Texarkana Gazette

No. 12 Vandy edges No. 2 Hogs again

- MATT JONES

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Vanderbilt scored three runs in the sixth inning to take the lead, and the sixth-ranked Commodores defeated second-ranked Arkansas, 7-6, in the regular-season finale Saturday at Hawkins Field.

The Commodores (37-17, 19-11 SEC) won the series after dropping the opening game 8-2 on Thursday. Vanderbilt rallied from a six-run deficit in the eighth inning to win 10-8 on Friday.

Arkansas (39-15, 20-10) failed to win the SEC outright. The Razorbacks shared the regular-season championsh­ip with Florida.

Because of tiebreaker­s, Florida will be the No. 1 seed at next week’s SEC Baseball Tournament in Hoover, Ala.

As the No. 2 seed, Arkansas is scheduled to play Wednesday at approximat­ely 12:30 p.m. against an opponent that will be determined by a single-eliminatio­n game the day before. The Razorbacks will begin play in Hoover during the double-eliminatio­n portion of the tournament.

Arkansas relief pitchers Parker Coil and Gage Wood each balked with a runner at third base, and Enrique Bradfield hit a one-out infield single to score Jonathan Vastine as the Commodores took a 7-6 lead in the sixth inning. All three runs were charged to Coil, who allowed three hits and faced four batters.

The Razorbacks failed to score after putting lead-off runners aboard in the seventh and eighth innings. Peyton Holt struck out to strand runners at first and second base in the seventh inning, and Jared Wegner grounded out to strand two runners in the eighth.

Caleb Cali singled with one out in the ninth before Brady Slavens hit into a game-ending double play against Vanderbilt right-hander Nick Maldonado, who earned his eighth save.

Arkansas led on two different occasions. Two runs scored in the second inning after shortstop Vastine threw away a potential inning-ending double-play ball.

Vanderbilt took a 3-2 lead in the bottom of the second when Troy Laneve hit a three-run home run against Arkansas starter Hunter Hollan. It was the second home run of the series for Laneve, who had not homered prior to a three-run, goahead home run in the eighth inning Friday.

Hollan was hit hard six days after throwing a complete game against South Carolina. The left-hander allowed 4 runs on 8 hits, and struck out 4 in 2 2/3 innings.

Arkansas regained the lead, 6-4, with a four-run fifth inning. Kendall Diggs, Slavens and Peyton Holt all had RBI singles, and Caleb Cali was credited with an RBI on a groundout that scored Diggs.

The fifth-inning rally began moments after LSU lost 9-5 at Georgia, which clinched the SEC West title for the Razorbacks and guaranteed Arkansas would finish at least tied for the league’s best record.

The Razorbacks claimed their sixth regular-season conference championsh­ip and fourth as a member of the SEC. Arkansas has a won league title two of the past three seasons.

This year’s championsh­ip team joins past SEC champions from Arkansas in 1999, 2004 and 2021. The Razorbacks also won Southwest Conference championsh­ips in 1989 and 1990.

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn has led the team to the last three conference titles. The program’s two SWC championsh­ips and first SEC title were won under former coach Norm Debriyn.

Arkansas clinched its eighth SEC West title, four of which have come since 2018. Van Horn, who has coached the Razorbacks since 2003, has won seven division championsh­ips.

FAYETTEVIL­LE — When the University of Arkansas baseball team closed its regular-season home schedule in 2022 by going 3-4 at Baum-walker Stadium, it helped cost the Razorbacks a shot to host an NCAA regional and super regional.

This season the Razorbacks, who are tied for No. 2 in the USA Today coaches poll with Florida and No. 4 in the NCAA’S Ratings Percentage Index, have solidified their resume to be a top eight national seed by closing 9-1 at home in the regular season — including sweeps of No. 19 Tennessee and Texas A&M and taking 2 of 3 games from No. 9 South Carolina.

Arkansas (38-13, 19-8) improved to 30-4 at home — including 13-2 in SEC games — with a 5-1 victory over the Gamecocks last Sunday.

“We don’t have the ballpark that these guys have and that’s what we’re trying to get to,” Texas A&M Coach Jim Schlossnag­le said. “There are other great atmosphere­s (in the SEC), but in my mind this is the classiest program in the league.

“They do it right and the fans are great. They get on you, but that’s alright and part of it. This is the standard in my mind.”

Arkansas’ .882 home winning percentage this season is its second-highest since Baum-walker Stadium opened late in the 1996 season, surpassed only by an .895 winning percentage (34-4) in 2018.

“Sometimes it can hurt you, the pressure, the fans, the hype,” Razorbacks coach Dave Van Horn said this week during an interview on Siriusxm College Sports Radio. “But this year’s team has just loved playing at home, and I can’t say that’s the way it’s been every year.

“In 2009 we didn’t play real well at home, and we were supposed to be pretty good. We kind of tanked in April.”

The 2009 Razorbacks advanced to the College World Series — winning a regional at Oklahoma and super regional at Florida State — after going 21-12 at home, including 1-7 in their last eight SEC games.

“Finally got it together in May, and thank goodness we snuck into a regional, and we went all the way to Omaha and won a few games,” Van Horn said in his radio interview. “Last year’s team … they didn’t play great at home. The fans got on them a little bit on social media and they kind of used that to fuel themselves and when we got into a regional they didn’t want to quit playing, and they got after it and got down to the final four.”

