Playing quarterback may not have been in Noah Fifitaâs bloodline, but itâs always been in his DNA.
The Arizona redshirt sophomore signal-caller hails from a defensive front-seven family.
âThe thing about football was it was a part of my family,â he said. âIn my mind, that was a way to make them proud.
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita fields questions on July 10, 2024, at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, site of the two-day Big 12 football Media Days event.
âI was forced to play football, but I loved it so much because of my family.â
Fifitaâs father, Les Fifita, was a linebacker during his playing days. Lesâ brother, Steve Fifita, played defensive tackle at Utah under Urban Meyer, before a stint in the NFL with the Miami Dolphins and New England Patriots. Noah Fifitaâs other uncle, Kelly Talavou, played defensive tackle for the Baltimore Ravens.
âWeâve always been a defensive family,â Noah Fifita said.
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita threads the seam on a third-quarter throw in the Wildcatsâ throttling of rival Arizona State in the 97th Territorial Cup on Nov. 25, 2023, in Tempe. Fifita threw for a program-record 527 yards.
So when Fifita first started playing youth football for the Fountain Valley Barons in Southern California as a 4-year-old, he followed the path of his family members. That was short-lived. As Fifita put it, thereâs âa funny storyâ to how he became a quarterback.
âThey actually put me at linebacker and offensive tackle my first year,â he said, âbut our quarterback couldnât take a snap and my dad was the head coach.â
So, naturally, Les Fifita moved Noah to quarterback because he was the only player on the team he could âcuss out at that age,â Noah said.
âHe put me at quarterback because I could take a snap, and then my grandpa, (a former rugby player), taught me how to throw the ball. And the rest is history,â said Fifita.
Les Fifita noticed âafter the first few practices, our quarterbacks that we tried couldnât take a snap without looking at the ball.â
âDriving home with Noah, I was like, âHey, do you think you could take a snap and put your hand under the centerâs actual butt?â He goes, âYeah, I think I can do that,â â Les Fifita said. âSo then it went from that to, âNoah, do you think you can fake it to this guy and then give it to this guy?â He was like, âYeah, I can do that.â And then it went to, âHey, do you think you can fake it to this guy, fake it to this guy and then give it to this guy?â âYeah, I can do that.â
âThen I just started making stuff up and said, âCan you fake it to this guy, fake it to this guy, roll out and throw it?â He said, âYeah, I can do that.â Little by little he just kept doing it and realized he can be a quarterback.â
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita, right, celebrates with wide receiver Jacob Cowing after the Wildcats scored a touchdown late against Oregon State in October 2023.
Origin story
Fifita, whose full name is Noah Malakai Fifita, is named after his non-blood-related uncle Manoa Pouono (who went by Noa without the âhâ), a former offensive tackle at Fresno State who is now the offensive line coach at SoCal powerhouse Mater Dei High School; Fifitaâs younger brother, Dash Fifita, is a junior linebacker for the Monarchs.
Pouono and Noahâs grandfather, Steve Fifita Sr., come from Tongan families who migrated to the U.S. âover 40 years agoâ; Noahâs motherâs family originates from the Philippines. Per Pouono, there were âeight or nine families that settled out here in Orange County,â and most of the SoCal Tongan immigrants worked at the NGK Spark Plugs manufacturing plant.
âAll of our parents worked at the same job,â Pouono said. âThatâs how they settled out here in Orange County.
âThatâs why we all call each other brothers and sisters, because our families were all here when we were born.â
Before Pouono played football at FSU, Les Fifita and Noah Fifitaâs mother, Winnona Fifita, called him to break the news about their first childâs name.
âStill to this day, Iâm so honored,â Noah said.
The Fifitas are grounded in their Methodist Christian faith. Every night at 9 p.m., a tradition started by Steve Sr., the Fifita family recited prayers that sometimes lasted 20 minutes.
âThe biggest thing with him is family, faith and football,â Arizona star receiver Tetairoa McMillan said of Noah, his teammate and longtime friend. âHe puts God first and relies on him and knows without him, nothing is possible. His faith in God, his family and his ability is why he (succeeds), for sure.â
Amid the success this year for Noah Fifita, the Bible verse Galations 6:9 resonated with the UA quarterback, which reads, âlet us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.â
Translation, in Fifitaâs words: âStaying focused, just being in the moment and not letting success affect my mindset.â
Poise and leadership
Former UA teammates running back Michael Wiley, tight end Tanner McLachlan and wide receiver Jacob Cowing collectively described Fifita as calm and cool, in addition to being professional and a great leader.
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita leaves UCLAâs Kain Medrano on the turf after juking his way past the Bruinsâ linebacker while scrambling out of danger in the second quarter of the Wildcatsâ 27-10 win Nov. 4, 2023, at Arizona Stadium.
