2009 Arizona Wildcats football team

Last updated

2009 Arizona Wildcats football
Arizona Wildcats logo.svg
Holiday Bowl vs. Nebraska, L 0–33
Conference Pacific-10 Conference
Record8–5 (6–3 Pac-10)
Head coach
Offensive coordinator Sonny Dykes (3rd season)
Offensive scheme Air raid
Defensive coordinator Mark Stoops (6th season)
Base defense 4–3
Home stadium Arizona Stadium
Uniform
Pac-10-Uniform-UA-2009.png
Seasons
  2008
2010  
2009 Pacific-10 Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
No. 11 Oregon $  8 1   10 3  
Arizona  6 3   8 5  
Oregon State  6 3   8 5  
Stanford  6 3   8 5  
No. 22 USC  5 4   9 4  
California  5 4   8 5  
Washington  4 5   5 7  
UCLA  3 6   7 6  
Arizona State  2 7   4 8  
Washington State  0 9   1 11  
  • $ BCS representative as conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2009 Arizona Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona in the 2009 NCAA Division I FBS college football season. The Wildcats, led by sixth-year head coach Mike Stoops, played their home games at Arizona Stadium.

Contents

Arizona hosted Central Michigan of the Mid-American Conference to begin the season on September 5, 2009 (with a 19–6 win), and ended the regular season with a 21–17 win over perennial conference power, then-ranked #20 Southern California on December 5, 2009; this was the first victory over USC by the Wildcats in the Mike Stoops era.

In addition to the slate of nine conference games, four at home and five on the road, the Wildcats traveled to Iowa City, Iowa and lost to the Iowa Hawkeyes of the Big Ten (who eventually finished with a #10 AP Poll ranking and an invitation to the Orange Bowl), and hosted in-state sister school Northern Arizona of the Big Sky Conference the preceding week.

After posting an 8–4 regular season record (6–3 in the Pac-10, good for a second-place tie in the conference with Oregon State and Stanford), the Wildcats were invited to appear in the 2009 Holiday Bowl in San Diego, the second consecutive postseason bowl game for the Arizona football program under Stoops. The Wildcats were shut out 33–0 by Nebraska.

The Wildcats finished the regular season with an Associated Press poll ranking of #22, their first national ranking since the 2000 season.

Schedule

DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
September 57:00 p.m. Central Michigan *W 19–651,683
September 127:00 p.m. Northern Arizona *
  • Arizona Stadium
  • Tucson, Arizona
KGUN W 34–1750,623
September 1912:30 p.m.at Iowa * ABC L 17–2770,585
September 265:30 p.m.at Oregon State Versus W 37–3242,119
October 108:00 p.m.at Washington FSN L 33–3661,621
October 174:30 p.m. Stanford
  • Arizona Stadium
  • Tucson, Arizona
VersusW 43–3853,479
October 243:30 p.m. UCLA No. 22
  • Arizona Stadium
  • Tucson, Arizona
FSNW 27–1351,440
November 71:30 p.m. Washington State Dagger-14-plain.pngNo. 18
  • Arizona Stadium
  • Tucson, Arizona
FSNW 48–750,242
November 144:00 p.m.at California No. 17VersusL 16–2453,347
November 216:00 p.m.No. 11 Oregon
ABCL 41–44 2OT57,813
November 281:30 p.m.at Arizona State ABCW 20–1755,989
December 51:30 p.m.at No. 18 USC ABCW 21–1783,753
December 316:00 p.m.vs. No. 22 Nebraska *No. 20 ESPN L 0–3364,607
Schedule Source: 2009 Arizona Wildcats football schedule and Arizona Official Athletic Site Archived 2012-10-26 at the Wayback Machine .

Rankings

Ranking movements
Legend:██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking
— = Not ranked RV = Received votes
Week
PollPre1234567891011121314Final
AP RVRVRVRVRVRV232118RVRVRV22RV
Coaches RVRVRVRVRVRV241919RVRVRV23RV
Harris Not releasedRVRVRV252118RVRVRV24Not released
BCS Not released2220181720Not released

Game summaries

vs Central Michigan

Central Michigan Chippewas (0–0) vs Arizona Wildcats (0–0) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Chippewas00066
Wildcats673319

