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How Gage Wood's no-hitter could help Arkansas baseball in losers bracket at College World Series

How Gage Wood's no-hitter could help Arkansas baseball in losers bracket at College World Series

USA Today17-06-2025
How Gage Wood's no-hitter could help Arkansas baseball in losers bracket at College World Series
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Arkansas' Gage Wood throws historic no-hitter in College World Series
Arkansas' Gage Wood tosses the third no-hitter in Men's College World Series history as Arkansas tops Murray State.
NCAA
OMAHA, NE ― After losing its College World Series opener, Arkansas baseball faced a daunting task − winning four games in four days to keep its season alive.
June 16 was just the first of those games, but what a game it was: a 19-strikeout no-hitter from Gage Wood in the 3-0 victory over Murray State. The game not only was a history-making outing − the first Men's College World Series no-hitter since 1960 − it put the Razorbacks in a better position to keep its season going.
Arkansas used four pitchers in its first game. Gabe Gaeckle, who pitched six innings in relief, is unlikely to be available before the semifinal. But Zach Root, the game 1 starter, threw just 38 pitches. Relievers Cole Gibler and Christian Foutch should be available, too.
Razorbacks coach Dave Van Horn would not tip his hand after the no-hitter. But Root returning seems like a possibility. Only Gaeckle should be unavailable. Landon Beidelschies, Ben Bybee, Aiden Jimenez and Dylan Carter are other frequently-used relievers who should be available.
How many teams have won College World Series after losing the first game?
Four teams have won the College World Series after losing the first game: 1998 USC, 2006 Oregon State, 2010 South Carolina and 2018 Oregon State.
The Beavers in 2006 are the only one of those teams that won four games in four days, as the others had the benefit of an off day or rainout. The Beavers threw shutouts in each of their two semifinal games against Rice to advance to the championship series.
The 2018 Oregon State team is one Arkansas will be familiar with, too, as that team beat the Razorbacks to win the national title.
Why Arkansas baseball needs to hit better to get through the losers bracket
Arkansas isn't the only team that has struggled offensively in Omaha. The highest number of runs scored in a game was eight by Louisville, and that was done with only one extra-base hit. The first multi-run home run wasn't hit until Day 4.
But the Razorbacks have seen the worst offensive production compared to what's typical of any team in Omaha. Their typically strong power production has disappeared. Arkansas hasn't been like Louisville or Coastal Carolina, who have thrived playing small ball all year.
But the Razorbacks have already started to adjust. They haven't stolen many bases this season, but in the elimination game, they stole four bases from four different players.
"This ballpark's really big," outfielder Charles Davalan said. "So we've got to do some different stuff just to get runs. ... We knew coming in that the running game would be in action. When usually, in season, we didn't have to use it. But now, bigger ballpark, we've got to do different stuff."
More on Gage Wood How Arkansas baseball's Gage Wood silenced Murray State with a dominant no-hitter at CWS
Arkansas baseball has history of postseason heartbreak
Arkansas is one of the best teams in college baseball without a national title. If the Razorbacks fail to come away with a championship this year, they will be tied for second all time in most trips to Omaha without a title. They have hosted a regional in seven of the last eight tournaments, including a stint as the No. 1 overall seed in 2021. That season ended in a super regional heartbreak, as did the 2023 and 2024 seasons where Arkansas lost in regionals as a national seed.
Aria Gerson covers Vanderbilt athletics for The Tennessean. Contact her at agerson@gannett.com or on X @aria_gerson.
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Dan Ardell did a rare feat in his brief Angels career. But it did not define his life
Dan Ardell did a rare feat in his brief Angels career. But it did not define his life

Los Angeles Times

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  • Los Angeles Times

Dan Ardell did a rare feat in his brief Angels career. But it did not define his life

