Arkansas football is up to two commitments in the 2025 class, as Marcus Wimberly announced his pledge Saturday afternoon.
The Bauxite safety revealed his decision during the Razorbacks’ big recruiting weekend, which was dubbed the Hogwild Hangout and featured numerous prospects across several classes who made their way to Fayetteville.
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It is still relatively early in Wimberly’s recruitment and he’s still unrated by the major recruiting services, but Michigan extended a scholarship shortly after Arkansas. His other offers were from Memphis, Sam Houston State, UT-Martin and UAPB.
Both of Arkansas’ commits in the Class of 2025 so far are in-state recruits who grew up dreaming of playing for the Razorbacks, with Central Arkansas Christian quarterback Grayson Wilson being the first back in April.
“Growing up being a fan of them, I felt a little emotional, but I didn’t want to let it out right there,” Wimberly told Hogville after receiving his offer at a camp on June 17. “When I got to the car, tears of joy just bailed out of me.”
Wimberly didn’t commit on the spot, though. Instead, just like Wilson, he waited exactly six weeks before officially announcing he was staying home to play for Arkansas.
With two players in the fold, the Razorbacks have more 2025 commits than all but two SEC teams — Georgia (6) and Alabama (5). LSU and Vanderbilt also have two, while Auburn and Tennessee have just one. (Oklahoma, which will also be in the conference by then, has four while Texas has one.)
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Marcus Wimberly at Bauxite
As you might expect for an SEC-caliber athlete in a small town, Marcus Wimberly plays on both sides of the ball at Bauxite, which is a Class 4A school near Bryant and Benton.
Offensively, he was primarily a wide receiver for the Miners, but an injury to a teammate forced him to take over quarterback duties late in the season. He racked up more than 1,500 yards of offense as a sophomore.
On the other side of the ball, Wimberly played safety and notched three interceptions, two of which he returned for touchdowns — including a 95-yard return.
Those stats don’t fully illustrate his athleticism, though. He’s been clocked as fast as 4.37 seconds in the 40-yard dash, but ran it in 4.52 seconds — and notched a 38-inch vertical and 10-foot, 2-inch broad jump — at an Arkansas camp last month.
That camp performance is what earned Wimberly a scholarship from the Razorbacks — just a few months after a pair of Division II schools, Harding and Ouachita Baptist, gave him his first two offers.
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It wasn’t until May 11 that he got his first Division I offer and it was from an FCS school, UAPB. Sam Houston State, UT-Martin and Memphis followed before he burst onto the scene with Arkansas and Michigan.
That kind of player doesn’t come through Bauxite often. In fact, the last FBS scholarship signee to come from the school — according to Best of Arkansas Sports’ database — was Dan Dawson, an athlete in the 1997 class. He played linebacker at Rice.
In a feature on the UA website in 2016, which compiled every player — walk-on and scholarship alike — for the Razorbacks since 1963, there were none from Bauxite.
There’s a chance that the last Arkansas football player from Bauxite was Leon “Muscles” Campbell, who starred for the Razorbacks from 1946-49 before becoming the 15th overall pick in the 1950 NFL Draft.
Before that, George Cole was an All-SWC quarterback for the Razorbacks in 1927. He went on to be a longtime assistant coach for Arkansas football, even serving as the head coach in 1942, before eventually becoming the athletics director from 1970-73. The field at Baum-Walker Stadium is still named after him.
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Praise for Wimberly from Harbaugh
The Wolverines were particularly high on Marcus Wimberly.
According to Scorebook Live, Michigan safeties coach Jay Harbaugh told Bauxite head coach Caleb Perry that he was one of the best safeties in the country for the 2025 – if not *the* best – and that’s out of a group of 55 safeties they’re evaluating in the class.
Harbaugh, who is also the Wolverines’ special teams coordinator, is the son of Michigan football coach Jim Harbaugh. Since taking over the program in 2015, Harbaugh has extended a few offers in the Natural State.
Most notably, Michigan was one of the earliest schools to offer Greenwood quarterback Kane Archer, doing so when he was just 13 years old and a rising eighth grader.
