Arizona Wildcats storylines: On UA's rushing attack, special teams, and USC's separation
- Michael Lev Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Star reporter Michael Lev checks in with a game-day breakdown before the Wildcats host USC in a Pac-12 bout.
Wildcats hope to prove theyāre ānot a team to be messed withā against USC
Updated
Shawn Poindexter, hauling in a 75-yard touchdown pass against Southern Utah, says a win over USC this week would be a big deal for Arizona.
Mike Christy / Arizona Daily StarThe Arizona Wildcats want to win every game, obviously. But they understand that a victory over USC on Saturday would mean a little bit more.
Although the Trojans are off to a slow start ā for them ā theyāre still the defending Pac-12 champions and the most iconic program on the West Coast. Beating them would be a big deal.
āI think itād be huge,ā senior receiver Shawn Poindexter said. āWe (had) a good statement win against Oregon State. That should speak volumes.
āBeating USC would really establish us, and maybe the city will believe in us a little bit more.ā
Poindexter wasnāt trying to imply that Tucson has lost faith. He meant that a win over USC would turn the cityās enthusiasm up a notch ā or, at the very least, recapture the buzz that was lost when Arizona started the Kevin Sumlin era 0-2.
āIt would be a great boost, not just for the program but for our fans too,ā sophomore linebacker Tony Fields II said. āI believe our fans will be here. Theyāll be all in.ā
The crowd at Arizona Stadium should be lively, and all itāll take is one Khalil Tate romp into the end zone for the #Pac12AfterDark tweets to start flowing.
For the players, thereās a fine line between being engaged and being too fired up. Tate willed Arizona back into the game last year in Los Angeles but forced a pass late that was intercepted. Fields believes the more seasoned Wildcats will be better prepared for the atmosphere and intensity this time.
āLast year I feel like āSC was a big game for me, one of the biggest games for me. Now I feel like Iāve been there, done that,ā said Fields, who will make his 18th career start Saturday. āI was talking to one of the young guys the other day.
āTreat it like another game. You donāt want to get too jittery. Thatās when stupid penalties and stupid mistakes happen.ā
Although Arizona has had minimal success against USC, some in the know give the Wildcats a fighting chance. They opened as two-point underdogs, and the line stood at three as of this writing. Bruce Feldman of The Athletic picked Arizona over USC as his āUpset Specialā this week.
What kind of message would it send if the Wildcats were to pull it off?
āThat weāre not a team to be messed with this year,ā offensive lineman Bryson Cain said. āI think with coach Sumlin ⦠we can really make a difference in the Pac-12.ā
Bryson Cain glad heās been able to contribute to UA rushing attack
Updated
Offensive lineman Bryson Cain, right, helped lead the way for Arizona's rushing outburst at Oregon State.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily StarLast week at Oregon State, Arizona rushed for more than 400 yards for the sixth time in the past three seasons.
For the first time, offensive lineman Bryson Cain wasnāt just a witness.
āThis is the first time I was involved in it,ā Cain said, āso it felt a little extra special.ā
Cain, the Wildcatsā starting right guard, redshirted as a freshman in 2016. He was on track to be a top backup last season before breaking and tearing multiple ligaments in his ankle late in training camp.
So began a long, grueling rehabilitation process. By the time he returned to full-time duty in the spring, Cain had a new position coach and a new position.
Joe Gilbert basically had to start from scratch with Arizonaās offensive line. Among the moves he made was shifting Cain from tackle to guard.
āIt was whatever was best for the team,ā Cain said. āWhatever Coach Gilbert thinks is right for me is right.ā
Gilbertās tinkering continued into the season. After senior Layth Friekh became eligible for Game 3, Gilbert moved freshman Donovan Laie from left tackle to right tackle. Like Cain, Cody Creason moved from tackle to guard.
The changes have worked, at least so far. The offensive line has been Arizonaās most improved unit over the past two weeks. The Wildcats led the Pac-12 in total offense and rushing entering this weekend.
āI think itās more communication than anything,ā Cain said. āWeāre getting a lot more comfortable with the offense. Weāre getting to a point where we donāt have to make certain calls anymore. We can just look up and see the defense lined up a certain way. Everyoneās on the same page.ā
Cain said the line is āplaying as one unit rather than five different players having to move around and block people.ā That statement calls to mind an analogy Kevin Sumlin used earlier this season: āYour line better work more like a nickel than five pennies.ā
A healthy Cain has enhanced its value.
