60
Friday, December 24 2 p.m. (MST) Depart Tucson for San Antonio 6 p.m. (CST) Arrive at Hyatt Regency San Antonio 6:30 p.m. Team Dinner Welcome at Hotel Arizona Wildcats Alamo Bowl Events and Practices Team Hotel: Hyatt Regency San Antonio Arizona Athletics Media Relations Tom Duddleston Sports Information Director Football Contact Cell: (520) 4199236 Email: [email protected] Blair Willis Assistant Media Relations Director Secondary Football Contact Cell: (520) 4192979 Email: [email protected] Blake Grimsley Media Relations Staff Football Assistant Contact Cell: (714) 6063057 Email: [email protected] Saturday, December 25 Sunday, December 26 10:45 a.m. Practice at University of Incarnate Word 12:30 p.m. Limited postpractice media availability 1:30 p.m. Team Day at Sea World 4 p.m. Offensive Press Conference at Media Hotel Marriott Rivercenter Salon D (second floor) 6 p.m. Team Night at Spurs/Wizards Game Monday, December 27 11:15 a.m. Practice at University of Incarnate Word 1 p.m. Limited Postpractice media availability 2:30 p.m. Defensive Press Conference at Media Hotel Marriott Rivercenter Salon D (second floor) 6 p.m. Rudy’s BBQ Pep Rally 2 p.m. Practice at University of Incarnate Word 3:45 p.m. Limited postpractice media availability 6 p.m. Team Dinner at Hotel Tuesday, December 28 Wednesday, December 29 11 a.m. Head Coaches Press Conference at the Marriott Riverwalk Salon D Noon Kickoff Luncheon at Marriott Rivercenter Grand Ballroom 3 p.m. Team Walkthrough at University of Incarnate Word (closed) All interview requests for Arizona players and coaches must be arranged through the UA media relations staff. Interviews will be held following designated practices at the University of the Incarnate Word. Photo and/or video opportunities at practice are limited to the first 15 minutes or at the discretion of the UA media relations staff. Questions regarding player injuries must be directed to the head coach. Contact SID staff for complete media policies. All practice times and media availability subject to change at any time. Check with UA SID staff for most current schedule. Table of Contents Section Page Schedule of Events, UA Media Relations IFC Game Information 1 Arizona Offense and Defense Summaries 23 Head Coach Mike Stoops 45 UA Assistant Coaches 67 Arizona Football Notes 812 Game Starters and Career Charts 1314 Arizona Bowl Game History 1516 Arizona Bowl Game Records 1718 Depth Chart Player Capsules 1928 2010 Game Recaps 2940 2010 Season Statistics 4156 Arizona Team Rosters 5758 Depth Chart IBC Mike Lowery Marketing/Media Relations Athletics Web Manager Cell: (520) 4887363 Email: [email protected] 8:15 p.m. Kickoff at 2010 Valero Alamo Bowl

Table of Contents - SIDEARM Sports · 2016-05-20 · OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA PAGE 1 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL Date Opponent Time/Result Sept. 3 @ Toledo (ESPN) W, 41-2 Sept. 11 The

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Page 1: Table of Contents - SIDEARM Sports · 2016-05-20 · OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA PAGE 1 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL Date Opponent Time/Result Sept. 3 @ Toledo (ESPN) W, 41-2 Sept. 11 The

Friday, December 24 

2 p.m. (MST)  Depart Tucson for San Antonio 6 p.m. (CST)  Arrive at Hyatt Regency San Antonio 6:30 p.m.    Team Dinner Welcome at Hotel 

Arizona Wildcats Alamo Bowl Events and Practices  

Team Hotel: Hyatt Regency San Antonio 

Arizona Athletics Media Relations 

Tom Duddleston Sports Information Director Football Contact Cell: (520) 419‐9236 Email: [email protected] 

Blair Willis Assistant Media Relations Director Secondary Football Contact Cell: (520) 419‐2979 Email: [email protected] 

Blake Grimsley Media Relations Staff Football Assistant Contact Cell: (714) 606‐3057 Email: [email protected] 

Saturday, December 25 

Sunday, December 26 

10:45 a.m.  Practice at University of Incarnate Word 12:30 p.m.  Limited post‐practice media availability 1:30 p.m.    Team Day at Sea World 4 p.m.    Offensive Press Conference at Media Hotel       Marriott Rivercenter Salon D (second floor) 6 p.m.    Team Night at Spurs/Wizards Game 

Monday, December 27 

11:15 a.m.  Practice at University of Incarnate Word 1 p.m.    Limited Post‐practice media availability 2:30 p.m.    Defensive Press Conference at Media Hotel       Marriott Rivercenter Salon D (second floor) 6 p.m.    Rudy’s BBQ Pep Rally 

2 p.m.    Practice at University of Incarnate Word 3:45 p.m.    Limited post‐practice media availability 6 p.m.    Team Dinner at Hotel  

Tuesday,  December 28 

Wednesday,  December 29 

11 a.m.    Head Coaches Press Conference at the        Marriott Riverwalk Salon D Noon    Kickoff Luncheon at Marriott Rivercenter        Grand Ballroom 3 p.m.    Team Walk‐through at        University of Incarnate Word (closed) 

All interview requests for Arizona players and coaches must be arranged through the UA media relations staff.  Interviews will be held following designated practices at the University of the Incarnate Word. Photo and/or video  

opportunities at practice are limited to the first 15 minutes or at the discretion of the UA media relations staff.  Questions regarding player injuries must be directed to the head coach. Contact SID staff for complete media policies. 

All practice times and media availability subject to change at  any time. Check with UA SID staff for most current schedule. 

Table of Contents  

  Section                Page   Schedule of Events, UA Media Relations    IFC   Game Information            1   Arizona Offense and Defense Summaries    2‐3   Head Coach Mike Stoops          4‐5   UA Assistant Coaches          6‐7   Arizona Football Notes          8‐12   Game Starters and Career Charts      13‐14   Arizona Bowl Game History        15‐16   Arizona Bowl Game Records        17‐18   Depth Chart Player Capsules        19‐28   2010 Game Recaps            29‐40   2010 Season Statistics          41‐56   Arizona Team Rosters          57‐58   Depth Chart              IBC 

                       

  

Mike Lowery Marketing/Media Relations Athletics Web Manager Cell: (520) 488‐7363 Email: [email protected]  

8:15 p.m.    Kickoff at 2010 Valero Alamo Bowl   

Page 2: Table of Contents - SIDEARM Sports · 2016-05-20 · OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA PAGE 1 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL Date Opponent Time/Result Sept. 3 @ Toledo (ESPN) W, 41-2 Sept. 11 The

PAGE 1OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

2010 2010 2010 2010 2010 VVVVVALERALERALERALERALERO O O O O ALAMO BOALAMO BOALAMO BOALAMO BOALAMO BOWLWLWLWLWL

Date Opponent Time/ResultSept. 3 @ Toledo (ESPN) W, 41-2Sept. 11 The Citadel (KWBA/FCS) W, 52-6Sept. 18 No. 9 Iowa (ESPN) W, 34-27Sept. 25 California (KWBA/FS AZ Plus) W, 10-9Oct. 9 Oregon State (Versus) L, 29-27Oct. 16 @ Wash. State (Versus) W, 24-7Oct. 23 Washington* (ESPN) W, 44-14Oct. 30 @ UCLA (FSN) W, 29-21Nov. 6 @ No. 10 Stanford (ABC) L, 42-17Nov. 13 USC (ABC) L, 24-21Nov. 26 @ Oregon (ESPN) L, 48-29Dec. 2 Arizona State (ESPN) L, 30-29 (2 OT) Times local to site BOLD Indicates UA Home Games * Pac-10 Games

No. 16 Oklahoma State Cowboys (10-2, 6-2 Big 12) vs. Arizona Wildcats (7-5, 4-5 Pac-10)

2010 Valero Alamo Bowl | 8:15 p.m. (CST) | The Alamodome (65,000) | San Antonio, TexasAll-Time Series: Tied 3-3 First Meeting: 1931 (OSU 31, UA 0) Last Meeting: 1942 (UA 20, OSU 6)

Live TV Broadcast: ESPNTelevision Talent: Rece Davis (play-by-play); Craig James (color analyst); Jesse Palmer (color analyst); Jenn Brown (sideline)UA English Radio: Wildcat Radio Network (Brian Jeffries, play-by-play; Lamont Lovette, color; Dana Cooper, sideline)ESPN Radio: Carter Blackburn (play-by-play); Mike Bellotti (color analyst); Brock Huard (color analyst); Shelley Smith (sideline)

2010 Arizona Football Schedule/Results

2010 Arizona Statistical Ranks

Team Statistical Comparison

Oklahoma State vs. ArizonaThe Arizona Wildcats of the Pac-10 take on the Oklahoma State

Cowboys of the Big 12 in the 2010 Valero Alamo Bowl.

29.8 44.921.6 27.8135.2 182.9136.7 137.3310.0 354.7206.6 275.5445.2 537.6343.2 412.822.0 22.820.4 27.06.2 9.96.6 10.134.1 41.036.5 36.849% (85-173) 44% (72-162)42% (77-183) 44% (95-218)51.4 64.849.7 49.228:54 28:0731:06 31:52

Scoring Avg.OpponentsRush Yds. Avg.OpponentsPass Yds. Avg.OpponentsTotal Offense Avg.OpponentsKickoff Ret. Avg.OpponentsPunt Return Avg.OpponentsNet PuntingOpponents3rd Down Conv.OpponentsPenalty Yds. Avg.OpponentsTOPOpponents

Category Arizona Oklahoma St.

Overall: 7-5 Pac-10: 4-5 Home: 4-3 Road: 3-2

Category Stat Pac-10 NCAARushing Offense:Passing Offense:Total Offense:Scoring Offense:Rushing Defense:Pass Defense:Total Defense:Scoring Defense:Net Punting:Punt Returns:Kickoff Returns:Turnover Margin:Sacks:

135.2 8th 8th310.0 1st 9th445.2 3rd 23rd29.8 5th 47th136.7 5th 39th206.6 4th 44th343.3 4th 37th21.6 3rd 33rd34.1 9th 98th6.2 8th 90th22.0 4th 58th0.00 6th t-53rd2.75 2nd 14th

Some Game Themes: Arizona seeks some answers to a four-game tailspin... UA takes a break from ninestraight games against Pac-10 opponents to face a national power from the Big 12. The Cats last such contestwas a Sept. 18 tilt against No. 9 Iowa in Tucson... The Cats' defense, under siege from Andrew Luck, USCtailbacks and Nike U in recent outings, takes on the national leader in total offense and a host of All-Big 12talent... Can Arizona contain the primary threesome therein -- QB Brandon Weeden, WR Justin Blackmon andRB Kendall Hunter? Can the Cowboys -- near last in FBS pass defense -- contain Arizona QB Nick Foles and All-Pac-10 receiver Juron Criner? Does anyone want either team to contain either collection of dudes? (No, it's abowl game.)... The Cats look to win an eighth game for the third consecutive year, modest perhaps againstOSU's 10-2 campaign, but forward-looking nonetheless... Cowboys placekicker Dan Bailey (24-28) and Arizona'sAlex Zendejas (13-16) combined for 37 field goals in solid fashion so likely there are points to be had if the run-and-catch fellows don't get it done. Zendejas had some extra-point trouble in the last game but has been goodfrom distance... Push comes to shove: OSU scored less than 30 points once, Arizona allowed more than 30twice... The Cats look to keep the Cowboys out of the red zone: OSU brings a 95 percent red-zone rate (vs.75% for UA), no doubt a function of its balanced attack and 5-yards-a-pop rushing game. Hunter has nearly asmany TDs (16) as Arizona's rushing attack (20)... A couple of teams from the changing landscape of collegefootball, with UA to begin play next in the Pac-12 and Oklahoma State returning to a 10-team Big 12... A coupleof head coaches named Mike with reputations for hot-collar moments... The Cats look to ignore their last gameagainst a Big 12 power (Nebraska 33, Arizona 0, Holiday Bowl last year) and take on this one with deep respectand open minds; have some fun, but don't forget there's a football game...

What to Expect From the Cats: Arizona has made its name under Mike Stoops as a team that plays fast andfearless, regardless of the opponent. Perhaps no game was better evidence of that mantra than the 34-27 upsetvictory over No. 9 Iowa in Tucson in September. Unfortunately for the Wildcats, that game remains the highlightof the season despite a 7-1 start that was followed up by four straight losses to quality foes in Stanford, USC,Oregon and Arizona State. Arizona faltered down the stretch mostly due to its inability to stop the run and itsfailure to capitalize on all of its scoring opportunities. Indeed, three of the final four teams rushed for over 200yards and Arizona State still put up over 100 against the Wildcats defense. Meanwhile, UA’s redzone offenseranks outside the top 100 in the nation, scoring just 75-percent of the time and converting touchdowns just 58-percent of the time. That will be challenge against an Oklahoma State squad that doesn’t waste redzoneopportunities (see 95-percent scoring rate) and is known for flinging the ball around, notably to All-American widereceiver Justin Blackmon. But OSU’s balance with talented runner Kendall Hunter and his 1,500-plus yards onthe ground will leave the UA defense with quite the challenge in stopping one of the nation’s most explosiveoffenses, led by quarterback Brandon Weedon. Arizona saw plenty of similarly electric teams down the stretchand was unable to stop them in the end (Stanford 42 points, Oregon 48 points). However, perhaps a few weeksof preparation and healing time will allow the UA defense to get back to its fast, attacking ways from the first halfof the season when it rated as on of the nation’s top units. Should that happen, Wildcats will look to spread theball around to their offensive weapons which are headlined by quarterback Nick Foles and receiver Juron Criner,who is pretty good in his own right. The Cats also would not mind leaning on a big special teams play that haseluded to club since two such game-changing plays in the Iowa game. For Arizona, it certainly gets back to anattitude of playing fast, physical and relentless in all phases of the game. That will be a refreshing approach, iftaken, after four tough losses to end the regular season.

UA-OSU Series History, Notes: Arizona and Oklahoma State renew a series that was split evenly at three winsapiece during pre-World War II years from 1931-1942 … The Wildcats have won three of the four most recentmeetings, including the last, which was a 20-6 Arizona victory in Tucson in 1942 … The Cowboys claimed thefirst two meetings in 1931-32 by scores of 31-0 and 13-6 in Oklahoma, before the Wildcats broke through with a22-13 winning margin in a neutral site game at Phoenix in 1937 … When the series commenced in 1931, theWildcats were coached by Fred A. Enke, who won 509 games as the school’s basketball coach from 1926-1961.Fred A. Enke coached just the one season on the gridiron, posting a 3-5-1 record. His son, Fred. Enke Jr.,played quarterback at Arizona and was drafted in the seventh round of the 1948 NFL draft, where he went on toplay seven seasons … In addition to Fred. A. Enke, Arizona has been coached by A.W. Hardwick (1932), G.A.Oliver (1937) and Miles Casteel (1940-42) in games against Oklahoma State … That will make Mike Stoops thefifth UA coach to take the sidelines against the Cowboys in just seven all-time meetings … Interestingly,Casteel’s 45 coaching victories remain the fourth-most for an Arizona head coach in school history. Mike Stoopsremains five wins shy of Casteel, but just one behind Jim LaRue, whose 41 victories are currently fifth-most …As noted, the UA-OSU series stopped after the 1942 meeting, and Arizona did not play any football in the 1943and 1944 seasons, due to World War II. Some years later, the UA Student Union Memorial Building incorporatedthe bell from the U.S.S. Arizona, sunk during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. An electronicrendition of the bell still tolls every 15 minutes during the day from the speakers atop the UA AdministrationBuilding on campus.

Pass Eff. Foles 145.5 3rd 26thTotal Offense Foles 280.5 2nd 19thRec./Game Criner 6.1 1st t-23rdRec. Yds./Gm. Criner 98.8 1st 8thKick Returns Cobb 24.4 6th 57thAll-Pur. Yds. Criner 104.3 7th 89thSacks/Game Elmore 0.92 1st t-7th

Washington 0.55 4th t-58thB. Reed 0.54 5th t-60th

TFL/Game Elmore 1.08 5th t-54thWashington 0.95 10th 96th

Category Player Stat Pac-10 NCAAArizona Individual Statistical Rankings

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ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA OFFENSIVE SUMMARA OFFENSIVE SUMMARA OFFENSIVE SUMMARA OFFENSIVE SUMMARA OFFENSIVE SUMMARYYYYY

PAGE 2 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Arizona’s offensive attack is guided by a pair of coordinators in Seth Littrelland Bill Bedenbaugh, who worked under current Louisiana Tech headcoach Sonny Dykes in his coordinator days at Arizona and previously atTexas Tech. Each is in his first season as a co-coordinator at Arizona, withLittrell coaching out of the press box and calling the plays on game day,and Bedenbaugh serving as the on-field communicator with players.Certainly, it is a collaborative effort throughout each week in practice andpreparation for the specific game plan.

The Wildcats will operate out of a multiple spread offense, but will mix in ahandful of traditional power sets to keep defenses honest. However, thebread and butter in 2010 has been the passing attack, which averages 310yards per game and ranks No. 9 in the nation. The trigger man in thesystem is junior quarterback Nick Foles, who is cool, calm and collected atthe controls. The 6-foot-5, 245-pounder is a 20-game starter who hasthrown for nearly 3,000 yards this season, despite missing two and a halfgames with a dislocated knee cap in October.

Foles looks to a bevy of wide receivers, led by junior wide receiver JuronCriner, who has 73 receptions for 1,186 yards and 10 touchdowns on theseason. A pair of unheralded players – David Douglas and David Roberts –offer reliable alternatives if defenses focus attention on the 6-foot-4, 120-pound Criner. Roberts and Douglas, both smaller receivers, have combinedfor 88 receptions, resulting in 892 yards and seven touchdowns.

Added up, Arizona has nine players with at least 13 catches on the season.UA splits its receiving corps into two categories: outside receivers andinside receivers. Criner, Douglas and Travis Cobb are the primary outsidetargets that look to stretch defenses vertically and to the sidelines. Inside,Roberts, Terrence Miller and Bug Wright are a trio that threaten teamsacross the middle and seek to find wholes in zone coverage.

The Wildcats are not afraid to balance out teams with the run, althoughcoaches will tell you they wish it was a more consistent effort. UA averaged135 yards on the ground in the regular season, with Keola Antolin pacingthe ground game with 667 yards and seven touchdowns. The moreexplosive Nic Girgbsy has beenhampered by injuries the second half of theseason, but otherwise has 474 yards and eight touchdowns of his own.

Arizona runs behind a veteran offensive line that features senior starters atevery position. The leader of the group is 6-foot-4, 295-pound Colin Baxter,a Rimington Award finalist and a starter in 49-conesucitve games. He hasplayed the last month of the season with a torn meniscus, and may opt forsurgery prior to the bowl game to prepare for professional tryouts down theroad.

Another veteran in the group is sixth-year graduate student Adam Grant,who anchors UA’s left tackle spot. Grant is a massive 6-foot-8, 325-punder who battled knee injuries in his first three seasons before finishing his careernow as an every game starter since the start of 2009. His fellow line mates include guards Conan Amituanai and Jovon Hayes, along with right tacklesPhillip Garcia and Jack Julsing.

In the power game, the Wildcats will employ sophomore H-back Taimi Tutogi and senior tight end A.J. Simmons who are both steady blockers. Arizonacan go with even a heavier set with a second tight end in redshirt freshman Jack Baucus.

Arizona’s primary concern throughout the season has been redzone scoring, where the squad has a 74.5 success rate, but just a 56.9 percent touch-down scoring percentage. The culprits have been six total turnovers inside the redzone, untimely penalties and an inconsistent rushing attack. Other-wise, the Wildcats can move the ball against anybody, evidenced by 445 yards per game, which ranks No. 23 in the country.

Game WR WR/TE TE/IR LT LG C RG RT HB/TE/RB/IR QB RB@ Toledo Criner Douglas Baucus (TE) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Simmons (TE) Foles AntolinThe Citadel Criner Douglas Wright (IR) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Roberts (IR) Foles GrigsbyIowa Criner Douglas Simmons (TE) Grant Amituanai Baxter Dotsy Garcia Tutogi (HB) Foles GrigsbyCalifornia Miller Morrison Baucus (TE) Grant Amituanai Baxter Dotsy Garcia Simmons (HB) Foles GrigsbyOregon St. Criner Douglas Wright (IR) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Roberts (IR) Foles Grigsby@ Wash. State Criner Douglas Simmons (TE) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Tutogi (HB) Foles AntolinWashington Criner Douglas Simmons (TE) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Tutogi (HB) Scott Antolin@ UCLA Criner Cobb Simmons (TE) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Tutogi (HB) Scott Antolin@Stanford Criner Douglas Simmons (TE) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Roberts (IR) Foles AntolinUSC Criner Douglas Miller (IR) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Nwoko (RB) Foles Antolin@ Oregon Criner Baucus (TE) Simmons (TE) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Tutogi (HB) Foles AntolinArizona St. Criner Douglas Miller (IR) Grant Amituanai Baxter Hayes Garcia Roberts (IR) Foles Antolin

2010 Arizona Game-by-Game Offensive Starters

• WR Juron Criner was a unanimous selection to the All-Pac-10 First Teamas voted on by the coaches. Criner also was cited as a second or thirdteam All-America pick by various publications, including Sports Illustrated.

• Criner ranks No. 5 in UA history with 20 career receiving touchdowns andhis 125 career receptions are No. 7 in UA history. He checks in at No. 9 all-time with 1,856 career receiving yards .

• QB Nick Foles was named honorable mention All-Pac-10 for the secondstraight year. The junior has thrown for 5,397 yards (No. 8 in UA history) in22 career games (20 starts) and he ranks No. 7 in UA history with 38career passing TDs (19 each of last two seasons).

• Senior center Colin Baxter (49-game starter) and left tackle Adam Grant(30-game starter) were both named to the All-Pac-10 Second Team.Baxter, a finalist for the Rimington Award, will miss the bowl game afterundergoing knee surgery in early December to repair a torn meniscus,which he played with for the final month of the regular season.

• UA averages 445.2 yards per game, second-best in school history. Themark sits slightly ahead of the 444.9 turned in by the 1998 club.

• UA’s 310.0 passing yards per game would be a school record at thispoint. It edges out the 308.5 passing yards per game set by the 2008squad which won the Las Vegas Bowl.

• The Cats have passed for 250 or more yards in a game a total of eighttimes this year. That ties the 2007 squad for most 250+ games in a singleseason.

• The Wildcats average 29.8 points per game in 2010. The figure checks inNo. 6 in program history.

• Receivers David Douglas and David Roberts have combined for 88catches for 892 yards and seven touchdowns. Douglas is second on theteam with 46 receptions for 424 yards and five touchdowns, while Robertshas 42 catches for 468 yards and two touchdowns.

• RB Nic Grigsby currently stands as UA No. 6 rusher in school history with2,898 yards. His 28 career rushing TDs is No. 2 in school history.

• Arizona has eight players with 20 or more receptions, to match itsbiggest group of "20" guys in history -- the group in 2007.

OFFENSIVE HIGHLIGHTS

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PAGE 3OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA DEFENSIVE SUMMARA DEFENSIVE SUMMARA DEFENSIVE SUMMARA DEFENSIVE SUMMARA DEFENSIVE SUMMARYYYYY

Arizona returned only three starters from a season ago after back-to-backfinishes in the top-25 for total defense. It was an area of concern, particularlyat linebacker, where not a single player on the roster had played meaningfulminutes at the position prior to this season.

On top of the personnel turnover, Arizona lost its six-year defensive coordina-tor, Mark Stoops, who left following the 2009 season to take the same job atFlorida State. Head coach Mike Stoops promoted linebackers coach Tim Kish,who had been on staff since 2004, and brought in Greg Brown, a well-respected secondary aide, from Colorado to assist in the coordinator duties.

Along with the shuffling of the staff, Arizona changed its defensive schemesslightly. More man-to-man coverage concepts were implemented last spring asUA looked to get its best athletes on the field. That shift was firmed up in fallcamp as Arizona brought in a handful of talented defensive backs that werecapable of immediately challenging for playing time. Indeed, nickel and dimepackages were going to be used more often with the depth the Wildcats had.

Unfortunately, the Wildcats defense had a rough go at things in camp going upagainst a veteran offensive unit. It was cause for concern amongst peopleinside the program and those outside it with a rooting interest. It seemed theCats were too young and the learning curve was going to take much longerthan hoped for.

But then came the season opener at Toledo, when the Wildcats thumped theRockets, 41-2. Surprisingly, it was the Wildcat defense that made headlines ina dominating effort. From that point forward, expectations for the defensechanged.

Arizona knew coming into the year that it had the best duo of defensive ends inthe league in Brooks Reed and Ricky Elmore. Both were healthy throughoutthe year and lived up to expectations, while D’Aundre Reed emerged as atough run-stopper as a third player in the rotation.

Inside, the Wildcats returned veteran Lolomana Mikaele and found a futurestar in redshirt Justin Washington, who recorded two sacks in that season-opening game. Sione Tuihalamaka, Willie Mobley and Dominique Austinprovided depth for a rather stout defensive interior despite losing two startersfrom 2009’s squad.

At linebacker, junior college transfers Paul Vassallo and Derek Earls stepped inand produced immediately. Earls intercepted a pass in the season-openinggame, while Vassallo went on to be on of the Pac-10’s top tacklers, collecting94 on the season. Sophomore Jake Fischer, an undersized but instinctualplayer, rounded out the position with three solid starters who were highlyreliable throughout the year.

In the secondary, Trevin Wade headlined a unit that featured talenteddefensive backs. But despite an 85-yard interception return for a score againstIowa, Wade’s play was inconsistent much of the season. Fellow corner RobertGolden made the shift from safety during the offseason and struggled with

consistency at times, too. Fortunately, Arizona had depth with true freshmen Shaquille Richardson and Jonathan McKnight, who both saw significant time ingames throughout the season. Overall, it was a solid unit that was perhaps unspectacular much of the year.

At safety, Joseph Perkins emerged as one of the leaders of the team and was steady in his play throughout the year, ranking second on the club in tackles. Heslid down at times to the linebacker level in nickel and dime packages and is strong in run support. Anthony Wilcox played steadily at the other safety position,while sophomore Adam Hall burst onto the scene the second half of the season, becoming a big hitter and playmaker evidenced by interceptions against USCand Oregon.

When it was all said and done, the Wildcat defense surpassed expectations this season, but struggled down the stretch against some of the top offenses in thePac-10. Even so, the nucleus is in place for a strong unit to return next year as eight positions will return players with starting experience. That means extrapractices for the bowl game will be critical to the continued growth of the unit.

DEFENSIVE HIGHLIGHTS

Game DE DT DT DE LB LB LB/NB CB SS FS CB@ Toledo B. Reed Mikaele S. Tuihalamaka Elmore Vassallo Earls Perkins (NB) Wade Wilcox Hall GoldenThe Citadel B. Reed Mikaele Washington Elmore Vassallo Earls Fischer (LB) Wade Wilcox Perkins GoldenIowa B. Reed Mikaele Washington Elmore Vassallo Earls Fischer (LB) Wade Wilcox Perkins GoldenCalifornia B. Reed Mikaele Washington Elmore Vassallo Earls Fischer (LB) Wade Wilcox Perkins GoldenOregon St. B. Reed Mikaele Washington Elmore Vassallo Earls Fischer (LB) Wade Young (LB) Perkins Golden@ Wash. State B. Reed Mikaele Washington Elmore Vassallo Earls Perkins (NB) Richardson Wilcox Hall GoldenWashington B. Reed Mikaele S. Tuihalamaka Elmore Vassallo Earls Perkins (NB) Wade Wilcox Hall Golden@ UCLA B. Reed Mikaele S. Tuihalamaka Elmore Vassallo Earls Perkins (NB) Wade Wilcox Hall Golden@ Stanford B. Reed Mikaele Washington Elmore Vassallo Earls Fischer (LB) Wade Wilcox Perkins GoldenUSC B. Reed Mikaele Washington Elmore Vassallo Earls Fischer (LB) Richardson Perkins Hall Golden@ Oregon B. Reed Mikaele Washington D. Reed Vassallo Earls Perkins (NB) Richardson Hall Golden WadeArizona St. B. Reed Mikaele Washington Elmore Vassallo Fischer Perkins (NB) Wade Wilcox Hall Golden

2010 Arizona Game-by-Game Defensive Starters

• DE Ricky Elmore, a second team All-Pac-10 selection, led the confer-ence with 11.0 sacks. His 0.92 sacks per game tally checked in No. 7 inthe nation during the regular season. In 2010, the 6-foot-5, 250-pounderhas 48 total tackles, including 13.0 for loss. His 25.5 career sacks areseventh-most for active players in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivisionand second-most in UA history behind Tedy Bruschi.

• DE Brooks Reed was named First Team All-Pac-10. He totaled 6.5sacks on the season and was voted a team co-captain prior to theseason.

• Arizona ranks No. 14 in the nation with 2.75 sacks per game. The Catsalso tally 6.75 tackles for loss per game, the second-best mark in thePac-10 during the 2010 season.

• UA is 15-1 in the last 16 games when holding an opponent under 100net rushing yards.

• Arizona is just 13-23 in games when its opponent rushes for 100+ yardsin a game since `06.

• Only five teams have beat UA when rushing for less than 100 yardssince the start of `06 .

• Paul Vassallo has a team-high 94 tackles (30 more than No. 2 JosephPerkins), 7.5 tackles for loss and 2.0 sacks entering the bowl game. Anhonorable mention all-league selection, he currently ranks No. 7 in thePac-10 in tackles per game (7.83).

• Trevin Wade’s 85-yard interception return for a touchdown was his 10thcareer interception, most for any active UA player.

• Redshirt freshman DT Justin Washington was second on the team with10.0 tackles for loss. He ranked No. 10 individually in the league in thecategory, despite missing two games with an injury.

• Arizona allows just 21.6 points per game, the second-best mark in theleague.

• Arizona returned just three starters to the 2010 defense, after the 2008and 2009 versions finished ranked in the top 25 nationally in totaldefense.

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Mike Stoops, the 28th head football coach in Arizona’s century-plusfootball history, took over a 2-10 program and turned it into achampionship contender and bowl champion, taking no shortcutsalong the way. He has guided the Wildcats to three-consecutivebowl games for just the second time in the school’s history.

His recruiting success and the player development program underhis guidance have given Arizona a roster deep with talent and full ofplayers who own the same fortitude he brings to work every day.

His background in national-caliber football as a player and coachhelped pave the way in Tucson, with improvement across the boardfrom day one. His teams have beaten ranked squads each of hisyears at UA (including 2010), and in 2009 he helped return theWildcats to the national rankings, where they also appeared for themajority of the 2010 season. He’s begun a succession of bowlappearances that has extended to three with this year’s berth in theValero Alamo Bowl.

Toughness, passion and accountability mark his style and program,along with his coaching love – defense. His recent work on theother side of the ball has helped refine his head coaching systeminto one of balance and consistency.

Under Stoops’ direction, Arizona again slots players annually in theNFL Draft, earns first-team All-Pac-10 accolades, competes with the best… while the players comport themselves on and off the field asstudent-athletes and citizens befitting an institution of higher education.

Prior to his arrival in Tucson in December 2003, Stoops’ coaching development took place at three stops – Iowa under Hayden Fry, KansasState under Bill Snyder and Oklahoma under his brother, Bob. The theme at each was similar: build a foundation and then win. During his 18years with those programs he helped build a combined record of 158-48-4, and remains among those credited with the success of the threeprograms including the 2000 national title year at OU.

At Arizona, Stoops endured some growing pains incorporating his system, wrapping up 2004 and 2005 with 3-8 years. Throughout, he andhis staff worked tirelessly to recruit the kinds of players he helped mold into Lombardi, Butkus, Nagurski and Thorpe awards winners atOklahoma. Three years into the effort, Arizona cornerback Antoine Cason added his name to the list of honorees Stoops helped develop.

His third and fourth Arizona clubs kept improving but didn’t come through with finishing efforts in key games, finishing 6-6 and 5-7, respec-tively.

It changed in 2008, when the Wildcats shed their decade-old mantle as a second-division squad and fought for a 5-4 league record and 8-4overall mark to return UA to the bowl season. That trip culminated with a championship in the Las Vegas Bowl over BYU in a game markedby the Cats’ resiliency and determination, as well as offensive fireworks and tough defense. The 8-5 mark was UA’s best in 10 years.

Last year Arizona took the Pac-10 race to the wire, facing off in late November against Oregon with the Rose Bowl on the line. The Ducksprevailed in two overtimes, but UA bounced back and won two rugged road games at ASU and USC to finish alone in second place and earna slot in the Holiday Bowl at 8-4.

The head coach went through a bit of juggling on his staff in the offseason, and his work in that area looks to be one of the key moves in histenure, assigning co-coordinators and bringing in a quarterback-dedicated assistant to work with UA’s talented group.

In 2010, he and his staff were able to piece together a surprisingly stout defense after just three starters returned. The offense continued tostand as one of the best in the league, and the Wildcats cemented a winning record for the third straight season. The bowl berth for a thirdstraight season is the second-longest in the conference behind Pac-10 Champion Oregon.

Mike StoopsSeventh Year at ArizonaRecord: 40-44 overallBowl Record: 1-1

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Arizona Football Under Mike Stoops

MIKE STOOPS IN BOWL GAMESArizona Coach Mike Stoops is 1-1 in bowl games as a head man,beating BYU in the 2008 Las Vegas Bowl and dropping a decision toNebraska in last year’s Holiday Bowl. However, his playing (Iowa) andcoaching history have put him in bowl action 18 other times for a 21-triphistory. He played and coached in the Rose Bowl, played and coachedin the Peach Bowl, was an assistant coaching national champion withOklahoma in the 2000 Orange Bowl and has worked in nine otherdifferent bowls:

2010 Valero Alamo Bowl Arizona head coach2009 Holiday Bowl Arizona head coach2008 Las Vegas Bowl Arizona head coach2003 Sugar Bowl Oklahoma coordinator2002 Rose Bowl Oklahoma coordinator2001 Cotton Bowl Oklahoma coordinator2000 Orange Bowl Oklahoma coordinator1999 Independence Oklahoma coordinator1998 Alamo Bowl Kansas State coordinator1997 Fiesta Bowl Kansas State co-coordinator1996 Cotton Bowl Kansas State co coordinator1994 Aloha Bowl Kansas State assistant1993 Copper Bowl Kansas State assistant1991 Holiday Bowl Iowa volunteer assistant1990 Rose Bowl Iowa volunteer assistant1988 Peach Bowl Iowa volunteer assistant1987 Holiday Bowl Iowa graduate assistant1984 Freedom Bowl Iowa player1983 Gator Bowl Iowa player1982 Peach Bowl Iowa player1982 Rose Bowl Iowa player

• Coached the Wildcats to three-straight winning seasons and three-straightbowl appearances. The three consecutive bowl appearances equal a schoolrecord.

• Arizona’s 34-27 victory over No. 9 Iowa on Sept. 18, 2010, marked theseventh straight season in which the Wildcats knocked off a nationally rankedteam.

• Guided the Wildcats to a 3-0 record in non-conference games to open the2010 season, the first time the school had done so since 2001.

• Ranked in the top 25 much of the season, the 2010 Arizona Wildcats drewand average of 54,408 fans per game in seven contests at Arizona Stadium,the third-best mark in program history.

• In 2010, helped Arizona record a seventh consecutive 50,000-plus per-gameattendance figure, its best streak in the 30 years Arizona Stadium has beennear its current capacity. The 2006 club attracted a record 390,589 fans forthe second-best game average in UA history, 55,798.

• Returned Arizona to the national rankings in 2009, with the team ascendingto No. 18 in November. The Cats returned to the rankings for much of theregular season in 2010, jumping as high as No. 9 in the polls, the highestranking for the school since a preseason top-5 ranking in 1999.

• Led Arizona to a second-place finish in the Pac-10 in 2009, its highestfinish in 11 seasons.

• Helped lead the program's defense to consecutive years in the nation'sTop 25 in total defense in 2008 and 2009.

• Arizona's victory over No. 20 Southern California in 2009 gave Stoopsvictories over each Pac-10 program during in his tenure.

• Arizona has had 12 players selected in the NFL Draft the past fourseasons after their development under Stoops' training systems.

• Capped the University's first eight-win season in 10 years with a bowlvictory over No. 17 BYU in the Pioneer Las Vegas Bowl in 2008.

• Has coached in 17 bowl games and competed in four others as aplayer.

• Stoops added 2007 Jim Thorpe Award winner Antoine Cason to hislong list of national award winners. Cason was a consensus All-Americanand later first-round pick by the San Diego Chargers. Moreover, he wasa team spokesman and representative of the program from his first dayonward.

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Bill BedenbaughCo-Offensive CoordinatorOffensive Line Coach - Fourth YearBedenbaugh recruits metropolitan Houston and Illinois for UA... He's in his first year as co-offensive coordinatorafter his first three years on UA's staff as offensive line coach and running game coordinator... Helped craft anattack that led the Pac-10 in passing in 2010... Coached center Colin Baxter to second-team all-league honors andaccolades as a finalist for the Rimington Trophy... This is his 16th year in coaching after starting as line coach atOklahoma Panhandle State in 1995...

Seth LittrellCo-Offensive CoordinatorRunning Backs, Tight End Coach – Second YearLittrell oversees recruiting in San Antonio, Oklahoma and Houston for UA…He’s in his first year with BillBedenbaugh as co-offensive coordinator while also directing the running back and tight end positions…CoachedKeola Antolin and Nicolas Grigsby to back-to-back years of 1,200 yards on the ground and nine scores…Helpedrun an offense which saw nine different receivers tally at least 13 receptions in 2010…Seventh season in coachingafter stints at Kansas as a graduate assistant and Texas Tech as the running backs coach.

Tim KishCo-Defensive CoordinatorLinebackers Coach – Seventh YearKish recruits the Inland Empire in Southern California and the Phoenix area for the Wildcats…Molded the trio ofPaul Vassallo, Derek Earls and Jake Fischer from inexperienced group to one of the conference’s top linebackingcorps in 2010…Helped Vassallo to All Pac-10 honorable mention list after the junior college transfer led UA with 94tackles…A veteran assistant coach, Kish has been a defensive coordinator in both the Big Ten and Pac-10 duringhis 35 seasons in coaching.

Greg BrownCo-Defensive CoordinatorSecondary Coach – First YearPrior to the Alamo Bowl, Brown accepted a position at the University of Colorado…Recruited Dallas and Coloradofor UA… Helped Robert Golden with the transition to a starting cornerback role in 2010…Improved Arizona’s depthin secondary as freshmen Shaquille Richardson and Jonathan McKnight saw playing time ... Factored into sopho-more safety Adam Hall’s emergence towards the end of the year…Will not be with Arizona for the Alamo Bowl

Garret ChachereInside Receivers CoachSecond Year at ArizonaRecruiting Orange County, Calif., Nevada and Texas for Arizona, Chachere specializes in working with UA’s insidereceiving group…Coached Dave Roberts to 468 yards receiving on 42 receptions and two scores…Arizona’spassing offense recorded 310.0 ypg and 24 touchdowns through 12 regular season games…Currently in his 20thyear in coaching with stints most recently at Tulane and Memphis before joining the UA staff in 2009.

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Jeff HammerschmidtSpecial Teams Coordinator

Defensive Ends Coach - Seventh YearOversees Arizona’s recruiting efforts in San Diego and Northern California…Hammerschmidt, a three-year starter atsafety for Arizona from 1988-90, coaches UA’s defensive ends and special teams…Helped DE’s Brooks Reed andRicky Elmore to All Pac-10 team selections in 2010…Elmore led the Pac-10 in sacks with 11 while Reed totaled6.5….Coached Alex Zendejas to second in the Pac-10 in field goal percentage as he connected on 13 of 16attempts… Hammerschmidt is in his second stint with the program after serving under Dick Tomey from 1992-195.

