Football
Brown announces changes to Bears’ staff ahead of spring practice
Some new faces, some returning for another stint at UCA and some serving in new roles on football staff

CONWAY,Ark. — When Central Arkansas hits the practice field next week, the coaching staff overseeing them will have a different look.
Coach Nathan Brown has revamped his staff heading into the 2025 season, with some new faces, some returning for another stint at UCA and some serving in new roles.
“We are excited to make some great additions and adjustments to our 2025 football coaching staff,” Brown said a week out from the start of spring practice on March 6. “We have a good mix of new ideas and familiarity within our program. There are several new faces in roles and also some coaches from our staff that will have enhanced roles moving forward.”
One notable addition — or return — is Chad Williams as defensive coordinator, replacing the retiring Greg Stewart.
“I am excited about the return of Chad Williams as our defensive coordinator,” said Brown. “Chad spent 2018 to 2020 with us in the same role and gave us some of the highest caliber defenses we have had at the Division 1 level during that time. We finished the 2019 season as a national playoff seed and a Southland title with him calling our defenses.
“He has spent the last four years at his alma mater at Southern Miss, as the linebackers coach and run game coordinator. Not only does Chad bring a ton of coordinating experience to us but also a wealth of NFL knowledge.
“He played safety and linebacker in the NFL for the Baltimore Ravens for almost a decade and brings that mentality to work every single day. He demands details and respect from his players and they get better every day because of that.”
Blaze Barista, who will be the safeties coach and transfer portal coordinator, was previously in the UCA program in 2022 on the defensive side of the ball working with outside linebackers.
“Blaze Barista is a young talented coach in the football profession,” said Brown. “Blaze is coming to us from The Citadel where he was the safeties coach on staff there. He is one of the most talented recruiters I have been around and really demands the room at a high level in the secondary. He coaches with passion and energy everyday and has made us better on defense the second he stepped on campus.”
On the offensive side of the ball there are several changes, not the least of which is Brown taking over offensive coordinator duties. He has also hired a new running backs coach in Will Kennedy and a new quarterbacks coach in Chase Fourcade.
“We have made some adjustments to our offensive staff and one of those is coaching the position of quarterback,’ said Brown. “I wanted to hire someone to take the roll as quarterback coach and run the day to day operations and that guy was Chase Fourcade.
“Chase is a familiar name to UCA not because of his ties to UCA but in playing and competing against UCA in his playing career at Nicholls. Chase was one of the greatest quarterbacks to ever play in the Southland Conference.
“He is the all-time leading passer and total offensive guy in Nicholls history. He was a conference player of the year at the quarterback position and turned that into a three-year professional career between the NFL, CFL, and USFL.
Chase recently retired from the game and got into coaching and was a natural fit to run that room. I have stayed in touch with him over the years and always thought I would want to hire him on our staff if given the opportunity. Chase brings a wealth of knowledge and is a fundamental expert with the quarterback position.”
Kennedy has obvious Conway ties as a former Conway Wampus Cat student-athlete.
“I am excited to announce Will Kennedy as our new running backs coach,” said Brown. “Will is very familiar with the community of Conway as a Wampus Cat alum. Will went to the University of Arkansas out of high school and got into coaching during his undergraduate days at Arkansas. He has since turned that into a graduate assistant job that assisted with the running backs position.
“Will has coached with some great offensive minds while at Arkansas such as Dan Enos and Bobby Petrino. He has SEC experience and has seen that position group run at the highest level. Will is young and smart and understands the fundamental side of coaching the running back room. He will make us better at that position every single day.”
Ken Collums, the Bears’ former offensive coordinator and a UCA Sports Hall of Famer from his playing days, has assumed a new role with the Bears as assistant head coach and tight ends coach.
“We have also changed and enhanced the rolls of several coaches on our staff. Ken Collums will now take over as assistant head coach and tight ends coach,” said Brown. “With Coach Collums experience as a head coach and his overall care for young men and knowing the game of football, he is a valuable asset to what we are trying to build here. He has been doing this for a long time and has a wealth of experience and knowledge that is invaluable to us.”
Also on the offensive side of the ball, Jake Walker moves from tight ends to wide receivers and adds the title of offensive pass game coordinator.
“He is one of the brighter young coaches I have been around and has made us better in our wide receiver room with detail and knowledge,” said Brown. “He has a great mind for the game and you can see him really spreading his wings, coaching a skill position now.
