Rocket Sanders deal starting feel like Rakeem Boyd 2.0 at Arkansas

It’s possible, maybe even likely, Sanders doesn’t play for Arkansas again in 2023 and perhaps ever.

On-Pace Guy strikes again.

Arkansas running back Rocket Sanders started the 2023 season with a reasonable, if still difficult, chance to crack the top three in Razorbacks history at the position. The junior was a preseason All-American entering the fall after rushing for more than 1,300 yards as a sophomore. Another 1,000-yard season would have fifth on Arkansas’ all-time list.

Instead, Sanders will be likely to have a 100-yard season as a junior as coach Sam Pittman said he was unsure if his star back would return this season. Sanders hurt his knee in the team’s season opener, missed three games, returned for two, but has been sidelined since.

“I don’t know. I really don’t,” Pittman said when asked about Sanders’ timetable. “He’s not going to play Saturday. I really don’t know. It just depends on how he feels and the progression of his rehab.”

Sanders’ situation calls to mind that of Rakeem Boyd. Boyd was Arkansas’ lone preseason All-SEC selection as a running back in 2020. He was coming off a season in which he ran for more than 1,100 yards, but he ended up missing times with a lower leg injury before practically opting out of the team’s final three games of the regular season and its bowl, which ultimately didn’t come to fruition because of COVID-19, anyway.

Boyd declared for the NFL Draft in December of 2020 and it’s possible Sanders does the same in 2023.

AJ Green has been Arkansas’ leading rusher this season, though he has just 239 yards. The fewest yards an Arkansas leading rusher has had in a season in the modern era is 443 from Broderick Green in 2009.

Arkansas at No. 11 Alabama: Players To Watch on Saturday

Arkansas is a 19.5-point underdog this weekend, as the Razorbacks try to stop a four-game losing streak,

Boy, when you are trying to snap a four-game losing streak, a trip to Tuscaloosa to face No. 11 Alabama is not what the doctor ordered.

But that is the task at hand for the Arkansas football team this week. In three of the last four losses, the Razorbacks have either been tied or led at some point in the fourth quarter. Now, it’s a matter of figuring out how to finish games, with less mistakes and less penalties.

Arkansas will again try to establish a balanced offensive attack against the Crimson Tide, with senior quarterback KJ Jefferson at the controls, and junior running back Raheim “Rocket” Sanders trying to get on track for the first time this season.

Due to a knee injury, Sanders has only carried the ball 34 times this season, for 91 yards, or just 2.7 yards per carry. He averaged 6.5 yards per carry last season.

Alabama will counter with another stellar defense, led by freshman defensive back Caleb Downs. Nick Saban also hopes to see sophomore quarterback Jalen Milroe continue to progress for the Tide offense.

Here are 12 Players to Watch in Saturday’s game:

It’s official: Arkansas has one of the worst offenses in the country

Teams like Central Michigan, Buffalo and Old Dominion all have higher ranked offenses than the Razorbacks.

KJ Jefferson and Rocket Sanders entered the season as one of the top 10 quarterback-running back duos in the country. Arkansas’ offense was hopeful to take a step forward with them in 2023.

Six weeks into the season, they are among the worst, statistically.

Sanders, a preseason All-American running back, has been limited to three games because of a knee injury. He’s had just 94 yards on 31 carries.

Jefferson is a second-team preseason All-SEC selection. His six interceptions are a career high and the season is only half over.

The two have underperformed, but it’s hardly all on them. Arkansas’ offensive line has given up 23 sacks to rank 124 out of 133 FBS teams. In total tackles for-loss against, Arkansas has allowed 47 to rank 127th.

Simply put, Arkansas’ offense isn’t bad, it’s the one of the worst in school history right now. The Razorbacks ranked 111th in Chad Morris second year and 118th the year before. In Bret Bielema’s final year, in 2017, the Hogs were 94th.

The difference? Those teams used a total of 10 quarterbacks in three seasons. Arkansas’ offensive line play has let down the offense tremendously as the Razorbacks carry just a 2-4 record six games into the season after Saturday’s loss at Ole Miss.

Here are the only power-conference offenses worse than the Hogs’ at the midway point of the season.

Rocket readying for liftoff

Arkansas could get its preseason All-American running back Rocket Sanders’ back vs Texas A&M.

