
Kevin Sumlin's Wildcats are back in the thick of things in the crowded Pac-12 after upsetting Oregon and knocking off Colorado at home.
In the Rich Rodriguez years, Arizona established a disconcerting habit of upsetting a highly ranked team and then falling off the edge of the football earth a week later.
It is one of the things that kept the Arizona teams of 2012-17 from building and sustaining a fan base and being anything more than a periodic upstart. Consider:
- In 2012, Arizona stunned No. 10 USC — and a week later was humiliated 66-10 by UCLA.
- In 2013, the UA shocked No. 5 Oregon — and was kicked around 58-21 by Arizona State a week later.
- In 2014, the Wildcats again upset No. 2 Oregon — and a week later, climbing to No. 10 in the poll, stumbled and lost to unranked USC.
- In 2015, Arizona surprised No. 10 Utah in double overtime — and a week later was blown out 52-37 by a 5-5 ASU club.
A year ago, after Khalil Tate’s Mr. October performances, capped by an upset over No. 15 Washington State, the Wildcats vanished, going 1-4 down the stretch.
That maddening yo-yo act led to a precipitous decline of fan support; Arizona Stadium’s yearly attendance fell from 51,392 to 48,288 to last year’s 20-year low of 42,632.
That’s why Friday’s 42-34 victory over Colorado was so encouraging. Arizona was coming off a blowout win over No. 19 Oregon and, for the first time in forever, proved that it wasn’t some type of fleeting happenstance.
How is this happening?
Part of it is that Kevin Sumlin’s staffing does not appear to be part of the RichRod hiring system. RichRod had a flawed habit of hiring yes-men assistant coaches with unimpressive résumés and personalities that he could dominate.
But if you examine Arizona’s improvement on the offensive line over the last 10 weeks — a period in which the UA started four (and sometimes five) new players, which is often football suicide — it’s clear that Sumlin has different standards.
His offensive line coach is Joe Gilbert, who spent the last six years in the same capacity for the NFL’s Indianapolis Colts. Moreover, Sumlin hired Harold Goodwin as an offensive analyst. Goodwin was an NFL offensive line coach with the Steelers, Colts and Cardinals the last 11 seasons.
Who in college football has a superior coaching/planning/scouting offensive line staff than Arizona? Not many.
Over the last 10 weeks, Gilbert and Goodwin have helped to develop rookie-type linemen Josh McCauley,ÌýBryson Cain,ÌýDonovan Laie,ÌýMichael Eletise and seldom-used junior Cody Creason into useful Pac-12 players.
Even as Tate hobbled on a bad ankle, even as Tate completed just 49 percent of his passes in losses to BYU, Houston, Utah and USC, the new offensive line improved piece by piece.
In wins over Oregon and Colorado, the UA gained 1,031 yards, Tate was sacked just twice, and Arizona’s rebuilt offensive line won the battles up front two weeks in succession.
Running back J.J. Taylor, who has gained 1,234 yards to lead the Pac-12, has become a revelation.
Why? A lot of it is that the offensive line coached by NFL veterans Gilbert and Goodwin has grown into its shoes, and, so, too, has Sumlin’s first Arizona team.