Omaha, Neb.

Dominic Fletcher was a freshman All-American in 2017 and so impressive in the fall practices that coach Dave Van Horn thought Arkansas might have another Andrew Benintendi in the making.

A month into the season, though, Fletcher was batting .190 and led the team in strikeouts.

All that was a distant memory Wednesday when he went 4-for-4 with a homer and four RBIs to help deliver a 7-4 win over Texas Tech that put the Razorbacks in control of their bracket at the College World Series.

The difference?

"Just sticking with the approach and not trying to do too much," Fletcher said. "Just a couple different things in my swing. But mostly just being relaxed up there and not getting too jumpy."

Fletcher doubled in two runs in the first inning, homered in the fourth, had a bunt single in the sixth and singled in a run in the eighth. His average has jumped more than 100 points, to .296, and he's become an integral part of an Arkansas lineup that is one of the most potent in the nation.

"He slowly climbed out of it, a little here, and little there, and down the stretch the last 45 days he's been pretty good," Van Horn said. "He'll have a game where it doesn't look good and he'll have a game like today and he'll hit three or four balls on the screws."

Arkansas (46-19) mostly held in check the Red Raiders (45-19), who had come into the game scoring 8.2 runs per game and batting .311. Their six hits were their fewest in 19 games, and their 14 strikeouts were three fewer than the season-high 17 they had in a 5-1 loss at Arkansas in April.

Razorbacks starter Kacey Murphy limited Tech to two runs and two hits in 42/3 innings. The Detroit Tigers' 11th-round draft pick struck out seven, including four in a row over the third and fourth innings. Barrett Loseke (4-2) struck out five in three innings of shutout relief. Matt Cronin worked the last 11/3 innings, allowing two runs.

"Kacey Murphy got us off to a great start," Van Horn said. "He worked his way out of a jam in the first and then had a couple of pretty good innings. That's really good offense."

Loseke was sharp for the second time against Tech. In the April game, he pitched 42/3 innings of no-hit shutout relief and struck out 10.

"I stuck to my game plan the first time I was out there," Loseke said. "I felt good. I remember I was well rested, I had my curveball, changeup, fastball working that day. And today I knew I had past success against them, and I didn't necessarily try to repeat what I did last time, but I knew I could get them out. That gave me confidence to go out there and execute my game plan."

The start of the game was delayed 31/2 hours because of rain.