Arkansas Football 2023 Spring Preview: Defensive Tackle

Football

With Arkansas’ spring football practice starting on next Thursday, we continue our series of previewing positions for the 2023 Razorbacks.

The Hogs currently sit with 76 scholarship players going into spring ball, which leaves nine open spots to fill when the transfer portal opens back up in May.

Head coach Sam Pittman’s squad lost a lot as far as numbers go, but few played a significant amount during their time in Fayetteville. Arkansas added the nation’s No. 20 2023 freshman class on Rivals with 20 incoming freshman, and it also added 10 talented transfers from the transfer portal.

We continue our spring preview with a position group that the Hogs recently gained positive news at — defensive tackle…

Returning: Taurean Carter (redshirt senior), Marcus Miller (redshirt senior), Eric Gregory (redshirt senior) Cameron Ball (redshirt sophomore), Nico Davillier (sophomore)

Newcomers: Ian Geffrard (freshman, enrolling after spring)

Big news came Wednesday, when redshirt senior defensive tackle Taurean Carter announced via Twitter that he’s been cleared to practice for the Razorbacks.

After shining for the Razorbacks last spring, Carter suffered a knee injury on the third play of the team’s ‘Spring Showcase’ that took place inside the Walker Pavilion due to inclement weather.

While head coach Sam Pittman remained hopeful that Carter would be able to make a return at some point last season, it never happened. The official injury was never announced, but Carter had surgery and was on the sideline with his jersey on to root his teammates on each game.

“He was having a great spring, and it’s tough not having him out there,” Pittman said on Aug. 16, 2022. “But he’s bought into his role at this point of being a leader and talking to the younger guys and being a motivational guy in the room. He is probably the most outspoken guy in our room. He gets after it. If he sees them lagging and dragging around, he’ll get on them pretty good.”

It could be assumed that Carter was in prime position to start on the defensive front for Arkansas last season. This year, he can be penciled in as a starter at defensive tackle in the spring.

Carter’s best season as a Razorbacks came in 2021, when he racked up 24 total tackles, three tackles for loss and a sack. His Pro Football Focus grade of 67.1 across 244 snaps was the second best of any Arkansas interior defensive lineman.

New defensive coordinator Travis Williams is expected to implement a 4-2-5 base defense, which is new to those on the Arkansas roster. Former defensive coordinator Barry Odom ran primarily three-man fronts during his time in Fayetteville, but that will likely change this season unless the team is unable to find more players in the transfer portal.

While Williams likes to run a four-man front, the Razorbacks might not have the depth to do that right away. Carter is back, but the team lost a pair of starters in Isaiah Nichols (transferred to Purdue) and Terry Hampton (out of eligibility).

That leaves redshirt seniors Marcus Miller and Eric Gregory along with redshirt sophomore Cam Ball and sophomore Nico Davillier. Of those three, Ball is the primary candidate to slide in next to Carter with the starting group.

The 6-foot-5, 305-pound big man was the Hogs’ highest graded interior lineman by PFF last season. He logged 341 snaps and graded out with a 70.5 overall mark and a 75.0 in run defense. Ball racked up 31 total tackles, 2.5 TFLs, one sack and a forced fumble in 2022.

Gregory worked on the edge at times last season, primarily when the team was in a three-man front. When they go to four-man, Gregory is prone to shift inside and he will likely need to do that with the lack of depth at the tackle position. He played 379 snaps last season and graded out with a 63.4 overall defensive grade after totaling 19 tackles, four TFLs and two sacks.

Miller has been around for a while, but he’s only played 122 total snaps and just eight of those came last season. He did have a knee scope in fall camp that limited him early on, but he was healthy for the majority of the season.

Pittman praised Davillier during fall camp last season after the four-star freshman was thrown into the fire quickly due to injuries.

“Nico Davillier made some big-time plays today as a young guy,” Pittman said on Aug. 13, 2022. “He’s going to play for us now. There’s not gonna be no redshirt. I mean, he’s going to be on the field. He’s a good player.”

Davillier played 13 total defensive snaps as a freshman and he had a quarterback hurry in the win over Auburn. He did see action in each game on special teams, totaling 63 total snaps, primarily on the field goal block team.

While defensive line coach Deke Adams and the Hogs are pleased with who they have on campus, it’s pretty clear that defensive tackle remains a position of need. Expect to see the Hogs target that spot in the transfer portal after spring ball, which has been successful over the past few season. Arkansas added players like John Ridgeway, Markell Utsey, Tre Williams, Terry Hampton and Jordan Domineck after the spring over the past two seasons.