Larry Scott on criticism, Pac-12 Networks, sports gambling, injury reports
Updated
Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott says the conference's network has brought "significant exposure."
Reed Saxon / AP PhotoThe USC-Arizona game kicks off at 7:30 p.m. ā 10:30 on the East Coast.
Late start times are just one of the many reasons Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott has become a lightning rod for criticism. The Pac-12 Networks ā which still donāt have a carriage deal with DirecTV ā also rank near the top of that list.
Scott handles it all in stride. The commissioner, whoās been the face of the league for nearly a decade, visited with reporters last week before the Arizona-Oregon State game in Corvallis. He talked about what itās like to be criticized and gave a frank assessment of the Pac-12 Networks. Hereās a portion of that conversation, which has been lightly edited for context and clarity:
You are in a position where youāre going to be criticized a lot. How do you deal with that?
A:Ā āIt goes with the territory. Iāve been a commissioner before this role in pro sports. If youāre not comfortable with that, you shouldnāt be in a role like this. The same is true for athletics directors, university presidents, coaches. I never complain about it. The way I look at it is, one of the reasons college sports is so successful is because of the popularity, the exposure and the passion people have for it. If people didnāt have such extreme passion, there wouldnāt be the criticism.
āI donāt like criticism of the league. I donāt like criticism of the schools. I donāt like personal criticism. But I donāt take it personally. I donāt think you can be in a role like this and not have some of it.ā
Howās the health of the Pac-12 Networks?
A:Ā āI think itās very healthy. Stable. Significant exposure for the members. The production quality is very, very high. But itās not growing at this stage. Weāve had this stalemate with DirecTV, and thereās cord-cutting going on. Itās hard for any network to be growing these days.
āBut the original impetus for the network was about our mission, providing a platform for exposure. Weāre creating a lot of value for the members, the programs and the student-athletes in a lot of different ways.ā
You can buy HBO for a month for a set amount of money. Have you ever considered doing something like that with the Pac-12 Networks?
A:Ā āIn the earliest days, that was an option. But once we entered the business model we entered into, with distribution for the network with Comcast, DISH, Cox, Spectrum, weāre prohibited from selling the network individually like the HBO model.
āWe agreed, as part of those original distribution deals, that weād exclusively be distributed as part of a bundle ⦠at least through 2024. Our ESPN and Fox agreements go through 2024. Likewise, all of our distributions go through 2024. Itās a complete, open slate after that.ā
Is there any concern within the league about the Supreme Court decision that opens the possibility of legalized gambling on sports?
A:Ā āYes. Weāre concerned and monitoring whatās going to happen. Mostly concerned about the integrity of the competition ā influences and temptations around student-athletes, coaches. Weāre at a minimum going to have to put significant effort and resources into education and monitoring. Weāve had some experience with that already, because thereās gambling in Las Vegas (site of the Pac-12 Tournament). We monitor that and work closely with authorities there.ā
What about a universal injury report? Have you ever talked about that with your fellow commissioners?
A:Ā āI have. This topic came up pretty early in my tenure within the conference as well. There was a strong belief by our schools that it should be a school-by-school decision. Some of the concerns on our campuses are that student-athletes are different from professional athletes. Thereās information-protection laws and other campus regulations. Thereās a real caution about disclosing medical information about students.ā
Jake Glatting holds on to important role with Wildcats
UpdatedArizona holder Jake Glatting runs through the Wildcatsā fake field goal at Oregon State that resulted in a Khalil Tate TD pass three plays later pic.twitter.com/gXxNOHEOaQ
— The Wildcaster (@TheWildcaster) September 25, 2018
When he found out Arizona was adding graduate transfer Dylan Klumph, Jake Glatting knew what the future held.
Klumph was an accomplished two-year starter at Cal. He was coming to Tucson as a scholarship player. Barring something unforeseen, Klumph would become the Wildcatsā punter. Glatting would have a reduced role.