Dave NicholOutside Receivers Coach

Fourth Year at ArizonaNichol recruits Southern Arizona along with California’s Ventura County and San Fernando and Central Valley…Inhis fourth season at Arizona after working under former UA offensive coordinator Sonny Dykes and the spreadoffense at Texas Tech…Coached Juron Criner to All Pac-10 First Team selection with Criner leading UA with 73receptions for 1,186 yards and 10 scores…Arizona’s sideline signal caller, Nichol helped David Douglas with atransition to outside receiver as Douglas was second on the team in touchdown catches with five…11th season incoaching with stops at Baylor and Texas Tech.

Frank ScelfoQuarterback Coach

First Year at ArizonaScelfo recruits Louisiana and Texas for UA…In his first season with Arizona after serving as Tulane’s offensivecoordinator for eight seasons…Coached quarterback Nick Foles to All Pac-10 honorable mention list as Folesrecorded over 2,900 yards passing to go along with 19 tds…Provided veteran offensive coaching voice as he hasmentored four NFL quarterbacks while at Tulane…Has specialized in wide-open passing attack throughout hiscareer…Currently in his 29th season coaching.

Mike TuiasosopoDefensive Line Coach

Seventh Year at ArizonaPrior to the Alamo Bowl, Tuiasosopo accepted a position at the University of Colorado…Recruited Los Angeles,Hawaii and Utah for Arizona during seven years with Mike Stoops and Arizona…Coached redshirt freshmanJustin Washington to breakout year with 10.5 tackles for loss and six sacks…Helped Arizona to a top five totaldefense in the Pac-10…Comes from football-rich family with strong recruiting ties…Will not be with the team forAlamo bowl.

Erick Harper Assoc AD/Football Operations, 7th yearDave Emerick Director of On-Campus Recruiting, 1st yearTanous Farhat Assist. Dir. of Football Ops/Recruiting, 2nd yearCorey Edmond Director of Performance Enhancement, 7th yearBrian Odom Assistant Strength Coach, 6th yearMatt Rice Offensive Graduate Assistant, 3rd yearRyan Walters Defensive Graduate Assistant, 1st yearKris Heavner Graduate Assistant, 3rd yearWendell Neal Assoc. AD/Equipment ServicesTim Pfennig Football Equipment Services

Tim Cummins Coordinator of Football VideoBrent Pantaleo Football Video ServicesRandy Cohen Director of Medical ServicesJenny Allen Assistant Trainer, footballAdam Garmon Assistant Trainer, footballDon Porter, M.D. Team PhysicianMike Meade Director, CATS AcademicsKelly Hooker Administrative Associate to Head CoachAna Verdin Administrative AssistantMelissa Melendez Administrative Assistant

Support Staff

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Alamo Bowl Game Quick HitsArizona has 15 players from state of Texas … It will be Arizona's fourth bowlappearance in Texas after 1969, 1985 and 1992 participation in the SunBowl … Arizona's three-game bowl streak matches the school's bestprevious string from 1992-94 (Sun, Fiesta, Freedom) … Arizona's activestreak is the second-longest in the Pac-10 Conference … Arizona is 3-3against Oklahoma State, all from 1931 to 1942, during UA's BorderConference days. UA beat the Cowboys, 22-13, in Phoenix in 1937 and1940 (24-0), the only neutral site games in the series.

Following FolesJunior quarterback Nick Foles’ Arizona career is 22 games deep (20 starts),with a handful of games as a backup in 2009 and a pair of missed gamesthis year due to a knee strain. This year he’s thrown for 2,911 yards andshould become only the third Wildcat to pass for 3,000 in a season. A yearago he posted 260 completions, No. 2 on UA’s single-season chart; this yearhe takes 254 into the bowl game (currently fourth). His 19 TD throws lastyear and this are fourth-best. The 38 scoring pitches are No. 7. Mike Stoops’notion of offense has come a long way since his first year in Tucson whenthe team leader (true freshman Richard Kovalcheck) threw for 940 yards in2004. Foles had nearly that many (888) in two games against Oregon State/Oregon this year. Foles has all the throws, is mobile enough to find moretime and has a stable of talented receivers to deliver the catch. His careerpass efficiency rating of 134.96 would be a school record by a hair overWillie Tuitama’s 134.70 (2005-08) if he reached the 1000-attempts level. Forthe record, he has 786 throws and 514 completions for 5,397 yards. That’scompleting 65 percent of the tosses, better than Tuitama’s mark of .616.

All-Pacific-10 ConferenceArizona placed junior receiver Juron Criner and senior defensive end BrooksReed on the first-team All-Pac-10 squad in 2010, with senior center ColinBaxter, graduate offensive tackle Adam Grant and senior defensive endRicky Elmore earning second-team honors. UA missed out on first-teampicks a year ago, with Baxter, Grant and soph corner Trevin Wade earningteam-two nods along with departing DT Earl Mitchell and LB Xavier Kelley.Honorable mention picks this year include four juniors -- QB Nick Foles, RBKeola Antolin, LB Paul Vassallo and slot receiver David Douglas … Crinerjoins first-team UA receivers of the past in Mike Thomas (2008 and 2007),Bobby Wade (2002), Dennis Northcutt (1999), Derek Hill (1987) and BradAnderson (1983) in earning first-team all-Pac-10 honors … Reed joins aselect group among Wildcat ends or edge rushers on the first team in TedyBruschi (1993-95) and Chris Singleton (1988-89). Louis Holmes (2006),Copeland Bryan (2005), Joe Tafoya (2000), Danny Lockett (1986) and SteveBoadway (1984) earned second-team honors.

All-America HonorsFour Wildcats earned All-America recognition by various publicationsfollowing terrific individual seasons … Junior wide receiver Juron Criner’sbreakout season did not go unnoticed. Following a 73-catch, 1,186-yardseason that produced 10 touchdowns, Criner earned second team All-America accolades by cbssports.com and by Sports Illustrated. He was alsonamed a third team All-America by Rivals.com … Senior center Colin Baxterwas a second team All-America selection by Rivals.com … Senior defensiveend Ricky Elmore was named honorable mention All-American by SportsIllustrated … Redshirt freshman defensive tackle Justin Washingtoncollected first team Freshman All-America honors from College FootballNews.

Coin Op DefenseArizona’s defense operates out of a base 4-3 like many teams; however,don’t be surprised when you see five or six defensive backs on the field,particularly against the Oklahoma State Cowboys’ offense. The Cats willswap a linebacker out of the game in favor of an extra defensive back for thenickel package against teams that employ three or four wide receiver sets.Typically, that means safety Joseph Perkins slides down to the linebackerlevel in the nickel package, with Adam Hall and Anthony Wilcox manning thetrue safety positions. If teams empty the backfield, Arizona will counter witha dime package, which brings extra coverage corners. Corners Trevin Wadeand Robert Golden usually bump inside, while reserves ShaquilleRichardson, Jonathan McKnight or Mike Turner will rotate to take the twooutside coverage spots. It allows the Wildcats to mix in man coverage withzone principles over the top.

Back Home in TexasArizona has not played a football game in the state of Texas since 1999,when an early season non-conference visit to TCU resulted in a thrilling 35-31 victory. So it’s safe to say Arizona’s Alamo Bowl appearance will be awelcomed homecoming for the 15 players on the roster who hail from theLone Star State. Arizona has found recruiting success in the talent-richfootball state, providing the school with a blend of players from Texas,Arizona, California and other western states. Last season, UA had 21players from Texas on the roster. How many will be on there next year?Perhaps a visit to the state for a bowl game will spike the recruiting effortsin this area.

Offensive Stats in PerspectiveArizona’s offense has had little trouble throughout the season moving thefootball, particularly through the air. This year’s squad has moved itself intoUA’s record charts in several categories. Here are a few:

• UA averages 445.2 yards per game, second-best in school history. Themark sits slightly ahead of the 444.9 turned in by the 1998 club.• UA’s 310.0 passing yards per game would be a school record at thispoint. It edges out the 308.5 passing yards per game set by the 2008squad which won the Las Vegas Bowl.• The Cats have passed for 250 or more yards in a game a total of eighttimes this year. That ties the 2007 squad for most 250+ games in asingle season.• The Wildcats average 29.8 points per game in 2010. The figure checksin No. 6 in program history.

Team AwardsArizona held its annual Team Banquet on December 10. Among otherfestivities, the team recognized some of its outstanding performers of theseason … Arizona’s trio of quarterbacks – Nick Foles, Matt Scott andBryson Beirne – were named co-Offensive Players of the Year. All threehad tremendous seasons, including Beirne who is as well-liked and well-respected by his coaches and teammates as anyone on the team. It showsthe hard work and commitment all three players have put into improvingtheir respective games on and off the field with QB coach Frank Scelfo …The Offensive Scout Team MVP award was given to wide receiver DanBuckner, who transferred from Texas last spring. Buckner, at 6-foot-4, willlikely make a significant impact next season and could combine with JuronCriner to form one of the best WR combos in the nation … The DefensiveMVP award was presented to senior Brooks Reed, who recorded six sackson the season and was a relentless presence off the edge in the run andpass game … The Defensive Scout Team MVP Award went to truefreshman Aiulua Fanene. The defensive tackle from American Samoa is theyounger brother of Cincinnati Bengals’ end Jonathan Fanene … TheSpecial Teams MVP was given to fifth-year senior Mike Turner, a defensiveback whose speed allows him to excel on punt and kickoff coverage. Heforced three fumbles on the season while collected 16 tackles, most oncoverage units … The team’s highest honor – The Tedy Bruschi Award –was handed out to senior center Colin Baxter, a 49-consecutive gamestarter on the offensive line. A two-time team captain, Baxter for hisoutstanding performance, leadership and character representing theprogram.

None Finer Than CrinerArizona junior wide receiver Juron Criner has turned in an All-Americaseason, with a league-best 73 catches for a league-best 1,186 yards. Thereceptions are the seventh-most on Arizona’s chart while the yards check inat No. 3. He’s scored 10 touchdowns this year, the No. 3 single-seasontotal in UA history, where he also owns the No. 6 spot with nine a year ago.He’s a deep threat with touchdown catches of 85, 52, 45, 41, 38 and 28yards this year, and a serious yards-after-contact and yards-after-catchguy. He’s rushed for 65 yards at a 9-yard average on end-around or speed-lateral plays. Career-wise, with another year of eligibility and a similareffort, he’s poised to become a 200-catch, 3,000-yard Wildcat, accom-plished only three times, by guys who moved on to the next level – MikeThomas (2005-08), Bobby Wade (1999-02) and Dennis Northcutt (1996-99). Criner is sitting on career marks of 125 receptions (seventh on UAchart), 1,856 yards (ninth) and 20 receiving touchdowns (fifth).

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In the ZoneIn the ZoneIn the ZoneIn the ZoneIn the ZoneArizona and Oklahoma State have some similarities in terms of offensiveoutput, but one area the Cowboys dominate is in scoring offense (44.9 ppgcompared to UA’s 29.8 ppg). The key, surely, for OSU has been its abilityto capitalize in the redzone, a place where the Wildcats have struggledmightily. OSU leads the nation with a 95-percent success rate, while theCats check in lowly at No. 107 in the country (75-percent). The Cowboyshave scored touchdowns on 39-of-59 trips (66-percent). Amazingly, those39 redzone touchdowns are more than UA’s total redzone scores (38). TheWildcats have 29 touchdowns out of 38 total redzone scores.

Foles Making a Name for HimselfArizona junior quarterback Nick Foles showed throughout the 2010 seasonwhy he was one of the nation’s top quarterbacks. Now the honorablemention All-Pac-10 quarterback will take his talents back to his home statefor a game. Here are some quick hits on Nick Foles:

• Preseason watch list for Davey O’Brien and Manning awards• Currently ranks No. 10 in nation for active career completion percent-age (65.48%)• Currently ranks No. 3 in nation for active career completions per game(23.4)• Has thrown for 5,397 yards (No. 8 in UA history) in 22 career games(20 starts)• No. 7 in UA history with 38 career passing TDs• Has 19 passing touchdowns in 2010, t-4th most in UA single season• 63.41% completion percentage in 2009 No. 3 in UA history• Career-high 448 yards passing at Oregon in 2010• Holds UA record for single game pass completion % for 30+ attempts(86.49% at Toledo, 2010)

Foles Flinging FactsQuarterback Nick Foles' 54 pass attempts at Oregon were the third-mostin a game in Arizona history, behind 61 by Willie Tuitama at California in2007 and 56 by Marc Reed against Oregon State in 1966. Foles threw 53times at Washington in 2009. One rub in Eugene was his completionpercentage of .537 (29 complete), well below his average of 71 percententering the game, which dropped to 68 percent afterward... Folesconnected with Juron Criner for an 85-yard touchdown pass at Oregon,tied for the seventh-longest in school history, the career-long for bothplayers and the longest pass play for the Wildcats in eight years... Foles iswithin reach of 3,000 passing yards this year (currently 2,911), accom-plished just three times in Arizona's football history, twice by Willie Tuitama(3,683 in 2007 and 3,088 in 2008) and once by Jason Johnson (3,327 in2002)...His 19 TD tosses this year match his 19 from 2009, a singleseason mark that is No. 4 in UA history.

Big Play JuronWide receiver Juron Criner turned in a monster junior season, which drewthe attention of some around the country. He was a unanimous choice forFirst Team All-Pac-10 and earned several All-America honors on secondand third teams by various publications. Here are some quick hits onJuron Criner:

• No. 5 in UA history with 20 career receiving touchdowns• 125 career receptions are No. 7 in UA history• No. 9 at UA with 1,856 career receiving yards• No. 8 in nation with 98.8 receiving yards per game in 2010• Career-highs of 73 catches for 1,186 yards in 2010• Game-winning TD catch vs. California with 1:11 remaining followed 51-yard reception.• Led Pac-10 receivers with nine (9) receiving touchdowns in 2009• 13 of 20 (65 percent) career TD grabs have been 20+ yard plays• 80 of 125 (65 percent) of career catches result in first down or TD• 16.2 yards per catch on 73 receptions in 2010• Five 100-yard games in 2010 (Six in career)• 10-catch, 176-yard performance at Toledo 2010• 12-catch, 152-yard effort against Stanford in 2009• 12-catch, 179-yard (career hight) effort against Oregon State in 2010• Career-high three (3) touchdowns vs. Oregon in 2009

JC for the TDJunior receiver Juron Criner has 20 career touchdown receptions, fifth-mostin school history, largely in two years as a key guy in the rotation. His hadnine touchdowns a season ago and surpassed that with 10 during the regularseason this year. Juron has a shot at the season mark of 11 TD catches, a tiebetween Bell (1974) and Mike Thomas (2007). He will also have a shot at theschool record of 30 TD receptions, by Theopolis "T" Bell from 1972-75 in JimYoung's tenure as UA's head coach under a wide-open attack directed bythen QB Bruce Hill.

Staring at the Numbers......Junior David Douglas has done a good job of working as an outsidereceiver this year after a juco wide-guy never enrolled. He has 46 catchesand five TDs after totals of 34 and two his first two seasons in the slot. Those76 catches put him in good shape to find a spot on Arizona's career receivingchart where the top 15 starts around the 100 mark. Aside from being a goodreceiver, he's Nick Foles' roommate and thereby closer to the thoughtprocesses in the UA passing game... Arizona's 84 penalties are the mostduring Mike Stoops' seven years in Tucson but thankfully well short of theschool record of 114 by the 1999 Wildcats. Stoops' first six teams averaged66 penalties per year and 5.5 per game. The team is averaging 7.0 per gamethis year... Another annual average for a Stoops' club is 12.6 interceptions byhis defenders, which means this year's teams is slightly behind pace withnine... UA's 33 sacks are the second-most for a Mike Stoops' UA club (34last year). Interestingly, UA did not have one against Stanford, USC orOregon. A sack or two would have helped in those games, no doubt.Stanford is the best pass-pro team in the country, and USC and Oregonopted to run the ball a combined 103 times against 59 combined passes....The 57 running plays (389 yards) by the Ducks in November were thesecond-most in Stoops' tenure, behind 61 totes (for 310) by Oregon State inMike's first year in 2004. USC and Washington ran the ball 52 times againstArizona in 2005. Washington had the highwater mark in yards gained rushing(333 in 2005) before the Ducks' onslaught... Linebacker Paul Vassallo has achance to hit the 100-tackle mark this year, sitting on 94 entering the bowlgame. The last Wildcat to hit the plateau was current Denver Broncolinebacker/fullback Spencer Larsen with 131 in 12 games in 2007...

Elmore Got More In a Big WaySenior defensive end Ricky Elmore put an exclamation mark on his outstand-ing career in his home finale against Arizona State as he racked up a career-high three sacks. The performance vaulted him into the No. 2 spot on UA’sall-time list for quarterback sacks, behind only Tedy Bruschi’s remarkable 52sacks. It also pushed Elmore’s season total to 11.0, the top mark for anyplayer in the Pac-10. Elmore’s 0.92 sacks per game tally checked in No. 7 inthe nation during the regular season. In 2010, the 6-foot-5, 250-pounder has48 total tackles, including 13.0 for loss. His 25.5 career sacks are seventh-most for active players in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision. He wasnamed Second Team All-Pac-10 and also was named an honorable mentionAll-American selection by Sports Illustrated.

Oh So CloseArizona’s Mike Stoops has coached in 84 games in his seven-year tenure atthe school. Of those, 32 of them (38 percent) have been decided by sevenpoints or less, which discards a few eight-point decisions that could also beconsidered one-possession outcomes. Added up, Stoops is just 12-20 in theseven-point-or-less games, with many of the tough losses coming in his firstseveral years. The Cats have won a few more close calls the last coupleyears, including a 10-9 comeback stunner over Cal back in September. Evenso, the hard losses have been tough to shake. The mark was 2-3 in 2010,with losses coming by three points to USC, two points to Oregon State andone point to Arizona State. They say these things even out in the end, butwhen they don’t turn out in your favor, they are tough to swallow.

20 GrabsArizona has eight players with 20 or more receptions, to match its biggestgroup of "20" guys in history -- the group in 2007. Last year the Cats had sixplayers with 20 or more. This year's group is led by Juron Criner with 73,while the 2007 group was led by Mike Thomas with 83.

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Miller’s Fantastic FinishSophomore wide receiver Terrance Miller had a sensational final third of theseason, stepping up in place of fellow inside receiver Bug Wright, whomissed time with injuries and a late-season suspension. In the final fourgames (against Stanford, USC, Oregon and ASU), Miller pulled in 23receptions for 312 yards. That’s some good work against some prettytalented teams. The only thing missing from Miller’s resume in those gameswas a touchdown, which he has yet to tally in his career. Even so, the late-season emergence of Miller is promising for his next two seasons in theprogram.

Cobb’s Steady PlaySenior wide receiver Travis Cobb turned in a steady season as a widereceiver and kick returner for the Wildcats. He had a 100-yard kickoff returnagainst Iowa earlier in the season (the second return score of his career)and he notched his first career scoring reception against USC on a 31-yardplay. He hauled in 25 catches in the regular season, totaling 275 yards. Healso netted 44 yards on six rush attempts throughout the season. And, forthe second consecutive season, Cobb surpassed 700 kickoff return yards.In two seasons, he has 1,470 kickoff return yards on 58 run-backs, whichaverages 24.9 yards per try. Pretty good clip.

Numb in NovemberArizona played to a 7-1 record through September and October, and thenendured its first winless November since 2000 (when Dick Tomey's finalArizona club also started strong -- 5-1 -- and then lost its last five ballgamesincluding an 0-3 slate in November. Mike Stoops' Arizona clubs havetypically been strong in the late season throughout his first six years inTucson. The seventh pitted the Cats against some strong clubs this year --Stanford, USC and Oregon -- and it showed on the scoreboards.

The DavidsDon’t get confused between No. 85 David Douglas and No. 81 DavidDouglas. While both are receivers, the former played “inside wide receiver”his first two seasons before sliding to “outside receiver” this season,although you’ll see him in the slot at times, too. Roberts, meanwhile, is asteady inside receiver who is able to find holes in defensive coverage.Neither player has electrifying speed or a big frame, but both are reliableguys who move the chains and come up with big catches at key times.Douglas is second on the team with 46 receptions for 424 yards and fivetouchdowns, while Roberts has 42 catches for 468 yards and two touch-downs. Added up, that is 88 catches for 892 yards and seven touchdowns.Good numbers for sure.

Out of the BackfieldWhile Arizona’s trio of running backs (Nic Grigsby, Keola Antolin and GregNwoko) average just 24.2 carriers per game, they factor into the passinggame quite often. They have combined for 53 catches for 395 yards, whichaverages out to 7.45 yards per catch and nearly 35 extra markers per gamefor the tailbacks. That’s a nice extension of the running game even it doesn’tshow up that way statistically.

Quarter ScoresArizona has scored points rather evenly throughout the course of games enroute to outscoring opponents by nearly 100 points on the season (357-259). The Wildcats have scored 73 points in the opening quarter of games,105 in the second, 89 in the third and 81 in the fourth quarters, respectively.ASU defeated UA in overtime, outscoring the Cats 10-9 in early December.Meanwhile, opponents have not combined to score more than 67 points inany quarter, with that tally coming in the third period and fourth periods.Otherwise, opponents have scored 55 in the opening quarter, 60 in thesecond and 67 in the third and fourth.

Plenty of PatronsArizona enjoyed one of its most successful seasons in program history interms of fan support. In seven games, the Wildcats averaged 55,408 fansper game at Arizona Stadium, which holds 57,400. This year’s mark standsat No. 3 in school history, behind the record season attendance average of56,562 in 1994 and the 55,798 in 2006. Arizona has drawn a home crowdin excess of 50,000 for 14 straight games and has averaged over 50,000per game for seven-straight seasons, a school record.

Three in a RowArizona earned a bowl appearance for the third-consecutive season for justthe second time in program history. The last time the Cats tripped to thepostseason in three straight years was from 1992-1994. The ’92 squadstarted the streak with an appearance in the John Hancock Bowl, which wasfollowed up by the 1993 club’s Fiesta Bowl season and the 1994 team’sFreedom Bowl berth.

Hall Emerging QuicklySophomore safety Adam Hall has emerged as a key playmaker on defensethis season after playing mostly special teams as a true freshman in 2009.Hall had two interceptions down the stretch in big games against USC andOregon. He moved up to No. 5 on the team with 50 total tackles on theseason, which includes 3.5 for loss. Hall is a big hitter who has good rangein pass coverage. Consistency will continue to be a primary goal for Hall,like any young player. But the 6-foot-4, 205-pounder is emerging as perhapsthe top playmaker in the secondary.

Plugging the MiddleTwo unheralded players in UA’s defense are tackles Lolomana Mikaele andJustin Washington. Mikaele is a fifth-year senior co-captain, while Washing-ton is a rookie as a redshirt freshman. Mikaele has 32 tackles on theseason, paced by 7.5 tackles for loss and 0.5 sacks. Washington, whomissed two games with a knee injury, has 45 tackles, including 10.5 for lossand 6.0 sacks. Combined, that’s 77 tackles and 18.0 tackles for loss for thetwo primary inside guys.

Rushing to SuccessThe spread offense has taken over college football in recent seasons andthe Wildcats jumped on the bandwagon with Sonny Dykes and his staff in2007. With it came a record-setting passing season for Arizona in 2007 andback-to-back eight-win seasons in 2008 and 2009. But the Wildcats havefound their success most consistent in running the football, not tossing itaround for 300-plus yards per game. Not coincidentally, a more consistentground game the last few seasons has helped the Wildcats win moregames. Consider this rush of facts:

• Arizona is 8-10 in games when it passes for 300+ yards since the startof 2006• Arizona is 6-2 in games when its opponent throws for 300+ yards in agame since '06• Arizona is 26-9 in games when it rushes for 100+ yards in a game since`06• Arizona is just 13-23 in games when its opponent rushes for 100+ yardsin a game since `06• Only five teams have beat UA when rushing for less than 100 yardssince the start of `06• UA is 15-1 in the last 16 games when holding an opponent under 100net rushing yards

Where Grigsby Stacks UpSenior tailback Nic Grigsby has moved up to No. 2 on the UA career rushingtouchdown chart (28) and No. 6 in school history with 2,898career rushingyards. Grigsby needs 102 yards to become the school's sixth player toreach 3,000 career rushing yards. Against Oregon State this year, hebecame the eighth player in school history with 500 carries in a career. Hereare some more quick hits on Nic Grigsby:

• Currently stands as UA No. 6 rusher in school history with 2,898 yards• His 28 career rushing TDs is No. 2 in school history.• His 556 career rush attempts are sixth-most by a UA player• His 107 rushing yards against The Citadel marked his 11th career 100-yard game• Arizona is 10-1 in games he rushes for 100 yards or more.• Tied career high with three rushing touchdowns against The Citadel• Average of 5.3 yards per carry in career, including 5.7 ypc since start of2008.• Had 1,153 yards and 13 touchdowns in 2008

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The Matt Scott FactorJunior backup QB Matt Scott played a pivotal role in UA’s steady 7-1 start tothe season, but injured his wrist in a victory at UCLA in late October (thesecond game he started in place of Nick Foles, who had a dislocatedkneecap). He missed the Stanford and USC games with the injury and didnot play at Oregon. In place of then-injured Nick Foles against Washingtonand UCLA, Scott proved that he brings a special element to the Arizonaoffense. In two starts against Washington and UCLA, Scott combined tocomplete 45-of-58 pass attempts (72.4 percent) with three touchdowns andone interception. That checks out to an impressive 165.98 pass efficiencyrating. Not to mention, he added 136 rushing yards on 19 total carries.Arizona averaged 525 yards and 36.5 yards per game in those two starts.Even in a limited role, he may be called upon to make a few situationalplays for the Cats from here on out.

Don’t Forget D’AundreOne player who has gone under the radar throughout his career is seniordefensive end D’Aundre Reed. Often overshadowed by all-conferenceplayers Brooks Reed (no relation) and Ricky Elmore, D’Aundre has beensteady as a third guy in the rotation at end. While he often doesn’t appearas the starter, he rotates equally with Brooks and Elmore. D’Aundre may bethe best of the trio against the run, but he also brings some explosion offthe edge. He has 38 total tackles on the season, including 6.0 for loss and2.0 sacks. He earned a start at Oregon, due in part to his ability to makeplays near the line in the run game.

Vassallo Making a Name for HimselfJunior linebacker Paul Vassallo has quietly become one of the leaders onthe UA defense and earned honorable mention all-conference accolades.Vassallo settled comfortably into his role as a 12-game starter after joiningthe program as a junior college transfer last December. He has a team-high94 tackles (30 more than No. 2 Joseph Perkins), 7.5 tackles for loss and2.0 sacks entering the bowl game. He was named the Pac-10 DefensivePlayer of the Week following a dominating 14-tackle performance againstWashington on Oct. 23. He currently ranks No. 7 in the Pac-10 in tacklesper game (7.83).

Ten For TrevinJunior cornerback Trevin Wade snared his 10th career interception againstIowa on Sept. 18, which put him in a tie for No. 10 in the NCAA for careeractive leaders in interceptions. Amazingly, it was second career “pick-six”with both coming against the Hawkeyes (one in 2009). His 85-yard returnagainst the Hawkeyes this year tied for the sixth-longest in school history.To date, he has 43 tackles, two pass breakups and one interception on theseason. He was a preseason candidate for a handful of national honors,including the Jim Thorpe Award, the Bonko Nagurski award and theBednarik Award.

The Future in the SecondaryArizona’s future appears bright in the secondary, especially at corner. TheWildcats already have two experienced players at the position in TrevinWade and Robert Golden, both juniors. But a pair of true freshmen havemade the competition in practice fun to watch this season. ShaquilleRichardson and Jonathan McKnight both have seen significant playing timethis season, with Richardson starting two games, including at WashingtonState where he picked off two passes. Filling in for the injured Trevin Wade,the Carson, Calif., native intercepted a pair of passes, broke up threeadditional passes and registered seven tackles – all solo – against theCougars. His two picks in his first career start are the first for a Wildcatsince current San Diego Charger Antoine Cason snared two againstNorthern Arizona in the season opener of his true freshman season of2004. Interestingly, Cason and Richardson both hail from the same highschool – Los Alamitos – and both wear the same number: No. 5. The manRichardson filled in for – Wade – also picked off two passes in his Arizonadebut, but did so as a redshirt freshman and in a reserve role. Wade’s pairof picks came against Idaho in the 2008 season opener.

Colin the ShotsUA center Colin Baxter was named a finalist for the Rimington Award in earlyDecember. Unfortunately for Baxter, he will be unable to play in the bowlgame following knee surgery to repair a torn meniscus, which he played within the final month of the season. Otherwise, he started 49-consecutive gamesalong UA's line, providing stability at a position of need over the last fouryears. In 2008, he was slid from guard to center mid-year after center BlakeKerley went down with a season-ending injury. Thereafter, Baxter neverlooked back. He's a featured spokesman for the team, offering uniqueperspective acquired from his time in the trenches and his tireless work withthe program on and off the field. He was named a team captain prior to theseason for the second straight year. He earned Second Team All-Pac-10honors from the league coaches and was named second team All-Americanby Rivals.com.

Old Man on the BlockArizona graduate offensive tackle Adam Grant, who moved to the left side thisyear after a couple of years on the right, is an NCAA-approved sixth-yearplayer thanks to some earlier medical problems that caused him to miss ninegames as a sophomore (knee) and his redshirt freshman year in 2006 (knee).He also missed six games with a hand injury in 2008. Grant's tenacity andphysical situation are at all-time highs. The 24-year-old religious studiesstudent earned his degree two Mays ago. He's a 30-game starter in 32 overallappearances and one of the team's spokesmen on a variety of topics, notablyperseverance. He initially was recruited as a tight end (redshirted 2005 in thatrole) but his big frame (now 6-foot-8, 325) was evident, and his future was afew feet closer to the ball from the onset of his career. His showcase gamewas likely against then-No. 9 Iowa on Sept. 18, when he went head-to-headwith Adrian Clayborn, an All-American defensive end. Clayborn finished withjust three tackles and was never a threat in the backfield on pass plays. Hegets to finish out his collegiate career playing in a third-straight bowl game.

Rushing Attack IntactArizona’s running back trio of Nic Grigsby, Keola Antolin and Greg Nwoko hascombined for over 5,000 career rushing yards. Through 12 regular seasongames this season, the current tally is 5,181 rushing yards, paced by NicGrigsby’s 2,898 yards, which places him No. 16 amongst active players in theNCAA for career rushing yards. Throw in Matt Scott’s 632 career markers as adual-threat quarterback, and you tally 5,813 career rushing yards ready to seethe field at any time. Of course, UA’s receivers are also threats on reversesand end-around plays, notably Travis Cobb, Terrence Miller and Juron Criner(50 rush yards at Stanford in 2010).

Not to Be OffensiveOver the course of the last 49 games, Arizona has scored 15 non-offensivetouchdowns (nearly every 3 games or so). In 2007 and 2008, the Wildcatsscored on two punt returns and two interception returns in each season. In2009 , Travis Cobb scored on a kickoff return (95 yards), Bug Wright returneda punt to the house (86 yards), Orlando Vargas blocked a punt and returned itfor a score (23 yards), and defensive backs Trevin Wade (38 yards) andRobert Golden (79 yards) had pick-six's. This season, Trevin Wade (85 yards)returned an interception for a scored against Iowa, and Travis Cobb has a100-yard kickoff return against the Hawkeyes. UA has gone eight straightgames without a non-offensive touchdown this season.

Turnover FortunesArizona's success on the gridiron hinges greatly on its fortunes in the turnoverbattle, particularly on the road. Since the start of the 2006 season (57 totalgames), the Wildcats are an impressive 15-3 when they win the turnoverbattle in a game. Conversely, they struggle to a 6-15 mark in games whenthey lose the critical battle. The Cats linger just over .500 in games they splitthe turnover margin with a 13-10 mark. In multiple miscue games, Arizona isjust 14-16 when it turns the ball over two or more times, but has benefittedwith a 12-3 clip when opponents turn it over twice or more in a game. Butperhaps the most notable statistical trend as it relates to turnovers is the factthat the Cats are 0-10 when they lose the turnover battle on the road. At thesame time, UA is 12-5 away from the home when it wins or splits the turnoverbattle. In bowl games, the Cats split the turnover battle with BYU, 3-3, at theLas Vegas Bowl in 2008 and lost the turnover battle, 1-0, to Nebraska in theHoliday Bowl a season ago.

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Zendejas In the BooksArizona junior place kicker Alex Zendejas has scored 79 points this season(13-16 FGs, 40-45 PATs). That tally has boosted his career total to 173points, which stands at No. 10 in UA history. Zendejas is 30-for-38 (.789) onfield goal attempts the last two seasons, Interestingly, that percentage trailsUA career percentage leader Jason Bondzio (.833), but leads Zendejas’uncle Max Zendejas, who connected on .738 percent of tries in his career(1982-84).

Don’t Confuse Your 2’sArizona has a handful of regular players that share duplicate numbers.Perhaps the most troublesome for those high in the press box to identify isUA’s pair of 2’s. Junior running back Keola Antolin is the guy you’ll seemaking the plays on offense in the running game and passing game, and hemay make a foray onto a kick return team. His number-sharing teammate isa guy that will make plays on the side of the ball – Mike Turner. Turner is aspeedster on special teams that is adept at creating big plays, particular inpunt coverage. He has two forced fumbles on punt plays in 2010, and wasthe man who recovered a muffed punt against ASU in 2009 that set up UA’slast-second game-winning field goal. He’ll also be featured at cornerback inUA’s dime packages in passing situations. Certainly a valuable multi-talentedplayer who has been in the program for five seasons.

Don’t Confuse Those 3’s, 4’s, 5’s, 6’s and 14’sA few other bothersome duplicate numbers to consider: The primary No. 3for UA is senior safety Anthony Wilcox. Often an overlooked part of UA’sdefense, he’s played steady in his six games this season, and he’ll appear ona coverage team once in a while, too. The other No. 3 is running back DanielJenkins. He’s an elusive runner who you’ll mostly see on UA’s kick returnteam as an upback. But he may field a short kick at some point … The No. 4is shared by quarterback Matt Scott and freshman defensive back MarquisFlowers. Scott will be easy to pick out when he’s in the game on offense, butyou’ll find Flowers on several UA special teams units and in various defen-sive coverage packages throughout a game … The No. 5 is shared by seniorrunning back Nic Grigsby and freshman defensive back ShaquilleRichardson. If you see a No. 5 in the game on defense or special teams, it’sthe talented corner Richardson, who is featured prominently in UA’s dimedefense and made his first career start at Washington State… The No. 6 isused by WR/KR Traivs Cobb and freshman DB Jonathan McKnight. Oncoverage teams and perhaps in the secondary is where you’ll find McKnight… Place kicker Alex Zendejas is the prominent No. 14 in kicking situations,but you’ll find No. 14 Richard Morrison, an inside WR, on offensive plays andperhaps on some non-place kicking special teams units.

Moving the ChainsThe Wildcats' offensive attack the last several years has been very good atmoving the chains and keeping drives alive. A good game in this categoryincludes accumulating 20 or more first downs in a game. When the Catsreach that mark, they are 17-8 over the last 38 games and 22-9 since thestart of the 2006 season. At the same time, keeping opponents under thatmark is critical, too. UA has captured 25 of its 34 victories over the last fouryears by keeping opponents under 20 first downs in a game. If UA gets 20and keeps its opponents below that number in the same game, the Cats winbetter than 80-percent of the time (16-3 record).

Game of PossessionWhile not always the case, maintaining possession of the football is a signthat one's offense is moving the ball and its defense is doing a sound jobcontrolling the opposing offense That has usually been the case for theWildcats, although some quirky games (such as a 23:32 edge in possessionat Oregon in 2008) skew TOP from being a perfect stat. Even so, Arizona is25-7 since the start of 2006 when it has a positive margin in time of posses-sion and struggles to just a 9-20 mark when its opponents keeps the balllonger. For games in which the opponent controls the ball four or moreminutes longer than the Cats yields a 4-17 record for the Cardinal and Navy.When the tables are turned and UA has the four-plus minutes of possession,the Cats are 17-6.

Smart GuysArizona placed five student-athletes on the 2010 Pacific-10 Conference All-Academic Football Teams last week including first-team honors forsophomore linebacker Jake Fischer, senior safety Anthony Wilcox andjunior kicker John Bonano. Earning second-team nods were linebacker R.J.Young and safety Adam Hall. Four Cats earned honorable mention -- juniorquarterback Nick Foles, senior tight end A.J. Simmons, redshirt freshmantight end Jack Baucus and junior receiver David Roberts. Roberts earnedsecond-team honors in 2008 and Young repeats from second-team honorsa year ago. The Cats' five first- or second-team honors matched itshistorical high from 2008.

