The Sentinel-Record

Hogs names Kelley as starting QB

- NATE ALLEN

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Arkansas Razorbacks head coach Chad Morris finally answered a question Monday that he has been asked practicall­y since he was hired last December.

Morris said third-year sophomore Cole Kelley will be the starting quarterbac­k for Arkansas’ season-opener Saturday at 3 p.m. against the Eastern Illinois Panthers at Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium. The game is scheduled to be shown on the SEC Network (Resort Channel 79).

Fourth-year junior Ty Storey, of Charleston, who has been competing with Kelley from every January meeting and winter

workout on, will also will play against Eastern Illinois, Morris asserted. Morris had publicly proclaimed the two neck-and-neck and too close to call until Monday’s press conference.

“Cole Kelley will be our starter,” Morris said. “And Ty’s going to get in and have an opportunit­y to play as well.”

Offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­ks coach Joe Craddock was asked what set Kelley apart.

“We just felt like the last two weeks Cole really was the more consistent one and really led his team in every situation he had,” Craddock said. “Really led his team to points. We just felt at this time Cole was the right guy to go with.”

Although Storey is the older quarterbac­k and the 2016 nominal backup to Austin Allen while Kelley redshirted as a freshman, Kelley is by far the more varsity experience­d. He was Allen’s backup last year and started four games when Allen was injured.

At 6-7, 258 pounds, he also has a bigger body and bigger arm than Storey at 6-2 and 215.

“Cole has got a strong arm, and he’s big,” Craddock said. “He’s not afraid to stand in there. Not to say that the other guys are afraid, I’m just saying that one of his strengths when you turned on the tape from last year when he did play, he’s standing in there taking some good, big hits. And to keep being able standing in there showing the courage that it takes to do that, that’s one of his biggest attributes, his size and his ability to throw the ball down the field.”

Storey, who was acknowledg­ed to have picked up the offense quicker last spring when it seemed he perhaps ran slightly ahead, is not out of the first-team running. Morris said, in any event, Storey must be prepared to play like the next snap is his.

“I’m excited to see Ty, to see what he can do out there,” Morris said. “This is, by no stretch of the imaginatio­n, is this saying this is a lifetime contract. I shared that with Cole last night, ‘You don’t have a lifetime contract.’ He’s excited about this, and Ty was excited about getting his opportunit­y to come in and play.”

Walk-ons Grant Morgan, the third-year sophomore letterman backup middle linebacker from Greenwood; D’Vone McClure, the ex-Cleveland Indians minor league baseball prospect become Razorbacks sophomore first-team nickel back and alum of Jacksonvil­le; and junior two-year letterman place-kicker and kickoff man Connor Limpert are walk-ons no more.

All three have been awarded scholarshi­ps, Morris announced Monday.

“I’m very excited for Grant Morgan and D’Vone McClure, as well as Connor Limpert,” Morris said. “The scholarshi­p that they were presented last night, they were very deserving of this. I think you see that was very evident with the excitement level of their teammates and how they celebrated that.”

Morris was asked more about the scholarshi­ps upon taking questions after his opening statements.

“They’ve earned that,”Morris said. “They’ve worked hard, and I think you could talk about all three of them and the impact that they have. D’Vone being a big impact player for us and to play a lot if not start for us in some areas and on special teams.

“I think nothing symbolizes what this program is about more than what Grant Morgan represents. Someone that’s been told his whole life that you can’t. ‘You can’t play there. You can’t do this,’ and he’s defied the odds all the way through. And Connor has impacted games.”

Defensive coordinato­r John Chavis said the remarkable facet about all three is that they would have continued their Razorbacks role even if not placed on scholarshi­p.

“Financiall­y, it does make a difference for these young men,” Chavis said. “They’re all deserving because they’re all going to make contributi­ons to this football team this year.”

While Morgan, McClure and Limpert now play on scholarshi­p, freshman receiver Michael Woods and senior special-teamer Ryder Lucas will miss the season opener on disciplina­ry suspension. Both were charged with driving under the influence during the summer before the August preseason practices began. Both have practiced throughout the preseason.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? START ME UP: Arkansas Razorback quarterbac­k Cole Kelley runs through drills on Aug. 8 during football practice on campus in Fayettevil­le. The third-year sophomore was named by head coach Chad Morris as the starting quarterbac­k ahead of fourthyear junior Ty Storey during a press conference Monday.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK START ME UP: Arkansas Razorback quarterbac­k Cole Kelley runs through drills on Aug. 8 during football practice on campus in Fayettevil­le. The third-year sophomore was named by head coach Chad Morris as the starting quarterbac­k ahead of fourthyear junior Ty Storey during a press conference Monday.

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