The Blog Hawgs

Sports & Pop Culture for the Arkansas Man

Archive for June, 2010

UA WR Greg Childs one of SEC’s Top 25 Players

Posted by Adam Butler on June 4, 2010

Which Was Better--The Phenomenal Catch, Run & Fumble Recovery or the Fact Vern Lundquist Thought it Might be Ruled Incomplete After Childs Ran 60+ Yards With It? Then Again, With Those Refs, Vern Probably Wasn't as Crazy as he Sounded.

per ESPN SEC blogger Chris Low. I look for big things from Childs if he can stay healthy. He was slighted last year when he was shutout of the postseason awards, and that it just the type of thing that provides extra motivation for a guy who has already shown a wealth of talent.

Posted in Sports | 2 Comments »

CWS Predictions

Posted by Brett Kincaid on June 4, 2010

While I have not been able to spend as much time on it as I would like, I have looked over the bracket and feel reasonably confident in these picks.  The Road to Omaha is brutal, and it almost always yields a surprise team or two.  Oddly enough, no #1 seed has won the championship in more than 10 years.  That shows the growth of the game and the rapidly spreading talent levels across the country.

Play Ball

Super Regional Matchups

  • #1 Arizona State (Tempe Regional) v. Arkansas (Fayetteville Regional)
  • #2 Texas (Austin Regional) v. TCU (Fort Worth Regional)
  • #3 Florida (Gainesville Regional) v. Texas A&M (Coral Gables Regional)
  • #4 Coastal Carolina (Myrtle Beach Regional) v. South Carolina (Columbia Regional)
  • Mississippi (Charlottesville Regional) v. Oklahoma (Norman Regional)
  • LSU (Los Angeles Regional) v. Cal State Fullerton (Fullerton Regional)
  • Vanderbilt (Louisville Regional) v. Connecticut (Norwich Regional)
  • Alabama (Atlanta Regional) v. Auburn (Auburn Regional)

College World Series Field

  • Arkansas – Wishful thinking? Perhaps.  But these guys know how to get to Omaha, and a strong road record this year means they will not be afraid of Tempe.
  • #2 Texas – The Longhorns have a complete team and experience.  TCU deserved a better draw.
  • #3 Florida – Tough call here, but UF is as solid as any team in the country – especially at home.
  • South Carolina – Will Coastal shrink from the moment?  I say they will, largely because USC believes it should have been a national seed and wants to show the country why.
  • Oklahoma – A surprise team to find its way to Omaha, the Sooners should host the regional and super at Norman.
  • LSU – The hottest team in America and defending champs.
  • UConn – The feel-good story of the CWS will be the Huskies.
  • Alabama – This team just looks like its playing with purpose.  I like their makeup right now.

***I am resisting the urge to change my UConn pick to Florida State.  I think I have talked myself into the ‘Noles making a run.***

Posted in Sports | 7 Comments »

NWC Report for 6/4/10

Posted by Jeff on June 4, 2010

It’s Wal-Mart Shareholders Week. The concerts were open to the public (without dragging a Wal-Mart employee to help you get in) for the first time.  Pretty exciting if you like REO Speedwagon. Shareholders Week is always a big boost to the local economy.

Benton County Judge Dave Bisbee’s trial on misdemeanor charges of hiring his own company to do county remodeling continues. Bisbee took the stand yesterday.

Mark Wahlberg feeds a meter. "Say hi to your mom."

It’s official.  Fayetteville will now require paid parking in the downtown and Dickson Street districts.  The only free time allowed will be from 2 a.m. and 10 a.m. Supporters of the 2 a.m. clause argued that those who are drinking on Dickson should not have to worry about their car being towed… since intoxicated people on Dickson at 2 a.m. are known for making rational decisions about their cars.

The Woodstock of the Ozarks, Wakarusa kicked off last night on Mulberry Mountain. Pretty nice lineup this year featuring a few big national names and tons of great local acts.

John Popper gets led to the wilderness of Mulberry Mountain.

Now that they are going to allow sales inside the city limits, Fayetteville decided to allow residents to shoot off fireworks inside its borders as well. But no bottle rockets.

Jon Williams picks the Stadium Debate Scab while venting about why the UofA’s stadium and arena can’t be used to attract big time music shows.

I was looking for one more story to be the perfect ending for the week and then…     Honestly. He thought they were tomato plants. Be sure to watch the video.

**UPDATE**

(I figured this was pretty well known state-wide but when the Blog Hawgs Founder/Editor yells ‘jump’, I ask, ‘how high?!’)

Bentonville rising senior OL, Marcus Danenhauer committed to the UofA.  Danenhauer is massive, smart, and skilled. He has started for Bentonville for two years. Bentonville does not start many sophomores. He’s good.

Posted in News | 4 Comments »

Pac 10 to Try and Beat the Big 10 to the Expansion Punch?