at Arizona StadiumTucson, AZ

  • Date: September 5, 2009
  • Game time: 7:00 p.m.
  • Game weather: Cloudy, 84 °F (29 °C)
  • Game attendance: 51,683
  • Referee: Jack Folliard
Game information
First quarter
  • (7:17) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 36-yard field goal (Drive: 7 plays, 28 yards, 2:59; Arizona 3–0)
  • (0:00) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 37-yard field goal (Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 0:58; Arizona 6–0)
Second quarter
  • (8:20) ARIZ – Nic Grigsby 3-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 9 plays, 63 yards, 1:37; Arizona 13–0)
Third quarter
  • (0:38) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 37-yard field goal (Drive: 12 plays, 79 yards, 5:20; Arizona 16–0)
Fourth quarter
  • (12:21) CMU – Dan LeFevour 5-yard run, two-point run failed (Drive: 9 plays, 73 yards, 3:11; Arizona 16–6)
  • (8:45) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 35-yard field goal (Drive: 6 plays, 40 yards, 3:27; Arizona 19–6)
StatisticsCMUARIZ
First downs1124
Total yards182448
Rushing yards20–7446–246
Passing yards252434
Passing: Comp–Att–Int18–31–119–30–1
Time of possession22:0837:45
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
Central MichiganPassing Dan LeFevour 18/31, 108 yards, INT
Rushing Antonio Brown 3 carries, 31 yards
Receiving Kito Poblah 6 receptions, 47 yards
ArizonaPassing Matt Scott 19/30, 202 yards, INT
Rushing Nic Grigsby 23 carries, 118 yards, TD
ReceivingTerrell Turner6 receptions, 55 yards

The Wildcats’ season began following a 43-minute lightning delay, the second straight year the Arizona season opener was delayed by lightning.

Central Michigan was flagged for a false start on its first play from scrimmage. After a short completion and a trap-play run, CMU quarterback Dan LeFevour was intercepted by LB Vuni Tuihamalaka at the Chippewas’ 31, but the Wildcats, on their third play from scrimmage (in the person of WR Bug Wright) coughed up the ball at CMU's 16. The UA forced Central Michigan to go three-and-out on its second drive, then drove to score.

The 'Cats forced a second turnover just before the end of the quarter. Linebacker C.J. Parish drilled CMU's Antonio Brown on a punt return, forcing the ball loose. UA longsnapper Jason Bertoni, who started his career at Central Michigan (before leaving the Chippewa program in 2007 for personal reasons), recovered at CMU's 28.

The Wildcats gained seven yards on three plays, setting up a 37-yard Alex Zendejas field goal. Zendejas hit a total of four field goals in his first college start.

Arizona's first touchdown of the season came midway through the second quarter.

Freshman QB Matt Scott led the Wildcats on a nine-play, 63-yard drive. RB Nic Grigsby capped it with a three-yard run up the middle. Zendejas’ PAT made it a 13-point lead.

Central Michigan was hampered by the quickness of the Arizona defense and didn't score until there were 12 minutes 21 seconds remaining in the game; even then, the team failed to convert on a two-point conversion that would have made it a one-possession game.

Scott completed 10 of 17 first-half passes for 110 yards. Sophomore QB Nick Foles did not play a snap in the entire game. TE Rob Gronkowski, a key offensive weapon for Arizona in 2008 and speculated to be a future top NFL draft pick, did not play in the opener because of a back injury. [1]

vs Northern Arizona

Northern Arizona Lumberjacks (0–0) vs Arizona Wildcats (1–0) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Lumberjacks370717
Wildcats1476734

at Arizona Stadium • Tucson, AZ

  • Date: September 12, 2009
  • Game time: 7:00 p.m.
  • Game weather: Partly cloudy, 88 °F (31 °C)
  • Game attendance: 50,623
  • Referee: Larry Farina
  • TV announcers (KGUN): Dave Sitton (play-by-play), John Fina (analyst), Glenn Howell (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (11:19) ARIZ – Nic Grigsby 25-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 8 plays, 80 yards, 3:41; Arizona 7–0)
  • (9:10) NAU – Matt Myers 43-yard field goal (Drive: 4 plays, 9 yards, 1:58; Arizona 7–3)
  • (5:39) ARIZ – Nic Grigsby 30-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 7 plays, 68 yards, 3:24; Arizona 14–3)
Second quarter
  • (14:16) NAU – Ed Berry 4-yard pass from Michael Herrick, Matt Myers kick (Drive: 14 plays, 79 yards, 6:17; Arizona 14–10)
  • (0:30) ARIZ – Terrell Turner 2-yard pass from Matt Scott, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 17 plays, 99 yards, 7:40; Arizona 21–10)
Third quarter
  • (10:07) ARIZ – Keola Antolin 1-yard run, kick failed (Drive: 2 plays, 95 yards, 0:39; Arizona 27–10)
Fourth quarter
  • (14:10) ARIZ – Juron Criner 5-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 11 plays, 57 yards, 5:24; Arizona 34–10)
  • (8:07) NAU – Ed Berry 19-yard pass from Michael Herrick, Matt Myers kick (Drive: 1 play, 19 yards, 0:09; Arizona 34–17)
StatisticsNAUARIZ
First downs1327
Total yards226559
Rushing yards19–6747–365
Passing yards159194
Passing: Comp–Att–Int20–30–220–28–1
Time of possession24:0835:52
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
Northern ArizonaPassingMichael Herrick20/32, 159 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT
RushingAlex Henderson14 carries, 56 yards
ReceivingEd Berry7 receptions, 71 yards, 2 TD
ArizonaPassingMatt Scott14/20, 150 yards, TD, INT
RushingNic Grigsby15 carries, 207 yards, 2 TD
ReceivingTerrell Turner5 receptions, 46 yards, TD

The Wildcats were effective, if not totally crisp, in a 34–17 win over in-state rival Northern Arizona (NAU), a FCS (formerly Division I-AA) member of the Big Sky Conference.

