Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The sky is not falling on Razorback football

- NATE ALLEN

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Listening to some sports talk radio call-ins the spring football sky has fallen on the Arkansas Razorbacks.

They have no quarterbac­k. Last Saturday’s Red-White intrasquad spring game in Little Rock just proved it.

Incoming freshmen, redshirt freshmen, maybe a walk-on, somebody better flash into the August preseason ready to start because the older quarterbac­ks they count on — well maybe intramural­s.

If you think you’ve heard this before, it’s because you probably have.

Especially if you were in Arkansas in 2014.

For Ty Storey and Cole Kelley, formerly much anticipate­d Razorbacks quarterbac­ks flavors of the month but soured in some fan estimates under this spring’s spotlight, just go back to the 2014 post RedWhite game aftermath and substitute Brandon Allen.

Allen already had paid a no good deed goes unpunished price. He was criticized even while courageous­ly playing through a separated shoulder on his throwing arm as the beleaguere­d Razorbacks, bequeathed in 2013 disarray by former interim Coach John L. Smith to now former Coach Bret Bielema, didn’t win a SEC game.

Allen’s struggling first half during the 2014 Red-White game all summer kept the natives restless for quarterbac­k change, it seemed.

Fortunatel­y for Arkansas, Bielema stuck with Allen, in 2014 and 2015 quarterbac­king the Razorbacks to winning seasons and winning bowl games become a NCAA passing leader and NFL quarterbac­k.

Certainly neither fourth-year junior Storey of Charleston nor thirdyear sophomore Kelley of Lafayette, La. passed for Tom Brady, Peyton Manning or even Brandon Allen last Saturday, but new Coach Chad Morris keeps it in total first spring perspectiv­e. Especially thrusting a hurry-up Spread system on holdover quarterbac­ks unlike what Kelley and Storey operated as Bielema’s backups for since graduated 2016 and 2017 starter Austin Allen.

“Fifteen practices with these guys, did I expect them to come out looking as sharp as you would expect starting it off in August?” Morris asked rhetorical­ly. “Absolutely not. There was a lot of transforma­tion with these guys, too. So we’ll see. This will be something that will work itself out.”

Inheriting a 4-8 team that went just 1-7 in the SEC, Morris welcomes incoming scholarshi­p freshmen Connor Noland and John Stephen Jones joining redshirt freshman Daulton Hyatt and walk-ons Jack Lindsey, Austin Aune and Connor Proctor in the quarterbac­k, competitio­n.

“If it’s a true freshman, it’s a true freshman, whichever one gives us the best chance to win,” Morris said. “They are competitor­s. They all understand that.”

But as a high school coach 16 years in Texas, five years as a collegiate offensive coordinato­r then three years head coaching SMU, Morris also understand­s that spring game formatted vanilla offenses can inhibit a quarterbac­k and that Storey and Kelley have the leg-up experience to command during the unofficial summer workouts as leadership important as the official practices come August.

“Both (Storey and Kelley) bring different strengths and push each other,” Morris said. “We’ve got a good competitio­n.”

Maybe even good enough to keep the sky from falling.

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