Noland copies football feat, leads Diamond Hogs to doubleheader sweep

Arkansas starter Connor Noland delivers to the plate as Eastern Illinois first baseman Hunter Morris leads off of first Saturday, Feb. 16, 2019, during the first inning at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville.

— Connor Noland's first college baseball start went about as well as his first start as a quarterback for the University of Arkansas football team last fall.

Noland, a freshman right-hander from Greenwood, pitched 4 2/3 innings in his debut Saturday. He didn't get the individual win, but he helped the No. 12 Razorbacks to a 12-3 win over Eastern Illinois in the second game of a doubleheader at Baum-Walker Stadium.

Noland left the game after EIU loaded the bases on two errors - including one by Noland - and a single in the top of the fifth inning. Two runs scored against relief pitcher Kole Ramage, which left Noland a final line of 2 unearned runs on 4 hits and 1 walk, and 7 strikeouts.

Noland was pulled after throwing 73 pitches on a 75-pitch count, but he was given a no-decision by the official scorer because the game was still in doubt when he came off the mound.

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn said he thought Noland pitched well despite a tight strike zone and a wind chill in the 20s.

"It didn't faze him and he just kept pitching," Van Horn said. "I thought his command picked up in the second and third, it was good. The fourth inning I thought he was pretty good and the fifth inning he was getting tired, and his pitch count was getting up there.

"I thought he did really well the first time out on a cold day."

Noland led Arkansas' football team to a 23-0 win over Tulsa last October in his first start as a quarterback. In that game he completed 10 of 16 passes for 124 yards and a touchdown, and was intercepted once. It was one of four football games in which Noland played last fall, but the only that he started.

"There is a lot of pressure when you go into a football game, especially with thousands of people in the stands," Noland said. "Coming out for baseball, we still had a good crowd, but I had definitely had that experience and had seen that many people. It definitely made the transition a little bit easier."

Arkansas (2-0) gave Noland some early run support. Designated hitter Jordan McFarland and catcher Zack Plunkett, who did not play in the first game of the doubleheader, each had RBI singles in the second inning to put the Razorbacks ahead 2-0.

First baseman Trevor Ezell and center fielder Dominic Fletcher added sacrifice fly RBI in the third inning to push Arkansas' lead to 4-0.

All four runs came against EIU starter Michael YaSenka, a right-handed junior college transfer who struck out 5 and allowed 5 hits in 5 innings. YaSenka was pitching in his first game for the Panthers (0-2).

In two games Saturday, the Razorbacks scored 27 runs and recorded 32 hits, including 12 hits for extra bases.

"I think the story of the day was we got a lot of big hits," Van Horn said. "The first game, we didn't strike out the whole game; very rare. The second game, (YaSenka) struck out the first three hitters of the game, so I shouldn't have said anything about it between games."

Arkansas pulled away in the nightcap after redshirt freshman third baseman Jacob Nesbit hit a two-run single with two outs in the sixth inning to put the Razorbacks ahead 6-2.

"We got some big two-out hits throughout the day, especially in the second game," Van Horn said.

EIU pulled within 6-3 on a fielding error by Arkansas shortstop Casey Martin in the top of the eighth inning, but the Razorbacks scored six runs in the bottom of the inning on six hits, an error and a walk.

Ramage earned the win by throwing 2 1/3 innings. He allowed 1 run on 4 hits and 2 walks, and struck out 4.

"He didn't have the command he normally has, but he got us some big outs," Van Horn said.

Game 1

Arkansas hit four home runs and won 15-7 in Game 1 of the doubleheader.

Trevor Ezell hit a solo home run in the third inning, Christian Franklin added a three-run home run and Heston Kjerstad a two-run home run in the fourth, and Jack Kenley hit a solo home run in the sixth. Arkansas also hit five doubles and out-hit EIU 17-10.

Seven Arkansas players had multi-hit games. Ezell and Casey Martin had three hits, and Matt Goodheart, Casey Opitz, Jacob Nesbit, Kenley and Franklin had two apiece.

The Razorbacks scored eight runs in the fourth inning against EIU starting pitcher Tyler Jones, who allowed nine runs on nine hits. In addition to the home runs by Franklin and Kjerstad, there were RBI doubles by Opitz and Kenley to put Arkansas ahead 9-0.

Arkansas starting pitcher Isaiah Campbell pitched five innings and allowed three runs on five hits. He struck out five batters and did not issue a walk.

Campbell was perfect through four innings, but ran into trouble in the fifth when four of the Panthers' first five hitters reached on three singles and a double. EIU added a third run in the inning on an error.

The half-inning came on the heels of Arkansas' eight-run fourth that kept Campbell in the dugout for nearly 30 minutes.

"Having those innings is always nice because you get the run support, but in this weather you kind of get a little stiff, a little tired," Campbell said. "But we thought my stuff was just as good in the fifth as it was in the first. They just kind of changed their plan and they attacked fastball first pitch more. I was still making pitches, still getting weak contact, but they just found some holes."

Arkansas led by 15-4 until EIU shortstop Christian Pena hit a three-run home run off reliever Jacob Burton in the eighth inning.

The Razorbacks won their season opener for the 25th consecutive season. Arkansas last lost a season opener in 1994, a 7-3 loss at TCU.