Hogs' Dave Van Horn Preview James Madison Series

  • 8 months ago
Arkansas Razorbacks coach Dave Van Horn announced his starting rotation on the mound and just avoid injuries so it can last awhile ahead of the season-opener against James Madison on Friday afternoon at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville, Ark.
Transcript
00:00 >> Start off, do you have your starting rotation set for this weekend?
00:03 >> Yeah, we'll go with Hagen Smith Friday.
00:06 We'll go with Tigert Saturday, Molina Sunday, and Colin Fisher on Monday.
00:13 And how many years, maybe never I've been able to tell you a rotation.
00:17 So hopefully, we'll stay healthy all year.
00:20 We'll be able to figure this one out.
00:22 >> Guess if I knew those top three guys would be there,
00:24 maybe a little bit of question on the order between Tigert and Molina.
00:26 Was there any strategy with that order there?
00:29 >> Yeah, not really.
00:30 Just figured, I don't know, you could probably talk to Coach Hobbs about it.
00:33 But I think left, right, left, it doesn't,
00:36 I guess it really doesn't matter and it could change.
00:40 Just maybe the two guys that have been in our program the longest,
00:45 I mean you could go through a lot of things.
00:47 It's maybe how they pitched.
00:50 But I think they're pretty equal.
00:53 They're both really good.
00:55 So we'll go that way, but no particular reason.
01:02 >> So what went in the decision to go with Fisher there in the fourth game?
01:05 >> We were thinking about Bobby, we've got some other guys as well.
01:08 Bobby tweaked his hamstring a little bit and pitch count was down.
01:13 He tried to pitch last weekend and we were inside.
01:18 He didn't have his best stuff and have the command that he's had.
01:21 But that's kind of what we're looking at.
01:23 I mean if you really look at it, Gabe Gackles pitched really well lately.
01:27 He threw great last weekend and he would be a candidate and
01:33 there's a couple others.
01:34 So it's a good problem to have.
01:37 Some of these guys are young, but their stuff is really good.
01:41 So we'll play it out.
01:44 It's like I told the team yesterday before practice started,
01:46 we had a little meeting in the dugout.
01:48 I just talked about, it's just the beginning of the season.
01:52 And the game will tell us what to do.
01:57 You guys will show us what to do.
01:59 And the cream will rise to the top and we'll figure it out.
02:02 >> Coach, just how tough was it to hear Peyton Stovall broke his foot this
02:08 close to the season?
02:09 >> Well, it was tough.
02:10 It was tough for Peyton.
02:11 It was tough for me personally, for Peyton.
02:13 And I think our team feels really bad for him.
02:16 I mean, he was upset about it when he found out.
02:19 He just, why me, why does this keep happening?
02:22 And missed games last year.
02:24 He was really swinging the bat well, played good too.
02:27 So I just told him, you're one of the stronger guys mentally,
02:33 you can handle this.
02:34 And that's why I was put on you, I feel like.
02:35 And I think that he'll be even more ready to go once he gets it going.
02:41 Gets his live at bats.
02:45 But yeah, it was tough.
02:46 And when it happened, when the ball hit him, we're like, ooh,
02:50 that is not a good spot.
02:51 Even though it was a change up, it hit him flush.
02:54 And he didn't move.
02:55 He's leading off the game and he's mad at himself for not jumping out of the way.
03:01 And I said, well, you play the game the right way.
03:05 And got those, you change up, you just kinda let it hit you.
03:07 And you take your base and you didn't do anything wrong.
03:11 It's kinda the way you're trained.
03:12 And we're sure excited to get him back when he comes back.
03:17 >> And just not having him at second, how do you feel about, I guess, Holt,
03:21 Sprague-Lott, anybody else maybe?
03:23 >> Yeah, Holt will play there.
03:26 And played there the last third of the season, did a great job.
03:30 He was gonna be our starting third baseman.
03:34 So Sprague-Lott, who is gonna probably play a little bit everywhere, will start.
03:39 And he started in college for a few years.
03:41 So I feel good about those guys defensively.
03:46 >> Hey, what can you tell us about James Madison?
