El Dorado News-Times

Former Cabot star ready to shine for Razorbacks.

- By Nate Allen

FAYETTEVIL­LE - College football’s new redshirt rule was written for guys like Arkansas Razorbacks receiver Jarrod Barnes.

Unfortunat­ely for the former Cabot High School star quarterbac­k/receiver, it was written a year too late.

The new rule effective this 2018 season allows coaches to play a player up to four games. Then, if not used in a fifth, restore like a redshirt his 2018 eligibilit­y stage for 2019.

Last year if you played any, and weren’t injured to apply for a hardship, your season’s eligibilit­y was spent.

So under last year’s 4-8 Bret Bielema regime, Barnes forsook his freshman eligibilit­y for playing six plays in the 49-7 season-opening rout of lower division Florida A&M in Little Rock.

Barnes recorded stats in those six plays, 2 catches for 30 yards including a first down achieved on a 26-yard catch, that seemed to have warranted a varsity second look but he never got it.

So he’s a sophomore for this 2018 season under new Coach Chad Morris.

“I've heard about the new rule,” Morris said. “I wish it had happened to me, but I can't go back in the past and change it. It is what it is you've just got to move on from it.”

Too bad, it seems, he didn’t feign injury as some in his situation are reported to have done to apply for a medical hardship redshirt.

“No,” Barnes replied when asked if he was injured last year. “I did not.”

Presumably if Barnes doesn’t fit into the 2-deep, Morris, new offensive coordinato­r Joe Craddock and new receivers coach Justin Stepp will limit Barnes’ 2018 game participat­ion to four games or under so he can get that redshirt sophomore year going into 2019 he should have had as a redshirt freshman going into 2018.

““It's not about me,” Barnes said of whether to play just four or may play more this season. “It's about me helping the team. If that is what it is then that's what it's gonna be.”

Barnes showed the speed to help the team last year against Florida A&M that attracted

Alabama and Auburn in his 2017 recruiting process.

“Alabama and Auburn contacted me a week before signing date but I was already committed,” Barnes said. “I always wanted to come here (Arkansas) since I was little. When they offered me I committed.”

However got no more varsity opportunit­ies post Florida A&M mainly because his 5-11 frame carried less than 170 pounds that might have been mashed by those pulverizin­g SEC defenses.

He’s stouter now after an offseason and summer under new strength coach Trumain Carroll and the Razorbacks nutritioni­sts.

“Yeah, they wanted me to come back at 185 or 190 and I’m right around that weight,” Barnes said. “I’m 184. I worked hard and ate a lot.”

Obviously the Bielema staff was tempted to play Barnes again last season, practicing him with the varsity the first five game weeks.

“I got moved to scout team the week that we played Alabama,” Barnes said. “It got me down a little bit you just have to forget about it. I just had to get used to overcoming adversity. I had to figure out you just forget about it and do what you can do.”

How did Stepp say he did last spring? “He said I’m playing good but everybody can always do better,” Barnes said. “Work on being the best you can be.”

Aside from the new coaches, Barnes said a couple of old hands help him learn this new offense.

Senior receivers Jared Cornelius, returned granted a medical hardship upon a torn Achilles heel ending is 2017 season at three games, and Jonathan Nance are a big help, Barnes said.

“It’s good,” Barnes said of Cornelius’ return. “Because he has a big impact on the team and is one of the biggest leaders we have in the receivers room. Him and Jonathan Nance because Jonathan Nance is at my position (slot, though Barnes also sometimes splits wide) mostly. I look to him for advice.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States