Last season’s Razorbacks won a regional at Oklahoma State and super regional at North Carolina to advance to the College World Series.

“This year’s team, we play good at home,” Van Horn said in his radio interview. “We field the ball, we pitch, we hit just enough. I think our guys really enjoy it.

“I think they embrace our fans, and I think our fans really appreciate this team. Because this team, it could have tanked. It could have been 2016 all over again with all the injuries.”

Arkansas suffered its only losing record in Van Horn’s 21 seasons as coach in 2016 when the Razorbacks finished 26-29 and were 19-14 at home.

“You look at what’s happened in our league with a couple of teams that are really talented,” Van Horn continued in his radio interview. “A couple of injuries, and it took ’em out. They didn’t recover.

“But with our group, they’ve fed off the home crowd and off of each other.”

Van Horn wasn’t specific about the SEC teams that have struggled, but Mississipp­i State and Ole Miss — the past two national champions — are 8-19 and 6-21 in conference play.

The Razorbacks’ strong home record has them in sole possession of first place in the overall SEC standings — one game ahead of Florida (40-12, 18-9) going into their final regular-season series at No. 6 Vanderbilt (35-16, 17-10) that starts Thursday night — and 1 1/2 games ahead of No. 4 LSU (39-12, 17-9) for the West lead,

“Playing with the crowd on your side, when they’re loud, it’s fun and it’s exciting,” said Ben Mclaughlin, who has been a designated hitter, third baseman and pitcher for the Razorbacks this season. “I think we could really ride the emotions of the crowd, and when they’re excited, it gives us an extra gear.”

Arkansas has drawn a combined 327,871 fans for its 34 home games — an average of 9,643 — according to its announced crowds based on tickets sold.

The announced attendance for the South Carolina series was 30,631, including 10,432 last Saturday night when the Gamecocks won 3-1 behind seven scoreless innings by starting pitcher Jack Mahoney.

“Arkansas is the one place in the SEC that I have always wanted to pitch,” said Mahoney, a junior right-hander. “And this place did not let me down.

“In that seventh inning, I kind of had to remind myself that I have a job to do.”

Brady Slavens and Peyton Holt singled to start the bottom of the seventh inning for the Razorbacks before Mahoney escaped the jam with a double-play groundout by Jayson Jones and strikeout by John Bolton.

“I’m looking around and it was the one of, no, it was the loudest thing that I have ever heard in my life,” Mahoney said of the Arkansas fans cheering when the Razorbacks got the tying run to the plate. “This place is different here.”

Arkansas has lost three key pitchers to season-ending injuries — Jaxon Wiggins, Koty Frank and Dylan Carter — but Brady Tygart is back from an elbow injury that sidelined him for eight weeks.

Center field Tavian Josenberge­r returned to the lineup last weekend after being out with a hamstring injury and left fielder Jared Wegner is expected back for the Vanderbilt series after recovering from a broken thumb.

“I think when we just get the momentum at home, we hold the momentum,” Tygart said. “The crowd gets into it, and we don’t really give [opponents] a chance to come back.”

Junior Hunter Hollan pitched a complete game for the Razorbacks in their victory over South Carolina last Sunday.

“We know when people come in our house that we’re going to ball out,” Hollan said. “We’re going to compete and get after it.”

Van Horn said the home crowds have been especially good the second half of the season.

“I think with all the injuries and everything that was going on, they were kind of waiting to see how we were going to be and waiting for the weather to get better,” Van Horn said after the the South Carolina series finale. “But the second half of the season has been amazing.

“Guys are comfortabl­e here.”

 ?? (Photo by J.T. Wampler/ Northwest Arkansas Democrat-gazette) ?? Arkansas Razorbacks huddle together Feb. 26 following a 12-3 loss to Eastern Illinois University. The Razorbacks dropped a 7-6 decision to Vanderbilt on Saturday, costing Arkansas an outright SEC regular-season title.
(Photo by J.T. Wampler/ Northwest Arkansas Democrat-gazette) Arkansas Razorbacks huddle together Feb. 26 following a 12-3 loss to Eastern Illinois University. The Razorbacks dropped a 7-6 decision to Vanderbilt on Saturday, costing Arkansas an outright SEC regular-season title.
 ?? (Photo by Camden Hall/arkansas Athletics) ?? Arkansas first baseman Brady Slavens runs toward home plate during a game against Vanderbilt on Saturday in Nashville, Tenn. The Razorbacks lost, 7-6, costing Arkansas the outright regular-season SEC championsh­ip.
(Photo by Camden Hall/arkansas Athletics) Arkansas first baseman Brady Slavens runs toward home plate during a game against Vanderbilt on Saturday in Nashville, Tenn. The Razorbacks lost, 7-6, costing Arkansas the outright regular-season SEC championsh­ip.
 ?? (NWA Democrat-gazette/hank Layton) ?? Arkansas catcher Parker Rowland hits a two-run single May 14 during the fifth inning of the Razorbacks’ 5-1 win over the South Carolina Gamecocks at Baum-walker Stadium in Fayettevil­le.
(NWA Democrat-gazette/hank Layton) Arkansas catcher Parker Rowland hits a two-run single May 14 during the fifth inning of the Razorbacks’ 5-1 win over the South Carolina Gamecocks at Baum-walker Stadium in Fayettevil­le.

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