03:48 Do you do much of an advanced scout on one?
03:50 >> Yeah, and it's still going on right now.
03:52 I mean, basically what I can tell you is that what we can do is we know
03:57 what they did last year with who's coming back.
04:02 And maybe we've got velocities and tendencies and those type of things.
04:08 But I mean, this is a team that last year hit right at almost 300,
04:13 won a lot of games.
04:14 They're competitive, and
04:19 I don't feel like they would have scheduled to come here a couple years ago
04:24 if they didn't feel good about what they had in the program at the time.
04:27 And then also what's coming in to start the season on the road,
04:32 a long way from home like this.
04:34 >> And their downfielder, Trimble, I think, has got some,
04:37 I believe Trimble's got some really big numbers.
04:38 >> Really good stats, just a tough out.
04:41 You look at his numbers, his strikeouts to walks and batting average.
04:45 I mean, he's the guy that probably built their lineup around, and
04:49 he had a tremendous year last year.
04:51 So really, you try to watch batting practice the first day and
04:57 see if some of the reports are your visual, your eyes, you put on them.
05:02 It looks like what you've read.
05:05 A lot of times you make some changes too.
05:07 And then what does our pitchers throw compared to maybe
05:13 what they're seeing with these numbers?
05:15 So you might switch, you turn the field a little bit on it with those position
05:18 players because of velocity or different things.
05:21 So, yeah, it's the beginning of the year.
05:24 You don't know much about a lot of people.
05:25 So really, I just told our guys, we'll get as much as we can on them, but
05:29 we just need to really take care of what we can take care of.
05:31 And that's for us to play good defense and throw strikes.
05:35 >> Hey, with your batting order with Stovall,
05:37 what's the chain reaction to moving someone else in lead off and go for that?
05:41 >> Pretty much just kinda basically what you said,
05:45 we're just gonna move everybody up.
05:46 We'll probably hit our catcher lead off.
05:48 This might be the first time I've ever done that.
05:50 I know that Biggio was a pretty good lead off hitter in college back in the day.
05:55 And so White's a tough out if he's catching.
06:02 If he's not catching, then we'll flip it around.
06:04 But if White's not catching, he'll be DHing on Friday or Saturday.
06:09 So that's what we're looking like.
06:12 And I'll go left after that, then right, then left, and
06:16 then pretty much right after that.
06:19 If Stovall was in the lineup, he might be hitting lead off for us.
06:23 And then you go left, right, left, right, left, right, probably.
06:26 And then you can finish up with a few right handers at the end.
06:29 So if we get into the game, we feel like the righties are struggling.
06:34 With a right hander,
06:35 then I'll bring a couple of these lefties off the bench and let them hit.
06:38 >> You mentioned the catchers and Hudson's a starter.
06:40 Do you have any plans already in place with the depth that you have to give him
06:45 a day off this weekend, or is it gonna be- >> Yeah,
06:47 I won't catch him all weekend, no doubt.
06:50 I think Helfrich's gonna definitely catch, and you might see another one.
06:54 Just see how it goes.
06:55 But we feel really good about our catchers, and
07:00 I'm sure it's gonna be an ongoing question throughout the year.
07:03 And unless guys just really do well and separate themselves,
07:07 how am I gonna handle it?
07:09 I don't know, I'm gonna let it handle itself right now.
07:12 >> And I'm just wondering, the season's here, any one, two players that maybe did
07:16 the most for themselves in terms of either earning a starting job or
07:20 figuring into the competition as we get to opening day?
07:23 >> I think for the last two weekends,
07:26 I've kind of put together the starting lineup a couple of times.
07:31 And the lineup's done pretty well, has outscored the other team pretty good,
07:36 which is a good thing.
07:37 Doesn't mean everybody in the lineup's done great, but
07:41 as a team, they play pretty well together.
07:44 Again, I told the team yesterday, the lineup will change throughout the year.
07:49 And just cuz you make the starting lineup day one doesn't mean you're gonna be
07:54 there in the 15th game, so you gotta keep working.
07:59 So I can't say that one individual's really jumped himself up.