Arizona 2010 Rankings by Week Week AP USA Today Harris Poll BCSPreseason - - N/A N/AWeek 1 - - N/A N/AWeek 2 - 23 N/A N/AWeek 3 24 18 N/A N/AWeek 4 14 16 N/A N/AWeek 5 14 14 N/A N/AWeek 6 9 11 N/A N/AWeek 7 17 20 21 N/AWeek 8 15 18 18 18Week 9 15 16 15 15Week 10 13 13 13 15Week 11 18 19 19 18Week 12 23 23 23 22Week 13 20 20 21 21Week 14 - - 25 23Postseason - - - -

Arizona’s 2011 ScheduleDate OpponentSept. 3 Northern ArizonaSept. 10 at Oklahoma StateSept. 17 StanfordSept. 24 OregonOct. 1 at Southern California*Oct. 8 at Oregon StateOct. 15 Open DateOct. 20 UCLA (Thursday)*Oct. 29 at WashingtonNov. 5 Utah*Nov. 12 at Colorado*Nov. 19 at Arizona State*Nov. 26 Louisiana-Lafayette

* Pac-12 contests

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Game, Season and Career Records1 .......................... 9,211 ................................... Willie Tuitama (2005-08)2 .......................... 7,618 ................................. Tom Tunnicliffe (1980-83)3 .......................... 6,016 .................................. Alfred Jenkins (1983-86)4 .......................... 5,972 ....................................... Keith Smith (1996-99)5 .......................... 5,749 ............................. Jason Johnson (1999-2002)6 .......................... 5,723 ......................................... Dan White (1993-957 .......................... 5,424 ................................. Ortege Jenkins (1997-00)8 .......................... 5,397 .............................. Nick Foles (2009-present)9 .......................... 5,090 .......................................... Bruce Hill (1973-75)

1 .......................... 3,683 ........................................ Willie Tuitama (2007)2 .......................... 3,327 ...................................... Jason Johnson (2002)3 .......................... 3,088 ........................................ Willie Tuitama (2008)4 .......................... 2,911 ............................................ Nick Foles (2010)5 .......................... 2,520 ...................................... Tom Tunnicliffe (1982)6 .......................... 2,474 ...................................... Tom Tunnicliffe (1983)7 .......................... 2,486 ............................................ Nick Foles (2009)8 .......................... 2,368 ............................................. Marc Reed (1966)9 .......................... 2,347 ...................................... Jason Johnson (2001)10 ........................ 2,202 ........................................ Alfred Jenkins (1984)

1 .......................... 510 ........................... Willie Tuitama (at Wash., 2007)2 .......................... 494 ............................. Jason Johnson (at Cal, 2002)3 .......................... 448 ............................ Nick Foles (at Oregon, 2010)4 .......................... 446 ................................. Willie Tuitama (UNM, 2007)5 .......................... 443 .......................... Jason Johnson (at Wash. 2002)6 .......................... 440 ........................... Nick Foles (Oregon St., 2010)7 .......................... 426 ............................. Tom Tunnicliffe (Pacific, 1982)8 .......................... 418 ................................... Keith Smith (at Cal, 1996)9 .......................... 416 .............................. Nick Foles (Stanford, 2009)............................ 416 ............................... Jason Johnson (Utah, 2002)

1 .......................... 67 ........................................ Willie Tuitama (2005-08)2 .......................... 46 ...................................... Tom Tunnicliffe (1980-83)3 .......................... 45 ............................................... Bruce Hill (1973-75)4 .......................... 43 ............................................. Dan White (1993-95)5 .......................... 42 ............................................ Keith Smith (1996-99)............................ 42 .................................. Ortege Jenkins (1997-2000)7 .......................... 38 ................................... Nick Foles (2009-present)8 .......................... 35 .................................. Jason Johnson (1999-2002)9 .......................... 30 ....................................... Alfred Jenkins (1983-86)

1 .......................... 28 ............................................. Willie Tuitama (2007)2 .......................... 23 ............................................. Willie Tuitama (2008)3 .......................... 20 .................................................. Marc Reed (1966)4 .......................... 19 ........................................... Jason Johnson (2001)............................ 19 ........................................... Ortege Jenkins (1997)............................ 19 ................................................. Nick Foles (2009)............................ 19 ................................................. Nick Foles (2010)

1 .......................... 327 ........................................... Willie Tuitama (2007)2 .......................... 260 ............................................... Nick Foles (2009)3 .......................... 254 ............................................... Nick Foles (2010)4 .......................... 239 ......................................... Jason Johnson (2002)5 .......................... 210 ........................................... Willie Tuitama (2008)6 .......................... 193 ................................................ Marc Reed (1966)

1 .......................... 68.50% (165 att.) ......................... Keith Smith (1998)2 .......................... 67.55 (376 att) ............................. Nick Foles (2010)3 .......................... 64.91% (399 att.) ........................ Willie Tuitama (2008)4 .......................... 63.41% (410 att.) ......................... Nick Foles (2009)5 .......................... 60.24% (524 att.) ..................... Willie Tuitama (2007)6 .......................... 60.60% (193 att.) ......................... Keith Smith (1996)

Career Passing Yards

Single Season Passing Yards

Single Game Passing Yards

Career Passing Touchdowns

Single Season Passing Touchdowns

Single Season Completions

Single Season Completion Percentage

1 .......................... 3,824 (604) ...................... Trung Canidate (1996-99)2 .......................... 3,501 (805) ..................... Ontiwaun Carter (1991-94)3 .......................... 3,371 (513) ............................. Art Luppino (1953-56)4 .......................... 3.163 (678) ................................ Mike Bell (2002-05)5 .......................... 3,096 (649) ........................... Hubie Oliver (1977-80)6 .......................... 2,898 (556) .................. Nic Grigsby (2007-Present)7 .......................... 2,571 (600) .......................... David Adams (1984-86)8 .......................... 2,530 (521) ................... Clarence Farmer (2000-03)(Current Players: Keola Antolin 1,829 yards on 373 carries)

1...... .................... 288 (18) ....................... Trung Canidate (ASU, 1998)2 .......................... 232 (27) ........................ Jim Upchurch (UTEP, 1973)3 .......................... 228 (6) ............................. Art Luppino(NMSU, 1954)4 .......................... 224 (36) ..................... Ontiwaun Carter (CSU, 1994)5 .......................... 222 (26) .............................. Mike Bell (Wash., 2003)6 .......................... 221 (33) ................... Trung Canidate (at OSU, 1999)7 .......................... 217 (33) ....................... Bill Hargis (Occidental,1930)8 .......................... 207 (15) ........................... Nic Grigsby (NAU, 2009)

1 .......................... 44 ........................................... Art Luppino (1953-56)2 .......................... 28 ................................. Nic Grigsby (2007-present)3 .......................... 27 ........................................... Ronald Veal (1987-90)4 .......................... 25 ..................................... Trung Canidate (1996-99)5 .......................... 21 .................................... Ontiwaun Carter (1991-94)............................ 21 .............................. Keola Antolin (2008-present)7 .......................... 20 .......................................... Kelvin Eafon (1996-98)............................ 20 ..................................... Vance Johnson (1981-84)9........ .................. 19 ........................................... Chuck Levy (1991-93)............................ 19 ................................... Clarence Farmer (2000-03)

1 .......................... 21 ................................................ Art Luppino (1954)2 .......................... 16 ............................................... Kelvin Eafon (1998)3 .......................... 13 ............................................... Nic Grigsby (2008)............................ 13 ....................................... Bobby Thompson (1961)5 .......................... 11 ........................................... Trung Canidate (1999)6 .......................... 10 ............................................ Keola Antolin (2008)........ .................... 10 ........................................ Clarence Farmer (2001)............................ 10 ........................................... Trung Canidate (1998)............................ 10 ........................................... Vance Johnson (1983)............................ 10 ............................................. Jim Upchurch (1973)(Current Players: Grigsby - 8 in 2010; Antolin - 7 in 2010)

1 .......................... 96 yards* ................... Trung Canidate (SDSU, 1997)2 .......................... 94 yards .......................... Nic Grigsby (NAU, 2009)3 .......................... 88 yards* ................... Bobby Thompson (at UTEP, 1960)4 .......................... 84 yards* ........................ Willie Hamilton (at Ore., 1972)5 .......................... 82 yards .......................... Willie Lewis (Wyoming, 1970)* Touchdown

1 .......................... 32 .................................... Art Luppino (NMSU, 1954)2 .......................... 25 ................................... Art Luppino (at Utah, 1954)3 .......................... 24 ......................... Keola Antolin (at Oregon, 2008)............................ 24 ..................................... Ronald Veal (WSU, 1988)............................ 24 ................................. Richard Hersey (UOP, 1980)............................ 24 ........................................ Harry Holt (UTEP, 1977)............................ 24 .................................. Don Beasley (at ASU,1953)

1 .......................... 3,520 ........................................ Willie Tuitama (2007)2 .......................... 2,968 ........................................ Willie Tuitama (2008)3 .......................... 2,954 ...................................... Jason Johnson (2002)4 .......................... 2,805 ............................................ Nick Foles (2010)5 .......................... 2,464 ...................................... Tom Tunnicliffe (1983)6 .......................... 2,441 ...................................... Tom Tunnicliffe (1982)7 .......................... 2,412 ............................................ Nick Foles (2009)

Career Rushing Yards

Single Game Rushing Yards

Career Rushing Touchdowns

Single Season Rushing Touchdowns

Longest Runs

Single Game Points Scored

Single Season Total Offense

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Game, Season and Career Records1 .......................... 30 .................................................. ‘T’ Bell (1972-75)2 .......................... 24 ................................... Dennis Northcutt (1996-99)3 .......................... 23 ......................................... Bobby Wade (1999-02)............................ 23 ........................................ Mike Thomas (2005-08)5 .......................... 20 ............................... Juron Criner (2008-present)6 .......................... 19 ...................................... Charlie McKee (1969-71)7 .......................... 17 ......................................... Richard Dice (1993-96)8 .......................... 16 ............................................ Jon Horton (1983-86)............................ 16 ................................... Rob Gronkowski (2007-08)

1 .......................... 3,351 yards (230 rec.) ......... Bobby Wade (1999-02)2 .......................... 3,252 (223) .................... Dennis Northcutt (1996-99)3 .......................... 3,231 (259) ......................... Mike Thomas (2005-08)4 .......................... 2,509 (153) ..................................... T' Bell (1972-75)5 .......................... 2,415 (136) ............................. Jon Horton (1983-86)6 .......................... 1,957 (119) ........................... Richard Dice (1993-96)7 .......................... 1,925 (112) ................................ Derek Hill (1985-88)8 .......................... 1,884 (109) .......................... Terry Vaughn (1990-93)9 .......................... 1,856 (125) ................ Juron Criner (2008-present)10 ........................ 1,789 (97) ......................... Brad Anderson (1981-83)

1 .......................... 259 (3,231 yds) ................... Mike Thomas (2005-08)2 .......................... 230 (3,351) .......................... Bobby Wade (1999-02)3 .......................... 223 (3,252) .................... Dennis Northcutt (1996-99)4 .......................... 153 (2,509) .................................... ‘T’ Bell (1972-75)5 .......................... 136 (2,414) ............................. Jon Horton (1983-86)6 .......................... 131 (1,584) ..................... Syndric Steptoe (2003-06)7 .......................... 125 (1,856) ................ Juron Criner (2008-present)8 .......................... 119 (1,957) ........................... Richard Dice (1993-96)

1 .......................... 93 (1,389 yds) ............................ Bobby Wade (2002)2 .......................... 88 (1,422) ........................... Dennis Northcutt (1999)3 .......................... 83 (1,038) ................................. Mike Thomas (2007)4 .......................... 76 (1,003) ....................................... Jim Gerth (1966)5 .......................... 74 (825) .................................... Mike Thomas (2008)6 .......................... 73 (1,186) ................................... Juron Criner 2010

1 .......................... 1,422 (88 rec.) ...................... Dennis Nortcutt (1999)2 .......................... 1,389 (93) .................................. Bobby Wade (2002)3 .......................... 1,186 (73) ................................. Juron Criner (2010)4 .......................... 1,134 (54) ................................. Keith Hartwig (1976)5 .......................... 1,038 (83) ................................. Mike Thomas (2007)6 .......................... 1,003 (76) ....................................... Jim Greth (1966)

1 .......................... 11 ......................................................... ‘T’ Bell (1974)............................ 11 .............................................. Mike Thomas (2007)3 .......................... 10 ................................................... K. Hartwig (1976)............................ 10 ......................................... Rob Gronkowski (2008)............................ 10 .............................................. Juron Criner (2010)5 .......................... 9 ................................................ Juron Criner (2009)............................ 9 .......................................... Dennis Northcutt (1997)............................ 9 ......................................... Jeremy McDaniel (1998)

283 ...................... Jeremy McDaniel (14) .......................... at Cal (1996)257 ...................... Dennis Northcutt (10) ......................... at TCU (1999)222 ...................... Bobby Wade (11) ................................... at Cal (2002217 ...................... ‘T’ Bell (7) ................................ at New Mexico (1975)217 ...................... Jon Horton (9) ............................... Utah State (1984)208 ...................... Derek Hill (7) ................................. at Stanford (1987)205 ...................... Charlie McKee (6) ......................... Oregon St. (1971)203 ...................... Keith Hartwig (9) ............................. Wyoming (1976)196 ...................... Bill Glazier (8) ............................. New Mexico (1951)179 ...................... Keith Hartwig (9) .................. at Northwestern (1976)179 ...................... Juron Criner (12) .................... Oregon State (2010)176 ...................... Juron Criner (10) ........................... at Toledo (2010)

Career Receiving Touchdowns

Career Receiving Yards

Career Receptions

Single Season Receptions

Single Season Receiving Yards

Single Season Touchdown Receptions

Single Season Total Offense

1 .......................... 52 ......................................... Tedy Bruschi (1992-95)2 .......................... 25.5 .................................... Ricky Elmore (2007-10)3 .......................... 25 .......................................... David Wood (1981-84)4 .......................... 24.5 ...................................... Joe Tafoya (1997-2000)5 .......................... 23.5 ...................................... Rob Waldrop (1990-93)............................ 22.5 ................................. Reggie Johnson (1988-90)............................ 22.5 ....................................... Jim Hoffman (1991-94)8 .......................... 22 ....................................... Danny Lockett (1985-86)9 .......................... 21.5 ...................................... Joe Salave'a (1994-97)10 ........................ 21 ..................................... Chuck Osborne (1992-95)(Current players: Brooks Reed -- 17)

100 yds ............... Travis Cobb .......................................... Iowa (2010)100 ...................... Chris McAlister ..................................... UCLA (1996)100 ...................... Chris McAlister .............................. at Hawai’I (1998)98 ........................ Wallace Smith .................................... Whittier (1935)97 ........................ Michael Bates ........................ Washington St. (1990)97 ........................ Rick Stevenson .............................. at Indiana (1968)95 ........................ Travis Cobb .................................... vs. WSU (2009)95 ........................ Willie Hamilton ...................................... UTEP (1972)95 ........................ Gary Kenley ............................ at New Mexico (1962)95 ........................ Ricky Harris .............................. at Arizona St. (1963)95 ........................ Bill McCormick ...................................... UTEP (1953)

94 yds ................. Jackie Wallace ...................................... UCLA (1971)91 ........................ Wally Scott ................................ at Arizona St. (1965)87 ........................ Fred Batiste .................................... at Denver (1949)87* ...................... Marquis Hundley .............................. vs. Idaho (2008)86 ........................ Bug Wright ..................................... vs. WSU (2009)* Recovered fumbled punt, yards only

100 yds ............... Chuck Cecil .................................. Arizona St. (1986)98 ........................ Mikal Smith ................................... Arizona St. (1996)97 ........................ Mike Scurlock ................................. California (1994)96 ........................ Allan Durden ....................................... at LSU (1984)89 ........................ Lynnden Brown ....................... at Washington (1984)85 ........................ Trevin Wade .......................................... Iowa (2010)85 ........................ Scott Geyer ...................................... NC State (1989)83 ........................ Dennis Anderson ...................... Northwestern (1975)79 ........................ Robert Golden ................................ Stanford (2009)

1 .......................... 360 points .......................... Max Zendejas (1982-85)2 .......................... 337 .......................................... Art Luppino (1953-56)3 .......................... 283 ............................... Steve McLaughlin (1991-94)4 .......................... 262 ....................................... Gary Colston (1986-90)5 .......................... 246 .......................................... Less Pistor (1974-77)6 .......................... 197 .................................... Jason Bondzio (2007-08)7 .......................... 194 ................................... Vance Johnson (1981-84)8 .......................... 190 .................................................. T' Bell (1972-75)9 .......................... 182 ........................................... Sean Keel (1999-00)10 ........................ 173 ........................... Alex Zendejas (2008-present)11 ........................ 169 ............................................. Nick Folk (2003-06)12 ........................ 162 ................................. Dennis Northcutt (1996-99)

Career Quarterback Sacks

Longest Kickoff Returns

Longest Punt Returns

Longest Interception Returns

Career Total Points (All Players)

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1921 East-West Christmas Classic -Centre (Ky.) 38, Arizona 0SAN DIEGO, Calif.—A dominating squad from Centre (Ky.) College splashed to

a 38-0 victory over Arizona in front of several thousand rain-soaked fans, spoiling Arizona’sfirst-ever bowl game appearance.

The Praying Colonels held the Cats to zero first downs in the first half, andArizona was unable to maintain a good drive throughout the game.

Centre’s Red Roberts, one of Walter Camp’s first All-America ends, scored thefirst touchdown five minutes into the match. Later, All-American Alvin (Bo) McMillin wentover the right tackle for another score. Centre led 18-0 at the half.

The second half was much the same, as Centre dominated every phase. Justas Arizona was mounting a drive late in the third stanza, an interception ended Westernhopes, and the Wildcat defense was unable to halt the potent Eastern attack. Centre’s HerbCovington scored on a punt return and a sweep to seal the victory.

1949 Salad Bowl - Drake 14, Arizona 13PHOENIX, Ariz.—Arizona couldn’t overcome crucial mistakes, and the Drake

Bulldogs triumphed, 14-13, before a crowd of 14,000 in nostalgia-filled Montgomerystadium.

The fiesty Midwesterners were outgained by coach Miles Casteel’s troops, 355yards to 206, but the Cats had two fumbles and an interception that ended any hope for avictory. Drake built a 14-7 halftime lead on the strength of Frank Metzger’s 1-yard run andFloyd Miller’s interception of Ed Wolgast for a 20-yard score. The Cats got on the board witha 15-yard Wolgast rollout.

Arizona roared back in the second half, as running back Charlie Hall romped 79yards with the third quarter kickoff. The Cats failed to score on their first thrust after thethrilling return, but after an exchange of punts, the durable Wolgast tallied his secondtouchdown.

Drake carried the luck on this afternoon. Arizona’s Wrinfred Tackett, one of theBorder-Conference’s top extra-point kickers, booted the pigskin against the left upright, theball bounced away from the goal posts, and Drake escaped with a one-point margin.

Wolgast finished the day with 133 yards rushing, eight yards more than Drake’steam total.

1968 Sun Bowl - Auburn 34, Arizona 10EL PASO, Texas—Arizona battled Auburn on even terms for one half, but within

a period of seven minutes in the second half, the Tigers scored 24 points to crush theWildcats, 34-10, before 32,302 weather-beaten fans and a national television audience inthe 34th annual Sun Bowl.

Auburn had taken the lead, 10-0, on a John Riley 52-yard field goal, tying a SunBowl record, and a 65-yard touchdown pass from All-SEC quarterback Loran Carter toMickey Zofko. But the Cats were fit to be tied as Steve Hurley booted a 37-yarder after bothteams exchanged turnovers. Arizona held Auburn on fourth down with under two minutesleft in the half, and Arizona’s Bruce Lee went to work. Two first-down pass completions setup a 12-yard toss to Hal Arnason in the end zone, tying the score 10-10 at the half. In the third quarter, Auburn took the lead and didn’t look back as Tommy Taylorscampered nine yards to put the Tigers up 17-10. Then Buddy McClinton intercepted Leefor the third time in the game and raced 32 yards to score. Auburn’s next possessionproduced a dazzling Carter to Tim Christian 42-yard touchdown pass. Riley then kicked a41-yard field goal to secure the victory with 11:14 left.

Auburn’s Buddy McClinton was voted MVP of the game, and All-America tackleDave Campbell was honored as the outstanding lineman.

1979 Fiesta Bowl - Pittsburgh 16, Arizona 10TEMPE, Ariz.—The 10th-ranked Pittsburgh Panthers survived a late rally and

hung on to defeat Arizona, 16-10, in the 1979 Fiesta Bowl.A national television audience was able to watch superb defensive play on both

sides. Arizona’s defense held Pitt to 299 yards, while the offense dented the Panther’snationally-ranked defense for 317 yards.

Pitt led 6-0 at halftime on the strength of 46-and 36-yard field goals by thegame’s most valuable offensive player, Mark Schubert. Arizona moved the ball well, butcouldn’t get the one big play it needed. The Cats drove to Pitt’s 37, 26 and 22, but came upempty each time.

The Cats’ trouble came on key plays. Midway through the first period, they werestopped on fourth-and-two at the Pitt 21. Arizona managed to get on the board late in thethird period on a 38-yard field goal by Brett Weber, but Pitt answered with a touchdown toexpand its lead to 13-3.

The Panthers appeared to have wrapped up the game when Schubert kickedhis third field goal of the day with 8:02 left. But the Cats reached into their bag of tricks toget back in the game. From the Pitt 47, fullback Hubie Oliver took a pitch and launched apass down field to Greg Jackson who caught it at the Panther one. Oliver scored on thenext play.

The outcome was in doubt until Terry White picked off a Jim Krohn pass with:58 remaining. Arizona’s David Liggins was voted the game’s most valuable defensiveplayer on the strength of two key interceptions of Dan Marino passes to thwart Pantherdrives.

1985 Sun Bowl - Arizona 13, Georgia 13EL PASO, Texas—Arizona and Georgia each failed on late field goal attempts

leaving the teams tied, 13-13, and the record Sun Bowl crowd of 52,203 going home with anempty feeling.

The teams battled on even terms for a half with Georgia’s Steve Crumleybooting a 37-yard field goal and Arizona’s Max Zendejas adding a 22-yarder after anapparent Arizona touchdown was nullified by penalty.

The third quarter belonged to coach Larry Smith’s troops, who drove 34 yardswith the second-half kickoff before Zendejas nailed a 52-yard field goal. The Wildcats

expanded the margin to 13-3 with 3:30 left to play in the stanza, as Martin Rudolph picked offa James Jackson pass and bolted 35 yards for a touchdown.

Georgia took the ensuing kickoff and drove to the Arizona 28, where DavisJacobs kicked a 45-yarder to begin the Bulldog rally. Two plays later, James DeBow fumbled,and Georgia’s Tony Flack recovered to set up Lars Tate’s game-tying 2-yard run. Jacobsmissed a 44-yarder with 1:14 to play. The Cats then used a 25-yard David Adams run to giveZendejas a 39-yard try with :10 remaining. However, his attempt was wide-right and short.

Zendejas and Georgia center Peter Anderson won outstanding player honors.Arizona finished the season at 8-3-1, while Georgia wound up 7-3-2.

1986 Aloha Bowl - Arizona 30, North Carolina 21HONOLULU, Hawaii—Arizona capitalized on big defensive plays to coast to its

first-ever post-season victory, 30-21, over North Carolina. All-America free safety Chuck Cecilwas the ring-leader of the Cat defense that forced five fumbles with bone-jarring hits.

The Arizona offense showed spark as well. David Adams closed his sterlingcareer with 81 yards rushing and a touchdown and three catches for 77 yards. Offensive MVPAlfred Jenkins finished 12-of-28 passing for 187 yards and a score.

But it was coach Larry Smith’s defense which made the big plays to set up points.A Jim Birmingham fumble recovery led to a 31-yard Gary Coston field goal to begin theattack. Later, Boomer Gibson partially blocked a punt, and the Cats put seven more on theboard with an Adams one-yard scamper. Danny Lockett’s sack of Mark Maye caused afumble, and the Cats cashed in with another Coston three-pointer for a 13-0 halftime lead.

It was more of the same in the third quarter. Arizona’s Jeff Valder booted a 52-yard field goal to set an Aloha Bowl record. Then Cecil clobbered Jonathan Hall, and JerryBeasley recovered the subsequent fumble at the Tar Heel 30. Jenkins found Jon Horton from13 yards out for the quick score. Another Tar Heel fumble led to Greathouse’s five-yardscoring run, and the Cats were in control.

1989 Copper Bowl - Arizona 17, North Carolina State 10TUCSON, Ariz.—Arizona cashed in on big plays to defeat North Carolina State,

17-10, before an Arizona Stadium crowd of 37,237 in the inaugural Copper Bowl. TheWildcats were dominated statistically, 310 yards to 130 yards including a season-low 50yards on the turf. However, two unlikely heroes, Olatide Ogunfiditimi and Scott Geyer, madethe big plays to pull out the victory.

In the first stanza, neither team could sustain drives, but the Cats got on theboard first as Ronald Veal found a double-covered Ogunfiditimi 37 yards down field for a 7-0advantage. The second quarter proved more magical as Geyer, the Defensive MVP,intercepted Shane Montgomery and raced 85 yards for a score.

But the Wolfpack had a magic wand of their own as Montgomery, the OffensiveMVP, capped a 56-yard, nine-play drive with a four-yard touchdown toss to fullback ToddVarn to cut the lead, 14-7. The half ended with a Gary Coston 34-yard field goal. Score: 17-7.

The second half included a Damon Hartman 43-yarder to inch the Pack closer,17-10. However the New Year brought a little luck to the Cats, as Montgomery just missed adiving Chris Williams over the middle for the possible tying touchdown with 1:02 left.

Arizona Dick Tomey notched a victory in his first-ever bowl game in 13 years as ahead coach. The Wildcats finished 8-4 on the season, and the Wolfpack closed at 7-5.

1990 Eagle Aloha Bowl - Syracuse 28, Arizona 0HONOLULU, Hawai’i—Marvin Graves ran for two touchdowns and passed for

another score as Syracuse embarrassed Arizona, 28-0, in the ninth Eagle Aloha Bowl gamein rain-drenched Aloha Stadium. Graves scored on a pair of 5-yard runs and threw 47 yards to Terry Richardson and 6yards to Chris Gedney as the Orangemen ran their record to 7-4-2. Arizona fell to 7-5. Theshutout snapped Arizona’s 214-game scoring streak, the second longest scoring streak inNCAA history. The last time the Cats were shut out was a 31-0 defeat by Arizona State in1971. The Orangemen drove 65 yards in 13 plays following the opening kickoff with Gravesscoring on a quarterback draw from the five with 8:35 left in the first quarter.

Syracuse made it 14-0 with 2:22 remaining in the half as Richardson slippedbehind the Cat pass defense for an easy 47-yard reception. Arizona tried to get back into thegame in the third quarter, twice reaching the Orangemen 35-yard line. But both drives died,and Syracuse put the game away in the fourth quarter with two long marches.

Graves was selected as Syracuse’s most valuable player, and cornerback ToddBurden, who had two interceptions and caused a fumble, was selected as Arizona’s mostvaluable player. The week-long inclement weather put a damper on many activities andcaused many ticket purchasers to stay at home. There were 32,217 tickets sold but only14,185 attended the game.

1992 Hancock Bowl - Baylor 20, Arizona 15EL PASO, Texas—Arizona’s defense lived up to its billing on all but two plays;

those spelled doom as Baylor’s big scoring passes helped beat the Cats, 20-15, in the JohnHancock Bowl.

UA, which unleashed a no-huddle, wide-open passing attack, opened scoringwith a Steve McLaughlin first-quarter field goal and increased the lead to 10-0 with a 65-yardscoring drive capped by a George Malauulu quarterback draw for seven yards mid-waythrough the second quarter.

BU halfback Brandell Jackson hit Melvin Bonner for a 61-yard strike threeminutes later, but Arizona answered with a 14-play drive to set up another McLaughlin fieldgoal and take a 13-7 halftime lead.

The Bears, held to 47 yards rushing, went to the air and struck again with anotherBonner TD catch for 69 yards from QB J.J. Joe. Shortly into the fourth period, the Bearscapitalized on two Arizona fumbles in UA territory and cashed them in for two Terry Weir fieldgoals and a 20-13 lead.

With time running out, Arizona held BU deep on fourth-and-eight, and punterRhett Delaney took an intentional safety at 0:31. A Chuck Levy 27-yard kickoff return put the

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Cats in decent shape, and UA drove to the Baylor 28. Two passes from Malauulu into theend zone were incomplete although Heath Bray nearly snagged the game winner on thefirst try.

1994 IBM OS/2 Fiesta Bowl - Arizona 29, Miami 0TEMPE, Ariz.—Arizona’s heralded “Desert Swarm” defense lived up to its

name, and the Cats’ offensive attack nearly named its own price as UA thumped No. 10Miami, 29-0, in IBM OS/2 Fiesta Bowl XXIII.

The convincing victory was the bowl’s only shutout in its 23-game history.UA ran for 257 yards and one touchdown, passed for 152 yards and two

touchdowns, had three Steve McLaughlin field goals and held Miami to 182 yards in totaloffense. The Wildcats’ swarming defense limited the Canes to Fiesta Bowl record-lows of22 rushes and 35 yards, plus picked off three Miami passes and sacked the quarterbackfour times.

Tailback Chuck Levy ran for 142 yards including a 68-yard scoring dash andearned Fiesta Bowl offensive MVP honors, while defensive end Tedy Bruschi recorded asack and earned defensive MVP honors for UA.

UA jumped to a quick lead on its first possession, driving 75 yards with DanWhite throwing a 13-yard TD pass to Troy Dickey. Arizona never looked back.

The Canes’ total offense was the second-lowest in Fiesta Bowl history, and theArizona margin of victory was the second-largest in bowl history. Arizona enjoyed a time ofpossession advantage of 37:20 to 22:40 for Miami, another bowl record. Miami’s frustrationwas typified by its first possession, starting at its own 37-yard line. Three plays later theCanes punted on fourth-and-41 from their own 6-yard line.

The game gave UA its first 10-victory season in 90 years of football, and itsstrong showing earned the Cats a No. 9 final ranking in the coaches poll and No. 10 in themedia poll.

1994 Freedom Bowl - Utah 16, Arizona 13ANAHEIM, Calif.—Utah used a 72-yard kickoff return to set up the winning

touchdown, as the Utes upset No. 14 Arizona in the 11th annual Freedom Bowl, 16-13. Acrowd of 27,477 watched as the Cats used a stifling defense to hold Utah to only 75 yardsof total offense.

Arizona quarterback Dan White connected with Ontiwaun Carter from 23 yardsout to give the Cats the early lead. After a White fumble deep in Arizona territory, Utahrunning back Charlie Brown scampered in from six yards out to tie the score.

After a 44-yard field goal by Steve McLaughlin, the Cats had first-and-goal atthe Utah 2-yard line, but two dropped passes by Tim Thomas and then Lamar Lovett in theend zone forced the Cats to kick a 20-yard field goal. Late in the fourth quarter withArizona leading 13-7, and Matt Peyton having to punt from his own end zone, the Catsgambled and took a safety as Peyton stepped out of the back of the end zone.

On the ensuing kickoff, Cal Beck returned the ball to the Arizona 5-yard line.The Wildcat defense held the Utes on three straight downs to set up a fourth-and-goal.Quarterback Mike McCoy scrambled out of the pocket and was in the grasp of ChuckOsborne but managed to get the pass off and found Kevin Dyson in the corner of the endzone for the winning score. A final UA drive ended in an interception.

The Cats recorded six sacks on the day, three of them by Tedy Bruschi, whoearned Defensive MVP honors. Chuck Osborne had two sacks, and Sean Harris led theteam with nine tackles.

1997 Insight.com Bowl - Arizona 20, New Mexico 14TUCSON, Ariz.—Four Wildcat interceptions helped seal a hard-fought victory

for Arizona over New Mexico in the ninth Insight.com Bowl, 20-14, before a crowd of49,385 in the Cats’ house, Arizona Stadium.

UA ran over the Lobos, using a 209-yard running attack featuring the quickerTrung Canidate and the bruising style of Kelvin Eafon on 43 of the team’s 81 plays.Canidate was named the game’s Most Outstanding Offensive Player with 97 yards and atouchdown on 24 carries, while Eafon earned the game’s Most Valuable Player award forhis 75 yards and two touchdowns on 19 totes. Thirteen of his rushes came in the fourthquarter when Arizona used ball possession to turn back New Mexico efforts at a game-winning touchdown.

Arizona picked off four passes by UNM’s Graham Leigh—one in the firstquarter by cornerback Chris McAlister, two in the third quarter by backup corner KelvinHunter and strong safety Rashee Johnson, and one in the fourth stanza by cornerbackKelly Malveaux, who returned the ball 44 yards just as the Lobos were crossing midfield. Itwas Malveaux’s first interception of the year. Arizona outside linebacker Jimmy Sprotteearned the bowl’s Most Outstanding Defensive Player honor with nine tackles includingfour hits for losses of 12 yards. Inside linebacker Marcus Bell was the Cats’ leading tacklerwith 10.

Arizona coach Dick Tomey gave fifth-year senior QB Brady Batten the start inthe game. An injury early in the year cost him a shot at the every-day spot. He played allbut the fourth quarter, when the nominal No. 1 guy for most of the year, Ortege Jenkins,came on.

1998 Culligan Holiday Bowl - Arizona 23, Nebraska 20SAN DIEGO, Calif.—Arizona’s defense held the storied Nebraska option

rushing attack to 87 net yards, and the No. 5-ranked Wildcats cranked up some tough-guyrushing of their own to score 14 fourth-quarter points and beat the No. 14 Cornhuskers, 23-20, in the 21st annual Culligan Holiday Bowl.

The Cats secured the school’s finest record in history and earned enoughacclaim through their efforts in the game — the most watched of any college bowl game inESPN history – to earn a final No. 4 ranking in both the Associated Press and USA Today/ESPN polls.

Unanimous All-America cornerback Chris McAlister cemented his reputationwith an outstanding effort, intercepting two passes, one which turned the Huskers back on

their final come-back try with less than four minutes remaining. He also had a 78-yardreverse punt return called back because of a questionable blocking call against Derek Hall.

Arizona trailed 13-9 at the half, and both teams struggled through fivepossessions in the third quarter before UA’s Dennis Northcutt gave the Cats some decentfield position with a 16-yard punt return to start a 10-play scoring drive. Trung Canidaterushed five times for 37 yards in the span, and Keith Smith completed passes of five yards toNorthcutt and Paul Shields and topped it off with a 15-yard strike to Brad Brennan for thescore.

Nebraska answered, though, and reclaimed the lead at 20-16 with an eight-play,88-yard drive, almost exclusively through the air.

With 10 minutes remaining, Smith opened UA’s next drive with a seven-yardpass to Shields, then the Cats ran the ball eight straight times for the nine-play, 68-yard drivewhich netted the final score on a Kelvin Eafon one-yard plunge. Smith had runs of 20, eightand eight yards to set up the score.

UA halted the Huskers with McAlister’s second pick and then later used enoughclock with a first down to force Nebraska to get the ball back with 34 seconds remaining. Oneshort completion and three incompletions, and the game was over.

Canidate ran for 101 yards on 22 carries. Smith, who completed 11-of-19passing for 143 yards and ran for 25 more, was named Holiday Bowl Offensive MVP. UA’sMark McDonald, who was 8-17 in field goals during the regular season, was a big key with aperfect 3-for-3 day, including a career-long 48-yarder. NU outgained the Cats, but UA wonthe turnover battle and kicking game.

2008 Pioneer Las Vegas Bowl - Arizona 31, BYU 21LAS VEGAS-- Arizona capped its best season in nine years with a solid effort

against No. 17 Brigham Young, beating the Cougars 31-21 in the Pioneer Las Vegas Bowl onDec. 20.

The Cats took the first lead, set up by a 71-yard pass from Willie Tuitama toTerrell Turner, added a Jason Bondzio 31-yard field goal a third of the way into the secondquarter, and then struggled some in the rest of the first half. Tuitama fumbled a low snap onthe first play of the second half and BYU took a 14-10 lead four minutes into the frame withthe gift 27-yard drive.

After that, Arizona stalled once, missing a 3rd-and-1 opportunity, but turned rightaround for a defensive three-and-out against the Cougs and Mike Thomas' 11-yard puntreturn took the ball into BYU territory. Two plays later, Tuitama's 37-yard pass to DelashaunDean struck home and the Cats were back in the lead.

The Cougs fought back with a 12-play, 39-yard drive, but missed a long field goalattempt. Tuitama hit successive passes of 19 and 17 yards, and after a five-yard gain by NicGrigsby fired one down the seam to a streaking Chris Gronkowski for a 27-yard score,making it 24-14 at the end of the period.

Five minutes into the final period, Wildcat cornerback Marquis Hundley mannedup and intercepted BYU's Max Hall in the end zone, taking it out to the UA 18 yard-line.Tuitama led a seven-play, 82-yard drive, sparked by a 27-yard run by Grigsby and a 23-yardpass to Turner, and then ran it in himself from six yards out for a 31-14 lead. Again theCougars showed some of their 17th-ranked gumption, using eight Hall passes and two of hisruns to get into the endzone quickly, and recovered an ensuing onside kick at the UA 48yard-line.

Hall drove BYU 28 yards, but Mitch Payne's field goal attempt banged off the leftupright with 2:07 left. The Cats ran the ball four times and then Tuitama scootched a three-yard pass to Mike Thomas on the final play of the game, giving the latter the Pac-10 careerreceiving record with his 259th reception as time expired.

On the field it was clear Arizona was the better team that night. The Cats heldBYU to its second-lowest point total of the year, limited the nation's No. 7 passing offense toone touchdown throw, held the Cougs to two touchdowns under their scoring average andkept all-everything receiver Austin Collie (11-119) out of the end zone. Dean led UA withseven catches for 88 yards to help Tuitama complete 24 of 35 throws for 325 yards and thegame's MVP award. Grigsby chipped in 87 tough rushing yards and a score. LinebackerXavier Kelley led UA with 15 tackles, a career high at the right time.

2009 Pacific Life Holiday Bowl - Nebraska 33, Arizona 0SAN DIEGO—No. 20 Nebraska showed it was more than two ranking spots

ahead of No. 22 Arizona by throttling the Wildcats, 33-0, in the Holiday Bowl.After developing a reputation for high-scoring games and crazy finishes, the bowl

got the first shutout in its 32-year history. Zac Lee threw a 74-yard touchdown pass to NilesPaul in the third quarter to highlight the win, but it was only one moment in a dominatingeffort.

The coaches expected a defensive game, and the Huskers delivered, earningtheir first shutout in 46 bowl appearances, plus held UA to 109 net yards. Arizonaquarterback Nick Foles was harassed all night and had one of his toughest outings of theyear, finishing with nine completions in 30 attempts, for a miniscule 48 yards.

The Wildcats had the ball fourth-and-3 at the Nebraska 8-yard line with 1:41 togo, and eschewed a field goal, with safety P.J. Smith batting down Foles' pass to preservethe shutout. Nebraska free safety Matt O'Hanlon intercepted Foles on the third play fromscrimmage and returned it 37 yards to the Arizona 5. Lee scored on a 4-yard run two playslater. It was the fastest score in Holiday Bowl history, coming just 75 seconds in.

Nebraska (10-4) got its first 10-win season since 2003. Nebraska's Alex Heneryset a Holiday Bowl record with four field goals, from 47, 50, 41 and 22 yards. Arizona finished8-5. NU coach Bo Pelini earned bragging rights in Youngstown, Ohio, where he and UAcoach Mike Stoops grew up and played at Cardinal Mooney High.

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PAGE 17OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA BOA BOA BOA BOA BOWL GAME RECORDS/RESULWL GAME RECORDS/RESULWL GAME RECORDS/RESULWL GAME RECORDS/RESULWL GAME RECORDS/RESULTSTSTSTSTS

ARIZONA INDIVIDUAL RECORDSRushing RecordsMost Rushing Attempts: 24, Trung Canidate (97 yds) vs.

New Mexico (1997 Insight.com)Most Rushing yards: 142, Chuck Levy vs. Miami (1994 Fiesta)Most Rushing TDs: 2, Ed Wolgast vs. Drake (1949 Salad)Longest Scoring run: 68, Chuck Levy vs. Miami (1994 Fiesta)

Passing RecordsMost Passes Attempted: 38, George Malauulu vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most Passes Completed: 24, Willie Tuitama vs. BYU (2008 Las Vegas) 20, George Malauulu vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most Yards Passing: 325, Willie Tuiama vs. BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

282, George Malauulu vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most Pass Interceptions: 6, Bruce Lee vs. Auburn (1968 Sun)Most Passing TDs: 2, Willie Tuitama vs. BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

2, Dan White vs. Miami (1994 Fiesta)

Receiving RecordsMost Pass Receptions: 9, Troy Dickey vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most Yards Receiving: 111, Terrell Turner (4 rec) vs. BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

108, Troy Dickey vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most TD Receptions: 2, Troy Dickey vs. Miami (1994 Fiesta)Longest Scoring reception: 78, Brad Brennan from Keith Smith (1998 Holiday)

Return RecordsLongest TD Punt Return: noneLongest TD Kickoff Return: noneLongest TD Interception: 85, Scott Geyer vs. N.C. State (1990 Copper)Most Interception Returns: 2, Chris McAlister (1998 Holiday); 2, Dave Liggins (1979 Fiesta).

Kicking RecordsLongest Field Goal: 52, Jeff Valder vs. North Carolina (1986 Aloha); 52, Max Zendejas vs. Georgia (1985 Sun)Most Field Goals Attempted: 4, Steve McLaughlin vs. Miami (1994 Fiesta)Most Field Goals: 3, Mark McDonald vs. Nebraska (1998 Holiday); 3, Steve McLaughlin vs. Miami (1994 Fiesta)Most Punts: 9, Keenyn Crier (374 yds) vs. Nebraska (2009 Holiday), 9, Ryan Springston (348 yds) vs. New Mexico (1997 Insight.com),

9, Matt Peyton vs. Utah (1994 Freedom)Best Punting Average: 41.7, John Nies vs. N.C. State (1990 Copper)Most PATs: 4, Jason Bondzio vs. BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

3, Gary Coston vs. North Carolina (1986 Aloha)

Miscellaneous RecordsMost Yards Gained Rushing and Receiving: 158, David Adams vs. North Carolina (1986 Aloha)Most Yards Total Offense: 399, George Malauulu vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Largest Margin of Victory: 29, 1994 Fiesta, UA 29 Miami 0Largest Margin in Defeat: 38, 1921 Christmas Classic, Centre 38 UA 0Quarterback Sacks: 6, vs. Utah (1994 Freedom)

ARIZONA TEAM RECORDSMost First Downs: 24, vs. Miami (1994 Fiesta)Most Rushing Attempts: 59, vs. New Mexico (1997 Insight.com)Most Yards Rushing: 266, vs. Miami (1994 Fiesta)Most Passes Attempted: 44, vs. Auburn (1968 Sun)Most Passes Completed: 24 vs. BYU (’08 Las Vegas);

20, vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most Passes Intercepted: 8, vs. Auburn (1968 Sun)Most Yards Passing: 325 (2008 Las Vegas)

282, vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most Yards Total Offense: 418, vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)

416, vs. BYU (2008 Las Vegas)Most Fumbles: 4, vs. Nebraska (1998 Holiday)Most Fumbles lost: 3, vs. BYU (’08 Las Vegas), vs. Nebraska (1998 Holiday)Most Punts: 11, vs. Auburn (1968 Sun)Most Penalties: 8, vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most Penalty Yards: 91, vs. Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most Points 1st Quarter: 9, vs. Miami (1994 Fiesta)Most Points 2nd Quarter: 13, vs. North Carolina (1986 Aloha)Most Points 3rd Quarter: 17, vs. North Carolina (1986 Aloha)Most Points 4th Quarter: 14, vs. Nebraska (98 Holiday)Most Points: 31,vs. BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

30, vs. North Carolina (1986 Aloha)Fewest Points: 0, vs. Nebraska (2009 Holiday), vs. Syracuse (1990 Aloha); 0, vs. Centre (Ky) (1921 Christmas Classic)

ARIZONA BOWL RESULTSWildcats In the Bowls (6-8-1)

1921 Christmas Classic, San Diego Centre (Ky.) 38, Arizona 01949 Salad Bowl, Phoenix Drake 14, Arizona 131969 Sun Bowl, El Paso Auburn 34, Arizona 101979 Fiesta Bowl, Tempe Pittsburgh 16, Arizona 101985 Sun Bowl, El Paso Arizona 13, Georgia 131986 Aloha Bowl, Honolulu Arizona 30, N.Carolina 211989 Copper Bowl, Tucson Arizona 17, N.C. State 101990 Eagle Aloha Bowl, Honolulu Syracuse 28, Arizona 01992 John Hancock Bowl, El Paso Baylor 20, Arizona 151993 IBM OS/2 Fiesta Bowl, Tempe Arizona 29, Miami 01994 Freedom Bowl, Anaheim Utah 16, Arizona 131997 Insight.com Bowl, Tucson Arizona 20, N. Mexico 141998 Culligan Holiday Bowl, San Diego Arizona 23, Nebraska 202008 Pioneer Las Vegas Bowl Arizona 31, BYU 212009 Pacific Life Holiday Bowl, San Diego Nebraska 33, Arizona 02010 Valero Alamo Bowl, San Antonio Arizona vs. Oklahoma St.

