One important facet of the roster-building process, the NFL draft declaration game, has broken the Pac-12βs way this winter.
We wonβt know whether it qualifies as a lopsided victory or narrow escape until later this week. While Monday was the deadline for early entrants to declare for the April 27-29 draft, news will trickle out for several days. Some prospects simply arenβt interested in announcing their decisions on social media (imagine that!).
However, enough stay-or-go decisions have been made public for the Hotline to offer preliminary judgment β¦
Arizona Our verdict : Winner
Comment : The Wildcats arenβt loaded with pro prospects but have retained three key players: tailback Michael Wiley, receiver Jacob Cowing and left tackle Jordan Morgan. The least-known of the trio outside of Tucson, Morganβs decision is the most important. He might have jumped into the draft if not for a season-ending knee injury against UCLA. Assuming good health for the start of the season, Morgan will be one of the Pac-12βs best at a high-value position.
Arizona State Our verdict : Case dismissed
Comment : Several key players are out of eligibility, including star linebacker Kyle Soelle, while other starters have transferred. (Offensive lineman LaDarius Henderson is heading to Michigan, for example.) But the direct damage to ASU from draft decisions is minimal as new coach Kenny Dillingham works to retool the roster.
Cal Our verdict : Winner
Comment : We considered dismissing this case as well, since the Bears werenβt exactly loaded with draft-eligible talent. However, one key stay-or-go decision went the direction they hoped: Jackson Sirmon, a first-team all-conference linebacker, will return for the 2023 season. We should mention that punter Jamieson Sheahan declared for the draft β not because of the ramifications for next season as much as because we get a kick out of punters declaring for the draft.
Colorado Our verdict : Case dismissed
Comment : Much like ASU, the Buffaloes had a limited number of players whose NFL decisions would impact the trajectory of the program, for better or worse, in 2023. (Itβs all about Coach Deion Sanders working the transfer portal.) The departure of receiver Daniel Arias isnβt nearly significant enough for a verdict.
Oregon Our verdict : Winner
Comment : The biggest news broke a week before Christmas, when quarterback Bo Nix announced his plan to return. But heβs not alone in that endeavor. Offensive lineman Steven Jones passed on the draft. So did linebacker Mase Funa. Defensive linemen Brandon Dorlus, Casey Rodgers and Popo Aumavae are returning, too. (The Ducks will be stacked up front.) However, two of the top defensive players in the conference, inside linebacker Noah Sewell and cornerback Christian Gonzalez, a potential first-round pick, are turning pro.
Oregon State Our verdict : Loser (by a hair)
Comment : Many of OSUβs key players have used up their eligibility β cornerback Rejzohn Wright, for example β and another anchor, linebacker Omar Speights, is transferring. The list of top talents who had the opportunity to return for the β23 season and instead chose to enter the draft features cornerback Alex Austin and tight end Luke Musgrave. As a counterweight, the Beavers got good news on the draft front from safety Kitan Oladapo.
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Stanford Our verdict : Loser
Comment : This ruling shouldnβt come as much of a surprise β very little has gone right for Stanford over the past 18-24 months. Quarterback Tanner McKee declared for the draft in early December, perhaps a year too late. (His value plunged to such an extent during Stanfordβs dismal season that the university should offer him compensatory damages.) And not for nothing: The Cardinal also lost all-conference cornerback Kyu Blu Kelly. It wasnβt long ago that Stanford possessed enough players with high-end draft value to create drama at the deadline.
UCLA Our verdict : Loser
Comment : The Hotline delayed judgment on the Bruins until word from Westwood arrived at lunchtime Monday that star tailback Zach Charbonnet is headed to the NFL. (No surprise: Heβs the rare tailback who warrants a high-round valuation.) Charbonnet joins a slew of teammates who have already declared, including receiver Kaz Allen and offensive lineman Jon Gaines. However, a key decision isnβt yet public: edge rusher Laiatu Latu.
USC Our verdict : Loser
Comment : This decision carries slightly more nuance than you might expect. Yes, the Trojans took a combination punch to the gut with the losses of star receiver Jordan Addison and the top defensive player in the conference, lineman Tuli Tuipulotu. However, offensive lineman Justin Dedich and linebacker Shane Lee are returning. And a vital point: Quarterback Caleb Williams isnβt eligible for the draft until the spring of 2024, thus limiting the range of outcomes for the Trojans.
