Arkansas
Arkansas’ Defensive Line Provides Sizeable Test for Cowboys’ Offensive Front
STILLWATER — South Dakota State’s starting defensive line had an average weight of about 266 pounds. The Razorbacks come to Boone Pickens on Saturday with a stout defensive line that averages about 33 pounds heavier per player.
That’s the difference between the FCS level and the SEC.
“When you’re playing a team in the SEC, you’re going to play girth,” OSU coach Mike Gundy said. “You’re going to run into guys that have a lot of guys with a lot of size and are physical in the box. They have a really good geographical location for producing bigger type bodies like that. That’s where I mentioned that we need to make good strides from last week to this week in order to block a completely different front than we did last week.”
Arkansas’ defensive line might be the most impressive part of its team as the Razorbacks head to Stillwater this weekend for a game against Oklahoma State at 11 a.m. Saturday in Boone Pickens Stadium. OSU will match that group with an uber-experienced offensive line, a unit that will try to open lanes for Ollie Gordon and keep Alan Bowman upright. That battle in the trenches could be the matchup within the matchup that decides this game.
As good an FCS team as South Dakota State is, the Jackrabbits aren’t near as big on the defensive front. SDSU defensive tackles Jarod DePriest and Max Boloun are each listed at 285 pounds. Arkansas DTs Eric Gregory and Cameron Ball are listed at 320 and 324, respectively.
On top of that size in the middle, the Razorbacks D-line features a projected first round NFL Draft pick in defensive end Landon Jackson, who is listed at 6-foot-7, 280 pounds.
Jackson is the most prominent example of how highly touted this group is considered. Among those four starters from Arkansas’ season-opening 70-0 win against Arkansas-Pine Bluff, three were considered four-star prospects by at least one of the major recruiting services. All were considered top 500 recruits in their respective classes.
Jackson was a classmate of OSU linebacker Nick Martin while the two were high schoolers at Pleasant Grove in Texarkana, Texas. Jackson initially went to LSU out of high school over offers from Alabama, Ohio State, Oregon and others. What a ridiculous defense the Pleasant Grove Hawks must’ve had that season.
“I know their nose guards are very heavy,” OSU left tackle Dalton Cooper said. “Their nose guards, D tackles, they’re 320, 330, so they’re gonna be heavier-set guys. These last guys we played, they were like 280, 275. Not gonna say they were like easy to block, but they definitely aren’t gonna be as challenging as these Arkansas guys.
“Then Landon Jackson, the D end, No. 40, he’s just a player. He’s projected first-round pick — whatever that is. We gotta treat them like we do every week. Just attack the day, don’t get too far ahead in our minds and just stay humble and grounded in what we do.”
So, that’s the Arkansas side of the tale of the tape. On OSU’s side, the Cowboys start five sixth-year seniors along the offensive line. On top of that, the Cowboys regularly worked in Arizona State transfer Isaia Glass on Saturday to give Cooper some breathers. The unit kept Bowman, OSU’s quarterback, clean as a Buc-ee’s bathroom on Saturday, as Bowman wasn’t sacked and was hurried only three times.
OSU’s offensive line did, though, have a bit of a harder time run blocking. The Cowboys ran for 3.8 yards per carry. Gordon, the reigning Doak Walker winner, still had his numbers, going for 126 yards and three touchdowns, but he still had to work for it. Gordon led the nation in broken tackles in Week 1, according to PFF.
If the Cowboys want to be the team many orange-clad supporters think they can be, a good performance from OSU’s offensive line against a stout Arkansas front four will go a long way in proving that the Pokes’ College Football Playoff aspirations are possible.
“Our double teams, our combo blocks, weren’t as solid as they could’ve been (against South Dakota State),” Cooper said. “Either we were falling off early or staying on too long and not picking up the backer flowing over. We just gotta be better with that. We know what we need to do, and that’s all we’re doing this week is to fix that so we can get ready for this Arkansas game.”
Arkansas
$6.2 million college football coach ‘in the mix’ for Arkansas HC job
Arkansas dismissed Sam Pittman after a 2-3 start to the college football season, capped by a 56-13 home loss to Notre Dame.
“I feel a change is necessary to put our student-athletes and program in the best position to be successful,” said athletic director Hunter Yurachek in a statement. “The goal for our football program is to be highly competitive within the Southeastern Conference and compete for a national championship.”
Offensive coordinator Bobby Petrino was installed as interim while beginning a national search.
Kane Wommack, currently Alabama’s defensive coordinator and a former South Alabama head coach, has been publicly linked to the candidates for Arkansas’ vacancy.
On Tuesday, On3 insider Pete Nakos took it further, listing Wommack as “in the mix” for Arkansas among nine Power Conference openings, suggesting there’s a strong chance he could be hired.
Wommack, 38, rose through the college ranks after playing at Arkansas and Southern Miss.
He held stops as a graduate assistant at Jacksonville State (2011) and Ole Miss (2012-13), coordinator roles at Eastern Illinois (2014-15) and South Alabama (2016-17), and a defensive coordinator stint at Indiana (2019-20), before his head-coaching tenure at South Alabama (2021-2023).