āIt was tough finding out Dylan was coming, finding out he was on scholarship after talks with coach (Rich) Rodriguez years ago about potentially getting on scholarship, and that never happening,ā Glatting said. āIt was hard taking that news. But Dylanās a great dude. Heās got a great leg. Iāve got nothing against him.ā
Entering his fifth and final year at the UA, Glatting just hoped heād have a job. He retained his spot as the holder, one of those positions typically not noticed unless something goes wrong.
Or youāre the key figure in a trick play that works just right.
Glatting found himself in that position last Saturday against Oregon State. As Glatting and kicker Lucas Havrisik trotted onto the field for a 44-yard field-goal attempt in the third quarter, special-teams coordinator Jeremy Springer called for āBlueā ā the code name for a fake.
Glatting knelt behind snapper Nick Reinhardt, per usual. But when Glatting received the ball, he bolted to his left, the pitch man on an option play.
Glatting read the defense and elected to keep the ball. He needed 7 yards for the first down. He gained 8.
āItās been five years since Iāve done any running on the field with the ball in game-like situations,ā said Glatting, who played quarterback at Thunderbird High School in Phoenix. āItās been a long time since I got hit like that.ā
Glattingās teammates, in particular his fellow special-teamers, mobbed him when he returned to the sideline.
āWhen someone you donāt expect to make a play makes a play like that, everyoneās like, āNice play, dude! You got the first down! Heck yeah!ā ā Glatting said.
After series of tight games, USC gains separation from Arizona
Updated
Khalil Tate evades the Trojans' pass rush during the Wildcats' 48-14 loss at Arizona Stadium in 2016.
Mike Christy / Arizona Daily StarFor a nine-year stretch, Arizona played USC as tough as anyone.
From 2007-15, every game between the Wildcats and Trojans was decided by one score. Arizona won two of them ā its only victories in the series in the past 16 matchups.
USC has gained separation the last two seasons, winning by 34 and 14 points.
Below are the results of the past 11 meetings. The games in even-numbered years were played in Tucson.
2007:Ā USC 20, Arizona 13
2008:Ā USC 17, Arizona 10
2009:Ā Arizona 21, USC 17
2010:Ā USC 24, Arizona 21
2011:Ā USC 48, Arizona 41
2012:Ā Arizona 39, USC 36
2013:Ā USC 38, Arizona 31
2014:Ā USC 28, Arizona 26
2015:Ā USC 38, Arizona 30
2016:Ā USC 48, Arizona 14
2017:Ā USC 49, Arizona 35
More information
- Greg Hansen: 'Mr. Football' on special teams, surnames and Arizona Stadium sellouts
- Pac-12 analysts weigh in on Khalil Tate, JT Daniels and the USC-Arizona matchup
- Field Pass: Matchups, starters and stats to know for Arizona-USC
- The Wildcast, Episode 132: Arizona-USC preview from Frog & Firkin
- Pac-12 power rankings: No questions atop conference after Stanford's overtime thriller
- Cats Stats: Examining the chain reaction caused by Arizonaās dearth of takeaways
- From 'a dark place' to a good place: Arizonaās PJ Johnson perseveres through pain
- The Wildcast, Episode 131: Will Khalil Tate log his first victory over USC?
- Could special teams be the key to an Arizona Wildcats upset of USC?
- Kevin Sumlin on Arizona Wildcats' matchup with USC: 'Weāve got our work cut out'
- Pueblo shuts out Douglas to hand Bulldogs first loss of season
- What to watch for when the Arizona Wildcats host USC tonight
- Arizona Wildcats make multiple lineup changes on defense before USC game
- College football scoreboard: Arizona Wildcats, USC Trojans
- USC Trojans spoil Arizona Wildcats' Pac-12 home opener 24-20
View this profile on Instagram#ThisIsTucson šµ (@this_is_tucson) ⢠Instagram photos and videos
Most viewed stories
-
Nearly 90 fun events happening in March! šŗ
-
Surprise! Wildflower season is starting early. Here's where to find the best blooms š¼
-
Jamie vs Sonoran Dogs: The very delicious ending to the Sonoran Dog Trail
-
39 fun events to check out February 27 - March 1!
-
Conservation park for endangered animal could open south of Tucson
-
New owner saves Tucson's oldest bookstore from closing
-
4th Ave. is getting cheesier: A new quesadilla spot is now open!



