Feet planted in the batter's box, Missouri outfielder Pierre Seals swung his bat. He slowly took a few steps towards first base, doing more watching than walking. He observed as the ball carried 435 feet and over the wall in deep left center.
“I knew I got it,” Seals said. “I was just trying to see how far it was going to go to be honest.”
With power in the bats and a dominant performance on the mound from Keyler Gonzalez, Mizzou baseball defeated No. 24 Arkansas 6-1 for the first time in over four years on Saturday. The win helped the Tigers avoid another series sweep and break a nine-game losing skid.
Mizzou also earned its first home Southeastern Conference win since May 10, 2024, against Auburn.
“We played good baseball,” Missouri coach Kerrick Jackson said.
The night before Mizzou showcased the capability of its offense, Jackson said that his team was “allergic to hits.” Game 2 of the series made it seem so, as Mizzou recorded just two hits and was shut out by the Razorbacks.
The series finale told a different story.
The Tigers had equaled their hit totals within the first two batters of the game and pounced for a three-run first. After leading off with hits from Jase Woita and Kam Durnin, Arkansas starter Colin Fisher walked Blaize Ward and hit Mateo Serna to plate the first run. The next two batters, Kaden Peer and Donovan Jordan, brought in two more runs on a fielder’s choice and an RBI groundout.
Following Seals’ home run in the second, Eric Maisonet nailed a solo shot of his own straight right in front of the scoreboard in left. Unlike Seals' homer, Maisonet’s barely eclipsed the wall for the third baseman’s third home run of the season.
“Eric’s got sneaky power,” Jackson said. “Right before he went to the plate, I told him ‘Hey man, catch a ball out front, hit it into the bullpen.’”
As Maisonet was rounding the basepaths, third base coach Jose Carballo pointed to Jackson and laughed. He hit it a bit to the right of the bullpen, but he did just that.
The Tigers performed better at the plate on Saturday, stringing together hits and making adjustments mid at-bat to bring runs home. Mizzou swatted eight hits and walked three times in the game.
Missouri also commanded the Razorbacks with strong pitching. Lefty Javyn Pimental was originally slated to start and make his second appearance since returning from injury, but he was shut down and ruled out for the finale. Mizzou pivoted to freshman righty JD Dohrmann, who was also recently injured and making his return after nearly a month of absence.
Dohrmann put Arkansas down in order in the first, but he was halted after a lead-off walk in the second. Pitching coach Drew Dickinson and Mizzou’s trainer made their way to the mound and opted to remove Dohrmann.
The Tigers then turned to righty Gonzalez for the long haul of the game. Inning after inning, Gonzalez came to the mound and kept Arkansas from scoring. He did it for five innings, only giving up two hits and striking out five to earn the win for the game.
“The little things mean a big deal to him and some of those things we take for granted,” Jackson said. “He takes nothing for granted.”
This was the Cuban-born pitcher’s second win of the week, as he officially became a citizen of the United States on Friday.
“It was a long process,” Gonzalez said. “But being able to become a U.S. citizen, it’s great. This country has given me everything, so I’m super happy and proud to be an American now.”
The momentum from Gonzalez’s shutout carried over to Juan Villarreal, who entered in the seventh and kept the shutout going until the ninth. He pitched three innings on the mound, striking out the side in the eighth.
He ran into trouble in the ninth, loading the bases and allowing one run to cross on a fielder’s choice to end the shutout. Sam Rosand came into the game and struck out the final batter to secure the win.
Mizzou (21-23, 4-17 SEC) will travel across the state to face Southeast Missouri State at 6 p.m. Tuesday in Cape Girardeau.
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