Los Angeles Times

Will Tate hit the ground running?

- By J. Brady McCollough

A year ago, no player in the nation received more preseason love than Arizona quarterbac­k Khalil Tate.

Coming off a sophomore season in which he rushed for 1,411 yards (9.2 yards per carry) and 12 touchdowns and threw for 1,591 yards and 14 touchdowns, Tate was a chic Heisman Trophy pick — even though he was switching from Rich Rodriguez’s read-option-heavy offense to Kevin Sumlin’s version of the spread.

After all, Sumlin had coached Johnny Manziel to the Heisman in 2012, and the assumption was that Sumlin would tailor his passhappy scheme to Tate’s special skill set.

Then came the season opener against Brigham Young. Arizona lost 28-23 as Tate passed 34 times and ran it only eight times for 14 yards. The next week, in a loss to Houston, Tate passed 45 times and ran it seven.

As it turned out, Tate was hampered by a left ankle injury and would battle it for most of the season. That was an obvious reason for Sumlin electing to have Tate fling the ball all over the yard, and that decision will make a lot more sense if Tate comes out this year with designed runs playing a much bigger role in the offense.

Tate might want to show NFL scouts that he can play quarterbac­k at the next level, but the only way he’s going to have that shot is by proving he’s an efficient dual-threat guy. His passing improved as last year went on, and he finished with 2,530 yards and 26 touchdowns through the air with eight intercepti­ons. But he rushed for only 224 yards. The experience he gained in 2018 could help him reach his full potential in 2019, if Sumlin is willing to let him do what he does best and keep defenses on their heels.

Pac-12 fans would certainly benefit from seeing the explosive Tate who starred at Gardena Serra High, the one who burst onto the scene two seasons ago against Colorado with 14 carries for 327 yards and four touchdowns, instead of the restrained player Sumlin featured last year.

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