Junior RB Nicolas Grigsby rushed for two touchdowns; Grigsby's two scores — a 25-yard run and a 30-yard run — helped pace the Wildcats through a sometimes-choppy first half in front of 50,623 at Arizona Stadium.

He was key to the Wildcats' final drive of the second quarter, an 18-play, 99-yard march. WR Terrell Turner gave the Wildcats a 21–10 lead with a 2-yard touchdown catch from starting QB Matt Scott, a play after WR Delashaun Dean hauled in a 23-yard grab. Dean was drilled by two NAU players at the end of the play, and had to be helped off the field. Scott then found Turner on a short pass to pad the Wildcats' lead.

Arizona added two scores in the second half to put the Lumberjacks away. Sophomore RB Keola Antolin punched in a 1-yard score on the first play following Grigsby's 94-yard run to give the Wildcats a 27–10 lead with 10 minutes left in the quarter.

Backup quarterback Nick Foles hit Juron Criner for a 5-yard touchdown pass on the second play of the fourth quarter to make it 34–10.

The Wildcats began emptying their bench midway through the third quarter. Foles entered the game with 7:15 remaining in the quarter, and drove the team about 40 yards before fumbling a snap and turning the ball over. CB Trevin Wade's second interception of the third quarter gave Arizona the ball back.

Arizona has not lost to NAU since 1937. [2] All three of Arizona's state universities (Arizona, NAU and Arizona State) are obligated under state law to play one another in athletic contests each year.

at Iowa

Arizona Wildcats (2–0) at Iowa Hawkeyes (2–0) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Wildcats730717
Hawkeyes7731027

at Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA

  • Date: September 19, 2009
  • Game time: 12:30 p.m.
  • Game weather: Partly cloudy, 76 °F (24 °C)
  • Game attendance: 70,585
  • Referee: Dan Capron
  • TV announcers (ABC): Mike Patrick (play by play), Craig James (analyst), Heather Cox (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (10:49) IOWA – Adam Robinson 2-yard run, Daniel Murray kick (Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 4:11; Iowa 7–0)
  • (6:57) ARIZ – Trevin Wade 38-yard interception return, Alex Zendejas kick (Tied 7–7)
Second quarter
  • (9:55) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 20-yard field goal (Drive: 7 plays, 60 yards, 2:17; Arizona 10–7)
  • (6:28) IOWA – Adam Robinson 1-yard run, Daniel Murray kick (Drive: 6 plays, 70 yards, 3:27; Iowa 14–10)
Third quarter
  • (1:47) IOWA – Daniel Murray 20-yard field goal (Drive: 7 plays, 44 yards, 3:19; Iowa 17–10)
Fourth quarter
  • (14:52) IOWA – Daniel Murray 40-yard field goal (Drive: 4 plays, 6 yards, 0:52; Iowa 20–10)
  • (4:40) IOWA – Brandon Wegher 2-yard run, Daniel Murray kick (Drive: 14 plays, 74 yards, 8:30; Iowa 27–10)
  • (1:53) ARIZ – Juron Criner 10-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 9 plays, 63 yards, 2:47; Iowa 27–17)
StatisticsARIZIOWA
First downs819
Total yards253338
Rushing yards25–14842–133
Passing yards231228
Passing: Comp–Att–Int10–26–120–32–1
Time of possession22:0437:56
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
ArizonaPassing Nick Foles 6/11, 55 yards, TD
RushingNic Grigsby11 carries, 75 yards
ReceivingDavid Roberts2 receptions, 44 yards
IowaPassing Ricky Stanzi 20/32, 205 yards, INT
RushingAdam Robinson18 carries, 101 yards, TD
Receiving Marvin McNutt 2 receptions, 50 yards

The Hawkeyes scored on the opening drive, with a 2-yard touchdown run by Adam Robinson. But Arizona tied the score at 7 after Trevin Wade returned a Ricky Stanzi interception 38 yards into the end zone.

The Wildcats struggled with their few offensive chances.

QB Matt Scott missed a handful of open receivers in the third quarter, and — on a play that could have changed the momentum of the game — WR Delashaun Dean dropped what would have been a 50-yard gain. Dean appeared to trap the ball between his leg and the ground; a video replay rule confirmed that it was an incomplete pass.

