The Arizona Republic

Cats lose QB Gunnell, 10th straight

- Bruce Pascoe

This time, at least, they battled.

The Arizona Wildcats lost their quarterbac­k, fell behind early but kept fighting. They had a legitimate chance to make UCLA sweat in the fourth quarter.

In the end, it wasn’t enough. The Cats fell to the Bruins 27-10 Saturday night at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. The loss extended Arizona’s school-record skid to10 games. The UA has dropped five straight on the road against UCLA.

The game unexpected­ly became a contest between backup quarterbac­ks when Arizona’s Grant Gunnell was injured on the first play from scrimmage. Freshman Will Plummer took over and led the Wildcats to an early lead that they couldn’t maintain.

Plummer, a three-star recruit from Gilbert High School, completed 17 of 35 passes for 151 yards with two intercepti­ons.

Gunnell completed his lone pass attempt for 2 yards. The injury appeared to be to his right shoulder.

Although he slowed for long stretches in the second half, UCLA’s Demetric Felton notched career highs with 32 carries for 206 yards before exiting with a leg injury late in the fourth quarter.

Arizona’s next chance to break its losing streak comes next week against Colorado, which defeated San Diego State 20-10 earlier Saturday. UCLA improved to 2-2.

After looking leaky and fatigued in the first half, the UA defense stiffened in the third quarter. The Wildcats limited the Bruins to 36 yards and only one first down in the frame.

The UA offense started to show signs of life, leaning more on its ground game, but the best it could manage in the third quarter was a field goal. Lucas Havrisik’s 26-yarder made it 20-10 with 1:15 left in the period.

After forcing a third straight UCLA three-and-out, Arizona again drove into scoring range. The Wildcats again had to settle for a field-goal attempt. This time, holder Jacob Meeker-Hackett bobbled the snap. He couldn’t get the ball down. Arizona came up empty at the end of a 14-play, 42-yard drive.

The UA defense again held, but the Wildcats regained possession at their 1yard line. Four plays later, Plummer threw an intercepti­on to UCLA’s Stephan

Blaylock.

Brittain Brown put the game away with a 2-yard TD run with 1:38 remaining.

The start of the contest was eventful to say the least.

On the first play from scrimmage, Gunnell got driven to the turf by unblocked blitzing linebacker Bo Calvert. Gunnell landed on his right shoulder.

Plummer entered and immediatel­y scrambled for 26 yards. The drive stalled, but the struggling UA defense came up with a huge stop on the next series.

UCLA coach Chip Kelly decided to go for it on fourth-and-1from the Bruins’ 25yard line. Trevon Mason, Jalen Harris and others smothered Felton for a 3-yard loss.

After an alert recovery of a Gary Brightwell fumble by walk-on offensive lineman Tyson Gardner – a surprise starter at left tackle – Arizona scored the game’s first touchdown. Plummer’s 10yard keeper set up Michael Wiley’s 3yard TD run to give the Wildcats a 7-0 lead.

How rare of an occurrence was that? It marked only the fourth time in 13 road games under Kevin Sumlin that Arizona

has held a first-quarter lead.

Arizona having to use an untested backup quarterbac­k against UCLA isn’t unusual. In 2018, Rhett Rodriguez made his first and only start when Khalil Tate was injured and couldn’t play. The Wildcats lost 31-30.

Last year, Gunnell made his first career start when Tate again was injured. Arizona won 20-17.

The Bruins also played with a backup quarterbac­k. Dorian Thompson-Robinson was unavailabl­e for the second straight week because of COVID-19 contact tracing. Redshirt freshman Chase Griffin got the start. But it was mostly the UCLA ground game that offset the initial UA surge.

Felton rushed for 134 first-half yards as the Bruins scored 20 consecutiv­e points. Kelly wisely deployed an up-tempo attack against an undermanne­d Arizona defense.

Two plays that conceivabl­y could have been reviewed – and might have benefited the Wildcats – never went to replay.

In the second quarter, it appeared that Brown fumbled at the end of a run. Arizona’s Jaxen Turner emerged with the

ball. But Brown was ruled down, and the Bruins ran a play before the previous one could be reviewed or challenged. UCLA ended up scoring a touchdown, on a pass from Griffin to Brown, to take a 10-7 lead.

Later in the quarter, Arizona appeared to have a first down on a pass from Plummer to Brian Casteel. But after catching the ball past the first-down marker, Casteel got pushed back. The officials marked the ball a yard short. On fourthand-1, UCLA stuffed Plummer on a sneak and regained possession at the UA 43.

Six plays later, Felton scored from the1 to bump the Bruins’ advantage to 17-7.

UCLA extended its lead to 20-7 at halftime. The Bruins rushed 192 yards in the opening 30 minutes and held a 288152 edge in total yardage.

Extra points

Receiver Dylean Miller and cornerback­s McKenzie Barnes and Malik Hausman were among the players listed as unavailabl­e for Arizona.

UA linebacker Parker Henley got hurt in the first half and didn’t return. Freshman Derick Mourning played most of the rest of the game at “Mike” linebacker.

 ?? JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Arizona quarterbac­k Grant Gunnell was injured on the first play of the game against UCLA at the Rose Bowl on Saturday in Pasadena, Calif. Gunnell left the game.
JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA/GETTY IMAGES Arizona quarterbac­k Grant Gunnell was injured on the first play of the game against UCLA at the Rose Bowl on Saturday in Pasadena, Calif. Gunnell left the game.

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