With spring football just starting, Arkansas looks to replace RB coach

After four years at Arkansas, running backs coach Jimmy Smith has decided to take TCU job.

Just two days into spring football practice and there is already more turnover on the Arkansas coaching staff.

Jimmy Smith, who has coached the Razorbacks’ running backs since Head Coach Sam Pittman hired him in 2020, has announced that he is leaving for the same position at TCU.

With the obvious connected between Smith and former Arkansas offensive coordinator Kendall Briles, who departed Fayetteville to fill the Horned Frogs’ OC position before last season, the move is understandable.

The loss of Smith is a setback for a Razorbacks program that went just 4-8 last season. But, expectation for an improved offense are rising heading into the 2024 season, as former head coach Bobby Petrino returned to Fayetteville as the offensive coordinator, and hand-picked 6-foot-6 Boise State transfer quarterback Taylen Green out of the portal.

But the value of Smith will be tough to replace, especially with his close ties to Georgia, where the Razorbacks have found success in recruiting the past four years. He is credited with bringing in the Hogs’ likely starting tailback, Rashod Dubinion, a 4-Star recruit out of Ellenwood (Ga.) Cedar Grove High School.

Smith also helped land two more 4-Star tailbacks, in redshirt-freshman Florida-native Isaiah Augustave, as well as the recently departed A.J. Green, out of Oklahoma. He was also key in helping develop former Razorback Raheem “Rocket” Sanders into one of the SEC’s top ball-carriers.

Pittman gave Smith his first Power 5 job, after he served one season as the running backs coach at Georgia State. He had previously been the head coach at Cedar Grove High School.

Arkansas will begin an immediate search for Smith’s replacement.

Despite injuries, former Razorback Ragnow squashes retirement talk

Former Arkansas lineman Frank Ragnow helped lead Detroit to its best season in nearly half a century.

When it comes to toughness, there is no better example on a football field than former Arkansas offensive lineman Frank Ragnow.

Since being a first-round pick of Detroit in the 2018 NFL Draft – going 20th overall – the 6-foot-5, 311-pound All-Pro, has not only become the cornerstone of the Lions’ offensive line, but arguably the best center in professional football.

Unfortunately, Ragnow is also no stranger to the injury report. A still lingering turf toe injury sustained in 2021, limited him to just four games that year. Just this past season, alone, he made a number of appearances on the injured list with knee, ankle, back, and toe ailments. That also included painful knee and ankle sprains he endured during a 31-23 playoff victory over Tampa Bay on Jan. 21.

Despite suffering from an array of injuries the following week, Ragnow was a full-participant at practice and played all 72 offensive snaps in a season-ending loss to San Francisco in the NFC Championship game. But following the game, the banged-up Ragnow seemed to contemplate retiring from the game, saying he was going to “take a look at my body and my MRIs and figure everything out.”

Although he didn’t specifically say that he was pondering retirement, he did reference the physical and mental toll the game has taken on him. There was also growing speculation around the Lions that Ragnow could call it quits.

“It takes a toll on you,” he told Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press. “It really takes a toll on you, so I need to find a way to get back to Frank, and I don’t regret any of this at all. But it weighs on you and I’m just going to take some time and really figure everything out to make sure that I’m feeling good. Not only for me, the football player, but for me to be the best husband and best father and everything with that as well.”

But the Lions were finally able to breathe a sigh of relief at the NFL Honors event on Feb. 8, when Ragnow was all smiles as he announced that he had figured it out, and would return for the 2024 season.

“I’m not retiring,” he said. “I just need a few weeks to get healthy.”

Ragnow has long earned the respect of his teammates and bosses, as they recognize the toll the injuries have taken on him and the physical pain he has been put through.

“I have so much respect for him and for everything that he goes through and fights through, that I’m just respectful of his time and his thoughts,” Detroit General Manager Brad Holmes said after the season. “We’re not going to pressure him to do anything or make any moves.”

Even in an injury-plagued 2023, Ragnow was still good enough to earn second-team All-Pro honors and be selected to the Pro Bowl.