Iowa's defense would again prove to be the difference-maker in this game, not allowing a touchdown until 1:53 was remaining in the game, with the Hawkeyes well ahead. Iowa safety Tyler Sash, with a grab of a Matt Scott pass intended for Terrell Turner, also netted his seventh interception in five games (dating back to last year).

Nick Foles came in at QB in the fourth quarter and went 6 for 11 with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Juron Criner, but, as noted above, the damage was already done.

The loss dropped Arizona to 0–7 against Big Ten teams in the last decade; the Wildcats’ last nonconference road win of any kind came in 2001, when John Mackovic's Wildcats defeated San Diego State.

[3] [4]

at Oregon State

Arizona Wildcats (2–1) at Oregon State Beavers (2–1) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Wildcats7714937
Beavers71001532

at Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR

  • Date: September 26, 2009
  • Game time: 5:30 p.m.
  • Game weather: Sunny, 79 °F (26 °C)
  • Game attendance: 42,119
  • Referee: Jack Wood
  • TV announcers (Versus): Ron Thulin (play by play), Kelly Stouffer (analyst), Lewis Johnson (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (6:25) ARIZ – Delashaun Dean 2-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 15 plays, 71 yards, 7:07; Arizona 7–0)
  • (0:02) OSU – Damola Adeniji 11-yard pass from Sean Canfield, Justin Kahut kick (Drive: 14 plays, 83 yards, 6:15; Tied 7–7)
Second quarter
  • (8:25) OSU – Jacquizz Rodgers 1-yard run, Justin Kahut kick (Drive: 11 plays, 71 yards, 4:57; Oregon State 14–7)
  • (3:39) ARIZ – Greg Nwoko 19-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 9 plays, 74 yards, 4:39; Tied 14–14)
  • (0:00) OSU – Justin Kahut 22-yard field goal (Drive: 7 plays, 41 yards, 0:57; Oregon State 17–14)
Third quarter
  • (6:21) ARIZ – Nick Foles 1-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 7 plays, 47 yards, 3:28; Arizona 21–17)
  • (1:48) ARIZ – Juron Criner 3-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 4 plays, 80 yards, 1:36; Arizona 28–17)
Fourth quarter
  • (13:44) OSU – Jacquizz Rodgers 2-yard run, James Rodgers run for two-point conversion (Drive: 9 plays, 65 yards, 2:58; Arizona 28–25)
  • (8:08) ARIZ – Terrell Turner 13-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 5 plays, 45 yards, 2:04; Arizona 35–25)
  • (4:09) OSU – Aaron Nichols 13-yard pass from Sean Canfield, Justin Kahut kick (Drive: 12 plays, 62 yards, 3:50; Arizona 35–32)
  • (0:25) ARIZ – Team safety (Arizona 37–32)
StatisticsARIZOSU
First downs2528
Total yards388407
Rushing yards33–13430–104
Passing yards254303
Passing: Comp–Att–Int25–34–031–49–2
Time of possession31:1928:41
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
ArizonaPassingNick Foles25/34, 254 yards, 3 TD
Rushing Keola Antolin 12 carries, 46 yards
ReceivingGreg Nwoko4 receptions, 76 yards
Oregon StatePassing Sean Canfield 31/47, 303 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT
Rushing Jacquizz Rodgers 16 carries, 85 yards, 2 TD
Receiving James Rodgers 8 receptions, 119 yards

Running behind a third-string tailback and second-team left tackle, right guard and wide receiver (as well as a new starting QB, sophomore Nick Foles, the transfer from Michigan State) the Wildcats defeated Oregon State 35–32 at Reser Stadium in Corvallis, in the Pac-10 opener for Arizona. The Wildcats started the game without a half-dozen starters, including tight end Rob Gronkowski (who would end up being out the rest of the 2009 season due to back surgery). Tailbacks Nicolas Grigsby and Keola Antolin were out of the game by halftime with shoulder and leg injuries, respectively (Grigsby would not fully recover until the end of the season).

That left the Wildcats with third-stringer Greg Nwoko at running back. The redshirt freshman from the Austin, Texas area delivered: His 52-yard catch-and-run on a screen pass set Arizona up for its second touchdown of the quarter, a 3-yard pass from quarterback Nick Foles to receiver Juron Criner. Nwoko rushed nine times for 44 yards and a touchdown in the first extended action of his career.

Arizona took the lead early in the third quarter, when Foles — making his first college start — dove in on a sneak from the 1-yard line. Foles led his team on a 15-play, 71-yard scoring drive in the first quarter, connecting with WR Delashaun Dean for a 2-yard touchdown pass.

The Beavers scored their first touchdown with 2 minutes remaining in the quarter, when Damola Adeniji caught a tipped pass from QB Sean Canfield for an 11-yard score. James Rodgers gave OSU a 14–7 lead with a 2-yard run midway through the second quarter. Arizona tied the game on Nwoko's touchdown, but the Beavers re-took the lead on the final play before halftime. Justin Kahut's 21-yard field goal made it 17–14.

