Arizona Wildcats defensive lineman Parker Zellers (93) celebrates a sack during the second quarter of the No. 16 University of Colorado Buffaloes vs. University of Arizona Wildcats college football game on Nov. 12, 2016, at Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Ariz. Mike Christy / Arizona Daily Star

NO. 14: DL PARKER ZELLERS

Ht/Wt/Yr: 6-1, 247, senior

Comment: Arizona has spent considerable resources trying to find needed upgrades along the defensive line. Yet one of the players the UA has sought to replace happens to be one of its most irreplaceable players.

At 6-1, 247, Zellers has no business playing nose tackle in the Pac-12, at least not in 2017. But Zellers worked his way from walk-on to starter. Defensive line coach Vince Amey runs a meritocracy, and Zellers earned his spot by outplaying bigger, more sought-after players (which would be just about everybody else).

Which isn’t to say Zellers is an All-Pac-12 performer. He had 12 tackles in nine games last season. Three of those were sacks. That tied for the team lead. His two forced fumbles gave him solo top honors in that category.

None of those numbers are worth bragging about – not that Zellers would do so anyway. He’s a self-made, team-first guy, and that’s where his true value lies – as a leader and inspiration to his teammates.

Remember what Rich Rodriguez said recently about Zellers? I had asked the UA coach in April which defensive players stood out most in spring. He said this:

“You talk about a guy like Parker Zellers. He came here as an unrecruited walk-on that nobody knew anything about. Undersized. And he made himself into a player. This spring he was even better (despite missing time while rehabbing a shoulder injury). He’s a guy you’ve got to throw out of drills. That’s an example of that edge we’ve got to keep fostering.”

What’s strange about Zellers’ role on the team – the Parker Paradox, if you will – is that he’ll be even more valuable if he plays less. Zellers isn’t built for 80-90 plays. He and the rest of Arizona’s undersized defensive front wore down as games progressed on a regular basis last year.

It’s imperative that the Wildcats develop two complete D-line units that the coaches are confident in deploying. Despite losing some possible rotation players for one reason or another (Justin HoltGaelin ElmoreDereck Boles), the staff is working toward that end.

One player Arizona did add is 300-plus-pound nose tackle Sione Taufahema, a stout junior-college transfer who would complement Zellers well. Placing Zellers into a third-down role – where he could utilize his quickness and not have to worry as much about stopping the run – would enhance his effectiveness. He’s already a respected contributor in so many other ways.


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