El Dorado News-Times

Arkansas wide receiver undergoes season ending surgery.

- By Nate Allen

FAYETTEVIL­LE Arkansas Razorbacks senior receiver Jared Cornelius underwent surgery Monday to repair damage to his Achilles tendon and will miss the remainder of the 2017 season, Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said at his Monday press conference.

Junior junior college transfer Jonathan Nance is at one spot and with either third-year sophomore Deon Stewart or redshirt freshman Jordan Jones as the others listed as the starting receivers for the Razorbacks (1-2) in Saturday’s 11 a.m. SEC Network televised non-conference game against the

New Mexico

State Aggies (2-2) at Reynolds Razorback Stadium.

Bielema had feared postgame last Saturday it could be a season-ending result for Cornelius after the senior was injured during Arkansas’ 50-43 overtime loss to Texas A&M in the SEC opener for both teams at the Dallas Cowboys’ AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

Arkansas’ leading returning receiver from last season (32 catches for 515 yards and four touchdowns), Cornelius has been hampered his first two games of 2017 by a back injury during the summer preseason, but had sufficient­ly healed to play his best game of the season so far with five catches, one for a touchdown, and 43 yards against Texas A&M before his Achilles tendon injury.

A three-year letterman, Cornelius has not redshirted and would be eligible for a hardship fifth year of eligibilit­y at Arkansas in 2018. He can also check out possible NFL interest whether in next spring’s draft or the league’s supplement­al draft.

“We'll continue to make decisions as they come,” Bielema said. “No need to make any hurried ones now. We'll give him all the informatio­n possible.” Bielema recalled while coaching at Wisconsin that two injured Badgers returned for a hardship fifth year and went on to careers in the NFL.

Offensive coordinato­r Dan Enos was asked Monday about Cornelius being missed.

“Jared outside of being a very good football player is an outstandin­g person,” Enos said. “He’s turned into being a great leader on our team. He was playing well Saturday. We were starting to see the old Jared Cornelius start to unfold. I think we would have gotten a really better version of him each and every week.”

Nance, the lesser heralded of two junior col-

lege transfer receivers the Razorbacks signed last December out of Gulf Coast (Miss.) Junior College, has surprised as Arkansas’ leading receiver so far (nine catches for 200 yards including touchdown each in the 28-7 loss to TCU and last Saturday against Texas A&M).

Jones surprised Texas A&M, netting 20 and 30-yard runs on two jet sweeps. Bielema also said injuries during practice last week limited the participat­ion of senior first-team nickel back Kevin Richardson and redshirt freshman backup inside linebacker Grant Morgan against Texas A&M.

Richardson (ankle) has been cleared to return to Tuesday’s practice, Bielema said.

Dalton Wagner, the true freshman offensive lineman injured during the August preseason, also has been cleared to return, Bielema said Monday.

Bielema said the offensive line likely will continue starting true freshman Ty Clary at right guard and junior Johnny Gibson at right tackle, but that offensive line coach Kurt Anderson also will work junior college transfer Paul Ramirez at right tackle and Gibson at right guard. The Razorbacks went to the Gibson at guard and Ramirez at tackle arrangemen­t because Clary, while doing well in the running game, doesn’t have the heft of Gibson and was getting outmuscled on the pass rush by Texas A&M’s defensive tackles, Bielema said.

Though holding TCU to a 14-7 game until under the final 3:00, Arkansas defensive coordinato­r Paul Rhoads said the defense committed just half as many “busts” last Saturday, though the 50-43 final obviously doesn’t show it.

“That’s why we were angry, to be quite honest with you, on Sunday when we got a chance to see it and see all of those numbers,” Rhoads said. “Two missed tackles against that football team? And playing as hard as we possibly did and having a low number of mental mistakes? To give up as many points as we did and total yardage is certainly not a reflection of that. But they came at critical times and they took advantage of a vast majority of them in a big way. That’s SEC football.”

It’s Sun Belt Aggies, not SEC Aggies that the Razorbacks meet Saturday from New Mexico State. But these 2-2 Aggies, walloping UTEP 41-14 last Saturday in Las Cruces, N.M., and opening the season losing only 37-31 to Pac 12 member Arizona State, should not be taken lightly, Bielema said.

“They run the ball efficientl­y,” Bielema said. “They throw the ball. Their quarterbac­k's a senior, he's seen a lot of good football. Their running back is a good player that has good speed. He breaks tackles. Defensivel­y they're a group that plays very physical. They’ve played Arizona State, a Power Five team, and they play good football.”

It was announced Monday that Arkansas’ next SEC game, Oct. 7 in Columbia, S.C. against the South Carolina Gamecocks, will be televised by the SEC Network and kick off at 3 p.m.

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