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ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA OPPONENT BOA OPPONENT BOA OPPONENT BOA OPPONENT BOA OPPONENT BOWL GAME RECORDSWL GAME RECORDSWL GAME RECORDSWL GAME RECORDSWL GAME RECORDS

PAGE 18 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL RECORDSRushing RecordsMost Rushing Attempts: 22, Lars Tate, Georgia (1985 Sun)Most Rushing yards: 101, Torin Dorn, North Carolina (1986 AlohaMost Rushing TDs: many with 1Longest Scoring run: 58, Torin Dorn, N.C. (1986 Aloha)

Passing RecordsMost Passes Attempted: 46, Shane Montgomery, N.C. State (1989 Copper),

46, Max Hall, BYU 92008 Las Vegas) (30 comp)Most Passes Completed: 30, Max Hall, BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

21, Shane Montgomery, N.C. State (1989 Copper)Most Yards Passing: 328, Max Hall, BYU 92008 Las Vegas)

222, Shane Montgtomery, N.C. State (1989 Copper)Most Pass Interceptions: 4, Graham Leigh, New Mexico (1997 Insight.com)Most Passing TDs: 2, Loran Carter, Aub. (1968 Sun); 2, Marvin Graves, Syracuse (1990 Aloha)

Receiving RecordsMost Pass Receptions: 11, Austin Collie (119 yds), BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

7, Eric Starr, North Carolina (1986 Aloha)Most Yards Receiving: 166, Melvin Bonner, Baylor (1992 Hancock)Most TD Receptions: 2, Melvin Bonner, Baylor (1992 Hancock)Longest Scoring reception: 74, Paul Niles from Zac Lee, Nebraska (2009 Holiday)

69, Melvin Bonner from J.J. Joe, Baylor (1992 Hancock)

Return RecordsLongest TD Punt Return: noneLongest TD Kickoff Return: noneLongest TD Interception: 32, Buddy McClinton, Auburn (1968 Sun)

Kicking RecordsLongest Field Goal: 52, John Riley, Auburn (1968 Sun)Most Field Goals Attempted: 3, Mark Schubert, Pitt (1979 Fiesta);

Terry Weir, Baylor (1992 Hancock); Kris Brown, Nebraska (1998 Holiday),

BYU, two kickers (2008 Las Vegas)Most Field Goals: 4- Alex Henery, Nebraska (2009 Holiday),

3- Mark Schubert, Pitt (1979 Fiesta)Most Punts: 10, Mike Crissy Miami (94 Fiesta);

J.Jones Utah (94 Freedom)Best Punting Average: 41.0, J. Jones, Utah (1994 Freedom)Most PATs: 4, John Riley, Auburn. (1968 Sun)

Miscellaneous RecordsMost Yards Gained Rushing and Receiving: 166, Melvin Bonner,

Baylor (1992 Hancock) 143, Niles Paul, Nebraska (2009 Holiday)

OPPONENT TEAM RECORDSMost First Downs: 22, BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

20, Pittsburgh (1979 Fiesta)Most Rushing Attempts: 68, Georgia (1985 Sun)Most Yards Rushing: 223, Nebraska (2009 Holiday); 211, Georgia (1985 Sun)Most Passes Attempted: 46, BYU (’08 Las Vegas);

North Carolina State (89 Copper)Most Passes Completed: 30, BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

21, North Carolina State (89 Copper)Most Passes Intercepted: 4, New Mexico (1997 Insight.com)Most Yards Passing: 328, BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

222, N. C. State (1990 Copper)Most Yards Total Offense: 444, BYU (2008 Las Vegas)

375, North Carolina (1986 Aloha)Most Fumbles: 5, North Carolina (1986 Aloha)Most Fumbles lost: 5, North Carolina (1986 Aloha)Most Punts: 10, Miami (1994 Fiesta);

Utah (1994 Freedom)Most Penalties: 10, BYU (2008 Las Vegas),

Pittsburgh (1979 Fiesta)Most Penalty Yards: 94, Utah (1994 Freedom)Most Points 1st Quarter: 10, Nebraska (2009 Holiday), Auburn (1968 Fiesta)Most Points 2nd Quarter: 13, Nebraska twice

(2009 Holiday, 1998 Holiday)Most Points 3rd Quarter: 14, Auburn (1968 Sun)Most Points 4th Quarter: 14, North Carolina (1986 Sun);

14 Syracuse (1990 Aloha)Most Points: 38, Centre (1921 Christmas Classic)Fewest Points: 0, Miami (1994 Fiesta)

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DEPTH CHARDEPTH CHARDEPTH CHARDEPTH CHARDEPTH CHART PLAT PLAT PLAT PLAT PLAYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULES

Will miss bowl game after having knee surgery following season finale ...Played final month of season with a torn meniscus ... Finalist for RimingtonTrophy as the nation’s top center… Second-team All-Pac-10… 49consecutive starts in the middle of things, at center the past three yearsafter playing guard as a redshirt freshman and a few games in 2008 atguard before taking over for injured Blake Kerley. Stayed in the lineup asUA’s most consistent and best lineman… Outland Trophy watch-list assenior… Phil Steele mid-year All-America…Second-team all-league in 2009…

COLIN BAXTERCOLIN BAXTERCOLIN BAXTERCOLIN BAXTERCOLIN BAXTERSeniorCenter6-4, 295Rolling Hills, Calif.

#64#64#64#64#64* Rimington Award Finalist

Starter in “heavy” sets with fellow TE A.J. Simmons… Started threegames… Had four catches for 22 yards and a touchdown… TD catchagainst Citadel…. Catches against Citadel, Iowa, Cal and Stanford… Willlikely have to fend off some mid-year juco signees for 2011 supremacy butis more than capable of doing so… Honorable mention Academic All-Pac-10 in 2010…

BAUCUS’ SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G12-3 4 22 5.5 1 8 1.8

JAJAJAJAJACK BACK BACK BACK BACK BAUCUSUCUSUCUSUCUSUCUSRedshirt FreshmanTight End6-4, 250Mundelein, Ill.

#86#86#86#86#86* Started three games in 2010

No. 3 quarterback with three appearances in 2010… Completed all five ofhis throws for 33 yards and a touchdown against The Citadel... Consum-mate team player with plenty of film-room study in support of Foles andScott… Has played in 12 games during his career…

BEIRNE’S SEASON PASSING GP-GS EFF. C-A-I PCT. YDS TD Long Avg./G

3-0 221.4 5-5-0 100.0 33 1 11 11.0

BRBRBRBRBRYYYYYSON BEIRNESON BEIRNESON BEIRNESON BEIRNESON BEIRNEJuniorQuarterback6-3, 225Honolulu, Hawaii

#17#17#17#17#17* Three games played in 2010

22ARIZONA FOOTBALL BY THE NUMBERS

2

The number of regular season wins the Wildcats have overthe last three seasons, each ending in bowl appearances.

Arizona had two First Team All-Pac-10 players in 2010,including WR Juron Criner (unanimous selection) andDE Brooks Reeed.

Honorable mention All-Pac-10… Two 100-yard games and seven scoresin 2010 as the top running back… Leading rusher with 667 yards on 142totes… Seven starts this season… Ran for season-high 114 yards and twoTDs on 14 carries against Washington and 111 yards and a score on 23totes against UCLA… Career four 100-yard games…. Target out of thebackfield with RB-high 28 catches for 204 yards and two touchdowns….Will be the top guy in 2011, chased by junior-to-be Greg Nwoko… Career-high 149 yards against California in 2008, career-high 25 carries againstOregon State in 2008…

ANTOLIN’S SEASON RUSHINGGP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G12-7 142 667 4.7 7 78 55.6

ANTOLIN’S SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G12-7 28 204 7.3 2 29 17.0

KEOLA KEOLA KEOLA KEOLA KEOLA ANTANTANTANTANTOLINOLINOLINOLINOLINJuniorRunning Back5-9, 195Las Vegas, Nev.

#2#2#2#2#2* UA’s leading rusher in ‘09 and ‘10

Reserve defensive tackle in 2010, with nine appearances… One tackleagainst Washington… Potential starter entering year… Career 26 gamesplayed… Could factor in 2011 as a top interior tackle…

DOMINIQUE AUSTINDOMINIQUE AUSTINDOMINIQUE AUSTINDOMINIQUE AUSTINDOMINIQUE AUSTINJuniorDefensive Tackle6-4, 292La Puente, Calif.

#92#92#92#92#92* Nine games played in 2010

Full-year starter at left guard in 2010, with 18 starts in two years as aregular… Stepped up a year ago after spending his first three years as areserve player, including a 2006 redshirt season… Recruited as a two-waylineman, played some defensive tackle and tight end while redshirting… Asteady job on the left side, one of the most improved performances onsquad in 2010…

CONCONCONCONCONAN AN AN AN AN AMITUAMITUAMITUAMITUAMITUANANANANANAIAIAIAIAISeniorLeft Guard6-4, 335Long Beach, Calif.

#55#55#55#55#55* Started all 12 games at LG in 2010

4ARIZONA FOOTBALL BY THE NUMBERS

49

Keola Antolin has four 100-yard rushing games in hiscareer, including two this season (Washington, UCLA).

Colin Baxter has started 49-consecutive games for UA, butwill miss the bowl game after undergoing surgery to repair atorn meniscus in his knee in early December.

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PAGE 20 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Special teams’ contributor in 2010 and 2009 after transferring from juniorcollege prior to fall camp a year ago… 19 games played, 10 tackles…Career-high five tackles in outstanding performance off the bench in 2009victory at USC…

MARMARMARMARMARCUS BENJCUS BENJCUS BENJCUS BENJCUS BENJAMINAMINAMINAMINAMINSeniorCornerback6-0, 190St. Martinville, La.

#7#7#7#7#7* Played in 19 games last two years

Arizona’s specialist for kickoff duties… Started all 12 games in the role thisyear after wresting it six games into the 2009 season… Walk-on in fallcamp 2009… Played in 20 games as the kickoff man… First-teamAcademic All-Pac-10 in 2010…

JOHN BONJOHN BONJOHN BONJOHN BONJOHN BONANOANOANOANOANOJuniorKicker6-0, 180Salinas, Calif.

#17#17#17#17#17* First-team Academic All-Pac-10

Turned in 25 receptions for 275 yards and a score in 2010… TD cameagainst Southern California… Six sweeps for 40 yards… Career-bestseven catches and 62 yards against Washington State… Ranks 57th inKOR nationally at 24.4 yards per return… Also had 95-yard TD return in2009, against WSU… Has seven games with 100 or more yards inreturns… Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week after his 100-yardkickoff return helped spark UA to victory over No. 9 Iowa, earning him Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week…

COBB’S SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G11-1 25 275 11.0 1 31 25.0

COBB’S SEASON KICKOFF RETURNSNo. Yds. Avg. TD Long29 708 24.4 1 100

TRATRATRATRATRAVIS COBBVIS COBBVIS COBBVIS COBBVIS COBBSeniorWide Receiver6-0, 190Rocky Mount, N.C.

#6#6#6#6#6* Two career kickoff return TDs

0ARIZONA FOOTBALL BY THE NUMBERS

2

The number of kickoff returns for touchdowns Arizona hadfrom 1999-2009 before Travis Cobb’s 95-yarder vs.Washington State during the 2009 season.

Cobb has racked up two seasons with 700+ yards in kickoffreturns paced by two career touchdown returns.

50 consecutive starts as the top punter, the most starts on the club… First-team All-Pac-10 punter as a redshirt freshman in 2007… Season averageof 40.4 yards per kick in 2010 after 43.7, 43.9 and 41.5 the precedingthree years… Big leg – typified by 62-yard free kick after team safety atToledo this year -- but some problems with consistency… 2010 total of 46punts his fewest in four years… No. 2 in Arizona history with 210 careerpunts… 42.4 career average…

CRIER’S SEASON PUNTING No. Yds. Avg. Long TB FC i20 50+

46 1860 40.4 62 6 10 10 6

KEENYN CRIERKEENYN CRIERKEENYN CRIERKEENYN CRIERKEENYN CRIERSeniorPunter6-1, 200Spring, Texas

#47#47#47#47#47* Four-year starter as punter

No. 4 outside receiver… Two catches apiece in Toledo and Citadelgames… Played in 10 games… Sat out 2009 after transfer from WestVirginia…

CRUMP’S SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G10-0 4 39 9.8 0 17 3.9

GINO CRGINO CRGINO CRGINO CRGINO CRUMPUMPUMPUMPUMPSeniorWide Receiver6-2, 210Washington, D.C.

#21#21#21#21#21* Played in 10 games on the season

First-team All-Pac-10… Second Team All-American selection by SI.comand cbssports.com, respectively ... One of the top receivers in the nation,with 73 catches for 1,186 yards and 10 scores… Eighth nationally with 98yards per game, 23rd with 6.1 receptions per contest… Five 100-yardgames and three others at 95-plus this year… Scored in eight games…Career-highs of 12 receptions and 179 yards against Oregon State thisyear, matched the dozen a year ago against Stanford… Quick ascensionup Arizona career receptions, yardage and TD charts at Nos. 7, 9 and 5 intwo years as front-line receiver….

CRINER’S SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G12-11 73 1186 16.2 10 85 98.8

CRINER’S SEASON RUSHINGGP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G12-11 7 65 9.3 0 21 5.4

JURJURJURJURJURON CRINERON CRINERON CRINERON CRINERON CRINERJuniorWide Receiver6-4, 210Las Vegas

#82#82#82#82#82* Unanimous First-Team All-Pac-10

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DEPTH CHARDEPTH CHARDEPTH CHARDEPTH CHARDEPTH CHART PLAT PLAT PLAT PLAT PLAYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULES

Honorable mention All-Pac-10 2010… Teams’ second-leading receiverwith 46 receptions for 424 yards… Nine formation starts outside, afterplaying inside receiver his first two years… Five TD grabs, with twocoming against USC… Snared seven passes for 74 yards and a scoreagainst Iowa… Matched that career-high catch game with seven againstStanford in 2009, with career-best 92 yards… Used as ‘safe’ punt returnspecialist, with five for 28 yards in latter half of season… Career total of 76receptions…

DOUGLAS’ SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G12-9 46 424 9.2 5 38 35.3

DOUGLAS’ SEASON PUNT RETURNSNo. Yds. Avg. TD Long5 28 5.6 0 11

DADADADADAVID DOUGLASVID DOUGLASVID DOUGLASVID DOUGLASVID DOUGLASJuniorWide Receiver6-1, 198McKinney, Texas

#85#85#85#85#85* Second-leading receiver on team

Eleven-game starter after earning role following mid-year transfer afterjuco career… 44 tackles, a sack, an interception (Toledo) and four PBUs…He and LB mates Paul Vassallo and Jake Fischer did admirable job asnew starters in 2010… Season-best 10 tackles at Stanford this year, plussix against Iowa… 6.5 tackles for loss and a forced fumble… Had a rugby-style punt for 34 yards in season finale against Arizona State…

EARLS’ SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK

44 6.5 1 1 4 1 1 0

DEREK EARLSDEREK EARLSDEREK EARLSDEREK EARLSDEREK EARLSJuniorLinebacker6-3, 240Waconia, Minn.

#40#40#40#40#40* Started 11 of 12 games in 2010

Second-team All-Pac-10 2010…Named honorable mention All-Americanby SI.com ... Elmore topped off a 33-start career with his best season,recording 11 sacks to lead the Pac-10… Has 21.5 sacks in past two yearsand 25.5 total to rate No. 2 behind former UA All-American Tedy Bruschi(52)… Three sacks among eight tackles (career high, three times) inseason finale against ASU… Also had eight hits against Cal this year andat Iowa last year… Sixth on squad with 48 total tackles, first with 13 TFL…

ELMORE’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 48 13 11 0 1 1 0 0

RICKY ELMORERICKY ELMORERICKY ELMORERICKY ELMORERICKY ELMORESeniorDefensive End6-5, 260Simi Valley, Calif.

#44#44#44#44#44* Led Pac-10 with 11.0 sacks in 2010

Backup middle linebacker and special teams player… Played in ninegames, with a tackle against Toledo at linebacker… Duty on kickoff returnsquad for much of year… Expected to push for a bigger role in 2011…

TREVTREVTREVTREVTREVOR ERNOOR ERNOOR ERNOOR ERNOOR ERNORedshirt FreshmanLinebacker6-1, 230Lakewood, Calif.

#10#10#10#10#10* Played in nine games in 2010

Key young player for Arizona’s defense, with 52 tackles and seven starts,sometimes giving way to nickel back… Season and career-high seventackles against ASU and Cal in 2010… Also had six against USC… Entersbowl with 7.5 TFL including sacks against Toledo and WSU… Recovereda fumble against Oregon, knocked down passes against USC andOregon… First-team Academic All-Pac-10… Pac-10 Special Teams Playerof the Week against UCLA with 29-yard run on fake punt…

FISCHER’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 52 7.5 2 0 2 0 1 0

JJJJJAKE FISCHERAKE FISCHERAKE FISCHERAKE FISCHERAKE FISCHERSophomoreLinebacker5-11, 220Tucson, Ariz.

#33#33#33#33#33* Fourth on squad with 52 tackles

11ARIZONA FOOTBALL BY THE NUMBERS

20529

The number of sacks DE Ricky Elmore recorded in 2010 tolead the Pac-10. He has 25.5 in his career, which is No. 2 inschool history behind Tedy Bruschi’s 52.

Junior WR Juron Criner has 20 touchdown receptions in hiscareer, a mark that ranks No. 5 in UA history.

Criner has five games of 100+ receiving yards in 2010and six in the last two seasons.

Arizona converted a fake punt on 4th-and-3 at UCLA whenJake Fischer covered 29 yards on the ground.

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The future of Arizona’s secondary no doubt includes Flowers, who playedall 12 games as a true freshman in 2010… Finished with 11 tackles, eighton scrimmage plays and three on kickoff return coverage… High-profileathletic skills out of Phoenix prep ranks put him in picture from the onset offall camp 2010…

FLOWERS’ SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

MARMARMARMARMARQQQQQUIS FLUIS FLUIS FLUIS FLUIS FLOOOOOWERSWERSWERSWERSWERSFreshmanSafety6-3, 200Phoenix, Ariz.

#4#4#4#4#4* Played in all 12 games in 2010

Honorable mention All-Pac-10… The focal point of Arizona’s passinggame, Foles held his own in a league full of QB stars, emerging as thePac-10 leader in passing yards (291) and completions (25) per game, plusa No. 3 rating in pass efficiency (145.5)… Threw for 19 touchdowns tomatch sophomore total, with three TD passes in four different games…Tossed for 448 yards at Oregon and 440 against Oregon State… Thrownfor 300+ yards eight times in 20 starts… Missed the Washington andUCLA games with a dislocated knee cap… Has all the throws in hisarsenal… Will own a host of school records when done… Honorablemention Academic All-Pac-10… Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week(Iowa)…

FOLES’ SEASON PASSING GP-GS EFF. C-A-I PCT. YDS TD Long Avg./G 10-10 145.54 254-376-7 67.6 2911 19 85 291.1

FOLES’ SEASON RUSHING GP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G 10-10 26 -106 -4.1 1 24 -10.6

NICK FOLESNICK FOLESNICK FOLESNICK FOLESNICK FOLESJuniorQuarterback6-4, 245Austin, Texas

#8#8#8#8#8* Eight career 300-yard passing games

Special teams player who returned from spring knee injury to reclaim roleon kick coverage unit after missing first five games of the year… Appearedin five games, with tackles against UCLA and Stanford… 31 games playedin his career as a special teams guy…

FOSTER’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

TREVTREVTREVTREVTREVOR FOSTEROR FOSTEROR FOSTEROR FOSTEROR FOSTERSeniorDefensive Back6-0, 205Ontario, Calif.

#29#29#29#29#29* Played in 31 career games at UA

Nice consistent performance on right side in first full year of action afterstellar juco career, a redshirt season and an injury a year ago… 12-gamestarter this year, 14 total in 17 games played… He and the rest of the lineare key reasons for UA’s offensive success…

PHILLIP GARPHILLIP GARPHILLIP GARPHILLIP GARPHILLIP GARCIACIACIACIACIASeniorRight Tackle6-7, 330Montbello, Calif.

#67#67#67#67#67* Started 14 games in UA career

Recruited solely for one purpose, Gorham has performed every long snapin 2010 as a true freshman… Performance has been exemplary… 12-game starter in the specialty…

CHASE GORHAMCHASE GORHAMCHASE GORHAMCHASE GORHAMCHASE GORHAMFreshmanLong Snapper6-2, 225Scottsdale, Ariz.

#50#50#50#50#50* Started all 12 games at LG in 2010

Second-team All-Pac-10… Thirty-game starter and elder statesman online, capping his career with a medical hardship sixth year… Moved to leftside in 2010 after earlier seasons on the right side… Mature team leaderand spokesman after his ride starting as true freshman tight end signeeand 2005… Overcame some surgeries and injuries to become one of themost consistent players on squad in 2009 and 2010…

ADADADADADAM GRANTAM GRANTAM GRANTAM GRANTAM GRANTSeniorLeft Tackle6-6, 325Puyallup, Wash.

#78#78#78#78#78* Second Team All-Pac-10 in 2010

12-game starter and third-leading tackler with 55 as a cornerback afterfirst two years playing safety and special teams… Interception to helpsolidify win at UCLA… Team-high eight PBUs with high of two againstWashington… Season- and career-high 11 tackles at Stanford… 25-gamestarter at strong safety and corner… 79-yard pick return against Stanfordto help beat Cardinal in 2009…

GOLDEN’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 55 2.5 0 1 8 1 1 0

ROBERROBERROBERROBERROBERT GOLDENT GOLDENT GOLDENT GOLDENT GOLDENJuniorCornerback5-11, 200Fresno, Calif.

#1#1#1#1#1* Third on team with 55 tackles

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Probable contender for top rotation duty in 2011, Jenkins played in ninegames in 2010, with eight carries for 26 yards in the first two games of theyear… Also appeared on some kicking teams, with a 22-yard KOR againstCitadel… Redshirted as true freshman in 2009…

JENKINS’ SEASON RUSHINGGP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G9-0 8 26 3.2 0 5 2.9

JENKINS’ SEASON KICKOFF RETURNSNo. Yds. Avg. TD Long2 23 11.5 0 22

DDDDDANIEL JENKINSANIEL JENKINSANIEL JENKINSANIEL JENKINSANIEL JENKINSRedshirt FreshmanRunning Back5-9, 190Moreno Valley, Calif.

#3#3#3#3#3* Played in nine games on season

Perseverance paid off for Hayes, a 10-game starter this year at right guardafter a career spent as a reserve, and one slowed by a dietary problemthat caused him to have weight-gain difficulty for two years… Took over forinjured Vaughn Dotsy in third game of the year and didn’t look back, withsolid duty thereafter… Academic Momentum Award from Scholar Ballerthis year…

JOJOJOJOJOVVVVVON HAON HAON HAON HAON HAYESYESYESYESYESSeniorRight Guard6-2, 320Los Angeles

#57#57#57#57#57* 10-game starter in 2010 as senior

Julsing lettered the last two years as a backup tackle and PAT-unitlineman, playing in 15 games… Missed November action this year with aninjury…Filled in nicely for injured Phillip Garcia in ASU game.

JJJJJAAAAACK JULSINGCK JULSINGCK JULSINGCK JULSINGCK JULSINGSeniorOffensive Tackle6-8, 310Moreno Valley, Calif.

#77#77#77#77#77* Played in 15 games last two years

Seven-game starter at nickel back in 12 games in 2010, turning in solidwork with 50 tackles and tying for team-high with two interceptions againstUSC and Oregon… Three pass breakups in coverage… 30 tacklesagainst the run, three on kickoff coverage… Played as true freshman in2009 in nine games… Season and career-high 11 tackles at Oregon inone of his best efforts… Will seriously factor as starter at one of the safetyspots in 2011… Second-team Academic All-Pac-10…

HALL’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 50 3.5 0 2 3 0 0 0

ADADADADADAM HALLAM HALLAM HALLAM HALLAM HALLSophomoreSafety6-4, 212Tucson, Ariz.

#12#12#12#12#12* 50 tackles, two INTs on season

McKnight and fellow freshman Shaq Richardson likely are the future onthe edge in UA’s defense after true freshman seasons learning the trade…Played in all 12 games, with six tackles on kickoff returns, one on puntreturns and three others in coverage at cornerback… Broke up a passagainst ASU in season finale when he had a best of three tackles inextended duty…

MCKNIGHT’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

JONJONJONJONJONAAAAATHAN MCKNIGHTTHAN MCKNIGHTTHAN MCKNIGHTTHAN MCKNIGHTTHAN MCKNIGHTFreshmanCornerback5-11, 180River Ridge, La.

#6#6#6#6#6* Played in 12 games as true frosh.

102ARIZONA FOOTBALL BY THE NUMBERS

2

The number of rushing yards senior Nic Grigsby needs toreach the 3,000-yard mark for his career.

Two interceptions ties for the individual team lead in 2010for the Wildcats. Safeties Adam Hall and Joseph Perkins,along with corner Shaquille Richardson have a pair each.

A healthy Grigsby might have made a deeper run at UA’s historical rushingcharts, but still had some electrifying moments in 2010 in five starts and 11games played… Slowed by ankle problem but rushed for 474 yards andteam-best eight scores… Added an 11th 100-yard game against Citadelincluding a 62-yard TD run… 21 catches out of the backfield for 163 yardsand another score… Career 2,898 rushing yards for a 5.2 per tote mark…Had 200-yard game against NAU in 2009… 28 rushing TDs are No. 2 onUA’s record list and 94-yard run vs. NAU was second longest in UAhistory…

GRIGSBY’S SEASON RUSHINGGP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G11-5 102 474 4.6 8 62 43.1

GRIGSBY’S SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G11-5 21 163 7.8 1 41 14.8

NIC GRIGSBYNIC GRIGSBYNIC GRIGSBYNIC GRIGSBYNIC GRIGSBYSeniorRunning Back5-10, 198Whittier, Calif.

#5#5#5#5#5* No. 2 all-time at UA with 28 rush TDs

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Mobley’s work after a year away from football in 2009 (transfer year at aJC) could put him in the picture to replace Mikaele in 2011… Appeared innine games, with seven tackles including a pair each against the Washing-ton schools in late October… Shared his first sack at WSU…

MOBLEY’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 7 1.5 .5 0 0 0 0 0

WILLIE MOBLEYWILLIE MOBLEYWILLIE MOBLEYWILLIE MOBLEYWILLIE MOBLEYSophomoreDefensive Tackle6-2, 280Eden Prairie, Minn.

#96#96#96#96#96* Played nine games, seven tackles

Played in seven games with some duty on kick return unit and somebackup action inside at tackle… Two tackles, the first of his career, againstWashington… Will contend for a bigger role in 2011… 11 games played…

MERRILL’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

CHRIS MERRILLCHRIS MERRILLCHRIS MERRILLCHRIS MERRILLCHRIS MERRILLSophomoreDefensive Tackle6-2, 290Scottsdale, Ariz.

#71#71#71#71#71* Played in seven games on season

Starter inside for all 12 games this year and three a year ago among 37games played… Nearly tripled his production this season… One of theCats’ hidden consistencies was his play up front… 32 total tackles and 7.5for losses…. Forced a fumble against Washington… Career-best five hitsagainst The Citadel in 2010... Goes by “Mana”.

MIKAELE’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 32 7.5 .5 0 0 0 1 0

LOLLOLLOLLOLLOLOMANOMANOMANOMANOMANA MIKAELEA MIKAELEA MIKAELEA MIKAELEA MIKAELESeniorDefensive Tackle6-2, 305Honolulu, Hawaii

#94#94#94#94#94* Team co-captain for 2010 season

TERRENCE MILLERTERRENCE MILLERTERRENCE MILLERTERRENCE MILLERTERRENCE MILLER

* 23 catches, 312 yards last 4 games

Miller’s emergence as an inside option in the passing game showed up ina big way with his seven-catch, 116-yard outing against USC on Nov. 13…Followed that with an 8-96 day at Oregon and 5-74 outing against ASU…27 receptions for 340 yards… Played as true freshman in 2009 and hasimproved steadily… Gives UA the big option inside… Signed as a potentialtight end prospect…

MILLER’S SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G12-3 27 340 126 0 38 28.3

MILLER’S SEASON RUSHINGGP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G12-3 2 13 6.5 0 14 1.1

SophomoreInside Receiver6-4, 225Moreno Valley, Calif.

#87#87#87#87#87

RICHARD MORRISONRICHARD MORRISONRICHARD MORRISONRICHARD MORRISONRICHARD MORRISON

* 13 catches in nine games played

Solid young receiver who will factor in 2011 in top rotation… Nine-gamesplayed at inside receiver in 2010, with 13 catches for 122 yards… Season-high four grabs for 38 yards against USC after missing a pair of games(UCLA/Stanford) with a sore shoulder… Signed as a QB out of highschool, but converted to receiver in spring 2010…

MORRISON’S SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G9-1 13 122 9.4 0 17 13.6

MORRISON’S SEASON RUSHINGGP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G9-1 1 0 0 0 0 0.0

Redshirt FreshmanInside Receiver6-0, 180Royce City, Texas

#14#14#14#14#14

The Cats’ No. 3 running back and occasional fullback… One start in 12appearances, with 234 rushing yards, third best on squad… Best amongregulars with 5.1 yards per carry… Season- and career-high 72 yards onseven totes in Citadel game and solid effort with 8-49 at Stanford… Hadtwo scores against Citadel, his game high in two-year career… Fourcatches for 28 yards, 1 KOR for 17 yards…

NWOKO’S SEASON RUSHINGGP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G12-1 46 234 5.1 3 32 19.5

NWOKO’S SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G12-1 4 28 7.0 0 14 2.3

GREG NWGREG NWGREG NWGREG NWGREG NWOKOKOKOKOKOOOOOSophomoreRunning Back6-2, 228Pflugerville, Texas

#34#34#34#34#34* No. 3 rusher on team in 2010

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Thirty-seven games’ experience and 12 as the starter this year makesafety Perkins one of the Cats’ steady defenders… Second on the squadwith 64 tackles, tied for team lead with two picks (Cal and OSU, tied forteam lead with eight PBU… First two years as reserve and special teamsplay… Career-high eight hits against Beavers and Sun Devils, broke upthree passes vs. ASU…

PERKINS’ SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 64 1.0 2 8 0 0 0

JOSEPH PERKINSJOSEPH PERKINSJOSEPH PERKINSJOSEPH PERKINSJOSEPH PERKINSSeniorSafety6-2, 205Gardena, Calif.

#9#9#9#9#9* 2nd on team with 64 tackles in 2010

Kicking unit duty in 2010 while backing up Colin Baxter at center…Expected to start in place of Baxter in the Alamo Bowl after Baxter’sseason ended following surgery in early December ... Will contend forstarting role in spring and fall camps after playing in 21 games his first twoyears as a reserve guard and center…

KYLE QUINNKYLE QUINNKYLE QUINNKYLE QUINNKYLE QUINNSophomoreCenter/Guard6-2, 310Brentwood, Calif.

#76#76#76#76#76* Slated to start Alamo Bowl game

First-team All-Pac-10… Defense-high 33-game starter (along with fellowDE Ricky Elmore)… A solid senior year for Reed helped UA’s defense in abig way… Turned in 6.5 sacks among 9.5 tackles for losses and 44 totalhits… Matched his career high with a couple of six-tackle games, at UCLAand at Oregon... Forced a fumble against the Bruins, knocked downpasses against Toledo and USC… Great off the edge… 17 sacks in hiscareer…

REED’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 44 9.5 6.5 0 2 1 0 0

BRBRBRBRBROOKS REEDOOKS REEDOOKS REEDOOKS REEDOOKS REEDSeniorDefensive End6-3, 262Tucson, Ariz.

#42#42#42#42#42* First Team All-Pac-10 Selection

0ARIZONA FOOTBALL BY THE NUMBERS

17

The number of starts that Kyle Quinn has in his career ashe prepares to make first start in place of 49-game starterColin Baxter at center.

First Team All-Pac-10 defensive end Brooks Reed has 17career sacks, including 6.5 this season. His personalseason high was 8.0 sacks in 2008.

Reed, the No. 3 defensive end, turned in a fine senior campaign with 38tackles… Started one game in 2010 for eight total in his career… Sacksagainst WSU and UW… Closed the regular season with career-best sixtackles at Oregon and against ASU, the latter all solo…Strong in runsupport.

REED’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 38 6.0 2 0 1 0 1 0

D’AUNDRE REEDD’AUNDRE REEDD’AUNDRE REEDD’AUNDRE REEDD’AUNDRE REEDSeniorDefensive End6-4, 258Moreno Valley, Calif.

#83#83#83#83#83* 38 tackles, 6.0 for loss in 2010

Richardson’s first start as a true freshman, at WSU, brought him Pac-10Defensive Player of the Week honors with two interceptions, season-highseven tackles and three PBUs out of the gate… Clearly the future on theedge… Finished with 28 hits, seven PBU, forced and recovered fumblesand the two picks… Had starts against USC and at Oregon also, with fivehits and a PBU against the Ducks…

RICHARDSON’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 28 1.0 0 2 7 1 1 0

SHASHASHASHASHAQQQQQUILLE RICHARDSONUILLE RICHARDSONUILLE RICHARDSONUILLE RICHARDSONUILLE RICHARDSONFreshmanCornerback6-2, 180Carson, Calif.

#5#5#5#5#5* Two starts as a true freshman

DADADADADAVID ROBERVID ROBERVID ROBERVID ROBERVID ROBERTSTSTSTSTS

* Second on team with 468 rec. yds.

Solid junior year with 42 receptions for 468 yards and two scores at insidereceiver… Season-high seven grabs (59 yards) against Stanford andseason-high 90 yards (6 catches) at UCLA… Scores against Huskies andDucks… Had big game a year ago to throw himself into the picture, with12 catches for 138 yards and a score at Washington… Dependable handsand good in traffic… Honorable mention Academic All-Pac-10…

ROBERTS’ SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G11-4 42 468 11.1 2 38 42.5

ROBERTS’ SEASON RUSHINGGP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G11-4 1 9 9.0 0 9 0.8

JuniorInside Receiver6-0, 190Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.

#81#81#81#81#81

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One of the Cats’ top down-field tacklers on special teams, with six onkickoff returns and three on punt returns… Team-best three forcedfumbles… Backup duty at cornerback for past several years among 36games played… Kickoff return duty at Oregon, with seven for 89 yards…Played receiver in 2007… Named team’s special teams player of year atend-of-season awards banquet.

TURNER’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 16 0 0 0 2 3 0 0

TURNER’S KICKOFF RETURN STATS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long 7 89 12.7 0 16

MIKE TURNERMIKE TURNERMIKE TURNERMIKE TURNERMIKE TURNERSophomoreCornerback5-11, 187Manteca, Calif.

#2#2#2#2#2* Named team’s ST Player of Year

One of the disappointing developments in UA’s year was a wrist injury toMatt Scott during his second start (UW/UCLA), causing him to miss threegames where he might have been helpful. In filling in for injured NickFoles, Scott completed 42 passes (58 attempts) for 552 yards and threescores in victories against the Huskies and Bruins, earning Pac-10Offensive Player of the Week honors against UW… Outstanding backupQB, as good as it gets… Also rushed for 65 yards against UW and 71yards against Bruins, another feature of his game… 21 games played, fivestarts…

SCOTT’S SEASON PASSING GP-GS EFF. C-A-I PCT. YDS TD Long Avg./G 7-2 150.95 66-93-2 74.0 776 4 41 110.9

SCOTT’S SEASON RUSHING GP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G 7-2 35 135 3.9 0 32 19.3

MAMAMAMAMATT SCOTT SCOTT SCOTT SCOTT SCOTTTTTTTTTTJuniorQuarterback6-3, 195Corona, Calif.

#4#4#4#4#4* 4-1 record in five career starts

A.JA.JA.JA.JA.J..... SIMMONS SIMMONS SIMMONS SIMMONS SIMMONS

* 15 starts over last two seasons

UA’s top tight end for the past two seasons, with 15 formation starts in thespan… Responsibilities in the run game and eight receptions for 92yards… Two grabs for 14 yards against Iowa, tying high-catch career markaccomplished three previous times… Played in 47 games in his UA career,with 17 starts… Honorable mention Academic All-Pac-10…

SIMMONS’ SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G12-8 8 92 11.5 0 31 7.7

SeniorTight End6-2, 255Oakland, Calif.

#88#88#88#88#88If the passing game’s going his blocking is helping, if the run game isworking, his lead blocking is working… Five formation starts in 11 gamesplayed… One rush for -1 against Stanford, five receptions for 63 yardswith career-high two grabs for 34 yards at WSU… 23 games played afteropening career as true freshman in 2009…

TUTOGI’S SEASON RUSHINGGP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G11-5 1 -1 -1.0 0 0 -0.1

TUTOGI’S SEASON RECEIVINGGP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G11-5 5 63 12.6 0 25 5.7

TAIMI TAIMI TAIMI TAIMI TAIMI TUTTUTTUTTUTTUTOGIOGIOGIOGIOGISophomoreH-Back6-1, 260Chula Vista, Calif.

#31#31#31#31#31* 23 games played over last two years

Top candidate for starting duty in 2011 and beyond… Started Toledo,Washington and UCLA games… 17 total tackles, with two for losses and1.5 sacks… In on sacks against WSU and Washington… Season-high fivetackles against Bruins, where he also recovered a fumble…

TUIHALAMAKA’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 17 2 1.5 0 0 0 1 0

SIONE TUIHALAMAKASIONE TUIHALAMAKASIONE TUIHALAMAKASIONE TUIHALAMAKASIONE TUIHALAMAKARedshirt FreshmanDefensive Tackle6-2, 280Hawthorne, Calif.

