Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sumlin: Arizona is the right challenge

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TUCSON, Ariz. — Kevin Sumlin calls the head coaching job at Arizona “the right place and the right challenge.”

He made the comment at a news conference introducin­g him as coach Tuesday.

Sumlin said that when he spoke with Arizona Athletic Director Dave Heeke about the job, talk inevitably turned to the Rose Bowl. Arizona is the only one of the original Pac-10 never to play in the game.

“I said, ‘It is going to happen,’ ” Sumlin said. “‘What time is that going to happen? Why not now and why not us?’ ”

Sumlin, fired after compiling a 51-26 record the past six seasons at Texas A&M, confirmed that he will retain Marcel Yates as defensive coordinato­r. He made no other announceme­nts about assistants but there are consistent reports that he will bring in Noel Mazzone as offensive coordinato­r.

Sumlin, 53, has an 86-43 record in 10 seasons as a head coach with nine bowl appearance­s. But he found long-term survival in the SEC difficult, losing his job after the Aggies went 7-6 last season, including losing to Wake Forest in the Belk Bowl.

Sumlin also coached four seasons at Houston, going 12-1 in his final year there in 2011. He takes over in Tucson just 13 days after Arizona fired Rich Rodriguez after a notice of claim was filed with the state attorney general’s office alleging he ran a hostile workplace.

The claim filed by Rodriguez’s former assistant alleged the coach fondled himself in front of her and forced her to cover up an extramarit­al affair he was having with a different woman. Rodriguez acknowledg­ed the affair, but denied the allegation­s.

Heeke expects a transparen­t program under Sumlin.

“I think you saw that Kevin’s just an open, honest, straightfo­rward person,” Heeke said. “We’re all in this together. It’s a partnershi­p, it’s about the people. We look forward to a really long partnershi­p with Kevin and a really open and inclusive environmen­t.”

The first question asked of Sumlin was about being the first black football coach at Arizona.

“It is significan­t but this is my third time being a head coach and I’ve been asked that question every time,” he said. “It is significan­t and shouldn’t be overlooked but you hope that in time, in the next 5-10 years, that that is not the first question you get.”

Sumlin met with Arizona’s players early Tuesday to offer them reassuranc­e: one, that Yates would be back to run the defense and, two, that the offense would not vary greatly from the one run by Rodriguez. Arizona returns several talented young players, most notably dynamic quarterbac­k Khalil Tate.

“Offensivel­y, we’re quite similar in philosophy,” Sumlin said, “a little bit different in what we wanted to do maybe throwing the ball a little bit more and getting explosive plays and scoring points.

“I wanted them to leave the building this morning not thinking we’re going to run the Triple Option or we’re going to become this crazy team,” Sumlin said. “So they left the day feeling good. There will be some subtle changes but hopefully for the better.”

The Triple Option comment came after earlier reports that Arizona’s top pick for the job was Army’s Ken Niumatolo, who runs the same offense there. Tate responded to those reports with a tweet that read “I didn’t come to Arizona to run the Triple Option.”

Heeke said Sumlin was the only person offered the job.

The university will add more money to pay assistants, Heeke said, one of the subjects of a long conversati­on he and Sumlin had Saturday night.

“We want to get coaches that Kevin thinks will help lead our program forward and we’re ready to invest in that,” Heeke said.

Pending approval by the Arizona board of regents, Sumlin will get a five-year contract worth $14.5 million.

Despite the speed of the decision, Heeke insisted there was an extensive search and extreme vetting of candidates.

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