No position looms larger for Arkansas in 2026 than quarterback, and that’s why KJ Jackson checks in at No. 14 on the Razorbacks’ list of 30 most important players.
Jackson gets the edge over the other Arkansas quarterback in the top 30, AJ Hill, because he already has SEC experience from last season. Ryan Silverfield has said the quarterback race will still be alive midway through fall camp before a starter is chosen, but it’s tough to ignore what Jackson showed late in 2025.
The former four-star prospect from Mobile, Ala., arrived in the 2024 class with plenty of buzz, and he may be the more athletic option heading into the battle for QB1. In five appearances, he completed 33 of 54 passes for 441 yards, three touchdowns and just one turnover.
That production may not leap off the page, but the way he handled himself did. Jackson showed the kind of short-memory toughness that matters for a first-year starter - the ability to shake off a bad snap and move straight to the next one.
“KJ has got a unique skill set," Arkansas quarterback coach Mitch Stewart said in April. "Dude is very athletic, but he’s very cerebral too.
He’s just a kind of a savvy ball player. You can tell he’s been around a lot of ball, it kind of comes natural to him.
Smooth thrower.”
Stewart also pointed to Jackson’s growing presence in the locker room as the roster has shifted around him with returnees, transfers and freshmen all in the mix.
“So he does have some of that [leadership] to him, but he’s also got some of that natural," Stewart said. That’s just kind of his personality.
He is a mild-mannered alpha, is how I would put it. He’s not a screamer and a yeller, but he does have a presence about him that makes you kind of naturally gravitate to him a little bit, and you see it.”
Jackson’s limited action last season still offered a few clear reasons for optimism. Against Texas, he stepped into throws in tight coverage.
Against Missouri, he stayed composed through his reads and worked through progressions. He also showed he can diagnose coverages before the snap, look away from his first option and come back to his third or even fourth.
One of his best throws came against the Tigers, when he threaded a pass between a cornerback and safety to hit O’Mega Blake and tie the game at seven.
That kind of processing fits Tim Cramsey’s offense, which asks quarterbacks to think before and after the snap instead of leaning only on athleticism or pre-set reads. If Jackson can keep doing that in camp and into the season, his growth under Cramsey could be a major piece of Arkansas’ push back toward the postseason.
Accuracy remains the biggest area Jackson wants to sharpen. After the Red-White Spring Game, he put it plainly:
"The story of my life has been accuracy," Jackson said following Arkansas' Red-White Spring Game. "So just keep on building on that and improving that to the fall and be the best me I can be for the team."
In that spring game, Jackson went 9 of 13 for 129 yards and a touchdown, including a 65-yard connection with junior wide receiver CJ Brown.
Even if he doesn’t win the job outright, there are former Razorbacks who believe Jackson has the tools to take control, keep turnovers down and help smooth the transition into a new offense.
"[Jackson] handles the game well as far as controlling the game," Hillis said during a Pig Trail Nation interview in April. "I don't think he's going to be a guy that's going to make a lot of mistakes. I think he's going to go out there and he's going to study his playbook and he's going to get things done.
"When you have a guy like that, especially with some receivers around him, I mean, we have some size at receiver now that I'm really excited about. If those guys get on the same page, you never know what can happen."
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