Arkansas first fielded a baseball team from 1897 to 1930. The modern era of Razorbacks baseball began in 1947, under Deke Brackett. Bill Ferrell led the team from 1950 to 1965, and Wayne Robbins took over from 1966 to 1969. In 1970, Cole hired 28-year-old
Norm DeBriyn after another man took the job but resigned after only one day. DeBriyn inherited a program that played at a dilapidated stadium at the
Washington County Fairgrounds, and whose paperwork was contained in a single manila folder. He immediately set about upgrading the program. Within three years, he had the Razorbacks in the NCAA tournament for the first time in school history. He then persuaded athletic director
Frank Broyles to build a new on-campus stadium, George Cole Field. Arkansas' baseball program has won six conference championships, two in the Southwest Conference in 1989 and 1990, and four in the Southeastern Conference in 1999, 2004, 2021, and 2023. They have also won two conference tournament titles, the first in 1985 as a member of the SWC, the second in 2021 in the SEC. In addition to those championships, the Razorbacks have also won nine SEC West Division championships in 1999, 2004, 2007, 2011, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2023, and 2024. In Arkansas' eleven College World Series appearances they have finished as national runners-up twice, in 1979 and 2018.
1979 College World Series DeBriyn's 10th team put the Razorbacks on the national map. The Razorbacks won 49 games, lost 15, and finished second in the
Southwest Conference (SWC). The Hogs defeated
George Washington,
Florida, and
Delaware twice to move out of the East Regional (played at Seminole Stadium in
Tallahassee, Florida). The Razorbacks then went to
Omaha and defeated
Pepperdine, 5–4 and an
Arizona Wildcats club, with a young
Terry Francona, 10–3. A match-up with SWC champion Texas loomed next for the Razorbacks. The Hogs had gone 1–4 against the
Longhorns up to this point in the season. The Razorbacks prevailed, 9–4, and earned a contest with
Cal State Fullerton for a championship. Texas was eliminated. Arkansas lost twice to the Titans, 13–10, and 2–1, to give the trophy to Cal State Fullerton. Freshman
Kevin McReynolds was named to the all-tournament team as an outfielder, along with Steve Krueger at
pitcher, Larry Wallace at
shortstop, and Marc Brumble as an
outfielder.
1985 College World Series Arkansas came into the South regional hot winning twelve straight games (last loss against fellow CWS team
Mississippi State), and winning the SWC tournament with the help of tourney-
MVP Dave Patterson. A 20–13 victory over
Eastern Kentucky started things off on the right foot for the Hogs. Wins against
George Mason,
hometown FSU, and
Georgia Tech would push the Hogs to their second College World Series. Arkansas arrived in
Omaha in as dramatic fashion as they left it. The Diamond Hogs defeated
the Gamecocks of South Carolina in a 14
inning affair, 1–0, but Arkansas would lose to Mississippi State three days later, and fall to the loser's bracket. Facing elimination, the Razorbacks crushed
Stanford 10–4, eliminating the
Cardinal from the College World Series. Now a win away from the Championship series with
Miami (Fl), Arkansas had to face
Southwest Conference rival
Texas. Said Razorback third baseman
Jeff King of Texas, "We figured we would meet them again." The Hogs were 4–1 against the Longhorns in 1985, including two wins in the Southwest Conference Tournament. Arkansas lead the game 7–0, but the Longhorns battled back and sent the game to extra innings. Texas' Bill Bates hit a leadoff triple in the bottom of the tenth inning with the score tied 7–7. Another future SEC opponent was on the horizon, this time in the form of
Tigers from LSU. The Tigers came out on top, 5–2, but were eliminated two days later, with Texas eliminated a day later.
1989 College World Series Ten years after the successful 1979 campaign, the Razorbacks were again headed to
Omaha. First, the 51–16 Razorbacks played their way through the Northwest Regional, losing first to
Le Moyne before defeating
George Washington,
Illinois,
Arizona State, and Le Moyne to move to the College World Series. Once in the College World Series, the Diamond Hogs met
Wichita State. The Shockers had actually been defeated by the Razorbacks 5–1 in
Fayetteville, which was the Razorbacks' first game of the season. Arkansas lost 3–1 on June 2, and had to stave off elimination against
North Carolina. The Tar Heels were eliminated, and Arkansas had another shot at the Shockers, who had lost to
Florida State and was now fighting to remain in Omaha, as one more loss would eliminate them.
