Calipari Sounds Sure About Arkansas Youth But Razorback Fans Know The Stakes

Despite their youth, Coach John Calipari is confident that Arkansas' exceptional recruiting class and strategic veteran leadership can make the Razorbacks a formidable force this season.

John Calipari isn’t backing away from the formula that built his career, even if the rest of college basketball has drifted toward older rosters.

At Arkansas, he’s leaning right into youth.

“We’re good enough, we’re old enough. How 'bout that statement?” Calipari said during a recent summer workout via Hogs Plus.

That line fits the way he’s always operated. Calipari has made a Hall of Fame run with freshmen, won a national title with a roster built mostly around them and piled up 65 NBA Draft picks along the way, second all-time. He’s also won more than 900 games doing it his way, and the Razorbacks’ third-year coach doesn’t sound interested in changing now.

Arkansas signed the consensus No. 1 high school recruiting class in the 2026 cycle, headlined by No. 2 overall player Jordan Smith, Jr. and fellow 5-stars JJ Andrews, Abdou Toure and Miikka Muurinen. With that group in the mix, Calipari believes he has a team that can play his style and grow fast.

The roster is expected to be one of the youngest in the country, if not the youngest, with an average age of 18 years and seven months. Calipari is fine with that. He’s said more than once that his mission is to help young players get to the NBA, and this group already has a core forming through freshmen, returnees and transfers working through offseason chemistry.

There is one notable absence from the mix right now. Sophomore small forward Isaiah Sealy injured his knee last month, and Calipari said the injury has cut into what the staff can do in practice.

“With Isaiah being out, I felt so bad for him,” Calipari said. “He made so many strides but this is an athletic, competitive team.

This is one of those teams you try to do more drills, go five-on-five, let them compete. The hair on their neck....

I'm liking the group.”

Even with the youth, Arkansas does have some experience around the edges. Billy Richmond III is back after considering staying in the 2026 NBA Draft, and his emergence as a two-way player last season gives Calipari a valuable piece.

Inside, Furman transfer center Cooper Bowser adds size and production at 6-foot-11 and 235 pounds. He was a scorer, rebounder and shot blocker, and even with time missed because of a toe injury, he averaged over 16 points and six rebounds while hitting more than 70% of his shots.

The Razorbacks also have redshirt freshman forward Paulo Semedo and Muurinen, giving them at least three players with a 7-foot or longer wingspan in the paint. That matters for a team that already blocked 5.2 shots per game last season and finished with 191 total blocks, good for second in the SEC and 13th nationally.

The backcourt is loaded, too. Along with the trio of 5-stars, Arkansas added Georgia scoring guard Jeremiah Wilkinson, who averaged 17 points while shooting 41% from the field, 37% from three and 79% at the line. He also brings defensive disruption, with a steal rate of 3.3% that ranked among the best in the nation, according to CBB Analytics.

“We should be a great defensive team,” Calipari said. “A great shot blocking team, one that's athletic, driving, tough and all those things.”

Calipari also isn’t shying away from the schedule. Last season, he believed Arkansas had enough to chase the SEC and make a run in the NCAA Tournament, and he made sure the team was tested with non-conference games against Houston, Duke, Michigan State, Louisville and Texas Tech.

This year’s slate brings more heavy lifting, with games against Michigan State in Detroit, Arizona in Phoenix and North Carolina at the Dean Smith Center. Calipari sounds ready for all of it.

“We have a tough schedule, one of the toughest schedules in [college] basketball,” Calipari said. “And the average age of our team I think is going to be 18 years and seven months.

I don't care. Let's go.”

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