WATCH: Jadon Haselwood hurt after big play setting up Rocket Sanders touchdown

Arkansas is banged up already and becoming moreso against Mississippi State.

Rocket Sanders went in for the score, the first of Arkansas’ day, but the Hogs’ first scoring drive was about the play that came before.

Jadon Haselwood found himself wide open on the sideline around midfield and quarterback Malik Hornsby, after rolling out, found him. Haselwood hauled down the right sideline before being taken out 68 yards later at the Mississippi State 3.

Sanders scored on the next play, his 11th carry for 45 total yards in the first half for the SEC’s leading rusher.

Arkansas’ offense has had much more going for it with Hornsby in the game than starter Cade Fortin. Offensive coordinator Kendal Briles has largely spent the game alternating between the two.

Expect that to stop after halftime.

Sam Pittman says Arkansas’ passing game needs work. Let’s examine the numbers

Arkansas’ passing numbers are mostly better in 2022 compared to 2021, but there’s one big difference.

Arkansas coach Sam Pittman said his team was too one-dimensional. The Razorbacks had just been drubbed by Alabama, 49-26.

KJ Jefferson has been a stalwart for the Razorbacks at quarterback the last season-and-a-half. But passing has never been strongest suit. He works in efficiency, with an air attack that works best set up by a strong running attack.

Arkansas has the running attack, but for whatever reason, the Hogs’ passing game has been underwhelming, thus Pittman’s remarks.

“Right now, we’re one-dimensional. We’ve got to be able to throw and catch and protect,” he said. “We can’t just turn around and hand the ball off and beat really good teams.”

Arkansas still has ninth-ranked rushing attack in FBS, averaging 232 yards per game. Even against the Crimson Tide, the Hogs went for 187 yards on the ground. It wasn’t enough.

Jefferson’s numbers are actually better through five this season than they were through five games last year. So what’s the problem? Let’s take a look at the numbers more closely.

Social media reacts to Arkansas’ MASSIVE touchdown

Sam Pittman said last week KJ Jefferson can take over a game when he wants to for Arkansas.

The comeback is on in Fayetteville.

After falling behind 17-0 midway through the second quarter, Arkansas has woken up. Touchdowns on back-to-back drives from Rocket Sanders and the gem below to Jadon Haselwood have Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium alive again.

KJ Jefferson hit 237 yards passing on the touchdown strike to the transfer from Oklahoma. Haselwood’s grab gave him three for the game for 76 yards.

Things were quiet inside the stadium until Sanders’ first touchdown. Occasionally boos were heard, actually.

But when Jefferson found Haselwood on the far sideline and he scampered home, the place exploded.

Arkansas still trailed at the half, 17-14, but it’s looking less likely Bobby Petrino will break Razorbacks Country hearts for a second time.

Right now, anyway.

Joy with Jadon: Haselwood finding his groove at Arkansas

Jadon Haselwood knew Arkansas could be great. And Arkansas wouldn’t be this great without him.

Jadon Haselwood was one of the first players in Arkansas’ transfer class heading into this season to commit to play for the Hogs. He knew what the team could be capable of.

Turns out, part of the reason Arkansas has achieved what it has, what Haselwood expected, is because of his arrival. Talk about serendipity.

The Georgia native and Oklahoma transfer has a team-high eight catches in the Razorbacks’ two games so far. They’ve gone for 72 yards (third on the team) and a score (tied for second). In other words, his season pace is dynamite: 48 catches for 786 yards and six touchdowns.

That’s the type of stats that land folks on All-SEC lists at the end of year. Maybe not the first-team, but they’re Keon Hatcher-circa-2016 numbers.

Haselwood’s catch total went up against South Carolina in Week 2 from his three-grab day against Cincinnati in the opener, a sign he’s developing comfort with quarterback KJ Jefferson.

“He’s a mature kid. Not afraid to say his opinion, which helps the football team. Not afraid to lead. Brings a lot of confidence to the offensive football team,” coach Sam Pittman said.

And so far, it’s helping the Hogs into a national ranking seen only once in the last decade-plus.

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After being underutilized at the end of 2021, Marvin Mims off to a hot start to begin 2022

After a frustrating end to the 2021 season, Marvin Mims is showing why he needs to be targeted early and often for the Oklahoma Sooners through two games in 2022.

