Noah Fifita and Tetairoa McMillan took the field at Arizona one last time this week, when McMillan held a private Pro Day at the UA in front of 24 NFL scouts and coaches.
Fifita threw passes to his longtime best friend and top receiving target, so the NFL visitors could observe McMillanâs route-running prowess and ball skills in person.
During the winter break, Fifita was back home in Huntington Beach, California, while McMillan, a projected top-10 pick in next monthâs NFL Draft, trained in Phoenix. The formerly inseparable duo planned to âwing it on Monday,â but Fifita practiced with McMillan on Sunday to shake off the rust.
Fifita said it was âsuch a blessing to be back on the fieldâ with McMillan, and the time away from each other âmade you forget how good he really is.â
Added Fifita: âHeâs such a special player. ... He never shies away from the pressure or shies away from the moment. Even with more than half the league there, he was still the same character, laughing and joking around. Iâm excited to see what his future holds.â
Arizona wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan, left, and quarterback Noah Fifita celebrate after McMillanâs catch-and-run score in the third quarter of the Wildcatsâ season-opener against New Mexico, Aug. 31, 2024.
Reality kicked in for Fifita during Arizonaâs first spring practice on Tuesday: McMillan isnât his teammate for the first time since the seventh grade. They were teammates with the Orange County Buckeyes (youth football), Servite High School and Arizona. They came to Arizona as a package deal in 2022, but McMillanâs NFL aspirations and Fifita staying in Tucson to right the wrongs from last season separated them.
When Arizona kicked off its spring football schedule on Tuesday, not sharing the field and practice space with McMillan âfelt different,â Fifita said.
âThat will always be my brother and my best friend, so I definitely miss him out on the field,â Fifita said. âBut Iâm happy to see him doing bigger and better things.â
Replacing a generational talent like McMillan is a formidable task, especially when he made up 44% of Arizonaâs passing attack with 1,319 receiving yards. McMillan finished last season with 84 receptions. Former running back Quali Conley had the second-most receptions with 39.
Brent Brennan will always âchose to have (McMillan) on our team â and so would a bunch of NFL teams in the next month,â said the Arizona head coach. But Arizona has âa lot of players in that room that can make plays,â Brennan added.
Redshirt junior Chris Hunter III emerged in the second half of last season and flashed brilliance with two acrobatic touchdowns against TCU in November. Additionally, the Wildcats added several transfers in âXâ receiver Tre Spivey III (Kansas State) and slot receivers Luke Wysong (New Mexico), Kris Hutson (Washington State) and Javian Whatley (Chattanooga), who all combined for 193 catches for 2,380 yards and 10 touchdowns last season. The Wildcats also signed two promising high school prospects in Isaiah Mizell and in-state product Gio Richardson.
âI think weâve added some guys who have real speed, which I think we were missing a year ago at that position,â Brennan said. âI think we answered that with how aggressively we attacked the portal in the offseason. I think itâs going to be a little bit more by committee. Of course, a few guys are going to emerge as big-time playmakers. Right now, one day in, who thatâs going to be, weâre looking at a core group and weâre excited about what they can do.â
Fifita wonât be throwing passes to his buddy McMillan, but âthe pieces we brought in, theyâre outstanding,â said Arizonaâs quarterback.
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita warms up before an NCAA college football game against Utah, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2024, in Salt Lake City, Utah.
âWe have a long road to where we want to be, but we definitely have the pieces in place to do everything we want to do,â Fifita said. âYou just go down the list with the guys we brought in and the guys we kept, we have some that can do everything and Iâm extremely excited.â
The overhaul at receiver is a microcosm of Arizonaâs revamped roster. The Wildcats signed 53 scholarship newcomers in 2025, and 34 of them are practicing this spring. Some of the returners even changed numbers, including Fifita, who changed his jersey number from 11 to 1, the number he donned at Servite.
âI wanted to do it last year, but it didnât feel like the right time,â Fifita said. âNow that weâre able to do it, I was excited to go back to the number I wore in high school and growing up.â
New number, new faces in the offense and a new play-caller in offensive coordinator Seth Doege, âit just felt different,â Fifita said after Tuesdayâs practice.
âWe have a lot to prove that it is different,â Fifita said. âFrom within, it feels a lot different from the energy, from the vibe and the people around. Iâm really excited.â
The biggest difference in the offense: tempo, no-huddle and a sense of urgency, a stark contrast to the slow-developing plays under former play-callers Dino Babers and Matt Adkins â and the pro-style system under Jedd Fisch that sometimes required the quarterback to be under center.
