Four-star quarterback committed to Arkansas transfers to Conway

Reminder that the transfer portal, as it were, has been open in high-school sports for a lot longer than college.

Tne transfer portal is still open, looks like.

High-school football players have been transferring from school to school for a competitive advantage for generations. No transfer portal required. But now that one exists at the college level, high-schoolers moving draws a bit more interest than it once did.

That’s the case for Grayson Wilson, who is set to leave Central Arkansas Christian this late spring and will play his senior season at Conway High in the fall, instead. CAC is located in North Little Rock and plays at the 4A level. Conway is about 25 miles north of Little Rock and plays at the 6A level.

Wilson draws special interest in Northwest Arkansas because he’s a Razorbacks commit. He’s rated as a four-star recruit by Rivals and  threw for 3,413 yards with 41 touchdowns and two interceptions last year. Competition will be stiffer at 6A.

Arkansas currently has a bevy of young quarterbacks on its roster. Starter Taylen Green has two seasons of eligibility left. Malachi Singleton is a redshirt freshman and KJ Jackson is preparing for his first year of college football, period. Walk-on Austin Ledbetter handles things for the scout team.

In the age of the portal, however, it’s hard to imagine Arkansas could ever quite have enough quarterbacks.

Where Sam Pittman ranks on best/worst list of Power Four college football coaches

College Football 2024: A look at where Arkansas Razorbacks football coach Sam Pittman ranks in this analyst’s list of best/worst coaches in Power Four conferences.

On a personal level, everyone seems to agree that they like Sam Pittman.

The Arkansas coach is affable, down-to-earth, and seemingly well-liked among his coaching peers.

But nice guys don’t always finish high in the running when it comes to rating the best coaches in college football.

Case in point, CBS Sports’ Tom Fornelli and a team of panelists from 247Sports recently ranked all 68 Power Four coaches from top to bottom. Pittman checked in at No. 56, one spot behind California’s Justin Wilcox and one spot ahead of Cincinnati’s Scott Satterfield.

That’s a steep drop compared to this time a year ago when the Razorbacks were coming off a 7-6 season and 55-53 triple-overtime victory over Kansas in the Liberty Bowl.

A year prior to that, Pittman guided Arkansas to a nine-win season and a victory over Penn State in the Outback Bowl.

Notes Fornelli:

“While Pittman is a personal favorite of many of our voters as a human being, he’s heading in the wrong direction in these rankings. Pittman drops 16 spots after going 4-8 last season and 1-7 in the SEC. Only one other coach fell further in our rankings this season, and Pittman enters 2024 on one of the hottest seats in the SEC.”

Among the soon-to-be 16 SEC head coaches, Pittman falls behind Florida’s Billy Napier (No. 47), South Carolina’s Shane Beamer (No. 46), Oklahoma’s Brent Vanables (No. 34), Auburn’s Hugh Freeze (No. 33), and Texas A&M’s Mike Elko (No. 32) in Fornelli and crew’s 26-68 rankings.

Of the SEC coaches Pittman is ranked ahead of, only first-year Mississippi State coach Jeff Lebby and Vanderbilt’s Clark Lea rate below the Arkansas coach.

Eight SEC coaches rank in Fornelli’s top 25, including Georgia’s Kirby Smart at No. 1.

Arkansas coach says he lives in ‘constant state of paranoia’ over roster-poaching

An Arkansas Razorbacks football coach opened up about his concerns over the state of college football with regard to teams illegally poaching players from other rosters.

A transfer portal that never seems to actually close. NIL war chests. Schools “stealing” players already on active rosters at other NCAA programs.

Welcome to the world of college football in 2024.

First-year Arkansas offensive line coach Eric Mateos opened up about those topics in a podcast interview Friday. Let’s just say that Mateos didn’t hold back regarding his anxieties about being a coach in the current landscape of the sport.

Mateos, who became the Razorbacks’ line coach in December after spending three years in the same post at Baylor, said that he lived in a “constant state of paranoia” over losing players in the portal by illegal means.

He mentioned Fernando Carmona, who officially transferred to Arkansas from San Jose State in January. Carmona was ranked as the No. 12 offensive tackle in the portal this off-season by 247Sports.

“Guys are trying to steal our left tackle from us already, and he just got here in January,” Mateos said on Coaches & The Mouth, a podcast devoted to Razorbacks athletics. “That’s the challenge with it: how do you manage people trying to come get your guys? My goal is to get players who love playing here at Arkansas. They love playing for me, and they love playing with each other so much that the cheating going on doesn’t really faze them.”