Foles appeared to put the game away when he found WR Terrell Turner for a 13-yard touchdown pass with eight minutes remaining, but the Beavers — resilient and persistent — proved tough to put away. Canfield found Aaron Nichols for a 13-yard score with 4:09 remaining, cutting Arizona's lead to 3.

CB Devin Ross intercepted Canfield with 1 minute 33 seconds remaining.

Even after surrendering a safety with 25 seconds left, Oregon State recovered an onside kick and had the ball, down five points, in their zone. This time, Arizona made the plays. Sacks by Earl Mitchell and Ricky Elmore ended the game.

Grigsby left the game after just one rushing attempt with what was discovered to be a sprained AC joint in his right shoulder. He was never fully healthy the rest of the season. [5] [6]

at Washington

Arizona Wildcats (3–1) at Washington Huskies (2–3) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Wildcats7317633
Huskies7771536

at Husky StadiumSeattle, WA

  • Date: October 10, 2009
  • Game time: 8:00 p.m.
  • Game weather: Clear, 52 °F (11 °C)
  • Game attendance: 61,621
  • Referee: Michael Batlan
  • TV announcers (Fox Sports Arizona): Tom Glasgow (play by play), Mack Strong (analyst), Jen Mueller (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (6:51) ARIZ – Greg Nwoko 12-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 8 plays, 67 yards, 3:36; Arizona 7–0)
  • (4:55) WASH – Jake Locker 56-yard run, Erik Folk kick (Drive: 5 plays, 76 yards, 1:50; Tied 7–7)
Second quarter
  • (14:55) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 18-yard field goal (Drive: 9 plays, 68 yards, 4:51; Arizona 10–7)
  • (6:30) WASH – Devin Aguilar 5-yard pass from Jake Locker, Erik Folk kick (Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 3:08; Washington 14–10)
Third quarter
  • (11:49) ARIZ – David Roberts 9-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 7 plays, 47 yards, 3:04; Arizona 17–14)
  • (9:31) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 23-yard field goal (Drive: 4 plays, 4 yards, 1:05; Arizona 20–14)
  • (2:55) ARIZ – Nick Foles 1-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 8 plays, 36 yards, 4:37; Arizona 27–14)
  • (2:04) WASH – Devin Aguilar 29-yard pass from Jake Locker, Erik Folk kick (Drive: 2 plays, 39 yards, 0:45; Arizona 27–21)
Fourth quarter
  • (13:20) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 29-yard field goal (Drive: 10 plays, 62 yards, 3:37; Arizona 30–21)
  • (4:22) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 24-yard field goal (Drive: 12 plays, 73 yards, 6:38; Arizona 33–21)
  • (2:55) WASH – Kavario Middleton 25-yard pass from Jake Locker, Erik Folk kick (Drive: 6 plays, 59 yards, 1:21; Arizona 33–28)
  • (2:37) WASH – Mason Foster 37-yard interception return, Jake Locker two-point pass to Jermaine Kearse (Washington 36–33)
StatisticsARIZWASH
First downs2614
Total yards461256
Rushing yards30–7724–116
Passing yards384140
Passing: Comp–Att–Int39–53–212–23–1
Time of possession39:1920:41
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
ArizonaPassingNick Foles39/53, 384 yards, TD, 2 INT
RushingGreg Nwoko16 carries, 54 yards, TD
ReceivingDavid Roberts12 receptions, 138 yards, TD
WashingtonPassing Jake Locker 12/23, 140 yards, 3 TD, INT
RushingJake Locker11 carries, 92 yards, TD
ReceivingDevin Aguilar3 receptions, 43 yards, 2 TD

In a controversial play, Washington LB Mason Foster intercepted a deflected pass off the foot of Arizona's Delashaun Dean (who insisted the pass hit the ground) and returned the carom 37 yards for a touchdown with 2:37 left, and the Huskies rallied with two touchdowns in the final three minutes to beat the Wildcats 36–33 in Seattle.

On the call, Dean commented: "I felt it graze my foot, but the way the ball bounced up, it would have hit my foot a lot harder", Dean said. "I figured it had to hit the ground, then after seeing the pictures you could actually see the black beads from the turf jump up when the ball hit the ground. It's pretty obvious when you look at it. I don't know how it got missed." [7]

Led by quarterback Jake Locker, Washington overcame a 12-point deficit in the final 3 minutes to hand Arizona the loss. Arizona lost the game despite a torrid third quarter. QB Nick Foles connected with David Roberts on a 9-yard touchdown pass on the Wildcats’ first possession of the second half. The Wildcats got the ball back — and scored again — following a strange play.