The 27-year-old Ragnow is still under contract for the next three years. so his future appears to remain bright with the Lions, who just completed their best season since 1957’s NFL Championship campaign.

The Minnesota native arrived in Fayetteville as a 4-Star prospects in 2014 and quickly made his presence felt, being named to the SEC’s All-Freshman Team. As a junior he was named First-Team All-American by Pro Football Focus, who also rated him the nation’s top-graded center, as both a junior and senior.

Detroit Lions center Frank Ragnow (77) on the sidelines during action against the Atlanta Falcons at Ford Field in Detroit on Sunday, Sept. 24, 2023.

Razorback football sets dates for spring practice, Homecoming

Razorbacks football program announces key dates for the spring and fall.

The Arkansas football team will kick off spring practices on March 7, and are slated to hold the annual Red-White spring game on April 13, the program announced Wednesday.

The Razorbacks will hold the NCAA-allowed 12 practices leading up to the spring finale inside Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium. That weekend will also serve as a memorial for legendary Arkansas athletic trainer Dean Weber, who passed away on Feb. 13.

The A Club will hold its annual spring reunion the day of the Red-White game, which is held to welcome back all former Razorback student-athletes. Following the game, Weber’s celebration of life will take place inside Bud Walton Arena at 4 p.m. For more information on the A Club or the reunion, contact the Razorback Foundation at (479) 443-9000.

With Head Coach Sam Pittman entering his fifth year at the helm, the Razorbacks will open up the regular season against Arkansas-Pine Bluff in Little Rock on Aug. 31. The Fayetteville home-opener will be held on Sept. 14, as Alabama-Birmingham comes to town. The UAB game will also serve as part of the University’s Family Weekend, when this year’s U of A Hall of Honor inductees will also be recognized.

More details about Family Weekend will be updated at family.uark.edu as they are made available.

The Hogs will host LSU for Homecoming on Oct. 19, which will be the earliest the two schools have ever played inside the state of Arkansas. The Arkansas Alumni Association will host a number of Homecoming activities throughout the week, leading up to Saturday’s game. Additional details will be available at homecoming.uark.edu.

Arkansas will honor the United States Armed Services during the home finale on Nov. 23, against Louisiana Tech. It will also be Senior Day to honor the senior class of Hogs.

Former Arkansas QB Allen could be 49ers’ primary backup next season

With eight years of NFL experience, former Arkansas quarterback Brandon Allen could ascend to QB2 in San Francisco next season.

After going to his second Super Bowl in three year, there is a chance former Arkansas quarterback Brandon Allen could be San Francisco’s primary back-up quarterback next season, according to ProFootballRumors.com.

The 31-year-old Allen was the 49ers’ third-string emergency quarterback for the recent Super Bowl LVIII, sitting behind starter Brock Purdy and backup Sam Darnold. He is just two years removed from being Joe Burrow‘s primary backup for Cincinnati in Super Bowl LVI. Unfortunately, his teams came up short in both games.

But, the way things may likely shake down in the offseason, Allen could spend his ninth season in the NFL as San Francisco’s QB2.

With the rash of injuries to quarterbacks this past season, it could play into Allen’s favor. Seven of the league’s starting quarterbacks − nearly a quarter of them − were sidelined with season-ending injuries.

It is expected that teams will now put more of an emphasis on backup duties in free agency. With Darnold, the No. 3 overall pick in 2018, being one of the league’s top backups, his price tag may be too much for the 49ers to bear moving forward.

The Athletic’s Matt Barrows said the team views Allen as a “strong candidate” to be Purdy’s primary backup next season. The 49ers made it a priority to acquire Allen after the 2023 draft, even before trading away former first-round pick Trey Lance. With his experience level, Allen is currently signed to the veteran-minimum, $1.23M per season.

Darnold signed a $4.5M deal with the Niners last March, but will likely command more than that in 2024. Now with a year of experience in Head Coach Kyle Shanahan’s offense, Allen should have a chance to ascend.