“Offensive line coach Gunnar Boykin is also adding the offensive run game coordinator to his coaching title. He has been with me for all seven of my years here and has consistently had one of the better offensive lines in the conference.
“Gunnar has a lot of skills when it comes to scheming an offense and I use him as a security blanket for me and what we are trying to accomplish on the offensive side of the ball.
“We are also excited to get Brooks Hollingsworth back and use him on the offensive side of the ball as an analyst. Brooks is a UCA Hall of Famer that knows more ball than the whole staff combined. He will add to the game plan room and scheming a winning offense every day.”
Special teams will also feature a few changes, according to Brown.
“We have made some adjustments in the third phase of the game as well. Kre Trammell will now be our special teams coordinator,” he said. “Kre is as talented of a young coach as I have ever been around. He is organized and detailed and will look to attack on special teams. We need this phase to be a weapon and allow us to gain an advantage every week. He will oversee all units on special teams as well as still coaching our corners on defense.
“Walker Ashburn will add the co-special teams coordinator to his title and will oversee our punt unit. This unit is probably as important as any in this phase and having Walker just focus on the scheme and execution of this unit will make us better. Walker will handle this along with other responsibilities within Coach Trammell’s special teams units while also coaching our interior defensive line.”
The mainstay on the defensive side is Tony Davis, who coaches UCA’s defensive ends and edge rushers.
“Tony Davis is returning as our defensive line edge coach and defensive run game coordinator,” said Brown. “Tony has been with me for the past seven years and we have always had one of the higher caliber defensive lines in the conference. I think Coach Davis is one of the best defensive line coaches in the country at the FCS level. One of the big reasons for David Walker’s success should be attributed to Coach Davis and the way he developed him.”
The Bears are scheduled to open Spring Practice on Thursday, March 6. The Spring Game is scheduled for Saturday, April 12 on The Stripes.
Information from UCA Sports is included in this story.
Football
David Walker’s unlikely path: UCA to Tampa Bay’s rookie sensation
Journey from small-town Arkansas to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers is rewriting the script for NFL rookies from overlooked programs

CONWAY, Ark. — David Walker’s journey to the NFL was never supposed to look like this.
Small-town Stuttgart, Ark., is a long way from the bright lights of Raymond James Stadium, but for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ rookie edge rusher, the distance between dream and reality was measured in grit, not geography.
“I always thought if you worked hard enough, someone would notice,” Walker said, his voice steady but unmistakably proud. “I just didn’t know when, or who.”
The who, as it turns out, was the Buccaneers’ front office, who selected Walker with the 121st overall pick in the fourth round of the 2025 NFL Draft, a move that raised eyebrows across the league.
Tampa Bay had built a reputation for finding diamonds in the rough, but even seasoned analysts were surprised when they reached for a pass rusher from Central Arkansas, a program that rarely sends talent to the NFL’s main stage.
They have sent players to the NFL before. Linebacker Monte Coleman played 16 years when Washington’s team was the Redskins. Walker isn’t interested in the odds.
“I’ve been doubted before,” he said, a familiar refrain for a player whose career has been defined by proving people wrong.
Walker’s collegiate resume is, in a word, relentless.
After transferring from Southern Arkansas, he anchored the Bears’ defense, racking up 62 tackles, 10.5 sacks, and four forced fumbles in his final season. His three-year run at UCA saw him amass 31 sacks and 63 tackles for loss, earning him the 2024 Buck Buchanan Award as the nation’s best defensive player in the FCS.
His 94.6 overall grade last fall was the best among all FCS and FBS edge defenders, a statistic that doesn’t shock anyone who saw him play on Saturdays.
Coaches and teammates describe Walker’s game with the kind of admiration usually reserved for veterans.
“He can rush the passer, and he is tough,” defensive coordinator Larry Foote told reporters after rookie minicamp. “He loves football and you know his height thing, I think that is why he dropped, but you can’t measure heart. You don’t really know how quick he is until rookie minicamp. You can see it.”
“He knows how to rush the passer,” Bucs coach Todd Bowles said. “He’s been a natural. I make fun of him. I told him when I was recruiting him in Temple: ‘Tell this league you belong.’ And he does.”
If there was any lingering doubt about Walker’s transition from small-school football, his performance at the Senior Bowl erased it.
