Arkansas
Arkansas baseball: What went wrong in Fayetteville region for Razorbacks
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — The Arkansas baseball season met a familiar end Sunday. For the second straight year, the Razorbacks went crashing out in front of their home fans in the Fayetteville Regional.
It was a magical spring inside Baum-Walker Stadium, where the Hogs went 33-3 and won the SEC West title for the fifth time in the last six seasons, but the team flamed out in the 2024 NCAA Tournament and the dreams of a run to Omaha felt more foolish than prophetical.
Here’s a look at three reasons why the Hogs (44-16) couldn’t get out of the regional, as they enter another offseason with disappointment lingering throughout the program.
Hagen Smith couldn’t cover the Arkansas baseball cracks
“(Hagen) Smith was the guy. He was a rock. He carried us. The whole season, that guy carried us.” Arkansas head coach Dave Van Horn said. “I just think the pitching got a little tired.”
Those were Van Horn’s thoughts in the immediate aftermath of a season-ending 6-3 loss to Southeast Missouri State Sunday. Holes in the pitching staff were covered by Smith throughout the SEC, until they weren’t.
Arkansas won each of Smith’s first 13 starts, but the Hogs lost his final three appearances.
More: Arkansas baseball rally falls short again, Razorbacks eliminated in Fayetteville regional
More: Pitching concerns arise after Arkansas baseball’s blowout win over SEMO in 2024 NCAA Tournament
The dagger came Saturday night when Kansas State punched Arkansas in the mouth with a six-run fifth inning that forced the powerful lefty out of the contest. He walked the first two batters and gave up a three-run homer to Kaelen Culpepper, and the Wildcats held off a late rally for a 7-6 win that sent the Hogs into the losers bracket.
Smith will go down as one of the best pitchers in Arkansas history, now holding the career and single-season strikeouts record. He helped Arkansas win two SEC West titles and make a run to the College World Series as a freshman in 2022.
He was excellent in 2024, but Smith needed to be perfect in the postseason for the Razorbacks to replicate that type of run. That’s simply too small of a margin of error, and Arkansas paid the price.
“You take him off our team and we’re just really average. That’s the way it is. One guy can make a difference,” Van Horn said.
Not enough offense in clutch spots
Arkansas left 27 runners on base in three games this weekend. Nearly half of those came Saturday night against Kansas State when the Hogs stranded 13 runners and left multiple men on base in five straight innings.
The lack of a clutch hit carried over to Sunday as Arkansas went 0-for-4 with runners in scoring position. Their only three runs came off homers.
This problem was not exclusive to the Fayetteville Regional. Arkansas failed to put teams away throughout the regular season, leading to close games that wore down the Hogs’ roster.
“You just go back and look at our scores, I’m going to say in the SEC we had played 15-to-18 games, win-or-lose by less than three runs,” Van Horn said. “Everything was tight. We didn’t blow anybody out. They didn’t blow us out. A lot of 5-4, 3-2. I mean, it was stressful. I think maybe it just beat us up a little bit mentally.”
The Arkansas offense wasn’t good enough this season. The Hogs ranked 60th out of the 64 tournament teams. Sunday’s three-run performance of SEMO encapsulated the season.
Pitching struggles Friday prove costly
Arkansas won the regional opener against SEMO 17-9, but the Hogs had to use five pitchers against Fayetteville’s lowest seed. That set the tone and put Arkansas in a disadvantageous spot for the rest of the regional.
Mason Molina couldn’t get past the third inning, and Will McEntire didn’t eat enough outs. Arkansas had to burn freshman star Gabe Gaeckle. If Gaeckle had been available Saturday, maybe Arkansas has a quicker trigger in removing Smith.
“We didn’t pitch very well. That was pretty obvious the last month. It’s, you know, we were rolling pretty good early,” Van Horn said. “You’ve got 1-2-3. You’ve got two lefts and a right, and they’re all going to give you innings. They’re all experienced, and then all of a sudden you can see a little crack in the armor.”
Arkansas
Arkansas Storm Team Forecast: Midweek Rain Chances
We’ve got clouds to start out this Sunday with temperatures on the cool side. Once clouds exit, which should be later this afternoon, temperatures will warm into the 70s.
We’ll be back into the 80s both tomorrow and Tuesday. Dry conditions will continue through the next couple of days with a high wildfire danger persisting statewide.
Rain chances return midweek, with Wednesday through Friday bringing what could be a meaningful rainfall. Rainfall amounts are still uncertain, but we’re getting closer to pinpointing that. Stay tuned for updates!
Arkansas
Renegade wins 2026 Arkansas Derby
HOT SPRINGS, Ark. — After a hotly contested race, Renegade emerged as the winner of the 2026 Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn on Saturday.