After being drafted by Jacksonville in the sixth round – 201st overall – in the 2016 NFL Draft, Allen spend his first three seasons with the Jaguars and Los Angeles Rams, but did not see the field. After signing with the Broncos in 2019, he got his first three starts. He then spent three season’s as Joe Burrow’s back-up in Cincinnati, where he got six more starts while Burrow was injured.

The 6-foot-2, 209-pound Allen has a 2-7 career record as a starter, while throwing for 1,611 yards and 10 touchdowns. In the final regular-season game of 2020, he passed for 371 yards and two touchdowns in a 37-31 victory over Houston.

Coming out of Fayetteville High School in 2011, Rivals rated Allen as the No. 5 pro-style quarterback in the nation. Following a slow start as a freshman at Arkansas, he became a major component in turning around the dismal Razorback program, becoming the first quarterback to lead the Hogs to back-to-back bowl wins in consecutive seasons.

With eight professional seasons now under his belt, Allen is the second-longest tenured Razorback signal-caller to play in the NFL. Only Joe Ferguson’s 17-year career, which spanned four franchises from 1973-90, tops Allen’s.

In 38 collegiate starts, Allen ended his career with 7,463 yards passing, which now ranks fourth in program history, while also finishing second in career pass completions (583), second in attempts (1,016) and third in completion percentage (57.4).

Former Razorback LB Greenlaw has successful surgery after Super Bowl

Former Razorback Dre Greenlaw had surgery to repair a torn Achilles’ tendon on Thursday.

Former Arkansas and Fayetteville High standout Dre Greenlaw underwent successful surgery Thursday to repair a fully torn Achilles tendon in his left leg, suffered against Kansas City in Sunday’s Super Bowl LVIII.

San Francisco’s 6-foot, 230-pound weakside linebacker has been a mainstay on that daunted Niners defense since his impactful rookie season in 2019. He was voted the No. 79 player in the NFL’s “Top 100 Players of 2023”.

Kansas City was being shut out through the first 20 minutes of the Sunday’s game, while Greenlaw was on the field. All of the Chiefs points were scored after he was carted off, in the 25-22 Kansas City comeback victory.

The Chiefs were able to take advantage of the 49ers without Greenlaw, who finished with three tackles. Quarterback Patrick Mahomes went right at Greenlaw’s replacement, Oren Burks. Mahomes targeted Burks’ assigned receiver nine times, completing all nine passes, including a touchdown.

The freak injury occurred in the second quarter, as Greenlaw began jogging from the sideline onto the field, after a change of possession. He fell to the ground and immediately began grabbing his lower leg. He was eventually carted off to the locker room.

“Dre is the heartbeat of our defense … to lose a guy like Dre, it’s tough,” 49ers tight end George Kittle told ESPN. “He’s just such a fantastic football player, and he’s everything the Niners stand for, so to lose him, it just really, really sucks.”

With full recovery generally taking between six and nine months, the 26-year-old Greenlaw could miss the beginning of his sixth NFL season.

Greenlaw had been dealing with some Achilles’ issues this season, limiting him to just 15 games. He still finished second on the team in tackles behind only All-Pro Fred Warner, racking up 120 stops, with 1.5 sacks, four quarterback hits and four passes defensed, in the regular season. In the three postseason games, he added 18 tackles, with two interceptions and two passes defensed.

In four seasons at Arkansas, Greenlaw amassed 321 tackles, including 13 for a loss, and four sacks. He also had three interceptions, three fumbles forced and three recovered.

Dre Greenlaw leads the Razorbacks on the field in 2018.

Arkansas defensive end Jackson on 2024 ESPN early All-American team

After earning All-SEC honors in 2023, Arkansas defensive lineman Landon Jackson has been named to ESPN’s “Way Too Early” All-American team.

With the 2023 college football season now in the rearview mirror, the first accolades for the 2024 have already begun.

ESPN Senior Writer Chris Low released his “Way-Too-Early All-America team,” which includes Arkansas rising-senior defensive end Landon Jackson on the second team.

The 6-foot-7, 281-pound Jackson, who transferred in from LSU prior to the 2022 season, had a breakout season for the Razorbacks in 2023. Starting all 12 games for the Hogs, he amassed 44 tackles, including 22 solo stops, and tallied a team-high 6½ sacks and 13½ tackles for a loss.