#91#91#91#91#91* Three starts in 12 games played

Played in final two games of the year with a tackle at Oregon and oneagainst Arizona State… Also partially blocked a punt against the SunDevils… Likely to have some special teams’ duty and backup role inAlamo Bowl… Transferred to UA before start of fall camp after juco careerat Navarro CC…

USMAN’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

MOHAMMED USMANMOHAMMED USMANMOHAMMED USMANMOHAMMED USMANMOHAMMED USMANJuniorDefensive End6-2, 250Arlington, Texas

#97#97#97#97#97* Played final two games of season

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Wilcox did a great job of taking the strong safety job in fall camp andhanging on to it… Started nine games, giving way to formation quirks inthe others… Tied for team high with eight passes defended, including ahigh of three against Iowa…. Career-high nine tackles against OregonState, eight at Stanford… Sophomore juco transfer in 2008 who played ineight games before this year… First-team Academic All-Pac-10…

WILCOX’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 44 0 0 0 8 0 0 0

ANTHONY ANTHONY ANTHONY ANTHONY ANTHONY WILWILWILWILWILCOCOCOCOCOXXXXXSeniorSafety6-0, 205Lakeland, Fla.

#3#3#3#3#3* Broke up eight passes on season

Goes by the name of Bug… Twenty-five receptions for 294 yards and twoscores, two rushes for 31 yards… Multi-purpose threat with 14 puntreturns for 85 yards and three KOR for 28.7-yard average… Had 35-yardpunt return against Toledo… Had two formation starts (Citadel, OSU) ineight games played… Suspended for last three regular-season games ofthe year for a disciplinary reason…

WRIGHT’S SEASON RECEIVING GP-GS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long Avg./G 8-2 25 294 11.8 2 27 36.8

WRIGHT’S SEASON RUSHING GP-GS ATT NET AVG. TD Long Avg./G 8-2 2 31 15.5 0 18 3.9

WRIGHT’S SEASON PUNT RETURNS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long 14 85 6.1 0 35

WRIGHT’S SEASON KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds. Avg. TD Long 3 86 28.7 0 34

WILLIAM WRIGHTWILLIAM WRIGHTWILLIAM WRIGHTWILLIAM WRIGHTWILLIAM WRIGHTJuniorInside Receiver5-9, 175Tatum, Okla.

#19#19#19#19#19* Two starts on season

Honorable mention All-Pac-10… Turned in a top defensive effort forArizona in first year… He checked in with 94 hits including a career-best14 tackles against Washington and double figures against Toledo, OSUand Stanford… Two sacks among 7.5 tackles for losses, a forced fumbleat Oregon and PBU against UCLA and ASU… Would be the first Wildcatsince current Denver Bronco Spencer Larsen (2007) to notch 100tackles… Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week (Washington)

VASSALLO’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 94 7.5 2.0 0 2 1 1 0

PAPAPAPAPAUL UL UL UL UL VASSALLVASSALLVASSALLVASSALLVASSALLOOOOOJuniorLinebacker6-3, 240Reno, Nev.

#41#41#41#41#41* Team leader with 94 tackles in 2010

On preseason Thorpe, Nagurski and Bednarik awards watch lists, Wadesettled to Earth after a soph year with five picks and 14 PBU by gettingbeat up some in the rigors of Pac-10 offensive play… 43 tackles, oneinterception and two PBU in 2010… Took the interception back 85 yards tospark the victory over Iowa, earning College Football Performance Awardsnational DB of the week honor… Season-high seven tackles againstASU… Second-team All-Pac-10 as soph in 2009…

WADE’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 43 1.5 0 1 2 0 0 0

TREVIN WADETREVIN WADETREVIN WADETREVIN WADETREVIN WADEJuniorCornerback5-11, 188Round Rock, Texas

#24#24#24#24#24* Has 10 career interceptions

One of the Cats’ top youthful performances came from redshirt freshmanDT Washington, who notched 45 tackles, six sacks and 10.5 tackles forloss from his interior post up front… Two sacks among four tackles and ablocked PAT against Iowa … Two sacks against ASU in season finale…Career-high seven tackles against California… Missed the UCLA gamedue to injury…

WASHINGTON’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 45 10.5 6 0 0 0 0 1

JUSTIN JUSTIN JUSTIN JUSTIN JUSTIN WWWWWASHINGTASHINGTASHINGTASHINGTASHINGTONONONONONRedshirt FreshmanDefensive Tackle6-2, 275Cypress, Texas

#43#43#43#43#43* Second on team with 10.5 TFL

85ARIZONA FOOTBALL BY THE NUMBERS

614

Trevin Wade returned an interception for an 85-yardtouchdown in Week 3 against Iowa, his only interceptionof the season but the 10th of his career.

The number of sacks redshirt freshman tackle JustinWashington collected in his first season on the job.

Paul Vassallo collected a team season-high 14 tacklesearlier this season against Washington.

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DEPTH CHARDEPTH CHARDEPTH CHARDEPTH CHARDEPTH CHART PLAT PLAT PLAT PLAT PLAYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULESYER CAPSULES

PAGE 28 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Kick-coverage starter and backup linebacker who will contend for top rolein 2011… Started Oregon State game in place of the strong safety as arover type… Recorded 19 tackles – nine against runners, seven onkickoffs and two on punt returns… Season- and career-high five tacklesagainst California, four against Citadel and three against Iowa… Recov-ered fumble against Citadel… Second-team Academic All-Pac-10…

YOUNG’S SEASON DEFENSIVE STATS Tackles TFL Sacks INT BRUP FF FR BLK 19 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

R.JR.JR.JR.JR.J..... YOUNGYOUNGYOUNGYOUNGYOUNGSophomoreLinebacker5-11, 232DeSoto, Texas

#51#51#51#51#51* Played in all 12 games on season

No. 2 in the Pac-10 in field goal accuracy in 2010 with 13 makes in 16 tries(.813), one shy of the school record (14-16, .875) by Jason Bondzio in2008 and Alex’s uncle Max Zendejas (20-25) in 1983… A little moreadventurous in the PAT department, with 40-for-45 mark hurt by fourblocks… Five-for-five inside 30 yards, six-for-seven from 40 to 49 yards onfield goals… Career-long 47 yarder against Iowa this year and Oregon lastyear… Scored 89 points as soph, sixth best by a UA kicker… TheTerritorial Cup Game MVP in 2009 for a winning field goal as time expired,Zendejas had two PATs blocked, at the end of regulation to extend thegame, and in overtime, to lift ASU to a one-point victory in the 2010version…

ZENDEJAS’ SEASON KICKING PAT FG PCT. 1-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Long 40-45 13-16 81.2 5-5 2-4 6-7 0-0 47

ZENDEJAS’ SEASON PUNTING No. Yds. Avg. Long TB FC i20 50+ 5 148 29.6 43 1 0 2 0

JuniorKicker5-11, 190Glendale, Ariz.

#14#14#14#14#14* Made 13 of 16 field goals on year

ALEX ZENDEJALEX ZENDEJALEX ZENDEJALEX ZENDEJALEX ZENDEJASASASASAS

Arizona Team AwardsMVP Offense: Nick Foles, Matt Scott, Bryson Beirne – co-winnersMVP Defense: Brooks ReedMVP Special Teams: Mike TurnerMVP Scout team Offense: Dan BucknerMVP Scout team Defense: Aiulua FaneneTedy Bruschi Award: Colin Baxter

All-AmericaJuron Criner, cbssports.com 2nd team; Sports Illustrated 2nd team;Rivals.com third-teamColin Baxter, Rivals.com second-teamJustin Washington, CFN 1s-team Freshman All-America;2nd-team Phil SteeleRicky Elmore, honorable mention Sports Illustrated

All-Pac-10Juron Criner, first-teamBrooks Reed, first-teamAdam Grant, second-teamRicky Elmore, second-teamColin Baxter, second-teamHonorable mention – Paul Vassallo, Nick Foles, David Douglas,Keola Antolin

Pacific-10 Conference All-Academic Anthony Wilcox, first team Jake Fischer, first team John Bonano, first team Adam Hall, second team R.J. Young, second team Honorable mention: Nick Foles, David Roberts, Jack Baucus, A.J. Simmons

Pac-10 Players of the WeekNick Foles – Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week (Iowa)Travis Cobb – Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week (Iowa)Shaquille Richardson – Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week (WSU)Paul Vassallo – Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week (Washington)Matt Scott – Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week (Washington)Jake Fischer – Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week (UCLA)

Other Honors and AwardsJovon Hayes – Academic Momentum Award from Scholar-Baller/National Consortium for Academics and Sports (UA’s second consecu-tive – Earl Mitchell 2009)

Paul Vassallo - C.A.T.S. Student-Athlete of the Month (September)

Mike Turner – Seattle Times Pac-10 Special Teams player of the Week(Oct. 16 vs WSU)

Arizona team– Tostitos Fiesta Bowl National Team of the Week (Iowa)

Colin Baxter, center, Finalist for Rimington Trophy

vs. Iowa, Arizona Defensive Line -- ESPN Weekly Helmet Sticker

Shaquille Richardson – Honorable mention Jim Thorpe DefensiveBack of the Week (WSU)

Jack Baucus and John Bonano nominated for CoSIDA Academic All-District

Victor Yates – nominated for College Football Rudy Awards

2010 Honors and Awards

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PAGE 29OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS

Game 1: Arizona 41, Toledo 2Sept. 3, 2010 | Toledo, Ohio (Glass Bowl) |Attendance: 25,907

Arizona 41, Toledo 2Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

Arizona 7 14 7 13 41Toledo 0 2 0 0 2

Team Statistics Arizona Toledo

First Downs 25 10Rushes-Yards (Net) 25-105 28-80Pass Yards (Net) 413 103Pass Att-Comp-Int 44-37-1 23-14-1Total Offense Plays-Yards 69-518 51-183Fumble Returns-Yards 0-0 0-0Punt Returns-Yards 3-47 3-(-10)Kickoff Returns-Yards 1-19 7-96Interception Returns-Yards 1-1 1-0Punts (Number-Avg) 3-43.0 8-43.6Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-1Penalties-Yards 8-48 6-40Possession Time 33:47 26:13Third Down Conversions 8 of 11 5 of 14Fourth Down Conversions 0 of 0 0 of 1Red Zone Scores-Chances 4-6 0-1Sacks By Number-Yards 2-15 1-7

Individual StatisticsRushingArizona -- Grigsby, N. 8-53; Nwoko, N. 5-29;Antolin, K. 5-13; Cobb, T. 1-12; Jenkins, D. 2-7;Scott, M. 1-2; Team 1-(-2); Foles, N. 2-(-9)

Toledo -- Thomas, A. 10-52; Williams, M. 9-21;Dantin, A. 6-7; Fluellen, D. 1-1; Bellinger, J. 1-1;Team 1-(-1)

PassingArizona -- Foles, N. 32-37-1-360; Scott, M. 5-7-0-53

Toledo -- Dantin, A. 14-23-1-103

ReceivingArizona -- Criner, J. 11-187; Douglas, D. 5-33;Antolin, K. 5-23; Wright, W. 3-35; Cobb, T. 3-30;Roberts, D. 3-25; Grigsby, N. 3-24; Crump, G. 2-20; Simmons, A.J. 1-31; Miller, T. 1-5;

Toledo -- Page, E. 4-43; Bellinger, J. 2-22;Thomas, A. 2-10; Williams, M. 2-10; Stafford, K.1-12; Fluellen, D. 1-5; Reedy, B. 1-4; Cortazzo, T.1-(-1)

InterceptionsArizona -- Earls, D. 1-1

Toledo -- None

FumblesArizona -- Foles 1-0

Toledo -- Page, E, 1-1

Sacks (UA-A)Arizona -- Fischer, J. 1-0; Washington, J. 1-0

Toledo -- Fatinikun, T.J. 1-0

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPARIZ 1 8:46 Douglas, D. 9-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 9 68 4:09TOL 2 9:19 Team safetyARIZ 2 3:03 Grigsby, N. 36-yard run (Zendejas kick) 9 91 4:17ARIZ 2 0:17 Foles, N. 1-yard run (Zendejas kick) 6 38 2:03ARIZ 3 11:02 Grigsby, N. 1-yard run (Zendejas kick) 10 73 3:53ARIZ 4 13:02 Criner, J. 32-yard pass from Foles (Crier, K. rush failed) 7 66 3:08ARIZ 4 5:51 Antolin, K. 5-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 11 81 5:14

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Nick Foles threw for 360 yards and accounted for three touchdowns tohelp Arizona pound Toledo 41-2 on Friday night.

Foles tossed two TD passes and ran for another score as the Wildcats recorded their firstroad victory outside the Pac-10 in nine seasons. Nic Grigsby added two touchdown runs.

Foles completed 32 of 37 passes with an interception that occurred when a ball went offthe hands of running back Taimi Tutogi and bounced to Toledo defensive back DiauntaeMorrow.

He showed a nice touch on his first touchdown throw, lofting a 9-yard pass over a de-fender and into the hands of tight end David Douglas, who got one foot down in the backof end zone with 8:40 left in the first quarter.

Foles completed five passes for 58 yards on the opening drive, but the Wildcats didn't domuch after that until late in the first half.

Grigsby, who struggled with a shoulder injury last season, scored on a nifty 36-yard run,cutting across the middle and outracing two Rockets to corner of the end zone, capping anine-play, 91-yard drive and giving Arizona a 14-2 lead.

One play later, Derek Earls picked off Austin Dantin's pass over the middle to get the ballback for the Wildcats. Foles scored on a 1-yard run with just 17 seconds left in the half,making it 21-2.

Arizona's speedy bunch of receivers seemed to be open on nearly play. Juron Criner ledthe way, finishing with 11 catches for 187 yards and a touchdown.

Arizona's young defense, with seven new starters, including all three linebackers, did anice job limiting the Rockets to 80 yards rushing, including just 16 yards in the first half.

It was quite an improvement for a defense that coach Mike Stoops said looked terrible in ateam scrimmage two weeks ago.

Toledo had the top offense in the Mid-American Conference a year ago, but it did littleright against the Wildcats. Dantin was 14-of-23 passing for 103 yards.

Toledo's only score of the night came when Arizona lineman Conan Amituanai was calledfor holding in the end zone, giving the Rockets the safety.

Arizona hadn't ventured this far for opener since going to Penn State in 1999. It also wasthe first time a Pac-10 team has played at a Mid-American Conference stadium.

Scoring Summary

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PAGE 30 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Game 2: Arizona 52, The Citadel 6Sept. 11, 2010 | Tucson, Ariz. (Arizona Stadium) |Attendance: 54,814

Arizona 52, The Citadel 6Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

The Citadel 0 0 3 3 6Arizona 7 17 21 7 52

Team Statistics The Citadel Arizona

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingThe Citadel -- Dallas, T. 11-53; Martin, S. 11-31;Anderson, R. 4-22; Jones, V. 4-18; Robertson, C.3-11; Starnes, T. 1-9; Dupree, B. 1-6; Martin, T. 2-5; Keiper, R. 2-4; Hardy, K. 2-0; Thompson, M. 9-(-9)

Arizona -- Grigsby, N. 11-107; Nwoko, G. 7-72;Jenkins, D. 6-19; Butler, K. 3-14; Cobb, T. 1-8;Antolin, K. 2-2; Douglas, D. 1-1; Team 1-(-1);Foles, N. 1-(-2); Scott, M. 3-(-6)

PassingThe Citadel -- Thompson, M. 2-7-0-12;Martin, S. 1-7-0-9

Arizona -- Foles, N. 17-22-1-214; Scott, M. 3-6-0-28; Beirne, B. 5-5-0-33

ReceivingThe Citadel -- Jones, D. 2-16; Anderson, R. 1-5

Arizona -- Antolin, K. 4-53; Douglas, D. 4-33;Wright, W. 3-29; Criner, J. 2-60; Roberts, D. 2-27;Morrison, R. 2-21; Crump, G. 2-19; Cobb, T. 2-15;Grigsby, N. 2-9; Baucus, J. 1-6; Miller, T. 1-3

InterceptionsThe Citadel -- Akindele, T. 1-0Arizona -- None

FumblesThe Citadel -- Thompson, M. 2-2; Martin, S. 1-0;Hardy, K. 1-0; Anderson, R. 1-0, Starnes, T. 1-1Arizona -- Wright, W. 1-0

Sacks (UA-A)The Citadel -- Billingslea, C. 1-0; Clanton, E. 1-0Arizona -- Washington, J. 1-0; Earls, D. 1-0; Reed,B. 1-0

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPARIZ 1 6:23 Grigsby, N. 3-yard run (Zendejas kick) 6 60 1:53ARIZ 2 12:58 Wright, W. 4-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 12 84 4:32ARIZ 2 5:53 Zendejas, A. 41-yard field goal 7 40 2:25ARIZ 2 5:13 Grigsby, N. 1-yard run (Zendejas kick) 2 22 0:25ARIZ 3 13:56 Grigsby, N. 62-yard run (Zendejas kick) 3 71 0:49ARIZ 3 12:23 Nwoko, G. 23-yard run (Zendejas kick) 1 23 0:08CIT 3 6:55 Keeler, S. 39-yard field goal 10 48 5:22ARIZ 3 4:39 Nwoko, G. 3-yard run (Zendejas kick) 6 48 2:08CIT 4 9:08 Keeler, S. 23-yard field goal 11 47 5:25ARIZ 4 4:09 Baucus, J. 6-yard pass from Beirne (Zendejas kick) 11 50 4:59

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP)-Nic Grigsby rushed for three touchdowns, including a career-long 62-yardscoring run, and ARIZONA routed The Citadel 52-6 in the Wildcats' home opener on Saturdaynight.

Nick Foles completed 17 of 22 for passes for 214 yards and one touchdown before calling it anight early in the third quarter as the Wildcats (2-0) rolled for 489 yards in a tuneup for nextSaturday's home game against No. 9 Iowa.

Grigsby rushed for 107 yards in 11 carries and boosted his career rushing touchdown total to25, tied for third-most in ARIZONA history.

The Citadel (1-1), a member of the Football Championship Subdivision (formerly NCAADivision I-AA) Southern Conference, played a Pac-10 team for the first time.

Matt Thompson, freshman quarterback in the Bulldogs' triple-option offense, fumbled theball twice to set up ARIZONA touchdowns late in the first half and early in the second.

ARIZONA third-stringer Greg Nwoko gained 72 yards in seven carries, including touchdownruns of 23 and 3 yards.

The Wildcats, who opened their season with a 41-2 win at Toledo, have outscored their firsttwo opponents 93-5. Sam Keeler's 39-yard field goal with 6:55 left in the third quarter for TheCitadel provided the first offensive points against ARIZONA this season. Keeler also had a 23-yarder.

After a slow start, ARIZONA scored on consecutive possessions at the end of the first quarterand start of the second.

Foles' 44-yard pass to Juron Criner highlighted a six-play, 60-yard drive that put the Wildcatsup 7-0 on Grigsby's 3-yard scoring run. Criner caught Foles' long pass, bounced off a would-betackler, then broke downfield to the Bulldogs' 3.

ARIZONA went 84-yards on 12 plays the next time it had the ball. Foles threw to Bug Wrightin the back of the end zone for the touchdown to make it 14-0 with 12:58 left to go in thehalf. Foles completed 5 of 6 passes on the drive for 69 yards.

Alex Zendejas' 41-yard field goal with 2:25 left in the half made it 17-0. The first play after thesubsequent kickoff, Thompson fumbled and Paul Vassallo recovered for ARIZONA at TheCitadel 22. Foles threw over the middle to Wright to the 1-yard line, and Grigsby took it infrom there to put the Wildcats up 24-0 25 seconds before the half.

ARIZONA scored two touchdowns in a 27-second span the first two minutes of the secondhalf.

Grigsby's 62-yard run one play after the second-half kickoff made it 31-0. Although the seniortailback has a 94-yard run in his career, the 62-yarder was his longest for a touchdown.

The first play after the subsequent kickoff, Thompson's bad pitch was recovered by DerekEarls for ARIZONA at the Bulldogs' 23. Nwoko went 23 yards for the score on the next play toput ARIZONA ahead 38-0 with 12:23 still left in the third quarter.

Scoring Summary

10 2250-150 36-21421 27514-3-0 33-25-164-171 69-4890-0 0-00-0 3-86-135 3-831-0 0-07-42.1 3-34.36-3 1-02-9 3-3032:38 27:227 of 19 6 of 120 of 1 1 of 11-1 6-62-9 3-19

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Game 3: No. 24 Arizona 34, No. 9 Iowa 27Sept. 18, 2010 | Tucson, Ariz. (Arizona Stadium) |Attendance: 57,864

Arizona 34, Iowa 27Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

Iowa 0 7 7 13 27Arizona 14 13 0 7 34

Team Statistics Iowa Arizona

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingIowa-- Hampton, J. 7-30; Robinson, A. 10-5;Stanzi, R. 9-(-9);

Arizona -- Grigsby, N. 14-27; Antolin, K. 6-26;Nwoko, G. 5-25; Cobb, T. 2-7; Foles, N. 2-(-22)

PassingIowa -- Stanzi, R. 18-33-1-278

Arizona -- Foles, N. 28-39-1-303

ReceivingIowa -- Jn-Koulianos, D. 7-114; McNutt, M. 3-66; Sandeman, C. 3-32; Reisner, A. 2-27;Hampton, J. 2-8; Davis, K. 1-12; Robinson, A. 0-19

Arizona -- Douglas, D. 7-74; Wright, B. 5-67;Grigsby, N. 4-24; Criner, J. 2-48; Simmons, A.J.2-14; Antolin, K. 2-9; Nwoko, G. 2-9; Roberts, D.1-38; Tutogi, T. 1-8; Baucus, J. 1-8; Cobb, T. 1-4.

InterceptionsIowa -- Binns, B. 1-20Arizona -- Wade, T. 1-85

FumblesIowa -- None

Arizona -- Grigsby, N. 1-1; Wright, B. 1-1.

Sacks (UA-A)Iowa -- Daniels, M. 1-0; Tarpinian, J. 1-0

Arizona -- Reed, B. 1-1; Washington, J. 2-0;Elmore, R. 1-1; Vassallo, P. 1-0.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPARIZ 1 12:45 Douglas, D. 5-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 3 8 0:44ARIZ 1 10:10 Wade, T. 85-yard interception return (Zendejas kick)IOWA 2 14:50 Hampton, J. 4-yard pass from Stanzi, R. (Mossbrucker kick) 9 93 3:51ARIZ 2 14:36 Cobb, T. 100-yard kickoff return (Zendejas kick)ARIZ 2 5:42 Zendejas, A. 22-yard field goal 11 76 4:24ARIZ 2 0:16 Zendejas, A. 47-yard field goal 9 51 2:46IOWA 3 7:15 Jn-Koulianos, D. 37-yard pass from Stanzi (Mossbrucker kick) 3 48 1:12IOWA 4 8:59 McNutt, M. 18-yard pass from Stanzi (Mossbrucker kick) 1 18 0:06IOWA 4 8:12 Binns, B. 20-yard interception return (kick blocked)ARIZ 4 3:57 Wright, B. 4-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 9 72 4:10

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Nick Foles hit William Wright with a late 4-yard touchdown pass and No. 24Arizona held its ground in the national spotlight with a momentum-swinging 34-27 win overninth-ranked Iowa Saturday night.

Arizona (3-0) jumped out to a 20-point halftime lead behind a slew of big plays that included ablocked punt, Travis Cobb's 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown and an interception returned85 yards by Trevin Wade for another score.

The Wildcats moved 72 yards in nine plays in the second half for the winning score, then sealedwhat they hope is a program-defining win with four straight sacks of Stanzi.

Foles threw for 303 yards and two touchdowns on 28-of-39 passing.

Iowa rolled over its first two not-so-challenging opponents by a combined score of 72-14. Theroad trip to the desert represented a little tougher challenge: a long-distance road game (over1,500 miles) with a late start (9:30 Iowa City time) in hot-air-dryer heat (close to 100 at kickoff).

On top of that, the Hawkeyes were facing a talented Arizona team looking to prove itself against abig-school program in one of the biggest nonconference games in the 81-year history of ArizonaStadium.

The Wildcats were certainly up for it, producing one big play after another in a stadium-rockingfirst half.

Arizona held Iowa to a quick three-and-out on its first drive, then David Roberts broke through toblock Ryan Donahue's punt, which Marquis Flowers recovered at the Hawkeyes 8. Three playslater, Foles hit David Douglas on a 5-yard slant for a touchdown that had the rowdies in redjumping and pumping their white pompoms.

Iowa was marching on its second drive, but receiver Marvin McNutt Jr. had the ball slip throughhis hands and it fell right to Wade, who had a clear shot to the end zone for an 85-yard score.

Barely five minutes into the game, Iowa was in a 14-0 hole.

The Hawkeyes kept plugging away on offense, moving 93 yards for a 4-yard touchdown pass fromStanzi to Jewel Hampton, the first touchdown against Arizona this season.

Then, boom! another big play: Cobb burst through a seam like one of the pregame fireworks onthe ensuing kickoff and was gone, 100 yards for a touchdown that put Arizona up 21-7.

Tacking on two field goals by Alex Zendejas, including a career-long-matching 47-yarder, Arizonahad a seemingly comfortable 27-7 halftime lead.

Seemingly.

Turning up the defensive pressure, Iowa stymied Arizona's offense in the third quarter - 58 totalyards - and pulled within 13 points on a 37-yard touchdown pass from Stanzi to Derrell Johnson-Koulianos.

Iowa came up with a big play of its own on special teams, recovering a muffed punt by Bug Wrightat the Wildcats 18. Stanzi hit McNutt on a backpedaling touchdown pass at the edge of the endzone on the next play, making it 27-21.

Binns followed with his at-the-line grab and return for a score, only to watch in amazement fromthe sideline as the PAT wobbled away from the uprights. Then it was Foles' turn.

Getting the ball out quickly to avoid Iowa's strengthening rush, the junior completed 4 of 5 passeson the final drive, hitting Wright for the decisive score with 3:57 left. Foles finished with 303yards and two touchdowns on 28-of-39 passing, solidifying his - and his team's - place among thecountry's best up-and-comers.

Scoring Summary

19 1926-29 30-63278 30318-33-1 28-39-159-307 69-3660-0 0-02-35 5-223-77 3-1481-20 1-857-46.9 5-37.80-0 2-26-60 12-10327:52 32:084 of 13 5 of 130 of 1 0 of 12-2 3-52-22 6-44

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PAGE 32 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Game 4: Arizona 10, California 9Sept. 25, 2010 | Tucson, Ariz. (Arizona Stadium) |Attendance: 50,906

Arizona 10, California 9Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

California 0 6 0 3 9Arizona 0 0 3 7 10

Team Statistics California Arizona

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingCalifornia -- Vereen, S. 27-102; Sofele, I. 3-30;Ross, J. 2-7; Allen, K. 1-6; Stevens, E. 1-2; Riley,K. 1-0; TEAM 1-(-1).

Arizona -- Grigsby, N. 12-65; Wright, W. 2-31;Antolin, K. 4-15; Nwoko, G. 3-3; Morrison, R. 1-0; TEAM 1-(-2); Foles, N. 3-(-13).

PassingCalifornia -- Riley, K. 13-26-1-116;Vereen, S. 0-1-0-0

Arizona -- Foles, N. 25-39-1-212

ReceivingCalifornia -- Jones, M. 4-41; Calvin, M. 3-31;Ross, J. 2-17; Vereen, S. 2-13; Allen, K. 1-9;Ladner, S. 1-5.

Arizona -- Douglas, D. 6-61; Criner, J. 5-68;Roberts, D. 3-22; Antolin, K. 3-21; Wright, W. 3-20; Grigsby, N. 3-10; Morrison, R. 1-6; Baucus,J. 1-4.

InterceptionsCalifornia -- Conte, C. 1-0

Arizona -- Perkins, J. 1-20

FumblesCalifornia -- Ross, J. 1-0.

Arizona -- Perkins, J. 1-0; Foles, N. 1-1.

Sacks (UA-A)California -- Kendricks, M. 2-0; Jordan, C. 1-0.

Arizona -- None.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPCAL 2 1:42 Tavecchio, G. 25-yard field goal 5 20 1:42CAL 2 5:23 Tavechhio, G. 40-yard field goal 11 53 4:31ARIZ 3 10:16 Zendejas, A. 46-yard field goal 4 0 1:43CAL 4 11:02 Tavecchio, G. 23-yard field goal 9 61 4:05ARIZ 4 1:11 Criner, J. 3-yard pass from Foles 7 77 1:26

TUCSON, Ariz. - Just when No. 14 Arizona seemed headed for a crushing loss, Nick Foles and JuronCriner finally brought the Wildcats' offense to life.

Foles threw a 3-yard pass over the middle to Criner with 1:11 to play for the game's only touchdownand Arizona escaped with a 10-9 victory over California in their Pac-10 opener on Saturday night.

Just when No. 14 Arizona seemed headed for a crushing loss, Nick Foles and Juron Criner finallybrought the Wildcats' offense to life.

Foles threw a 3-yard pass over the middle to Criner with 1:11 to play for the game's only touchdownand Arizona escaped with a 10-9 victory over California in their Pac-10 opener on Saturday night.

The score was set up by Foles' 51-yard pass to Criner, questionable for the game because of a turf toeinjury. The 6-foot-4 Criner fought off California's Darian Hagan, who had played smothering passdefense all night, on the big play.

The winning seven-play, 77-yard drive came after California's Giorgio Tavecchhio missed a 40-yard fieldgoal try with 2:37 to play. Arizona is 4-0 for the first time since 1998.

A loss would have been devastating for the Wildcats a week after their draining 34-27 home win overthen-No. 9 Iowa. Arizona is the only Pac-10 team never to make it to the Rose Bowl.

Arizona has next weekend off.

The Wildcats clinched the victory when Kevin Riley's pass bounced off the hands of Marvin Jones andwas intercepted by Joseph Perkins. Perkins fumbled but Robert Golden recovered for Arizona.

It appeared that Tavecchio's field goals of 25, 40 and 23 yards would be enough for the Bears (2-2), whohad shut down Arizona's prolific offense a week after giving up 497 yards and being routed 52-31 atNevada.

The Wildcats helped out with 10 penalties for 99 yards. Foles completed 25 of 39 passes for 212 yardsbut had two critical first-half turnovers.

His fumble on a sack by Cal's Cameron Jordan on the final play of the first quarter led to the Bears' firstfield goal. Then, in the final seconds of the half, he was intercepted in the end zone after Arizona haddriven to the Cal 13.

Shane Vereen, who had a game-clinching touchdown run in Cal's victory over Arizona a year ago,rushed for 102 yards in 27 carries. He was the workhorse as the Bears drove downfield in the finalminutes but Tavecchio's 40-yard field goal try was wide right.

That gave Arizona its last chance.

Tavecchio also had a 40-yard try bounce off the right upright in the third quarter.

Riley was 13 of 26 for 113 yards. The only Cal turnover came on the game-clinching play.

A personal foul penalty called on the Arizona defense, with no individual named by the official, aidedCalifornia's 11-play, 55-yard drive that ended in Tavecchio's 40-yarder that gave the Bears a 6-0 leadwith 5:23 left in the half.

Arizona drove the length of the field after Cal's subsequent kickoff, with a pass interference call againstHagan on a long throw for Criner moving the ball to the California 13 with 45 seconds left on the half.

On the next play, Foles lofted a pass intended for his roommate David Douglas in the right corner of theend zone. California's Marc Anthony deflected the pass and Conte grabbed it, getting a foot down justinbound for the interception.

Arizona finally scored on Alex Zendejas' 46-yard field goal with 10:16 left in the third quarter. The scorewas set up by Foles' 51-yard pass to Criner, questionable for the game because of a turf toe injury. The6-foot-4 Criner fought off California's Darian Hagan, who had played smothering pass defense all night,on the big play.

The winning seven-play, 77-yard drive came after California's Giorgio Tavecchhio missed a 40-yard field goal try with 2:37 to play. Arizona is 4-0 for the first time since 1998.

Scoring Summary

16 1836-146 26-99116 21213-27-1 25-39-163-262 65-3110-0 0-03-32 0-03-71 3-861-0 1-205-209 6-2441-0 2-18-68 10-9932:22 27:382 of 12 4 of 140 of 0 1 of 12-3 1-23-13 0-0

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Game 5: Oregon State 29, Arizona 27Oct. 9, 2010 | Tucson, Ariz. (Arizona Stadium) |Attendance: 56,054

Oregon St. 29, Arizona 27Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

Oregon St. 10 7 6 6 29Arizona 7 0 13 7 27

Team Statistics Oregon St. Arizona

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingOSU-- Rodgers, Jacq. 25-83; Katz, R. 8-7;Rodgers, James 1-2; Wheaton, M. 1-1.Arizona -- Antolin, K. 8-70; Grigsby, N. 5-22;Foles, N. 5-6; Nwoko, G. 1-3.

PassingOSU -- Katz, R. 30-42-1-393.

Arizona -- Foles, N. 35-46-1-440.

ReceivingOSU -- Wheaton, M. 7-113; Rodgers, James 7-102; Halahuni, J. 5-70; Rodgers, Jacq. 3-41;Nichols, A. 3-12; Bishop, J. 2-36; Munoz, G. 1-9;McCants, R. 1-5; Darkins, W. 1-5.

Arizona -- Criner, J. 12-179; Wright, W. 4-64;Antolin, K. 4-40; Douglas, D. 4-34; Roberts, D. 4-24; Grigsby, N. 2-41; Cobb, T. 2-32; Morrison, R.2-17; Simmons, A.J. 1-9.

InterceptionsOSU -- Tuimaunei, S. 1-0.

Arizona -- Perkins, J. 1-2.

FumblesOSU -- Rodgers, James 1-0.

Arizona -- None.

Sacks (UA-A)OSU -- TEAM 1-0; Olander, B. 1-0; Roberson, D.1-0.

Arizona -- Elmore, R. 2-0; Reed, B. 1-0.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPOSU 1 11:41 Rodgers, James 33-yard pass from Katz (Kahut kick) 8 68 3:19ARIZ 1 7:34 Criner, J. 45-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 3 57 1:02OSU 1 1:26 Kahut, Justin 23-yard field goal 14 70 6:00OSU 2 9:21 Wheaton, M. 48-yard pass from Katz (Kahut kick) 7 80 3:11ARIZ 3 12:54 Antolin, K. 33-yard run (Zendejas kick blocked) 5 66 2:00OSU 3 6:58 Katz, R. 1-yard run (Kahut kick failed) 11 65 5:48ARIZ 3 3:20 Grigsby, N. 41-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 7 66 3:32OSU 4 5:46 Rodgers, Jacq. 1-yard run (Kahut kick failed) 10 80 4:51ARIZ 4 1:52 Antolin, K. 12-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 9 80 1:54

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - The Wildcats' Nick Foles completed 35 of 46 for 440 yards and three touch-downs, but Oregon State held on to upset No. 9 Arizona 29-27 on Saturday night.

Add Ryan Katz to the list of impressive Pac-10 quarterbacks.

Oregon State coaches kept things somewhat conservative early in his first season as a starter, thenunleashed his strong, accurate arm, along with his elusive scrambling against No. 9 Arizona.

The sophomore from Santa Monica, Calif., threw for 393 yards and two touchdowns, sneaked acrossfor another score and the Beavers held on for a 29-27 upset.

Katz completed 30 of 42 against an Arizona defense that had been ranked No. 2 nationally, giving up230.8 yards per game. "I just see a lot more confidence in him," Oregon State's Joe Halahuni said."He's more of a leader off the field and in the huddle. He"s doing great running the ball, throwing itand making good decisions."

Three times Katz eluded the pass rush and scrambled for a first down on third-down situations.

The Wildcats (4-1, 1-1 Pac-10), in the top 10 for the first time since the 1999 preseason rankings andcoming off a bye week, never led. The loss dampened their hopes for the school's first trip to the RoseBowl.

The Wildcats' Nick Foles completed 35 of 46 for 440 yards and three touchdowns. "When you look atthe entire game, we just weren't all there," Arizona coach Mike Stoops said. "I think we did competewell in the secondary but this was the most yards we've given up in a long time. Oregon State reallybeat us in a lot of ways. They wanted to throw the ball and they threw it at will, which is very hard tocome back from."

Oregon State (3-2, 2-0) lost standout receiver James Rodgers to what could be a season-ending kneeinjury in the second quarter. He was in street clothes on crutches in the second half after sevencatches for 102 yards, including a 33-yarder for the Beavers' first score. Riley said the injury was "notgood" and he would know more on Sunday.

Foles' 12-yard touchdown pass to Keola Antolin cut the lead to 29-27 with 1:52 to play but OregonState recovered the subsequent onside kick attempt. Arizona got the ball on its own 20 with 2seconds left and tried to use a short pass and a series of laterals to score. But Antolin was stopped atmidfield to finish Oregon State's fifth consecutive victory in Tucson.

The teams combined for 1,027 yards in a game that featured five touchdown plays of 33 yards orlonger.

Rodgers' younger brother, Jacquizz, rushed for 92 yards in 25 carries and caught three passes for 41yards. His 1-yard touchdown run with 5:46 to play put the Beavers up 29-20.

James Rodgers made a fingertip catch of Katz's deep pass for what would have been a 56-yardtouchdown with 5:07 left in the half. But he was hit by Arizona's Adam Hall as he crossed into the endzone, then went down in pain. He was helped off the field with no weight on his left knee. The scorewas called back by an ineligible receiver downfield penalty.

Foles connected on touchdown passes of 45, 33 and 12 yards but Katz matched him all the way. TheOregon State coaching staff had held Katz down as he opened his first season as a starter but haveunleashed him in the first two Pac-10 games. He threw for 260 yards in the Beavers' 31-28 victory overArizona State a week ago.

The Wildcats took the second-half kickoff and went 66 yards in just two minutes before Antolin scoredon a 33-yard run. The point after attempt was blocked and it was 17-13.

OSU responded with an 11-play, 65-yard scoring drive that finished with Katz sneaking over from the1. But Justin Kahut's extra point try was no good, giving the Beavers a 23-13 lead. He also missed thekick after the last OSU touchdown.

Nic Grigsby took a swing pass from Foles and weaved through traffic 41 yards for a touchdown thatcut the Beavers' lead to 23-20 with 3:20 left in the third quarter. The Beavers responded with a 10-play, 80-yard drive, culminating with Jacquizz Rodgers' touchdown run.

Scoring Summary

25 2635-93 19-101393 44030-42-1 35-46-177-486 65-5410-0 0-01-0 0-06-369 4-2641-0 1-24-165 3-1341-0 0-08-52 8-4536:23 23:3710 of 15 6 of 110-0 0-13-4 1-23-20 3-25

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PAGE 34 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Game 6: Arizona 24, Washington State 7Oct. 16, 2010 | Pullman, Wash. (Martin Stadium) |Attendance: 23,955

Arizona 24, Wash. St. 7Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Fi-

nalArizona 7 7 7 3 24Wash. St. 0 0 7 0 7

Team Statistics Arizona WSU

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingARIZ - Antolin, K. 21-92; Grigsby, N. 14-66;Cobb, T. 1-(-4); Foles, N. 2-(-5); Scott, M. 9-(-7).

WSU - Tuel, J. 14-33; Montgomery, Jam. 13-24;Richmond, Mar. 1-2; Mitz, L. 3-1; TEAM 1-(2);Barton, I. 2-9; Forrest, R. 1-(-16).

PassingARIZ - Scott, M. 14-20-1-139; Foles, N. 6-7-0-71.

WSU - Tuel, J. 18-32-2-257.

ReceivingARIZ - Cobb, T. 7-62; Roberts, D. 3-26; Tutogi,T. 2-34; Morrison, R. 2-26; Criner, J. 2-20;Antolin, K. 1-16; Douglas, D. 1-15; Simmons,A.J. 1-7;Miller, T. 1-4.

WSU - Wilson, Marq. 6-131; Blackledge, D. 2-42; Simone, G. 2-41; Karstetter, Jar. 2-17;Montomgery, Jam. 2-13; Barton, I. 2-9; Mitz, L.2-4.

InterceptionsARIZ - Richardson, S. 2-0.

WSU - Locker, C. 1-0.

FumblesARIZ - Foles, N. 1-0.

WSU - Forrest, R. 1-1; Montgomery, Jam. 1-1.

Sacks (UA-A)ARIZ - Elmore, R. 2-1; Fischer, J. 1-0; Mikaele,M. 0-1; Tuihalamaka, S. 0-1; Reed, B. 1-0;Mobley, W. 0-1.