Mateos added that Carmona had assured him that he was committed to the Arkansas program.

“With Fernando, I called him, and I was like, ‘Hey man, I know people are coming after you, trying to get you to leave again,'” Mateos said during the podcast. “He’s like, ‘Coach, you don’t have to worry about nothing. I’m riding with you.’ I knew he would say that, but as a coach you just live in this constant state of paranoia.”

Mateos also said that NIL collectives were allowing schools to offer money and other incentives to players already on active rosters in an effort to entice them to enter the portal.

“I had somebody tell me two days ago that there was a collective from a university calling kids at another school who were not in the portal and offering them money to go into the portal. The collective is recruiting. The collective is recruiting players. It’s like, what is going on?” Mateos said.

As 247Sports’ Grant Hughes noted in his writeup of Mateos’ comments:

“NCAA rules state that coaches are not allowed to contact prospective transfers until after they enter the portal, and boosters are not authorized to recruit high school recruits or transfers. Mateos said NIL collectives have become involved, and rules are being broken across the nation.”

The topic of roster-poaching has become a hot-topic debate. In the past year, Colorado self-reported 11 NCAA violations. One pertained to hosting a camp for high school graduates and transfers from other programs that had entered the portal.

But the university (deliberately or not) also welcomed seven players on active NCAA rosters that had not entered the portal, a violation of rule 13.1.1.3, which prohibits tampering with a player who is not in the portal.

And in February, Iowa announced that it planned to self-report a tampering violation concerning its recruitment of offensive lineman Kadyn Proctor, who had transferred to the Hawkeyes from Alabama. Tyler Barnes, Iowa’s director of recruiting, had reached out via text message to Proctor in September 2023. Alabama began the season with losses to Texas and an ugly road win at South Florida that month.

Proctor has since left Iowa to transfer back to Alabama.

Former MLB player and Husker commit returns to College Football after ten years

He was originally committed to Nebraska in 2014 and was drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers in the second round of the MLB draft. 

A former Husker football commit is returning to college football after ten years in Major League Baseball. Monte Harrison has committed to Arkansas.

A class of 2014 member, Harrison was a four-star recruit out of Lee’s Summit West in Missouri. He was originally committed to Nebraska in 2014 and was drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers in the second round of the MLB draft.

He made the majors in 2020 with the Miami Marlins and spent the next season in South Florida. Harrison was also a player for the Dodgers in 2022. He hit .176 in the majors for his career, with two home runs and six RBI as an outfield.

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How a 28-year-old former MLB player is now an Arkansas football preferred walk-on

It’s really never too late to go back to school.

After working his way up through the minors, Monte Harrison spent three seasons in the MLB with the Miami Marlins and Los Angeles Angels. Now, he’s going back to school at a slightly later stage of his life to try and find something new.

On Tuesday, Arkansas on Rivals reported that Harrison will join the Arkansas Razorbacks football team as a preferred walk-on receiver. That preferred distinction means he is guaranteed a roster spot compared with a walk-on, who must earn their keep. Harrison previously had offers to play football out of high school and even committed to Nebraska before eventually switching to baseball. He’s obviously now switching back.

The catch in all this? He’s 28 years old.

Here’s a clip of Harrison catching some passes when he was younger, courtesy of Rivals:

Kudos to Harrison for reinventing himself. Hopefully it goes well because we could all learn something from him.

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Former MLBer Monte Harrison, 29, to play football at Arkansas

You probably watched Harrison hit a baseball for the Marlins or Angels. Now you’ll see him catch a football for the Razorbacks.

Monte Harrison won’t be scared, that’s for sure.

The man who spent nine seasons playing professional baseball, including stints in the Major Leagues with Miami and Los Angeles of Anaheim, committed Tuesday to play college football at Arkansas.

College. Football.

Harrison, who lives in Kansas City, was a four-star wide receiver recruit in high school in Lee’s Summit, Missouri. Nebraska offered him a chance to play football and baseball for the Cornhuskers. But the Milwaukee Brewers drafted him in the second round of the 2014 MLB Draft and Harrison chose to sign.

He had been playing professional baseball ever since. His last stop was in the 2023 season with Milwaukee’s Triple-A affiliate the Nashville Sounds. Harrison played with the Angels for parts of the 2022 season and with the Marlins for parts of 2021 and 2020.

Harrison will get an opportunity back out at his spot of wide receiver when arrives to Fayetteville. Arkansas returned every wideout who caught a pass in 2023, so it may take a bit for Harrison to crack the rotation.