Jackson was named a first-team All-SEC selection by the league coaches and second-team All-SEC by the Associated Press.

He garnered SEC Defensive Lineman of the Week honors in October after turning in a career-high 3½ sacks and 11 tackles against Alabama, prompting high praise from Crimson Tide coach Nick Saban.

If was unknown if Jackson would enter the transfer portal or forego his senior season at Arkansas, until he announced on Dec. 6 that he would return for his final year.

Jackson was rated the No. 110 overall prospect in the nation by 247Sports ranked, coming out of  Texarkana (Texas) Pleasant Grove High School in 2021. His younger brother Lance Jackson, also a Razorback target, recently committed to play football at Texas.

 

 

 

 

Arkansas football officially welcomes Bobby Petrino disciple as wide receivers coach

Arkansas officially welcomed Bobby Petrino disciple, Ronnie Fouch, as the program’s next wide receivers coach on Monday.

[autotag]Arkansas football[/autotag] officially welcomed their new wide receivers coach, Ronnie Fouch, to the coaching staff on Monday evening.

Fouch was announced with a post from the team’s official Twitter (X) account with the caption, “Let’s get to work!!!”

The news comes after reports surfaced last week that Fouch would be in line for the vacant position at Arkansas. While Fouch is a relative unknown on a national level, he previously worked with Razorback offensive coordinator [autotag]Bobby Petrino[/autotag] at Louisville and Missouri State.

Fouch joined Missouri State’s staff in 2020 where he coached running backs. Before that he was a quarterbacks coach in the AAF and quality control assistant at Louisville from 2015-18. During college, he played quarterback at Washington and Indiana State.

The move comes after former Arkansas wide receivers coach Kenny Guiton left to take the same position at Wisconsin under Luke Fickell.

This marks the final hire for [autotag]Sam Pittman[/autotag]’s staff ahead of a critical 2024 season in which the fifth-year head coach is firmly on the hot seat.

Hog legend Dan Hampton to enter NFF College football Hall of Fame

Former Arkansas Razorbacks All-American Dan Hampton is slated to become the 21st Hog to be inducted the National Football Foundation College Football Hall of Fame.

It’s been 45 years since Dan Hampton departed Arkansas for an NFL Hall of Fame career, but the accolades keep coming in for the Jacksonville product.

It was announced Monday that the 66-year-old Hampton, affectionately known as “Danimal,” is slated to become the 21st Razorback to be inducted the National Football Foundation College Football Hall of Fame.

Hampton spent four years as a defensive tackle for the Razorbacks, from 1975-78, playing for a pair of legendary coaches. He played the final two season’s of Coach Frank Broyles’ career, then wrapped up his final two seasons under Coach Lou Holtz. Arkansas went 35-10-2 record during Hampton’s career, including a mark of 22-8-1 in the Southwest Conference.

Hampton amassed 239 tackles – 126 unassisted – as a Razorback, including 32 from behind the line of scrimmage and six fumble recoveries. As a senior in 1978, he totaled 98 tackles, including 18 behind the line of scrimmage, while being named SWC Defensive Player of the Year and earning first-team All-SWC honors.

He was also named an AFCA First-Team All-American that season, leading Arkansas to a No. 3 finish in the national polls, following the 31-6 rout of heavily favored No. 2 Oklahoma.

In 1991, Hampton was elected to the University of Arkansas Sports Hall of Honor and a year later, was voted to the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame. He was selected to the Razorbacks’ All-Century team in 1994 and was later named one of the state’s Top 50 greatest athletes of the 20th century.

After being the No. 4 overall pick in the 1979 NFL Draft by Chicago, Hampton spent 12 seasons with the Bears, and is one of only two players to play for the franchise in three different decades. He was also one of the cornerstones of the famous 1985 Bears defense that cruised to a 46-10 victory over New England in Super Bowl XX. That vaunted “46 Defense” allowed just 198 points all season, and recorded shutouts in both NFC playoff games.