Facing top prospects from Power Five conferences, Walker dominated during practices, displaying a “solid rip move” and “great change of direction,” according to Bleacher Report’s Brent Sobleski.
Analysts pointed out that, while he might lack the elite straight-line speed of some first-rounders, his “suddenness” and “pass-rushing instincts” stood out, traits that often translate better to game speed than combine numbers ever could.
For Walker, the learning curve has been steep, but not unfamiliar.
“Football is just basketball on grass,” he said in his post-draft interview, referencing his high school days as a multi-sport athlete.
“You can see the way he cuts,” a coach observed, drawing parallels to his quick-twitch agility and vision.
That background, paired with what his high school coach called “absolutely ferocious work ethic,” has given him an edge in picking up Tampa Bay’s complex defensive schemes.
The Bucs’ defense is no place for passengers, especially in a division where quarterback pressure can make or break a season. Walker is entering a “stacked” outside linebacker room, but veterans like Anthony Nelson have already taken note.
“Walker has the skills,” Nelson said, though he’s quick to add that the real test comes “when the pads go on.”
The rookie is not fazed.
“I’m willing to do anything they ask,” Walker said at his introductory press conference. “I’m just here to get better every day and help this team however I can.”
Walker’s humility is matched by his ambition. When asked about his goals for the season, he doesn’t mention stats or accolades.
“I just want to make my family proud and show the kids back home that it’s possible,” he said, referencing Stuttgart, where his story has already become legend.
“David’s always been the hardest worker in the room,” his former coach at Stuttgart High told local media. “He’s God-gifted, but he’s earned everything that’s coming to him.”
The Buccaneers have a history of turning mid-round picks into major contributors, from Ronde Barber to Chris Godwin. Barber himself, now a Hall of Famer, recently singled out Walker as “the most impactful rookie” on the team.
“Big things are coming for David,” Barber said, adding that Walker’s relentless motor “reminds me a little of myself.”
That’s high praise from a franchise legend .
Analysts have started to echo Barber’s sentiment, with some calling Walker “the steal of the draft.” The Pewter Report noted that “a crazy 33.8% of his pass rushes” in college resulted in pressure, a number that puts him in elite company.
“He isn’t the fastest edge rusher (4.69), but he’s very sudden in his movements and has great pass rushing instincts,” PewterReport.com wrote.
The challenge now is sustaining that production against NFL-caliber talenta transition that, so far, Walker appears to be handling with characteristic determination.
For Tampa Bay, Walker represents more than just a fourth-round flier. The team’s pass rush was a question mark entering the offseason, and the rookie’s emergence could be a crucial answer.
“He fills a central position of need,” wrote one columnist, suggesting that Walker’s development may be a bellwether for the Bucs’ defensive fortunes this season.
As training camp approaches, Walker’s story is still being written. He’s already earned the respect of teammates and coaches, but the real test, the one he’s been preparing for since those early mornings in Stuttgart, is yet to come.
“I’m just excited to get to work,” Walker said, flashing a grin that betrays both nerves and excitement. “This is where I’ve always wanted to be.”
It’s a sentiment that resonates far beyond UCA. In a league where pedigree and profile often overshadow perseverance, Walker is a reminder that the road less traveled can still lead to the NFL’s biggest stage.
The season’s outcomes remain uncertain, one thing seems clear. Walker has already beaten the odds, and he’s just getting started.
Football
Walker poised to be Buccaneers’ next middle-round breakout pass rusher
David Walker’s speed and production could make him the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ next defensive star after a dominant FCS career

CONWAY, Ark. — Tampa Bay had a history of finding impact players outside the first round, and in 2025, fourth-round pick David Walker could be the latest to make his mark.
Selected 121st overall out of Central Arkansas, Walker arrives in Tampa Bay with a resume that stands out among recent FCS prospects.
Walker capped his college career as a three-time unanimous FCS All-American, the 2024 Buck Buchanan Award winner, and a three-time conference Defensive Player of the Year.
Over 34 games, he amassed 191 tackles, 63 tackles for loss, 31 sacks, eight pass breakups, and six forced fumbles, setting program records for both tackles for loss and sacks.
His dominance was further highlighted by a 6.5-TFL performance against Tarleton State in 2024, a single-game school record.
Despite questions about his size-standing 6-foot-1 and weighing 263 pounds-Walker’s explosiveness and relentless motor have drawn praise from Buccaneers coaches and scouts.