WSU - Long, T. 2-0; Toomer, T. 2-0; Beck, M. 2-0.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPARIZ 1 4:48 Antolin, K. 9-yard run (Zendejas kick) 6 44 2:37ARIZ 2 10:59 Antolin, K. 1-yard run (Zendejas kick) 15 95 5:44ARIZ 3 13:48 Grigsby, N. 7-yard run (Zendejas kick) 1 7 0:05WSU 3 3:27 Wilson, Marq. 23-yard pass from Tuel (Furney kick) 9 63 2:49ARIZ 4 11:57 Zendejas, A. 40-yard field goal 6 9 2:52

PULLMAN, Wash. (AP)--With quarterback Nick Foles knocked out of the game with a knee injury, No. 17Arizona turned to running backs Keola Antolin and Nic Grigsby for offense.

Antolin ran for 92 yards and two touchdowns, and Grigsby added 66 yards and another score as theWildcats beat Washington State 24-7 Saturday to remain in contention for the Pac-10 title.

Foles, the league's leading passer, will be out at least two weeks with a sprained knee, coach MikeStoops said. Backup Matt Scott played nearly three quarters against the Cougars.

"You always have two quarterbacks ready," Stoops said. "Matt was OK, a little rusty."

Arizona (5-1, 2-1 Pac-10) ran 47 times for 142 yards, far above the averages for the league's top passingteam.

"We wanted to come out and establish the run game, and that's what we did," said Antolin, who hadhis best outing of the season.

Despite the win, Stoops was unhappy with inconsistent offensive play that allowed Washington State(1-6, 0-4) to remain within striking distance much of the game.

"We have to play better than we did tonight," Stoops said.

Arizona managed only 352 yards of offense and 24 points against a defense that was giving up morethan 500 yards and 42 per game. The Cougars recorded six sacks.

On the flip side, Washington State had just 297 offensive yards and failed to reach double digits inscoring for the first time this season.

"Missed opportunities and points left on the field," offensive lineman B.J. Guerra said.

"We've got to put it together," defensive end Travis Long added.

Foles was injured with 14:07 left in the second quarter when Long was tripped and rolled into his rightleg, knocking him to the ground after a completed pass. Foles limped off the field, supported betweentwo Arizona officials.

Scott completed 14 of 20 passes for 139 yards, but was intercepted once and sacked five times.

Washington State has lost 12 straight Pac-10 games dating to 2008, and has beaten only Montana Statethis season. But its passing attack continued to improve, with quarterback Jeff Tuel completing 18 of 32passes for 257 yards, despite being sacked seven times. Freshman Marquess Wilson caught six passesfor 131 yards.

Antolin scored on a 9-yard run late in the first for a 7-0 Arizona lead.

Foles had started the first eight plays of their second scoring drive when he was injured. Scott directedthe team over the final 37 yards, with Antolin running up the middle from the 1-yard line for a 14-0lead.

Arizona threatened in the closing minutes of the first half, moving 71 yards to the 19, but Scott wasintercepted by Casey Locker in the final seconds to kill the drive.

Arizona's 14-0 lead was the first time this season that Washington State was shut out in the first half.

The Wildcats got a break early in the third when Washington State punter Reid Forrest fumbled thesnap deep in his own territory. Khyri Knowles dove on the ball at the 7 and, on the first play, Grigsbyran in for a 21-0 lead.

Washington State got on the scoreboard when Tuel hit Wilson with a 23-yard touchdown strike late inthe third.

But the Cougars blew a chance to tighten the game after they stopped Antolin on fourth-and-1 on thefirst play of the fourth quarter. Running back James Montgomery took a handoff and then threw abackward pass that was deflected by Arizona's Brooks Reed and recovered by D'Aundre Reed. AlexZendejas eventually kicked a 40-yard field goal for a 24-7 lead.

Tuel connected with Wilson for an 83-yard gain midway through the fourth, giving the Cougars the ballon Arizona's 12 and Wilson the fourth 100-yard game of his rookie season. But Tuel was intercepted inthe end zone to kill the threat.

The game was also costly for Washington State. The Cougars lost offensive lineman David Gonzales to abroken left arm and cornerback Damante Horton to a sprained knee.

Scoring Summary

22 1547-142 34-40210 25727-20-1 32-18-274-352 66-2970-0 0-00-0 4-181-20 4-732-0 1-05-42.8 5-41.21-0 2-22-20 4-3031:06 28:548 of 16 7 of 160 of 1 1 of 24-5 0-17-35 6-40

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Game 7: Arizona 44, Washington 14Oct. 23, 2010 | Tucson, Ariz. (Arizona Stadium) |Attendance: 56,244

Arizona 44, Washington 14Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

Washington 7 7 0 0 14Arizona 10 20 7 7 44

Team Statistics Washington Arizona

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingWASH-- Polk, C. 14-65; Callier, J. 8-36; Price, k.3-11; Fogerson, Z. 2-10; Locker, J. 6-(-24).

Arizona -- Antolin, K. 14-114; Scott, M. 7-65;Girgsby, N. 12-50; Criner, J. 2-9; Nwoko, G. 2-5;Beirne, B. 1-(-4); TEAM 5-(-5).

PassingWASH -- Locker, J. 17-29-0-183; Price, K. 1-4-0-9.

Arizona -- Scott, M. 18-22-0-233; Beirne, B. 0-0-0-0.

ReceivingWASH -- Goodwin, D. 5-51; Kearse, J. 4-47;Callier, J. 3-6; Polk, J. 2-20; Polk, C. 2-18; Bruns,C. 1-43; Sylvester, A. 1-7.

Arizona -- Criner, J. 8-108; Wright, W. 3-47;Roberts, D. 3-43; Tutogi, T. 1-14; Antolin, K. 1-11; Cobb, T. 1-11; Grigsby, N. 1-(-1).

InterceptionsWASH -- None.

Arizona -- None.

FumblesWASH -- Locker, J. 1-1.

Arizona -- Beirne, B. 1-0; Tutogi, T. 1-1.

Sacks (UA-A)WASH -- Aiyewa, V. 1-0; Foster, M.

Arizona -- Reed, D. 1-0; Elmore, R. 1-0;Tuihalamaka, S. 1-0; Vassallo, P. 1-0.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPWASH 1 11:33 Kearse, J. 26-yard pass from Locker (Folk kick) 4 62 1:34ARIZ 1 9:20 Roberts, D. 17-yard pass from Scott (Zendejas kick) 7 62 2:05ARIZ 1 4:42 Zendejas, A. 29-yard field goal 8 56 3:10ARIZ 2 10:48 Antolin, K. 1-yard run (Zendejas kick) 10 92 4:55WASH 2 7:55 Polk, C. 7-yard run (Folk kick) 7 55 2:46ARIZ 2 7:37 Antolin, K. 78-yard run (Zendejas kick blocked) 1 78 0:12ARIZ 2 1:54 Grigsby, N. 4-yard run (Zendejas kick) 8 54 3:38ARIZ 3 10:09 Grigsby, N. 4-yard run (Zendejas kick) 6 26 3:29ARIZ 4 11:09 Criner, J. 21-yard pass from Scott (Zendejas kick) 8 75 4:02

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Nic Grigsby and Keola Antolin ran for two touchdowns apiece, Matt Scott had notrouble replacing Nick Foles and No. 15 Arizona easily handled up-and-down Washington 44-14Saturday night.

Arizona (6-1, 3-1 Pac-10) overcame occasionally poor tackling with a balanced offense and by harass-ing Jake Locker into an ineffective game.

Scott held his own after Foles went down with a knee injury last week against Washington State andlooked like he was the starter all along against the other Evergreen State school. He threw for 233yards and two touchdowns, including a fumble-the-snap, 21-yard heave to Juron Criner in the fourthquarter, and added 65 yards on seven carries.

Washington (3-4, 2-2) continued its season-long, win-one, lose-one pattern, following last week'sthrilling double-overtime victory over then-No. 24 Oregon State with a defensive clunker.

Locker finished 17 of 29 for 183 yards with a touchdown and lost 24 yards on six carries before beingreplaced by Keith Price early in the fourth quarter.

Antolin finished with 114 yards on 14 carries and Criner caught eight passes for 108 yards to giveArizona its best start since opening the 1998 season 6-1.

The Wildcats had hoped to be on better footing than last year's game at Washington.

Arizona lost what's now known as the "Shoe" game in Seattle when Mason Foster returned aninterception 37 yards for the go-ahead touchdown after the ball caromed off the size 14 1/2 cleat ofArizona's Delashaun Dean. The Wildcats disputed the call - Dean said it hit the ground - but werekicking themselves more for being in position to cough up a 12-point lead in the final four minutes.

Arizona made sure it didn't get tripped up by a close call this time by steamrolling Washington'snoodle-strainer defense - 199 points the past five games - for 467 total yards.

The only question mark came early; Taimi Tutogi fumbled on Arizona's opening drive and Lockermarched the Huskies for a quick score, rolling left and throwing across his body for a drop-it-in-there26-yard touchdown to Jermaine Kearse in the corner of the endzone.

After that, all Arizona almost all the time.

Led by Scott, the Wildcats carved up Washington's 98th-ranked defense, piling up 356 total yards ontheir way to a 30-14 halftime lead.

Scott looked a lot like Locker on Arizona's first score, rolling left and throwing across his body for a 17-yard touchdown to David Roberts. He then led the Wildcats to a 29-yard field goal by Alex Zendejasand set up Antolin's first TD, a 1-yard dive left, with a 32-yard rumble on an option.

Locker tried to rally the Huskies by setting up Chris Polk's 7-yard touchdown run, but the defenseparted on the next play, allowing Antolin to burst up the middle for a 78-yard touchdown.

The Wildcats still weren't done.

Grigsby capped the first half with a 4-yard touchdown run and opened the second with another afterRicky Elmore stripped Locker and the Wildcats recovered.

Scott added a put-it-out-of-reach scoring pass early in the fourth quarter, dropping the snap out of theshotgun and firing a TD strike to Criner just before being laid out on a roughing the passer call.

The starter over Foles the first three games of 2009, Scott finished an efficient 18 of 22 and gaveArizona a confidence boost if Foles isn't ready to play next week at UCLA.

Scoring Summary

19 2333-98 43-234192 23333-18-0 22-18-066-290 65-4670-0 0-00-0 3-86-151 3-700-0 0-07-41.6 2-44.01-1 2-19-94 5-2828:46 31:144 of 13 7 of 121 of 2 0 of 01-1 5-52-8 4-33

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PAGE 36 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Game 8: Arizona 29, UCLA 21Oct. 30, 2010 | Pasadena, Calif. (Rose Bowl) |Attendance: 53,408

Arizona 29, UCLA 21Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

Arizona 7 12 7 3 29UCLA 7 0 7 7 21

Team Statistics Arizona UCLA

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingARIZ-- Antolin, K. 23-111; Scott, M. 12-71;Grigsby, N. 5-31; Fischer, J. 1-29; Nwoko, G. 9-25;Team 2-(-3).

UCLA -- Franklin, J. 13-44; Coleman, D. 9-42;Barr, A. 1-9; Smith, J. 1-(-9); Brehaut, R. 4-(-15).PassingARIZ -- Scott, M. 24-36-1-319.

UCLA -- Brehaut, R. 13-27-1-228.

ReceivingARIZ-- Criner, J. 8-127; Roberts, D. 6-90;Wright, W. 4-32; Simmons, A.J. 1-16; Miller, T.1-16; Nwoko, G. 1-14; Grigsby, N. 1-11; Cobb,T. 1-8; Antolin, K. 1-.5.

UCLA -- Carroll, R. 3-90; Smith, J. 3-74; Embree,T. 3-30; Johnson, J. 2-21; Harkey, C. 1-7; Barr, A.1-6.

InterceptionsARIZ-- Golden, R. 1-0.

UCLA -- Hester, A. 1-0.

FumblesARIZ-- Scott, M. 1-1.

UCLA -- Embree, T. 1-0; Brehaut, R. 1-1.

Sacks (UA-A)ARIZ -- Elmore, R. 1-0; Reed, B. 1-0.

UCLA -- Zumwalt, J. 1-0.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPARIZ 1 11:24 Criner, J. 41-yard pass from Scott (Zendejas kick) 8 80 3:36UCLA 1 7:24 Coleman, D. 11-yard run (Forbath kick) 8 45 3:52ARIZ 2 14:18 Antolin, K. 2-yard run (Zendejas kick failed) 11 85 5:05ARIZ 2 8:21 Zendejas, A. 42-yard field goal 11 44 4:58ARIZ 2 0:00 Zendejas, A. 24-yard field goal 12 74 2:25UCLA 3 13:31 Carroll, R. 68-yard pass from Brehaut, R. (Forbath kick) 4 79 1:24ARIZ 3 6:45 Nwoko, G. 1-yard run (Zendejas kick) 13 80 6:46UCLA 4 14:24 Smith, J. 49-yard pass from Brehaut (Forbath kick) 8 86 3:20ARIZ 4 1:18 Zendejas, A. 30-yard field goal 4 6 0:59

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Backup Matt Scott had another big game, passing for a career-high 319 yards,and No. 15 Arizona held off UCLA 29-21 on Saturday to remain in contention for its first Pac-10championship.

Scott was 24 of 36 with one interception and one touchdown. The junior also carried 12 times for 71yards.

Scott threw for 233 yards and ran for another 65 in a 44-14 victory over Washington last weekend fillingin for Nick Foles, who sprained his right knee two weeks ago. Foles might be healthy enough to returnnext Saturday when the Wildcats play at No. 13 Stanford.

Keola Antolin rushed for 111 yards on 23 carries for the Wildcats (7-1, 4-1 Pac-10), off to their best startsince winning seven of their first eight games en route to a 12-1 finish in 1998.

Richard Brehaut passed for a career-best 228 yards and two touchdowns for the Bruins (3-5, 1-4), wholost their third straight game but performed much better than in their last two, when they wereoutscored 95-20 at California and Oregon.

UCLA entered ranked 117th among the 120 FBS schools in yards passing with an average of just 104.6per game.

The Wildcats rolled up a season-high 583 yards and 32 first downs and held the Bruins to 299 yards and15 first downs, but didn't put the game away until the final minute.

UCLA played without starting quarterback Kevin Prince, who underwent season-ending knee surgeryOct. 23, and standout linebacker Patrick Larimore, sidelined with an injured left shoulder. The Bruinswere also without wide receiver Ricky Marvray and offensive tackle Sean Sheller, a pair of startersserving one-game suspensions for violating team rules.

Completely outplayed in the first half, UCLA trimmed Arizona's lead to 19-14 on the fourth play of thethird quarter on a 68-yard completion from Brehaut to Randall Carroll - the Bruins' longest touchdownpass since 2007.

But the Wildcats responded with an 80-yard drive capped by Greg Nwoko's 1-yard run.

Neither team threatened again until Brehaut's 49-yard pass to Josh Smith on a flea flicker with 14:24remaining capped an 86-yard drive and moved UCLA within five points. There wasn't a defender within10 yards of Smith when he made the reception and trotted into the end zone as the Rose Bowl crowdof 53,408 roared its approval.

UCLA reached the Arizona 34 with 9 1/2 minutes to play, but Smith lost 9 yards on a flanker reverse andthe Bruins were forced to punt. The Bruins got the ball with 3:14 remaining at their 20 after a punt, butturned the ball over on downs, putting the Wildcats in position for Alex Zendejas' 30-yard field goalwith 1:18 left.

The Bruins reached their 46 before Brehaut fumbled while being sacked and Slone Tuihalamakarecovered.

Scoring Summary

32 1552-264 28-71319 22824-36-1 13-27-188-583 55-2990-0 0-01-11 2-261-24 6-1181-0 0-04-38.5 6-44.21-1 2-16-49 5-4437:55 22:058 of 16 4 of 112 of 2 0 of 14-5 1-12-26 1-6

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PAGE 37OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS

Game 9: Stanford 42, Arizona 17No.v 6, 2010 | Stanford, Calif. (Stanford Stadium) |Attendance: 43,506

Stanford 42, Arizona 17Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

Arizona 0 3 7 7 17Stanford 7 14 14 7 42

Team Statistics Arizona Stanford

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingARIZ-- Antolin, K. 16-87; Criner, J. 3-50; Nwoko,G. 8-49; Grigsby, N. 1-2; Tutogi, T. 1-(-1);Foles, N. 2-)-6)

STAN -- Taylor, S. 19-82; Wilkerson, A. 10-81;Luck, A. 3-25; Gaffney, T. 6-15; Owusu, C. 1-12;Stewart, H. 1-8; Marecic, O. 1-2.

PassingARIZ -- Foles, N. 28-48-1.

STAN -- Luck, A. 23-32-0.

ReceivingARIZ-- Criner, J. 9-98; Robert, D. 7-59; Douglas,D. 4-23; Miller, T. 3-26; Antolin, K.2-22; Cobb, T.1-9; Tutogi, T. 1-7; Baucus, J. 1-4.

STAN -- Owusu, C. 9-165; Fleenor, C. 4-23;Baldwin, D. 3-50; Whalen, R. 2-15; Reuland, K. 1-13; Taylor, S. 1-12; Marecic, O. 1-10; Gaffney, T.1-5; Hewitt, R. 1-0.

InterceptionsARIZ-- None.STAN -- Sherman, R. 1-15.

FumblesARIZ-- None.

STAN -- None.

Sacks (UA-A)ARIZ -- None.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPARIZ 1 11:24 Criner, J. 41-yard pass from Scott (Zendejas kick) 8 80 3:36UCLA 1 7:24 Coleman, D. 11-yard run (Forbath kick) 8 45 3:52ARIZ 2 14:18 Antolin, K. 2-yard run (Zendejas kick failed) 11 85 5:05ARIZ 2 8:21 Zendejas, A. 42-yard field goal 11 44 4:58ARIZ 2 0:00 Zendejas, A. 24-yard field goal 12 74 2:25UCLA 3 13:31 Carroll, R. 68-yard pass from Brehaut, R. (Forbath kick) 4 79 1:24ARIZ 3 6:45 Nwoko, G. 1-yard run (Zendejas kick) 13 80 6:46UCLA 4 14:24 Smith, J. 49-yard pass from Brehaut (Forbath kick) 8 86 3:20ARIZ 4 1:18 Zendejas, A. 30-yard field goal 4 6 0:59

STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - Andrew Luck threw for 293 yards and two touchdowns, leading No. 10Stanford to a 42-17 victory in its highly anticipated showdown with 13th-ranked Arizona on Saturdaynight.

Stepfan Taylor added four short touchdown runs for the Cardinal (8-1, 5-1 Pac-10), who won easily inthe first meeting with Arizona (7-2, 4-2) when both teams were ranked.

Luck lead the offense, which put up six touchdowns and 516 yards against the stingiest defense in thePac-10. Chris Owusu was especially dangerous with nine catches for 165 yards and a score, as well as akey 12-yard run. Stanford also allowed no sacks to a team that led the league with 27 coming into thegame.

The defense also did a good job against the Wildcats, who didn't get the offense moving until it wasfar too late despite the return of injured quarterback Nick Foles.

Foles threw for 248 yards, one touchdown and one interception, with his biggest success comingwhen the Wildcats went to the no-huddle offense with a big deficit in the second half. Keola Antolinran for 86 yards and another score on a night starting running back Nic Grigsby played sparinglybecause of a sprained right ankle.

The Cardinal were still smarting over last year's loss at Arizona, when they allowed two big fourth-quarter touchdown runs in a 43-38 shootout. They built a 21-3 halftime lead in the rematch and didn'tlet up. Stanford scored on its opening drive of the second half on a 5-yard shovel pass from Luck toTyler Gaffney to make it 28-3.

Stanford then answered Arizona's first touchdown of the game - a 7-yard pass from Foles to JuronCriner - with a 78-yard drive capped by Taylor's third TD run to make it 35-10 and give the Cardinaltheir ninth straight 30-point game. Taylor added his fourth TD with 3:23 to go to make it 42-17.

Stanford got off to a strong start against an Arizona defense that has had plenty of success so far thisseason but hadn't faced the most dangerous offenses in the conference from Stanford, Oregon andUSC.

On the opening drive of the game, Owusu got behind the Wildcats' secondary for a 45-yard touch-down pass from Luck to make it 7-0.

Taylor added a pair of TD runs in the second quarter to build the lead to 21-3 at the break. The firstcapped an 89-yard drive that featured an 18-yard pass from Luck to Owusu on third-and-15. Thesecond came after Owusu gained 12 yards on a perfectly executed option play by Luck.

The Wildcats blew a couple of good scoring opportunities. They drove to the 20 on their opening drivebut Foles was called for intentional grounding at the 34 and Arizona punted. A.J. Simmons dropped apotential first-down catch at the 10, stalling another drive that led to a field goal by Alex Zendejas.

Foles then drove Arizona to the 27 late in the half before he was intercepted by Richard Sherman.

Scoring Summary

25 2631-180 45-217248 29328-48-1 23-32-079-428 77-5100-0 0-00-0 1-275-120 4-840-0 1-155-45.8 4-34.50-0 0-08-55 7-5322:57 37:037 of 16 9 of 141 of 3 0 of 03-5 5-50-0 2-6

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PAGE 38 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Game 10: USC 24, Arizona 21Nov. 13, 2010 | Tucson, Ariz. (Arizona Stadium) |Attendance: 54,722

USC 24, Arizona 21Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

USC 14 7 3 0 24Arizona 0 14 0 7 21

Team Statistics USC Arizona

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingUSC-- Tyler, M. 31-160; Havili, S. 3-21; BAxter, D.3-13; Barkley, M. 5-10; Woods, R. 1-5; Team 3-(-4).

ARIZ -- Antolin, K. 10-38; Miller, T. 2-13; Nwoko,G. 3-12; Criner, J. 1-7; Foles, N. 2-(-19).

PassingUSC -- Barkley, M. 21-35-1-170;Mustain, M. 1-1-0-7.

ARIZ -- Foles, N. 32-48-0-353.

ReceivingUSC-- Woods, R. 8-41; Ellison, R. 3-32; Johnson,R. 2-25; Baxter, D. 2-22; Ausberry, D. 2-14;Jordan, C. 2-10; Tyler, M. 1-16; Havili, S. 1-13;Carswell, B. 1-4.

ARIZ -- Miller, T. 7-116; Criner, J. 6-98; Douglas,D. 6-44; Cobb, T. 4-50; Morrison, R. 4-38;Antolin, K. 4-(-4); Simmons, A.J. 1-11.

InterceptionsUSC-- None.

ARIZ -- Hall, A. 1-0.

FumblesUSC-- None.

ARIZ -- Foles, N. 1-1; Cobb, T. 1-0; Douglas, D. 1-1.

Sacks (UA-A)USC -- Casey, J. 1-0; Wright, S. 1-0.

ARIZ -- None.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPUSC 1 4:13 Barkley, M. 1-yard run (Houston kick) 10 80 4:37USC 1 1:34 Ellison, R. 7-yard pass from Barkley (Houston kick) 3 22 0:47ARIZ 2 12:50 Douglas, D. 5-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 9 80 3:44USC 2 3:43 Tyler, M. 3-yard run (Houston kick) 17 66 8:57ARIZ 2 1:24 Cobb, T. 31-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 9 80 2:14USC 3 3:35 Houston, J. 30-yard field goal 15 72 6:48ARIZ 4 1:01 Douglas, D. 11-yard pass from Foles, N. (Zendejas kick) 9 85 1:09

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Marc Tyler barely practiced last week because of an injured ankle, then put on aworkhorse performance befitting the great Southern California tailbacks of years gone by.

Tyler, who said his workouts last week were limited to "a little bit on Thursday," ran for 160 yards on 31carries, both career highs, and Southern California climbed into a tie with Arizona for third in the Pac-10with a 24-21 victory over the 18th-ranked Wildcats on Saturday night.

The junior, son of former UCLA great Wendell Tyler, has three career 100-yard rushing games, all thisseason. He said he's finally learned to go "north and south" rather than trying to be fancy.He said sitting out the practices helped him handle so many carries.

Matt Barkley passed for one touchdown and sneaked for another as the Trojans (7-3, 4-3 Pac-10)jumped ahead 14-0 and never relinquished the lead.

The Wildcats' Nick Foles threw for 353 yards and three touchdowns, the last an 11-yarder to DavidDouglas with 1:01 to play. But USC recovered the subsequent onside kick to preserve the victory.Arizona (7-3, 4-3) lost its second in a row and next plays at No. 1 Oregon. The Wildcats were blown outat Stanford 42-17 last weekend.

USC, which won its sixth straight in Tucson, rushed for 206 yards and had the ball almost 15 minuteslonger than the Wildcats did. Foles completed 32 of 48 with no interceptions in his second start aftermissing two games with a knee injury. Barkley was 21 of 35 for 170 yards with one interception.Neither team punted in the first half as USC took a 21-14 lead.

Barkley and Foles each completed 13 of their first 15 passes, but a fumble by the Arizona quarterbackand a missed 34-yard field goal by the Wildcats' Alex Zendejas paved the way for an early 14-0 Trojanslead.

Arizona, which used an Oregon-style, hurry-up offense throughout, went 80 yards in nine plays to cut itto 14-7, Foles throwing five yards to David Douglas for the score.

The Trojans then used up almost nine minutes with a 17-play, 66-yard drive that ended with Tyler's 3-yard touchdown run to put USC ahead 21-7 with 3:43 left in the half.

With the drive stalled at the Arizona 11, the USC field goal team went on the field, but Mitch Mustaintook the snap from center and threw to Jordan Cameron for the first down. Tyler scored two plays lateron a 3-yard run.

Arizona quickly drove for a touchdown before the half ended. Foles threw 31 yards to Travis Cobb for atouchdown to cap another 80-yard scoring drive and slice the lead to 21-14 with 1:24 left.

The Wildcats forced the game's first punt on the opening possession of the second half. With a coupleof big third-down catches by Juron Criner, Arizona drove to the Trojans 19, but Douglas fumbled at the15 and Shareece Wright recovered for USC.

The Trojans used up another 6 1/2 minutes driving to the Arizona 13, where Joe Houston's 30-yard fieldgoal boosted the lead to 24-14 with 3:35 left in the third.

The Wildcats were in a hole in a hurry.

After Zendejas' miss on Arizona's opening possession, Barkley went 5-for-5 on a 10-play, 80-yard drivethat ended with his 1-yard sneak for the score.

Arizona kept the ball for just four plays after the subsequent kickoff when Wright sacked Foles, whofumbled and USC's DaJohn Harris recovered at the Wildcats 22, setting up Barkley's 7-yard TD pass toRhett Ellison to put the Trojans ahead 14-0 with 1:34 still left in the opening quarter.

Scoring Summary

24 2446-205 18-51177 35336-22-1 48-32-082-382 66-4040-0 0-01-11 1-23-64 3-360-0 1-02-42.5 3.36.30-0 3-28-60 6-4037:27 22:337 of 15 11 of 162 of 3 0 of 04-5 2-42-19 0-0

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PAGE 39OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPS2010 GAME RECAPSGame 11: Oregon 48, Arizona 29

Nov. 26, 2010 | Eugene, Ore. (Autzen Stadium) |Attendance: 59,990

Oregon 48, Arizona 29Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 Final

Arizona 14 5 3 7 29Oregon 7 7 20 14 48

Team Statistics Arizona Oregon

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingARIZ-- Grigsby, N. 16-44; Antolin, K. 8-17;Foles, N. 3-(-3).

ORE -- James, L. 28-126; Huff, J. 3-103; Barner, K.15-71; Thomas, D. 6-62; Alston, R. 4-44;TEAM 1-(-17).

PassingARIZ -- Foles, N. 29-54-1-448

ORE -- Thomas, D. 14-24-1-148.

ReceivingARIZ-- Miller, T. 8-96; Douglas, D. 5-81; Roberts,D. 5-64; Grigsby, N. 4-39; Criner, J. 3-109; Cobb, T.2-46; Antolin, K. 1-8; Nwoko, G. 1-5.

ORE -- Paulson, D. 3-48; Davis, D.J. 3-31; James, L.3-20; Maehl, J. 2-27; Huff, J. 2-18; Hoffman, J. 1-4.

InterceptionsARIZ-- Hall, A. 1-22.

ORE -- Boyett, J. 1-0.

FumblesARIZ-- Turner, M. 1-1.

ORE -- Barner, K. 1-1; Harris, C. 1-0.

Sacks (UA-A)ARIZ -- None.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPARIZ 1 4:47 Criner, J. 8-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 16 60 7:42ORE 1 3:12 Paulson, D. 38-yard pass from Thomas (Beard kick) 4 56 1:35ARIZ 1 2:51 Criner, J. 85-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 1 85 0:21ORE 2 14:04 Maehl, J. 6-yard pass from Thomas (Beard kick) 10 53 3:47ARIZ 2 9:56 Team safetyARIZ 2 0:04 Zendejas, A. 29-yard field goal 13 80 5:35ORE 3 13:30 Huff, J. 85-yard run (Thomas pass failed) 2 85 0:19ORE 3 4:44 Thomas, D. 20-yard run(Beard kick) 19 99 6:07ARIZ 3 2:46 Zendejas, A. 41-yard field goal 7 50 1:58ORE 3 0:36 Davis, D.J. 6-yard pass from Thomas (Beard kick) 6 75 2:10ORE 4 12:46 James, L. 13-yard run (Beard kick) 5 35 1:31ORE 4 12:15 James, L. 1-yard run (Beard kick) 2 8 0:21ARIZ 4 10:45 Roberts, D. 32-yard pass from Foles (Zendejas kick) 6 81 1:30

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -Darron Thomas passed for three touchdowns and ran for another and top-rankedOregon earned at least a share of a second consecutive Pac-10 title with a 48-29 victory over No. 20Arizona on Friday night.

LaMichael James shrugged off talk of an injury to run for 126 yards and two scores for the Ducks (11-0,8-0), who trailed 19-14 at halftime but surged in the second half to stay on course for a trip to the BCSnational title game.

The Ducks can lock up an outright conference title and a spot in the national championship game inGlendale, Ariz., next week with a victory at Oregon State.

It was the third straight loss for Arizona (7-4, 4-4), which ultimately couldn't keep up with the Ducks'speedy spread-option.

With temperatures in the mid-40s and periodic rain showers, there were concerns that the Wildcatswould have trouble with their passing game, which had been averaging about 300 yards a game.

But Nick Foles passed for a career-high 448 yards and three touchdowns, including an 85-yard score toJuron Criner.

Thomas completed 14 of 24 passes for 148 yards and an interception. Oregon finished with 537 yardstotal offense, but Arizona kept up with 506 yards.

Oregon was playing catch-up the entire first half and trailed for just the second time this season at thebreak.

But the Ducks bounced back early in the second half with Josh Huff's 85-yard scoring run, the longestplay from scrimmage for the Ducks this season. While the conversion failed, Oregon had a 20-19 lead.

Arizona hurt itself on Oregon's next series, when they were called offside on Rob Beard's missed 42-yard field goal attempt. That gave the Ducks a first down and Thomas followed with a 20-yardtouchdown run to make it 27-19.

The Wildcats cut the lead on Alex Zendejas' 41-yard field goal, but James ran for a pair of scores, onefor 13 yards and another for a yard, to make it 48-22.

James went down late in the first half after he was hit by Arizona safety Adam Hall. While he washelped off the field, he stayed on the sidelines until the break, then earned rousing applause when hereturned from halftime hopping across the field with his helmet on.

The Wildcats struck first, capitalizing on Hall's interception of Thomas, which led to Foles' 8-yardtouchdown pass to Criner.

Oregon answered quickly with Thomas' 38-yard scoring pass to David Paulson, a drive that took just1:35. But the Autzen Stadium crowd was stunned just seconds later when Foles hit Criner with an 85-yard touchdown reception.

Thomas tied it again with a 6-yard pass to Jeff Maehl in the back of the end zone.

Oregon botched a punt snap, sailing it out of the end zone for an Arizona safety, making it 16-14. TheWildcats added a 29-yard field goal to take the lead into halftime. Oregon coach Chip Kelly took a pairof time-outs before the attempt, prompting kicker Alex Zendejas to shake a finger at Oregon's sidelinebefore he made it.

Last season Arizona fans readied to rush the field but Oregon scored with 6 seconds left, sending thegame into overtime. The Ducks went on to win it 44-41 in double OT, spoiling Arizona's chance for itsfirst Rose Bowl bid.

Scoring Summary

28 2727-58 57-389448 14829-54-1 14-24-181-506 81-5370-0 0-00-0 2-(-13)9-91 5-851-22 1-04-37.2 1-30.01-1 2-110-80 4-3129:27 30:3310 of 19 6 of 151 of 2 4 of 52-3 5-60-0 1-7

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PAGE 40 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Game 12: Arizona State 30, Arizona 29Dec. 2, 2010 | Tucson, Ariz. (Arizona Stadium) |Attendance: 56,253

ASU 30, Arizona 29 (2 OT)Statistical Summary

Score by Quarters1 2 3 4 O1 O2 Final

ASU 3 3 0 14 3 7 30Arizona 0 0 14 6 3 6 29

Team Statistics ASU Arizona

First DownsRushes-Yards (Net)Pass Yards (Net)Pass Att-Comp-IntTotal Offense Plays-YardsFumble Returns-YardsPunt Returns-YardsKickoff Returns-YardsInterception Returns-YardsPunts (Number-Avg)Fumbles-LostPenalties-YardsPossession TimeThird Down ConversionsFourth Down ConversionsRed Zone Scores-ChancesSacks By Number-Yards

Individual StatisticsRushingASU-- Tyler, M. 31-160; Havili, S. 3-21; BAxter,D. 3-13; Barkley, M. 5-10; Woods, R. 1-5; Team3-(-4).

ARIZ -- Antolin, K. 25-83; Cobb, T. 1-17; Nwoko,G. 3-11; Scott, M. 3-10; Roberts, D. 1-9;Douglas, D. 1-9; Grigsby, N. 4-7; Criner, J. 1-(-1);Team 1-(-1); Foles, N. 3-(-19)

PassingASU -- Osweiler, B. 22-49-0-267.

ARIZ -- Foles, N. 22-36-0-262; Scott, M. 2-2-0-4

ReceivingASU-- Taylor, K. 6-112; Robinson, G. 4-62;Marshall, C. 4-42; Miles, J. 2-20; Bell, G. 2-12;Willie, M. 2-12; Middlebrooks, K. 2-7.

ARIZ -- Criner, J. 6-95; Miller, T. 5-74; Roberts, D.4-39; Douglas, D. 4-26; Morrison, R. 2-14; Cobb,T. 1-8; Grigsby, N. 1-6; Simmons, A.J. 1-4.

InterceptionsASU-- None.

ARIZ -- None.

FumblesASU-- Marshall, C. 1-0.

ARIZ -- Nwoko, G. 1-1.

Sacks (UA-A)ASU -- Brooks, J. 1-0; Onyeali, J. 1-0.

ARIZ -- Elmore, R. 3-0; Washington, J. 2-0; Reed,B. 1-0.

Team Qtr Time Scoring Play Plays Yards TOPASU 1 2:13 Weber, T. 52-yard field goal 7 15 1:39ASU 2 0:03 Weber, T. 36-yard field goal 15 72 5:01ARIZ 3 9:32 Criner, J. 28-yard pass from Foles, N. (Zendejas kick) 8 91 3:11ARIZ 3 2:01 Criner, J. 52-yard pass from Foles, N. (Zendejas kick) 3 63 1:09ASU 4 14:21 Weber, T. 38-yard field goal 7 62 2:35ASU 4 7:09 Willie, M. 3-yard pass from Osweiler (2-pt pass good) 12 51 5:29ASU 4 2:59 Weber, T. 40-yard field goal 5 7 2:52ARIZ 4 0:27 Douglas, D. 5-yard pass from Foles, N. (kick blocked) 10 57 2:24ARIZ OT1 Zendejas, A. 19-yard field goal 10 23ASU OT1 Weber, T. 40-yard field goal 4 2ASU OT2 Marshall, C. 2-yard run (Weber kick) 4 25ARIZ OT2 Douglas, D. 9-yard run (Zendejas kick blocked) 5 25

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Arizona State blocked extra point attempts at the end of regulation and the secondovertime, enhancing its bowl chances with an improbable 30-29 win over rival Arizona on Thursdaynight.

Arizona State (6-6, 4-5 Pac-10) rallied from an 11-point deficit in the fourth quarter and broke throughfor a blocked extra point with 27 seconds left in regulation to keep the score tied at 20-all.

Cameron Marshall scored on a 2-yard run in the second overtime and David Douglas of Arizona (7-5, 4-5) answered with a 9-yard touchdown run, but James Brooks through to block Alex Zendejas' extrapoint to send Arizona to its fourth straight defeat.

Thomas Weber kicked five field goals for Arizona State, which now must wait to see if the NCAA clearsits bowl waiver after one of the wildest finishes in this heated rivalry.Arizona had BCS hopes after opening the season 7-1. A blowout loss to Stanford ended that goal andtwo more losses left the Wildcats reeling and on course for a smaller bowl.

The Sun Devils found themselves in a tough spot after a series of just-miss losses and a win over an FCSteam that didn't count toward a bowl, needing to beat their rivals and get a waiver from the NCAA toget into a bowl.

Both teams' fate came down to a rivalry game, which can have a funny affect on teams, leading to flukeplays and plenty of emotions.

Last year's game had both.

Arizona State's Kyle Williams made a spectacular tying TD catch, muffed a punt about a minute laterand Arizona won the defensive battle 20-17 on Max Zendejas' 32-yard field goal. The teams celebratedtheir dislike afterward with a mini melee at midfield.

The 84th version of the Duel in the Desert was more a Dud in the Desert early on.

The Pac-10's top two passing teams, with quarterbacks who threw for a combined 828 yards last week,seemed like they were playing underwater, trading go-nowhere runs, dropped interceptions and badlyoverthrown passes throughout an ugly first half.

Weber provided the only points, hitting from 52 and 36 yards to put the Sun Devils up 6-0.

Arizona, after 88 yards and eight punts in the first half, finally came to life in the second.

Back in rhythm after a 49-yard first half, Nick Foles hit Terrence Miller on a pump-faking 38-yard passdown the middle, then hooked up with Juron Criner on the next play, pinpointing a pass in the cornerof the end zone for a 28-yard touchdown.

Criner made it 14-6 late in the third quarter, giving Arizona State cornerback LeQuan Lewis a slightbump on an up-for-grabs ball to score a 52-yard touchdown.

The Sun Devils decided to fight back after that.

Weber hit a 38-yard field goal to open the fourth quarter, then Brock Osweiler led Arizona State backdown the field for a 3-yard touchdown pass to Mike Willie, adding a 2-point conversion that put theSun Devils up 17-14.

Arizona State's defense held on a fourth down near Arizona's 30 on the next drive and Weber nailed a40-yard field goal to make it 20-14 with 3 minutes left.

Foles answered by hitting Douglas on 5-yard touchdown pass, but Arizona State blocked the PAT, addinganother wild chapter to a rivalry already filled with them.

