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Arkansas vs. Mississippi State Baseball Game 2: How to watch, pitching matchup, forecast, what to know | Whole Hog Sports

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Arkansas vs. Mississippi State Baseball Game 2: How to watch, pitching matchup, forecast, what to know | Whole Hog Sports


SCHEDULED GAME TIME

Saturday, 6 p.m. at Baum-Walker Stadium (11,531) in Fayetteville

RECORDS 

Arkansas 41-9, 18-7 SEC

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Mississippi State 32-17, 14-11 SEC

STREAKS

Arkansas won 1

Mississippi State lost 2

LAST 10 GAMES

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Arkansas 7-3

Mississippi State 7-3

COACHES 

Arkansas: Dave Van Horn — 880-450 in 22nd season at Arkansas and 1,200-607 in 30th season overall in Division I. 

Mississippi State: Chris Lemonis — 199-110 in sixth season at Mississippi State and 340-201-2 in 10th season overall.

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SERIES HISTORY

Arkansas leads 60-57, including 28-19 in Fayetteville. 

LAST MEETING

Arkansas defeated Mississippi State 7-5 on Friday in Fayetteville. 

TELEVISION 

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The game will be streamed on SEC Network+ and can be accessed on WatchESPN.com and via the ESPN app (carrier login required). Brett Dolan (play-by-play) and Troy Eklund (analyst) will be on the call.

RADIO 

Phil Elson (play-by-play) and Bubba Carpenter (analyst) will call the game on the Razorback Sports Network, which can be accessed through local FM and AM affiliates, via the Arkansas Razorbacks Gameday app, via the Varsity Network app or on ArkansasRazorbacks.com. Blackouts may apply.

STARTING PITCHERS

Arkansas: RHP Brady Tygart — 4-2, 3.34 ERA, 1.27 WHIP in 56 2/3 innings.

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Mississippi State: BHP Jurrangelo Cijntje — 7-1, 3.53 ERA, 1.13 WHIP in 66 1/3 innings. 

TEAM COMPARISONS

Earned Run Avg.: Arkansas 3.35; Mississippi State 4.23

Runs Per Game: Arkansas 6.80; Mississippi State 7.08

Batting Avg.: Arkansas .271; Mississippi State .284

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Opp. Batting Avg.: Arkansas .207; Mississippi State .233

Slugging Pct.: Arkansas .444; Mississippi State .446

On-Base Pct.: Arkansas .389; Mississippi State .396

Fielding Pct.: Arkansas .982; Mississippi State .982

FORECAST

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According to the National Weather Service, Saturday will be clear with a high of 79 degrees and a low of 56 in Fayetteville. Northwest winds will become calm.

WHAT TO KNOW

• Arkansas has a two-game lead over Texas A&M and a four-game lead over Mississippi State in the SEC West standings. The Razorbacks are one game behind Kentucky and tied with Tennessee for second place in the overall SEC race. 

• Arkansas is ranked third and Mississippi State is ranked 15th in the USA Today Baseball Coaches Poll. 

• The Razorbacks were predicted to win the SEC and the Bulldogs were predicted to finish last in the SEC West by league coaches. 

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• Arkansas has a 32-2 record at Baum-Walker Stadium. Mississippi State is 7-8 on the road and 10-9 in all games away from home.

• Since losing a series at Ole Miss in mid-April, Mississippi State has won 8 of 11 games against SEC competition, including a midweek game against Ole Miss at a neutral site that did not count against either team’s conference record. 

• Arkansas has won its last four series against Mississippi State with three sweeps. The Bulldogs have not won a series in Fayetteville since 2007. 

• The Razorbacks and the Bulldogs rank first and second, respectively, in the SEC in team ERA. 

• Mississippi State right fielder Dakota Jordan is an All-America candidate who entered the series batting .367 with an OPS of 1.201. Jordan has 16 home runs, 11 doubles and 56 RBI, and earlier this week was named a finalist for the Ferriss Trophy that goes to the best college baseball player in Mississippi. 

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• Arkansas right fielder Kendall Diggs (shoulder) did not start Friday’s game but entered as a pinch hitter in the eighth inning. Diggs has played through an injury to his left shoulder since March 9 and appeared to aggravate the injury during the Razorbacks’ finale at Kentucky last weekend.



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A man pleads not guilty to setting fire to Mississippi synagogue

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A man pleads not guilty to setting fire to Mississippi synagogue


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — The man accused of setting fire to a Mississippi synagogue pleaded not guilty to a federal arson charge on Tuesday.

