Arkansas Defensive Rebuild Leaves One Position Group Fans Can Finally Trust

Can Arkansas' defense successfully rebuild under new leadership and substantial roster changes to overcome last season's woes?

Ron Roberts didn’t walk into an easy fix when he took over Arkansas’ defense this offseason. He inherited a unit that had been getting pushed around for a long time, and the numbers told the story: the Razorbacks gave up more than 425 yards and 33 points per game, marks that checked in at No. 122 and No. 129 nationally and stood as the worst in the SEC.

That’s the backdrop for a defense that looks almost completely remade on paper. Arkansas brought in more than 40 transfer additions and installed a new scheme, but the real question heading into fall camp is simpler: how much confidence should there be in each position group right now?

The safest place to start is the secondary, though even that comes with caution. Arkansas’ cornerbacks have taken their lumps in recent seasons, and the memory of Ole Miss receiver Jordan Watkins torching the Hogs in 2024 is hard to ignore.

Watkins entered that game with just 295 yards and two touchdowns on the season, then ripped off eight catches for 254 yards and five touchdowns. That kind of night was part of a larger pattern during the past two seasons.

This time around, Ryan Silverfield’s financial commitment gave the staff room to build out the defensive assistant group, and the additions of Deron Wilson, Eddie Hicks and CJ Wiliford were aimed at getting the secondary back on track. Tulane transfer Jahiem "Joker" Johnson and former Maryland standout La'Khi Roland are expected to start on the outside, and both bring a track record of forcing turnovers and challenging receivers at the line.

At STAR, North Carolina transfer Khmori House is the expected answer in a role Roberts believes fits him perfectly. Behind that projected starting group, Arkansas has options with prior starting experience in Shelton Lewis (Clemson), Braydon Lee (Maryland) and Carter Stoutmire (Colorado). DJ Hairston is another name to watch after working with the two-deep this spring and showing playmaking ability as a freshman at Hinds Community College in 2025.

Up front, Silverfield liked what he saw from the pass rush this spring, but the Razorbacks still need more help around senior Quincy Rhodes. Rhodes is the headliner, and for good reason: he came back for his senior year after being viewed as a potential first-round pick this spring. The problem is depth, where Arkansas is leaning on younger pieces such as redshirt freshmen Xadavien Sims, Caleb Bell and Trajen Odom.

Roberts’ move to more of a 3-4 base should open the door for more variety in pressure looks off the edge, and that makes J’Lynn Allen an especially interesting addition. The North Little Rock native put together a strong season at Hutchison Community College as a redshirt freshman, finishing with 31 tackles, 14 tackles for loss, 10 sacks, two forced fumbles and two pass breakups in 2025. At 6-foot-7 and 245 pounds, he gives Arkansas a different kind of body on the edge, and if he can help early, the ceiling of the pass rush rises with him.

The linebacker group is built around a familiar name in a bigger role. Junior Bradley Shaw is set to run the show at the second level after spending the last two seasons behind Xavian Sorey. He dropped to 227 pounds to become a more versatile MIKE, and that should help him move better without giving up the physical edge that makes him effective.

Arkansas also added several portal linebackers with upside. Ja'Quavion Smith, a Howard (FCS) transfer, picked the Razorbacks over Auburn and brings speed, range and a willingness to strike in the run game.

Phoenix Jackson is another swing worth taking after breaking out at Fresno State before injuries derailed things at Baylor last season. West Virginia transfer Ben Bogle also arrives with strong credentials after playing at an All-American level at Southern Illinois (FCS), and he could work his way into the rotation after a solid spring.

At JACK, Charlie Collins and Steven Soles give Arkansas some legitimate pass-rush pieces. If those two settle into consistent roles, the Razorbacks could have something that looks more complete across all three levels.

The back end still leans heavily on veteran leadership. Miguel Mitchell has been around the block with stops at Florida and Arkansas, and he closed the 2025 season with a 67.0 pass coverage grade, according to Pro Football Focus.

Christian Harrison brings even more credibility. Over four college seasons, he has allowed just one touchdown on 577 career coverage snaps, also according to Pro Football Focus, and coaches have praised his communication and instincts throughout spring practice.

There’s depth behind them, too, though it comes with the usual transfer-and-development mix that can bring growing pains. Kyeaure Magloire, Nsongbeh Ginyui, John Howse IV, Ian Williams, LaMarcus Hicks and true freshman Tay Lockett are all in the mix for snaps.

The defensive line has a similar feel: promising pieces, but not a finished product yet. Hunter Osborne comes over from Virginia and is viewed as a steadying presence for a young group that includes Danny Beale, Anthony Kennedy, Carlon Jones, Reginald Vaughn and others. David Oke, if healthy, adds versatility as a defender who can rush the passer and chase plays down in the backfield with underrated lateral speed for a nearly 300-pound player.

Beale is the newcomer drawing the most buzz. Coaches have been high on him all offseason and believe he could become a rare freshman contributor on the interior in the SEC. His willingness to learn the scheme, along with his technique, twitch and quickness, has stood out.

Arkansas has rebuilt the defense with volume, experience and a new system. The pieces are there. The real test now is whether they can come together fast enough to turn a unit that was a liability into one that can hold up in the SEC.

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Arkansas is still sorting out its wide receiver pecking order heading into the new season, and the competition has not narrowed to one obvious favorite. Chris Marshall, the transfer with stops at Boise State and Texas A&M, is in the mix, and so are returning options CJ Brown, Donovan Faupel, Ismael Cisse, Jamari Hawkins and Courtney Crutchfield as the Razorbacks try to identify who can become the go-to target.

Brown is the familiar name worth watching because he already knows what SEC football looks like and has shown he can handle meaningful snaps in this offense. With a new coaching staff in place and no settled WR1 yet, his experience gives him a real opening, but Arkansas still has to decide whether that steadiness is enough to separate him from a crowded room before the season arrives. [Read more 🡒]

La'Khi Roland Could Decide Arkansas' Secondary Rebuild

Arkansas has spent the offseason trying to remake a pass defense that fell short a year ago, and La'Khi Roland looks like one of the more important pieces in that effort. The former Maryland defensive back arrives with the kind of size and athletic profile coaches want at corner, and the Razorbacks believe his ability to make plays on the ball can help change the tone of a secondary that needs both technical refinement and a stronger identity.

Roland is expected to be part of the answer starting in 2026, when Arkansas hopes the rebuild has taken hold and the back end looks far more stable. He should have a chance to line up opposite Tulane transfer Jahiem Johnson, giving the Razorbacks a potentially reshaped cornerback pairing, but the bigger question is whether Roland can be the kind of difference-maker who helps turn a lingering weakness into a strength. [Read more 🡒]