Utah Our verdict : Winner
Comment : The Utes lost a hefty amount of talent but still emerged as a winner in the declaration game, primarily because quarterback Cam Rising is coming back (although his health remains an issue following a serious leg injury in the Rose Bowl). Top receiver Devaughn Vele and all-conference tight end Brant Kuithe are returning, too. That said, the Utes lost Clark Phillips III, perhaps the top cornerback in the conference, along with tight end Dalton Kincaid and linebackers Gabe Reid and Mohamoud Diabate.
Washington Our verdict : Winner (by a landslide)
Comment : The Huskies lost their starting tailback (Wayne Taulapapa) and a key edge rusher (Jeremiah Martin) but nonetheless finished as the Pac-12βs biggest winner. Because quarterback Michael Penix is returning. So are his favorite targets, receivers Jalen McMillan and Rome Odunze. And edge rushers Bralen Trice and Zion Tupuola-Fetui. And mammoth defensive tackle Tuli Letuligasenoa. And all-conference left guard Troy Fautanu. Tally it up, and those seven form the core of what should be a preseason top-10 team.
Washington State Our verdict : Winner
Comment : The Cougars were hit hard by the transfer portal but received good, if somewhat limited, news on the draft front. All-conference edge rushers Ron Stone Jr. and Brennan Jackson are returning. Their presence ensures that if the Cougarsβ front seven regresses β the linebacking unit was hit hard by attrition β the scope will be limited.
The University of Arizona once had a live "Wildcat" mascot; however, the current mascot β with a few changes that include wife, Wilma, along the way β Wilbur the Wildcat has been a favorite around Tucson for more than 60 years.
By Johanna Eubank
Arizona Daily Star
Photos: Every University of Arizona homecoming since 1914
1914: The University of Arizona defeated Pomona College, 7-6, on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 26, 1914, at the first Homecoming game. The Wildcats got their name that year after a tough football game against the Occidental College Tigers on November 7, 1914. The team "showed the fight of Wildcats," according to the Los Angeles Times.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1915: University of Arizona Wildcat Mascot "Rufus Arizona." The original mascot, first called, "Tom Easter", arrived on campus on October 17, 1915, and was introduced to the student body the following day at assembly in Herring Hall. He was the gift of the freshman, who, with George Schreer, raised funds ($9.91) to purchase him from one F.W. Fawkins. blacksmith in Troop B, 9th Cavalry, U.S. Army, stationed atDouglas. He was official named "Rufus Arizona" after President Rufus B. von Kleinsmid.
UA Special Collections
1916: University of Arizona football team in the 1916-17 UA yearbook. The team beat the New Mexico Aggies at the 1916 homecoming game, 73-0. The game synopsis in the yearbook included this line: "At the beginning of the season Coach McKale stated that he would rather win the Aggie game than any other two games."
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1917: "Big Bill" McGowan, center, played right tackle and even handled punting the ball. He was elected captain of the UA football team that defeated Whittier College at the 1917 Homecoming game. He joined the military at the end of the school year to fight in World War I.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1918: The "Seniors" chapter page from the 1919 University of Arizona yearbook, which shows an American warplane. There was no Homecoming or football that season due to World War I.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1919: Texas Miners 0, UA 46. The Homecoming game was Occidental, which UA won, 27-0.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1920: The 1920-21 UA football team caption and quarterback "Slony" Slonaker led the team to victory with a broken rib on the last two games of the season, New Mexico and Redlands.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1921: UA football team, seen in this photo playing against Whittier College, shellacked an embarrassed and overmatched New Mexico Military Institute, 110-0.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1922: Florine Pinson, a junior English major from Miami, Ariz, was selected as "Queen of the 1923 Desert" yearbook. It's not Homecoming royalty (though possibly a predecessor), since the first official Homecoming queen was crowned until 1947. Besides, traditional Homecoming royalty typically don't opt for risque poses.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1923: "Yell leaders" during the 1923 UA football season. Gotta love the hats.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1924: The 1925 UA Desert Yearbook makes one of the first yearbook references to the homecoming during the recap of the 1924 game against the California Aggies: "The annual Homecoming Day football classic found the Wildcats in tip top form, and for the first time throughout the season, the team played real football, and were rewarded with a 12-6 victory."
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1925: The 1926 UA Desert yearbook details the 1925 Homecoming game against the Nevada Wolfpack: "The game ended in a 0-0, but it was clearly a moral victory for the crippled and desperate group of Wildcats. For four heartbreaking quarters they held, and at times outplayed, a startled and wondering Nevada team."