In-State Arkansas Recruiting Efforts in 2025
The Razorbacks are still trying to finish strong with their 2024 class, which is currently ranked 16th nationally by 247Sports. Marcus Wimberly’s commitment shows they’re also already getting a jump on 2025.
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Starting the class with a pair of in-state recruits is also an encouraging sign for Arkansas football, which is trying to fortify its borders even better than it has in the current cycle.
While they’ve landed five homegrown talents — Benton running back Braylen Russell, Little Rock Mills defensive end Charleston Collins, Pine Bluff wide receiver Courtney Crutchfield, Bentonville wide receiver CJ Brown and Fort Smith Southside offensive lineman Kobe Branham — in 2024, they’ve also seen some head to SEC rivals.
Little Rock Christian quarterback Walker White is committed to Auburn and Valley View linebacker Brian Huff is committed to Missouri. It also seems like Harding Academy linebacker Wyatt Simmons and Bryant defensive end TJ Lindsey (now at IMG Academy) are heading elsewhere despite holding Arkansas offers.
That would make the Razorbacks 5 for 9 on in-state prospects they actively pursued, which doesn’t include several others who have already committed to or been offers by other Power Five programs.
The 2025 crop of in-state recruits may not be quite as deep and it remains to be seen how the top-end talent compares to 2024, but Arkansas has already extended seven offers within its borders.
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In addition to Wimberly and Central Arkansas Christian quarterback Grayson Wilson, the Razorbacks have also offered Joe T. Robinson athlete Quentin Murphy, Little Rock Parkview safety Omarion Robinson, Marion offensive lineman Carius Curne, North Little Rock safety Keytrone Green and Warren wide receiver Antonio Jordan.
Murphy plays quarterback and will likely head elsewhere with Wilson already on board at Arkansas. In fact, he actually announced a commitment to Ole Miss last month, but was told the Rebels weren’t ready to accept a commitment from a 2025 quarterback yet. Robinson is a top-100 recruit with numerous Power Five offers, while Curne is starting to explode with four SEC offers in the past two months, with Georgia being the latest.
Of course, Arkansas football is also after several top recruits from outside the state, as well.
Included among Saturday’s visitors for the Hogwild Hangout was defensive end Lance Jackson, the younger brother of current Arkansas defensive end Landon Jackson. He’s a top-200 prospect from Pleasant Grove High in Texarkana, Texas, who has offers from the likes of Alabama, Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Texas and many others.
The Razorbacks also welcomed a few other touted recruits from bordering states, including defensive end Alexander Shieldnight from Oklahoma, offensive lineman Devin Harper from Louisiana and running back Markeylin Batton from Texas.
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Shieldnight goes to Wagoner High in the Sooner State and already has offers from the two top in-state programs, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State.
Harper stands 6-foot-5, 295 pounds and attends Captain Shreve High School in Shreveport, La., where he’s earned a four-star rating and offers from the likes of Alabama, Georgia, LSU, Texas and several others.
Batton isn’t as heralded as those two, but he actually picked up an offer from Arkansas during the Hogwild Hangout. It’s his second Power Five offer, with Texas Tech being his first.
He hasn’t posted about it on social media yet, but Hogville’s Otis Kirk reported that four-star linebacker Elijah Melendez would make the trip from Florida for the event, too. Playing for Osceola High in Kissimmee, Fla., he has offers from Alabama, Georgia, LSU and many others.
Check out some highlight of 2025 Arkansas football commit Marcus Wimberly:
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More coverage of Arkansas football and Arkansas recruiting from BoAS…
On a bitter afternoon in Kansas City, Missouri, the No. 19 Arkansas Razorbacks (5-2) were defeated by the Illinois Fighting Illini (6-1), 90-77, inside the T-Mobile Center.
Right out of the gates, Arkansas’ lack of physicality and focus was noticable. Not only did that result in 11 total turnovers throughout the contest, but the Razorbacks couldn’t stop the Illini from finishing white-hot from distance (15-of-31 from three), either.
