USA TODAY US Edition

Arizona greats to face off

- George Schroeder

Kyle Quinn’s first impression of Rob Gronkowski came on the practice field — and it was about what you might have figured.

“Talk about an intimidati­ng force,” says Quinn, who was an offensive lineman at Arizona, a position that provided an up-close view of a “physical specimen.”

Conversely, Quinn recalls Nick Foles as a comforting presence, whose long hours of preparatio­n and constant positivity made him “the quarterbac­k you want to play for.”

Gronkowski and Foles will face off in Super Bowl LII for the Patriots and Eagles, respective­ly. Long before that, their careers intersecte­d as teammates in Tucson, though they never played together.

After tearing up the Pac-12 as a freshman and sophomore, Gronkowski sat out his junior season in 2009 while rehabbing a back injury, then left early for the NFL draft the next spring. That was the season Foles, who had transferre­d from Michigan State to Arizona, took over the starting job; he went on to throw for more than 10,000 yards in three seasons in the Air Raid offense.

“People don’t realize what those guys did,” says former Arizona coach Mike Stoops, who recruited both players. “These guys just balled.”

Despite injuries, Gronkowski’s play was routinely spectacula­r. After 28 catches for 525 yards and six touchdowns as a freshman, he had 47 catches for 672 yards and 10 touchdowns as a sophomore. He averaged 16 yards per catch.

“He just had a unique skill set,” says Stoops, now Oklahoma’s defensive coordinato­r. “He’s fearless. He’ll block. He just plays. He does what you tell him to do. … We never got to see the full potential, obviously.”

But they saw plenty in two seasons. One of Quinn’s memories is of Gronkowski lined up in the slot, taking a screen pass and outrunning defensive backs.

“You don’t see tight ends doing that,” says Quinn, who spent the past three years as an offensive graduate assistant at Arizona. “They tried to double-team him as best they could. When you have the middle of the field taken up by a line- backer and a safety, it’s like, ‘Wow, what can you not do with him.’ ”

In the run game, Quinn says Gronkowski “was like having a sixth offensive lineman. He would take defensive ends and just wash ’ em down better than most tackles would.”

Gronkowski has gained attention away from the field for his, uh, fun-seeking antics; the nickname “Gronk” seems fitting. At Arizona? Yeah, he was already Gronk.

“He was as fun-loving and carefree as any human being I’ve ever been around,” Stoops says. “He had a great three years at Arizona, I promise you that. … He enjoyed college.”

Stoops says Gronkowski occasional­ly neared lines but never crossed them.

“He’s very conscious of not making bad decisions and putting himself or his teams in harm’s way,” Stoops says. “He’s very smart.”

Drafted in the second round by the Patriots, Gronkowski has reached five Pro Bowls. Stoops says he told Patriots coach Bill Belichick before the draft, “he was gonna be a special player.”

“Don’t get distracted by Gronk’s ways,” Stoops recalls telling Belichick. “When he steps on the field, he’s as good as I’ve ever seen.”

After arriving at Arizona, Foles lost a quarterbac­k competitio­n to Matt Scott, but he came on in the third game after Scott struggled and became the Wildcats’ undisputed starter. Quinn and Stoops describe him as a cerebral, even-keeled leader.

“People don’t realize how tough he was,” Stoops says. “We didn’t have the best of teams at all times, but he would stand in there and deliver the football. A very courageous man. He’d hang in there and deliver the football accurately. Nick, shoot, he just kept doing his thing.”

Quinn credits Foles’ success in college — and now, in the NFL — to his discipline­d habits. Together, the quarterbac­k and center spent long hours studying opponents’ defenses.

Foles was a third-round pick by Philadelph­ia in 2012 and went to the Pro Bowl in 2013 — after he threw 27 touchdown passes against only two intercepti­ons — but was traded to St. Louis in 2015. He spent time there and in Kansas City before returning to the Eagles this season as a backup.

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