The Arizona Republic

New-look Cats face Lumberjack­s in opener

Rodriguez unsure what to expect

- MICHAEL LEV

TUCSON - The Arizona Wildcats have practiced together almost 50 times since last season ended. They have held full-contact scrimmages and in-stadium dress rehearsals.

They have done so much to prepare for the 2017 season. Yet heading into the opener against Northern Arizona on Saturday night, not much is truly known.

Even sixth-year UA coach Rich Rodriguez isn’t sure what to expect.

“I want to see what this team is all about,” Rodriguez said. “I wish we had a preseason or exhibition game so we can fix our problems and know what we have. The exciting part is that you don’t really know what you’re going to get out of your team until they start playing games.”

“Exciting” is one word for it. Rodriguez also used the words “anxiety” and “stress” to describe the buildup to Week 1 for him and his staff.

It’s undoubtedl­y a common feeling across the country in college football; turnover is inherent to the sport. But feelings of uncertaint­y are especially applicable to this particular UA squad.

Arizona has 42 freshmen, including walk-ons; 16 redshirt freshmen who never have played in a college game; and five transfers. Many of the newcomers will play this season, especially on defense. Some will start Saturday night.

Rodriguez used the term “reboot” to describe the state of the program at Pac-12 Media Days. Rebooting is what you do when your computer isn’t working properly. The Wildcats went 3-9 last season. They had to make changes.

Glenn Parker, for one, has an idea of how things might go Saturday night. The former Arizona lineman, a frequent visitor to UA practices, is calling the opener game for Pac-12 Networks.

“They will win this game and make mistakes,” Parker said. “It is the first game of the season, and they have a lot of youth. If we see a dominant win with lots of kids getting to play, they’ve met expectatio­ns.”

Lots of kids will play on defense, regardless of the score. Three freshmen are penciled in as starters: “Stud” Kylan Wilborn, linebacker Tony Fields II and safety Scottie Young Jr. Another linebacker, Colin Schooler, is listed as a co-starter. Six additional freshmen or redshirt freshmen appear on the Week 1 depth chart.

This was the plan from the moment the 2017 signing class became official. The message has been consistent throughout the offseason: The players the coaches deem the best will play, regardless of their experience level.

“I don’t even think about it, to be honest with you,” second-year defensive coordinato­r Marcel Yates said. “At this point, it’s time to play. So, freshman, senior, sophomore, I don’t care. Who’s gonna play is who’s gonna play.”

The youth movement isn’t as farreachin­g on offense. The Week 1 depth chart features six true freshmen, but none in starting roles. That total includes two quarterbac­ks, Rhett Rodriguez and Donavan Tate, who only would play in an emergency scenario.

Still, it’s possible that at some point veteran quarterbac­k Brandon Dawkins will have freshman tailback Nathan Tilford alongside him, freshman tight end Bryce Wolma on the wing and freshman slot receiver Gary Brightwell in the slot.

Although Dawkins considers himself a coach on the field – ready and willing to help anyone who needs it – he won’t treat the freshmen any differentl­y once the game begins.

“It doesn’t really faze me or cross my mind,” Dawkins said. “That’s not going to change how I run the offense. It’s all still going to run the same, smooth way as it should be run.

“I trust everybody they put in the game. I don’t care if they put a watergirl in the backfield.”

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