The Arizona Republic

Arizona walloped in the fog, snow

- Michael Lev

Snow flurries fell during the first quarter of Arizona’s game against Washington State on Friday night at Gesa Field. It’s believed to be the first time the Wildcats have played in snow since 1977.

Most of the rest of the game felt frustratin­gly familiar.

Mistakes and breakdowns led to one of Arizona’s least-inspired performanc­es of the season. The Wildcats fell to the Cougars 44-18 in chilly Pullman, Washington.

From late in the first half on, the game was played in a dense fog. The Cats seemed to be in a mental fog for much of the night.

Arizona was flagged 10 times for 60 yards. Seven of those infraction­s occurred in the first half. The Wildcats had only five penalties last week vs. Utah.

"I don't think we played well (or) coached well," UA coach Jedd Fisch said. "Clearly, we didn't execute the way we should have. We expect a lot more from some of our younger players. We didn't put them in the best position."

The loss was Arizona’s sixth in a row in the game preceding the season-ending Territoria­l Cup. Friday was the fourth time the Wildcats played that game in Washington or Oregon. The average margin: 28 points.

Fisch didn't think focus, or lack thereof, was an issue.

"I don't think that was a question," he said. "I thought our focus was great. I thought there was no issue about anything other than the fact that we are what we are currently with our depth.

"I thought our guys played very hard. We have to make plays. We have to catch the football. We have to make the throws on offense when we have guys in windows. That wasn't where it normally is.

"We can't, on third-and-11, give up a 50-yard pass. We can’t give up 230 yards rushing (223 officially). We have to put them in better position calling plays. We can’t have a punt blocked for a safety right up the A-gap.

"So there's a lot of things that we need to do, that we need to be better (at). But I would not say that it had anything to do with their focus."

Arizona (1-10, 1-7 Pac-12) lost its second in a row after its breakthrou­gh victory against Cal. WSU (6-5, 5-3) bounced back from a loss at Oregon to earn bowl eligibilit­y.

The Wildcats struggled in several facets. Run defense was a particular problem, as the Cougars compiled a season-high 223 yards on the ground. Max Borghi, one of 14 Cougars honored on Senior Night, had 139 of those yards and two touchdowns.

Washington State turned a 21-7 halftime lead into a 37-7 advantage with a 16-0 burst in the third quarter. It started with Borghi’s second touchdown run and included a safety on a blocked punt.

To their credit, the Wildcats never stopped battling. They drove for a field goal to make it 37-10 with 35 seconds left in the third quarter. A 27-yard touchdown pass from Will Plummer to Michael Wiley — plus a 2-point conversion pass from Plummer to Dorian Singer — made it 37-18 with 12:16 remaining.

The Cougars delivered the dagger three series later. Jayden de Laura threw a 78-yard touchdown pass to Calvin Jackson Jr. to bump the lead to 44-18 with 8:37 to play.

De Laura completed 13 of 22 passes for 259 yards and four touchdowns. Plummer finished 24 of 42 for 222 yards with two TDs and one intercepti­on.

WSU, which operates a version of the run-and-shoot offense, did more running than shooting in the first quarter. The Cougars had 61 yards rushing and only 13 passing. Twenty-six of those rushing yards came on Borghi’s touchdown run, which gave WSU a 7-0 lead with 7:11 left in the opening period.

WSU got the ball after a fourth-down failure. Arizona advanced to the WSU 45 on its opening drive. But Plummer’s sneak attempt on fourth-and-1 got stuffed for no gain.

The Cougars expanded their lead to 14-0 late in the second quarter. De Laura hooked up twice with Travell Harris for gains of 32 and 8 yards. The second pass went for a touchdown. Harris beat safety Jaydin Young in one-on-one coverage both times.

Arizona desperatel­y needed a spark at that point, and Drake Anderson provided it. His 71-yard run advanced the Wildcats into the red zone.

Arizona faced another fourth-down situation ¡ fourth-and-2 at the WSU 11. Jedd Fisch called a play-action pass. After finding no one open to the right, Plummer came back to his left. Plummer threw a jump ball to Boobie Curry, who defeated Chau Smith-Wade for the score to make it 14-7.

It didn’t take long for the Cougars to re-establish a 14-point advantage. They needed only three plays to go 75 yards. De Laura connected with Jackson for a 43-yard TD. Young again was victimized on the play.

After Arizona's first touchdown, WSU scored 23 unanswered points.

After the game, Fisch was ready to turn his attention to his first Territoria­l Cup.

"That's where our focus will be starting now," he said.

 ?? JAMES SNOOK/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Arizona running back Michael Wiley (6) is tackled by Washington State’s Jahad Woods and Washington State.
JAMES SNOOK/USA TODAY SPORTS Arizona running back Michael Wiley (6) is tackled by Washington State’s Jahad Woods and Washington State.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States