The last month of the 2021 season was frustrating for a lot of reasons. The Oklahoma Sooners lost games to Baylor and Oklahoma State to knock them out of Big 12 and College Football Playoff contention. Those losses sandwiched a disappointing day offensively in a win over Iowa State.

Among the frustrations was the lack of targets directed toward wide receiver Marvin Mims. Mims, who led the Sooners in receiving yards for the second straight season, received just eight targets against Baylor, Iowa State, and Oklahoma State; combined.

Eight. Targets.

Here’s how the targets were distributed over the final three weeks of the season to Oklahoma’s top five receivers in that three-game stretch.

Targets Receptions Yards Touchdowns
Michael Woods 14 7 87 0
Jadon Haselwood 12 6 83 0
Jeremiah Hall 9 8 113 0
Mario Williams 8 4 28 1
Marvin Mims 8 4 43 0

Mims tied for fourth in targets over the last three weeks of the regular season. Some of that was due to the way defenses were playing Mims, as they were looking to take away the deep ball. But there were zero adjustments made by Lincoln Riley to find other ways to get Mims the ball. Riley failed to get his best playmaker the football in a stretch of games where the Oklahoma Sooners were struggling to move the ball.

It was a stretch of games that had Marvin Mims on the verge of transferring had Riley stayed at Oklahoma.

“There wasn’t as many targets as I was looking for, nowhere near it,” Mims said told 247Sports’ Chris Hummer at Big 12 Media Days in July. “It was kind of a letdown, but at the end of the day I had to just keep battling through it. There were times where I was really unhappy about it with both the receiver coach and the offensive coordinator, but it was what it was.”

But with the coaching change that brought Jeff Lebby in to coordinate the offense, Marvin Mims is showing why that frustration was warranted.

Through two games, Marvin Mims has been targeted 12 times. He’s turned those 12 targets into an incredibly efficient 10 receptions for 244 yards and two touchdowns. He’s on pace to shatter his career-best numbers and is still averaging 24.4 yards per reception on the season.

Though he was targeted once in the first 29:24 of game time, Marvin Mims made his final three targets of the first half count. On three straight plays, Dillon Gabriel looked Mims’ way and the two connected for gains of 13, 14, and 36 yards, culminating in a touchdown.

Better late than never.

His performance on Saturday helped spark an Oklahoma Sooners’ offense that struggled for nearly 29 minutes of the first half. From the final drive of the half through the third quarter, the offense erupted for 31 points. It was his 36-yard touchdown reception at the end of the first half that got the Sooners on the board.

“… he ran by the guy in half-field coverage, and Dillon (Gabriel) makes a great throw,” Oklahoma head coach Brent Venables said “And Marvin makes a great play right over the shoulder, and, you know, good competitive play there when it counted the most. And it was, what a great play that was by both of them.”

It was a clutch play at a time when the Sooners needed someone to come through for them. The Sooners’ leading receiver for the 2020 and 2021 seasons came through with a big-time play to prevent Oklahoma from possibly trailing Kent State going into halftime. That was part of a career-high performance for the third-year Sooners wide receiver.

“And super proud of Marvin Mims, man, and what a display he put on tonight,” Venables said. “He’s my player of the game. Again, 203 all-purpose yards or whatever he does when he touches that ball, man. It’s electric. So 163 career yards receiving 36-yard touchdown, the 41-yard punt return, longest punt return we’ve had in three years.”

Only one other time in Marvin Mims career did he have seven receptions. The 2020 Big 12 title game win over Iowa State. On that day, he had seven receptions for 101 yards and a touchdown to help Oklahoma capture their sixth straight Big 12 title.

The Oklahoma Sooners need to feature Mims more moving forward. Seven to ten targets a game should be the goal because when he gets targeted, he produces. If Saturday against Kent State is any indication, Mims may see all the targets he wants and then some.

Offensive Coordinator Jeff Lebby said after the game, “Wanted to force the ball to him to give him the opportunity to go make plays and get us down the field. And it worked out the way we wanted.”

As the Sooners prepare to take on Nebraska, they must look to Marvin Mims early and often. He’s the type of player that can suck the air out of a hostile road crowd with his big play ability. While Jeff Lebby wants the Sooners to have a dominant running game, perhaps the clearest path to making that happen might be to air it out to his best offensive weapon.

