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Red Wolves hope to keep improving | Arkansas Democrat Gazette

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Red Wolves hope to keep improving | Arkansas Democrat Gazette


There is a quiet confidence surrounding the Arkansas State University football program as it prepares to embark on the 2024 season.

Coach Butch Jones, quarterback Jaylen Raynor and linebacker Charles Willekes were in New Orleans on Wednesday representing Arkansas State at the 2024 Sun Belt media days and talked about the upcoming season.

“We probably have the most competitive roster we’ve had to date,” Jones said during his news conference on Wednesday. “We’re still not completely balanced at all nine position groups, but we continue to make great improvements in the nine position areas. Our leadership is much more distributed.”

Coming off a 6-6 record in the 2023 season that saw the Red Wolves make their first bowl game appearance (Camellia Bowl) since 2019, the team enters Year 4 of the Butch Jones era with eight returning starters earning preseason All-Sun Belt honors. Fifteen starters overall are expected to return to the lineup, including four of the five members of the offensive line.

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Offensive linemen Makilan Thomas and Jacob Bayer were both placed on the first-team, along with defensive lineman Nate Martey. Raynor, Willekes, running back Ja’Quez Cross and wide receivers Corey Rucker and Courtney Jackson were all named to the second-team.

Arkansas State was selected to finish fourth in the Sun Belt West Division in the preseason coaches poll, but the team is confident it can exceed those expectations with the wealth of talent returning, combined with a highly touted recruiting class.

Raynor had a breakout year in 2023 as a true freshman, throwing for 2,543 yards and 17 touchdowns compared to 7 interceptions. Raynor made his debut against Stony Brook in the fourth game last season and became the first true freshman to start at quarterback for Arkansas State since 2001 the next week against Southern Miss.

He went 11 of 21 passing with 3 touchdowns and an interception while rushing for 97 yards and 2 touchdowns on 17 attempts in his first start. The next week at UMass, Raynor tied the program record with six passing touchdowns.

“Looking back on last year, seeing all the things I can fix and how much better I can be, it gets me so excited,” Raynor said. “Just being able to put the ball in play, take what the defense gives me, not always trying to take the top off the defense … just get the playmakers the ball, take the stress off my O-line to give them confidence and really just score some touchdowns.”

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While optimism is high, the Red Wolves will be up against a difficult schedule as they try to follow up on and continue their improvement in the 2023 season. Outside of the challenge of Sun Belt Conference play, Arkansas State will travel to take on the defending national champion Michigan Wolverines on Sept. 14.

“You can’t put too much emphasis on any individual game,” said Willekes, who started his career at Michigan State and made his college debut on special teams against Michigan in 2019. “As Coach Jones said, I’m also from Michigan, so that’ll be a cool experience, but you can’t take anything other than just the individual game week-to-week.”

One week later, the team will take on another Power 4 opponent on the road in Iowa State.

“If you look at our entire schedule, it’s a great challenge,” Jones said. “You are a byproduct of your experiences. That’s what makes you who you are. We have to be able to take the three years of what we’ve experienced and (figure out) how can we apply it moving forward into this season and learn from it.”

One of those experiences was the 73-0 loss Arkansas State suffered at Oklahoma in the first contest of the 2023 season. Jones believes the humiliation of that loss was a learning experience and will be motivation for his players to perform better against the stiff competition his Red Wolves will be up against this upcoming season.

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“I knew going into the season last year that the University of Oklahoma was going to be an extremely talented football team,” Jones said. “We experienced after the first game that they were a really good football team, and to be honest with you, these (players) will tell you we got embarrassed. As the season progressed, you could see our culture get stronger and stronger.”

Practices begin for Arkansas State on July 31 with several intrasquad scrimmages expected to be included in the lead up to regular season. The Red Wolves open the season on Aug. 31 when they welcome in-state rival Central Arkansas, which is ranked 11th nationally in the Hero Sports FCS Preseason Top 25, to Jonesboro.

“Last year our players were finally able to experience and finally able to really understand and feel what winning football looks like,” Jones said. “We still have 42 newcomers under scholarship so you can’t assume anything.

“For our entire team the message has been this: Even with our youthfulness, we just can’t be a year older, we have to be a year better as we continue to build this program.”

    Jaylen Raynor
 
 
  photo  Charles Willekes
 
 



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Clintons resigned, resolved against MAGA exploitation | Arkansas Democrat Gazette

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Clintons resigned, resolved against MAGA exploitation | Arkansas Democrat Gazette


John Brummett

jbrummett@arkansasonline.com

John Brummett’s career in news began when he was in high school, as a part-time reporter for the Arkansas Democrat. He moved to the Arkansas Gazette in 1977.

He wrote a political column for the Gazette from 1986 to 1990. He was an editor for the Arkansas Times from 1990 to 1992.

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In 1994, his book, “High Wire: From the Back Roads to the Beltway, the Education of Bill Clinton,” was published by Hyperion of New York City. He became a columnist with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette in 1994. In 2000, he signed a deal with Donrey Media Group, now known as Stephens Media, and wrote for them for 11 years.

He rejoined Democrat-Gazette as a columnist on Oct. 24, 2011.



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Arkansas Sports History Quiz: How big of a Hogs fan are you?

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Arkansas Sports History Quiz: How big of a Hogs fan are you?


With the snow and ice still sticking around and many schools and jobs announcing tomorrow will be a day off also, we decided to help everyone pass the time while still getting the kids a valuable education by putting together a Razorbacks sports quiz.