Washington punter Will Mahan muffed a snap on fourth down deep in the Huskies' zone on their first possession of the second half. He recovered the muff, took a few steps and kicked a ball that rolled 12 yards behind the original line of scrimmage. Mahan was flagged for an illegal kick, and the Huskies were penalized half the distance to the goal line – 9 yards.

Arizona turned the good fortune into a 23-yard Alex Zendejas field goal. The Wildcats capped their 17-point quarter with an eight-play, 36-yard drive; Foles delivered the crushing blow on third-and-goal from the Huskies’ 1, faking a hand-off up the middle and bootlegging into the end zone for a touchdown.

Washington cut Arizona's lead to six points just before the quarter's end, when Devin Aguilar caught his second touchdown pass of the night, a 29-yarder from Jake Locker. But Zendejas nailed a 29-yarder on the first possession of the fourth quarter.

The UA was leading 33–21 when Washington took over with the ball with 4:16 remaining in the contest. But the Wildcats' LB Vuna Tuihalamka was flagged for a late hit on a missed pass, getting Washington past midfield. It took quarterback Jake Locker six plays to travel 59 yards; his 25-yard touchdown pass to tight end Kavario Middleton cut the Wildcats' lead to 33–28 with 2:55 left.

The Huskies then chose to kick the ball deep, figuring that — with two timeouts left — they could try to force Arizona to punt. The Wildcats instead went for the kill. On first down, the Wildcats called what Stoops dubbed a run-pass option play, meaning Foles could check down to a run or choose to throw. He threw.

When his first few options weren't there, the quarterback attempted a short screen route to Dean. The ball glanced off the side of his right shoe and into Mason Foster's hands. The Huskies' linebacker ran in untouched. The defeat of Arizona came as the Husky football program, winless during the 2008 season, was trying to rebuild under their new head coach, former USC offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian (for their part, the Huskies finished the season 5–7 and 4–5 in Pac-10 play).

Following the game, head coach Mike Stoops said Arizona coaches were to blame for the poor call — even though Foles had been running the play all night with great success. He completed 39 of 53 passes for 384 yards and a touchdown. Offensive coordinator Sonny Dykes, however, defended the call. Arizona settled for four field goals and continued to struggle in the red zone. The Wildcats limited Locker to just 140 passing yards, but let him drive at will when one stop would have ended the game. [8]

vs Stanford

Stanford Cardinal (4–2) vs Arizona Wildcats (3–2) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Cardinal141410038
Wildcats13791443

at Arizona Stadium • Tucson, AZ

  • Date: October 17, 2009
  • Game time: 4:30 p.m.
  • Game weather: Clear, 95 °F (35 °C)
  • Game attendance: 53,479
  • Referee: Brian O'Cain
  • TV announcers (Versus): Ron Thulin (play by play), Kelly Stouffer (analyst), Lewis Johnson (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (12:31) ARIZ – Robert Golden 79-yard interception return, Alex Zendejas kick (Arizona 7–0)
  • (10:26) STAN – Jim Dray 30-yard pass from Andrew Luck, Nate Whitaker kick (Drive: 4 plays, 44 yards, 1:38; Tied 7–7)
  • (4:40) ARIZ – David Douglas 43-yard pass from Nick Foles, kick failed (Drive: 3 plays, 47 yards, 0:48; Arizona 13–7)
  • (0:48) STAN – Toby Gerhart 2-yard run, Nate Whitaker kick (Drive: 8 plays, 82 yards, 3:45; Stanford 14–13)
Second quarter
  • (9:16) STAN – Ryan Whalen 11-yard pass from Andrew Luck, Nate Whitaker kick (Drive: 10 plays, 68 yards, 4:48; Stanford 21–13)
  • (3:04) STAN – Chris Owusu 19-yard pass from Andrew Luck, Nate Whitaker kick (Drive: 6 plays, 80 yards, 2:55; Stanford 28–13)
  • (0:18) ARIZ – Terrell Turner 11-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 12 plays, 89 yards, 2:36; Stanford 28–20)
Third quarter
  • (12:43) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 24-yard field goal (Drive: 9 plays, 64 yards, 2:11; Stanford 28–23)
  • (9:55) STAN – Nate Whitaker 33-yard field goal (Drive: 5 plays, 47 yards, 2:42; Stanford 31–23)
  • (6:27) ARIZ – David Douglas 1-yard pass from Nick Foles, two-point pass failed (Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 3:28; Stanford 31–29)
  • (3:23) STAN – Toby Gerhart 2-yard run, Nate Whitaker kick (Drive: 6 plays, 86 yards, 2:59; Stanford 38–29)
Fourth quarter
  • (10:06) ARIZ – Greg Nwoko 43-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 6 plays, 80 yards, 2:36; Stanford 38–36)
  • (2:57) ARIZ – Nic Grigsby 57-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 5 plays, 92 yards, 2:30; Arizona 43–38)
StatisticsSTANARIZ
First downs2623
Total yards584553
Rushing yards40–15014–138
Passing yards434415
Passing: Comp–Att–Int22–36–140–52–0
Time of possession36:1023:50
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
StanfordPassing Andrew Luck 21/35, 423 yards, 3 TD, INT
Rushing Toby Gerhart 28 carries, 123 yards, 2 TD
Receiving Chris Owusu 5 receptions, 116 yards, TD
ArizonaPassingNick Foles40/51, 415 yards, 3 TD
RushingNic Grigsby7 carries, 89 yards, TD
Receiving Juron Criner 12 receptions, 152 yards