But Fifita didnât always have poise; a youth soccer game long before the blossoming of his football career changed that.
âHe cried the whole game,â Les Fifita said. âAs weâre coming home, Iâm yelling at him and then put him in a room, and I told everybody to not talk to him. He sat there and cried in the room for maybe an hour by himself. The next game he had like two goals. He ended up with 10 goals one game.
âHeâs always been receptive, because at the end of the day I love him and he knows that.â
His father is his âbiggest role model and biggest idol,â yet has âalways been my biggest fan but also my biggest critic,â Noah Fifita said.
âWhen people are talking highly of me, heâs the one to bring me down to earth,â Fifita said with a smirk. âHeâs the one to keep me humble and tell me what I need to do better.â
The older Fifita has nitpicked Arizonaâs quarterback all the way down to his body language.
âThe way I carry myself on the sideline, things I do that I donât recognize Iâm doing, he talks about it and brings it to my attention,â Noah said. âRegardless of how good the game is, heâll bring up those couple bad plays that I had and be critical. When everyone is talking about the broken record (at Arizona State), heâs the one thatâs bringing up an interception or a missed throw.
âHeâs a big role model because of his tough love.â
The younger Fifita unintentionally became a role model for other family members, including Steve Fifita and his aunt, Naite Fifita, Steve and Lesâ sister. When Noahâs parents worked, Naite babysat and they played outside together, whether it was football or other physical activities.
âAt a young age, he was disciplined to ask what time it was, because his father told him he had to go down for a nap,â Naite said. âAs his aunt, I would say, âWho cares about a nap? You donât need a nap.â But he would repeat exactly what his dad told him: âLeaders have to rest. I have to take a nap because Iâm a leader.â â
When Naite was a freshman in college, she had others watch Noah occasionally until, one day, he cried and chased her down the street until she noticed him in the rear-view mirror.
âI turned around, picked him up and never went back to class,â she said. âThe joke that circulated around the family is Noah was the reason I dropped out of college.â
Before Noah attended Servite High School in Anaheim, Naite drove him one hour â one way â from Huntington Beach to Corona to train at Winner Circle Athletics and Wellness Center and âtalk about things outside of football.â
âI got to really pour into him during those long drives. The main message we talked about was every member of the family has a role for the family as a whole,â she said. âDoesnât matter if youâre the youngest or the oldest in the family.
âIn a Pacific Islander family, you have a role.â
His role for Naite? Challenge her in school. Within the same year Fifita graduated from Servite, Naite earned a degree from UC Irvine.
Like he does after just about every game, UA redshirt freshman Noah Fifita finds his family and friends in the stands while other Arizona fans pour onto the field at Arizona Stadium to celebrate the Wildcats 27-10 win over then-No. 20 UCLA on Nov. 4, 2023.
âI dropped out because of Noah, but he was my inspiration to go back,â she said.
While Arizonaâs quarterback nudged his aunt back to school, he brought his Uncle Steve back to football. After Steve was cut by the Patriots, he âwas pretty depressedâ and âsat in the house and didnât do much or watch football or anything,â he said.
âLes talked me into going out and helping Noah on one of his youth teams,â Steve said. âI was a little hesitant, and then I went out there and fell in love with the game again.â
Said Noah: âFootball was how I connected with him. Every time he came home, he would always come watch my games. Those were always the biggest games for me growing up.â
When Steve became an assistant coach at Idaho State, Noah, then a middle-schooler, attended one of the fully padded high school camps in Pocatello, Idaho, as a guest visitor for another family member being recruited by colleges.
During a scrimmage period, Les told Steve to âthrow (Noah) in there.â
Then-backup quarterback Noah Fifita warms up during an Arizona football spring football practice session in March 2023.
âI knew he was good, but I didnât know how good,â Steve said. âI just heard stories and seen stuff on social media. Heâs an eighth-grade kid, and we have high schoolers out there, kids weâre recruiting, in full pads. The coach who was running the drill had the same reaction as me, like, âAre you sure?â âDad said itâs OK, so letâs put him in there.â Noah goes in there and just starts carving these guys up and goes down the field and scores.
âI just remember looking at Noah and said, âHoly (expletive), this kid is freaking good.â That was the first time I realized how good he was. Nothing fazed him. He was like, âWhat?â And then just started laughing about it. I was a little worried when I first put him in, but he handled it with ease and drove them down.â
Noah didnât see his uncle a ton growing up, âbut when I did, I always tried to make a good impression,â he said.
âIt was a little scrimmage, but he threw me in the scrimmage and I donât really remember that, but my whole life and entire career was to make him proud,â Noah said. âThe man I am today is because of my family.â
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita gets off a pass in the arms of Oregon State linebacker Easton Mascarenas-Arnold in the third quarter of Arizonaâs win over the Beavers in Tucson in October 2023.
