El Dorado News-Times

Razorbacks hopeful Cornelius, Hammonds will play

- By Nate Allen

FAYETTEVIL­LE Though limited by the ailing back that deleted him from the Razorbacks’ 105-man preseason roster until it expanded with last Monday’s start of fall semester classes, senior receiver Jared Cornelius is on the depth chart as an either-or first-teamer with sophomore La ’Michael Pettway and in the game plan for Arkansas’ season opener next Thursday night in Little Rock against the Florida A&M Rattlers.

Florida A&M, opening Saturday in Tallahasse­e, Fla., against Texas Southern, and Arkansas kickoff at 7 p.m. Thursday on the SEC Network at War Memorial Stadium.

Sophomore receiver/running back T.J. Hammonds (arthroscop­ic knee surgery) also was deleted from the preseason 105-man roster, but also restored to practice last Monday and also in the game plan against Florida A&M.

“We’re going to plan right now J-Red and T.J. Hammonds are both incorporat­ed in the game plan,” Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said Friday, addressing media, as did offensive coordinato­r Dan Enos and defensive coordinato­r Paul Rhoads before the Razorbacks’ closed practice.

“We'll let them practice this week and make a decision probably next Tuesday, whether or not they'll play or not, depending on reps by then.”

Hammonds, a reserve tailback as a true freshman last season and then moved to receiver last spring, has practiced at both spots since his return.

“Wednesday he repped at tailback the whole time,” Bielema said. “Today, the first half of our practice, he'll rep only at tailback and then he'll pop into wide receiver for a couple of skelly (pass skeleton) sessions.”

It sounds as if Hammonds’ recovery by next Thursday might be ahead of Cornelius’ pace which is harder to discern.

Bielema explained injured knees and ankles swell when ailing and go back to normal size with healing, but “with a back you really rely” on the injured player describing his fitness.

“The conversati­on I had with him going back to when we pulled him out of fall camp, is he's got to feel great about how he feels,” Bielema

said.

“He literally was just in my office a half-hour ago. Very excited. The program he did this morning with Matt (Summers, the trainer) he said was the best he's ever felt.

"So we'll piece him in there a little bit next week and then make a decision on game day.

“We’ll piece him in there a little bit next week and then make a decision on game day.”

Since Cornelius caught 32 of the 35 passes caught last season by returning wide receivers this season, Enos was asked if he had alternate game plans with and without Cornelius.

“I don't know if there is two different game plans, but there's certainly things we would like Jared to do,” Enos said.

“I think we have guys in position to do those things if he can't play, but there's things we will do if we have him available though.”

Is he optimistic counting on Cornelius to play?

“Yeah, absolutely,” Enos replied. “The prognosis sounds really, really good. Jared is really, really smart. He knows exactly what we're doing. Once he gets back full-go physically, he will know where to line up, how to run the routes and where to be. I am gonna remain very optimistic about it and hopefully we will have him.”

The starting offense, listing 12 positions with a fullback and two tight ends, starts Austin Allen at quarterbac­k, Devwah Whaley at running back with David Williams as slash right behind him; Kendrick Jackson at fullback; Austin Cantrell and Cheyenne O’Grady as the tight ends, Cornelius and Deon Stewart as receivers with Pettway and Jordan Jones in slashes right behind them and an offensive line of center Frank Ragnow; right and left guards Johnny Gibson and Hjalte Froholdt and Brian Wallace and Colton Jackson at right and left tackles.

With junior college transfer Jeremy Patton, and returnees Will Gragg and Jack Kraus all listed second-team tight ends and expected to contribute, Bielema said sophomore Grayson Gunter, lettering as a true freshman reserve last season, but coming off shoulder surgery that prevented him lifting weights last winter and practicing last spring, will redshirt.

“He missed all the developmen­t in the spring,” Bielema said.

“And to kind of space out that group of TEs who are all in that class together, when he played a year ago. Sat him down about two weeks ago and commonly, mutually came to that decision. Put him in a pretty developmen­tal lift phase to get back on track and complete his career obviously.”

Defensivel­y, the first unit starts McTelvin “Sosa” Agim and T.J. Smith at the ends with Bijhon Jackson at nose guard with Dre Greenlaw and De’Jon “Scoota" Harris as the inside linebacker­s and Randy Ramsey and Dwayne Eugene as the Razor and Hog outside linebacker­s in the new 3-4 scheme.

The secondary starts Ryan Pulley and Henre Toliver at the corners and Josh Liddell and Santos Ramirez at the safeties with Kevin Richardson the nickel with a linebacker scrapped against certain spread formations.

In addition to being listed first, with sophomore Ty Storey listed in a slash right behind him, redshirt freshman Cole Kelley not only is the backup quarterbac­k behind Allen but the No. 2 punter behind Blake Johnson.

At the inside linebacker­s, redshirt freshman Grant Morgan so impressed Rhoads and linebacker­s coach Vernon Hargreaves filling first-team roles when both Greenlaw and Scoota Harris were injured that Morgan is the first sub for both, Bielema said.

The Razorbacks, off last Thursday, Bielema said, will have closed workouts over the weekend and together will watch today’s 11 a.m. Florida A&M vs. Texas Southern game on ESPNU.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Eluding the defense: In this Nov. 25, 2016, file photo, Arkansas quarterbac­k Austin Allen, left, is hit by Missouri's Charles Harris, right, as he throws the ball during the second quarter of a game in Columbia, Mo. Arkansas endured a frustratin­g...
Associated Press Eluding the defense: In this Nov. 25, 2016, file photo, Arkansas quarterbac­k Austin Allen, left, is hit by Missouri's Charles Harris, right, as he throws the ball during the second quarter of a game in Columbia, Mo. Arkansas endured a frustratin­g...

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