Arkansas baseball vs. Alabama: How to watch, stream, listen

The Diamond Hogs take on Alabama this weekend at Baum-Walker Stadium, hoping to capture their second SEC win of the season. 

The Diamond Hogs take on Alabama this weekend at Baum-Walker Stadium, hoping to claim their second SEC series win of the season.

Alabama has lost its last two SEC series, falling to Florida and Kentucky. Winning inside Baum-Walker stadium is going to be a challenge, though. Arkansas is 18-1 at home this season, currently riding a 15-game winning streak.

It’s the longest home win streak since 1996.

The Diamond Hogs want to bounce back from last weekend’s series loss to LSU. The 9-3 victory looked like it would start a great weekend for the Hogs, but they ended up being outscored 26-7 in the final two games.

The Diamond Hogs could use a sweep this weekend to keep up with SEC West division leader, LSU, who has already won the first game of their series against Tennessee.

No. 8 Arkansas vs. Army: How to watch, stream, listen

The Hogs begin the new week with a one-off against Army for Military Appreciation Day at Baum-Walker Stadium. 

The [autotag]Diamond Hogs [/autotag]begin the new week with a one-off against Army for Military Appreciation Day at Baum-Walker Stadium.

Army enters Fayetteville 4-5 this season and are 1-4 in their last five games. The only game they did win was a 26-3 rout over Stonehill College.

Arkansas is trending upward right now, fresh off sweeping Wright State over the weekend. [autotag]Peyton Stovall[/autotag] was on fire last week, going 10-19 at the plate with three home runs during Arkansas’ 4-0 run.

The SEC is still jam-packed, so a dominant performance is needed if Arkansas wants to establish dominance in the conference.

While the Razorbacks are 9-2 this season, they haven’t found a consistent groove yet. However, last week showed signs this team has found its mojo because they will need it with the grueling SEC season approaching.

No. 8 Arkansas vs. Wright State: How to watch, stream, listen

The Diamond Hogs are preparing for a weekend series against Missouri Valley representative Wright State. 

The Diamond Hogs are preparing for a weekend series against Missouri Valley representative Wright State.

Wright State enters Baum-Walker Stadium 3-4, fresh off a series lost against Kentucky. The Raiders are one of 19 teams the Hogs will face this season that went to the NCAA Tournament.

Dave Van Horn is still waiting for his team to provide a consistent series, especially the pitching staff. Arkansas has looked average against formidable opponents, with the staff allowing double-digit runs twice this season.

“We shouldn’t have to rely on four pitchers on a pitching staff that’s unbelievably deep,” Van Horn said a few days ago.

“Guys have just got to slow the game down and throw to the glove and trust that their stuff is good. With four pitchers, that might be what we have to do, but I think we’ll have some guys step up. So, we’ll see.”

Rival SEC baseball atmospheres prove Auburn is lagging far behind

While other SEC baseball stadiums have become atmospheres you have to witness, Auburn’s Plainsman Park remains as dull as ever.

If you’ve been watching the NCAA Baseball Tournament during the past week, you’ve noticed quite amazing atmospheres from Starkville to Fayetteville and many other places in the SEC.

It made me jealous. Not because these SEC teams were winning, in fact the complete opposite. I’m rooting for them. Yet what made me jealous was the fact that these baseball stadiums — Dudy Noble, Baum-Walker, Lindsey Nelson — are much better than Auburn has ever had and, possibly, ever imagined of having.

Let that sink in.

The scenes have been phenomenal. The crowd? Noisy as possible. Heck, Mississippi State set a Super Regional record with 14,385 fans on Saturday.

And what do we have at Auburn? It’s rarely filled to the 4,096 capacity that Plainsman Park holds. We have the three or four guys in that one section along the third-base line that continue yelling things that are as funny as the latest Adam Sandler movie. Oh, and that parking deck. Yes, we have the parking deck full of people drinking but too far away — and disinterested in the game — to make any impact on the home-field advantage.

Heck, we don’t even have outfield seating. I’ve seen some people on Twitter mention putting seats on top of the left-field wall and, yes, that would be a great start but when you see 4,000 people (again, more than we average at a game) in the outfield at an Ole Miss game throwing beer in the air after a home run, the Plainsman Park atmosphere looks like a Jefferson-Pilot noon game at Vanderbilt.

It’s not like the Tigers haven’t won. Taking this year out of the equation, the Butch Thompson era has brought back some glory to the program with a trip to the Super Regionals in 2018 and to Omaha for the College World Series in 2019.

We’ve seen the Auburn fan base turn Jane B. Moore Field into a true home-field advantage. Auburn Arena has become one of the most intimidating environments in college basketball.

So what is lacking for Auburn baseball? Why have SEC stadiums at Ole Miss, Mississippi State and elsewhere become so much wild while Plainsman Park resembles a 9 a.m. World History lecture in Haley Center?

I don’t have all the answers but I can suggest some.

Build a section beyond the right-field wall that allows students to bring coolers with their beverages of choice where they can also see the game. It worked to a degree with K Corner but … well … students tend to be more rowdy than alumni in their 50’s.

Make the game more of an experience than it is right now. Besides baseball, what is the really attraction of going to Plainsman Park right now? It’s not for a great atmosphere that you witness across the street at Jordan-Hare Stadium or Auburn Arena.

Of course, this might also just come down to fan indifference. Are Auburn fans truly bought into baseball? Do they even care if the Tigers succeed or not? It’s been some time since the program put out a successful winner consistently but the same can be true for many other sports that are better supported on campus.

Granted, it is hard to compare a regular season series to a Super Regional but, when it comes to attendance, the stadiums are full to almost full in other places where the Tigers are lucky to play in front of 2,000.

Yes, watching the NCAA Regionals and Super Regionals have made me extremely jealous of the environments that other SEC teams enjoy and use to their advantage. There’s no reason Auburn can’t make Plainsman Park an atmosphere to fear.