Leading the Hogs was forward Adou Thiero, who racked up 26 points, six rebounds, an assist and a steal. 12 of his points came from the charity stripe, where he shot 21 attempts in total.
Below are social media reactions from fans and media throughout the Hoop Hogs’ non-conference loss:
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. -— If Taylen Green and Luke Hasz needed more motivation going into his first Battle Line Rivalry game this Saturday, then being ticked off at Missouri coach Eli Drinkwitz for blatantly butchering their names should do it.
Green’s name isn’t hard to pronounce given it sounds just like it looks Tay-Len, not Tal-On as Drinkwitz said. It’s obvious that Missouri’s coach knows exactly what he’s doing given his antics over the previous four seasons that get under other SEC fanbase’s and coaches skin.
The Boise State transfer has shown himself to be a playmaker when he can take care of the ball. Green has recorded 3,052 yards of total offense and 20 touchdowns this season and could make a statement with a clean performance and victory at Missouri.
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Not seen in the short clip is a few seconds later Drinkwitz saying Luke Hasz’ name as “Halls” which is totally off and a pronunciation most haven’t heard. It’s the small things like this which Missouri’s coach is allowed to get away with by most conference members.
Nearly 20 years ago, former LSU coach Les Miles had an infamous press conference as he was being courted by Michigan to be its next coach in 2007. The Tigers were No. 1 in the nation with a 10-1 record overall going up against 7-4 Arkansas.
As he was being asked about the Michigan noise, Miles assured media and fans that he was focused as LSU’s head coach and playing its rival “Ar-Kansas” that Black Friday.
Arkansas coach Houston Nutt used the soundbite above as motivation for his team that day as the Razorbacks pulled out a memorable 50-48 triple overtime victory which was thought to end LSU’s title hopes. Two-time Heisman runner up Darren McFadden had one of his finest performances in one of the Hogs’ greatest wins in program history with 206 yards rushing and four total touchdowns.
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Immediately after the game, Nutt and McFadden met with CBS sideline reporter Tracy Wolfson to celebrate their monumental upset. The Razorbacks’ coach embraced his star running back and proclaimed him as the best player in the country. The proud Little Rock native responded with a correction of Miles stating “It ain’t Ar-Kansas, it’s Arkansas, baby!”
For the sake of talking about one of the most memorable Arkansas games of all-time, it would be shameful to not at least include highlights of McFadden’s epic performance. That game ended an era as Nutt resigned and moved onto Ole Miss where he spent his next four seasons before becoming an analyst for CBS Sports.
The Tigers ended up winning the SEC Championship with several other teams ranked ahead losing to regain a spot in the national title game, ultimately winning it. On that fateful day, it was all about the Razorbacks who brought the wood and beat LSU without doubt similar to what Green could do in response to Drinkwitz.
“That’s how you pronounce it. It ain’t Ta-Lon or Halls, it’s Taylen and Hasz, baby.”
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Arkansas Razorbacks (5-1) vs. Illinois Fighting Illini (5-1)
Kansas City, Missouri; Thursday, 4 p.m. EST
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BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Fighting Illini -2.5; over/under is 154
BOTTOM LINE: Illinois plays No. 19 Arkansas in Kansas City, Missouri.
The Fighting Illini are 5-1 in non-conference play. Illinois leads the Big Ten in rebounding, averaging 46.3 boards. Tomislav Ivisic leads the Fighting Illini with 8.7 rebounds.
The Razorbacks are 5-1 in non-conference play. Arkansas averages 12.5 turnovers per game and is 4-0 when turning the ball over less than opponents.
Illinois scores 89.0 points, 29.8 more per game than the 59.2 Arkansas allows. Arkansas averages 8.3 made 3-pointers per game this season, 2.8 more made shots on average than the 5.5 per game Illinois gives up.
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TOP PERFORMERS: Will Riley is scoring 17.2 points per game and averaging 5.3 rebounds for the Fighting Illini.
Boogie Fland is shooting 48.1% from beyond the arc with 2.2 made 3-pointers per game for the Razorbacks, while averaging 17.2 points, 5.5 assists and 2.2 steals.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.