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1926: Homecoming snapshots from 1926 from the 1927 Desert Yearbook, including the parade through downtown Tucson.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1927: The 1928 UA Desert Yearbook referred to the 1927 Homecoming against at UCLA as one of the best of the season. "The Bruins came here with the idea that the tussle would be a practice game, but the learned differently from the start." The clincher was a pass to to "Swede" Sorenson in the third quarter to set up a Wildcat touchdown. "Sorenson took the ball while smothered by two UCLA backs, and ran five yards, with players hanging to him."
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1928: Arizona battled New Mexico to a 6-6 tie on Homecoming day in 1928. The Desert Yearbook notes, "Arizona underrated the strength of the Lobos and did not take advantage of chances to score until it was too late." The team would have settled for a tie the following week, when they faced national champions USC and "were trimmed," 78-7.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1929: UA defeated Caltech, 35-0, on Oct. 12, 1929, the first homecoming game played in the new Arizona Stadium. It was dedicated by Gov. J.C. Phillips before a crowd of 6,000.
Arizona Daily Star
1930: Scenes from the 1930 UA Homecoming as presented in the 1931 Desert Yearbook. Note the huge "A" constructed over the entrance at Main Gate.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1931: UA Homecoming game against Rice was the first played under stadium lights. Rice "broke a string of gridiron Homecoming day victories, which lasted since 1915, to mercilessly trounce the Cats, 32-0," according to the 1932 Desert yearbook.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1932: The Kappa Alpha Theta float, an airplane called the Spirit of A, on University Boulevard at UA Homecoming circa 1932-35.Β
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1933: Desert Yearbook makes no reference of the 1933 Homecoming. However, Arizona won its last two games of the season, against NAU and Whittier College.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1934: Homecoming week as presented in the 1935 Desert Yearbook.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1935: Coach Oliver of the Arizona Wildcats bemoaned the loss of a tackle, flanker and two backs to injuries two days before the 1935 game against the mightly Oklahoma City Goldbugs. Turns out it was it wasn't worth losing any sleep over it. Arizona won, 27-0.
Arizona Daily Star
1936: An ad in the Arizona Daily Star on the day of the 1936 UA Homecoming game, urges last-minute holdouts to get their tickets. Primo reserved seats were a steep $1.65, but worth it.
Arizona Daily Star
1937: Homecoming parade. The Wildcats defeated the Kansas Jayhawks 9-7 on November 20, 1937.Β
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1938: University of Arizona and Montana played for the Homecoming football game. Arizona lost, 7-0.Β
Courtesy Special Collections
1939: Kappa Sigma house won for Homecoming decoration in 1939, the second year in a row for the honor. The Desert yearbook described it as "an Alley Oop bearing down on a red-nosed gentleman" to depict the Wildcats game against Centenary College. Arizona won, 7-0.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1940: UA Homecoming got a two-page spread in the Desert Yearbook, the last big splash before World War II. The yearbook noted more than 1,000 "old grads" returned to campus. Delta Gamma took first place in the float contest. The Wildcats won their game agains Louisiana's Centenary Gentleman, 29-6.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1941: A large "cat-astrophe" cutout sits in front of a student residence. The two wildcats hold a score sign.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1942: The Wildcats beat the Oklahoma A&M Aggies, 20-6, in a subdued 1942 Homecoming game that had no formal campus events due to World War II.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1943: Football was suspended in 1943 and 1944 due to World War II. The Desert yearbook published pages of snapshots of former Wildcats now serving in the military. The campus became home to U.S. Navy cadet pilots, who lived in Yavapai Hall, had classroom instruction campus and flight instruction Gilpin Airfield at Kino and I-10, which is now home to Costco and Walmart.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1944: Football was suspended for the 1944 season at UA due to the war. The pages of the 1945 Desert Yearbook show hundreds of U.S. Navy cadets at attention during ceremonies on the UA campus, including graduation of the Navy Indoctrination School, which was decommissioned in Spring, 1945, as the war came to close.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1945: University of Arizona football team.Β
UA Special Collections
1946: With World War II in the rear view mirror, the 1946 UA Homecoming came back with a big splash. The Desert Yearbook noted that more than 1,500 alumni returned to campus. A huge red "A" welcomed guests to Old Main. The football team battled Santa Clara to a 21-21 tie.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1947: Ruth Tackett of Alpha Phi was crowned the first official UA Homecoming Queen during a dance at Bear Down Gym in 1947.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1948: Alpha Phi float for the Homecoming parade in 1948.Β
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1949: UA Homecoming featuring the Aggie House float.Β
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1950: The oft-forgotten UA Homecoming princesses of 1950 - the ones who narrowly missed the big honor - as seen in the 1951 Desert Yearbook.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1951: The 1951 University of Arizona and Idaho football game. Arizona won 13-6.Β
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1952: University of Arizona Homecoming Rally at Stone and Pennington, October 25, 1952
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1953: Les Brown and the Band of Renown entertained alums and students at the 1953 UA Homecoming Dance, as seen in this photo spread in the 1954 yearbook. Brown also crowned Homecoming Queen Kay Mason. According to Wikipedia, "Les Brown and the Band of Renown performed with Bob Hope on radio, stage and television for almost fifty years. They did 18 USO Tours for American troops around the world, and entertained over three million people."