But it’s probably not as hard as hitting Major-League pitching.

Former Arkansas starter finds new home in transfer portal

Former Arkansas offensive tackle Andrew Chamblee has joined SMU.

One of the most sought-after players in the transfer portal has found a new home.

ESPN’s Pete Thamel first reported Monday that former Arkansas offensive tackle Andrew Chamblee had committed to SMU via the transfer portal. Chamblee played in all 12 games a season ago.

Per Thamel:

He’s the No. 6 overall player in ESPN’s transfer portal rankings. At Arkansas in 2023, he earned freshman All-SEC honors.

Chamblee was an ESPN 300 recruit and ranked as the No. 2 overall prospect in Arkansas in 2022. He’s 6-foot-6, 300 pounds and started eight games last season as a redshirt freshman. He’ll have three years of eligibility remaining.

Chamblee later confirmed the news in a post to his official social media account on X, formerly Twitter.

SMU has now added two players via the portal who started for Arkansas’ offensive line a season ago. Over the weekend, Paris Patterson announced his commitment to the Mustangs.

On3 ranked Chamblee as a four-star recruit and the No. 16 offensive tackle in the country coming out of high school for the recruiting class of 2022.

Pittman, Hogs get much-needed defensive line depth with BYU transfer

Arkansas was short on scholarship players at defensive tackle. Salli is legit depth there.

Sam Pittman and the Arkansas footbal team picked up some depth for the defensive line on Monday as former Brigham Young defensive tackle Danny Salli committed to the Razorbacks out of the transfer portal.

Salli never played a game with the Cougars as he signed with BYU in January. He went through spring drills and practices before putting his name into the transfer portal just over a week ago. He visited Fayetteville over the weekend.

Salli was a three-star recruit out of Hutchinson Community College when he inked to play Provo during the winter. A 6-foot-3, 355-pounder, he’s considered more a run-stuffer than a pass rusher. Arkansas could use the bulk.

Eric Gregory and Cam Ball are the expected starters on the inside with Keivie Rose and Ian Geffrard the primary back-ups for now. After those two, the position largely consists of walk-on players.

Both Houston and Arizona had recruited Salli once he entered the portal. Oklahoma and Texas Tech were his primary suitors when he was at Hutchinson.

Arkansas lands commitment from JUCO running back

Arkansas badly needed some speed in the backfield to go with all its power backs.

Arkansas’ running back room should be full by now.

The Razorbacks received a commitment from Hutchinson Community College running back Tyrell Reed on Friday. The 5-foot-9, 205-pounder ran for 833 yards and 13 touchdowns as a freshman in his one and only season of JUCO ball.

Arkansas had a spot to fill at running back after senior Dominique Johnson entered the transfer portal last week. The current Razorbacks depth chart at the position has Utah transfer Ja’Quinden Jackson at the top, followed by returner Rashod Dubinion and freshman Braylen Russell.

The team needs another body or two behind those three and Reed as the only other player on the roster is walk-on Jezreel Bachert. But Reed’s addition gives the Razorbacks four possible options in the backfield.

Reed’s specialty is speed, which provides Arkansas an element it previously lacked. Jackson is a power back and Dubninon leans that way. Russell has yet to play a down of college football, but at 250 pounds, quickness probably isn’t his top trait.

Reed, on the other hand, runs a 4.36 40-yard dash.

Arkansas lands linebacker depth with former Florida State, Marshall LB Stephen Dix

Dix was a four-star recruit who played at Florida State before becoming a staple at Marshall.

Slowly but surely, the most desperate need for the Arkansas football team is being filled.

After losing every upperclassman linebacker from last year’s roster – the top four tacklers from the unit – Arkansas has had to rebuild the room practically en masse. On Wednesday, thinsg took a step forward with the commitment of former Marshall linebacker Stephen Dix.

Dix registered 67 tackles, including seven for-loss, with two sacks and four quarterback hurries for the Thundering Herd last year. Before Marshall, he played at Florida State where he played 21 games in two seasons before missing the 2022 campaign because of injury.

He should get every opportunity to crack the rotation for the Razorbacks immediately. The top two current upperclassmen on the depth chart are Georgia transfer Xavian Worthy, who was in for spring, and former Jacksonville State linebacker Larry Worth, who was not. Every other competitor at the position is a freshman.

Dix joins his former teammate at Florida State, running back Rodney Hill, as transfers to the Razorbacks since the portal re-opened in the spring.