Arizonaโ€™s Nate Phillips took a punt return 69 yards for a touchdown in one of only a handful of positive moments in last weekโ€™s loss to Washington State. The Wildcats are hoping to recapture that fun more often when they take on Washington in Seattle on Saturday night.

SEATTLE โ€” The Arizona Wildcats touched down Friday afternoon with their season on the brink and their coach โ€” or at least their defense โ€” under fire.

This is a pleasure trip. Or at least it should be.

During their 36 hours in town, the Wildcats plan to see the sights โ€” like, hopefully, a Washington punter. Theyโ€™ll take in some live local music: The Huskiesโ€™ marching band plays a mean version of โ€œTequila.โ€

The UA will sample some local fare. Food โ€” and, yes, victory โ€” tastes even sweeter when youโ€™re traveling.

โ€œWe work the practices,โ€ coach Rich Rodriguez said, โ€œbut we need to play the games.โ€

Donโ€™t be surprised if Arizona (5-3 overall, 2-3 Pac-12) plays looser and with more energy Saturday, when it takes on Washington at Husky Stadium. The Wildcats are essentially out of the Pac-12 South race, but can both become bowl-eligible and bury the ugliest loss of the Rodriguez era with a win.

Saturdayโ€™s game marks their best chance to win during the final month of a grueling season โ€” and, maybe the last time to fully let loose. After facing the Huskies (3-4, 1-3), Arizona will travel to USC and host Utah before traveling to Tempe for a rivalry game with Arizona State.

Linebacker Jake Matthews said a victory Saturday โ€œcan be a big turning point, for sure.โ€

โ€œIf we win this one, we can play the next three weeks with a chance to win all three,โ€ he said. โ€œWeโ€™re not having a good year, but we can get back on track. We can still win nine games.โ€

As recently as seven days ago, Arizona looked like it may never win again.

Washington State quarterback Luke Falk threw for 514 yards and five touchdowns in a 45-42 upset win at Arizona Stadium. The loss was the low point for a UA defense thatโ€™s been devastated by injuries and embarrassed by inconsistent play all season.

The Wildcats should fare better Saturday, in part because they canโ€™t do much worse. It helps that Washington averages just 333.4 yards per game, 200 fewer than the UA, and has freshmen โ€” Jake Browning and Myles Gaskin โ€” at quarterback and running back, respectively.

The UA offense will look different, too.

Jerrard Randall is expected to start over Anu Solomon on Saturday, the UAโ€™s first for-cause quarterback change in six years. The speedy Randall sparked the UA to a come-from-behind win over Colorado two weeks ago, and nearly pulled off a late-game upset of the Cougars last week.

Coaches have yet to name a starter, but Randallโ€™s running skills and the prospect of rain on Saturday make it a smart play. The former LSU Tiger is averaging 11 yards per carry this season, tops among Division I FBS players. His passing, still a work in progress, will be tested by the inclement weather.

โ€œYou donโ€™t think about it. You just go out and play,โ€ Randall said. โ€œI donโ€™t care about the rain. I just want to win.โ€

And maybe have a little fun, too.

Wednesdayโ€™s practice was highlighted by a visit from local Pop Warner players. UA players and coaches signed autographs and slapped high-fives with the kids โ€” โ€œlittle giblets,โ€ Rodriguez called them โ€” on their way out of Kindall/Sancet Stadium.

If Arizona needed a dose of levity, they got it in about 100 little, loud doses.

โ€œWeโ€™re trying to win, and weโ€™re trying to do as much as we can, but weโ€™re making it into more of a job instead of playing the game like we were when we were little kids,โ€ Matthews said. โ€œThatโ€™s what weโ€™re trying to get back to. Just have fun when youโ€™re playing.โ€


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