A three-star running back from Osceola, Ark., Korliss Marshall received just one offer from a Power 5 school.

That offer came from the home-state Arkansas Razorbacks, and Marshall committed to the Hogs just days before National Signing Day in 2013.

Less than 24 months later, and the sophomore will be looking for a new home.

Head coach Bret Bielema announced last week that Marshall would not return to the program in 2015. The decision comes after an up-and-down tenure in Fayetteville for Marshall in which he was suspended multiple times.

“He’s never going to have the chance to play for the Razorbacks again,” Bielema told ESPN.com last week.

After serving a three-game suspension, Marshall returned to play in the 17-0 win over then-No. 17 LSU. He then was suspended again, Bielema clearly at the end of the road with the sophomore tailback.

As a true freshman in 2013, the 6-foot, 190-pound tailback rushed for 146 yards on 17 carries. During his followup campaign this season, Marshall recorded carries in just six games rushing for 119 yards and a touchdown. His impact in 2014 was felt on kick return, where Marshall led the team and housed a kickoff.

Coaches were high on Marshall’s upside; he ran a 4.3 40-yard dash upon arriving in Fayetteville. Marshall went off in the Hogs’ spring game earlier this year, rushing for 99 yards and pair of touchdowns.

Those moments now seem like distant memories, and upon Marshall’s departure from the program, Bielema called it the “saddest story” of his coaching career.

“Everybody loves success, everybody loves to watch success, but the ones that stay in the back of my mind are always the ones that didn’t work out,” Bielema told Arkansas News in late November. “The ones that don’t get worked out get one page headlines, but they don’t get four years of a career of headlines. They usually flash for a very brief moment.”

Marshall never got to make an impact in a crowded Razorbacks backfield, but there’s no doubt those within the Arkansas program are disappointed due to the potential of Marshall’s natural talent.