âIâm not exactly used to that, but Coach Doege knows exactly what heâs doing,â Fifita said. âHeâs had success everywhere heâs been. Up to this point, itâs been really good. Weâre continuing to work, continuing to do everything we gotta do off the field to translate it on the field.â
The uptempo offense and no-huddle format âis going to be extremely advantageous,â Fifita said, because of the coach-to-player communication in Fifitaâs helmet in between plays. The snappiness and intent also âtakes the defensive coordinator out of it, being able to get on the line of scrimmage and play as fast as we can,â Fifita said.
âTo be honest, itâs new for me, too, because I thought we played fast today, and Coach Doege was disappointed in our urgency and energy,â said Fifita. âObviously a long way to where we want to be, but Coach Doege has shown that his system works and he knows exactly what heâs doing, so weâre going to follow him to the end of it. ... Iâve been blessed to have a lot of great offensive coordinators. I think where Coach Doege is different is his energy and mindset.
Arizona head coach Brent Brennan, left, poses for a photo with new offensive coordinator Seth Doege after a press conference inside Arizona Stadium on Dec. 13, 2024.
âHe has a certain type of aura and energy around him that I probably havenât seen before. Itâs genuine and consistent. I felt it when he tried to recruit me and pitched me to stay and it hasnât changed since. He has brought a mentality and mindset to this offense thatâs very interesting and I think itâll change the trajectory of this offense and team.â
Fifita and Doege spent âhours upon hours throughout the winter and these past couple of weeks, just trying to learn this offense,â per Arizonaâs quarterback.
âLet me tell you, itâs a great offense and a great scheme,â Fifita said. âExtremely fortunate to have him here. Fantastic coach, even better person and that sounds cliche, but itâs true when it comes to Coach Doege and weâre excited to have him lead us this year.â
Fifita, who anticipates becoming âmore of a threat with my legs,â said Doegeâs offense is designed for the UA quarterback to âplay on time, play on rhythm,â which wasnât the case last season when Fifita led college football in throwaways (37), according to Pro Football Focus. Fifita also led the Big 12 in interceptions (12) last season following a breakout season in 2023.
Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita, center, points out the defensive rusher at the line of scrimmage during the Oct. 12 game at BYU.
âI donât want to play off-schedule as much as I did last year,â Fifita said. âJust getting the ball out of my hands and getting it to my guys and letting them play. Protecting the ball is the biggest thing. I didnât do a good job of that last year and thatâs something me and Coach Doege are diving into.â
Learning a third offensive system in four years âwould be challenging for some quarterbacks, but the beauty of Noah Fifita is how intentional he is about being a great player,â Brennan said.
In addition to mastering the Air Raid-inspired offense, Doege and Brennan are also challenging the UA quarterback, who isnât a ârah-rah guy,â to âget outta that shell a little and move into an individual role where Iâm encouraging and helping others one-on-one,â Fifita said. Fifita has embraced âmore of an assertive leadership role with this team,â Brennan said.
âItâs such a natural position for your quarterback to be in,â said Brennan. âHeâs the one that gets either so much of the love or so much of the blame depending on how it goes, and I think thatâs one of the things where Noah is finding his voice in a much more assertive way.â
Quarterback Noah Fifita catches a stuffed Pikachu doll thrown down to him for an autograph after the University of Arizonaâs spring game on April 27, 2024 at Arizona Stadium. Fifita was one of the last ones to leave the field, signing autographs and taking photos for fans.
Extra points
â Brennan said Arizona left tackle Rhino Tapaâatoutai, who is recovering from a season-ending knee injury from last season, has emerged as âan incredible voiceâ and leader for the Wildcats. Said Brennan: âIf you ask our strength and conditioning staff, he was the MVP of the offseason for those seven weeks. He embraced that role. He already has natural energy, has great charisma and he really leaned into that; the players leaned into it.â Brennan noted wide receiver Chris Hunter III, safety Dalton Johnson, defensive back Treydan Stukes, safety Genesis Smith and defensive end Tre Smith as other team leaders.
â Redshirt junior Grayson Stovall, Hawaii transfer Kaâena Decambra and Portland State transfer Isaac Perez rotated at center on Tuesday. Stovall has been the backup to Josh Baker for the last three seasons. Decambra played right guard and tackle at Hawaii. Perez played left guard and center at Portland State.
â McMillan is projected by ESPN NFL Draft guru Mel Kiper Jr. to land at No. 20 overall to the Denver Broncos. Kiper previously projected McMillan to go No. 22 to the Los Angeles Chargers.



