Los Angeles Times

Arizona rebuild figures to be his next trick

Fisch has brought a UCLA flavor to Tucson as he tries to change the culture.

- By Ben Bolch

Trick plays were a Jedd Fisch specialty in his one season at UCLA.

Flea-flickers, double reverses and a screen pass to left tackle Kolton Miller were just part of the fun. Fisch, the Bruins’ offensive coordinato­r before becoming interim coach upon the firing of Jim Mora, conjured much of the magic in an otherwise disillusio­ning 2017 season.

What he wants to do at Arizona would amaze David Copperfiel­d. Fisch is trying to make ages of desert disappoint­ment disappear.

The only member of the Pac-12 Conference before its most recent expansion to never appear in a Rose Bowl, the Wildcats find themselves with far greater problems than snagging the national spotlight. They haven’t won a game in more than two years. Their school-record 16-game losing streak included a belly flop last month against Northern Arizona.

Why would Fisch, whose winless Wildcats (0-4 overall, 0-1 Pac-12) will face UCLA (3-2, 1-1) on Saturday night at Arizona Stadium, subject himself to this?

The answer is written on the cover of the notebook he’s toted with him while crisscross­ing the country for more than two decades: “One day as a head coach.”

“The chance to be in college and be on the West Coast and be in the Pac-12 and lead this team and really try to change the entire fortunes of the program,” Fisch, 45, said during a telephone interview, “was too good of an opportunit­y to pass up.”

The Bruins got a taste of Fisch’s offense four years ago, when it sparked the schoolreco­rd comeback from a 34point deficit during a 45-44 victory over Texas A&M.

He guided the Bruins to a bowl-clinching victory over California and a loss to Kansas State in the Cactus Bowl with incoming UCLA coach Chip Kelly watching from a luxury suite. Fisch also helped recruit several players who are still on the team, including quarterbac­k Dorian Thompson-Robinson.

“He’s a big part of why I chose UCLA, him and his offensive scheme,” said Thompson-Robinson. “It’s a real NFL-style offense, has a lot of similariti­es to stuff that they run on Sundays.”

The arrival of Kelly, another offensive guru, precluded the need for a second playcaller. So Fisch departed, becoming a member of coach Sean McVay’s offensive staff with the Rams and helping the team reach Super Bowl LIII. After moving on to become quarterbac­ks coach for the New England Patriots in 2020, Fisch took a call from Arizona officials late in the year.

Having interviewe­d for the job that went to Kevin Sumlin three years earlier, he was familiar with the massive challenge that awaited upon his hiring two days before Christmas. Among his top priorities was injecting some fun into the long-suffering program. He hosted players at his home each week and invited famous alumnus Rob Gronkowski to catch a football dropped from a helicopter the day before the spring game.

“We just feel like we have to make a family atmosphere,” Fisch said, “we have to create a culture where kids love playing here, kids want to be a part of it ... know that it’s going to be a great place to be.”

Facilities were upgraded, the football staff overhauled, the culture revamped. Core principles became respect, accountabi­lity, competitio­n and joy. The immediate goal was to become the hardest team on its opponents’ schedules.

Arizona is closer than its record would indicate, having gained more offensive yardage than three of its first four opponents. A flurry of turnovers and an inability to execute in critical situations have doomed the team.

“I’m hopeful that what our guys see is that if you do things right,” Fisch said, “good things will occur.”

Fisch knows this is going to take time. He said he wanted to get his team to the point where it has 20 returning starters, like Kelly’s Bruins.

“We’re just trying to build this thing block by block, piece by piece, brick by brick,” said Fisch, still assembling a foundation that could be his greatest trick of all.

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