08:06 I think there's been some separation already going into spring.
08:12 >> Six or seven years ago, you might have had a lot of sophomores and
08:15 juniors in your opening day lineup.
08:17 This year, it's gonna be a lot of third, fourth, fifth year type guys.
08:20 How does that change, maybe, does it change your expectations at all that you
08:24 have older players on the first day?
08:27 >> I don't think it changes my expectation.
08:29 I just feel like that this is basically the way it is, and I've said it for
08:34 two years now, that teams are always gonna be old now, especially in our league.
08:38 You know who you feel like as a coach, a coaching staff, who's in your program,
08:45 who's gonna be back for the next season, and who's gonna be an impact guy, start,
08:51 whatever, and then you've got some young guys coming in.
08:55 But with the way everything works these days, you gotta fill in with some guys.
08:59 And usually the guys you're gonna fill in with,
09:02 they're gonna be a minimum of a sophomore.
09:04 You look at Aloy, who's done a great job of swinging the bat,
09:08 playing defense, great teammate, players love him.
09:10 Well, he's only a sophomore, but he had a really good freshman year.
09:14 And you think he would get better, and he has.
09:18 He's really coachable, and he's done a great job for us.
09:22 And freshman getting in lineups in the SEC, there's gonna be one here,
09:27 one there, I think where you can really do it is on the mound.
09:31 Cuz when you're on the mound, you got the ball, and
09:32 if you get them out, you're pitching.
09:34 And if you can control the running game, and you can feel the position a little bit,
09:38 you don't panic, you throw it over the plate, and you got good stuff,
09:42 you're gonna pitch.
09:42 And I think it's maybe easier to prove it than maybe a position player that's
09:48 gotta do a bunch of things as far as playing defense, hitting,
09:51 knowing the signs, base running.
09:54 And a lot of times it takes a little longer for that guy.
09:57 But we've always had, for the most part, we've had one freshman that plays a lot or
10:02 two that play a lot as a young guy, and they're our dudes as sophomores and juniors.
10:09 >> Maybe expectation's not the right word, and
10:10 I think you were kinda alluding to this.
10:12 But there's more consistency with older guys early in the season.
10:14 Do you think that's fair?
10:15 >> Yeah, I think that that would be true.
10:18 You think about our outfield last year, really three guys transferred in,
10:23 two, and then one that had been here the year before that transferred in.
10:29 And when you just take care of needs like that, and then they come in and
10:33 they do what you think they're gonna do.
10:35 And I think the expectation is that you're older,
10:38 you're experienced, so we should be pretty good right out of the block.
10:41 And I guarantee every team in our league thinks the same thing,
10:44 cuz every team in our league right now says they're going to a regional and
10:49 they have a chance to play in Omaha.
10:50 And maybe talent-wise, that's true, but you gotta play the games.
10:56 >> And then with an older clubhouse where you've got a lot of 23,
10:59 24-year-old types, do you see the freshmen come in and
11:02 mature quicker because they're put into more of an older setting?
11:05 >> That's a good question.
11:06 I don't know if we have any 24-year-olds in there, maybe one.
11:10 But I think the freshmen probably realize they don't have as big a group of young
11:15 guys to go running around and doing silly things.
11:18 So that might help them grow up a little bit,
11:20 because these older guys, they're at the end of their college careers.
11:24 They wanna win, they wanna do well now, they work harder.
11:27 Like you said, they're more mature.
11:29 And I think the younger guys usually follow that lead.
11:33 And if you get one that's really serious when they come out of high school,
11:36 we've got a couple of those in there right now.
11:38 It's interesting, and those are the guys that may be the closest ones to playing
11:43 and pitching right away.
11:45 >> Going back to Peyton Holt and moving him to second, was there any thought to
11:48 maybe keep him at third and put Sprague-Lott at second?
11:51 Or was it a pretty easy choice for you because of the defense and that kind of thing?
11:55 >> It was an easy choice for me, cuz we had already talked about it.
11:59 You gotta plan cuz things happen in the middle of a game that if Stovall was to
12:04 get hurt, how would we handle it?