His head-coaching record at South Alabama was 22-16 with a bowl record of 1–1; the 2022 Jags went 10–3, a program high, and won the Sun Belt West Division championship.
He was hired as Alabama’s defensive coordinator beginning in 2024, and has since been the architect being the Tide’s top-10 scoring defense (16.2 points allowed per game).
Wommack’s resume checks several boxes Arkansas would value: SEC experience, recent success turning around South Alabama (10-win season), a defensive pedigree that could shore up Arkansas’ struggles, and recruiting ties in the Southeast.
Any Arkansas offer would likely be a significant raise and include a buyout for Alabama.
Insiders covering the Arkansas search have signaled that a resolution could come within days as the school moves to finalize a hire before the early signing period and bowl-season recruiting windows.
Read More at College Football HQ
Arkansas
Campaign finance reports detail special primary election candidates for Arkansas House and Senate fundraising | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Michael R. Wickline
Mike Wickline covers state politics, and he has covered the state Legislature for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette since November 2000. He previously spent several years covering the Idaho Legislature for the Lewiston Morning Tribune.
Arkansas
Arkansans can gobble up savings with Thanksgiving meals costing 20% less than last year
With Thanksgiving just around the corner, many Arkansans are asking the question: How much will my Thanksgiving dinner cost?
According to new data from the Arkansas Farm Bureau, your Thanksgiving meal may cost less than it did in 2024.
The Farm Bureau released its findings from its annual Thanksgiving Dinner Survey, and it found that meal prices across the board are lower than it has been since before the COVID-19 Pandemic.
“It’s about a 20% drop from last year. I think we said it was around $71 last year and $56 this year,” Director of Commodity Economics with the Arkansas Farm Bureau, Tyler Oxner, said.
According to the survey, the total average cost of a Thanksgiving meal for a family of 10 in 2025 is $56.77, which is $5.68 a person. In 2024, the total cost was $71.29, which is $7.13 a person. The pricing decrease is also evident across various items.
“The protein is what we’re seeing the biggest decrease in. We got a 7% decrease in turkeys year over year. About a third of the price of last year’s ham,” states Oxner.
A 16-pound turkey cost $15.13, or $0.94 per pound. In 2025, that same turkey may cost $14.10 and .88 a pound.
The survey also reports that a 4-pound ham cost Arkansans $21 last year. Now it’s costing $14.07, a 34% decrease.
Several classic Thanksgiving sides have also seen a decline in average cost:
- -3-pound bag of Sweet Potatoes from $3.03 to $2.40 (21% decrease)
- -5-pound bag of Russet Potatoes from $2.97 to $2.47 (17% decrease)
- -12-ounce package of Fresh Cranberries from $1.83 to $1.43 (22% decrease)
- -16-ounce package of Frozen Green Peas from $1.44 to $1.02 (29% decrease)
- -16-ounce package of Frozen Green Beans from $1.77 to $1.57 (11% decrease)
- -9-inch Frozen Pie Shells from $3.29 to $1.94 (41% decrease)
- -14-ounce package of Cube Stuffing, Herb Seasoning from $3.99 to $2.61 (35% decrease)
- -12-count package of Dinner Rolls from $4.20 to $1.68 (60% decrease)
- -30-ounce can of Pumpkin Pie Mix from $4.20 to $3.98 (5% decrease)
- -1 gallon of Whole Milk from $4.23 to $3.64 (14% decrease)
Some products did not see the same declines. The price of 1 pound of fresh carrots increased by 12%, jumping from $1.04 to $1.16. The price of 1 bunch of fresh celery jumped up by 66%, from $1.05 to $1.74. A 1/2-pint carton of whipping cream also soared by 54%, increasing from $1.92 to $2.96.
Of course, this all depends on where you shop.
“You’re going to see, depending on what grocery store you go to, what promotional deals they have going on at those stores,” says Oxner.
“Arkansas is normally cheaper, and the South in general is normally cheaper than the rest of the United States,” he adds.
These prices not only depend on what retailer you shop at, but what county you shop in.
The survey reports that prices on Thanksgiving meals range from $50.89 in Boone County to $68.36 in Garland County. All of the other counties that the Farm Bureau surveyed came in under $60:
- -Hempstead County: $51.27
- -Faulkner County: $53.58
- -Craighead County: $55.89
- -Sevier County: $56.34
- -Sharp County: $57.48
- -Carroll County: $58.46
- -Lonoke County: $58.54
Oxner credits these pricing trends to one group.
“Arkansas families may see lower prices for their traditional Thanksgiving meal, and they just need to know that this is the work of those Arkansas farmers out there that are working tirelessly to provide sustainable food.”
Oxner says that these prices have the potential to continue to decline in the coming years, but that all depends on various factors, such as changing transportation and production costs, as well as if the Avian Influenza becomes a problem again in Arkansas like it was in 2024.
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