Heโs a little biased, but Arizona linebackers coach Danny Gonzales didnโt mince words when sharing what he thinks of Jacob Manu, the leader of his group โ and the Wildcatsโ defense.
โI think weโve got the best linebacker in the Big 12,โ said Gonzales, who joined the UA after serving as head coach at New Mexico. โI got no problem saying that.
โI think Jacob Manu proved last year how special of a player he is,โ Gonzlaes added. โI say it without hesitation.โ
Gonzales added Manu โhas a high football IQ as any player that Iโve been around, which is a lot of fun.โ
During Manuโs team-captain campaign as a sophomore, the โWillโ linebacker became the first Wildcat to lead the Pac-12 in tackles (116) since Scooby Wright in 2014, and the first UA player to have over 100 tackles in a season since Colin Schooler in 2018. Manu earned first-team All-Pac-12 honors and was named to the Associated Press All-Pac-12 team.
In sync with his longtime high school and college teammates in quarterback Noah Fifita and wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan, Manu helped galvanize the UA roster after former head coach Jedd Fisch and his staff left for Washington.
โThe coaches that came in, we had nothing to do with those guys sticking together,โ Gonzales said. โThe spring practices and offseason workouts were an audition for the coaches on these guys.โ
Manu and several members of last seasonโs Arizona squad announced their decision to stay for head coach Brent Brennanโs first season via a cinematically-produced hype video played at McKale Center during a timeout break at the Arizona-UCLA menโs basketball game.
โThatโs one of the best things Iโve seen in my 25 years of coaching,โ Gonzales said.
โI think this team has done a phenomenal job of one, being together with all of the distractions that are out there, with the transfer portal, academics, late spring ball, new coaching staff,โ Gonzales added. โYouโve gotta give this football team credit, they fought through some of that adversity thatโll help as we get into game preparation come August.โ
Manu and Gonzales, like Arizonaโs offensive players and coaches, have worked together to marry concepts from the previous regime to the Wildcatsโ updated defense under coordinator Duane Akina; The Wildcats will still run a 4-2-5 base defense, the scheme used the last two seasons under Johnny Nansen.
Gonzales and Manu have had a symbiotic relationship since they first started working together.
โAny coach that says they know it all, theyโre full of it,โ Gonzales said. โThat was a great opportunity, and the relationship to build with Manu has been a lot of fun.โ
But in linebacker parlance, whoโs the โMikeโ to Manuโs โWill?โ Itโs a question that goes back to last season, when the Wildcats cycled through four different starters at โMikeโ linebacker, including defensive back Martell Irby, next to Manu in 13 games.
โTrying to find the next of that, weโve had three guys step up and do some good things,โ Gonzales said.
The duo of sophomores Taye Brown, who was consistently in the starting lineup during spring practices, and Kamuela Kaโaihue had โan exceptional springโ after spending their first season at the UA as special teams standouts. Speaking about second-year linebacker Leviticus Suโa, the Wildcatsโ top-rated defensive player from 2023, Gonzales said โschematically, itโs not an issue, itโs a matter of full-speed reps.โ
Justin Flowe, a former Oregon transfer, made โexceptional progress from some of the assignment mistakes he made last year, which is a huge-value bonus,โ Gonzales said. Floweโs 6-2, 225-pound body frame, explosive tackling and fearless mindset make him a valuable asset to the Wildcats. This spring, Flowe was tracked running 22 miles per hour, โso obviously he can run and has that skillset.โ
Flowe splashed into Arizonaโs defense following the Mississippi State game in Starkville last season, when he tied Manu with a career-high 12 tackles, but sometimes freelanced and struggled in pass coverage, which led to his tapered production. To maximize Floweโs strengths, Gonzales challenged Arizonaโs linebacker to โlimit focus.โ
โIf we can limit what he has to focus on, down in and down out and he knows exactly what weโre doing, heโs going to be a really good player and help us,โ Gonzales said of Flowe. โHeโs going to be a core four special teams guy because of his athletic ability. Heโs got the potential to cover punts, heโs got the potential to block punts and do all those things. Heโs one of the first ones down on kickoff.โ
Added Gonzales: โItโs our job as coaches to put him in position to be successful and use that ability.
Gonzales said he heavily recruited flow โout of Upland High School (in Calfornia), and now Iโm excited to get the opportunity to work with him.โ
Flowe was noticeably effective as a blitzing linebacker this spring, disrupting multiple plays in the backfield for sacks and tackles for loss. Flowe as a downhill and pass-rushing linebacker, a similar role as Micah Parsons with the Dallas Cowboys, could be a cheat code for Arizonaโs defense: See ball, get ball.
โWe gotta find pieces that donโt confuse him, and make him play fast. That goes for our entire 11 on defense,โ Gonzales said. โIf theyโre confused or thinking of what weโre doing, theyโre not going to be as good as they can be.
โWeโre giving him the ability to play fast and do things full speed,โ Gonzales added. โOur job is to make sure those 11 guys know exactly what theyโre doing, know what theyโre doing and how to do it โ and they can do it in a reckless manner. Heโs a big piece of that.โ
And blitzing is an essential component to how Gonzalesโ linebackers are going to to play this fall.
โOf course weโre going to blitz. If you know my personality, weโre going to blitz, and if coach Akina tells me, โNo,โ Iโm going to fight him on it, and coach Akina is not that way,โ Gonzales said. โWeโre going to try and get after people.โ
Gonzales โknows what heโs doing up front,โ Manu said, adding that โI love blitzing, so itโs good for me.โ
Manu and Flowe โare slippery insideโ as blitzers.
โNow it becomes, โHow can we make them technicians? How can we take advantage?โ The idea of being successful at football is, โWhere can you find six inches to give you an advantage? Is it eye placement? Is it footwork? Is it foot pattern?โ Coaches donโt win games, players win games,โ Gonzales said.
โItโs our job to give them every tool that they can. Right now with Flowe, when weโre blitzing, itโs, โWhat move are you doing?,โ he added. โYou have to be able to react and counter whatever they give you? But you have to have something in mind and if they counter your move, you gotta have something.โโ
Although itโs not official yet, Gonzales noted the Wildcats are likely adding one more linebacker, New Mexico transfer Alec Marenco, a 6-3, 230-pound El Paso, Texas native, who played for Gonzales at UNM. Marenco had 96 tackles and 3.5 stops for loss in three seasons with the Lobos. Arizona also signed incoming freshmen Jabari Mann and Stacy Bey for 2024, and returns walk-on and Tucson native Tyler Mustain.
โI think our room is pretty solid. Weโre going to add one more. ... You never want to count on a true freshman to play. For every true freshman you play, you lose a football game. Weโre at a point in this program, and give the previous staff credit because they did a really good job recruiting whatโs on our campus, weโre not counting on those pieces coming in,โ Gonzales said. โIf they work out on special teams and they give us reps here and there, thatโs an added bonus.
โI like what weโre adding to our room.โ