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1954: University of Arizona Homecoming float shaped as a whale in 1954.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1955: UA Homecoming queen Joey Holter in the homecoming parade in Oct. 1955.
Tucson Citizen
1956: UA Homecoming queen Nancy Haddad, with attendants Pat Finley, left, and Bobbi Corr in 1956.
Tucson Citizen
1957: UA Homecoming parade on Stone Ave in downtown Tucson passed by the Pioneer Hotel and Tucson's biggest department stores: Steinfeld's, JacomΓ©'s and J.C. Penney.
Tucson Citizen
1958: Kappa Sigma fraternity members won first place in the "Proposition 200" category with a funeral procession in protest to the controversial ballot initiative to change the name of Arizona State College in Tempe to "Arizona State University." Tucsonans took issue, since UA was the defacto state university for 73 years.
Tucson Citizen
1959: Alpha Xi Delta Sorority depicted snapshots of UA coeds - vintage 1900s - in the 1959 UA Homecoming parade.
Tucson Citizen
1960: Last-minute float construction (never!) on the UA Campus prior to the Homecoming game in 1960. From the 1961 Desert yearbook.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1961: The caption for this 1961 UA Homecoming parade photo in the Tucson Citizen was both sweet and sexist: "Four beaming coeds set the tone for the slogan put on the Pi Beta Phi float in the annual University of Arizona Homecoming Parade. The girls also, as a lesson in economics, carry symbols of items which Arizona produces, along with pretty girls."
Tucson Citizen
1962: Caption from the Tucson Citizen: "Today's Homecoming parade theme, "Smoke signals to satellites: Communications," was all the inspiration Gamma Phi Beta sorority members needed to come up with this float. At left, Bobbi Stephenson, Phoenix, and Sue David, Fullerton, Calif., portray Indian girls sending smoke signals. Vicki Carlson, also of Phoenix, holds the Navy semaphore flags, while at right, a satellite "orbits" the Earth.
Art Grasberger / Tucson Citizen
1963: Sigma Chi's "Cough it Up!" float in the 1963 UA Homecoming Parade, a nudge for UA alumni to donate money to start a medical school. The College of Medicine was founded in 1967.
Art Grasberger / Tucson Citizen
1964: Delta Chi fraternity members and others work on their UA Homecoming float, "We Grew, We Fought, We Prospered," outside the the fraternity house in November, 1964
Bill Hopkins / Tucson Citizen
1965: The message on this float, "Arizona's Finest Woman," in the 1965 UA Homecoming parade is anyone's guess.
Bruce Hopkins / Tucson Citizen
1966: UA cheerleaders ride in the back of a 1955 Chevy Bel Air during the 1966 UA Homecoming football game against BYU at Arizona Stadium.
Dave Acton / Tucson Citizen
1967 : Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority won first place for their 1967 UA Homecoming float, "All Hail Pop McKale," Arizona's famous football coach, who died on June 1 that same year. The float shows the proposed "fieldhouse" to be named after McKale (McKale Center, which opened in 1973). One minor glitch on the float: They spelled McKale's name wrong (McHale).