Posted by Adam Butler on June 3, 2010

This would be interesting. From the article:

Mack Headed to the Left Coast?

But when it comes to possible realignment, the Big 12 meetings may be premature.

Why?

Because it appears the Pac-10, which has its meetings in San Francisco starting this weekend, is prepared to make a bold move and invite Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Colorado to join its league, according to multiple sources close to the situation.

//

   
 

Left out would be Iowa State, Baylor, Kansas, Kansas State, Nebraska and Missouri.

Posted in News, Sports | 2 Comments »

(Alleged) Drunk Driver Goes “General Lee” at the DFW Airport

Posted by Adam Butler on June 3, 2010

Wow.

Posted in Commentary | 3 Comments »

The Butler Did It: On Perfection

Posted by Adam Butler on June 3, 2010

Tom Hanks was wrong. There is crying in baseball–or at least there should be after last night.

In case you have been under a rock for the last 18 hours or so and missed it, Armando Galarraga–a 28-year old, Venezuelan pitcher for the Detroit Tigers with all of 20 career wins in 4 MLB seasons–stood on the precipice of history last night until veteran Major League Baseball umpire Jim Joyce said that he didn’t.

That precipice was the 1st-base bag. When Galarraga took a throw from Tigers first baseman Miguel Cabrera and tagged it with his foot just ahead of hard-charging Cleveland Indian Jason Donald, for a split-second (about the amount of time by which Galarraga bested Donald) the Tigers faithful erupted in celebration of the 22nd perfect game in the 141-year history of Major League Baseball (and remarkably, the 3rd in the last 26 DAYS).

And then, the unthinkable happened. Joyce missed the call.

Cabrera argued vehemently. Tigers Manager Jim Leyland came out to argue. And then, after Galarraga kept his composure and (again) got the final out and preseved the complete-game shutout win (but nevertheless just one that is now relegated to a group of a much-less prestigious 20 somethings–Galarraga’s career wins, not MLB’s perfect games) the umpiring crew had to protect Joyce from Tigers journeyman Gerald Laird, Leyland and others including an increeasingly unruly crowd.

For his part, even as the call was being blown, Galarraga was a “perfect” gentlemen. He never said a word to Joyce. In fact, the only emotion he showed was a sheepish, almost childlike “Are you kidding me?” grin after the play.

But the story doesn’t end there. While national talking heads call for action by the commissioner–any action–whether it means awarding Galarraga a perfect game, instituting instant replay ,immediately suspending Joyce, or all of the above, the reactions from Galarraga and Joyce are teaching us all a little bit about how to react in the face adversity and controversy.

Shortly after the game, Galarraga said:

“Nobody’s perfect. Everybody’s human. I understand. I give the guy a lot of credit for saying, ‘I need to talk to you.’ You don’t see an umpire tell you that after a game. I gave him a hug.”

And, in a move from which infamous former MLB umpire and 1985 World Series blower Don Denkinger could learn a thing or two, Joyce was much less forgiving:

“I just cost the kid a perfect game.  I thought he beat the throw. I was convinced he beat the throw until I saw the replay. It was the biggest call of my career.”

And, today, in a move that should give you goose bumps if you have blood pumping through your veins, less than 18 hours after his would-be perfect game was marred by Joyce’s imperfection, Galarraga delivered the lineup card for today’s matinee between the Tigers and Indians to the regularly scheduled home plate umpire,…..(you guessed it) Joyce. Understandably, Joyce, who could have been taken off today’s game, but declined, was in tears.

Now, I had the obligatory James Joyce/Jim Joyce reference teed up (“A man’s errors are his portals of discovery.”) but a quick–and I mean quick–survey on Google suggests that turn has been done and done again by bloggers across the globe.

That’s fine because this has all actually been more of a Shakespearean tragedy, except the actors have improvised an alternate, not-so-unhappy ending.

To be sure, Galarraga will forever be known for “the one that got away” or more precisely, was taken away. And, although he is admired as one of the best umpires in the game, Joyce will join Denkinger, Bill Buckner and a few others on the list of unfortunate, long-time baseball men whose many accomplishments have been reduced to one, unfortunate play.

But, through the suffering of Galarraga and Joyce, we all can (and should) take pleasure and comfort from the shining examples of humility and humanity they have  displayed in the wake of the game.

Call it the perfect ending to an imperfect, perfect game.

Posted in Commentary | 2 Comments »

NCAA Baseball, Fayetteville Regional Report — Thursday

Posted by Brett Kincaid on June 3, 2010

Bad news for the college baseball world:  Cox and Eibner are healthy and ready to play.

There have been a lot of questions about Arkansas playing the early game on Friday.  Simply put, it’s the best thing for the team.

Kendall Rogers with Rivals.com provides an exceptional breakdown of the Fayetteville Regional.  SPOILER ALERT:  He likes the Hogs.