Razorbacks in the NFF College Football Hall of Fame:

2024 – Dan Hampton (DL)

2019 – Darren McFadden (RB)

2017 – Danny Ford (HC)
2012 – Jimmy Johnson (DL/AC)
2010 – Ronnie Caveness (LB)
2008 – Lou Holtz (HC)
2004 – Wayne Harris (LB)
2004 – Tracy Rocker (AC)
2003 – Doug Dickey (AC)
2003 – Hayden Fry (AC)
2001 – Barry Switzer (AC)
2000 – Billy Ray Smith Jr. (LB)
1999 – Chuck Dicus (WR)
1997 – Bowden Wyatt (HC)
1992 – Loyd Phillips (DL)
1987 – Johnny Majors (AC)
1984 – Lance Alworth (WR)
1983 – Frank Broyles (HC)
1971 – Clyde Scott (RB/DB)
1967 – Wear Schoonover (WR)
1954 – Hugo Bezdek (HC)

Dan Hampton makes a tackle during the 1978 Orange Bowl victory over Oklahoma.

Jan 26, 1986; New Orleans, LA, USA; FILE PHOTO; Chicago Bears defensive tackle (99) Dan Hampton pressures New England Patriots quarterback (11) Tony Eason during Super Bowl XX at the Superdome. The Bears dominated the Patriots 46-10 giving the Bears their first ever Super Bowl victory. The Chicago defense had 7 sacks and limited the Patriots to a record-low seven rushing yards. Mandatory Credit: Tony Tomsic-USA TODAY NETWORK

Arkansas All-American kicker Trainor relives historic 1988 season

Former Arkansas kicker Kendall Trainor recalls the ups and downs of his historic 1988 season with the Razorbacks.

Former All-American kicker Kendall Trainor now shares a lot of laughs when recounting his historic 1988 senior season at Arkansas.

The Fredonia, Kan., native had put up pretty good numbers through his first three seasons in Fayetteville. But it was after the 1988 season began on shaky ground, that the 6-foot-1 dual-sport athlete proceeded to have the greatest season a Razorback kicker has ever had.

When the dust had settled for the 10-2 Razorbacks, Trainor had converted 88.9 percent of his field goals on the season, going 25 for 28, and had ended his career by making his final 24 kicks. That streak is still tops in Arkansas history and was just one field goal short of the national record.

Facing competitive pressure from incoming freshman Todd Wright, Trainor put in extra work prior to his senior season, which resulted with a torn quad muscle that summer.

“When I saw Todd kick, I knew there was going to be a battle for the job in the fall,” Trainor recalls. “I probably worked harder on my kicking that summer than I had the previous two summers. But when I came into camp after the injury, I couldn’t kick every day. Todd came into camp and was kicking every day, and making everything. So that kind of pushed me a little bit.”

Trainor, who was also a member of the Razorbacks’ 1987 World Series baseball team, was ultimately named the starting kicker heading into the ’88 football season. But after a lackluster start, Head Coach Ken Hatfield considered pulling the plug on the veteran.

“Coach Hatfield had said that in order for us to be successful as a team that year, we were going to have to be 90 percent on our field goals – so we had that as our goal,” Trainor said. “But, as you know, the season didn’t start off that way.”

Not so funny at the time, Trainor can now laugh at how poorly those first two and a half games went.

He missed on a 57-yarder in the season-opening 63-14 win over Pacific, then booted a 55-yard field goal the following week, in a 30-26 win over Tulsa.

But when Ole Miss came to Little Rock a week later, a disastrous first half nearly derailed Trainor’s entire career. In addition to missing an extra point, his first field goal attempt came up short, while his second attempt sailed over the upright, just before halftime. Tension was running high as Arkansas went to the locker room struggling with the underdog Rebels.

“I still swear, to this day, that second field goal was inside the upright – I was extremely frustrated not getting that call,” he said, before humorously adding, “The refs must have been from Ole Miss or something.”

Still, Trainor was just 1-for-4 on the season, and kicking coach Ken Turner could not hide his frustration as he stormed through the locker room at the intermission.