“Speed – he contributes that, and I think he’s accumulated about [a lot of] sacks,” said outside linebackers coach Larry Foote. “He understands how to pressure the quarterback; it comes naturally to him.
“He’s a natural at pass rushing. Although he may be shorter in stature, his speed is something that can’t be taught, and he has shown significant improvement. I’ve been following his journey over the years. His performance continues to elevate.”
Walker’s speed, suddenness, and ability to convert quickness into power have already impressed during rookie minicamp.
“When you have that inside perspective as a coach, knowing him personally and understanding which motivational tactics work or don’t work, you can gauge whether he needs firm coaching or a supportive approach,” Foote said.
He knows. He tried to get him to Temple when he was coaching there, but the Stuttgart native wasn’t getting that far away.
That relationship could help Walker adjust quickly to the NFL.
The Buccaneers’ need for a spark in their pass rush was evident after last year’s second-round pick Chris Braswell struggled to make an immediate impact, and the team added veteran Haason Reddick on a one-year deal.
Walker’s arrival injects competition and depth into a group that also features Yaya Diaby and Anthony Nelson.
Walker’s knack for making plays in the backfield is a trait the Bucs hope will translate to the NFL. At UCA, a remarkable 33.8% of his tackles came behind the line of scrimmage.
He also brings a “violence” to his game that should serve him well against pro-level blockers.
While he may not have elite length or the fastest 40-yard dash (4.69 seconds), his instincts and production speak for themselves.
If Walker can replicate even a portion of his college disruption, he could be the next in a line of Buccaneers mid-round gems, following in the footsteps of players like Yaya Diaby and Shaq Barrett.
As coach Todd Bowles emphasized, improving the four-man pass rush is a priority, and Walker’s arrival gives the Bucs a new weapon to achieve that goal.
Football
Walker’s breakout at Bucs’ rookie mini-camp sparks Barrett comparisons
David Walker’s standout performance at Bucs rookie mini-camp has fans and analysts wondering if he’s the next Shaq Barrett

Tampa Bay rookie mini-camp offered a glimpse into the franchise’s future, but few expected the spotlight to shift so quickly to edge rusher David Walker.
While cornerback Jacob Parrish made headlines with a pair of pick-sixes, it was Walker who quietly-and forcefully-established himself as the best player on the field, igniting conversations about his potential to follow in the footsteps of legendary Bucs pass rusher Shaq Barrett.
Walker’s performance was marked by relentless energy and technical polish uncommon for a rookie.
Observers noted his explosive first step and ability to disrupt plays in the backfield, traits that have long defined Tampa Bay’s defensive identity.
The buzz around Walker grew even louder after Scott Reynolds, in the latest episode of Pewter Pulse, broke down Walker’s impact and drew early comparisons to Barrett, whose arrival in Tampa Bay transformed the team’s pass rush.
“Walker was everywhere,” Reynolds said in his analysis. “He showed the kind of motor and instinct that you just can’t teach. It’s the same feeling we had when Shaq Barrett first arrived-there’s something special in the way he attacks the edge.”
The Bucs’ coaching staff echoed this sentiment, noting that Walker’s approach to preparation and his adaptability in drills stood out among his peers.
While rookie camps are often about learning and adjustment, Walker appeared to be a step ahead, diagnosing plays and executing with a veteran’s confidence.
Fans have responded with enthusiasm, flooding the PewterReportTV YouTube channel with comments and likes after watching the new Pewter Pulse episode.
The growing community of “Pewter People” has rallied around the idea that Walker could be the next homegrown star, a player capable of revitalizing the Bucs’ pass rush as the team transitions into a new era.
Of course, the comparison to Barrett is not made lightly. Barrett’s journey from undrafted free agent to Pro Bowler and Super Bowl champion is the stuff of NFL legend.
Yet, the parallels are hard to ignore: both players arrived in Tampa Bay with something to prove, both possess an underdog mentality, and both have shown a knack for making big plays in critical moments.
As the offseason progresses, all eyes will be on Walker to see if he can build on his early momentum.
The Bucs’ defensive coaches are expected to give him every opportunity to earn a significant role, especially with the team seeking to bolster its pass rush depth.
For now, David Walker’s rookie mini-camp performance has set the stage for what could be one of the most intriguing storylines of the Bucs’ 2025 season.
If he continues on this trajectory, the comparisons to Shaq Barrett may soon feel less like hype and more like prophecy.
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