As Mims makes plays down the field, he forces teams to commit more personnel to slow Oklahoma’s passing attack, leaving fewer defenders available around the line of scrimmage to stop the run. Tradition would argue that teams use the run to set up the pass, but times have changed. In modern college football, where passing attacks are so efficient, and good pass defenders are hard to come by, establishing your passing attack can open the ground game, as we saw on Saturday against Kent State.

The Nebraska Cornhuskers rank 113th in the NCAA in passing yards allowed. Oklahoma’s road trip could feature another opportunity to air it out with Dillon Gabriel and Marvin Mims leading the way. And it could mean another career day for the Sooners’ talented wide receiver.

But only if they make it a point to get him the football.

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Haselwood, Rattler set to reunite Saturday in Fayetteville

Two former Oklahoma teammates will grace the same field again on Saturday, but for opposing teams.

[autotag]Jadon Haselwood[/autotag] and Spencer Rattler were among the top prospects from the recruiting class of 2019.

Both were considered five-star recruits by 247Sports… Rattler was ranked No. 9 in the class while Haselwood was No. 19. Lucky for Oklahoma and head coach Lincoln Riley, both players signed with the Sooners out of high school.

All three were able to find success at Oklahoma, but fast forward three years later, and all three have left Norman for other destinations. Riley infamously left Oklahoma to pursue an opportunity at USC while Rattler and Haselwood both elected to dip into the SEC at South Carolina and Arkansas respectively.

This Saturday, the latter will meet on the football field again. However, Rattler and Haselwood will both be sporting new uniforms.

Rattler will lead his new team, South Carolina, to Reynolds Razorback Stadium on Saturday to square off against Haselwood and the Arkansas Razorbacks.

Rattler says that he is looking forward to seeing Haselwood on Saturday.

“It’s going to be cool. I saw he had a touchdown catch last week,” Rattler said. “We still stay in touch, and it’ll be cool to see him.

While Rattler enjoyed seeing Haselwood reel in three catches for 42 yards and a touchdown in Arkansas’ 31-24 win over Cincinnati last week, he hopes that his catches this week are limited.

“Hopefully he doesn’t make too many catches this week,” Rattler said. “But I always want to see him do well.”

Rattler was expected to be the next great quarterback at Oklahoma following Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray, who each won a Heisman Trophy while leading the Sooner offense. He threw for 4,595 yards and 40 touchdowns during his three seasons in Norman. Last season, he split time with Caleb Williams at the quarterback slot. After Riley departed for Los Angeles, Rattler bolted for South Carolina while Williams followed Riley to USC.

Haselwood caught 62 passes for 736 yards and seven touchdowns during the same three-year stretch at Oklahoma. He committed to Arkansas early this calendar year and has found early success in Fayetteville. He, along with Matt Landers, Drew Sanders, and Dwight McGlothern are players that Arkansas brought in from the transfer portal last offseason, and made have already made an impact at Arkansas.

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Jadon Haselwood: “We don’t have anything prove to anybody”

Jadon Haselwood and Arkansas know they have more to leave out on the field this season.

Arkansas is playing for itself. New wide receiver Jadon Haselwood wouldn’t have it any other way.

The Oklahoma transfer caught three passes for 42 yards and a touchdown in his team debut Saturday in the Razorbacks’ win over Cincinnati. Largely playing from the slot – a position filled last year by Treylon Burks – Haselwood was a threat every time he went out for a pass. He and Toledo transfer Matt Landers have given the Hogs a legitimate pass-catching group.

He spoke to the media on Tuesday ahead of Arkansas’ game against South Carolina on Saturday about how the Hogs aren’t bothering with anyone outside the program.

“We don’t have anything to prove to anybody. We’ve got a lot to prove to ourselves, though,” Haselwood.

His words should be a comfort to Arkansas fans. Despite the fact he isn’t playing to prove anything to them, it’s clear he and the rest of the roster are motivated to achieve the biggest things they can this season.

Arkansas is coming off a 9-4 season last year, their best since 2011. After Saturday’s win over Cincinnati the Razorbacks moved up three spots in the Associated Press poll to No. 16. It’s the highest rank they’ve had since October 4 of 2021 when they were coming off a loss to eventual national champion Georgia.

The Razorbacks are likely to move up again next week if they beat South Carolina at home and start the season 2-0.