The fire badly damaged the Beth Israel Congregation, a historic synagogue that was bombed by the Ku Klux Klan in 1967 for the congregation’s involvement in the Civil Rights Movement. No one was injured in the blaze, which ripped through the building shortly after 3 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 10.

During the hearing, Magistrate Judge LaKeysha Greer Isaac denied bond for Stephen Spencer Pittman, ruling that he should be held in the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service through the duration of his trial.

The 19-year-old suspect appeared in court with both of his hands and ankles bandaged from burn wounds and a Bible sitting in front of him. The courtroom was packed with spectators, including several members of the Beth Israel Congregation.

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The prosecutor, Matthew Wade Allen, argued Pittman should not receive bond because there is a serious risk he will obstruct justice or threaten, injure or intimidate a witness or juror, such as his parents and members of the Beth Israel Congregation.

FBI Special Agent Ariel Williams testified that Pittman’s parents said they noticed behavior changes in their son since he returned home on winter break. Pittman’s mother told the FBI their family pets were afraid of her son and that she considered locking her bedroom door at night out of fear of his behavior, Williams said.

Williams also testified that Pittman’s father told the FBI about an incident where Pittman “bowed up” in his father’s face, after his father had attempted to correct him for saying something offensive to Pittman’s mother.

Leading up to the synagogue fire, several witness, including Pittman’s parents, told the FBI they heard Pittman make antisemitic comments and members of Pittman’s gym heard him say he wanted to burn a synagogue, Williams said.

Mike Scott, Pittman’s public defender, argued Pittman did not pose a danger to the community. He also said Pittman suffered third-degree burns and incarcerating Pittman could pose a risk to his health.

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Scott did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Pittman confessed to lighting a fire inside the building, referring to it as “the synagogue of Satan,” according to an FBI affidavit filed in U.S. District Court.

Pittman is charged with maliciously damaging or destroying a building by means of fire or an explosive. He has also been indicted on a state charge of willfully and maliciously setting fire to a synagogue. The indictment includes a sentencing enhancement for a hate crime.

Pittman faces five to 20 years in prison for the federal charge. The state charge carries a sentence of 5 to 30 years in prison, with the possibility of up to 60 years if he is found to have committed a hate crime.

The judge set Pittman’s trial for Feb. 23.

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Jackson puts Mississippi on notice: Take back Medgar Evers Boulevard

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Jackson puts Mississippi on notice: Take back Medgar Evers Boulevard


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  • The Jackson City Council has passed a resolution asking the state of Mississippi to take back maintenance of Medgar Evers Boulevard.
  • The city took control of the road in 1986 but now cites financial constraints as a reason for the transfer.
  • A 2002 state law requires the road to meet state construction standards before it can be returned, a condition not yet met.
  • A federally funded project is currently underway to upgrade the boulevard, which could satisfy the state’s requirements for a transfer.

The Jackson City Council, backed by Mayor John Horhn, is pushing Mississippi to reclaim Medgar Evers Boulevard — a move supporters say is long overdue, and critics say jumps the gun under state law.

The resolution asks the Mississippi Transportation Commission and Mississippi Department of Transportation to resume responsibility for the roadway, describing it as “a major roadway of statewide importance” whose long-term maintenance requires state-level resources.

But council members were split over whether the city should formally ask for the transfer now or wait until the road meets state construction standards, a legal requirement that remains unresolved.

How Medgar Evers Boulevard became a city road

During the meeting, Horhn said the city’s responsibility for Medgar Evers Boulevard dates back to a very different era at City Hall.

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In 1986, then-Mayor Dale Danks asked the state to hand over several major highways inside Jackson’s city limits, including Medgar Evers Boulevard, State Street, Woodrow Wilson Avenue, and parts of U.S. Highway 80. At the time, Danks said the city could maintain them better on its own as “the city was flush with cash.”

That calculation didn’t age well. While Jackson may have had plenty of dollars to spend in the 1980s, Ward 3 Councilman Kenneth Stokes’ resolution notes the “City of Jackson is currently experiencing financial and operational constraints that limit its ability to adequately maintain major state-designed thoroughfares.” 

In 2002, the Legislature changed the rules, passing a law that says if a city wants to give a road back, it has to first bring it up to state construction standards. It was this law, Mississippi Code § 65-3-99, that gave Ward 7 Councilman Kevin Parkinson pause about the resolution.

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Medgar Evers Boulevard, Parkinson said, does not yet meet those standards. Parkinson proposed amending the resolution to request the transfer only after the road meets state standards. That amendment failed on a 2-5 vote. Only Parkinson and Ward 4 Councilman and Council President Brian Grizzell voted in favor of the amendment.