12:06 If Aloy was to get hurt, how would we flip it around?
12:10 Things like that.
12:11 And Holt has better range than Jared does.
12:19 No knock on him, Jared can field with anybody in the country.
12:22 His glove is outstanding.
12:23 But the experience that Holt gained last year playing here and
12:29 Sprague-Lott has been more of a third baseman in college and
12:33 a little bit of a shortstop.
12:35 Played some second as well as a freshman, but we just feel like that
12:39 double play combination up the middle might be a little more athletic
12:44 with Holt at second.
12:46 >> And Robinette seemed to be really swinging the bat well lately.
12:49 How is he looking defensively?
12:51 And is he a guy that could maybe get some action this first weekend?
12:53 >> Yeah, if you look at him physically and probably from the stands,
12:56 I think you can see that he's in the best shape of his life.
12:59 He pretty much stayed here in the summer and worked out and
13:03 really worked on his body, got stronger.
13:05 And he's a little heavier footed, obviously, than Wagner is.
13:11 But his hands are good, his arms very accurate, and he is strong.
13:14 So that's been a good battle over there.
13:17 I see both of those guys for a while just kinda rotating out.
13:21 Probably DH playing first, probably see that the first couple of days.
13:24 And we're gonna let the games tell us, see what we see in the games.
13:28 And we're talking range and picking balls out of the dirt.
13:32 And the advantage that McLaughlin has, he's a bigger target.
13:35 Wagner has probably better range.
13:39 They both pick the ball out of the dirt.
13:41 So I'm not gonna say one's ahead of the other.
13:44 They both have their pluses and negatives, I guess.
13:47 But they both bring something to our lineup, and that's a little bit of sock,
13:51 and they're tough outs.
13:52 And again, it's not a problem whatsoever.
13:59 It's just a matter of figuring out who to play in the field.
14:02 >> I was looking at James Madison's stats from last year.
14:04 They stole a lot of bases, had a lot of bunts.
14:07 Is that something you've maybe focused on a little bit extra leading up to
14:10 the season?
14:11 And is that maybe a good test for your infield and your new catchers?
14:15 >> Yeah, I think they stole about 90 bases last year or something.
14:18 But they also got thrown out 30 some times.
14:20 So what that tells me is they're gonna keep doing it.
14:23 That's part of their game.
14:24 Some of those are probably on swing and miss hit and runs.
14:28 So they're not just sitting trying to single, single homer.
14:32 They're gonna hit and run, try to advance runner,
14:33 probably give up and out to move somebody to score in a position.
14:36 Yeah, we work on it a lot.
14:39 We talk about, especially early in the season,
14:41 we're playing teams from normally east or the north.
14:46 They're inside a lot.
14:49 They'll try to run a first and third offense on you, try to steal a run from you.
14:52 And if we're up five runs in the fifth, we'll give it to them.
14:55 Let's get in there and hit.
14:57 If it's late in the game, you gotta defend it a little better.
15:01 Bunch, you gotta be on your toes.
15:03 So we know that that is a major possibility.
15:07 And the SEC, they don't run as much cuz pitchers are quick to the plate and
15:11 the catchers can really throw.
15:13 You gotta really pick and choose your time and you gotta really work at it.
15:16 Kentucky and Vandy do it a lot.
15:18 They have those type of players.
15:20 They play on turf.
15:21 So you know what you know with the league.
15:24 But the non-conference guys, you just know that they're gonna probably doing
15:30 something to score, besides hitting the ball all over the field.
15:34 They're gonna try to manufacture runs.
15:36 >> With the wireless communication that your players are using now,
15:40 was that much of an adjustment the last few weeks?
15:43 >> Yeah, I was just feeling comfortable with it's probably the biggest adjustment.
15:46 And that includes me because I'm calling signs or
15:50 calling plays with someone standing next to me that's plugging it in.
15:54 And what if that someone who's plugging in and gets sick that day?
15:57 I gotta make sure that I know what I'm doing or somebody else so
16:00 we can get it in.
16:01 Cuz we really don't have physical signs cuz it's a better system and
16:06 it's quicker.
