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STILLWATER, Okla. — For the first time in what feels like forever, Arkansas jumped out to an early lead and Connor Noland took care of the rest Friday afternoon.
The Razorbacks scored the first five runs of the day and their ace limited a dangerous Grand Canyon lineup to only one run in seven innings to help them to a 7-1 win in the opener of the Stillwater Regional at O’Brate Stadium.
After falling behind by at least three runs within five innings of their last eight games, Arkansas used a four-run second inning to make sure that wouldn’t happen again to open the postseason.
“It started on the mound with Connor today,” head coach Dave Van Horn said. “Connor did a good job of not letting them frustrate him. But I think he would tell you, that long second inning that we had was big for our team's confidence.”
It was already 1-0 thanks to a solo home run by Cayden Wallace in the first, but hitting home runs hasn’t been Arkansas’ problem. Scoring runs in other ways has been much more of a challenge. Over the previous 15 games, the Razorbacks hit 26 long balls that accounted for 48 of their 80 runs — a whopping 60 percent.
That changed with a two-out rally following a strike ‘em out, throw ‘em out double play by the Antelopes that wiped out a leadoff walk. Peyton Stovall started it with a single and then, on a 2-2 pitch, Grand Canyon starter Daniel Avitia plunked Zack Gregory.
At that point, the Razorbacks were in business with runners on first and second, and Grand Canyon head coach Andy Stankiewicz knew his star freshman was in trouble.
“We were hoping to kind of get through it,” Stankiewicz said. “He’s usually around the zone, so when he hits a guy, you know he’s not quite on it. There were some moments there where we thought we could get back in the dugout, but once he hit the guy…you’re like like, ‘Oh, this isn’t where he usually is.’”
Braydon Webb followed with a bloop single that just got over second baseman Jonny Weaver’s head to drive in a run and double Arkansas’ lead. After a walk by Brady Slavens to load the bases, Wallace was hit by a pitch to bring in another run.
The bases were still loaded for Michael Turner and the senior catcher fouled off a couple of two-strike pitches before hitting a two-run single up the middle to cap what Van Horn described as an “amazing inning.”
“I thought the hitters did an incredible job of fouling off pitches, working the count, just getting the pitch count way up,” Van Horn said. “And then we came through with a couple of big hits. It started with Webb's big hit, and Michael got the big hit that kind of finished it off.
“You can hit three homers in an inning, but what we did in the second, I'll take that any time. That was big-time at-bats.”
With a 5-0 lead, Noland was able to relax and turn in his best outing in more than a month, giving the Razorbacks seven strong innings.
“It gives me a lot of confidence to go out there and just fill up the zone,” Noland said. “You can throw it in there, and a hit or two won’t hurt you that much. Just flood the zone and really get aggressive and try to put the game away.”
For good measure, the Razorbacks manufactured yet anther run in the sixth inning with the help of some heads-up base running by Slavens.
The slugger drew a leadoff walk and then, when Wallace flied out to deep right-center, he tagged up to second — a rare play in baseball. It immediately paid dividends, as Turner followed with an RBI single.
“When the center fielder caught it running away from the base, that's when he made his move,” Van Horn said. “If the right fielder would have caught it, I don't think he would have been able to go, so really good job by Brady there because obviously we ended up scoring a run.”
Here are several other key takeaways from Friday’s win…
Noland Returns to Form
Arkansas’ struggles on the mound, particularly by its starting pitchers, have been well documented. Since the middle of SEC play, they have rarely worked deep into games and have typically gotten knocked around.
Noland was a perfect example of that. A likely first-team All-SEC selection for most of the season, he looked like a completely different pitcher down the stretch. Over his previous five starts, the senior gave up 22 earned runs in 26 innings, leading to his ERA ballooning from 2.54 to 4.07.
Luckily for the Razorbacks, he returned to form and had one of his best starts of the season. Noland scattered six hits and three walks across seven innings. He had four strikeouts and allowed only one run.