“Coach Turner came into the locker room yelling, ‘Where’s Trainor? Where’s that choker?'” Trainor said. “He went out of his way to walk by my locker and just kept talking about me.”

An upset Trainor then jumped up and tried to follow Turner into the coaches’ locker room, before deep snapper Richey Miller intervened and tried to calm him down.

“Richey grabbed me and took me back to my locker, but I just sat there and fumed the whole halftime – seemed like forever,” he now says with a chuckle. “I got irritated enough that I stood up on a chair and told the rest of the team that I wasn’t going to miss another field goal all year. Some guys, like Rick Apolskis and Jim Mabry, were very supportive, but I’m sure some guys were rolling their eyes.”

When the team returned to the field, Trainor removed the kicking shoe he had been using in games, and replaced it with a shoe he had only used in practice. Then came the tipping point … as Trainor tossed his old shoe toward the trashcan, he missed.

“And all I hear is this voice yelling, ‘Dang Trainor, you can’t even make it in the trashcan,’ … I looked up, and it was my brother, Kevin,” he said with a big laugh. “When I figured out it was him, it kind of broke the ice before I went back out for the second half.”

His younger sibling, Kevin Trainor, has now spent the past three decades at the University of Arkansas, currently serving as the chief public relations officer for Razorback Athletics. Yet, it was his “brotherly love” that night that may have been one his most impactful accomplishments.

When big brother re-took the field against the Rebels, it was with a renewed determination. After the Hogs fell behind 13-12 in the third quarter, Trainor proceeded to score the game’s final nine points, connecting on field goals of 31, 38 and 42 yards, and propelling the Hogs to a 21-13 victory.

“When we went back out in the second half, we had several opportunities, and the rest is history,” he said with a big grin.

Not long after that, Coach Turner received a call from former Razorback All-American kicker Steve Little, who had been watching Trainor from afar. Little said it looked like Trainor was planting his left foot too close to the tee.

“So, we went and watched some film, and sure enough I was really getting close to the tee, which was causing me to be inconsistent with the direction of the kicks,” Trainor said.

During practice, Turner began placing a knee pad between the tee and where Trainor’s plant-foot should land.

“We started practicing with that knee pad for a couple of weeks, until we got into the groove,” Trainor said. “And honestly, the rest of the season seemed like easy sailing. It was like money.”

As promised, he never missed another kick as a Razorback. He still holds the school-record with five field goals in a game, and actually did it twice that season. He booted fields goals of 30, 30, 49, 34 and 19 yards, and added four extra points, in a 53-10 win over TCU. He then repeated the feat in a 25-20 win over Texas A&M in the conference finale, splitting the uprights five times to help secure the first of Arkansas’ two consecutive Southwest Conference titles.

His 28-yard field goal in Austin, also proved to be the difference in a key 27-24 win over Texas.

“Anytime someone would mention anything about the streak, I’d say, ‘Let’s not bring that up and jinx me’ – kind of like pitchers with no-hitters going,” he said.

Arkansas was 10-0 heading to Miami for the regular-season finale, but was a 17-point underdog against the No. 2 Hurricanes. Down 3-0 in the first quarter, the Razorbacks faced fourth down, just inside Miami’s side of the field. They could either punt or attempt a 58-yard field goal.

“The first time I really felt any pressure was when we went down to Miami, because we had been curb-stomped (51-7) by them the year before. But Coach Hatfield had us all in the mindset that we could compete and win that game,” Trainor said. “We had stalled out on that drive, and were not known as a gambling team. But Coach called me over during the timeout and asked if I could make this kick. Of course, I said, ‘Yeah, I can make it.’

“Then I started thinking that I could really put us in a bad spot if I missed, not to mention, the streak was on the line. I started questioning whether I should have said yes or not. But Jimmy Simpson, my holder, just said, ‘You got this, just hit it smooth.’ But I did not hit that ball very good at all, pushed it to the right a little bit.”