In a game that featured more than a thousand offensive yards, the Wildcats rallied back late to defeat the Cardinal. The quarterbacks were evenly matched: Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck threw for 423 yards and three touchdowns, while Arizona's Nick Foles also tossed three touchdown passes and had a total of 415 yards. Stanford's Toby Gerhart had 123 yards and two touchdowns. Arizona managed a total of just 138 rush yards, but 57 of those came on Nic Grigsby's go-ahead touchdown with under three minutes left. Stanford drove to the Arizona 17 with seconds to play, but a fourth-down pass to Chris Owusu was batted away and the Wildcats escaped with a home victory. [9]

vs UCLA

UCLA Bruins (3–3) vs No. 22 Arizona Wildcats (4–2) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Bruins0310013
No. 22 Wildcats13014027

at Arizona Stadium • Tucson, AZ

  • Date: October 24, 2009
  • Game time: 3:30 p.m.
  • Game weather: Clear, 84 °F (29 °C)
  • Game attendance: 51,440
  • Referee: Brian O'Cain
  • TV announcers (Fox Sports Arizona): Steve Physioc (play by play), James Washington (analyst)
Game information
First quarter
  • (4:39) ARIZ – Juron Criner 41-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 3 plays, 54 yards, 1:22; Arizona 7–0)
  • (3:19) ARIZ – Nic Grigsby 6-yard run, kick failed (Drive: 3 plays, 23 yards, 1:07; Arizona 13–0)
Second quarter
  • (7:51) UCLA – Kai Forbath 53-yard field goal (Drive: 8 plays, 27 yards, 5:12; Arizona 13–3)
Third quarter
  • (13:39) UCLA – Kai Forbath 33-yard field goal (Drive: 4 plays, 2 yards, 1:06; Arizona 13–6)
  • (8:34) ARIZ – Juron Criner 25-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 6 plays, 51 yards, 1:23; Arizona 20–6)
  • (5:20) UCLA – Tony Dye 28-yard fumble return, Kai Forbath kick (Arizona 20–13)
  • (0:34) ARIZ – Nick Booth 6-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 10 plays, 63 yards, 4:38; Arizona 27–13)
Fourth quarter
  • No scoring plays
StatisticsUCLAARIZ
First downs1027
Total yards211456
Rushing yards23–6546–209
Passing yards146247
Passing: Comp–Att–Int15–35–022–35–3
Time of possession24:2235:38
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
UCLAPassing Kevin Craft 6/17, 75 yards
Rushing Johnathan Franklin 9 carries, 36 yards
Receiving Nelson Rosario 2 receptions, 27 yards
ArizonaPassingNick Foles22/34, 247 yards, 2 TD, 3 INT
RushingKeola Antolin16 carries, 77 yards
ReceivingJuron Criner4 receptions, 85 yards, 2 TD

In the first quarter, Arizona's first drive ended when UCLA safety Rahim Moore intercepted a Nick Foles pass. But in their second drive, Foles passed to Juron Criner for a 41-yard touchdown to give the Wildcats a lead. After Arizona recovered a Bruin fumble, Grigsby rushed into the end zone for a 6-yard touchdown, extra point blocked.

Both Moore and Jerzy Siewierski intercepted a Wildcats pass in the second quarter. Kai Forbath kicked a 53-yard field goal to put UCLA on the board before the half. UCLA's Datone Jones recovered a Foles fumble and Forbath kicked a field goal to begin the third quarter. Kevin Craft came in to replace Kevin Prince in UCLA's second possession, but Christian Ramirez fumbled the ball to Arizona, which led to the Wildcats' third touchdown, a Nick Foles 25-yard pass to Criner. Tony Dye recovered a Wildcats fumble and ran in for a 28-yard UCLA touchdown. Late in the third quarter, Nick Booth rushed for 6 yards for a score to give Arizona a 27–13 lead.