Scoring Summary

19 1943-122 43-125267 26649-22-0 38-24-092-389 81-3910-0 0-01-5 4-263-54 5-1230-0 0-09-36.6 9-33.31-0 1-18-55 6-3433:00 27:0012 of 26 5 of 170 of 1 1 of 25-5 3-32-20 6-24

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PAGE 41OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

2010 2010 2010 2010 2010 ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOTBTBTBTBTBALL STALL STALL STALL STALL STAAAAATSTSTSTSTS

2010 Arizona FootballArizona Combined Team Statistics (Dec 2, 2010)

All games

Date Opponent Score Att.Sep. 3, 2010 at Toledo W 41-2 25907Sep 11, 2010 THE CITADEL W 52-6 54814Sep 18, 2010 #9 IOWA W 34-27 57864

* Sep 25, 2010 CALIFORNIA W 10-9 51906* Oct 9, 2010 OREGON STATE L 27-29 56054* Oct 15, 2010 at Washington State W 24-7 23955* Oct 23, 2010 WASHINGTON W 44-14 56244* Oct 30, 2010 at UCLA W 29-21 53408* Nov 06, 2010 at #10 Stanford L 17-42 43506* Nov 13, 2010 USC L 21-24 54722* Nov 26, 2010 at Oregon L 29-48 59990* Dec 02, 2010 ARIZONA STATE L 29-30 56253

Rushing gp att gain loss net avg td lg avg/gAntolin, K. 12 142 694 27 667 4.7 7 78 55.6Grigsby, N. 11 102 505 31 474 4.6 8 62 43.1Nwoko, G. 12 46 241 7 234 5.1 3 32 19.5Scott, M. 7 35 188 53 135 3.9 0 32 19.3Criner, J. 12 7 66 1 65 9.3 0 21 5.4Cobb, T. 11 6 44 4 40 6.7 0 17 3.6Wright, W. 8 2 31 0 31 15.5 0 18 3.9Fischer, J. 12 1 29 0 29 29.0 0 29 2.4Jenkins, D. 9 8 26 0 26 3.2 0 5 2.9Butler, K. 1 3 14 0 14 4.7 0 7 14.0Miller, T. 12 2 14 1 13 6.5 0 14 1.1Douglas, D. 12 2 10 0 10 5.0 1 9 0.8Roberts, D. 11 1 9 0 9 9.0 0 9 0.8Morrison, R. 9 1 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0TM 1 1 0 1 -1 -1.0 0 0 -1.0Tutogi, T. 11 1 0 1 -1 -1.0 0 0 -0.1Beirne, B. 3 1 0 4 -4 -4.0 0 0 -1.3Team 7 10 0 13 -13 -1.3 0 0 -1.9Foles, N. 10 26 32 138 -106 -4.1 1 24 -10.6Total 12 397 1903 281 1622 4.1 20 78 135.2Opponents 12 461 2020 380 1640 3.6 15 85 136.7

Passing gp effic comp-att-int pct yds td lg avg/gFoles, N. 10 145.54 254-376-7 67.6 2911 19 85 291.1Scott, M. 7 150.95 66-93-2 71.0 776 4 41 110.9Beirne, B. 3 221.44 5-5-0 100.0 33 1 11 11.0Total 12 147.40 325-474-9 68.6 3720 24 85 310.0Opponents 12 121.25 208-372-9 55.9 2479 16 83 206.6

Receiving gp no. yds avg td lg avg/gCriner, J. 12 73 1186 16.2 10 85 98.8Douglas, D. 12 46 424 9.2 5 38 35.3Roberts, D. 11 42 468 11.1 2 38 42.5Antolin, K. 12 28 204 7.3 2 29 17.0Miller, T. 12 27 340 12.6 0 38 28.3Wright, W. 8 25 294 11.8 2 27 36.8Cobb, T. 11 25 275 11.0 1 31 25.0Grigsby, N. 11 21 163 7.8 1 41 14.8Morrison, R. 9 13 122 9.4 0 17 13.6Simmons, A.J. 12 8 92 11.5 0 31 7.7Tutogi, T. 11 5 63 12.6 0 25 5.7Crump, G. 10 4 39 9.8 0 17 3.9Nwoko, G. 12 4 28 7.0 0 14 2.3Baucus, J. 12 4 22 5.5 1 8 1.8Total 12 325 3720 11.4 24 85 310.0Opponents 12 208 2479 11.9 16 83 206.6

Field Goals fg pct. 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 lg blkZendejas, A. 13-16 81.2 1-1 4-4 2-4 6-7 0-0 47 1

PATScoring td fg kick rush rcv pass dxp saf ptsZendejas, A. - 13-16 40-45 - - - - - 79Criner, J. 10 - - - - - - - 60Grigsby, N. 9 - - - - - - - 54Antolin, K. 9 - - - - - - - 54Douglas, D. 6 - - - - - - - 36Nwoko, G. 3 - - - - - - - 18Cobb, T. 2 - - - - - - - 12Roberts, D. 2 - - - - - - - 12Wright, W. 2 - - - - - - - 12Baucus, J. 1 - - - - - - - 6Wade, T. 1 - - - - - - - 6Foles, N. 1 - - - - - - - 6Team 1 2

Record: Overall Home Away NeutralAll games 7-5 4-3 3-2 0-0Conference 4-5 2-3 2-2 0-0Non-Conference 3-0 2-0 1-0 0-0

Team Statistics ARIZ OPPFIRST DOWNS 283 225 R u s h i n g 88 97 P a s s i n g 176 111 P e n a l t y 19 17RUSHING YARDAGE 1622 1640 Rushing Attempts 397 461 Average Per Rush 4.1 3.6 Average Per Game 135.2 136.7 TDs Rushing 20 15PASSING YARDAGE 3720 2479 C o m p - A t t - I n t 325-474-9 208-372-9 Average Per Pass 7.8 6.7 Average Per Catch 11.4 11.9 Average Per Game 310.0 206.6 TDs Passing 24 16TOTAL OFFENSE 5342 4119 Average Per Play 6.1 4.9 Average Per Game 445.2 343.2KICK RETURNS: #-Yards 42-923 54-1104PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards 20-124 20-131INT RETURNS: #-Yards 9-130 9-35FUMBLES-LOST 15-9 17-9PENALTIES-Yards 84-617 75-596PUNTS-AVG 52-39.3 66-40.8TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 3 0 : 0 9 3 1 : 0 63RD-DOWN Conversions 85/173 77/1834TH-DOWN Conversions 7/14 8/17

Interceptions no. yds avg td lgRichardson, S. 2 0 0.0 0 0Perkins, J. 2 22 11.0 0 18Hall, A. 2 22 11.0 0 22Golden, R. 1 0 0.0 0 0Wade, T. 1 85 85.0 1 85Earls, D. 1 1 1.0 0 1

Punting no. yds avg lg tb fc i20 50+ blkCrier, K. 46 1860 40.4 62 6 10 10 6 0Zendejas, A. 5 148 29.6 43 1 0 2 0 0Earls, D. 1 34 34.0 34 0 0 0 0 0

Punt Returns no. yds avg td lgWright, W. 14 85 6.1 0 35Douglas, D. 5 28 5.6 0 11Roberts, D. 1 11 11.0 0 11Total 20 124 6.2 0 35Opponents 20 131 6.6 0 27

Kick Returns no. yds avg td lgCobb, T. 29 708 24.4 1 100Turner, Mike 7 89 12.7 0 16Wright, W. 3 86 28.7 0 34Jenkins, D. 2 23 11.5 0 22Nwoko, G. 1 17 17.0 0 17Total 42 923 22.0 1 100Opponents 54 1104 20.4 0 45

All Purpose g rush rcv pr kr ir total avg/gCriner, J. 12 65 1186 0 0 0 1251 104.2Cobb, T. 11 40 275 0 708 0 1023 93.0Antolin, K. 12 667 204 0 0 0 871 72.6Total 12 1622 3720 124 923 130 6519 543.2Opponents 12 1640 2479 131 1104 35 5389 449.1

Total Offense g plays rush pass total avg/gFoles, N. 10 402 -106 2911 2805 280.5Scott, M. 7 128 135 776 911 130.1Antolin, K. 12 142 667 0 667 55.6Total 12 871 1622 3720 5342 445.2Opponents 12 833 1640 2479 4119 343.2

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PAGE 42 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Overall Team Statistics (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

Team Statistics ARIZ OPPSCORING 357 259 Points Per Game 29.8 21.6FIRST DOWNS 283 225 R u s h i n g 88 97 P a s s i n g 176 111 P e n a l t y 19 17RUSHING YARDAGE 1622 1640 Yards gained rushing 1903 2020 Yards lost rushing 281 380 Rushing Attempts 397 461 Average Per Rush 4.1 3.6 Average Per Game 135.2 136.7 TDs Rushing 20 15PASSING YARDAGE 3720 2479 C o m p - A t t - I n t 325-474-9 208-372-9 Average Per Pass 7.8 6.7 Average Per Catch 11.4 11.9 Average Per Game 310.0 206.6 TDs Passing 24 16TOTAL OFFENSE 5342 4119 Total Plays 871 833 Average Per Play 6.1 4.9 Average Per Game 445.2 343.2KICK RETURNS: #-Yards 42-923 54-1104PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards 20-124 20-131INT RETURNS: #-Yards 9-130 9-35KICK RETURN AVERAGE 22.0 20.4PUNT RETURN AVERAGE 6.2 6.6INT RETURN AVERAGE 14.4 3.9FUMBLES-LOST 15-9 17-9PENALTIES-Yards 84-617 75-596 Average Per Game 51.4 49.7PUNTS-Yards 52-2042 66-2690 Average Per Punt 39.3 40.8 Net punt average 34.1 36.5TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 3 0 : 0 9 3 1 : 0 63RD-DOWN Conversions 85/173 77/183 3rd-Down Pct 49% 42%4TH-DOWN Conversions 7/14 8/17 4th-Down Pct 50% 47%SACKS BY-Yards 33-221 27-191MISC YARDS -3 0TOUCHDOWNS SCORED 46 32FIELD GOALS-ATTEMPTS 13-16 12-15ON-SIDE KICKS 0-2 1-1RED-ZONE SCORES (38-51) 75% (29-35) 83%RED-ZONE TOUCHDOWNS (29-51) 57% (21-35) 60%PAT-ATTEMPTS (40-45) 89% (27-30) 90%ATTENDANCE 387857 206766 Games/Avg Per Game 7/55408 5/41353 Neutral Site Games 0/0

Score by Quarters 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT TotalArizona 73 105 89 81 9 357Opponents 55 60 67 67 10 259

Page 44: Table of Contents - SIDEARM Sports · 2016-05-20 · OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA PAGE 1 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL Date Opponent Time/Result Sept. 3 @ Toledo (ESPN) W, 41-2 Sept. 11 The

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2010 2010 2010 2010 2010 ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOTBTBTBTBTBALL STALL STALL STALL STALL STAAAAATSTSTSTSTS

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Overall Individual Statistics (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

Rushing gp-gs att gain loss net avg td lg avg/g

Antolin, K. 12-7 142 694 27 667 4.7 7 78 55.6

Grigsby, N. 11-5 102 505 31 474 4.6 8 62 43.1

Nwoko, G. 12-1 46 241 7 234 5.1 3 32 19.5

Scott, M. 7 - 2 35 188 53 135 3.9 0 32 19.3

Criner, J. 12-11 7 66 1 65 9.3 0 21 5.4

Cobb, T. 11-1 6 44 4 40 6.7 0 17 3.6

Wright, W. 8 - 2 2 31 0 31 15.5 0 18 3.9

Fischer, J. 12-7 1 29 0 29 29.0 0 29 2.4

Jenkins, D. 9 - 0 8 26 0 26 3.2 0 5 2.9

Butler, K. 1 - 0 3 14 0 14 4.7 0 7 14.0

Miller, T. 12-3 2 14 1 13 6.5 0 14 1.1

Douglas, D. 12-9 2 10 0 10 5.0 1 9 0.8

Roberts, D. 11-4 1 9 0 9 9.0 0 9 0.8

Morrison, R. 9 - 1 1 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0

Tutogi, T. 11-5 1 0 1 -1 -1.0 0 0 -0.1

Beirne, B. 3 - 0 1 0 4 -4 -4.0 0 0 -1.3

Team 8 - 0 11 0 14 -14 -1.3 0 0 -1.8

Foles, N. 10-10 26 32 138 -106 -4.1 1 24 -10.6

Total 12 397 1903 281 1622 4.1 20 78 135.2

Opponents 12 461 2020 380 1640 3.6 15 85 136.7

Passing gp-gs effic comp-att-int pct yds td lg avg/g

Foles, N. 10-10 145.54 254-376-7 67.6 2911 19 85 291.1

Scott, M. 7 - 2 150.95 66-93-2 71.0 776 4 41 110.9

Beirne, B. 3 - 0 221.44 5-5-0 100.0 33 1 11 11.0

Total 12 147.40 325-474-9 68.6 3720 24 85 310.0

Opponents 12 121.25 208-372-9 55.9 2479 16 83 206.6

Receiving gp-gs no. yds avg td lg avg/g

Criner, J. 12-11 73 1186 16.2 10 85 98.8

Douglas, D. 12-9 46 424 9.2 5 38 35.3

Roberts, D. 11-4 42 468 11.1 2 38 42.5

Antolin, K. 12-7 28 204 7.3 2 29 17.0

Miller, T. 12-3 27 340 12.6 0 38 28.3

Wright, W. 8 - 2 25 294 11.8 2 27 36.8

Cobb, T. 11-1 25 275 11.0 1 31 25.0

Grigsby, N. 11-5 21 163 7.8 1 41 14.8

Morrison, R. 9 - 1 13 122 9.4 0 17 13.6

Simmons, A.J. 12-8 8 92 11.5 0 31 7.7

Tutogi, T. 11-5 5 63 12.6 0 25 5.7

Crump, G. 10-0 4 39 9.8 0 17 3.9

Nwoko, G. 12-1 4 28 7.0 0 14 2.3

Baucus, J. 12-3 4 22 5.5 1 8 1.8

Total 12 325 3720 11.4 24 85 310.0

Opponents 12 208 2479 11.9 16 83 206.6

Punt Returns no. yds avg td lg

Wright, W. 14 85 6.1 0 35

Douglas, D. 5 28 5.6 0 11

Roberts, D. 1 11 11.0 0 11

Total 20 124 6.2 0 35

Opponents 20 131 6.6 0 27

Interceptions no. yds avg td lg

Hall, A. 2 22 11.0 0 22

Richardson, S. 2 0 0.0 0 0

Perkins, J. 2 22 11.0 0 18

Wade, T. 1 85 85.0 1 85

Golden, R. 1 0 0.0 0 0

Earls, D. 1 1 1.0 0 1

Total 9 130 14.4 1 85

Opponents 9 35 3.9 1 20

Kick Returns no. yds avg td lg

Cobb, T. 29 708 24.4 1 100

Turner, Mike 7 89 12.7 0 16

Wright, W. 3 86 28.7 0 34

Jenkins, D. 2 23 11.5 0 22

Nwoko, G. 1 17 17.0 0 17

Total 42 923 22.0 1 100

Opponents 54 1104 20.4 0 45

Fumble Returns no. yds avg td lg

Total 0 0 0.0 0 0

Opponents 0 0 0.0 0 0

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PAGE 44 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Overall Individual Statistics (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

PAT

Scoring td fg kick rush rcv pass dxp saf pts

Zendejas, A. - 13-16 40-45 - - - - - 79

Criner, J. 10 - - - - - - - 60

Grigsby, N. 9 - - - - - - - 54

Antolin, K. 9 - - - - - - - 54

Douglas, D. 6 - - - - - - - 36

Nwoko, G. 3 - - - - - - - 18

Roberts, D. 2 - - - - - - - 12

Wright, W. 2 - - - - - - - 12

Cobb, T. 2 - - - - - - - 12

Baucus, J. 1 - - - - - - - 6

Wade, T. 1 - - - - - - - 6

Foles, N. 1 - - - - - - - 6

Team - - - - - - - 1 2

Crier, K. - - - 0-1 - - - - 0

Total 46 13-16 40-45 0-1 - - - 1 357

Opponents 32 12-15 27-30 - 1 1-2 - 1 259

Total Offense g plays rush pass total avg/g

Foles, N. 10 402 -106 2911 2805 280.5

Scott, M. 7 128 135 776 911 130.1

Antolin, K. 12 142 667 0 667 55.6

Grigsby, N. 11 102 474 0 474 43.1

Nwoko, G. 12 46 234 0 234 19.5

Criner, J. 12 7 65 0 65 5.4

Cobb, T. 11 6 40 0 40 3.6

Wright, W. 8 2 31 0 31 3.9

Beirne, B. 3 6 -4 33 29 9.7

Fischer, J. 12 1 29 0 29 2.4

Jenkins, D. 9 8 26 0 26 2.9

Butler, K. 1 3 14 0 14 14.0

Miller, T. 12 2 13 0 13 1.1

Douglas, D. 12 2 10 0 10 0.8

Roberts, D. 11 1 9 0 9 0.8

Tutogi, T. 11 1 -1 0 -1 -0.1

Team 8 11 -14 0 -14 -1.8

Total 12 871 1622 3720 5342 445.2

Opponents 12 833 1640 2479 4119 343.2

Field Goals fg pct. 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 lg blk

Zendejas, A. 13-16 81.2 1-1 4-4 2-4 6-7 0-0 47 1

FG Sequence Arizona Opponents

Toledo - -

The Citadel (41) (39),(23)

Iowa (22),(47) -

California (46),48 (25),(40),33,(23),40

Oregon State 37 (23)

Washington State (40) 41

Washington (29) -

UCLA (42),(24),(30) -

Stanford (33) -

USC 34 (30)

Oregon (29),(41) -

Arizona State (19) (52),(36),(38),(40),(40)

Numbers in (parentheses) indicate field goal was made.

Punting no. yds avg lg tb fc i20 50+ blk

Crier, K. 46 1860 40.4 62 6 10 10 6 0

Zendejas, A. 5 148 29.6 43 1 0 2 0 0

Earls, D. 1 34 34.0 34 0 0 0 0 0

Total 52 2042 39.3 62 7 10 12 6 0

Opponents 66 2690 40.8 64 8 16 27 14 0

Kickoffs no. yds avg tb ob retn net ydln

Bonano, J. 66 4168 63.2 12 1

Crier, K. 1 62 62.0 0 0

Total 67 4230 63.1 12 1 20.4 43.1 26

Opponents 54 3523 65.2 12 0 22.0 43.7 26

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Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Overall Defensive Statistics (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

Tackles Sacks Pass defense Fumbles blkd

## Defensive Leaders gp-gs ua a tot tfl/yds no-yds int-yds brup qbh rcv-yds ff kick saf

41 Vassallo, P. 12-12 73 21 94 7.5-24 2.0-10 . 2 . 1-0 1 . .

9 Perkins, J. 12-12 42 22 64 1.0-2 . 2-22 8 . . . . .

1 Golden, R. 12-12 43 12 55 2.5-6 . 1-0 8 . 1-0 1 . .

33 Fischer, J. 12-7 36 16 52 7.5-22 2.0-11 . 2 1 1-0 . . .

12 Hall, A. 12-7 33 17 50 3.5-14 . 2-22 3 . . . . .

44 Elmore, R. 12-11 31 17 48 13.0-70 11.0-67 . 1 2 . 1 . .

43 Washington, J. 11-9 32 13 45 10.5-43 6.0-34 . . . . . 1 .

3 Wilcox, A. 12-9 29 15 44 . . . 8 . . . . .

40 Earls, D. 12-11 30 14 44 6.5-16 1.0-6 1-1 4 . 1-0 1 . .

42 Reed, B. 12-12 26 18 44 9.5-70 6.5-62 . 2 . . 1 . .

24 Wade, T. 11-10 35 8 43 1.5-5 . 1-85 2 . . . . .

83 Reed, D. 12-1 30 8 38 6.0-27 2.0-16 . 1 . 1-0 . . .

94 Mikaele, L. 12-12 14 18 32 7.5-19 0.5-1 . . . 1-0 . . .

5D Richardson, S. 12-3 25 3 28 1.0-1 . 2-0 7 . 1-0 1 . .

51 Young, R. 12-1 8 11 19 . . . . . 1-0 . . .

91 Tuihalamaka, S. 12-3 10 7 17 2.0-14 1.5-13 . . . 1-0 . . .

2D Turner, Mike 12-0 15 1 16 . . . 2 . . 3 . .

4D Flowers, M. 12-0 6 5 11 . . . . . . . . .

6D McKnight, J. 12-0 10 . 10 . . . 1 . . . . .

96 Mobley, W. 9-0 2 5 7 1.5-3 0.5-1 . . . . . . .

28 Parish, C. 3-0 3 2 5 . . . . . . . . .

26 Knowles, K. 9-0 3 . 3 . . . . . 1-0 . . .

7 Benjamin, M. 8-0 2 1 3 . . . . . . . . .

2J Foster, T. 5-0 2 . 2 . . . . . . . . .

97 Usman, M. 2-0 1 1 2 . . . . . . . 1 .

71 Merrill, C. 7-0 . 2 2 . . . . . . . . .

23 Watley, M. 10-0 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

4 Scott, M. 7-2 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

5 Grigsby, N. 11-5 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

18 Bonano, J. 12-0 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

6 Cobb, T. 11-1 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

87 Miller, T. 12-3 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

50 Gorham, C. 12-0 . 1 1 . . . . . . . . .

52 Muhammed, B. 10-0 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

92 Austin, D. 9-0 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

32 Brown, L. 9-0 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

10 Erno, T. 9-0 . 1 1 . . . . . . . . .

31 Tutogi, T. 11-5 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

56 Collins, M. 5-0 . 1 1 . . . . . . . . .

TM Team 8-0 . . . . . . . . . . . 1

81 Roberts, D. 11-4 . . . . . . . . . . 1 .

Total 12 551 240 791 81-336 33-221 9-130 51 3 10-0 9 3 1

Opponents 12 561 242 803 71-287 27-191 9-35 46 6 9-0 13 5 1

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PAGE 46 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Red-Zone Results (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

Arizona Inside Opponent Red-Zone

Times Times Total Rush Pass FGs Failed to score inside RZ

Date Opponent Score In RZ Scored Pts TDs TDs TDs Made FGA Down Int Fumb Half Game

09/03/10 at Toledo W 41-2 6 4 28 4 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0

Sep 11, 2010 THE CITADEL W 52-6 6 6 38 5 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

Sep 18, 2010 IOWA W 34-27 5 3 17 2 0 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 0

Sep 25, 2010 CALIFORNIA W 10-9 2 1 7 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

Oct 9, 2010 OREGON STATE L 27-29 2 1 7 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

Oct 15, 2010 at Washington State W 24-7 5 4 24 3 3 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0

Oct 23, 2010 WASHINGTON W 44-14 5 5 30 4 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

Oct 30, 2010 at UCLA W 29-21 5 4 19 2 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0

Nov 06, 2010 at Stanford L 17-42 5 3 17 2 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0

Nov 13, 2010 USC L 21-24 4 2 14 2 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0

Nov 26, 2010 at Oregon L 29-48 3 2 10 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0

Dec 02, 2010 ARIZONA STATE L 29-30 3 3 15 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals 51 38 226 29 15 14 9 2 4 3 3 1 0

38 of 51 (74.5%)

Opponents Inside Arizona Red-Zone

Times Times Total Rush Pass FGs Failed to score inside RZ

Date Opponent Score In RZ Scored Pts TDs TDs TDs Made FGA Down Int Fumb Half Game

09/03/10 at Toledo W 41-2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

Sep 11, 2010 THE CITADEL W 52-6 1 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

Sep 18, 2010 IOWA W 34-27 2 2 14 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Sep 25, 2010 CALIFORNIA W 10-9 3 2 6 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0

Oct 9, 2010 OREGON STATE L 27-29 4 3 15 2 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0

Oct 15, 2010 at Washington State W 24-7 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

Oct 23, 2010 WASHINGTON W 44-14 1 1 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Oct 30, 2010 at UCLA W 29-21 1 1 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Nov 06, 2010 at Stanford L 17-42 5 5 35 5 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Nov 13, 2010 USC L 21-24 5 4 24 3 2 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0

Nov 26, 2010 at Oregon L 29-48 6 5 35 5 3 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0

Dec 02, 2010 ARIZONA STATE L 29-30 5 5 24 2 1 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals 35 29 170 21 14 7 8 1 2 2 1 0 0

29 of 35 (82.9%)

Page 48: Table of Contents - SIDEARM Sports · 2016-05-20 · OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA PAGE 1 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL Date Opponent Time/Result Sept. 3 @ Toledo (ESPN) W, 41-2 Sept. 11 The

PAGE 47OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

2010 2010 2010 2010 2010 ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOTBTBTBTBTBALL STALL STALL STALL STALL STAAAAATSTSTSTSTS

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Team Game-by-Game (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

TEAM STATISTICS

Rushing Receiving Passing Kick Returns Punt Returns tot

Date Opponent no. yds td lg no. yds td lg cmp-att-int yds td lg no. yds td lg no. yds td lg off

09/03/10 at Toledo 25 105 3 36 37 413 3 45 37-44-1 413 3 45 1 19 0 19 3 47 0 35 518Sep 11 THE CITADEL 36 214 5 62 25 275 2 44 25-33-1 275 2 44 3 82 0 39 3 8 0 15 489Sep 18 IOWA 30 63 0 18 28 303 2 46 28-39-1 303 2 46 3 148 1 100 5 22 0 11 366Sep 25 CALIFORNIA 26 99 0 18 25 212 1 51 25-39-1 212 1 51 3 86 0 34 0 0 0 0 311Oct 9 OREGON STATE 19 101 1 33 35 440 3 45 35-46-1 440 3 45 5 104 0 27 0 0 0 0 541Oct 15 at Washington State 47 142 3 20 20 210 0 25 20-27-1 210 0 25 1 20 0 20 0 0 0 0 352Oct 23 WASHINGTON 43 234 4 78 18 233 2 25 18-22-0 233 2 25 3 70 0 37 3 8 0 6 467Oct 30 at UCLA 52 264 2 29 24 319 1 41 24-36-1 319 1 41 1 24 0 24 1 11 0 11 583Nov 06 at Stanford 31 166 1 21 28 248 1 26 28-48-1 248 1 26 5 120 0 31 0 0 0 0 414Nov 13 USC 18 51 0 15 32 353 3 31 32-48-0 353 3 31 3 36 0 18 1 2 0 2 404Nov 26 at Oregon 27 58 0 11 29 448 3 85 29-54-1 448 3 85 9 91 0 16 0 0 0 0 506Dec 02 ARIZONA STATE 43 125 1 17 24 266 3 52 24-38-0 266 3 52 5 123 0 43 4 26 0 11 391Arizona 397 1622 20 78 325 3720 24 85 325-474-9 3720 24 85 42 923 1 100 20 124 0 35 5342Opponents 461 1640 15 85 208 2479 16 83 208-372-9 2479 16 83 54 1104 0 45 20 131 0 27 4119

Games played: 12 Avg per rush: 4.1 Avg per catch: 11.4 Pass efficiency: 147.40 Kick ret avg: 22.0 Punt ret avg: 6.2 All purpose avg/game: 543.2 Total offense avg/gm: 445.2

Tackles Sacks Fumble Pass Defense Blkd PAT Attempts

Date Opponent ua a total tfl-yds no-yds ff fr-yds int-yds qbh brup kick kick rush rcv saf pts

09/03/1 at Toledo 32 40 72 7.0-24 2.0-15 1 1-0 1-1 1 6 0 5-5 0 0 0 41Sep 11 THE CITADEL 44 22 66 5.0-24 3.0-19 2 3-0 0-0 0 3 0 7-7 0 0 0 52Sep 18 IOWA 36 14 50 11.0-53 6.0-44 0 0-0 1-85 0 5 2 4-4 0 0 0 34Sep 25 CALIFORNIA 44 20 64 5.0-11 0.0-0 1 1-0 1-20 0 2 0 1-1 0 0 0 10Oct 9 OREGON STATE 51 18 69 7.0-37 3.0-25 0 0-0 1-2 0 3 0 3-4 0 0 0 27Oct 15 at Washington State 48 12 60 13.0-49 7.0-35 0 2-0 2-0 1 6 0 3-3 0 0 0 24Oct 23 WASHINGTON 40 28 68 8.0-43 4.0-33 1 1-0 0-0 0 3 0 5-6 0 0 0 44Oct 30 at UCLA 35 20 55 6.0-42 2.0-26 2 1-0 1-0 0 6 0 2-3 0 0 0 29Nov 06 at Stanford 58 8 66 1.0-3 0.0-0 0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 2-2 0 0 0 17Nov 13 USC 51 22 73 2.0-2 0.0-0 0 0-0 1-0 0 4 0 3-3 0 0 0 21Nov 26 at Oregon 57 18 75 7.0-20 0.0-0 1 1-0 1-22 0 2 0 3-3 0 0 1 29Dec 02 ARIZONA STATE 55 18 73 9.0-28 6.0-24 1 0-0 0-0 0 11 1 2-4 0 0 0 29Arizona 551 240 791 81.0-336 33.0-221 9 10-0 9-130 3 51 3 40-45 0 0 1 357Opponents 561 242 803 71.0-287 27.0-191 13 9-0 9-35 6 46 5 27-30 0 1 1 259

Punting Field Goals KickoffsDate Opponent no. yds avg long blkd tb fc 50+ i20 md-att long blkd no. yds avg tb ob

09/03/1 at Toledo 3 129 43.0 49 0 0 0 0 1 0-0 0 0 8 484 60.5 1 0Sep 11 THE CITADEL 3 103 34.3 39 0 1 0 0 0 1-1 41 0 9 599 66.6 3 0Sep 18 IOWA 5 189 37.8 53 0 0 0 1 0 2-2 47 0 7 465 66.4 4 0Sep 25 CALIFORNIA 6 244 40.7 52 0 1 2 1 1 1-2 46 0 3 204 68.0 0 0Oct 9 OREGON STATE 3 134 44.7 52 0 2 0 1 0 0-1 0 0 4 264 66.0 0 0Oct 15 at Washington State 5 214 42.8 50 0 0 0 1 3 1-1 40 0 5 321 64.2 1 0Oct 23 WASHINGTON 2 88 44.0 44 0 0 2 0 0 1-1 29 0 8 519 64.9 2 0Oct 30 at UCLA 4 154 38.5 43 0 1 1 0 1 3-3 42 0 6 357 59.5 0 0Nov 06 at Stanford 5 229 45.8 62 0 1 2 1 2 1-1 33 0 4 254 63.5 0 0Nov 13 USC 3 109 36.3 44 0 0 0 0 1 0-1 0 1 3 190 63.3 0 0Nov 26 at Oregon 4 149 37.2 49 0 0 0 0 1 2-2 41 0 6 340 56.7 1 0Dec 02 ARIZONA STATE 9 300 33.3 50 0 1 3 1 2 1-1 19 0 4 233 58.2 0 1Arizona 52 2042 39.3 62 0 7 10 6 12 13-16 47 1 67 4230 63.1 12 1Opponents 66 2690 40.8 64 0 8 16 14 27 12-15 52 0 54 3523 65.2 12 0

Page 49: Table of Contents - SIDEARM Sports · 2016-05-20 · OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA PAGE 1 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL Date Opponent Time/Result Sept. 3 @ Toledo (ESPN) W, 41-2 Sept. 11 The

2010 2010 2010 2010 2010 ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOTBTBTBTBTBALL STALL STALL STALL STALL STAAAAATSTSTSTSTS

PAGE 48 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

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Page 50: Table of Contents - SIDEARM Sports · 2016-05-20 · OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA PAGE 1 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL Date Opponent Time/Result Sept. 3 @ Toledo (ESPN) W, 41-2 Sept. 11 The

PAGE 49OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

2010 2010 2010 2010 2010 ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOTBTBTBTBTBALL STALL STALL STALL STALL STAAAAATSTSTSTSTS

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Opponent Game-by-Game (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

OPPONENT STATISTICS

Rushing Receiving Passing Kick Returns Punt Returns tot

Date Opponent no. yds td lg no. yds td lg cmp-att-int yds td lg no. yds td lg no. yds td lg off

09/03/10 at Toledo 28 80 0 17 14 103 0 24 14-23-1 103 0 24 7 96 0 20 3 -10 0 0 183Sep 11 THE CITADEL 50 150 0 30 3 21 0 9 3-14-0 21 0 9 6 135 0 31 0 0 0 0 171Sep 18 IOWA 26 29 0 17 18 278 3 37 18-33-1 278 3 37 3 77 0 37 2 35 0 19 307Sep 25 CALIFORNIA 36 146 0 19 13 116 0 22 13-27-1 116 0 22 3 71 0 29 3 32 0 16 262Oct 9 OREGON STATE 35 93 2 18 30 393 2 48 30-42-1 393 2 48 4 96 0 30 1 0 0 0 486Oct 15 at Washington State 34 40 0 19 18 257 1 83 18-32-2 257 1 83 4 73 0 23 4 18 0 16 297Oct 23 WASHINGTON 33 98 1 18 18 192 1 43 18-33-0 192 1 43 6 151 0 43 0 0 0 0 290Oct 30 at UCLA 28 71 1 13 13 228 2 68 13-27-1 228 2 68 6 118 0 45 2 26 0 13 299Nov 06 at Stanford 45 217 4 39 23 299 2 45 23-32-0 299 2 45 4 84 0 22 1 27 0 27 516Nov 13 USC 46 205 2 23 22 177 1 23 22-36-1 177 1 23 3 64 0 34 1 11 0 11 382Nov 26 at Oregon 57 389 4 85 14 148 3 38 14-24-1 148 3 38 5 85 0 36 2 -13 0 1 537Dec 02 ARIZONA STATE 43 122 1 17 22 267 1 54 22-49-0 267 1 54 3 54 0 27 1 5 0 5 389Opponents 461 1640 15 85 208 2479 16 83 208-372-9 2479 16 83 54 1104 0 45 20 131 0 27 4119Arizona 397 1622 20 78 325 3720 24 85 325-474-9 3720 24 85 42 923 1 100 20 124 0 35 5342

Games played: 12 Avg per rush: 3.6 Avg per catch: 11.9 Pass efficiency: 121.25 Kick ret avg: 20.4 Punt ret avg: 6.6 All purpose avg/game: 449.1 Total offense avg/gm: 343.2

Tackles Sacks Fumble Pass Defense Blkd PAT Attempts

Date Opponent ua a total tfl-yds no-yds ff fr-yds int-yds qbh brup kick kick rush rcv saf pts

09/03/1 at Toledo 35 44 79 3.0-12 1.0-7 1 0-0 1-0 1 2 0 0-0 0 0 1 2Sep 11 THE CITADEL 42 26 68 5.0-18 2.0-9 1 0-0 1-0 0 2 0 0-0 0 0 0 6Sep 18 IOWA 41 26 67 6.0-38 2.0-22 1 2-0 1-20 0 2 0 3-4 0 0 0 27Sep 25 CALIFORNIA 48 8 56 6.0-26 3.0-13 2 1-0 1-0 0 4 0 0-0 0 0 0 9Oct 9 OREGON STATE 42 14 56 4.0-21 3.0-20 0 0-0 1-0 0 2 1 2-4 0 0 0 29Oct 15 at Washington State 53 18 71 10.0-47 6.0-40 0 0-0 1-0 0 2 0 1-1 0 0 0 7Oct 23 WASHINGTON 45 16 61 7.0-15 2.0-8 2 1-0 0-0 0 4 1 2-2 0 0 0 14Oct 30 at UCLA 63 16 79 5.0-12 1.0-6 1 1-0 1-0 0 5 0 3-3 0 0 0 21Nov 06 at Stanford 52 16 68 5.0-25 2.0-20 0 0-0 1-15 2 7 0 6-6 0 0 0 42Nov 13 USC 39 14 53 6.0-27 2.0-19 3 2-0 0-0 0 1 1 3-3 0 0 0 24Nov 26 at Oregon 45 24 69 8.0-19 1.0-7 1 1-0 1-0 3 10 0 6-6 0 0 0 48Dec 02 ARIZONA STATE 56 20 76 6.0-27 2.0-20 1 1-0 0-0 0 5 2 1-1 0 1 0 30Opponents 561 242 803 71.0-287 27.0-191 13 9-0 9-35 6 46 5 27-30 0 1 1 259Arizona 551 240 791 81.0-336 33.0-221 9 10-0 9-130 3 51 3 40-45 0 0 1 357

Punting Field Goals KickoffsDate Opponent no. yds avg long blkd tb fc 50+ i20 md-att long blkd no. yds avg tb ob

09/03/1 at Toledo 8 349 43.6 58 0 0 2 3 4 0-0 0 0 1 62 62.0 0 0Sep 11 THE CITADEL 7 295 42.1 53 0 0 4 1 2 2-2 39 0 3 161 53.7 0 0Sep 18 IOWA 8 328 41.0 60 0 2 1 3 4 0-0 0 0 5 350 70.0 2 0Sep 25 CALIFORNIA 5 209 41.8 64 0 1 2 2 2 3-5 40 0 4 280 70.0 1 0Oct 9 OREGON STATE 4 165 41.2 53 0 2 0 1 1 1-1 23 0 6 369 61.5 1 0Oct 15 at Washington State 5 206 41.2 51 0 0 1 1 3 0-1 0 0 1 70 70.0 0 0Oct 23 WASHINGTON 7 291 41.6 51 0 1 2 1 4 0-0 0 0 3 199 66.3 0 0Oct 30 at UCLA 6 265 44.2 53 0 1 2 1 2 0-0 0 0 4 280 70.0 3 0Nov 06 at Stanford 4 138 34.5 48 0 0 1 0 2 0-0 0 0 7 475 67.9 2 0Nov 13 USC 2 85 42.5 46 0 1 0 0 0 1-1 30 0 5 336 67.2 2 0Nov 26 at Oregon 1 30 30.0 30 0 0 1 0 1 0-0 0 0 9 559 62.1 0 0Dec 02 ARIZONA STATE 9 329 36.6 51 0 0 0 1 2 5-5 52 0 6 382 63.7 1 0Opponents 66 2690 40.8 64 0 8 16 14 27 12-15 52 0 54 3523 65.2 12 0Arizona 52 2042 39.3 62 0 7 10 6 12 13-16 47 1 67 4230 63.1 12 1

Page 51: Table of Contents - SIDEARM Sports · 2016-05-20 · OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA PAGE 1 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL Date Opponent Time/Result Sept. 3 @ Toledo (ESPN) W, 41-2 Sept. 11 The

2010 2010 2010 2010 2010 ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOTBTBTBTBTBALL STALL STALL STALL STALL STAAAAATSTSTSTSTS

PAGE 50 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Rushing/Receiving Game-by-Game (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

RUSHING No-Yds/TD TOLEDO CIT IOWA CAL OSU WSU WASH UCLA STAN USC ORE ASU

Antolin, K. RB 142-667/7 5-13/0 2-2/0 6-26/0 4-15/0 8-70/1 21-92/2 14-114/2 23-111/1 16-86/1 10-38/0 8-17/0 25-83/0Grigsby, N. RB 102-474/8 8-53/2 11-107/3 14-27/0 12-65/0 5-22/0 14-66/1 12-50/2 5-31/0 1-2/0 DNP 16-44/0 4-7/0Nwoko, G. RB 46-234/3 5-29/0 7-72/2 5-25/0 3-3/0 1-3/0 - 2-5/0 9-25/1 8-49/0 3-12/0 - 3-11/0Scott, M. QB 35-135/0 1-2/0 3--6/0 DNP DNP DNP 9--7/0 7-65/0 12-71/0 - DNP DNP 3-10/0Criner, J. WR 7-65/0 - - - - - - 2-9/0 - 3-50/0 1-7/0 - 1--1/0Cobb, T. WR 6-40/0 1-12/0 1-8/0 2-7/0 DNP - 1--4/0 - - - - - 1-17/0Wright, W. WR 2-31/0 - - - 2-31/0 - DNP - - - DNP DNP DNPFischer, J. 1-29/0 - - - - - - - 1-29/0 - - - -Jenkins, D. RB 8-26/0 2-7/0 6-19/0 DNP - DNP - DNP - - - - -Butler, K. RB 3-14/0 DNP 3-14/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNPMiller, T. WR 2-13/0 - - - - - - - - - 2-13/0 - -Douglas, D. WR 2-10/1 - 1-1/0 - - - - - - - - - 1-9/1Roberts, D. WR 1-9/0 - - - - - - - - - DNP - 1-9/0Morrison, R. WR 1-0/0 - - - 1-0/0 - - - DNP DNP - DNP -Tutogi, T. HB 1--1/0 - - - DNP - - - - 1--1/0 - - -Beirne, B. QB 1--4/0 DNP - DNP DNP DNP DNP 1--4/0 DNP DNP DNP - DNPTeam 11--14/0 1--2/0 1--1/0 - 1--2/0 DNP DNP 5--5/0 2--3/0 DNP DNP - 1--1/0Foles, N. QB 26--106/1 2--9/1 1--2/0 3--22/0 3--13/0 5-6/0 2--5/0 DNP DNP 2--20/0 2--19/0 3--3/0 3--19/0