Arkansas running back Rocket Sanders wouldn’t be making his season debut if he were to play Saturday against Texas A&M, but it would sure feel like it.

The preseason All-American has missed Arkansas’ last three games with a knee injury. Even in the Hogs’ opener, Sanders was limited to 42 on just 15 carries as Arkansas easily handled Western Carolina. Since that time, the Razorbacks have beaten only Kent State.

Arkansas coach Sam Pittman is optimistic Sanders can return against the Aggies.

“As confident as I’ve been since the Western Carolina game,” Pittman said. “I would be lying to you if I told you that I’m sure he’s going to play. I feel better about his opportunity to play, but we still have to see how he recovers from yesterday’s limited reps that he participated in and go from there.”

Sanders ran for more than 1,400 yards and 10 touchdowns last year in helping Arkansas to have the No. 7 rushing offense in FBS with 236.5 yards a game. In Arkansas’ four games this season, the Hogs’ rushing offense is ranked 77th with 148 yards per game.

Sanders has practiced with more intensity each day that passes in the week leading up to Saturday’s game. Given the nature of his injury, though, it’s hard to imagine Sanders getting 20 carries or more, a mark he reached six times in Arkansas’ 13 games last year.

“This week, I thought he was farther ahead on Monday than what I thought he would be,” Pittman said. “It didn’t swell up too bad on it yesterday. We’ll give him a little less reps today and then see where he’s at on Thursday. But we’re obviously hoping he can play.”

A healthy Rocket could have the Razorbacks sitting pretty at 4-0

First-team All-SEC running back Rocket Sanders has missed three games, which has likely cost the Razorbacks some victories.

It’s the biggest elephant in the room, and one that most simply refuse to acknowledge.

After a pair of heartbreaking losses by the Arkansas football team, the keyboard experts have had a field day on social media the past two weeks, offering a slew of analytical assessments, along with an extensive list of the program’s problems. Yet, the most glaring issue the Razorbacks are dealing with has been completely ignored, and suspiciously swept underneath the old shag rug.

The losses were to legitimate Power Five programs, and both came down to the final plays of the game. Unfortunately, the Razorbacks came up just short each time. I have heard the reasoning range from Sam Pittman’s lack of coaching experience to quarterback KJ Jefferson’s apparent regression as a quarterback.

Not once have I heard anyone address the biggest factor, by far, in all of this – the Rocket that has yet to re-launch. After suffering an apparent knee injury early in the season-opener, Raheim Sanders played sparingly the remainder of that game, before being shut down completely for the past three games.

I know the contradictors, who will forever view the glass as half-empty, will accuse me of being some sort of homer and wearing rose-colored glasses. But is that really it? Or is it more of just an obvious observation by someone who has covered the sport for more than 35 years.

Even with my basic experience as a common fan, I can assure you that when you take away a team’s best player, in any sport, the team will surely suffer. Particularly when that player has been such a vital part of the team’s success.

I mean, we aren’t talking about a guy who was a gunner on the kickoff team or the backup holder for extra points. We are talking about the SEC’s top running back entering the 2023 season, and arguably the second-best ball-carrier in Razorbacks’ history.

We are talking about a kid who rushed for 1,442 yards a year ago – only the third Hog to ever accomplish that feat – and averaged 6.5 yards every time he touched the ball. He nearly single-handedly demolished No, 14 Ole Miss last November, with 232 yards and three touchdowns. He averaged more than 10 yards per carry and ran for over 170 yards, in wins over Auburn and BYU.

But there are those who scoff at the idea that his presence would likely have been the difference between sitting at 2-2 versus being 4-0. No guarantees, but I would surely have liked the Hogs’ chances much more with that 6-foot-2, 243-pound bruiser in the backfield. In each of those two recent losses, one or two plays could have literally been the deciding factor.

Theoretically speaking, if Sanders could have picked up that crucial 4th-and-1 midway through the BYU game, the trajectory and outcome could have been totally different. Early in the LSU game, if the Hogs could have snapped the ball quicker with a handoff to Sanders at the 1-inch line, that touchdown could have been the difference between winning and losing. Sure, a lot of what-ifs, but they’re not too far-fetched.