“He did a really good job of mixing up his pitches, moving his fastball around, then throwing his off-speed stuff down in the zone,” Stankiewicz said. “We kind of found ourselves chasing a little bit and that put us in a tough spot.”
One of the issues Noland had been having was with locating his fastball. It was something Turner pointed to after the loss to Florida at the SEC Tournament as an area of emphasis this week.
That works seems to have paid off, as the catcher said it was much better Friday, keeping the Antelopes off balance.
“I thought he worked ahead in the count,” Turner said. “Whenever he does that, he's super effective. And that's a tough lineup to throw against. You look up on the board, and all of their batting averages are above .350, so it's a little bit intimidating. But I thought he did a good job today.”
The only blemish on Noland’s day came in the fourth inning, when Tayler Aguilar hit a leadoff home run to break up the shutout. It was a line drive into the right field bullpen for his 21st long ball of the season.
“I knew he was going to come in because I saw the middle infield scoot over,” Aguilar said. “I knew they were going to come middle in on me and that was just something that I picked up on, on them moving, and something I used.”
Noland got through that inning with 56 pitches, a pretty solid number, but was even more efficient over the next two frames. He needed just eight pitches to get through the fifth and then — despite facing the heart of Grand Canyon’s lineup — needed only five to get through the sixth.
Back out to pitch the seventh, things got a little weird. Tyler Wilson hit a line drive off Noland’s right forearm to start the inning and the SEC All-Defensive Team pitcher recovered just in time to still get the out.
“That first play that he made was one of the best plays I've ever seen a pitcher make, especially because he was almost on the base line,” Turner said. “To avoid the baserunner with that throw, he couldn't have put it in a better spot. That was cool to see.”
The next two batters reached base before Homer Bush Jr. also hit a line drive back at Noland. This one hit him in the hip and went toward the third base line. Again, he recovered and made the play.
After being nailed by two line drives, and with runners on second and third, the right-hander struck out Elijah Buries on his 89th and final pitch to end the seventh. Noland said the inning was “unbelievable.”
“I've never seen that before in baseball, so for it to happen to me was really special,” Noland said. “But it helped that Mike called out where the ball was and I had the ability to go make a play. I'm just glad that everybody played the game the same way. We play it hard, no matter what happens. That was really the difference in not making that play and making it.”
Wallace Continues to Mash
No player is swinging a hotter bat for Arkansas than Wallace. The sophomore hit two home runs in Friday’s game and finished 2 for 4 with three RBIs.
The first-inning blast that started the scoring was an absolute moonshot. After watching Webb and Slavens strike out on 13 combined pitches, he hit Avitia’s 0-1 pitch completely out of the stadium.
“It was a fastball - looked like it was knee high - and he crushed it,” Van Horn said. “I mean, I don't know if you can hit a ball harder than that. It was a no-doubter right when it left the bat. I'm going to say it was about 450 feet.”
His second home run wasn’t quite as prodigious, but there was also no doubt it was clearing the left field wall after contact. It came in the fourth, answering Grand Canyon’s home run in the top half of the inning.
“You have got to hit your spots and we left a ball out over the plate a little bit and he went down and got it,” Stankiewicz said. “We wanted to try and work in a little bit more, but I think the guys were a little bit fearful about going in there. But if you leave it out over the plate, he is gong to hurt you so that is what he did.”
Wallace is now tied with Slavens for second on the team with 13 home runs, one behind Webb. Seven of those have come in the last eight games. Plus, in the six games prior to that, he had six doubles in six games.
Although his batting average over that 14-game stretch has dipped slightly compared to the first 43 games of the season — .283 compared to .304 — his power numbers have increased dramatically.
Wallace’s slugging percentage during the recent surge is .733, compared to .485 before. That’s led to his season slugging percentage jumping up 65 points to .550.
(Story continues below)
Key takeaways, box score from Arkansas' win over Grand Canyon
HawgBeat brings you all the key takeaways from Arkansas' win over Grand Canyon at the Stillwater Regional.