RECEIVING No-Yds/TD TOLEDO CIT IOWA CAL OSU WSU WASH UCLA STAN USC ORE ASU

Criner, J. WR 73-1186/10 10-176/1 2-60/0 2-48/0 5-68/1 12-179/1 2-20/0 8-108/1 8-127/1 9-98/1 6-98/0 3-109/2 6-95/2Roberts, D. WR 42-468/2 4-36/0 2-27/0 1-38/0 3-22/0 4-24/0 3-26/0 3-43/1 6-90/0 7-59/0 DNP 5-64/1 4-39/0Douglas, D. WR 46-424/5 5-33/1 4-33/0 7-74/1 6-61/0 4-34/0 1-15/0 - - 4-23/0 6-44/2 5-81/0 4-26/1Miller, T. WR 27-340/0 1-5/0 1-3/0 - - - 1-4/0 - 1-16/0 3-26/0 7-116/0 8-96/0 5-74/0Wright, W. WR 25-294/2 3-35/0 3-29/1 5-67/1 3-20/0 4-64/0 DNP 3-47/0 4-32/0 - DNP DNP DNPCobb, T. WR 25-275/1 3-30/0 2-15/0 1-4/0 DNP 2-32/0 7-62/0 1-11/0 1-8/0 1-9/0 4-50/1 2-46/0 1-8/0Antolin, K. RB 28-204/2 5-23/1 4-53/0 2-9/0 3-21/0 4-40/1 1-16/0 1-11/0 1-5/0 2-22/0 4--4/0 1-8/0 -Grigsby, N. RB 21-163/1 3-24/0 2-9/0 4-24/0 3-10/0 2-41/1 - 1--1/0 1-11/0 - DNP 4-39/0 1-6/0Morrison, R. WR 13-122/0 - 2-21/0 - 1-6/0 2-17/0 2-26/0 - DNP DNP 4-38/0 DNP 2-14/0Simmons, A.J. TE 8-92/0 1-31/0 - 2-14/0 - 1-9/0 1-7/0 - 1-16/0 - 1-11/0 - 1-4/0Tutogi, T. HB 5-63/0 - - 1-8/0 DNP - 2-34/0 1-14/0 - 1-7/0 - - -Crump, G. WR 4-39/0 2-20/0 2-19/0 - - - - - DNP - DNP - -Nwoko, G. RB 4-28/0 - - 2-9/0 - - - - 1-14/0 - - 1-5/0 -Baucus, J. TE 4-22/1 - 1-6/1 1-8/0 1-4/0 - - - - 1-4/0 - - -

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PAGE 51OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ARIZONA

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Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Passing Game-by-Game (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

#8 Foles, N. Comp Att Int Pct Yards TD Long Sacked Effic

Toledo 32 37 1 86.5 360 2 45 1-7 180.65

The Citadel 17 22 1 77.3 214 1 44 1-2 164.89

Iowa 28 39 1 71.8 303 2 46 2-22 148.85

California 25 39 1 64.1 212 1 51 3-13 113.10

Oregon State 35 46 1 76.1 440 3 45 3-20 173.61

Washington State 6 7 0 85.7 71 0 18 1-4 170.91

Stanford 28 48 1 58.3 248 1 26 2-20 104.44

USC 32 48 0 66.7 353 3 31 2-19 149.07

Oregon 29 54 1 53.7 448 3 85 1-7 138.02

Arizona State 22 36 0 61.1 262 3 52 2-20 149.74

TOTALS 254 376 7 67.6 2911 19 85 18-134 145.54

#4 Scott, M. Comp Att Int Pct Yards TD Long Sacked Effic

Toledo 5 7 0 71.4 53 1 23 0-0 182.17

The Citadel 3 6 0 50.0 28 0 16 1-7 89.20

Washington State 14 20 1 70.0 139 0 25 5-36 118.38

Washington 18 22 0 81.8 233 2 25 1-4 200.78

UCLA 24 36 1 66.7 319 1 41 1-6 144.71

Arizona State 2 2 0 100.0 4 0 4 0-0 116.80

TOTALS 66 93 2 71.0 776 4 41 8-53 150.95

#17 Beirne, B. Comp Att Int Pct Yards TD Long Sacked Effic

The Citadel 5 5 0 100.0 33 1 11 0-0 221.44

TOTALS 5 5 0 100.0 33 1 11 1-4 221.44

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PAGE 52 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Total Tackles Game-by-Game (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

Total Tackles UA-A Total TOLEDO CIT IOWA CAL OSU WSU WASH UCLA STAN USC ORE ASU

Vassallo, P. LB 73-21 94 5 - 5 2 - 2 3 - 1 3 - 1 1 0 - 1 7 - 0 9 - 5 6 - 1 1 0 - 1 6 - 2 4 - 2 8 - 0Perkins, J. S 42-22 64 1 - 4 6 - 2 3 - 2 2 - 0 6 - 2 4 - 1 1 - 0 2 - 4 3 - 2 5 - 2 4 - 0 5 - 3Golden, R. CB 43-12 55 2 - 1 2 - 0 2 - 1 7 - 1 4 - 1 1 - 0 2 - 2 1 - 2 9 - 2 7 - 1 4 - 1 2 - 0Fischer, J. LB 36-16 52 3 - 3 4 - 1 2 - 1 4 - 3 3 - 2 3 - 0 - 3 - 0 3 - 0 4 - 2 2 - 2 5 - 2Hall, A. S 33-17 50 1 - 4 1 - 0 1 - 0 1 - 1 1 - 1 5 - 1 4 - 2 2 - 2 1 - 0 6 - 2 8 - 3 2 - 1Elmore, R. DE 31-17 48 1 - 4 1 - 0 2 - 1 6 - 2 3 - 2 4 - 2 4 - 2 2 - 0 1 - 0 1 - 0 0 - 2 6 - 2Washington, J. DT 32-13 45 3 - 0 4 - 2 4 - 0 5 - 2 2 - 1 2 - 2 0 - 1 D N P 3 - 0 3 - 1 3 - 2 3 - 2Reed, B. DE 26-18 44 3 - 2 2 - 3 3 - 2 1 - 0 2 - 0 1 - 1 0 - 1 5 - 1 1 - 0 1 - 4 5 - 1 2 - 3Wilcox, A. DB 29-15 44 1 - 2 2 - 2 1 - 0 3 - 1 6 - 3 - 4 - 2 2 - 0 6 - 2 1 - 1 3 - 1 0 - 1Earls, D. LB 30-14 44 0 - 2 3 - 0 4 - 2 3 - 2 3 - 0 2 - 1 1 - 3 0 - 1 9 - 1 3 - 2 1 - 0 1 - 0Wade, T. CB 35-8 43 4 - 2 2 - 0 5 - 0 3 - 1 4 - 1 D N P 2 - 0 3 - 2 1 - 0 1 - 1 4 - 0 6 - 1Reed, D. DE 30-8 38 0 - 2 3 - 1 0 - 1 1 - 1 3 - 0 2 - 0 3 - 1 1 - 0 2 - 0 5 - 0 4 - 2 6 - 0Mikaele, L. DT 14-18 32 0 - 3 1 - 4 1 - 1 0 - 1 0 - 2 2 - 2 1 - 1 1 - 1 1 - 0 1 - 2 4 - 0 2 - 1Richardson, S. CB 25-3 28 2 - 0 1 - 0 - 1 - 0 0 - 1 7 - 0 1 - 0 2 - 2 2 - 0 4 - 0 5 - 0 -Young, R. LB 8-11 19 - 2 - 2 1 - 2 1 - 4 1 - 0 1 - 0 0 - 2 - - 0 - 1 2 - 0 -Tuihalamaka, S. DT 10-7 17 0 - 1 - - 1 - 0 0 - 1 1 - 1 2 - 1 3 - 2 - 1 - 0 0 - 1 2 - 0Turner, Mike CB 15-1 16 2 - 0 1 - 0 1 - 0 2 - 0 1 - 0 3 - 0 2 - 0 0 - 1 1 - 0 1 - 0 - 1 - 0Flowers, M. S 6-5 11 1 - 2 1 - 1 - - 1 - 0 - - - - 1 - 1 2 - 0 0 - 1McKnight, J. CB 10-0 10 - - - - - 2 - 0 3 - 0 1 - 0 - - 1 - 0 3 - 0Mobley, W. DT 2-5 7 0 - 1 1 - 0 D N P D N P - 1 - 1 0 - 2 - D N P - - 0 - 1Parish, C. LB 3-2 5 1 - 1 2 - 1 - D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P D N PBenjamin, M. DB 2-1 3 D N P - 1 - 0 D N P 1 - 0 - - 0 - 1 - D N P - D N PKnowles, K. DB 3-0 3 D N P 2 - 0 - - - - - - 1 - 0 - D N P D N PUsman, M. 1-1 2 D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P 0 - 1 1 - 0Foster, T. DB 2-0 2 D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P - - 1 - 0 1 - 0 D N P - D N PMerrill, C. DT 0-2 2 - - - D N P D N P D N P 0 - 2 - D N P - - D N PBrown, L. DB 1-0 1 - - 1 - 0 - D N P - - - - - D N P D N PMuhammed, B. LB 1-0 1 - 1 - 0 - - - - - - - - D N P D N PErno, T. LB 0-1 1 0 - 1 - - - D N P D N P - - - - - D N PCobb, T. 1-0 1 - - - D N P - - - - 1 - 0 - - -Bonano, J. K 1-0 1 - - 1 - 0 - - - - - - - - -Grigsby, N. 1-0 1 - - - - - - - - 1 - 0 D N P - -Miller, T. 1-0 1 - - - - - - - - - - 1 - 0 -Watley, M. DB 1-0 1 1 - 0 D N P D N P - - - - - - - - -Scott, M. 1-0 1 - - D N P D N P D N P - - - 1 - 0 D N P D N P -Tutogi, T. 1-0 1 1 - 0 - - D N P - - - - - - - -Austin, D. DT 1-0 1 D N P - - - - - 1 - 0 D N P - - - D N PCollins, M. LB 0-1 1 D N P D N P D N P D N P D N P - 0 - 1 - D N P - - D N PGorham, C. 0-1 1 - 0 - 1 - - - - - - - - - -

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Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Game Superlatives (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS

Rushes 25 Antolin, K. vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Yards Rushing 114 Antolin, K. vs Washington (Oct 23, 2010)

TD Rushes 3 Grigsby, N. vs The Citadel (Sep 11, 2010)

Long Rush 78 Antolin, K. vs Washington (Oct 23, 2010)

Pass attempts 54 Foles, N. at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Pass completions 35 Foles, N. vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

Yards Passing 448 Foles, N. at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

TD Passes 3 Foles, N. vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

3 Foles, N. vs USC (Nov 13, 2010)

3 Foles, N. at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

3 Foles, N. vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Long Pass 85 Foles, N. at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Receptions 12 Criner, J. vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

Yards Receiving 179 Criner, J. vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

TD Receptions 2 Douglas, D. vs USC (Nov 13, 2010)

2 Criner, J. at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

2 Criner, J. vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Long Reception 85 Criner, J. at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Field Goals 3 Zendejas, A. at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

Long Field Goal 47 Zendejas, A. vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

Punts 6 Crier, K. vs California (Sep 25, 2010)

6 Crier, K. vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Punting Avg 45.8 Crier, K. at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

Long Punt 62 Crier, K. at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

Long Punt Return 35 Wright, W. at Toledo (09/03/10)

Long Kickoff Return 100 Cobb, T. vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

Tackles 14 Vassallo, P. vs Washington (Oct 23, 2010)

Sacks 3.0 Elmore, R. vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Tackles For Loss 3.0 Elmore, R. at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

3.0 Mikaele, L. at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

3.0 Elmore, R. vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Interceptions 2 Richardson, S. at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

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PAGE 54 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Game Superlatives (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

TEAM GAME HIGHS

Rushes 52 at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

Yards Rushing 264 at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

Yards Per Rush 5.9 vs The Citadel (Sep 11, 2010)

TD Rushes 5 vs The Citadel (Sep 11, 2010)

Pass attempts 54 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Pass completions 37 at Toledo (09/03/10)

Yards Passing 448 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Yards Per Pass 10.6 vs Washington (Oct 23, 2010)

TD Passes 3 at Toledo (09/03/10)

3 vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

3 vs USC (Nov 13, 2010)

3 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

3 vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Total Plays 88 at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

Total Offense 583 at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

Yards Per Play 8.3 vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

Points 52 vs The Citadel (Sep 11, 2010)

Sacks By 7 at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

First Downs 32 at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

Penalties 12 vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

Penalty Yards 103 vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

Turnovers 3 vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

Interceptions By 2 at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

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Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Game Superlatives (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS

Rushes 31 Tyler, Marc, vs USC (Nov 13, 2010)

Yards Rushing 160 Tyler, Marc, vs USC (Nov 13, 2010)

TD Rushes 4 Taylor, S, at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

Long Rush 85 Huff, Josh, at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Pass attempts 49 Osweiler, Brock, vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Pass completions 30 Katz, Ryan, vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

Yards Passing 393 Katz, Ryan, vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

TD Passes 3 Stanzi, Ricky, vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

3 Thomas, Darron, at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Long Pass 83 Tuel, Jeff, at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

Receptions 9 Owusu, C, at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

Yards Receiving 165 Owusu, C, at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

TD Receptions 1 Jn-Koulianos, D, vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

1 McNutt, Marvin, vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

1 Hampton, Jewel, vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

1 Wheaton, Markus, vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

1 Rodgers, James, vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

1 Wilson, Marq., at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

1 Kearse, J., vs Washington (Oct 23, 2010)

1 Smith, Josh, at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

1 Carroll, Randal, at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

1 Owusu, C, at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

1 Gaffney, T, at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

1 Ellison, Rhett, vs USC (Nov 13, 2010)

1 Davis, D.J., at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

1 Maehl, Jeff, at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

1 Paulson, David, at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

1 Willie, Mike, vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Long Reception 83 Wilson, Marq., at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

Field Goals 5 Weber, Thomas, vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Long Field Goal 52 Weber, Thomas, vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Punts 9 Hankins, Trevor, vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Punting Avg 51.0 Wagner, Dan, at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

Long Punt 64 Anger, Bryan, vs California (Sep 25, 2010)

Long Punt Return 27 Terrell, D, at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

Long Kickoff Return 45 Thigpen, Damien, at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

Tackles 16 Bucannon, Deone, at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

Sacks 2.0 Kendricks, Mych, vs California (Sep 25, 2010)

2.0 Beck, Myron, at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

2.0 Toomer, Tyree, at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

2.0 Long, Travis, at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

Tackles For Loss 4.0 Toomer, Tyree, at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

Interceptions 1 MORROW, D., at Toledo (09/03/10)

1 Tolu Akindele, vs The Citadel (Sep 11, 2010)

1 Binns, B., vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

1 Conte, Chris, vs California (Sep 25, 2010)

1 Tuimaunei, S., vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

1 Locker, Casey, at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

1 Hester,Aaron, at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

1 Sherman, R, at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

1 Boyett, John, at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

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PAGE 56 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

Arizona 2010 FootballArizona Game Superlatives (as of Dec 02, 2010)

All games

OPPONENT TEAM GAME HIGHS

Rushes 57 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Yards Rushing 389 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Yards Per Rush 6.8 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

TD Rushes 4 at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

4 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Pass attempts 49 vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Pass completions 30 vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

Yards Passing 393 vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

Yards Per Pass 9.4 vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

TD Passes 3 vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

3 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Total Plays 92 vs Arizona State (Dec 02, 2010)

Total Offense 537 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Yards Per Play 6.7 at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

Points 48 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Sacks By 6 at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

First Downs 27 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

Penalties 9 vs Washington (Oct 23, 2010)

Penalty Yards 94 vs Washington (Oct 23, 2010)

Turnovers 4 at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

Interceptions By 1 at Toledo (09/03/10)

1 vs The Citadel (Sep 11, 2010)

1 vs Iowa (Sep 18, 2010)

1 vs California (Sep 25, 2010)

1 vs Oregon State (Oct 9, 2010)

1 at Washington State (Oct 15, 2010)

1 at UCLA (Oct 30, 2010)

1 at Stanford (Nov 06, 2010)

1 at Oregon (Nov 26, 2010)

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ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOTBTBTBTBTBALL RALL RALL RALL RALL ROSTERSOSTERSOSTERSOSTERSOSTERS

NUMERICAL ROSTERNo. Name Pos.1 Robert Golden S2 Keola Antolin RB2 Mike Turner CB3 Daniel Jenkins RB3 Anthony Wilcox S4 Marquis Flowers S4 Matt Scott QB5 Nic Grigsby RB5 Shaquille Richardson DB6 Travis Cobb WR6 Jonathan McKnight CB7 Marcus Benjamin CB8 Nick Foles QB9 Joseph Perkins S10 Trevor Erno LB11 Tyler Slavin WR12 Cameron Allerheiligen QB12 Adam Hall S13 John Cardona QB14 Richard Morrison WR14 Alex Zendejas PK15 Dan Buckner WR16 Garic Wharton WR17 Bryson Beirne QB17 Derrick Rainey CB18 John Bonano K18 Ross Oltorik QB19 William Wright WR20 Kyle Benson LB21 Gino Crump WR23 Kylan Butler RB23 Mark Watley S24 Trevin Wade CB25 Josh Robbins S26 Jourdon Grandon CB26 Khyri Knowles DB27 Terris Jones RB27 Victor Yates S28/48 C.J. Parish HB/LB29 Trevor Foster DB29 Austin Hill WR31 Taimi Tutogi HB32 Lyle Brown DB33 Jake Fischer LB34 Greg Nwoko RB35 Kyrel Parker DB36 Sean Lieb WR38 David Hill FB39 Kyle Day WR39 William Jenkins CB40 Derek Earls LB41 Paul Vassallo LB42 Brooks Reed DE43 Adam Gottschalk S43 Justin Washington DT44 Ricky Elmore DE45 Spencer Larsen WR46 Blake Brady DB47 Keenyn Crier P50 Chase Gorham LS51 R.J. Young LB52 Bilal Muhammed LB53 Brett Thompson DE55 Conan Amituanai OG56 Michael Collins LB

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. DOB Cl. Exp. Hometown (Last School/HS)12 Cameron Allerheiligen QB 6-3 200 12-11-91 Fr. HS Keller, Texas (Keller)55 Conan Amituanai OG 6-4 335 1-20-88 Sr.* 2L Long Beach, Calif. (Poly)2 Keola Antolin RB 5-8 195 1-14-90 Jr. 2L Las Vegas, Nev. (Bishop Gorman)92 Dominique Austin DT 6-4 292 11-11-90 Jr. 2L La Puente, Calif. (Bishop Amat)59 Jake Baratz C/G 6-5 282 9-10-90 Fr.* RS Naperville, Ill. (North)

86 Jack Baucus TE 6-6 255 12-22-90 Fr.* RS Mundelein, Ill. (Carmel Catholic)68 Mickey Baucus OL 6-8 275 2-13-92 Fr. HS Mundelein, Ill. (Carmel Catholic)64 Colin Baxter C 6-4 295 7-31-87 Sr.* 3L Rolling Hills, Calif. (Peninsula)17 Bryson Beirne QB 6-3 225 10-9-88 Jr.* 2L Honolulu, Hawaii (Mid-Pacific Institute)69 Eric Bender-Ramsay OL 6-6 325 5-28-90 Fr.* RS Carson, Calif. (Narbonne)

7 Marcus Benjamin CB 6-0 190 11-3-87 Sr. 1L St. Martinville, La. (Westgate/Arizona Western)20 Kyle Benson LB 6-2 221 12-24-91 Fr. HS Tempe, Ariz. (Corona del Sol)72 Trace Biskin OL 6-5 295 12-3-89 So.* SQ Westlake Village, Calif. (Oaks Christian)18 John Bonano K 6-0 180 11-29-89 Jr. 1L+ Salinas, Calif. (Palma)46 Blake Brady DB 6-0 188 4-7-92 Fr. HS+ Orange, Calif. (Servite)

32 Lyle Brown DB 5-10 175 2-28-89 Jr. 1L Castle Rock, Colo. (Douglas County/Glendale CC)61 Rylan Browner OL 6-3 282 5-1-91 So. SQ+ Cincinnati, Ohio (Montgomery Bell Academy, TN)15 Dan Buckner** WR 6-4 220 5-31-90 Jr. TR** Allen, Texas (Allen/University of Texas)23 Kylan Butler RB 5-8 180 7-5-90 Fr.* RS Antioch, Calif. (De La Salle)13 John Cardona QB 6-3 185 11-19-91 So. SQ+ Van Nuys, Calif. (Chatsworth)

6 Travis Cobb WR 6-0 180 8-5-87 Sr. 1L Rocky Mount, N.C. (RMHS/Blinn College)63 Brian Chacon C/G 6-4 270 6-8-91 So. SQ+ Long Beach, Calif. (Cypress)56 Michael Collins LB 6-1 225 9-6-91 Fr. HS+ Long Beach, Calif. (Los Alamitos)47 Keenyn Crier P 6-1 200 3-23-89 Sr.* 3L Spring, Texas (Westfield)82 Juron Criner WR 6-4 210 12-12-89 Jr. 2L Las Vegas, Nev. (Canyon Springs)

21 Gino Crump WR 6-2 210 8-8-88 Jr.* SQ+ Washington, D.C. (Wilson/West Virginia)39 Kyle Day WR 5-11 195 7-1-88 Sr.* 1L+ Sahuarita, Ariz. (Sahuarita)70 Vaughn Dotsy OG 6-5 335 9-7-89 Jr. 2L Ventura, Calif. (St. Bonaventure)85 David Douglas WR 6-1 198 6-27-89 Jr. 2L McKinney, Texas (North)40 Derek Earls LB 6-3 240 4-5-90 Jr. JC Waconia, Minn. (Waconia/N.Dak. State College)

73 Fabbians Ebbele OT 6-8 295 4-2-92 Fr. HS Chicago, Ill. (Simeon)44 Ricky Elmore DE 6-5 250 2-1-88 Sr.* 3L Simi Valley, Calif. (Grace Brethren)10 Trevor Erno LB 6-1 230 12-15-90 Fr.* RS Lakewood, Calif. (Lakewood)98 Aiulua Fanene DL 6-4 280 11-3-92 Fr. HS Nu’uuli, American Samoa (Tafuna)33 Jake Fischer LB 5-11 220 8-30-90 So. 1L Oro Valley, Ariz. (Ironwood Ridge)

4 Marquis Flowers S 6-3 200 2-16-92 Fr. HS Phoenix, Ariz. (Millennium)8 Nick Foles QB 6-5 245 1-20-89 Jr.* 1L Austin, Texas (Westlake/Michigan St.)52 Spencer Fosnot LS 6-1 190 11-23-90 So. SQ Phoenix, Ariz. (Desert Vista)29 Trevor Foster DB 6-0 205 8-4-87 Sr.* 2L Ontario, Calif. (Colony)67 Phillip Garcia OT 6-7 330 9-2-88 Sr.* 1L Montebello, Calif. (Schurr/Cerritos CC)

1 Robert Golden CB 5-11 200 9-13-90 Jr. 2L Fresno, Calif. (Edison)50 Chase Gorham LS 6-2 225 4-29-92 Fr. HS Scottsdale, Ariz. (Chaparral)43 Adam Gottschalk S 6-1 205 4-19-90 Jr. SQ+ Encino, Calif. (Crespi Carmelite)26 Jourdon Grandon CB 6-0 180 4-7-92 Fr. HS Avondale, Ariz. (Westview)78 Adam Grant OT 6-6 325 5-2-86 Gr.* 2L Puyallup, Wash. (Puyallup)

5 Nic Grigsby RB 5-10 198 12-26-88 Sr. 3L Whittier, Calif. (California)12 Adam Hall S 6-4 212 9-15-89 So. 1L Tucson, Ariz. (Palo Verde)57 Jovon Hayes OG 6-2 320 4-17-88 Sr.* 1L Los Angeles, Calif. (Dorsey)61 David Highberger LS 6-1 185 2-7-90 So.* SQ+ Northbrook, Ill. (Glenbrook North)29 Austin Hill WR 6-3 200 7-17-91 Fr. HS Corona, Calif. (Roosevelt)

38 David Hill FB 5-9 250 9-13-89 Jr. JC+ Las Vegas, Nev. (Desert Pines/Pierce CC)93 Jonathan Hollins DT 6-4 280 9-26-87 Jr.* RS Baton Rouge, La. (Redemptorist/Canyons)3 Daniel Jenkins RB 5-9 187 6-5-92 Fr.* RS Moreno Valley, Calif. (Rancho Verde)39 William Jenkins CB 6-0 200 5-20-90 So.* SQ+ Moreno Valley, Calif. (Rancho Verde/Humboldt State)27 Terris Jones RB 5-9 180 11-28-92 Fr. HS+ Long Beach, Calif. (California)

77 Jack Julsing OT 6-8 310 11-11-88 Sr. 1L Moreno Valley, Calif. (Vista del Lago/Coll. of the Desert)26 Khyri Knowles DB 5-11 175 2-4-91 So. SQ Newbury Park, Calif. (NPHS)45 Spencer Larsen WR 5-11 165 9-16-91 Fr. HS Salt Lake City, Utah (Cottonwood)60 Carter Lees OL 6-5 320 2-7-92 Fr. HS Sugar Land, Texas (Fort Bend Kempner)36 Sean Lieb WR 6-1 186 9-11-89 Jr. JC+ Phoenix, Ariz. (Brophy/Colorado/Phoenix College)

6 Jonathan McKnight CB 5-11 175 1-25-91 Fr. HS River Ridge, La. (John Curtis)71 Chris Merrill DT 6-2 285 10-6-89 So.* SQ Scottsdale, Ariz. (Saguaro)94 Lolomana Mikaele DT 6-2 305 11-18-87 Sr.* 2L Honolulu, Hawaii (Damien Memorial)87 Terrence Miller WR 6-4 225 1-16-92 So. 1L Moreno Valley, Calif. (Rancho Verde)96 Willie Mobley DT 6-2 277 9-2-89 So. JC Eden Prairie, Minn. (Eden Prairie/Orange Coast CC)

2010 ARIZONA FOOTBALL ALPHABETICAL ROSTER

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ARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONARIZONA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOA FOOTBTBTBTBTBALL RALL RALL RALL RALL ROSTERSOSTERSOSTERSOSTERSOSTERS

PAGE 58 2010 VALERO ALAMO BOWL

NUMERICAL ROSTERNo. Name Pos.57 Jovon Hayes OG58 Apaiata Tuihalamaka DE59 Jake Baratz C/G60 Carter Lees OL61 Rylan Browner OL61 David Highberger LS62 Chris Putton OG63 Brian Chacon C/G64 Colin Baxter C67 Phillip Garcia OT68 Mickey Baucus OL69 Eric Bender-Ramsay OL70 Vaughn Dotsy OG71 Chris Merrill DT72 Trace Biskin OL73 Fabbians Ebbele OT75 Kirifi Taula DT75 Shane Zink OT76 Kyle Quinn C/G77 Jack Julsing OT78 Adam Grant OT79 Trent Spurgeon OT80 Devin Veal WR81 David Roberts WR82 Juron Criner WR83 D’Aundre Reed DE85 David Douglas WR86 Jack Baucus TE87 Terrence Miller WR88 A.J. Simmons TE90 Dan Pettinato DE91 Sione Tuihalamaka DT92 Dominique Austin DT93 Jonathan Hollins DT94 Lolomana Mikaele DT95 Jowyn Ward DT96 Willie Mobley DT97 Mohammed Usman DE98 Aiulua Fanene DL

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. DOB Cl. Exp. Hometown (Last School/HS)14 Richard Morrison WR 6-0 180 11-7-90 Fr.* RS Royce City, Texas (Royce City)52 Bilal Muhammed LB 5-10 235 2-24-89 Jr. JC Harbor City, Calif. (Centennial Corona/El Camino CC)34 Greg Nwoko RB 6-2 228 5-29-90 So.* 1L Pflugerville, Texas (Pflugerville)18 Ross Oltorik** QB 6-2 220 6-2-89 Jr. TR+ Cincinnati, Ohio (Archbishop Moeller/Ohio St.)28/48 C.J. Parish LB 6-2 235 12-22-88 Sr. 1L College Station, Texas (A&M Con/Blinn College)

35 Kyrel Parker DB 6-0 185 1-4-92 Fr. HS Apache Junction, Ariz. (AJHS)9 Joseph Perkins S 6-2 205 11-16-88 Sr.* 2L Gardena, Calif. (Gardena/El Camino CC)90 Dan Pettinato DE 6-4 250 4-24-92 Fr. HS Grass Valley, Calif. (Nevada Union)62 Chris Putton OG 6-4 295 6-14-91 Fr.* RS Glendale, Ariz. (Cactus)76 Kyle Quinn C/G 6-2 310 2-9-90 So.* 1L Brentwood, Calif. (Liberty)

17 Derrick Rainey CB 6-1 190 2-22-90 Fr.* RS Houston, Texas (Northbrook)42 Brooks Reed DE 6-3 262 2-28-87 Sr.* 3L Tucson, Ariz. (Sabino)83 D’Aundre Reed DE 6-4 258 1-1-88 Sr.* 3L Moreno Valley, Calif. (Rancho Verde)5 Shaquille Richardson DB 6-2 180 3-21-92 Fr. HS Carson, Calif. (Los Alamitos)25 Josh Robbins S 6-3 198 2-18-92 Fr. HS Tucson, Ariz. (Canyon del Oro)

81 David Roberts WR 6-0 190 2-12-89 Jr.* 2L Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. (Rancho Cucamonga)4 Matt Scott QB 6-3 195 9-20-90 Jr. 2L Corona, Calif. (Centennial)88 A.J. Simmons TE 6-3 255 8-12-88 Sr.* 3L Oakland, Calif. (Bishop O’Dowd)11 Tyler Slavin WR 6-2 200 1-29-92 Fr. Hs Corona, Calif. (Eleanor Roosevelt)79 Trent Spurgeon OT 6-7 270 5-27-92 Fr. HS Owasso, Okla. (Owasso)

75 Kirifi Taula DT 6-3 280 12-30-91 Fr. HS Garden Grove, Calif. (Servite)53 Brett Thompson DE 6-3 215 8-17-90 So. SQ+ Tempe, Ariz. (Marcos de Niza)58 Apaiata Tuihalamaka DE 6-3 258 1-4-89 Jr.* 2L Hawthorne, Calif. (Serra)91 Sione Tuihalamaka DT 6-2 275 9-18-91 Fr.* RS Hawthorne, Calif. (Serra)2 Mike Turner CB 5-11 187 10-8-87 Sr.* 2L Manteca, Calif. (Manteca)

31 Taimi Tutogi HB 6-1 258 1-2-91 So. 1L Chula Vista, Calif. (Chula Vista)97 Mohammed Usman DE 6-2 240 4-1-89 Jr.. JC Arlington, Texas (Bowie HS/Navarro CC)41 Paul Vassallo LB 6-3 240 12-16-89 Jr. JC Reno, Nev. (Bishop Manogue/Sierra CC)80 Devin Veal WR 5-11 188 8-22-88 Jr.* 1L Sierra Vista, Ariz. (Buena)24 Trevin Wade CB 5-11 188 8-1-89 Jr.* 2L Round Rock, Texas (Stony Point)

95 Jowyn Ward DT 6-2 295 5-24-90 Jr. 2L Katy, Texas (Mayde Creek)43 Justin Washington DT 6-2 275 7-29-91 Fr.* RS Cypress, Texas (Cypress Woods)23 Mark Watley S 6-1 180 4-15-90 So.* SQ Encino, Calif. (Crespi Carmelite)16 Garic Wharton WR 5-11 168 12-22-91 Fr. HS Las Vegas, Nev. (Valley)3 Anthony Wilcox S 6-0 205 2-26-86 Sr. 1L Lakeland, Fla. (Jenkins/Compton, Calif., CC)

19 William Wright WR 5-9 175 10-11-88 Jr.* 2L Tatum, Okla. (Pauls Valley)27 Victor Yates S 5-11 202 5-29-88 Sr.* SQ+ Tucson, Ariz. (Palo Verde)51 R.J. Young LB 5-11 232 8-3-90 So.* 1L DeSoto, Texas (DeSoto)14 Alex Zendejas PK 5-11 190 8-17-89 Jr.* 2L Glendale, Ariz. (Ironwood)75 Shane Zink OT 6-7 302 9-14-89 So.* RS Redding, Calif. (Enterprise/Shasta College)

2010 ARIZONA FOOTBALL ALPHABETICAL ROSTER

Pronunciation Guide

Cameron Allerheiligen .............. al-er-high-lih-gen (hard g)Conan Amituanai ...................... Ah-mee-TOO-u-nighKeola Antolin ............................ Key-oh-lah AN-toh-linDominique Austin ..................... Dom-eh-neekBryson Beirne .......................... Burr-kneeJuron Criner ............................. Jur-ahn Cry-nerVaughn Dotsy ........................... Dot-seeFabbians Ebbele ...................... ebb-eh-leeAiulua Fanane .......................... eye-oo-LOO-ah fah-NAY-nayNick Foles ................................ rhymes with bowlsJovon Hayes ............................ Joe-vahnLolomana Mikaele .................... Mee-kah-AY-layGreg Nwoko ............................. Nuh-WOH-koeD’Aundre Reed ........................ Dee-on-dray

Dan Pettinato ........................... pet-in-knot-ohApaiata Tuihalamaka ............... Ah-pie-AH-tah Too-ee-ha-lah-MAH-kahSione Tuihalamaka .................. See-OH-nay Too-ee-ha-lah-MAH-kahTaimi Tutogi .............................. TIE-mee tuh-TOE-gee (hard g)Mohammed Usman .................. OOS-mun (rhymes with loose)Paul Vassallo ............................ vuh-SAH-lohAlex Zendejas .......................... zen-DAY-hahs

CoachesBill Bedenbaugh ....................... BEED-in-bohGarret Chachere ...................... Sash-er-ayFrank Scelfo ............................. Sell-foeMike Tuiasososopo .................. Too-ee-ah-suh-SOE-poe

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Career Starts

Pronunciation GuideAlphabetical

OffensePlayer 07 08 09 10 TotC. Amituanai - - 6 12 18K. Antolin - - 4 8 12J. Baucus - - - 3 3C. Baxter 11 13 13 12 49J. Criner 3 5 11 19V. Dotsy - - 9 2 11D. Douglas - - 4 9 13N. Foles - - 10 10 20P. Garcia - - 2 12 14A. Grant - 5 13 12 30N. Grigsby 8 13 7 4 32J. Hayes - - - 10 10T. Miller - - - 3 3R. Morrison - - - 1 1G. Nwoko - - 1 1 2D. Roberts - - 3 4 7M. Scott - - 3 2 5A.J. Simmons - 2 7 8 17T. Tutogi - - - 4 4B. Wright - - 2 2 4

Defense

D. Earls - - - 11 11R. Elmore - 9 13 11 33J. Fischer - - - 7 7R. Golden - - 13 12 25A. Hall - - - 7 7L. Mikaele 1 - 3 12 16J. Perkins - - - 12 12B. Reed - 13 8 12 33D. Reed - 3 4 1 8S. Richardson - - - 3 3S. Tuihalamaka - - - 4 4P. Vassallo - - - 12 12T. Wade - 1 13 10 24J. Washington - - - 9 9A. Wilcox - - - 9 9

Conan Amituanai Ah-mee-TOO-u-nighKeola Antolin Key-oh-lah AN-toh-linDominique Austin Dom-eh-neekBryson Beirne Burr-kneeJuron Criner Jur-ahn Cry-nerVaughn Dotsy Dot-seeNick Foles rhymes with bowlsJovon Hayes Joe-vahnLolomana Mikaele Mee-kah-AY-layGreg Nwoko Nuh-WOH-koeD’Aundre Reed Dee-on-drayApaiata Tuihalamaka Ah-pie-AH-tah

Too-ee-ha-lah-MAH-kahSione Tuihalamaka See-OH-nay

Too-ee-ha-lah-MAH-kahTaimi Tutogi TIE-mee tuh-TOE-gee (hard g)Mohammed Usman OOS-mun

(rhymes with loose)Paul Vassallo vuh-SAH-lohAlex Zendejas zen-DAY-hahs

Pos. No. Player Ht. Wt. Cl.-Exp.WR 82 Juron Criner 6-4 210 Jr.-2L

21 Gino Crump 6-2 210 Jr.*-SQ+IR 81 Dave Roberts 6-0 190 Jr.*-2L

14 Richard Morrison 6-0 180 Fr.*-RSTE 88 A.J. Simmons 6-3 255 Sr.*-3L

86 Jack Baucus 6-6 255 Fr.*-RSLT 78 Adam Grant 6-6 325 Gr.*-3L

77 Jack Julsing 6-8 295 Sr.-1LLG 55 Conan Amituanai 6-4 335 Sr.*-2L

72 Trace Biskin 6-5 295 So.*-SQC 76 Kyle Quinn 6-2 310 So.*-1L

62 Chris Putton 6-4 295 Fr.*-RSRG 57 Jovon Hayes 6-2 300 Sr.*-1L

62 Chris Putton 6-4 295 Fr.*-RSRT 67 Phillip Garcia 6-7 330 Sr.*-1L

77 Jack Julsing 6-8 295 Sr.-1LQB 8 Nick Foles 6-5 245 Jr.*-1L

4 Matt Scott 6-3 195 Jr.-2L17 Bryson Beirne 6-3 225 Jr.*-2L

RB 2 Keola Antolin 5-8 186 Jr.-2L5 Nic Grigsby 5-10 190 Sr.-3L34 Greg Nwoko 6-2 220 So.*-1L3 Daniel Jenkins 5-9 187 Fr.*-RS

HB 31 Taimi Tutogi 6-2 258 So.-1L88 A.J. Simmons 6-3 255 Sr.*-3L

IR 87 Terrence Miller 6-4 225 So.-1L19 Bug Wright 5-9 175 Jr.*-2L

WR 85 David Douglas 6-1 198 Jr.-2L6 Travis Cobb 6-0 180 Sr.-1L

Pos. No. Name Ht. Wt. Cl.-Exp.DE 44 Ricky Elmore 6-5 250 Sr.*-3L

83 D’Aundre Reed 6-4 248 Sr.*-3LDT 43 Justin Washington 6-2 275 Fr.*-RS

91 Sione Tuihalamaka 6-2 280 Fr.*-RS92 Dominique Austin 6-4 292 Jr.-2L

NT 94 Lolomana Mikaele 6-2 305 Sr.*-2L96 Willie Mobley 6-2 280 So.*-JC71 Chris Merrill 6-2 285 So.*-SQ

DE 42 Brooks Reed 6-3 262 Sr.*-3L97 Mohammed Usman 6-2 240 Jr.-JC

SLB 33 Jake Fischer 5-11 220 So.-1L51 R.J. Young 5-11 232 So.*-1L

MLB 40 Derek Earls 6-3 235 Jr.-JC10 Trevor Erno 6-1 230 Fr.*-RS

WLB 41 Paul Vassallo 6-3 240 Jr.-JC51 R.J. Young 5-11 232 So.*-1L

CB 1 Robert Golden 5-11 190 Jr.-2L2 Mike Turner 5-11 175 Sr.*-2L

SS 3 Anthony Wilcox 6-2 205 Sr.-1L4 Marquis Flowers 6-3 200 Fr.-HS

FS 9 Joseph Perkins 6-2 205 Sr.*-2L12 Adam Hall 6-4 212 So.-1L

CB 24 Trevin Wade 5-11 182 Jr.*-2L5 Shaquille Richardson 6-2 180 Fr.-HS6 Jonathan McKnight 5-11 175 Fr.-HS

Pos. No. Name Ht. Wt. Cl.-Exp.P 47 Keenyn Crier 6-1 200 Sr.*-3L

14 Alex Zendejas 5-11 190 Jr..*-1LLS 50 Chase Gorham 6-2 225 Fr.-HSKOR 6 Travis Cobb 6-0 180 Sr.-1L

2 Keola Antolin 5-8 186 Jr.-2LPR 85 David Douglas 6-1 190 So.-1L

19 Bug Wright 5-9 175 Jr.*-2LPK 14 Alex Zendejas (PAT/FG) 5-11 190 Jr..*-1L -or- 18 John Bonano (Kickoffs) 6-0 180 Jr.-1LHolder 47 Keenyn Crier 6-1 200 Sr.*-3L

Offense

Defense

Specialists

Player 07 08 09 10 Tot

ARIZONA DEPTH CHART