The sailing football grazed the inside of the right upright, bounced on the crossbar and went through, tying the score at 3-3. It was Trainor’s 23rd straight successful kick and the longest of his career – yet, still nine yards shy of Little’s 67-yard school-record. The Razorbacks eventually held a fourth-quarter lead, until a late Miami field goal gave the home team an 18-16 win.

The Hogs then fell to Troy Aikman and UCLA in the Cotton Bowl, as Trainer’s 49-yard field goal was the only points Arkansas could muster in the 17-3 defeat. It was also the final kick of his collegiate career.

His 69 career field goals is still fifth on the Razorbacks’ all-time list, while his 73.9 career percentage is third on the list.

Looking back, he praises the roles Turner and Wright contributed to his success that season.

“Coach Turner was significant in getting me back in the right frame of mind, thinking about things the right way. Really, just simplifying things and focusing on the fundamentals of the kicks,” Trainor said. “I credit Todd Wright a lot as well. We were very competitive and we didn’t miss many kicks in practice. He probably taught me a lot more about being consistent with my performance throughout the week, instead of just focusing on game days.

“He was the guy that really pushed me to be my best every day. I owe a lot to him.”

Trainor was drafted by the then-Phoenix Cardinals in the ninth round of the NFL Draft, but was unable to dethrone veteran Al Del Greco as the team’s placekicker. He also had stints with Dallas, Cleveland, San Francisco and Tampa Bay. The Buccaneers had actually traded him to Atlanta prior to the 1989 season-opener, where he was slated to be the Falcons’ Game 1 starter. Unfortunately, he broke his shoulder trying the make a tackle on a kickoff the previous week and was unable to pass the physical.

He received some call-backs during the season, but after nothing panned out, he spent two seasons in New Jersey, playing in the World League of American Football.

“I chased that dream for about four years, then ended up coming back to Northwest Arkansas and getting a temporary job with Walmart,” Trainor said.

After advancing into the company’s management training program, he went on to spend 26 years in the retailer’s home office. He left in 2017 to begin working as an independent consultant.

Through the years, the 56-year-old Trainor has continued to coach his kids’ youth sports teams, and enjoys passing along many of the memories and lessons he learned along the way.

In 2015, Trainor was inducted into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Honor, and will forever be remembered for “the streak,” 35 years ago.

“Obviously, there is a sense of pride.” he said. “It’s a really cool memory to draw from, because it taught me that you’re only going to be as good as your expectations.”

Arkansas kicker Kendall Trainor celebrates after his 58-yard field goal bounced through the uprights in the 1988 Miami game.

Arkansas freshman lineman Su’a opts to enter transfer portal

Former Bentonville offensive lineman Joey Su’a has decided to leave Arkansas and enter the transfer portal.

After redshirting at Arkansas this past season, without seeing any time on the field, former Bentonville offensive lineman Joey Su’a has decided to enter the transfer portal.

Su’a is the 13th Razorback to enter the portal since it opened on Dec. 4.

The 6-foot-4, 346-pounder enrolled early last spring, after being a consensus 3-Star prospect. He was rated the No. 3 player in Arkansas for the Class of 2023, and the No. 22 offensive guard nationally, by Rivals.

Arkansas head coach Sam Pittman entered the offseason committed to shoring up an offensive line that proved ineffective for most of the year.

Su’a’s departure drops the Razorbacks’ offensive line scholarship total to 16, and drops the overall scholarship number to 81. That does clear the way for four more additions, from either the portal, or the high school or junior college ranks. The Razorbacks are expected to host several transfer offensive linemen in the coming days.

The early signing period for college football is Dec. 20-22, with the regular signing period to begin Feb. 7, and continue through April 1.

Devon Manuel already entered the portal on Dec. 4. Ty’Kieast Crawford has announced that he plans to be back for a super senior season. Rising senior Joshua Braun is still on the roster, and Brady Latham could opt to return for his super senior season.

Arkansas has already added 6-foot-5, 315-pound Keyshawn Blackstock, a portal find from Michigan State.

Su’a, who did not allow a sack during his senior year at Bentonville, and registered 56 pancake blocks, chose Arkansas over BYU, Georgia, Maryland, Michigan State, Oregon and others.