FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — The Arkansas Razorbacks (1-0, 0-0 SEC) will host the Arkansas State Red Wolves (1-0, 0-0 Sun Belt) on Saturday, Sept. 6, at War Memorial Stadium in what marks the first-ever meeting between the two programs.
Kickoff is scheduled for 4 p.m. on ESPN+ and SEC Network+. You can also hear the game on ESPN Arkansas 99.5 in Fayetteville, 95.3 in the River Valley and 104.3 in Harrison-Mountain Home.
Arkansas State, under fifth-year head coach Butch Jones, opens with momentum after a strong season opener against Southeast Missouri State. Quarterback Jaylen Raynor completed 26 of 32 passes for 345 yards and three touchdowns and spread the ball to 10 different receivers, with TDs to three different targets.
The Red Wolves operate a read-based attack heavy on RPOs, with Raynor adept at throwing slants if passing lanes open, or handing off to one of three running backs when the box is light. While not blazing fast at 6-0 and maybe 200 pounds, Raynor is elusive and extends plays when pressured.
Arkansas’ defense must match the scheme’s nuance. The running game runs behind zone blocking, and defenders such as Sorey, Dix, and Shaw must play downhill, maintain discipline, protect mesh points and control rushing lanes.
Quincy Rhodes Jr., Charlie Collins and Phillip Lee are highlighted as players with opportunities to disrupt the ASU offense, should they pressure Raynor, who can tuck and run despite lacking top-end speed.
One of the Red Wolves’ best weapons is senior wide receiver Corey Rucker. He began at Arkansas State in 2020, later transferred to South Carolina, then returned and over the past two seasons caught 105 passes for 1,738 yards.
Against SEMO, Rucker had two catches for 59 yards and a touchdown, and his 3,096 career receiving yards rank seventh in Sun Belt history. TArkansas’ secondary must plan for him, especially if given any cushion.
Defensively, Arkansas State mirrors the Razorbacks’ base 4-2-5, though terminology differs: their “Jack” is akin to Arkansas’ Buck, and a third safety, called the “dollar” sign, replaces a nickel back.
Defensive coordinator Griff McCarley, promoted in February after serving as linebacker coach, emphasizes discipline, drive and physicality.
The group features seven transfer starters and 10 of the 11 starters have at least three years of college experience. Tackles weigh between 274 and 297 pounds and ends are inside the 240-250 range.
The first-ever clash promises a meaningful early-season test for both teams, pitting ASU’s disciplined, precise offense and veteran defense against Arkansas’ depth and SEC-level talent.
Key takeaways:
• The Red Wolves’ read-based RPO offense, led by Jaylen Raynor’s precision and mobility, demands disciplined, gap-controlled defense from Arkansas.
• Corey Rucker is a premier receiving threat and ranks among the Sun Belt’s all-time leaders—Arkansas’ secondary must neutralize his impact.
• ASU’s defensive unit is experienced, physical and versatile under Griff McCarley, with multiple transfer starters and heavy positional consistency.




























