The Arizona Republic

4 takeaways from UA’s loss to Utah

- Michael Lev

Here are five key takeaways from the UA’s 38-29 loss to No. 24 Utah on Saturday:

1. Countermea­sures

It made sense to try to pressure Utah quarterbac­k Cameron Rising. Entering Saturday, he had a significan­tly higher completion percentage with a clean pocket (71.8%) than without (30.0%). But the Utes were ready for whatever Don Brown and the Wildcats threw at them. Utah came to Tucson armed with plays that could beat the blitz and defeat man coverage.

Take the Utes’ first third-down conversion of the game. Utah faced thirdand-5 at its 43 on the opening possession. Tailback Micah Bernard motioned into the backfield. Arizona sent six pass rushers. Bernard sifted through the traffic into the right flat, where he was uncovered. He gained 27 yards, setting up the Utes’ first touchdown.

Their second TD exploited man coverage, which is Brown’s preferred M.O. With five seconds left in the first half, Utah faced first-and-goal at the 2. The Utes motioned out of a goal-line formation into a trips concept to the left. Tight end Brant Kuithe split wide, then motioned back in, creating separation from defender Christian Roland-Wallace. Rising fired the ball to Kuithe, who followed two blockers into the end zone. Rising was 8 of 15 for 78 yards with two touchdowns when not blitzed, per Pro Football Focus. He was 11 of 15 for 216 yards when he was blitzed.

2. Plummer’s progress

You wouldn’t necessaril­y know from his numbers, none of which were eyepopping (19 of 34, 223 yards, one TD). But UA quarterbac­k Will Plummer continued to show signs of progress.

First off, he didn’t throw an intercepti­on for the second time in three games. Not only that, PFF didn’t tag him with a single turnover-worthy play. Second, Plummer generally made sound decisions with the ball. On his TD run, he recognized that Utah was in a “zero” coverage (no safeties) and exploited it. On Arizona’s second drive, Plummer saw that Dorian Singer was uncovered on third-and-1 and flipped the ball to him for an easy first down. Two subsequent passes down the left sideline to Singer fell incomplete — but they were ready properly. Singer had one-on-one coverage with Utah’s Zemaiah Vaughn. On the first one, Vaughn broke up a wellthrown ball. On the second, Singer tried to adjust to the ball, which was thrown to the inside, but couldn’t come down

with it.

3. The 2-point play

After Arizona blocked a Utah punt and returned the ball for a touchdown, coach Jedd Fisch correctly elected to attempt a 2-point conversion. With the Wildcats needing two points to tie the score, it made perfect sense. The play itself never had a chance. Arizona lined up in an unusual formation between the hashmarks. Receivers Boobie Curry and BJ Casteel were aligned as tight ends. Berryhill (on the right) and tailback Michael Wiley (on the left) set up as wings. Plummer stood alone in the shotgun. At the snap, Berryhill ran into the backfield. He took a flip from Plummer, then flipped the ball to Wiley. Plummer leaked into the right flat. It looked like “Philly Special.” Only Utah was in a zone defense.

4. Greater expectatio­ns

Any UA fan living in reality should have come away from Saturday’s game feeling pretty good about the program. Arizona went toe-to-toe with the 24thranked team in the nation for 60 minutes. So why were the Wildcats mad afterward? Because they expected to win, Fisch said.

By virtue of finally winning the previous week — after two near-misses — Arizona crossed an important psychologi­cal barrier. The Wildcats have a newfound confidence in themselves. They truly believe they can compete with anyone in the Pac-12. Heading into the Utah game, we would have considered even one win in the final three games a surprising outcome. Now, we’d be surprised if Arizona didn’t win at least one of the final two games, at Washington State and Arizona State. Despite their 1-9 record, the Wildcats are mentally tougher under Fisch than they ever were under his predecesso­r. We expect respectabl­e, competitiv­e football down the stretch — just like Arizona showed against Utah.

 ?? CHRISTIAN PETERSEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Arizona coach Jedd Fisch talks with Will Plummer on the sideline during the first half Saturday against Utah in Tucson.
CHRISTIAN PETERSEN/GETTY IMAGES Arizona coach Jedd Fisch talks with Will Plummer on the sideline during the first half Saturday against Utah in Tucson.

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