Wichita State defeated
Norm DeBriyn's Razorbacks, 8–4, eliminating them. The finish was good for fifth place in the CWS. Wichita State would go on to win the National Championship, fighting off elimination three times more. Six of the 11 all-CWS team were members of the Wichita State Shockers, including
Eric Wedge. Arkansas Razorbacks outfielder
Troy Eklund was elected to the
All-American team.
2004 Arkansas won the SEC Western Division, a portion of the SEC crown, and visited the College World Series again in 2004.
2004 SEC tournament The Hogs were picked to finish last in the SEC, but instead was the #1 seed in the SEC Tournament. The Diamond Hogs lost to
Luke Hochevar and the
Volunteers of Tennessee, 6–8 in 13 innings. Kyle Norrid of
Tennessee hit a three-run
double in the 12th inning, but the Hogs returned with four straight
singles to keep the game going. and 4–1 respectively, before losing to South Carolina, 2–3. Arkansas went into the ninth down 3–0, and loaded the bases with no outs. Jake Dugger drove in a run with a single. Following a strikeout, Brett Hagedorn added to the Razorbacks score with a
sacrifice fly. Arkansas finished third in the SEC tournament.
2004 College World Series The Razorbacks began play in their
home stadium in the Fayetteville Regional. Arkansas defeated
Le Moyne first, but lost to
Wichita State 4–1. The Razorbacks had not seen the last of the Shockers, though, and after a 10–7 win over Missouri, defeated them two times on June 6, 2004, to advance to the Super Regionals. Arkansas had to play
Florida State twice to move on to
Omaha, but the games were again at
Baum Stadium. The Diamond Hogs prevailed, 7–4 and 4–2 and went on to Omaha. Arkansas was an eight seed in 2004, and for the fourth time in five Hog appearances, Arkansas' first game in Omaha was against the
Texas Longhorns. #1 Texas prevailed 13–2, and the Razorbacks were one loss from elimination. The
Arizona Wildcats would bump the Razorbacks from
Rosenblatt Stadium in their next game, 7–2.
2009 College World Series Arkansas began hot in 2009, starting the year at 10–2 including back-to-back wins over #1 Arizona State that set Baum Stadium attendance records. The Hogs luck changed entering SEC play, as they dropped series against Vanderbilt, Georgia, and LSU, and were swept by Alabama and Ole Miss to end the year. Limping into the
2009 SEC baseball tournament, the Hogs defeated Florida twice, but were bumped from the tournament by Vanderbilt. The Razorbacks were the #2 seed in the Norman Regional, hosted by the
Oklahoma Sooners. The Hogs defeated Washington State in game 1 in Norman, setting up a match up with #9 Oklahoma, who the Hogs had beaten at home a month earlier on a Brett Eibner walk-off bases-loaded walk. Arkansas collected 20 hits in a 17–6 win over the Sooners, setting up super regional berth with another win. Razorback Andy Wilkins went 5–5 in the following game with two doubles, two home runs, four runs scored and five RBI in an 11–0 rout. The win pushed the Hogs to a meeting with Florida State in
Dick Howser Stadium. The Hogs last met Florida State in the 2004 Fayetteville Super Regional, with the Hogs advancing to Omaha. Arkansas scored five runs in the last three innings to win game 1, and Andrew Darr propelled the Hogs to the College World Series on his two-run walk-off double in the bottom of the ninth. The Razorbacks opened the College World Series in game 1 against #1 national seed Cal State Fullerton. Dallas Keuchel pitched well, with Zack Cox and Andy Wilkins both homering in a resounding 10–6 win. The win set a rematch with LSU, who had beaten Arkansas in a hard-fought series earlier in the year. LSU got a first-inning home run from pitcher Brett Eibner, and the Hogs bats fell silent in a 9–1 loss. Both fighting for their tournament lives, Arkansas met Virginia in an elimination game. The Razorbacks offense was again quiet, and the Hogs were down to their last strike when Brett Eibner homered to keep the Razorbacks in Omaha. The Hogs would prevail after another timely Andrew Darr double in the tenth inning. A rematch with LSU sat on the horizon, and the drained Arkansas pitching staff struggled. Closer Stephen Richards started the game for the Hogs, who were losing 4–0 by the third inning. After an error and a wild pitch, the Razorbacks gave up runs in six separate innings, and lost 14–5. The Hogs finished tied with Arizona State (who Arkansas defeated twice in the regular season) for third place.