Not only that, but the threat of Sanders in the backfield also takes the entire focus off Jefferson. Not only would that prevent defenses from stacking the box, but it would also force them to account for two major weapons.

Obviously, the Hogs could have helped themselves in both losses without a truckload of pre-snap procedure penalties and other silly miscues. But if the Razorbacks would have won both games, those mishaps would just be a footnote. Not to mention, the social media mongrels would have had to come up with another hot discussion, or complaint.

I realize this theory doesn’t fit into the argument for those who want to continue wallering in self-pity and knocking the program, which is why it has been such a hush-hush topic. But facts are facts.

Sanders was a first-team All-SEC selection last year and was a preseason first-team All-SEC pick coming into this season. He has been mentioned as a Heisman Trophy candidate, while being named to the watch lists for the Walter Camp, Doak Walker and Maxwell Awards. He has also been projected as high as a first-round pick in the 2024 NFL Draft.

And still, there are those who will stand there with a straight face and say his presence would not make any difference. Just take a look at how any injury can drastically sway the Vegas betting lines. I can promise you, if Sanders were to have been healthy against LSU, that line would not have been anywhere close to 18 points.

When Darren McFadden was out with a dislocated toe early in the 2006 season, Hog fans were then quick to offer his absence as the excuse for the team’s offensive woes. Matter of fact, missing those games due to the injury is likely what cost McFadden the Heisman Trophy that season. When Texas star running back Bijan Robinson was injured midway through the 2021 season, and the Longhorns struggled without him down the stretch, that was the generally accepted reasoning.

Granted, injuries are part of the game, and all teams must deal with them at some point. Rawleigh Williams III was the SEC’s leading rusher in 2016, before a neck injury in the spring of 2017 ultimately ended his career. His absence the following season likely contributed to Bret Bielema losing his job.

A post on Facebook this week asked, “With all the preseason ‘hype’ for the Hogs, why are they only 2-2?” The answer is simple. That preseason ‘hype’ was based on the assumption that the Razorbacks would be fully loaded with a legitimate SEC Player of the Year candidate toting the ball.

While driving home from Bentonville yesterday afternoon, I listened to about 45 minutes of a local sports radio show. The entire drive was filled with fans calling in with all the things wrong with the Arkansas football program. Yet, not once did any callers or the show’s two hosts ever acknowledge Sanders’ absence.

Arkansas has remained somewhat mum about the true status of Sanders’ injury. He has been practicing in a limited capacity, but the staff seems to be taking precautions before inserting him back into the lineup too soon.

Until Sanders returns healthy, Jefferson and the offense must continue operating without a key cog in the engine. The unit did offer much improvement and inspiration last Saturday in Death Valley, but the hill will remain tougher to climb until the Rocket can be launched again.

Rocket Sanders (knee) still questionable for LSU game

If Sanders can’t go, expect AJ Green to get the start again.

Losing a preseason All-American is going to damage a team’s offensive success, no matter what team it is.

Arkansas could be dealing with a third straight week without its superstar, running back Rocket Sanders. Sanders has missed the last two games with a knee injury. Coach Sam Pittman said Sanders’ status for Saturday’s game at LSU was up in the air.

“He’s progessing faster than I thought he might,” Pittman said. “But I don’t know whether he’ll be able to play or not.”

Sanders ran for 1,443 yards with 10 touchdowns last year, earning him second-team All-American honors from the Associated Press heading into the 2023 season. He ran for 42 yards and two touchdowns in limited duty in Arkansas’ 56-13 win over Western Carolina in Week 1, but he hasn’t played since.

The Razorbacks, meanwhile, have the 82nd-ranked total offense in FBS. A lack of big plays have, especially, hurt.

The good news for Arkansas is that as good as LSU’s offense has been, its defense hasn’t been its usual stout self. The Tigers are ranked 63rd in FBS in total defense.

Arkansas’ biggest problem? It isn’t the O-line or any coaches

It is not Dan Enos. Sam Pittman said it best, whether the angry Arkansas fans want to believe or not.

Eleven.

That’s the number of plays the Arkansas offense has had this year to go for more than 20 yards. Three games into the season, eleven is a number that will not work. Only one team in the SEC has fewer and that team – Florida – is one largely expected to struggle on offense.