âNalo and Koloâ
After playing for the Fountain Valley Barons, Fifita finished his youth football career with the Orange County Buckeyes and led âJuice Countyâ to a 14U national championship. Thatâs where he met McMillan, his best friend, also known as âNaloâ for his hometown of Waimanalo, Hawaii; Fifita is nicknamed âKolo,â for Kolomotuâa, Tonga.
âNoah was one of the first ones to introduce himself to T-Mac when he first moved out here from Hawaii,â said Wes Taylor, former âJuice Countyâ and Servite assistant coach. âWhen T-Mac first got here, he was the new guy to the group. Once Noah introduced himself, it made him feel comfortable and he started opening up more.â
Seven years later, with a high school career together in between, Fifita and McMillan are still together and among the top quarterback-receiver tandems in college football; against rival ASU, Fifita and McMillan set records for most passing yards (527) and receiving yards (266), respectively, in a Territorial Cup game.
Fifitaâs Territorial Cup performance is also Arizonaâs single-game passing record. Entering this season, McMillan needs 1,248 yards to pass Bobby Wade for most career receiving yards by a Wildcat.
Theyâre staying: Arizona star quarterback Noah Fifita gestures to the crowd after a video featuring himself and teammate Tetairoa McMillan airs on the McKale Center video board during a Jan. 20 UA menâs basketball game.
âYou guys are seeing now what I saw at an early age,â Taylor said. âItâs almost like they know what each otherâs moves are going to be. Thatâs important to have as a quarterback-receiver duo.â
The close bond is intact off the field, too. Fifita and McMillan host the âIsland Time in the Desertâ podcast and video series, complete with interviews, debates and other topical discussions on Game Network app, a media outlet founded by Les Fifita earlier this year.
âWeâre starting to take it more serious now because now weâre in a space where more people are listening,â Fifita said.
Added McMillan: âWeâre with each other 25/8 while weâre at the facility. Away from the facility, we always want to be with each other, whether itâs shooting some hoops, play video games, do the podcast, watch Christmas lights. Weâre normal people at the end of the day.â
Normal people with legendary status in Tucson. When former UA leader Jedd Fisch left Arizona for the same role at Washington and was replaced by Brent Brennan, a Dick Tomey disciple and former San Jose State head coach, Fifita and McMillan held a players-only meeting to weigh their options. Fifita initially thought following Fisch to Washington was a âno-brainer.â
âFrom the team meeting on, I wanted to stay,â Fifita said. âEverything in my heart was telling me to stay.â
Fifita and McMillan, two essential pieces in the rise of UA football, were the catalysts in keeping the nucleus of players together at Arizona to play the 2024 season with Brennan.
âWe decided to stay loyal because thatâs just the way we grew up,â McMillan said. âLoyalty means everything, family is everything and without them, you canât find happiness.â
Fifita, McMillan, standout linebacker Jacob Manu and offensive lineman Jonah Savaiinaea, among several others, announced their decisions to stay with a video that was played during the first timeout break of the Arizona-UCLA menâs basketball game at McKale Center. After the video, a majority of the UA football team, along with Brennan and other coaches, took the floor and were met with a rowdy ovation.
âThe truth is these players really love each other,â Brennan said. âCoach Fisch and that staff recruited a bunch of quality young men that were incredibly committed and connected, and I think thatâs what contributed to them wanting to stay.â
UA quarterback Noah Fifita takes a hit while exchanging water gun fire with fans at Arizona Stadium during the 2023 version of the Wildcat programâs annual spring game event on April 15, 2023.
Experiencing change, staying patient
Fifita, McMillan, Manu and fellow Servite teammate Keyan Burnett collectively signed with Arizonaâs stacked 2022 recruiting class.
âWhat I love about Noah is he committed to us when Arizona was on a 12-game losing streak,â Fisch said in December. âHe stayed with us when we went 1-11. If that doesnât speak to his character, I donât know what does.â
For the first time in his life, Noah Fifita was living away from Orange County. Thankfully for him, his three closest friends were joining him for the ride.
âThe hardest thing for us as humans is change â going to new environments â but itâs even harder when you have to do it by yourself,â Les Fifita said. âBut if you go through it with three of your best friends, they just had a step above everybody. Going to college with your best friends and guys who know you outside of football, itâs a big deal. It plays a big part in the culture and wanting to stay together.â
The Fifita-McMillan on-field connection was, however, paused for a little over a year. Until a few weeks into the 2023 season, Fifita was the UAâs understudy to original starter Jayden de Laura. That lasted 16 games over parts of two seasons. When de Laura suffered an ankle injury at the end of the third quarter in Arizonaâs come-from-behind win at Stanford, Fifita was inserted into the lineup and had, as Fisch has often said this season, âno flinch.â
Steve Fifita compared Noah Fifita Wally-Pipping Arizonaâs former starter de Laura to when Alex Smith replaced an injured Brett Elliott at Utah in 2003 and became a Heisman Trophy finalist and No. 1 overall pick in the NFL Draft.
