El Dorado News-Times

Razorbacks to host SEC regional tournament.

- By Nate Allen

FAYETTEVIL­LE Coaches at some of the No. 1 seeds hosting the 16 four-team double-eliminatio­n NCAA Baseball regionals that begin winnowing to the eight playing for the national championsh­ip at the College World Series today contemplat­e starting their No. 3, 4 or even No. 5 starter in the tournament’s first round.

Arkansas Razorbacks coach Dave Van Horn isn’t one of them.

No obscure conference tournament champion or unknown at-large opponent for Arkansas throughout this Fayettevil­le Regional that the Razorbacks host starting Friday at Baum Stadium.

Instead, three formidable, old regional rivals come to Fayettevil­le that the SEC Tournament and SEC West runners-up nationally No. 12 ranked Razorbacks (4217) know well.

The Razorbacks at 7 p.m. Friday open with the fourth-seeded Tulsabased Summit League champion Oral Roberts University Golden Eagles (42-14). Second-seeded Missouri Valley Conference regular-sea-

son champion Missouri State (4017) and the third-seeded Big 12 Tournament champion Oklahoma State Cowboys (30-25), who enter with seven consecutiv­e victories, open the tournament at 2 p.m. Friday.

Friday’s losers play their eliminatio­n game at 2 p.m. Saturday, and Friday’s winners play at 7 p.m. Saturday.

Sunday’s loser’s bracket final is 3 p.m. with its winner returning at 8 p.m. for Sunday’s championsh­ip game and 6 p.m. Monday winner take all final if necessary.

No Fayettevil­le Regional games are on convention­al TV, but can be seen via the Internet on ESPN3. Arkansas’ games air on the Razorbacks Radio Network.

Van Horn’s Razorbacks have played all three Fayettevil­le Regionals in various regionals past.

This 2017 season, Arkansas lost 8-3 to Oklahoma State at the neutral site of Frisco, Texas and outslugged Missouri State 12-4 at Hammons Field in Springfiel­d, Mo.

None of the three Fayettevil­le Regional outfits allows Van Horn to gamble in the first two games on starting anybody but one of his by far two ace right-handers, junior Trevor Stephan (5-3, 3.08 ERA), or sophomore Blaine Knight (8-4, 3.08 ERA).

“Probably about as good a regional as there is out there,” Van Horn said.

“I think you could flip a coin on all four teams and they are all about the same.”

Knight and Stephan have interchang­ed starting the opener of Arkansas’ three-game SEC series weekends, though in the final three-game SEC series and the SEC Tournament, Stephan started the first game.

Van Horn seemed inclined to stick with that format but said it’s not etched in stone.

“We’ll look at the matchups,” Van Horn said whether it’s Stephan or Knight vs. ORU.

ORU’s Golden Eagles have appeared often on Arkansas’ schedule, but not since the 2015 Razorbacks beat them and host Oklahoma State in the Stillwater Regional and returned to Baum to beat Missouri State two out of three in the Super Regional that advanced them to Van Horn’s fourth College World Series at Arkansas.

Last year’s Hogs (26-29, 7-23) marked Van Horn’s first losing season in 15 Arkansas years.

They obviously rebounded this year, including coming back from a firstround loss to Mississipp­i State in the SEC Tournament to rout Auburn, Mississipp­i State and SEC East champion and national regional seed Florida in Sunday’s championsh­ip game to LSU, the SEC West champion, and also a top eight national seed.

“I think we are playing good,” Van Horn said Monday by phone as the Razorbacks bused back home.

“We ran into a really hot team yesterday. We had a couple of chances to break it open and win the game.

“For the most part we played solid baseball. I thought we swung the bats extremely well. I like where are at right now.”

Arkansas first baseman Chad Spanberger became an ESPN/SEC Network favorite topic by blasting three home runs plus three doubles during Arkansas’ five games.

And he wasn’t alone. “Obviously, I was impressed with the power that we showed but also I thought we pitched pretty good,” Van Horn said.

“We let Game One slip away (the bullpen lost it after Stephan’s fine start), but other than that we threw a lot of strikes and played solid defense until we dropped that ball yesterday (an error opening the LSU gates) that probably cost us the ballgame.”

Knight, beating Mississipp­i State with an excellent 6 2-3 innings, a combinatio­n seven-inning, 10-run rule no-hitter against Auburn by Dominic Taccolini, Matt Cronin and Josh Alberius, and Kacey Murphy’s seven-inning, 10-run rule shutout over Florida, and Kevin Kopps and Taccolini pitching well in the 4-2 loss to LSU all merited Van Horn’s praise.

Depending on who wasn’t spent in relief, Van Horn said he would feel comfortabl­e starting Murphy, Kopps or Taccolini if the Hogs reach a Game 3 and that Cronin earns more notice as a situationa­l southpaw out of the pen.

Van Horn likes his Hogs, but notes that ORU coach Ryan Folmar, Missouri State coach Keith Guttin and Oklahoma State coach Josh Holliday must be liking their clubs’ performanc­es.

ORU starting pitchers Miguel Asua (11-2, 1.67 ERA), a lefty, and righthande­rs Josh McMinn (9-3, 2.08 ERA), and Justin McGregor (9-0, 2.87 ERA) give Folmar formidable tournament pitching flexibilit­y.

The Golden Eagles also hit. .294 with power that is especially supplied by center fielder Noah Cummings (325, 14 home runs and 69 RBI) and first baseman Brent Williams (.271 with 16 home runs and 50 RBI).

“They have three really good starters with good numbers,” Van Horn said. “Offense is hitting just under .300 and they hit a lot of home runs. They play a really good non-conference schedule.

“They kind of dominate their own league. And non-conference they’ve done really against good programs in our region.”

Missouri State third baseman Jake Burger (.341, 22 home runs and 67 RBI) paced the Bears to losing but one Missouri Valley Conference game during the regular season, Van Horn said, noting Oklahoma State has regained some injured players to play in the Big 12 Tournament to the potential projected for the Cowboys.

The winner of the Fayettevil­le Regional is matched next weekend to play in the best two of three Super Regional the winner of the Fort Worth Regional hosted by national seed TCU of the Big 12 and including second seed Virginia, third-seed Dallas Baptist and fourth-seed Central Connecticu­t.

The eight Super Regional winners advance to the College World Series in Omaha.

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 ?? Craven Whitlow/Special to the News-Times ?? Going yard: Arkansas catcher Grant Koch connects for a home run against Vanderbilt in an SEC clash earlier this month at Baum Stadium in Fayettevil­le. After finishing as the runner-up to LSU in the SEC Tournament over the weekend, Arkansas will be hosting a regional starting on Friday. The Razorbacks will take on Oral Roberts, while Missouri State and Oklahoma State meet in the first game of the day.
Craven Whitlow/Special to the News-Times Going yard: Arkansas catcher Grant Koch connects for a home run against Vanderbilt in an SEC clash earlier this month at Baum Stadium in Fayettevil­le. After finishing as the runner-up to LSU in the SEC Tournament over the weekend, Arkansas will be hosting a regional starting on Friday. The Razorbacks will take on Oral Roberts, while Missouri State and Oklahoma State meet in the first game of the day.

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