Only super fans will ace the whole thing, but for most, it will be a fun trip down memory lane. Let’s see how many you legitimately get right.

Which Arkansas Razorback quarterback has the record for most passing yards in a game?

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Tyler Wilson, 510 yards vs. Texas A&M

Who owns the record for most baskets made in a game for the Razorbacks?

Dean Tolson, 20, vs. Texas A&M, 1974
He is also No. 2 with 17 against Rice a month earlier

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Which Arkansas Razorback running back has the most 100-yard rushing games?

Both Alex Collins and Darren McFadden lead the way with 10. Collins most recently did it in 2015 and McFadden in 2007.

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Which Razorbacks basketball team scored the most points per game?

Nolan Richardson’s 1990 team put up 99.6 points per game. This team featured Todd Day, Lee Mayberry and Oliver Miller and was ranked No. 2 before losing to Kansas in the Elite 8.

Out of the 16 SEC teams, how many do the Hogs have a winning record over and can you name the teams?

Five
Ole Miss 37-34-1
Mississippi State 19-16-1
South Carolina 14-10
Texas A&M 42-36-3
Vanderbilt 7-3

Who holds the record for most points in a basketball game for Arkansas and for how much?

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Rotnei Clarke, 51, 2009 vs. Alcorn State

Against which SEC team does Arkansas have the worst winning percentage in football?

There are numerous teams the Hogs have only beaten 25% of the time or less, but Alabama holds the highest win percentage with the Razorbacks only winning 20.6% of the time, due in large part to the Nick Saban era.

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Which Arkansas baseball player was picked highest of all time in the Major League Draft?

Jeff King went No. 1 overall in the 1986 draft to the Pittsburgh Pirates. Heston Kjerstad narrowly missed the honor when he went No. 2 overall in 2020 to the Baltimore Orioles.

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Which SEC team has beaten Arkansas football the most times?

Texas has sent the Hogs home with a loss 55 times.

Name the only coach in Arkansas Razorbacks history to have an outright national championship in a major sport.

Nolan Richardson, basketball, 1994
Frank Broyles claims the only other national championship in football, but it is highly disputed with Alabama being the commonly recognized champion for that year and the only champion acknowledged in sports almanacs. Because of this, rules were changed the following year to include bowl games as part of consideration for the national title because the Football Writers Association of America decided to break with tradition and name Arkansas its champion after Alabama lost its bowl game to Texas even though bowl games were only to be considered exhibitions at the time.

What basketball player averaged the most points per game for Arkansas?

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Martin Terry, 28.27 in 1973. He is also No. 2 with 24.35 in 1972. 

Which football coach has the highest winning percentage in Arkansas football history?

Ken Hatfield, 76%, 55-17-1, 1984-1989

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What are the most points the Razorbacks have ever scored in a basketball game? 

166 vs. U.S. International in 1988. The Hogs held on to win 166-101 in a shootout.

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Which football coach has the lowest winning percentage in Arkansas football history?

Chad Morris, 18.2%, 4-18, 2018-19

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Well, how did you do? Be honest?

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Head over to one of our social media pages and let us know how you did. Which answers surprised you?

Hogs Feed:



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Arkansas pays price for political pressure at universities | Arkansas Democrat Gazette

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Arkansas pays price for political pressure at universities | Arkansas Democrat Gazette


Arkansas has been my home for nearly 50 years–since my marriage, my education, and my first steps into public service.

I moved here to work on a political campaign and to attend the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences as a nurse practitioner–part of the University of Arkansas system. I have a deep personal investment in both our public institutions and their integrity.

Recent events at the University of Arkansas School of Law should concern every Arkansan, regardless of party.

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The recent abuses of political influence are about more than one person or one position. They are about whether our public universities can operate based on merit and mission or whether political pressure will override sound judgment and institutional independence.

To be fair, university leaders were placed in an untenable position–forced to weigh the future of funding, programs, jobs, and students under political threat. No educator or administrator should ever be put in a position to have to make that choice.

The failure here is not of individuals trying to protect our institutions–it is of a system that allows political coercion to exist at all.

When elected officials interfere with university hiring, it sends a chilling message to faculty, students, and researchers across the country that Arkansas is not a place where academic freedom and professional integrity are protected. This overreach harms recruitment. It harms innovation. And ultimately, it harms our state’s future.

If we want Arkansas to compete nationally–in education, research, business, and workforce development–we must protect the independence of our public institutions. Great universities thrive on open inquiry, diverse viewpoints, and freedom from political intimidation. These values are not partisan. They are foundational.

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This moment calls not for finger-pointing, but for constructive reform.

We need ethics policies that prevent abuses of power, protect state employees from coercion or retaliation, end patronage and insider favoritism, reinforce constitutional rights, and guarantee transparency when political pressure is applied.

These reforms are not radical. They are reasonable safeguards–the kind that strong, well-governed states already use to protect their institutions and their people.

Arkansans deserve a government that works for the public good–not political advantage. We deserve universities that can pursue excellence without fear. And we deserve leadership that values integrity over influence.

This is not about left versus right. It is about right versus wrong.

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Arkansas has always been strongest when we invest in people, protect fairness, and lead with integrity.

Are we willing to do what’s right to keep Arkansas strong?


Denise Garner of Fayetteville is a retired nurse practitioner, small-business owner, nonprofit founder, state representative, and longtime Arkansas resident.



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