âWhen Alex came in, you could see the demeanor change. Everyone knew Alex was going to be good, and Brett was a stud, too, and never did anything to lose his spot. But when Alexâs time came, he grabbed it and ran. He was ready,â said Steve Fifita, who was on that 10-2 Utah team.
âIt feels like that whatâs happened with Noah. He just always stayed ready. Everyone knew he was going to be good, but when his chance came, he just ran with it.â
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita scrambles out of danger and the reach of Washington defensive end Bralen Trice in the fourth quarter of their September 2023 matchup at Arizona Stadium. The 31-24 loss to the Huskies was Fifita's first start for Arizona.
Like Smith, Noah Fifita hasnât let go of that QB1 spot since he got his shot. Heâs passed for 2,869 yards, 25 touchdowns and six interceptions while completing 72.4% of his pass attempts. Fifita is the only UA quarterback in program history to complete over 70% of his passes in a season. Fifita was named the Pac-12 Offensive Freshman of the Year and Football Writerâs Association of American National Offensive Freshman of the Year.
After his first two starts against Washington and USC â defeats by a combined nine points, with the latter in triple overtime â the Wildcats havenât lost.
Les Fifitaâs message to his son: ââJust be ready. Just do you, and donât have any animosity because thatâs the worst thing to have. It just weighs you down. Man, just be happy. When itâs your time, itâs your time.â
âGod knew when he was going to be ready and now weâre here. Heâs never backslid in. A lot of people kept saying, âOnce he gets on the field, heâs not coming off the field.â I think people felt it. Iâm a believer. I think (this) year for him, to me, itâs just Godâs timing more than anything else.â
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita (11) participates in drills during a fall preseason practice at the Dick Tomey Practice Fields on Aug. 7 in Tucson.
Preparation and perfection are Noah Fifitaâs M.O. He toes the line of OCD at home. Besides every label in his kitchen and refrigerator facing out neatly, âthe towels have to be aligned a certain way, and everything is lined up so perfectly,â Les Fifita said.
âHis house is super organized,â Pouono said. âItâs a reflection on his preparation for the game.â
Noah Fifita once discovered that his brother had used his shower during a visit hours later âbecause the angles of his shampoo and body wash were different,â Winnona Fifita said.
âNoah found out that way,â she said. âHeâs crazy.â
On the football field and in the film room, Fifita is âan incredible preparer,â Fisch said.
âHeâs somebody that not only does everything right off the field, he does everything right on the field,â said the third-year UA coach. âI would say this: If you have great habits off the field, you usually have great habits on the field.â
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita gets the pass off, beating the pressure from Utah defensive tackle Keanu Tanuvasa during the Wildcats' 42-18 win over the No. 16 Utes in November 2023 at Arizona Stadium.
In high school, Taylor monitored Servite players watching film on âHudl,â a well-known website and app used by coaches and players to study opponents or compile highlights. Taylor said Fifitaâs average screen time for Hudl was âbeyond five or six hours.â
âThatâs equivalent to my investment into the game,â Taylor said. âAn average high school kid is investing two hours every week to film. It speaks volumes to why heâs able to be successful at a young age.â
Said Steve Fifita: âItâs clichÊ for college coaches to ask players, âDo you love this game?â Most people like this game, maybe some think they love it.â
âBut Noah really loves the boring stuff that people donât.â
Noah Fifita âis as comparable to any quarterback Iâve ever had off the football field, mentally,â said first-year Arizona offensive coordinator Dino Babers.
âNoah, as a I said before, is not normal,â said Babers. âHeâs different. Thank God for that.â
Quarterback Noah Fifita laughs after a long scramble during Arizonaâs 2024 spring game on April 27 in Tucson.
Godâs plan
Fifitaâs breakout freshman season wasn't a surprise for his family and close friends.
âIâve always expected him to be great at what heâs doing,â Les Fifita said. âItâs not a shocker to us, but Iâm happy that heâs helping his team, helping Tucson, and he gets to live his dream out.â
Behind Fifitaâs leadership, the Wildcats constructed one of four 10-win seasons in UA history. They ended the season on a seven-game winning streak â the longest stretch for the UA since 1998 â and won the programâs first bowl game since 2015. The Wildcats currently have the second-longest active winning streak in college football behind national champion Michigan and enter this season ranked No. 21 in the Associated Press Top 25, the highest preseason ranking for the program since 1999, four years before Fifita was born.
âThis whole process has been great. The best part about it is being able to play with these guys,â Arizonaâs quarterback said. âIâll say it over and over again: Weâve got some good people in this building, coaches, players and support staff.
âItâs been a blessing.â