Arkansas was not expected to struggle on offense. Not with second-team All-SEC quarterback KJ Jefferson. Not with second-team All-American Rocket Sanders. Not with two All-SEC types on the offensive line.

But for whatever reason, none of those individual items have coalesced with one another. Sanders has been hurt. The offensive line has lacked consistency. Jefferson has been banged up and a bit tentative.

Last year, Arkansas finished with 73 plays go for 20 yards or more. This year’s they’re on pace for 44, a number that would have ranked them 107th in the then-131-team FBS. Right now, the 11 rank the Hogs 93rd.

In plays that have gone for 10 yards or more, it’s just as bad. Arkansas is 89th with just 37 such plays. So it isn’t only that the big plays aren’t happening, the ‘good’ ones aren’t with enough regularity, either.

If one wants to blame the offensive line for that, they could. But the offensive line isn’t throwing or catching the ball.

If one wants to blame Jefferson for that, they’re crazy considering he, barring devastation, leave as the most productive quarterback in school history.

If one wants to blame Sanders for that, well, injuries happen.

If one wants to blame offensive coordinator Dan Enos for that, head to 2015, when the Razorbacks, with arguable less overall offensive talent, ranked 35th plays of 20 yards or greater.

Something weird is happening. Something unusual. And until Arkansas gets it fixed, the Hogs will be relying too much on a defense that’s good, but can’t be asked to carry the load all year long.

Three reasons why BYU and Arkansas each can win on Saturday

Arkansas and BYU are very similar on paper, and it could be a close contest on Saturday night. Here’s three reasons why each team could win.

Arkansas and BYU are both very different from when they met last season. The Hogs went into Provo, Utah and won in a shootout, 52-35, behind career performances from [autotag]KJ Jefferson[/autotag] and [autotag]Rocket Sanders[/autotag].

Since then, the two teams have underwent massive changes to their roster and coaching staff. The funny part is that while both programs changed over the offseason, they enter this week’s matchup as mirror images of each other.

Both teams have experienced quarterbacks (KJ Jefferson and Kedon Slovis), aggressive defenses and question marks in the running game. Heck, they both even have new strength and conditioning coaches after battling injury issues all last season.

The resemblances are uncanny and it should make for a very interesting showdown in Fayetteville. It’ll likely be a close contest that both teams could feel confident about winning.

Let’s take a look at three reasons why each team can walk away victorious on Saturday.

Arkansas enters Week 3 as the favorites over BYU according to ESPN’s FPI

ESPN FPI’s favors Arkansas over BYU. If that comes true, the Hogs will do something that hasn’t happened since 1979 under Lou Holtz.

Arkansas didn’t get much love from the ESPN Football Power Index’s ranking system, but that looks to be changing entering game week.

Ahead of Saturday night’s matchup with BYU, the Hogs are given a 79.2% chance of beating the Cougars by the ESPN FPI. If they do remain perfect on the year and start 3-0, it’ll be the third straight season they’ve done so under Sam Pittman. A mark the program hasn’t hit since 1977-1979 under Lou Holtz.

Saturday will be just the second time ever that BYU and Arkansas will face off. The first matchup happened last season when Arkansas went to Provo, Utah and beat the Cougars 52-35. [autotag]KJ Jefferson[/autotag] led the Hogs with 365 yards passing and 5 touchdowns. [autotag]Rocket Sanders[/autotag] also had a career day, with 15 carries for 175 yards and 2 touchdowns.

Kickoff is at 6:30 p.m. CST and will be televised on ESPN2.

Rocket Sanders to miss second game in a row

Sam Pittman confirmed on Monday that Raheim ‘Rocket’ Sanders would also miss this week’s game against BYU.

Sam Pittman met with the assembled media again on Monday to recap the Kent State game and preview Saturday’s game with BYU.

He also confirmed that Raheim ‘Rocket’ Sanders will miss his second game in a row.

The running game struggled on Saturday against the Golden Flashes without Sanders, but it wasn’t exactly gangbusters with him against Western Carolina either.

It remains to be seen if Sanders will be available for the SEC opener with LSU the following week in Baton Rouge.

Having McGlothern back will help the secondary, especially with BYU having a threat to throw the ball in Pittsburgh (and former USC) transfer Kedon Slovis.