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WALLY HALL: College QB ranking undersells Razorbacks

It came via email.

A writer for the website Pro Football Focus named Cam Mellor recently ranked all 130 of the "starting" quarterbacks for Football Bowl Subdivision teams.

That is an ambitious undertaking.

It also leaves a ton of room for debate.

For instance, he ranked the University of Arkansas 102nd, and he included Ben Hicks/Nick Starkel.

Supposedly, the Razorbacks' starter will be announced next week (expect it to be Hicks), but Starkel beat out Texas A&M's Kellen Mond before Jimbo Fisher arrived. Fisher wanted a more mobile quarterback, and Mond is ranked No. 25 on this list.

Ty Storey, Arkansas' quarterback last year who is now at Western Kentucky, ranked 100th in combination with Steven Duncan.

Cole Kelley was not ranked. He went to Southeastern Louisiana, which plays in the Football Championship Subdivision, not the FBS.

Yes, it was much simpler when the NCAA called its divisions I-A and I-AA.

Anyway, Arkansas State University quarterback Logan Bonner was ranked 126th.

Whoever starts for the Razorbacks against Portland State may not be the starter against Alabama.

Hicks started with a definitive advantage. He played for Coach Chad Morris and offensive coordinator Joe Craddock at SMU.

He knows the playbook and verbiage. He is supposed to be more agile.

Starkel started for the Aggies, so he is more familiar with the SEC and should be more comfortable playing against great teams. He has the stronger arm.

They are definitely much better than the No. 102 ranking suggests.

No. 1 Trevor Lawrence, the starting quarterback for defending national champion Clemson, was not a surprise. Nor was it that Alabama's Tua Tagovailoa was No. 2.

They are the early favorites to win the Heisman Trophy and to face off for the national championship again.

It should be noted that Tagovailoa appeared to play the second half of last season hurt. Not injured, but with some discomfort.

It would not have been a surprise if Jalen Hurts had been No. 3. After getting beat out by Tagovailoa at Alabama, Hurts transferred to Oklahoma and appears to be the starter, but he was ranked No. 11.

Look for Hurts also to be in the Heisman hunt. Reports are his passing has continued to improve under the watchful eye of Lincoln Riley, who has coached the last two Heisman winners.

Here are other notes of interest: Former Ole Miss quarterback Shea Patterson, who transferred to Michigan, was No. 13; Justin Fields, who transferred from Georgia to Ohio State, was No. 16; Georgia's Jake Fromm was No. 9; and LSU's Joe Burrow was No. 17.

Arkansas' duo was ranked last among SEC quarterbacks.

The Razorback Nation will get one shot, Aug. 24, to decide who they like best at quarterback and if this team is significantly better than last year. The event is scheduled to be open to the public.

The next public viewing after that will be Aug. 31 against Portland State in Reynolds Razorback Stadium.

. . .

Speaking of Portland State, the school made it to the NAIA College World Series in 1962, and the starting third baseman was Terry Yamauchi.

Yamauchi moved to Little Rock in 1975 and worked as a teacher and doctor at Arkansas Children's Hospital for more than 30 years.

He was a consultant for ABC News and a sought-after lecturer about internal medicine for children all around the world.

He played softball for a team during his first year in Little Rock, and all these years later that group still meets once a month for lunch.

Sports on 08/15/2019

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