Jordan Smith Jr. hasn’t played a college game yet, but the buzz around Arkansas’ freshman guard is already reaching rarefied air.
CBS college basketball reporter Jon Rothstein said Tuesday on The Chuck and Bo Show that there’s strong belief Smith could be the best player in next season’s freshman class and eventually become one of the sport’s biggest names. Rothstein also pointed to Smith as a player some people think could work his way into the No. 1 conversation for the 2027 NBA Draft.
“From talking to people, there is a lot of belief that he is going to be the best player in this freshman class next season,” Rothstein said Tuesday on The Chuck and Bo Show. “I, like you guys, need to see him against college competition.
“I’m anxious to see him during Arkansas' foreign tour [in the Bahamas], which is not always the greatest barometer. But there is a real belief that he is going to be one of the faces of the sport.”
For Arkansas, Smith is just one part of a loaded roster built for a national-title push under John Calipari. But among the newcomers and veterans alike, he stands out as the headliner. The five-star guard from Washington, D.C., arrives as a McDonald’s All-American and the Gatorade National High School Player of the Year, and he looks likely to spend only one season in Fayetteville.
He’ll be surrounded by plenty of talent. Fellow five stars Abdou Torre and JJ Andrews are in the mix, along with veterans Cooper Bowser, Billy Richmond III and Jeremiah Wilkinson. If Smith lives up to the hype, Arkansas could have one of the most dangerous teams in the country when March arrives.
Rothstein said Smith’s long-term ceiling doesn’t just matter for the Razorbacks, either.
“If you think about, this doesn't really directly correlate to Arkansas from a team perspective,” Rothstein said of Smith. “And I'm not somebody who relies a lot on what somebody is going to be in the NBA draft, but this is a player some people believe could be on contention to be the top overall pick in the 2027 NBA draft.”
That kind of projection would put Smith in a select group for Calipari, who has coached four previous No. 1 picks in Derrick Rose, John Wall, Anthony David and Karl-Anthony Towns.
Smith signed with Arkansas as the No. 2 prospect in the 2026 recruiting class, and his production at Paul VI Catholic School backed up the hype. As a senior, he averaged 27 points, six rebounds, six assists and three steals per game while shooting 56% from the field, 37% from three-point range and 72% percent at the free throw line.
He also helped lead Paul VI Catholic to Washington Catholic Athletic Conference and Virginia Independent School School Association Division I tournament championships last season.
On the grassroots circuit, Smith was just as productive. Playing for Team Takeover in the Nike EYBL, he finished No. 8 in scoring and averaged more than 20 points, seven rebounds, four assists and two blocks per game.
Rothstein stopped short of placing Smith at the top of the SEC before the season begins, but he still made clear how high the ceiling could be.
“I'm not going to put [Smith] there to start the year because I always like to give way to people who have done it at this level before,” Rothstein said. “But I'm expecting Jordan Smith to be right in the mix to be one of the best players in the SEC, and if you're one of the best players in the SEC, you're going to have a chance to be an All-American.”
In Other News...
Arkansas Just Won A Recruiting Battle That May Not Be Over
Arkansas added another piece to its 2027 class with the commitment of Rashaad Silver, a three-star safety from Columbia High School in Decatur, Ga. Silver has long been on the radar of several programs, with offers from 35 schools, and his path to Fayetteville picked up steam after an official visit in June and an offer from head coach Ryan Silverfield back in January.
Silver brings more than just recruiting buzz, too. He has drawn notice for his work on defense and for his academic achievement, which helped make him a priority for the Razorbacks as they keep building out the class. The question now is whether Arkansas can keep holding onto a pledge that already figures to draw plenty of attention from other major programs. [Read more 🡒]
EAs First Silverfield-Era Arkansas Reveal Will Sting Razorback Fans
EA SPORTS College Football 27 has started rolling out team ratings ahead of its July 9 release, and the early read on Arkansas is not especially flattering. The Razorbacks landed at 80 overall, which puts them at the bottom of the SEC in the game, a marker that says as much about the perception of the roster as it does about the fresh start underway in Fayetteville.
There are a few bright spots buried in the ratings, with Quincy Rhodes checking in as the highest-rated Razorback at 90 overall and Jelani Watkins drawing attention for his elite speed. Still, the bigger storyline is how the new-look roster is being viewed before a snap has been played, especially with KJ Jacksons rating leaving Arkansas looking like it has plenty to prove in the upcoming season. [Read more 🡒]
