The Arizona Republic

2nd-half ‘D’ leads UA to win over Cal

- Michael Lev

Coach Kevin Sumlin had the perfect adjective to describe Arizona’s 24-17 victory over Cal on Saturday night.

“That was really a gutty performanc­e,” Sumlin said.

It wasn’t pretty — unless you’re a fan of clutch defense.

The Wildcats’ defensive unit outscored its offense in the latest wacky chapter in this series.

A pair of defensive touchdowns in the second half helped the Cats overcome an out-of-sync offensive attack and defeat the Golden Bears in front of an announced crowd of 44,253 at Arizona Stadium.

“It’s football,” said receiver Tony Ellison, who scored Arizona’s lone offensive touchdown. “Sometimes the offense takes care of the defense. The defense took care of the offense tonight. We’re very grateful for that."

Sophomore safety Scottie Young Jr. put the game away with a 24-yard intercepti­on return for a touchdown with 3:13 remaining. It was Young’s second intercepti­on of the fourth quarter.

Young missed all of spring practice, a chunk of training camp and the 2018 opener because of a suspension. In one sudden sequence, he produced as many intercepti­ons as Arizona had all year up to that point.

“I just go out there every day and work for my team,” Young said. “I put the past behind me. What can I do to help the team win?”

Arizona intercepte­d Cal first-time starting quarterbac­k Brandon McIlwain three times in all. The Wildcats also forced him to fumble. They needed every one of them to offset an offense that struggled to find a rhythm after the first quarter.

Khalil Tate started at quarterbac­k and led a pair of first-quarter scoring drives. Freshman Jamarye Joiner replaced him for the first series of the second period. Nothing the Wildcats tried worked; the offense did not score a point over the final three quarters and finished with 265 total yards.

After limping and struggling for much of the night, Tate pulled the ball and ran on the most important offensive snap of the game for Arizona.

Clinging to a three-point lead in the fourth quarter, Arizona faced third-and-9 from its 4-yard line. Tate faked a handoff to J.J. Taylor and raced around the right side for a 17-yard gain — Tate’s longest run in a strange season. For a brief moment, he looked like the Tate of 2017.

The Wildcats didn’t score on the drive, but they advanced past midfield and took time off the clock.

“Even though we didn’t score, Khalil pulling the ball and running … that flipped the field,” Sumlin said.

“It was something I had to do,” said Tate, who finished with 40 rushing yards on eight attempts. “It was something the defense showed. It was something that surprised them.”

The possession ended with Taylor losing a fumble. Moments later, Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles tipped a McIlwain pass into the arms of Young for his first intercepti­on.

Arizona couldn’t turn the pick into points; Josh Pollack missed a 40-yard field-goal attempt off the left upright. But the defense again rose to the occasion. JB Brown sacked and stripped McIlwain. Dereck Boles recovered the ball.

The defense struggled on third down all night but stiffened on fourth, getting critical stops in the first and fourth quarters. The Wildcats also turned one of their takeaways into an improbable goahead touchdown.

With the score still 14-10 in the third quarter, Colin Schooler intercepte­d McIlwain on a deflected pass at the UA 16yard line. Schooler returned the ball 39 yards before Cal’s Jeremiah Hawkins punched it out of his grasp.

The ball bounded forward. Arizona’s Azizi Hearn scooped it up at the Cal 34 and raced into the end zone.

“That was all planned,” Schooler joked. “That went from a good play to a bad play to a great play. I gotta have trust in my teammates to pick up the slack sometimes.”

It was the latest zany play in a series that’s been full of them. Cal’s last trip to Arizona Stadium, in 2014, ended with the “Hill Mary” touchdown. Last year’s matchup concluded with Schooler breaking up a two-point conversion attempt that would have won the game for Cal in double overtime.

The Wildcats improved to 3-3, 2-1 in the Pac-12. The Bears lost their second straight to fall to 3-2, 0-2.

The most dynamic quarterbac­k on the field was McIlwain. The redshirt sophomore passed for 315 yards and ran for 107, topping the century mark for the second week in a row.

McIlwain ran for a pair of touchdowns — covering 25 and 23 yards — in the second quarter as the Bears turned a 10-0 deficit into a 14-10 halftime lead.

The game started about as well as Arizona could have hoped. With Tate looking spry, the Wildcats marched 75 yards in 11 plays on the opening possession. Tate finished the drive with a 31yard touchdown pass to Ellison. Tate also ran twice for 16 yards.

The UA defense followed with a fourth-down stop. On fourth-and-2 from the UA 37, McIlwain ran to the right. Tony Fields II and Schooler stuffed him a yard short of the marker.

A classic Taylor 26-yard run — he started to the right and cut all the way back to the left — put the Wildcats in scoring range. A sack stalled the drive, and Arizona had to settle for a field goal.

Pollack nailed the kick from 46 yards. It was the fifth-year senior’s first field-goal try of the season. He replaced slumping sophomore Lucas Havrisik this week.

 ?? CHRIS CODUTO/AP ?? Arizona’s Troy Young, left, and Malik Hausman tackle California receiver Vic Wharton III during Saturday’s game in Tucson.
CHRIS CODUTO/AP Arizona’s Troy Young, left, and Malik Hausman tackle California receiver Vic Wharton III during Saturday’s game in Tucson.

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