Hogs heading to Stillwater Regional

The Associated Press STILLWATER SWINE: Arkansas second baseman Rick Nomura tags out LSU's Andrew Stevenson during the seventh inning of a Southeastern Conference tournament game Thursday at the Hoover Met in Hoover, Ala. The Razorbacks, off a 2-2 finish at the tournament, move on to Oklahoma State's Stillwater Regional, beginning with Oral Roberts at noon Friday on the SEC Network (Resort Channel 79).
The Associated Press STILLWATER SWINE: Arkansas second baseman Rick Nomura tags out LSU's Andrew Stevenson during the seventh inning of a Southeastern Conference tournament game Thursday at the Hoover Met in Hoover, Ala. The Razorbacks, off a 2-2 finish at the tournament, move on to Oklahoma State's Stillwater Regional, beginning with Oral Roberts at noon Friday on the SEC Network (Resort Channel 79).

FAYETTEVILLE -- Once a floundering 11-12 overall and 1-5 in the Southeastern Conference, the Arkansas Razorbacks' midseason surge propelled them to a 14th consecutive NCAA baseball regional, announced Monday.

Coach Dave Van Horn's 20th-ranked Razorbacks, 35-22 overall and finishing 17-12 in the SEC then 2-2 in the SEC tournament in Hoover, Ala., are the second seed in the four-team, double-elimination Stillwater Regional beginning Friday at Oklahoma State's Reynolds Stadium in Stillwater, Okla.

Arkansas is matched at noon Friday on the SEC Network (Resort Channel 79) against the third-seeded Summit League champion Oral Roberts Golden Eagles, 41-14.

Friday night host team top-seed Oklahoma State, 37-18, completes the first round vs. the fourth-seeded Big East champion St. John's Red Storm, 39-14.

Winners' and losers' bracket games are scheduled Saturday with a losers' bracket final on Sunday afternoon and a championship game Sunday night and another one Monday if necessary.

The winner of the Stillwater Regional is bracketed the following weekend to play the winner of the Missouri State-hosted Springfield Regional in a best-of-three Super Regional advancing the winner among the Elite Eight playing for the national championship at the College World Series in Omaha, Neb.

Iowa, Oregon and Canisius are the teams in Springfield with Missouri State, 45-10, and the last of eight national seeds for the 64-team tournament. Though nationally seeded, Missouri State can't host a Super Regional because the double-A Springfield Cardinals return home that weekend to Hammons Field, which they share with Missouri State.

So Arkansas likely would host the Super Regional at Baum Stadium if the Razorbacks can prevail at Stillwater.

"That's nice," Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn said of the Super Regional hosting prospects but way putting the cart before the horse, the 13-year coach implied after Monday's pairings were announced.

"Believe me we have a lot of work to do," Van Horn said. "There are some really good teams in our regional. It's a great field. We need to get through Oral Roberts who has won a lot of ballgames. They have an older team."

The Golden Eagles bat .321 as a team and are paced by two .343 hitters -- Anthony Sequeria, 10 home runs and 54 RBIs, and Mark Whatley, five home runs and 44 RBIs.

ORU's top starters are Xavier Altamirano, 8-2 with a 2.94 ERA, and Guillermo Trujillo, 10-4, 4.03.

Arkansas will start junior right-hander Trey Killian, only 2-4 with a 4.72 but with a sensational start in last week's SEC tournament, holding Tennessee to one run for 7 2-3 innings before Arkansas won it 2-1 in the ninth for reliever Zach Jackson.

Van Horn hopes Killian can repeat his SEC tournament performance and hopes his No. 2 starter, freshman Keaton McKinney, 6-1, 3.14 ERA, heals from the ailing hip that removed him in the second inning of an ineffective start down 3-0 to eventual champion Florida, though Arkansas eventually prevailed 7-6.

"Trey is our oldest pitcher and most experienced pitcher and pitched really well last week," Van Horn said. "As far as McKinney, I'm not sure where he's at yet. I'll talk to him here in just a little bit and see how he's feeling. But that would probably be the order if everybody's healthy. We'll try to determine that definitely by tomorrow."

What is specifically wrong with McKinney's hip?

"I don't really know," Van Horn said. "There's some soreness and inflammation in there, some pain. I just know it's been bothering him off and on for a while and it really hadn't come about in a game until the other day. And you could tell it really affected his command, because he throws strikes, and he threw 7 out of 8 pitches for a ball, and that's unusual."

Dominic Taccolini, whom Van Horn and pitching coach Dave Jorn would prefer bringing out of the bullpen if needed the first two games or saved for a third-game start, likely would start Friday if McKinney still ails.

James Teague, struggling in his SEC tournament start losing 10-5 to LSU, also likely would have to pitch earlier in the tournament than Van Horn prefers if McKinney can't go.

"It's really concerning," Van Horn said of McKinney's availability. "He's one reason we're going to be in a regional, because he pitched so well down the stretch. We definitely need him to be able to go. If not, we're going to have to have somebody step it up."

Sports on 05/26/2015

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