While other teams get ready for bowl games, the Arizona Wildcats are preparing for next year.
Its season cut short, Arizona began offseason workouts just days after the Nov. 25 finale.
Despite a 3-9 record, the Wildcats have plenty of intriguing characters. Over the coming weeks, the Star will profile some of them.
First up: quarterback Khalil Tate, who played as a true freshman in 2016 â and will be given every opportunity to win the starting job in â17.
How would you sum up your freshman year? How did it go?
A: âI learned a lot. Very helpful to get to be in certain situations, travel certain places, just to get prepared for next year. Not playing a lot, but playing enough to where I (could) grasp what could happen next time if I was in the same exact situation.â
You said you learned a lot. Whatâs the biggest lesson you took away?
A: âJust game-time experience. Actually being on the field. If I was just on the sideline, the next year, first game, itâs different. Now Iâm going into next season knowing whatâs expected, knowing what I have to do, knowing a lot more.â
A lot of people were opposed to Arizona burning your redshirt. You seem to be on the other side of the fence, that it was beneficial for you.
A: âIt was very beneficial. Like I said, game-time experience was important. Basketball, football, baseball, anytime you play, you donât have to be a big factor, (but) as long as youâre in the game you get the feel for it. Next time youâll be even better because you were a rookie the first time.â
Do you wish you had played more after the redshirt was lifted?
A: âIt didnât matter. Iâm in Godâs hands. Whatever he wants me to do, Iâm going to do it. Iâm not going to fight or get frustrated. Iâm just blessed to be here. I canât complain at all.â
You performed well in relief against UCLA and Utah. You struggled against USC. What was the difference?
A: âNot being as comfortable as I was in those games. It was my first start. I expected myself to do way better than I did. It was against a pretty good, up-and-coming USC team. Itâs not like it was a weaker opponent to where the flaws went unnoticed. All the flaws were seen. That helped a lot, though, because I know next time what to expect.â
Did you put more pressure on yourself that day compared to when you came off the bench?
A: âIt wasnât really pressure. People knew I was going to play, so they game-planned. UCLA and Utah, they didnât know if I was going to play or not. USC, they game-planned for (me). It was something they were probably waiting on all week. They knew what to do.â
What did you learn from being around two veteran quarterbacks in Anu Solomon and Brandon Dawkins?
A: âFrom Anu, I just learned to take a lot more things seriously. Be more calm. See things fully instead of just making a decision. Just relaxing. From Brandon, have fun. I already have fun. But have more fun. The team (vibes) off you. If youâre down, theyâre going to be down. If youâre happy at all times, the team should be happy.â
When you start doing football-specific work again, what are some of the areas you really need to work on to improve your game?
A: âI would say decision-making, and that comes from learning more of the playbook. You can never know too much of the playbook. You can always learn something new about it. Decision-making will come easier. I wouldnât be thinking on the fly. I would know whatâs going on.â
Whatâs the message from the coaches about the QB competition heading into the offseason?
A: âThe coaches arenât going to say (anything) because itâs always open. They donât have to say itâs an open competition. Everybody knows that. Youâve just got to keep working hard.â
So whatâs your approach then?
A: âWork on the little things. Footwork. Decision-making. That comes with reps. Getting more live reps with the ones and twos. This past season I was with the threes a lot, so there werenât a whole lot of reps.â
Are you concerned at all that Arizona is adding two more quarterbacks to compete for the job?
A: âThat doesnât really make a difference to me. Iâve never really been the type to care about whoâs coming, whoâs there. If that was the point, I wouldnât have come here. Every school you go to, thereâs going to be somebody coming in. Itâs about yourself.â
You lost only a handful of games your entire high school career. What was it like to go through a nine-loss season?
A: âDifferent. I think it was a great experience. I feel like in life youâve got to experience the lows in order to be successful. If youâre just winning all the time âĻ youâre not learning. Youâre always up here. Youâre never down here. I wouldnât say I enjoyed the season, but it was helpful because I got to learn about myself, how I react to things.â
Why do you think Arizona will be better next season?
A: âWeâre going to use this year as motivation for next year. Nobody wants to lose nine games. Itâs not fun. Itâs not something that you want to happen, itâs not something you want to be a part of.â