Tucson Citizen
1968 : Three interceptions helped seal a 28-14 victory over Washington State in the 1968 Homecoming game. The photo shows halfback Dan Hustead on an eight-yard touchdown run to give the Cats at 21-0 lead.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1969 : Students protesters of Vietnam War gathered around a coffin with an American flag draped over it. Students listen to Reverend Don Eckstrom read scripture aloud at the University of Arizona mall during the 1969 UA Homecoming week.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1970: Rufus the Wildcat died in October, 1970, before the Homecoming game against Air Force. The Desert Yearbook said the autopsy indicated stress brought on by an ulcerous condition or a virus. The veterinarian was quoted as saying the games "were a terrible stress on the animal." The ASUA Senate passed a resolution abolishing the use of a live animal as mascot. The yearbook went on: "So there will no longer be a Rufus. The only University mascot will have to be Wilbur...."
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1971: UA President John P. Scheafer kisses 1971 Homecoming queen Mattie Green during the halftime ceremony on Oct. 30 at Arizona Stadium. Green was the first African-American to be crowned in the university's history.
Lew Elliott / Tucson Citizen
1972: This UA Homecoming float pays tribute to Arizona's A1 beer, favorite for college students in 1940s-70s
Dan Tortorell / Tucson Citizen
1973: UA Homecoming Queen finalists paint a mural at El Con Mall on Oct. 28, 1973, in advance of the big game. From left, Nancy Miller, Denise Bina, Lisa PIckett, Rachel Gjerding, and Sherri Giuendelsberger.
Craig Wellborn / Tucson Citizen
1974: The UA football team lost to BYU in October, but swept Colorado State, Air Force, Wyoming and ASU to finish the season.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1975: Jim Young's Wildcats lost to the New Mexico Lobos at the 1975 Homecoming Game, 44-34, diminishing their hopes for a WAC title.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1976: Earl Mendenhall escorts 1976 UA Homecoming Queen Natalie Fabric.
Courtesy UA Special Collections
1977: Orville "Speedy" McPherson, a fullback on the 1914 UA football team, left, reminisces with Harold C. Schwalen, a 1917 distinguished engineering grad, during the 1977 UA Homecoming alumni dinner at the Ramada Inn Tucson. McPherson, on the famous Pop McKale team that "fought like wildcats" spent 30 years in journalism. Schwalen was professor and department head in agriculture engineering until 1965.
H. Darr Beiser / Tucson Citizen
1978: Getting down with the sounds of that Disco beat at the 1978 UA Homecoming Ball at the Doubletree Hotel on Alvernon.
Jim Davis / Arizona Daily Star
1979: Dancers swing their heads and hair to the music of Chuck Wagon and the Wheels during a 1979 Homecoming Rally on UA Mall.
Jack W. Sheaffer / Arizona Daily Star
1980: University of Arizona mascot Wilbur the Wildcat tries to lead cheers at a 1980 Homecoming Pep Rally on the UA Mall. Under the Wilbur head? Sophomore student Nancy Benedict.
H. Darr Beiser / Tucson Citizen
1981: UA students donned homemade soda cans of Orange and Grape Crush (and little else) in keeping with the 1981 Homecoming Parade theme of "Crush Washington State."
Joe Vitti / Arizona Daily Star
1982: UA's 1931 football head coach Fred Enke Sr., left, talks over good times with players Milton Morse, center, and Peter Kusian during a 1982 UA alumni Homecoming Reunion at the Plaza International Hotel in Tucson.
Debra Reingold / Arizona Daily Star
1983: UA football head coach Larry Smith leads his team, including All-American linebacker Ricky Hunley (right), during a cheer at the 1983 UA Homecoming bonfire rally on the UA Mall.
Benjie Sanders / Arizona Daily Star
1984: Students and faculty took turns beating up a junk car painted with "Crush the Cardinal" during a 1984 UA Homecoming Rally on the UA Mall in advance of the Stanford football game. People could take home any parts that fell off after they took their whacks.
Bruce McClelland / Arizona Daily Star
1985: The UA Homecoming Pep Rally on the UA Mall included an egg toss. The participant at left is wearing a guitarist Eric Clapton tour shirt. Clapton was nicknamed "Slow Hand." But an egg toss requires quick hands or there could be a mess.
Arizona Daily Star
1986: UA students do their best surfing moves on a float in the 1986 UA Homecoming parade on the UA Mall on Nov. 1, 1986.
Ron Medvescek / Arizona Daily Star
1987: Homecoming royalty nominees participated in a "Dating Game" on the UA Mall on Nov. 3. The participants were given questions by the m.c. and the audience.