The horse is owned by Robert & Lawana L. Low and Repole Stable, trained by Todd Pletcher, and ridden by jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. Renegade entered the race with 3/2 odds to win.
Silent Tactic finished in second place and Taptastic took home third.
In addition to his share of the $1.5 million purse, Renegade also earned points toward the Kentucky Derby.
Arkansas
ARKANSAS A-Z: Norris Church Mailer — From Atkins to literary fame | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Norris Church Mailer became a model, actress and author after moving to New York to be with renowned writer Norman Mailer following their chance meeting in Arkansas at an event in Russellville. She published two semi-autobiographical novels, “Windchill Summer” and “Cheap Diamonds,” as well as a memoir, “A Ticket to the Circus,” which centers on her three-decade marriage to Mailer.
Born on Jan. 31, 1949, in Moses Lake, Wash., Norris Church Mailer began life as Barbara Jean Davis, being named for a little girl who lived next door. Her parents were homemaker Gaynell Phillips Davis and construction worker James Davis. They had briefly relocated from Arkansas to Washington state for her father’s work on the O’Sullivan Dam near Moses Lake. After the family returned to Arkansas, Barbara grew up in Atkins, where the family lived a simple life in the country without hot running water in the house or an indoor toilet. They attended a small, strict fundamentalist church several times a week. When Barbara was 3 years old, her mother saw an advertisement for the Little Miss Little Rock Contest and entered the child, who won.
The family moved from the country into town when Barbara was in first grade. There, they lived in a house with modern conveniences, including indoor plumbing. Barbara had a childhood friend whose name, Cherry, became the name of the heroine in her two novels.
Barbara attended school in the Atkins School District. After graduating from high school in 1967, she enrolled at Arkansas Polytechnic College (which later became Arkansas Tech University) in nearby Russellville. In 1969, she married her high school sweetheart, Larry Norris; two years later, they had a son, Matthew. In 1974, the marriage ended in divorce.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Helaine R. Williams)
With her young son, Barbara moved to Russellville, where she worked as a high school art teacher. In 1975, she met renowned writer Norman Mailer at a party in Russellville when he was there on a visit. The party was held at the home of a mutual friend, author Francis Irby Gwaltney, who at the time was teaching at Arkansas Tech. Gwaltney and Mailer had become friends during World War II and remained close through the years.
Barbara stated in her autobiography that there was instant chemistry when she and Mailer met. Although she was several inches taller than Mailer, half his age and from a vastly different background, she said she knew the two would be together.
At the time they met, Mailer was in the process of breaking up with his fourth wife and seeing another woman who would (for the space of one day) become his fifth. Hailing from Brooklyn, N.Y., the Harvard-educated Mailer was a bestselling author whose World War II novel “The Naked and the Dead” (1948) brought him early fame. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1968 for “Armies of the Night” and another Pulitzer in 1979 for “The Executioner’s Song.”
After meeting Mailer in Russellville in 1975, Barbara followed him to New York. Their son, John Buffalo Mailer, was born in 1978. The couple married in 1980 (the same year he divorced his fourth wife and then married and divorced his fifth), with Barbara becoming Mailer’s sixth and final wife.
When Barbara began a successful career as a model, her husband suggested she change her name to Norris Church Mailer. The name was composed from her previous married name, and “Church,” based on her religious background when growing up in Arkansas. She and Mailer often entertained top-tier celebrities at their homes in New York and Provincetown, Mass. Billed as “Norris Mailer,” she appeared with her husband in the movie “Ragtime” (1981) and also had small roles in a few other films.
(Courtesy of Ballantine Books)
Church Mailer’s first novel, “Windchill Summer,” was published in 2000, depicting a coming-of-age story about a girl named Cherry Marshall growing up in Arkansas during the Vietnam War era. Its sequel, “Cheap Diamonds,” released in 2007, followed Marshall’s story as an aspiring model from Arkansas arriving in New York City during the 1970s. Church Mailer’s 2010 memoir, “A Ticket to the Circus,” described her tumultuous life with Norman Mailer. Among other things, she claimed in her memoir to have had a brief romantic relationship with future President Bill Clinton, who was in his late 20s at the time.
In 2000, Norris Church Mailer was diagnosed with a malignant gastrointestinal tumor. Defying the odds, she lived 10 years, nursing her husband through his final illness until he died in 2007. On Nov. 21, 2010, Church Mailer died at her home in New York. Wilkes University in Pennsylvania established the Norris Church Mailer Fellowship in Creative Writing in 2004. — Nancy Hendricks
This story is taken from the online Encyclopedia of Arkansas, a project of the Central Arkansas Library System. Visit the site at encyclopediaofarkansas.net.
(Courtesy of Ballantine Books)
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