Read More HawgBeat

Latest

Bitcoin Treasuries Are Cracking as Public Companies Turn into BTC Sellers

A wave of bitcoin selling from public companies and sovereign entities is adding pressure to the bitcoin market, as firms that once called themselves long-term holders sit on long-term losses and move to shore up balance sheets, repay debt, and fund strategic pivots. Companies including Riot Platforms, Genius Group, and Nakamoto Holdings have all reduced

Analyst Says Bitcoin Closing 6 Red Monthly Candles Isn’t Bearish, What To Expect

Bitcoin’s recent price structure has not been easy to sit through. The price action has spent months moving sideways to lower, printing a series of bearish monthly closes since October that have placed the crypto sentiment in fear. That kind of slow pressure tends to feel worse than sharp sell-offs. According to a crypto analyst

Bitcoin breaks critical support as dollar and oil move together, raising risk of a deeper drop

Bitcoin spent the past 24 hours returning to the key levels on my channel map rather than continuing its breakout. It tested a boundary, failed to convert that test into acceptance, and rotated lower into the next pocket of support memory. Bitcoin price slid from the upper $68,000s and low $69,000s to around $66,400 by

Mapletree Notches Fifth US Logistics Disposal With $207.5M Sale to Dalfen

Mapletree Investments has sold a US logistics portfolio to last-mile specialist Dalfen Industrial for $207.5 million, as the Singapore-based group continues a string of disposals across its North American warehouse platform. The transaction marks Mapletree’s fifth major US logistics divestment... Read More>> The post Mapletree Notches Fifth US Logistics Disposal With $207.5M Sale to Dalfen appeared first

Newsletter

Don't miss

Bitcoin Treasuries Are Cracking as Public Companies Turn into BTC Sellers

A wave of bitcoin selling from public companies and sovereign entities is adding pressure to the bitcoin market, as firms that once called themselves long-term holders sit on long-term losses and move to shore up balance sheets, repay debt, and fund strategic pivots. Companies including Riot Platforms, Genius Group, and Nakamoto Holdings have all reduced

Analyst Says Bitcoin Closing 6 Red Monthly Candles Isn’t Bearish, What To Expect

Bitcoin’s recent price structure has not been easy to sit through. The price action has spent months moving sideways to lower, printing a series of bearish monthly closes since October that have placed the crypto sentiment in fear. That kind of slow pressure tends to feel worse than sharp sell-offs. According to a crypto analyst

Bitcoin breaks critical support as dollar and oil move together, raising risk of a deeper drop

Bitcoin spent the past 24 hours returning to the key levels on my channel map rather than continuing its breakout. It tested a boundary, failed to convert that test into acceptance, and rotated lower into the next pocket of support memory. Bitcoin price slid from the upper $68,000s and low $69,000s to around $66,400 by

Mapletree Notches Fifth US Logistics Disposal With $207.5M Sale to Dalfen

Mapletree Investments has sold a US logistics portfolio to last-mile specialist Dalfen Industrial for $207.5 million, as the Singapore-based group continues a string of disposals across its North American warehouse platform. The transaction marks Mapletree’s fifth major US logistics divestment... Read More>> The post Mapletree Notches Fifth US Logistics Disposal With $207.5M Sale to Dalfen appeared first

Bitcoin slips below $67k as ETF outflows curb risk appetite

Key takeaways BTC is down 2%, erasing the recovery earlier this week, US-listed spot ETF recorded an outflow of $173.73 million on Wednesday, breaking its two days of inflow this week. Bitcoin faces continued losses amid weaker institutional demand Bitcoin (BTC) prices continued to decline on Thursday, trading below $67,000, almost completely erasing the recovery

Tesla’s Business Has Become Much More Diversified in Just the Past Five Years. Does That Make Its Stock a Better Buy Today?

Key Points Tesla's energy generation and storage segment generated 27% revenue growth last year. The company's non-automotive segments were able to help offset a double-digit decline in auto revenue in 2025. These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires › Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) is known for its electric vehicles (EVs), and while they

WD sees sustainability as key business driver in an ‘AI economy’

Hard drive company WD promoted long-term operations and sustainability executive Jackie Jung to become its first chief sustainability officer in February, as it steps up sales to companies building AI data centers. Her vision: Turn sustainability into a “brand” for WD, a strategy that reduces risk for the $6 billion company (formerly known as Western

5 Business Ideas Worth Starting in 2026

If there is one thing Nigerians understand well, it is how to spot opportunity inside hardship. In 2026, that mindset will matter more than ever. The economy is tough, competition is rising, and many people are looking for smarter ways to earn, build, and survive. But even in a difficult environment, some businesses still stand