A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily Star
1988: Wilbur the Wildcat beckons all fans to the UA Homecoming bonfire on the UA Mall on Oct. 28.
David Sanders / Arizona Daily Star
1989: A mud tug-o-war marked the first day of UA Homecoming week festivities on Oct. 23, 1989. Some homecoming royalty, including Diane Kocour, center, tried their hand at avoiding the muck. It was sponsored by the Bobcats senior honorary.
Ron Medvescek / Arizona Daily Star
1990: Actor Craig T. Nelson, who attended the University of Arizona on a drama scholarship, waves to the crowd at the 1990 UA Homecoming parade on the UA Mall. Nelson struggled after college, but got a good role in the Al Pacino film, "And Justice for All." He went on to a lead role in Steven Spielberg's "Poltergeist." But he may be best known for the TV series, "Coach."
Mari A. Schaefer / Arizona Daily Star
1991: A University of Arizona band alumnus, with Lite Beer can wedged firmly into the bell of his alto saxophone, marches with fellow Pride of Arizona alumni during the 1991 UA Homecoming Parade on the UA Mall.
Mari A. Schaefer / Arizona Daily Star
1992: Members of Sigma Pi Epsilon fraternity raise their beers during the 1992 UA Homecoming Parade on the UA Mall on Nov. 7.
A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily Star
1993: Anne Marie Hall dons her UA game sweatshirt on Nov. 2, 1993. At the time, Hall was 90-years-old and had been to every UA game for the previous 50 years.
Bruce McClelland / Arizona Daily Star
1994: Members of Gamma Phi Beta and Sigma Phi Epsilon fend off a beer attack during the 1994 UA Homecoming Parade on the UA Mall on Nov. 5. The theme of their float was, "It's a Wildcat World."
Bruce McClelland / Arizona Daily Star
1995: UA cheerleaders jog along the route of the 1995 UA Homecoming Parade on the UA Mall on Nov. 11.
Linda Seeger Salazar / Arizona Daily Star
1996: Members of the Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Fiji fraternity cheer from the top of a truck complete with football and a goal post during the Homecoming parade.
James S. Wood / Arizona Daily Star
1997: Jeremy Crutchfield, president of the Bobcats, a senior group at the University of Arizona, puts mud on the head of homecomming queen finalist Robyn Connolly during a mud tug-o-war on the UA Mall to promote the UA spirit during homecoming week.Β
David Sanders / Arizona Daily Star
1998: Alpha Phi girls and Beta Theta Phi guys work making flowers for the Beta's homecoming float. Hundreds of the paper flowers were made for the float.
Jim Davis / Arizona Daily Star
1999: The UA's Homecoming Parade on the UA Mall prior to the game on Nov. 6.
Sergey Shayevich / Arizona Daily Star
2000: Danielys Zepeda, 7, cheers during the UA homecoming parade on University Blvd.
Joshua Trujillo / Arizona Daily Star
2001: The Pride of Arizona marches along the UA Mall by Old Main during the homecoming parade on November 10, 2001.
A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily Star
2002: Homecoming festivities included a celebration of the 100th year of the UA band. Here, Jack Lee, 81, a former band director at the UA who wrote "Bear Down Arizona" fifty years ago, waves his napkin while accepting a standing ovation in Bear Down Gym.Β
Chris Richards / Arizona Daily Star
2003: University of Arizona cheerleader Taylor Hendrickson gets tossed into the sky on Nov. 8, 2003 during the homecoming parade along the UA Mall.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star
2004: It was an emotional Homecoming on Saturday at the UA-Oregon State football game, when longtime twirling coach Shirlee Bertolini was honored at halftime. Bertolini, who came to the University of Arizona as its first female twirler in 1954, became the twirling coach in 1958.
Jim Davis / Arizona Daily Star
2005: One of thousands of fans who stormed the field at Arizona Stadium gets a ride off after Arizona's Homecoming victory over UCLA. The Wildcats, who had won only one Pac-10 conference game, scored the first four times they had the ball Saturday on the way to a 52-14 victory over the Bruins. UCLA came into the game undefeated and ranked No. 7 in the country.
David Sanders / Arizona Daily Star
2006:Β Β C.L. βStubβ Ashcraft, No. 20, show in this 2006 photo reflected in a University of Arizona team photograph from 1941. By his count, it was his 388th straight home game since he returned from World War II duty in 1945.
