La'Khi Roland Could Decide Arkansas' Secondary Rebuild

La'Khi Roland's presence in Arkansas' defensive lineup could be the key to revamping their secondary and elevating their pass defense this season.

Arkansas’ defensive makeover is going to need impact players on the back end, and La’Khi Roland looks built to be one of them.

The Razorbacks brought in help across the secondary, and Roland stands out as a player who already has the kind of production Arkansas has been missing. A former 3-star recruit in the 2024 class, he wasted little time making his mark at Maryland over the past two seasons. In 11 appearances last season, he finished with 21 tackles, one tackle for loss and a team-high three interceptions, including a 100-yard pick six.

The numbers back up the tape. Roland played 376 coverage snaps last season and posted a 67.7 grade from Pro Football Focus. On 26 targets, he gave up 15 catches for 202 yards and a touchdown, and he missed on just 16% of his tackle attempts.

Arkansas is counting on that kind of ball production to help fix a pass defense that was badly exposed a year ago. The Razorbacks allowed 239 passing yards per game last season, a figure that ranked No. 104 nationally. Coaches have pointed to busted coverages, poor angles, extra time spent in coverage and a lack of effort downfield as part of the problem, and they’re hoping a sharper culture and more accountability can bring a quick turnaround.

The message from the staff has been simple: the secondary has to operate as one unit.

“When you talk about the secondary, I believe it has to be one, you know what I mean?” he said.

“Because the biggest thing from a secondary standpoint is you don't want to have DBs going palms up. Typically, palms up equals busted coverages.”

Wilson also explained how the group is being organized to stay on the same page.

“As a secondary, we're one, and initially we meet together from an install standpoint, make sure we get everything to be on the same page, in the same book,” Wilson said. “And then from there, they have certain things that safeties need to hear, and Coach Wilford would meet with the safeties, and there are certain things that corners need to hear.”

Roland’s appeal goes beyond the stat sheet. At 6-foot-2 and 196 pounds, he brings the kind of length and athleticism coaches can’t manufacture. Eddie Hicks has been encouraged by that profile, along with Roland’s willingness to learn the details of the system.

"Starting off, La'khi is long, he's athletic, he can run,” Hicks said earlier this spring. “The biggest thing we've got to continue to just work on is his technique and things like that, making sure he's under control from a body position and movement standpoint.

"But he's been great. Super athletic, super talented guy that we're going to look for to make a lot of plays for us."

Roland has two seasons of eligibility left at Arkansas and is expected to line up opposite Tulane transfer Jahiem Johnson as the other starter at boundary corner.

He had plenty of options before choosing Arkansas, drawing interest from transfer-portal suitors including Ohio State and Georgia Tech.

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