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Hogs Can't Overcome Some Wild Pitching, Lack of Key Hits

Razorbacks start Georgia road series with loss Thursday night

ATHENS, Ga. — Arkansas (30-8, 11-5 SEC) could not overcome its own offensive shortcomings and some wild pitching against Georgia.

The result was a loss for the Razorbacks in the series opener against Georgia (21-17, 5-11 SEC), 6-5, on Thursday night at Foley Field.

The Hogs, who stranded 11 runners on base in the setback, were 5-for-25 (.200) with runners on and just 3-for-18 (.167) with runners in scoring position.

They loaded the bases with no outs in the top half of the eighth but could not capitalize as the next three Razorback hitters struck out, letting Georgia escape without significant damage.

Despite the struggles, the Razorbacks trimmed a four-run deficit to one and brought the go-ahead run to the plate with one out and two runners on base in the top of the ninth. It was too little too late, however, as Georgia held on for a 6-5 win.

Nine pitches into Thursday night’s game, the Hogs had the lead. Tavian Josenberger led the game off with a six-pitch walk and came around to score on Peyton Stovall’s 0-2 double to center.

Stovall advanced home on Ben McLaughlin’s two-out, two-strike RBI single to right as the Hogs went ahead by two in the first inning.

Hogs starter Hunter Hollan kept Georgia off the board through his first two innings of work, but the left-hander ran into trouble in the third.

The Bulldogs tagged Hollan for five runs in the inning, punctuated by a three-run home run with two outs.

Georgia added an unearned run in the very next inning, opening a 6-2 lead and forcing Arkansas to play catch-up.

Hollan departed the game after five innings, allowing six runs (five earned) on seven hits and five walks while striking out two. He turned the ball over to Dylan Carter, who was superb with 2 2/3 shutout innings and two strikeouts in relief.

"He was wild," Hogs coach Dave Van Horn said. "He walked five. He was pitching behind in the count a little bit, and they’ve got some good hitters. He’s got to pitch ahead, and he’s got a good fastball, but he uses his off-speed well. They didn’t chase. When that’s the case, you’ve got to throw the ball over the plate."

Carter’s dominance out of the bullpen allowed the Razorback offense to mount what appeared to be a valiant comeback.

Caleb Cali’s sacrifice fly to right in the top half of the sixth cut the deficit to three before he came up clutch again in the eighth with an RBI single to center to put Arkansas within two.

Brady Slavens was hit by a pitch after Cali’s run-scoring single, loading the bases with no outs and giving the Hogs a perfect opportunity to swing the game in their favor.

Georgia reliever Leighton Finley had other plans, however, striking out the next three batters to extinguish Arkansas’ threat.

Kendall Diggs’ ninth-inning RBI double off the wall in center, which was a foot shy from a game-tying two-run home run, had the Razorbacks on the edge of an exciting come-from-behind effort.

The Hogs could not finish the job, stranding two runners with one out to seal its series-opening defeat in Athens.

Three Razorback hitters – Cali (2-for-4, 2 RBI), Diggs (2-for-4, 1 RBI) and McLaughlin (2-for-3, 1 RBI) – finished the game with multiple base knocks. Josenberger drew a team-leading two walks and picked up a hit in the loss.

"We've been pretty good this year at, maybe not getting the super big hit, but moving people over and then getting them in, scoring a run here or there," Van Horn said. "We didn't do that tonight. Tonight was all or nothing, it seemed like. I guess you can credit their pitching staff for doing a good job, but we didn't look like our normal selves tonight."

Arkansas will look to bounce back tomorrow in the second game of its series against Georgia.

First pitch at Foley Field is 5 p.m. Friday on SEC Network+ with Matt Stewart (play-by-play) and Jason Jacobs (analyst) on the call.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

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