Questions may abound in spring, but not at wide receiver

0

While the White team’s 30-20 win in the scrimmage with concessions Saturday didn’t provide a lot of answers, there are no questions about the wide receivers.

Treylon Burks and Mike Woods have the potential to be the best 1-2 combination in the SEC and Trey Knox may actually be back to what he showed as a freshman in 2019.

Each of them caught just two passes and scored a touchdown.

“Probably not as many as they wanted,” Sam Pittman said later. “We’ve seen them for 14 practices. We didn’t need any more than what they got.”

Photo by Arkansas Communications

And Knox had a pair of catches on both of the plays he was targeted and made leaping catches on both, similar to what got fans excited about his potential in 2019. He just simply caught passes literally on top of poor Hudson Clark on those two plays.

Then there was John David White, the walk-on that looks too small in stature with this group of receivers, but is making plays that Pittman is noticing.

“I love him,” he said. “He can separate in his routes. He catches, he blocks, he’s tough. There’ll certainly be a place for him because he’s earned that.”

In other words, he’s exactly what the Razorbacks need around all these prototype big, tall receivers that have gotten all the headlines.

White had five catches (on six targets) for 87 yards and a touchdown.

They will be catching passes from KJ Jefferson as long as they can keep him on the field because Pittman has said all spring they want to have the quarterback also be able to run on purpose instead of desperation.

After the scrimmage, Pittman almost sounded like he was trying to convince himself Jefferson and Malik Hornsby are the answers at quarterback (and he admitted they will have to have two quarterbacks this season).

Photo by Arkansas Communications

“I’d have to go look back at every throw that he made, but I can tell you this, when I was standing out on the field, I was going, ‘It’d be hard not to like this kid at quarterback,’” he said. “He’s big, he’s strong, he’s commanding and he was on point. As a head coach, I was sitting back there going, ‘I’m damn glad he’s our quarterback.’”

And he’s also high on Hornsby who is fast and a better runner right now than a passer, although he settled down as the scrimmage continued Saturday.

“He was way more accurate that what he had been in the past,” Pittman said. “He had great command of the offense out there. He’ll be a better player when we’re allowed to use the quarterback as a runner a little bit more.”

Jefferson knows the players has catching his passes and the guess here is that gives him confidence. He was Burks’ roommate as a freshman and offensive coordinator Kendal Briles has pushed all spring teaching quarterbacks to let them do what they can do.

“Coach Briles is a huge believer in giving guys a chance on the outside and going up and making plays,” Jefferson said. “We’ve got playmakers, so why not give them a chance? I put my trust in those guys. They trust me to put the ball in good spots and they are going to make plays.”

Pittman is obviously putting his trust in Jefferson and Hornsby.

And everybody is trusting a talented group of receivers to make it work.

 

Van Horn on Pallette’s ‘efficient’ start in second game win

Dave Van Horn said after Peyton Pallette started and went six innings throwing just 73 pitches in a 10-inning 2-1 win after taking first game.

Hog Reaction Postgame Show | Recapping the Razorbacks’ Red/White Game

Ruscin and Tye recap the Razorbacks’ Red/White game, live from Sassy’s in Fayetteville!

Pittman pleased with spring, not a single bad practice, he says

The White downed the Red, 30-20, in the spring game Saturday and Sam Pittman talked about the 15 practices overall.

Catalon on defense during spring after Red-White Game

Hogs safety Jalen Catalon talked with the media after six tackles in brief time on field in Red’s 30-20 win to wrap up spring drills.

Jefferson after solid outing in half of spring game Saturday

Arkansas quarterback KJ Jefferson (6-of-11, 153 yards, 2 touchdowns) didn’t play long but was efficient, especially on deep passes.

McAdoo’s flip to Hogs probably should not be THAT surprising

0

Kenny Guiton got a big pickup for his group of wide receivers Friday evening when Clarendon’s Quincey McAdoo committed to Arkansas.


And we probably shouldn’t be that shocked. You kind of had the feeling he knee-jerked the initial commitment to Florida State shortly after Justin Stepp left for South Carolina.

According to the 247Sports composite of all the rankings, McAdoo is a highly-rated three-star prospect, the No. 52 wide receiver in the nation and the No. 4 overall prospect in the state.

For Guiton, it’s the first wide receiver pickup for the 2022 class and McAdoo is a big one when you add in he’s one of the top players within the state. That’s a point of emphasis for Sam Pittman and they didn’t want to see a Top 10 player within the state leave.

According to the guys who follow the recruiting closely, the Hogs have offered 11 players inside the state and they now have commitments from six.

It’s part of the reason the Razorbacks’ ranking has risen dramatically to just outside the Top 10 in some of them but it’s probably a little premature to get hung up on where they stack up nationally.

In the SEC, they are fourth (everybody else works just as hard at recruiting) and third in the West, but that will probably change as some like Alabama and Auburn kick their recruiting in and commitments are announced.

 

Nolan Richardson Drive unveiled on Arkansas’ campus

Former Arkansas basketball coach Nolan Richardson helped pave the way for countless others throughout his legendary career, now future generations of Razorbacks will forge their journeys on a street that bears his name.

Nolan Richardson Drive, previously Leroy Pond Avenue, was officially dedicated in a ceremony on Friday afternoon on the University of Arkansas campus.

Chancellor Joseph Steinmetz, legendary Arkansas coaches John McDonnell (men’s track and field) and Norm DeBriyn (baseball), Razorback head men’s basketball coach Eric Musselman and numerous former Razorback men’s basketball players were among those in attendance for a dedication ceremony coordinated by the University of Arkansas’ Black Alumni Society and the City of Fayetteville.

Later in the afternoon, a dedication ceremony was held to dedicate the renaming of Government Avenue, near the Fayetteville National Cemetery, to Lt. Col. Leroy Pond Avenue.

Pond was a University of Arkansas graduate, who died in 1945 from combat wounds sustained while fighting for the Army in World War II. Last month, the Fayetteville City Council voted unanimously for the name changes.

TRUSTING THE PROCESS: Andrew Hutchinson of Hawgbeat

Tye & Hutch on growing up a Springdale Bulldog, his love for stats, how being a father changed his life and more!

 

Torres on Musselman adding solid player in first round of transfers

Fox Sports Radio’s Aaron Torres on basketball transfers, NCAA issues with some basketball schools on Halftime Friday afternoon.