The Arizona Republic

Heat, stress crank up in scrimmage

Wildcats’ tough practice tests younger players

- Michael Lev KELLY PRESNELL/ARIZONA DAILY STAR

The Arizona Wildcats held by far their longest, most difficult practice of training camp Saturday morning.

The temperatur­e approached 100 degrees. An unrelentin­g sun beat down on the Arizona Stadium turf. The team ran 90 plays over two hours in full pads.

It was physically and mentally taxing, stressful in every way. In other words, it was exactly what UA coach Kevin Sumlin was seeking.

Sumlin wanted to put his players – especially the younger ones – through a test. The goal was to find out which ones their coaches and older teammates can trust the most.

Afterward, Sumlin again pushed the theme of consistenc­y, which he’s been promoting throughout the offseason. He knows it’ll be difficult to attain with so many young players slated for key roles. But practices like Saturday’s should move the needle in the right direction.

“There was a stress level out there today, on purpose,” said Sumlin, whose team opens the season Aug. 24 at Hawaii. “The music was loud. It’s getting warm. Guys are getting a little bit tired, but having to think and still play … without coaches on the field.

“Some guys responded to that; some guys didn’t. That’s what today was about. But I thought, overall, it was positive.”

The Wildcats have veteran leaders in just about every position group.

But they’re also integratin­g underclass­men at multiple positions. Such is the nature of college football.

No position has undergone a bigger makeover than wide receiver, where only fifth-year senior Cedric Peterson has any substantia­l experience. With Pederson sitting out Saturday’s scrimmage because of a minor injury, the younger receivers got plenty of opportunit­ies to show Sumlin what they could do.

The “starters” were redshirt sophomore Stanley Berryhill III, redshirt freshman Tre Adams and true freshman Jaden Mitchell. Tayvian Cunningham, Jamarye Joiner, Drew Dixon, Boobie Curry and Thomas Marcus Jr. also saw the field during the portion of the scrimmage open to the media. Dixon — a redshirt sophomore from Sabino High School with zero career catches — was the most experience­d player in the latter group.

“He’s coming along good,” Sumlin said. “He’s bigger now. He’s more comfortabl­e. Tremendous athlete. He just needs to take another step to be consistent.

“He is part of the group where one day, you’re like, ‘Wow.’ And then the next day …

“That’s part of growing up. That’s what we just talked about here as a team.”

Sumlin had a similar assessment of the freshmen and redshirt freshmen, who make up roughly half of the scholarshi­p receiving corps.

“Some days these freshmen are lights out,” Sumlin said. “Then you come back the next day, and you’re like, ‘What’s going on?’ That’s part of the process.

“They’re young. But they’re talented. We’ve just gotta push them along, because they’re all going to help us.”

That dynamic isn’t limited to wide receiver.

Arizona will have two new starters on the offensive line, neither of whom has started for the Wildcats. Junior-college transfer Josh Donovan has been running with the ones at left guard since spring. Redshirt sophomore Edgar Burrola has the lead for now at right tackle.

Right guard Cody Creason, a fifthyear senior, remembers what it was like when he was just breaking in. He’d lose a rep, and he’d get down on himself.

For those who are in a similar spot now, it’s a matter of learning how to manage those ups and downs.

“Especially on the offensive line, you’re going to have good plays and bad plays all the time,” Creason said. “If you get a holding penalty, or any penalty, or give up a sack, you’ve gotta just wipe that out of your head.”

Creason referenced a saying from offensive line coach Kyle DeVan that helps in that regard.

“Our coach always says, ‘The review mirror is smaller than the windshield. You can’t look behind you, you’ve gotta look ahead.’ ”

When Creason finished speaking, the opener was three weeks and seven hours away. Training camp resumes Monday. The Wildcats will conduct another scrimmage next Saturday. More answers will be revealed then.

“Everything works together,” Sumlin said. “Things for younger players were happening quick today. We’ll get them up to speed.”

Converted QB Joiner ‘coming along quickly’

Joiner didn’t play much during the two series open for media observatio­n, but the Cienega High School product is expected to have a sizable role despite only recently shifting from quarterbac­k to receiver.

“He’s coming along quickly,” Sumlin said. “He’s a bigger guy than you think he is. He’s explosive. He’s probably one of the top two, three athletes on this team.

“He’s caught balls in the middle. One thing you worry about guys that move out there (is) how will they deal with it in traffic. He’s done it. He’s a competitor. It means something to him. He’s bought in.”

Sumlin said Joiner appears to have a strong relationsh­ip with starting quarterbac­k Khalil Tate after the two spent last season in the same meeting room.

Wilborn again?

Sumlin praised the performanc­e of the defensive line, which featured Kylan Wilborn as the first-team defensive end.

After a breakout freshman campaign, Wilborn struggled as a sophomore and lost his starting job about midway through last season. He might be on the brink of bouncing back.

“He was a little nicked up last year,” Sumlin said. “He’s healthy now. He’s got what guys refer to as ‘twitch.’ He can get off the ball. He’s got great hands. He can rush the passer.”

Wilborn had seven sacks and four forced fumbles as a freshman. Last year he had two and one, respective­ly.

 ??  ?? Receiver Jaden Mitchell, a true freshman, gets forced out of bounds by a trio of Wildcat defenders after his catch and run during Saturday’s scrimmage at Arizona Stadium.
Receiver Jaden Mitchell, a true freshman, gets forced out of bounds by a trio of Wildcat defenders after his catch and run during Saturday’s scrimmage at Arizona Stadium.

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