“Some would say it makes us look a little foolish to pass a resolution knowing that it can’t be done at this time,” Parkinson said. “I don’t want to vote this down because I really, really, really want to give this to the state. But the reality is, it’s not going to happen now.”

Stokes: waiting misses the point

Stokes, who authored the resolution and represents the area Medgar Evers Boulevard runs through, said he disagreed with waiting.

Stokes said he believes the condition of the road — and the state’s role in maintaining it — can’t be separated from its history and who it was named after.

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“Once Medgar Evers’ name became a part of Highway 49, some hateful spirits took place,” Stokes said. “You do not punish a city because you name a street for a Black man.”

Stokes also argued that the city does not have the same financial capacity as the state to maintain a major highway, pointing to the condition of U.S. Highway 49 outside Jackson’s city limits as a comparison.

“If Rankin County’s Highway 49 can look the way it looks, then Jackson’s Highway 49 should look the same way,” Stokes said.

In 2022, MDOT completed a major widening of U.S. Highway 49 in Rankin County, a $253 million project that expanded 7.5 miles of the corridor, according to the Rankin First Economic Development Authority.

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Federal money already in play

The council debate comes as major improvements to Medgar Evers Boulevard are already underway.

In 2024, then-U.S. Transportation Secreatry Pete Buttigieg visited Jackson to mark the start of “The Medgar Evers Boulevard Project,” a multimillion-dollar reconstruction project along roughly 1.5 miles of the corridor.

The project is funded through a $20 million federal grant awarded in 2021. The City of Jackson is required to provide a local match of $17 million, according to Horhn. Additional roads, such as Woodrow Wilson Avenue, McDowell Road, McDowell Road Extension, could also benefit from those funds, Horhn said.

Planned improvements include sidewalks and streetlights, road repairs, medians and upgrades to sewer and stormwater infrastructure. Construction of the project is expected to be completed this year.

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Horhn: vote sets intention

Horhn referenced that federal investment during the council meeting, saying the project would bring Medgar Evers Boulevard up to state standards — clearing the legal pathway for a transfer.

But he said he did not have an issue with the council going on the record now about wanting the state to take control of the boulevard, as Parkinson argued against.

“This doesn’t make us look foolish,” Horhn said. “It sets an intention in motion.”

Horhn said he has spoken with Central Commissioner Willie Simmons of the Mississippi Transportation Commission, who indicated the state would have no issue resuming control of the road once it meets code.

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While the vote does not immediately shift responsibility for Medgar Evers Boulevard, it formally places Jackson on record asking the state to take back one of the city’s most visible — and most contested — roadways.

In the end, the resolution passed in a 4-2-1 vote. Stokes, Ward 5 Councilman Vernon Hartley, Ward 6 Councilwoman Lashia Brown-Thomas and Parkinson, though he voiced opposition at first, voted in favor. Ward 1 Councilman Ashby Foote and Grizzell voted against. Ward 2 Councilwoman Tina Clay abstained.

The Mississippi Department of Transportation did not respond to a request for comment by publication time.

Charlie Drape is the Jackson beat reporter. You can contact him at cdrape@gannett.com.



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Man charged with arson after semi truck destroyed in fire at residence in Mississippi

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Man charged with arson after semi truck destroyed in fire at residence in Mississippi


Police accused a man of intentionally burning a semi truck parked at a home in Mississippi in the fall of 2025.

Troy Anthony Leake Sr., 45, was arrested at a residence on Fox Glen Circle in Adams County, Mississippi, for Arson-3rd Degree (Personal Property), according to a January 16 statement from the Adams County Sheriff’s Office (ACSO).

In early November 2025, a 2004 Peterbilt semi-truck which was parked at a residence on Steamplant Road in Natchez, Mississippi, was a total loss due to fire.

The ACSO said that their investigation revealed that “Leake Sr. willfully set fire” to the semi truck.

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“Intentionally destroying someone’s livelihood is a serious crime that impacts our entire community,” said Adams County Sheriff Patten. “The destruction of this commercial vehicle represents a significant financial loss and a potential danger to the public. Our investigators worked diligently to follow the evidence in this case.”

During his arrest, police say that Leake Sr. was found to be in possession of suspected drugs.

Additional investigation led ACSO to add “three counts of Controlled Substance Violation (specifically involving methamphetamine, crack cocaine, and a substance known as “Mojo”) and one count of Introduction of Contraband into a County Correctional Facility.”

Leake Sr. was booked into the Adams County Detention Center and held without bond pending his appearance before a judge.

“An arrest for one crime often leads us to uncover others,” Patten stated. “This case is a clear example of our commitment to holding individuals accountable for all of their actions that threaten the safety and well-being of Adams County citizens.”

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