Transfers shine in Arkansas debut

Many of Arkansas’ additions via the transfer portal debuted in a big way in the 31-24 win over Cincinnati.

Arkansas Football had many returning assets to their roster entering the 2022 season. But were able to reel in valuable pieces from the transfer portal to fill needs.

Those transfers got their first chance to shine in an Arkansas uniform on Saturday, and did not disappoint.

Players such as [autotag]Matt Landers[/autotag], [autotag]Jadon Haselwood[/autotag], [autotag]Drew Sanders[/autotag], [autotag]Latavious Brini[/autotag], and [autotag]Dwight McGlothern[/autotag] all played key roles for the Razorbacks in their 31-24 victory over No. 22 Cincinnati on Saturday. Head coach Sam Pittman says that he is pleased with the way that they all performed, and gave his coaching staff credit for getting them prepared to play.

“Matt Landers I thought showed them he’s a hard guy to cover. The game didn’t necessarily go where we continue with him,” Pittman said following Saturday’s win. “Haselwood as a transfer doing some nice things made a really nice catch on the touchdown. Those guys on offense I thought they did a good job. Brini came in and played at least half the game when Catalon got hurt.”

Each transfer contributed to the win in their own way, but the player that made the most noise in the group was Dwight McGlothern. The transfer from LSU halted an 11-play Cincinnati drive in the 1st quarter by intercepting a pass by Bearcat quarterback Ben Bryant. The interception set up a three-play drive by Arkansas that ended with a K.J. Jefferson touchdown rush to put Arkansas ahead, 7-0.

“Huge play because I think on that drive, I think it was third and it might have been eight-plus on every one of them and they converted them,” Pittman said. (McGlothern) picked it off and got us headed in the right direction. That was big because they were converting third downs on us. Got a lot of work to do but that was a big play.”

Other highlights involving transfer included Landers and Haselwood combining to make six catches for 85 yards, and Sanders recorded a sack.

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No letdown here: Arkansas beats Cincinnati to open 2022 season

Arkansas quarterback KJ Jefferson was responsible for all four Hogs touchdowns in the win.

KJ Jefferson is that man.

The Arkansas quarterback was responsible for all four Razorbacks touchdowns in the Hogs’ 31-24 win over Cincinnati in the season opener on Saturday.

Jefferson threw for 223 yards and three touchdowns and ran for another 62 yards and a score. His seemingly innocuous scamper for six yards with 2:22 left gave Arkansas a first down at the Cincinnati 46 and all but sealed the victory.

The Razorbacks’ transfer portal pick-ups had excellent days. Drew Sanders had the first Arkansas sack of the season. Dwight McGlothern had a 51-yard interception return. Terry Hampton had a tackle-for-loss. Landon Jackson had a 1/2 sack and five tackles. And wide receiver Jadon Haselwood caught three passes for 42 yards and a touchdown.

Rocket Sanders picked up his second career 100-yard game, running 20 times for 117 yards. Trey Knox caught two of Jefferson’s touchdowns and finished with six grabs for 75 yards.

Arkansas’ defense tossed a first-half shutout, but struggled a bit in the second half after losing nickel Myles Slusher and safety Jalen Catalon with undisclosed injuries. Cincinnati quarterback Ben Bryant threw for 325 yards with two touchdowns and the interception.

Arkansas hosts South Carolina on September 10 to open SEC play.

Hello, Jadon! Social media reactions to Haselwood’s first Arkansas touchdown

Arkansas wide receiver Jadon Haselwood has already made an impact in his first game with the Hogs.

Much of the talk since December regarding Arkansas wide recievers was howthe Razorbacks could replace Treylon Burks.

The short answer was, well, they couldn’t. Not directly, anyway.

But Matt Landers and Jadon Haselwood arrived from Toledo and Oklahoma via the transfer portal and were both starters in their first game in an Arkansas uniform. Landers was quarterback KJ Jefferson’s favorite target in the first half.

But it was Haselwood who put the spark in the Hogs offense.

Immediately after Cincinnati cut Arkansas’ 14-0 lead to 14-7, Jefferson led the Razorbacks down the field on an eight-play, 75-yard drive. It was capped by a 19-yard touchdown pass – Jefferson’s second of the game – to Haselwood, whose adjustment at the goal line allowed it to happen.

So, no, maybe there isn’t another Burks. But at this rate, that conversation should settle quickly.