David Sanders / Arizona Daily Star
2007: Arizona's quarterback Willie Tuitama gets surrounded by fans after their Homecoming win against UCLA, 34-27, on Nov. 3, 2007.Β
David Sanders / Arizona Daily Star
2008: Rowdy Arizona fans get pumped up before the Wildcats' homecoming game against Southern California at Arizona Stadium on Oct. 25, 2008.
Greg Bryan / Arizona Daily Star
2009: University of Arizona students partake in the unofficial homecoming kick-off tradition of running across campus in their underwear on the UA Mall on Nov. 5, 2009.
Greg Bryan / Arizona Daily Star
2010: A group of University of Arizona students get into the school spirit after Pie-in-the-Pants on the University of Arizona mall on Wednesday October 20, 2010 in preparation for homecoming.
Mamta Popat / Arizona Daily Star
2011: Junior Honorary League "chain gang" member Leo Oppenheimer, center, cheers from a bus during the annual homecoming parade on the UA Mall, Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011. The grand marshall was Ron Barber, a member of Congresswoman Gabrielle Gifford's staff when he was shot on Jan. 8, 2011.
David Sanders / Arizona Daily Star
2012: The national champion University of Arizona baseball team hitches a ride on Tucson Fire Department's Ladder 1 during the 98th UA Homecoming Parade on Saturday, Nov. 10, 2012. Alumni and fans braved chilly temperatures to attend the Friday night bonfire, and Saturday alumni breakfasts, tailgate parties, the parade and the homecoming football game against the Colorado Buffaloes.
Mike Christy / Arizona Daily Star
2013: Sebastian Adamski comes out of the crowd to get a high five from the Irish Elvis for the Homecoming before the game against UCLA at Arizona Stadium, Saturday, November 9, 2013.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star
2014: Wilbur the Wildcat rides a Tucson Fire Department ladder truck during the 100th Homecoming Parade at the University of Arizona.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star
2015: Judy Sutter, right, class of 1971, runs out to meet fellow twirler alum John Lee as he marches with the Alumni Band at the 101st University of Arizona Homecoming Parade.
Mike Christy / Arizona Daily Star
2016: A dismal season redeemed. After eight straight sometimes embarrassing losses, the Wildcats with Jacob Alsadek (holding the Territorial Cup) celebrate a 56-35 pasting of the ASU Sun Devils at Arizona Stadium.
Mike Christy / Arizona Daily Star
2017: The "A" on Sentinel Peak ("A" Mountain) is lit with flares signaling the start of University of Arizona Homecoming week in Tucson on Oct. 22, 2017. Members of the Bobcat Senior Honorary set up flares on the mountain as part of their tradition. The UA Alumni Association has a concise history of the "A":
Back-to-back victories over Pomona College in 1914 and 1915 inspired football player and civil engineering student Albert H. Condron. He went to one of his professors and suggested building an βAβ in rocks on the side of Sentinel Peak as a class assignment.
Construction began on Nov. 13, 1915. It was completed on March 4, 1916.
The land was cleared and rocks were hauled up the mountain by six-horse teams. Students worked week after week and the βAβ was finally white-washed nearly four months after construction began. Total cost of the project? $397.
A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily Star
2018: Homecoming king and queen Ahmed Al-Shamari, left, and Jalon Jackson wave to the crowd during the 2018 University of Arizona homecoming parade on campus, Oct. 27, 2018, in Tucson, Ariz.
Mike Christy / Arizona Daily Star
2019: Harper Pastore, 5, waves to a passing car during the the University of Arizona homecoming parade on the UA Mall on Nov. 2, 2019. The grand marshal was UA womenβs basketball head coach Adia Barnes, who led her team to WNIT Championship in April.
Josh Galemore / Arizona Daily Star
2020: Nikita Ganesh, a senior at the University of Arizona studying Psychology and Chinese, stands for a portrait on the rugby pitch at William David Sitton Field. Ganesh who has been playing rugby since she was a senior in high school and throughout college was the homecoming queen.
Josh Galemore / Arizona Daily Star
Fans rushed the field after University of Arizona defeated Cal, 10-3, at homecoming for the only win of the football season.
Ana Beltran, Arizona Daily Star 2021
2022 : A fan narrowly misses catching a t-shirt chucked into the stands by former Arizona standout and NFL star Rob Gronkowsi in the second quarter of the Wildcats game against USC at Arizona Stadium in Tucson on Oct. 29.Β
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star