read. “This season has been nothing short of amazing and our teams season isn’t over yet. I will be the best teammate and supporter as we finish up the season and begin our run to Omaha. #31”

Carter was injured in last Thursday’s series-opening win over Texas A&M after just one inning of relief work. He’s been stellar this season, having recorded a 6-0 record, 3.65 ERA and two saves across 37 innings pitched this season. Carter has walked 11 batters, struck out 26 and opponents are batting .264 against him.

This is third season-ending injury suffered by an Arkansas pitcher. Jaxon Wiggins and Koty Frank are both out with UCL injuries that required Tommy John surgery, just as Carter will need.

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At least fans didn’t have to watch Arkansas’ loss to Lipscomb

Finding a positive in Arkansas’ loss Tuesday night is tough.

Tuesday night’s Arkansas baseball game against Lipscomb was like a break-up.

Hard to watch. Painful at the start. A chance of reconcilition. Ultimate dump.

The No. 6 Razorbacks lost to their Atlantic Sun foe at Dickey-Stephens Park in North Little Rock, 8-6. The game didn’t air on television or streaming.

A sacrifice fly and an RBI single in the 11th inning lifted the Bisons as Arkansas went down in order in the bottom of the frame. Razorbacks coach Dave Van Horn went through nine pitchers in the game, two of whom did not record an out.

Ben McLaughlin, who went 2 for 5 as a hitter with two runs, a double, and a walk, also picked up the loss. Van Horn put him on the mound where he walked two batters, gave up the single, the sac fly and another walk.

Arkansas scored three runs in the first before Lipscomb chipped away. The Bisons picked up one in the third inning and two in the fourth to tie things. Ben Bybee then gave up two hits and two walks without retiring a batter in the sixth as Lipscomb scored three.

The Diamond Hogs tied the game in the eighth by scoring two runs via wild pitch to ultimately send the game to extra innings. In other words, it went badly nearly the whole time.

Arkansas returns to SEC play Friday when hitting the road to play at Mississippi State.

Reminder: No TV for Hogs baseball in North Little Rock on Tuesday

Radio only. You remember radio right, Arkansas fans? It’s that thing in your car, you use it to stream music from your phone.

Remember when Arkansas fans used to fight online seemingly non-stop about whether games should be played in the greater Little Rock area?

Razorbacks fans from central Arkansas don’t seem to get as up in arms as they used to. Kudos to Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek for quietly getting away from making the trip down Interstate 49 and across I-40. His predecessor always seemed to be at the forefront of the fight.

But that’s football. In baseball and basketball, the Razorbacks still play one game per season just north of the state capital. No one seems to complain much about these games from either part of the Natural State. Attendance is usually good.

It’s embarrassing, though, that in this day and age of everything-is-streaming that those games aren’t on any form of video feed available to consumers. Meaning, no TV. No streaming.

Yurachek detailed the reasons why in December. Long story short, equipment isn’t available there and it’s not time-efficient nor cost-effective to haul the ones in Fayetteville over.

That means Tuesday’s game against Lipscomb can only be heard on the radio, where the mellow voice of Phil Elson will carry you through just fine.

Radio. You know, it’s in your car (and literally nowhere else in your world). It has the knobs. No. Not that one. That controls the temperature. The other one.

Anyway, that’s the reason the game is against Lipscomb. Here’s how to catch it.

Baseball RADIO AFFILIATES

City Station
Conway KASR-FM 92.7
El Dorado KELD-FM 107.1
Fayetteville KQSM-FM 92.1
Fayetteville KYNG-AM AM 1590
Forrest City KJXK-FM 106.5
Forrest City KJXK-AM AM 950
Fort Smith KERX-FM 95.3
Hot Springs/Mena KTTG-FM 96.3
Little Rock KABZ-FM 103.7
Marshall KBCN-FM 104.3
Rogers KURM-FM 100.3
Rogers KURM-AM AM 790
Russellville KARV-FM 101.3
Russellville KARV-AM AM 610
Stuttgart KW1400AK-FM 105.5
Texarkana KKTK-AM AM 1400

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Wegner, Josenberger still out, but Diamond Hogs expect them back by SEC Tournament

Arkansas outfielders Jared Wegner and Tavian Josenberger should be back from injury before the regular season ends, Dave Van Horn said.

Arkansas’ shot at an SEC West division title is a long one. But the Razorbacks, playing for something greater, will at least have a couple of their best hitters back in time for the real stakes.

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn said Monday that outfielders Jared Wegner and Tavian Josenberger should be back in the Diamond Hogs’ lineup before the end of the season. Wegner has been out for three weeks because of a fractured thumb. Josenberger hasn’t played since April 22 because of a hamstring malady.

Van Horn spoke to the Swatter’s Club in the final luncheon of the season. He said Wegner will have pins removed from his thumb next week and that both players should be back before the end of the regular season, just time for the SEC Tournament and the subsequent NCAAs.

Wegner was Arkansas’ best hitter before the injury. He was hitting .351 with 12 home runs and 44 RBI when he was forced out of the lineup. His homer and RBI totals still lead the team.

Josenberger was hitting .322 and was second on the team in walks with 28 when he was hurt. He also leads the team in stole bases (9) and is second in runs (40).

Arkansas will play Lipscomb on Tuesday in North Little Rock. The Diamond Hogs then hit the road proper for a three-game set at Mississippi State on the weekend. The team is two games in the loss column behind LSU in the SEC West standings, but they’re also five games up on third-place Alabama, Texas A&M and Auburn.

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Dominic Fletcher earns first call-up to Major League Baseball

Former Arkansas outfielder Dominic Fletcher is making his first trip to The Show after raking at Triple-A.

The Arizona Diamondbacks called up former Arkansas outfielder Dominic Fletcher for the team’s series finale Sunday against Colorado.

Fletcher, who is making his first trip to The Show, was hitting .323 with an on-base percentage of .417 and slugging .523 at Triple-A Reno. Ostensibly, Fletcher is taking the place of outfielder Jake McCarthy who was optioned to Reno on April 25. The official corresponding move was Arizona sending Anthony Misiewicz.

Fletcher was named Arizona’s No. 13 prospect entering the season by The Athletic’s Keith Law. The Diamondbacks selected Fletcher out of Arkansas in the second round of the 2019 draft. His brother, David, has spent most of the last four seasons as the Los Angeles Angels’ starting second baseman.

Fletcher slashed .298/.360/.497 during his three years in Fayetteville from 2017 to 2019. He was not in the Diamondbacks’ starting lineup Sunday and will likely serve as the team’s fourth outfielder.

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