2012 College World Series Arkansas began the 2012 season with high expectations, including a consensus top ten ranking and D. J. Baxendale, Nolan Sanburn, Dominic Ficociello, and
Ryne Stanek receiving preseason All-America honors. The team began the season playing well in non-conference games, and finished with a 16–14 SEC record. After a quick two losses at the SEC tournament, it was announced the Hogs would play in the Houston Regional, hosted by
Rice University. Arkansas defeated the
Sam Houston State Bearkats twice and Rice once to advance to the
Waco, Texas, Super Regional against
Baylor. The Razorbacks dropped the first game to Baylor, 8–1. Facing elimination, Arkansas won game 2 after consecutive
hit by pitches with the bases loaded gave the Hogs the tying and winning runs. Arkansas won game 3 when Jake Wise drove in
Brian Anderson with a double in the 10th inning, pushing across the game's only run and sending the Hogs to Omaha. Arkansas won their first game of the 2012 College World Series, an 8–1 victory over
Kent State Golden Flashes. D. J. Baxendale pitched into the seventh inning, with Joe Serrano, Brian Anderson, Bo Bigham, and Jake Wise all collecting multiple hits. Two nights later the Razorbacks faced SEC foe and two-time defending champion the
South Carolina Gamecocks, who came into the game with a 22-game postseason win streak. A Dominic Ficociello RBI in the first inning gave Arkansas a 1–0 lead, as they never trailed, winning a 2–1 pitcher's duel. Stanek pitched six innings, allowing just one run on three hits. Reliever
Barrett Astin pitched the final three innings allowing no runs, and just one hit.
2015 College World Series and Joe Serrano at TD Ameritrade Park Arkansas was not expected to make it to the College World Series in 2015, especially after a slow start to the season left the Razorbacks sitting at .500 heading into April. But the Razorbacks caught fire behind SEC and national player of the year
Andrew Benintendi and won both the Stillwater Regional and Fayetteville Super Regional to advance to Omaha for the eighth time and fourth time under Van Horn. In the first game, Arkansas got a stellar pitching performance from Trey Killian, but normally lights-out closer Zach Jackson didn't have his best stuff and
Virginia came back and forced the Razorbacks into an elimination game, beating them 5–3. Arkansas then faced No. 5 national seed Miami, and fell behind 2–0 when Jacob Heyward hit a 2-run shot off reliever Jackson Lowery, who had just been inserted for Keaton McKinney. The Razorbacks rallied twice to tie the game at 2–2 and 3–3, but lost 4–3 when Heyward hit a walk-off single. It was the first time since 2004 that they failed to win a game in Omaha.
2018 College World Series The
Razorbacks entered Omaha with a 44–19 record, co-champions of the SEC West with Ole Miss, and having won the Fayetteville Regional and Super Regional at home in Baum Stadium. The team set a school record for home wins, going 34–4 at Baum. Beginning the year as a top ten team, the Razorbacks never left that spot throughout the season. Arkansas previously played four of the other seven teams in Omaha, compiling a 4–5 record against them prior to the CWS. Arkansas defeated Texas in its opening game 11–5 behind pitcher Blaine Knight, who improved to 13–0 on the year. A three-hour rain delay marred the contest. It then went on to beat Texas Tech 7–4 in a game pushed back a day because of weather, and then eliminated defending national champion Florida 5–2 to earn a spot in the championship series against Oregon State. Arkansas won the first game of the championship series 4–1, but Oregon State completed a comeback 5–3 win in game two thanks in large part to a dropped foul ball by Arkansas with two outs in the 9th inning. The Oregon State batter hit a home run two pitches later to win the game, and the Beavers would win decisively in game three, 5-0. The game two loss is considered one of the most heart-breaking losses in program history. ==Postseason appearances==