STILLWATER, Okla. — For the first time in what feels like forever, Arkansas jumped out to an early lead and Connor Noland took care of the rest Friday afternoon.
The Razorbacks scored the first five runs of the day and their ace limited a dangerous Grand Canyon lineup to only one run in seven innings to help them to a 7-1 win in the opener of the Stillwater Regional at O’Brate Stadium.
After falling behind by at least three runs within five innings of their last eight games, Arkansas used a four-run second inning to make sure that wouldn’t happen again to open the postseason.
“It started on the mound with Connor today,” head coach Dave Van Horn said. “Connor did a good job of not letting them frustrate him. But I think he would tell you, that long second inning that we had was big for our team's confidence.”
It was already 1-0 thanks to a solo home run by Cayden Wallace in the first, but hitting home runs hasn’t been Arkansas’ problem. Scoring runs in other ways has been much more of a challenge. Over the previous 15 games, the Razorbacks hit 26 long balls that accounted for 48 of their 80 runs — a whopping 60 percent.
That changed with a two-out rally following a strike ‘em out, throw ‘em out double play by the Antelopes that wiped out a leadoff walk. Peyton Stovall started it with a single and then, on a 2-2 pitch, Grand Canyon starter Daniel Avitia plunked Zack Gregory.
At that point, the Razorbacks were in business with runners on first and second, and Grand Canyon head coach Andy Stankiewicz knew his star freshman was in trouble.
“We were hoping to kind of get through it,” Stankiewicz said. “He’s usually around the zone, so when he hits a guy, you know he’s not quite on it. There were some moments there where we thought we could get back in the dugout, but once he hit the guy…you’re like like, ‘Oh, this isn’t where he usually is.’”
Braydon Webb followed with a bloop single that just got over second baseman Jonny Weaver’s head to drive in a run and double Arkansas’ lead. After a walk by Brady Slavens to load the bases, Wallace was hit by a pitch to bring in another run.
The bases were still loaded for Michael Turner and the senior catcher fouled off a couple of two-strike pitches before hitting a two-run single up the middle to cap what Van Horn described as an “amazing inning.”
“I thought the hitters did an incredible job of fouling off pitches, working the count, just getting the pitch count way up,” Van Horn said. “And then we came through with a couple of big hits. It started with Webb's big hit, and Michael got the big hit that kind of finished it off.
“You can hit three homers in an inning, but what we did in the second, I'll take that any time. That was big-time at-bats.”
With a 5-0 lead, Noland was able to relax and turn in his best outing in more than a month, giving the Razorbacks seven strong innings.
“It gives me a lot of confidence to go out there and just fill up the zone,” Noland said. “You can throw it in there, and a hit or two won’t hurt you that much. Just flood the zone and really get aggressive and try to put the game away.”
For good measure, the Razorbacks manufactured yet anther run in the sixth inning with the help of some heads-up base running by Slavens.
The slugger drew a leadoff walk and then, when Wallace flied out to deep right-center, he tagged up to second — a rare play in baseball. It immediately paid dividends, as Turner followed with an RBI single.
“When the center fielder caught it running away from the base, that's when he made his move,” Van Horn said. “If the right fielder would have caught it, I don't think he would have been able to go, so really good job by Brady there because obviously we ended up scoring a run.”
Here are several other key takeaways from Friday’s win…
Noland Returns to Form
Arkansas’ struggles on the mound, particularly by its starting pitchers, have been well documented. Since the middle of SEC play, they have rarely worked deep into games and have typically gotten knocked around.
Noland was a perfect example of that. A likely first-team All-SEC selection for most of the season, he looked like a completely different pitcher down the stretch. Over his previous five starts, the senior gave up 22 earned runs in 26 innings, leading to his ERA ballooning from 2.54 to 4.07.