The second in an occasional series of profiles on Southern California athletes who have flourished in their post-playing careers. The expansion Los Angeles Angels were just 5 months old in September 1961 when the team called up three minor leaguers who would come to define the fledgling franchise's early years. Jim Fregosi, a teenage shortstop, would go on to make six All-Star teams and win a Gold Glove. Right-hander Dean Chance, who turned 20 that summer, would win Rookie of the Year and Cy Young awards and lead the American League in wins, ERA, shutouts and innings pitched. And Buck Rodgers would catch for nine big league seasons before managing at the minor and major league level for the Angels. But only Dan Ardell, a light-hitting first baseman who was called up with them, would do something that had never been done before on Sept. 20 against the Detroit Tigers. 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He has gone on to live a rich life, one that has included well-paying jobs in banking and asset management, a 41-year marriage that produced four children and six grandchildren, and absolutely no regrets about a baseball career that was so short it's remembered mostly for a teammate's base-running blunder. 'I never had a desire to be a major league ballplayer,' said Ardell, a retired real estate executive who made $1,250 for his big league cameo. 'I loved playing baseball, but once I started playing professionally, I was bored. I was disinterested.' In fact, the bookish Ardell probably never should have been there at all. But after winning the College World Series as a sophomore at USC, he accepted a $37,500 bonus to leave school five semesters short of a degree to sign with the Angels. Still, he hedged his bets just the same. 'They wanted to give me $35,000 and I said I need $37,500 because that would give me the $500 a semester [tuition] at 'SC that I needed,' Ardell said. 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He's still at his playing weight of 190 pounds, but he says he's lost 2 inches off a frame that once rose to 6-foot-2. And he no longer moves with the speed or grace that allowed him to steal seven bases in his first minor league season. There is no memorabilia, no remnants of his short-lived career in his hillside home in Laguna Beach's Bluebird Canyon, about a half-mile from the Pacific Ocean. He gave his gloves away during a garage sale shortly after he quit playing and a grandson took down the few pictures he had hung on the wall. After retiring with a .252 average and 45 home runs in 389 minor league games, Ardell went back to college, then studied real estate, working for Union Bank and Wells Fargo. He eventually started a real estate asset management company with his twin brother Dave, an equally talented baseball player who played at UCLA, where he was the team captain. 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I still have a dent,' he said with a chuckle, pointing to a spot in the center of his forehead. It wasn't until three decades after he walked away from the game that Ardell came to appreciate what he had accomplished — and only then after marrying Jean Hastings, who would shortly become a nationally recognized baseball academic and writer. Ardell and Hastings — a Brooklyn native who had always been a baseball fanatic — were living in the same Orange County neighborhood when a mutual friend suggested they go out on a date. 'She had just read 'Ball Four,'' Ardell said, referencing Jim Bouton's book about the raunchy, less-seemly side of baseball. 'So she said no, baseball players are to look at, they're not to touch.' She went on the date anyway, then married Ardell a couple of years later in 1981. Jean, 79, died in 2022 after a short, ferocious battle with leukemia, but in the more than 40 years she spent with Ardell, she slowly rekindled his love for a game he had all but forgotten. 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It was a philosophy she lived by marrying Ardell, a lifelong Republican who cast his first presidential vote for Barry Goldwater but later drove a car sporting a 'Republicans for Obama' bumper sticker. Ardell was already working with Opportunity International, a global nonprofit that alleviates generational poverty by microfinancing community projects both in Southern California and abroad. But now the bridge that he and Jean built became apparent through the difference being made — not only in those affected communities, but in his own soul as well. Tyler said he grew up playing catch with his grandfather, who attended all his Little League games. But it was his grandmother who told him about Ardell's professional career. 'He was always a little bit reluctant to talk about it. My grandma was the one that kind of opened him up,' said Tyler, 25, who followed his grandparents into baseball, where he works as manager of concessions for the Amarillo Sod Poodles, the double A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. 'I've talked to him a lot about that. He told me that he just didn't have the confidence. He knew that he was good, but I don't think he really understood it. I don't know if he necessarily misses it or feels like he missed out. I think he was more appreciative of the journey that it took him on and how he's evolved into a different love for baseball.' As he has grown older, Tyler said that's the part of his grandfather's journey that has stuck with him; the mission statement part that says it's not about the destination or the accomplishments, but about the influence you have on those you meet along the way. In that way, he said, Ardell's short career is now having an outsized influence. Tyler mentions a friend who is basically playing for free, stranded below the longest rung of the minor league ladder. But he still puts on a uniform every day. 'He plays for the love of the game and just because it's all he knows,' Tyler said. 'One of the things that Dan asks me that I ask my friend is, 'do you like what you're doing?' And at that point it's not about your career longevity or how much money you're making. 'As long as you're happy playing and you're making ends meet, then go for it.' Ardell wasn't happy playing, so he walked away. Three decades later with the love and support of a wife who saw baseball not as a sport but as a metaphor for life, as a game where the goal is to get home safely, Ardell began to understand the magic, too. 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USA Today

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  • USA Today

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USA Today

timea day ago

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Blake Burke scheduled for Knoxville return after minor league promotion

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