Washington State arrived in Fayetteville yesterday, amid they festivities around the Walmart shareholders meeting.

The Kansas State baseball program has come a long way in the past five years.

Center fielder Anthony Clifton has been credited with sparking Grambling’s second-half resurgence this season.

**Here is another helpful link from the NCAA.  I followed it last year, and it was quite helpful.**

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Ryan Mallett on Track

Posted by Brett Kincaid on June 3, 2010

Arkansas head football coach Bobby Petrino says star quarterback Ryan Mallett has started running straight ahead.  This is a big step as he recovers from a foot fracture that sidelined the Heisman candidate for spring practice.  It sounds like Mallett will be able to participate in the summer throwing program with his receivers starting this month.

Arkansas coach Bobby Petrino said Mallett was right on schedule, if not ahead of schedule, in his recovery.
“He’s running straight ahead, and he’ll be throwing starting this week,” Petrino said. “He’s doing well. He’s excited. We’re excited. We just have to make sure he doesn’t do something he’s not instructed to do.”

This is obviously great news for Hog fans.  It’s not so great news for SEC defenses.

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George Wilson, The NFL’s 2009 Walter Payton Man of the Year

Posted by Brett Kincaid on June 3, 2010

Former Razorback WR George Wilson, now a starting safety and team captain with Buffalo, shows that all the NFL players are not “Ben” and Santonio Holmes.  This CBS Sports story by Clark Judge details how the former walk on and undrafted free agent has worked his way into being an indispensable NFL player for the Bills.  And he works just as hard off the field.

In short, George Wilson is the textbook example of good things happening to good people

He was one of my favorites during that era of Razorback football.  I’m quite pleased to see him excelling at this level, and I am not surprised to see him doing so much off the field.  Quality man

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NCAA Baseball, Fayetteville Regional Report — Wednesday

Posted by Brett Kincaid on June 2, 2010

Road to Omaha

Razorback pitching has been exceptional the past few weeks.  Pitching coach Dave Jorn says the pitching depth has created confidence across the entire team and coaching staff.

“We’ve got some depth,” Jorn said Tuesday. “You don’t ever want to have to work out of a hole in a loser’s bracket. But if we were ever to get into that situation I feel more confident this year with the type of depth that we have to be able to have enough arms to be able to come out of it.”

Cole Manbeck with the Manhattan Mercury breaks down the Fayetteville Regional from the KSU perspective.  He is also high on the Hogs pitching.

The Razorbacks’ success this season has been built on pitching. Entering last week’s SEC tournament, they ranked 19th nationally with a team ERA of 3.86 while ranking 13th in the nation in both hits allowed per nine innings and strikeouts. In addition, they hand out just 2.6 walks per nine innings, the seventh fewest nationally.

Washington State got in their final practice at Pullman yesterday.  Today is a travel day for the Cougars.  They hope to have a better showing this year.

“We were expecting to go to the postseason, now not only are we expecting to go but we’re expecting to win.”

Grambling needs a lot to go right this weekend, but they have a good attitude.  It sounds like they have a firm understanding of what they are up against this Friday.

“We know it’s going to be tough,” Cooper said. “We’re just going to keep relying on pitching and defense and hopefully get some timely hitting along the way.”

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You Want Some Futbol News, Too?

Posted by Adam Butler on June 1, 2010

Apparently, International Futbol (READ: SOCCER) superstar Ronaldinho is a “nancy liberal”.  I mean, a fan rushed the pitch and he not only didn’t taze him, he let the guy kiss him.

Posted in Sports | 4 Comments »

You want some football news, too?

Posted by Brett Kincaid on June 1, 2010

ESPN has been heaping praise upon star quarterback Ryan Mallett since the Liberty Bowl.  That makes a lot of sense given that “Big Tex” is the premiere quarterback in the SEC.  But what happens if, God forbid, Mallett goes down to injury?  College Football Live addressed that issue today.  Needless to say, they believe Tyler Wilson is a more-than-adequate backup.

Of course, here in Arkansas a lot of us wonder if Tyler will even be the #2 when fall camp breaks.

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NCAA Baseball, Fayetteville Regional Report — Tuesday

Posted by Brett Kincaid on June 1, 2010

Game times have been set for the weekend.  The Razorbacks and Grambling will start the Friday session at 2:05 with Washington St. and Kansas St. following at 7:05.

The Hogs hope a week of rest (and an 0-2 finish at the SECT) yield positive returns on the field this week with a healthier crew of Razorbacks.

According to a Kansas State press release, they are building a baseball tradition in Manhattan.

Grambling players hoped to go far away from northeast Louisiana, but a trip to Fayetteville will suit them just fine.

The Washington State Cougars are happy to be back on the Road to Omaha, even if it means traveling halfway across the country to get started.

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