Luckily for the Razorbacks, he returned to form and had one of his best starts of the season. Noland scattered six hits and three walks across seven innings. He had four strikeouts and allowed only one run.
“He did a really good job of mixing up his pitches, moving his fastball around, then throwing his off-speed stuff down in the zone,” Stankiewicz said. “We kind of found ourselves chasing a little bit and that put us in a tough spot.”
One of the issues Noland had been having was with locating his fastball. It was something Turner pointed to after the loss to Florida at the SEC Tournament as an area of emphasis this week.
That works seems to have paid off, as the catcher said it was much better Friday, keeping the Antelopes off balance.
“I thought he worked ahead in the count,” Turner said. “Whenever he does that, he's super effective. And that's a tough lineup to throw against. You look up on the board, and all of their batting averages are above .350, so it's a little bit intimidating. But I thought he did a good job today.”
The only blemish on Noland’s day came in the fourth inning, when Tayler Aguilar hit a leadoff home run to break up the shutout. It was a line drive into the right field bullpen for his 21st long ball of the season.
“I knew he was going to come in because I saw the middle infield scoot over,” Aguilar said. “I knew they were going to come middle in on me and that was just something that I picked up on, on them moving, and something I used.”
Noland got through that inning with 56 pitches, a pretty solid number, but was even more efficient over the next two frames. He needed just eight pitches to get through the fifth and then — despite facing the heart of Grand Canyon’s lineup — needed only five to get through the sixth.
Back out to pitch the seventh, things got a little weird. Tyler Wilson hit a line drive off Noland’s right forearm to start the inning and the SEC All-Defensive Team pitcher recovered just in time to still get the out.
“That first play that he made was one of the best plays I've ever seen a pitcher make, especially because he was almost on the base line,” Turner said. “To avoid the baserunner with that throw, he couldn't have put it in a better spot. That was cool to see.”
The next two batters reached base before Homer Bush Jr. also hit a line drive back at Noland. This one hit him in the hip and went toward the third base line. Again, he recovered and made the play.
After being nailed by two line drives, and with runners on second and third, the right-hander struck out Elijah Buries on his 89th and final pitch to end the seventh. Noland said the inning was “unbelievable.”
“I've never seen that before in baseball, so for it to happen to me was really special,” Noland said. “But it helped that Mike called out where the ball was and I had the ability to go make a play. I'm just glad that everybody played the game the same way. We play it hard, no matter what happens. That was really the difference in not making that play and making it.”
Wallace Continues to Mash
No player is swinging a hotter bat for Arkansas than Wallace. The sophomore hit two home runs in Friday’s game and finished 2 for 4 with three RBIs.
The first-inning blast that started the scoring was an absolute moonshot. After watching Webb and Slavens strike out on 13 combined pitches, he hit Avitia’s 0-1 pitch completely out of the stadium.
“It was a fastball - looked like it was knee high - and he crushed it,” Van Horn said. “I mean, I don't know if you can hit a ball harder than that. It was a no-doubter right when it left the bat. I'm going to say it was about 450 feet.”
His second home run wasn’t quite as prodigious, but there was also no doubt it was clearing the left field wall after contact. It came in the fourth, answering Grand Canyon’s home run in the top half of the inning.
“You have got to hit your spots and we left a ball out over the plate a little bit and he went down and got it,” Stankiewicz said. “We wanted to try and work in a little bit more, but I think the guys were a little bit fearful about going in there. But if you leave it out over the plate, he is gong to hurt you so that is what he did.”
Wallace is now tied with Slavens for second on the team with 13 home runs, one behind Webb. Seven of those have come in the last eight games. Plus, in the six games prior to that, he had six doubles in six games.
Although his batting average over that 14-game stretch has dipped slightly compared to the first 43 games of the season — .283 compared to .304 — his power numbers have increased dramatically.
Wallace’s slugging percentage during the recent surge is .733, compared to .485 before. That’s led to his season slugging percentage jumping up 65 points to .550.
(Story continues below)