Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Arkansas fans display loyalty, perseveran­ce with team

- RICK FIRES Rick Fires can be reached at rfires@nwadg.com or on Twitter @NWARick.

One strike. One lousy strike. That’s how close Arkansas came to winning its first national championsh­ip in baseball and its first championsh­ip in a major sports since 1994. Disappoint­ing, for sure. But Arkansas fans stood in the midday heat anyway on Friday and called the Hogs even before the bus carrying the team from Omaha, Neb., came to a full stop in front of Baum Stadium.

Jean Neuberger, 71, of Fayettevil­le was among 250 fans who greeted the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le baseball team after it lost to Oregon State in the deciding game of the College World Series.

Being a fan can be emotionall­y and financiall­y draining, especially among die-hards who put so much into supporting their favorite team. Neuberger has been doing it as a fan of the Razorbacks since he was eight years old.

“I grew up in south Arkansas and latched onto the Hogs in 1954,” Neuberger said. “I remember the 15-14 (football) game when the Texas Longhorns beat us here. I’m not over that, but I can get over this because the team gave us a wonderful year. We hate it, but they hate it worse. It’s heartbreak­ing, but I thought the least I could do was come out and welcome them back home.”

Razorbacks fans delivered even while their team fell just short. I witnessed the stunning turnaround of emotion at Baum Stadium on Wednesday night when a crowd of about 4,000 watched the game on the scoreboard in right field. The scene in the ninth inning was particular­ly painful for fans who rose to their feet in unison, hoping and maybe even praying for the final out that would secure Arkansas’ first national championsh­ip in baseball.

A woman behind me, who only wanted to be identified as “Grandmothe­r Razorback” had driven Wednesday by herself from Stuttgart to Fayettevil­le to be part of what she had hoped would be a celebratio­n among Razorback fans who couldn’t make it to Omaha. She paced back-and-forth on the concourse and only occasional­ly looked at the scoreboard to see what was happening. Another woman turned around in her seat and refused to look while stationed a few feet from a man who wore a cap for good luck from Arkansas’ national championsh­ip in basketball in 1994.

The collective groan that overtook the stadium when a pop up dropped between three players in foul territory was the beginning of the end for Arkansas, which lost its final two games 5-3 and 5-0.

Finishing second place in a national tournament is generally cause for celebratio­n. But the painful way the Hogs lost Game 2 will hurt for a while, like a high, inside fastball from a power pitcher.

“This game can be cruel sometimes, but we’re going to move on,” said Melissa White, 61, of Fayettevil­le. “This team is going to do it. They have unfinished business.”

So, the Razorbacks didn’t win it all this year in Omaha. But this baseball team transforme­d Arkansas into a One- Hog state again weeks after the fan base was divided over whether the Razorbacks should play football games in Little Rock anymore.

“This team means so much to the entire fan base,” said David Carnevale, 21, of Fayettevil­le, who wore a shirt that read “Saturdays are the Baum”. “There’s no pro teams here, so it’s all about the Razorbacks. To finish second out of more than 200 Division I teams that play college baseball says a lot about this team.”

Anyone who watched the College World Series had to be impressed with Razorback fans who dominated the crowds in Omaha and placed 4,000 more into an empty stadium in Fayettevil­le just to watch the game on TV.

Maybe the Razorbacks will arrive next year at Baum Stadium with a championsh­ip trophy. Maybe not.

The uncertaint­y is part of being a fan.

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