Arkansas had late-season success in 2015. Behind their steady offense and stingy rush defense, the Razorbacks racked up key wins over Tennessee, Ole Miss, Auburn and LSU during their 7-5 season.

Let’s take a look at their position grades for the 2015 season.

QUARTERBACKS

The Arkansas offense ran through Brandon Allen, who was superb all season. Allen finished the year with 3,440 yards, 30 touchdowns and just eight interceptions. He had the highest-ranked Quarterback Rating of all NCAA signal-callers at 87.9. He climbed to the top of NFL recruiting boards while helping his teammates put together a successful season.

Grade: A

RUNNING BACKS

Razorbacks fans can’t be thrilled about Alex Collins leaving for the NFL. His season was somewhat overshadowed due to the play of Derrick Henry and Leonard Fournette, but Collins showed he could hang with the best. He had 1,557 yards and 2o TDs in 2015. He took pressure off Allen and make the Arkansas offense two-dimensional.

Grade: A

RECIEVERS/TIGHT ENDS

Hunter Henry emerged as one of the top tight ends in the country while Drew Morgan, Jeremy Sprinkle, Jared Cornelius and Dominique Reed all contributed from the wide receiver spot. Henry was the most dominating of the group. But everyone got touches throughout the year.

Grade: B+

OFFENSIVE LINE

The Arkansas offensive line has helped produce 1,000-yard rushers in the last three seasons. Brandon Allen was only sacked 14 times. New Razorbacks offensive line coach Kurt Anderson inherited a unit that’s among the best.

Grade: B+

DEFENSIVE LINE

Arkansas defense finished 12th in the nation against the rush, giving up oly 116.5 yards on the ground per game. The line played a huge role in holding Derrick Henry and Leonard Fournette to under 100 yards.

LINEBACKERS

Grade: B+

The Arkansas linebackers generated pressure on opposing quarterbacks. Brooks Ellis finished the year with 46 tackles and two sacks. Dre Greenlaw followed up with 46 tackles and one sack. The group was inconsistent in pass coverage, but steady overall.

Grade: B

SECONDARY

This was the most troubling unit for the Razorbacks by far. Arkansas allowed 275 yards through the air per game, ranking 109th in the nation. Sure, there are other factors that play a role, but the secondary was suspect. It gave up more than 300 yards in five different games and 17 passing TDs during the regular season.

Grade: D