16:07 The opportunity to run pick off plays and
16:11 because with what I call the shot clock, the 22nd clock,
16:16 it's hard to put stuff on cuz the catcher,
16:21 we used to have to get out and put signs on at everybody.
16:23 And now you gotta go.
16:28 Like you gotta be, and I'm always thinking a pitch or two ahead,
16:32 even when we're on offense.
16:33 But on defense, if you see something, you plug it in.
16:38 Let's pick this guy off first, runner first and second, nobody out.
16:42 One out, we're gonna slide that guy in there and pick.
16:44 You probably see more picks than normal just because it's easier to get them in.
16:48 We wanna do it during the game, but
16:50 a lot of times we just can't get his attention or whatever the case may be.
16:54 Now they're trained to look at that and it says, catcher picked it first.
16:59 The catcher gets a sign, he's given the pitches.
17:04 If we wanna call in a pitch, we can still radio it into his ear.
17:09 And our pitchers, like the big leagues, they have it in their hat.
17:12 And it's talking to them.
17:14 Slider away, I mean, if you were standing next to him, you'd hear it.
17:17 And every now and then it probably doesn't work like it does in the big league.
17:19 And I guess we get to hopefully not have to use one of our
17:24 offensive, defensive timeouts on that.
17:28 I'm sure there's gonna be some times where we're just shaking our head,
17:32 like what are we doing with all this?
17:33 But it does speed up the game.
17:36 And if technology works correctly, I think it's a good thing.
17:43 >> Now that we're almost to the season, do you have a feel for Dylan Carter and
17:46 Adam Hatchman and what they might be able to do for you, if anything?
17:50 >> Yeah, Dylan threw a bullpen the other day and he was really good.
17:52 And I mean, it's amazing, he's way ahead of schedule.
17:57 Cuz when he heard it last year, I didn't think he'd pitch this year.
18:00 Just going off of history and what's going on with guys that have had this
18:05 injury, but he's way ahead of the game, so to speak, as far as recovery.
18:10 And he wants to pitch this year.
18:15 He's got two years of eligibility left.
18:17 If he only had one, then I would probably have a little more serious conversation
18:23 with him like, hey, this is what we're gonna do.
18:25 We're gonna redshirt you.
18:26 Come back next year and be right in the middle of it again.
18:29 This year's like, you could still be right in the middle of it, but
18:32 if it doesn't work out, you still have another year.
18:37 If we get into it, when it's about time for him to possibly pitch for us,
18:41 we will talk with him.
18:43 And it'll be the conversation will be, do you wanna use a year to try?
18:49 And if it doesn't go good, it is what it is.
18:52 And Hatchman, he's a big old guy with a big arm.
18:56 He's starting to get there, and if he's ready to go in a few weeks,
19:00 we'll ramp him up and we'll see what happens, see if we can go there.
19:05 [BLANK_AUDIO]
19:07 >> Anything else, Coach?
19:08 >> I wanted to ask about Dean Weber.
19:10 >> Yeah, yeah, sad deal.
19:12 I've known Dean since I was a player here, 1981, '82.
19:17 I mean, Dean, I just have a lot of memories of him,
19:19 cuz we all were in the same area.
19:20 Up there in the Broyles Center, football, baseball, everybody.
19:25 It was football's area, but we were all in there.
19:28 We didn't feel comfortable in there all the time.
19:30 Didn't wanna be in there getting any treatment.
19:33 But Dean, he took control of that room.
19:37 I mean, you could hear him snapping around and popping off and
19:42 getting right back with those young guys and getting after guys he didn't feel
19:45 that should be in there and just, his career.
19:48 He spent so many years here at the University of Arkansas and
19:52 finished up in the foundation.
19:54 And he's always been a big fan of baseball here.
19:56 And he'd come by and we'd talk a little bit.
19:59 Every time I'd go by there, we'd talk.
20:01 And he'd always want me to just come and sit in his office and
20:04 we'd talk about the old days for a little bit.
20:06 But just, it's super sad, super sad to see someone that we all loved and
20:14 he loved this university and this athletic department pass on.