In the fourth quarter, the Bruins were unable to do anything and lost their fourth game in a row.

vs Washington State

Washington State Cougars (1–7) vs No. 21 Arizona Wildcats (5–2) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Cougars00077
No. 21 Wildcats24107748

at Arizona Stadium • Tucson, AZ

  • Date: November 7, 2009
  • Game time: 1:30 p.m.
  • Game weather: Scattered clouds, 78 °F (26 °C)
  • Game attendance: 50,242
  • Referee: Larry Farina
  • TV announcers (FCS Pacific): Dave Sitton (play-by-play), John Fina (analyst), Glenn Howell (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (14:47) ARIZ – Travis Cobb 95-yard kickoff return, Alex Zendejas kick (Arizona 7–0)
  • (11:43) ARIZ – Terrell Turner 28-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 3 plays, 44 yards, 1:05; Arizona 14–0)
  • (7:21) ARIZ – Keola Antolin 1-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 7 plays, 65 yards, 2:58; Arizona 21–0)
  • (0:24) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 21-yard field goal (Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 5:55; Arizona 24–0)
Second quarter
  • (13:28) ARIZ – Nick Booth 1-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 3 plays, 14 yards, 1:22; Arizona 31–0)
  • (1:23) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 27-yard field goal (Drive: 14 plays, 69 yards, 7:07; Arizona 34–0)
Third quarter
  • (13:27) ARIZ – William Wright 86-yard punt return, Alex Zendejas kick (Arizona 41–0)
Fourth quarter
  • (7:06) ARIZ – Taimi Tutogi 1-yard run, John Bonano kick (Drive: 15 plays, 97 yards, 8:07; Arizona 48–0)
  • (6:23) WSU – Jared Karstetter 64-yard pass from Marshall Lobbestael, Patrick Rooney kick (Drive: 2 plays, 71 yards, 0:37; Arizona 48–7)
StatisticsWSUARIZ
First downs827
Total yards185471
Rushing yards21–5954–294
Passing yards126177
Passing: Comp–Att–Int12–21–015–24–0
Time of possession18:4141:19
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
Washington StatePassingMarshall Lobbestael7/11, 103 yards, TD
RushingDwight Tardy4 carries, 44 yards
ReceivingJared Karstetter1 reception, 64 yards, TD
ArizonaPassingNick Foles12/19, 136 yards, TD
RushingMatt Scott10 carries, 91 yards
ReceivingDelashaun Dean4 receptions, 53 yards

at California

No. 17 Arizona Wildcats (6–2) at California Golden Bears (6–3) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
No. 17 Wildcats0100616
Golden Bears366924

at California Memorial StadiumBerkeley, CA

  • Date: November 14, 2009
  • Game time: 4:00 p.m.
  • Game weather: Clear skies, 60 °F (16 °C)
  • Game attendance: 53,347
  • Referee: Michael Batlan
  • TV announcers (Versus): Ted Robinson (play by play), Glenn Parker (analyst), Lewis Johnson (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (9:12) CAL – Giorgio Tavecchio 46-yard field goal (Drive: 11 plays, 56 yards, 5:48; California 3–0)
Second quarter
  • (14:17) CAL – Giorgio Tavecchio 22-yard field goal (Drive: 8 plays, 27 yards, 3:48; California 6–0)
  • (3:37) ARIZ – Keola Antolin 1-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 10 plays, 93 yards, 4:47; Arizona 7–6)
  • (0:22) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 36-yard field goal (Drive: 7 plays, 37 yards, 1:30; Arizona 10–6)
  • (0:00) CAL – Giorgio Tavecchio 46-yard field goal (Drive: 5 plays, 32 yards, 0:22; Arizona 10–9)
Third quarter
  • (8:21) CAL – Skylar Curran 27-yard pass from Kevin Riley, two-point run failed (Drive: 1 play, 27 yards, 0:08; California 15–10)
Fourth quarter
  • (12:26) ARIZ – A.J. Simmons 8-yard pass from Nick Foles, two-point pass failed (Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 4:20; Arizona 16–15)
  • (4:46) CAL – Giorgio Tavecchio 22-yard field goal (Drive: 13 plays, 72 yards, 7:35; California 18–16)
  • (1:21) CAL – Shane Vereen 61-yard run, two-point run failed (Drive: 1 play, 61 yards, 0:09; California 24–16)
StatisticsARIZCAL
First downs1818
Total yards274357
Rushing yards28–7340–176
Passing yards201181
Passing: Comp–Att–Int25–41–113–22–2
Time of possession28:1331:47
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
ArizonaPassingNick Foles25/41, 201 yards, TD, INT
RushingKeola Antolin19 carries, 78 yards, TD
ReceivingDavid Roberts4 receptions, 52 yards
CaliforniaPassing Kevin Riley 13/22, 181 yards, TD, 2 INT
Rushing Shane Vereen 30 carries, 159 yards, TD
Receiving Marvin Jones 5 receptions, 65 yards

In their final home season game, California started backup RB Shane Vereen in place of their star RB Jahvid Best, who was still recovering from a concussion sustained the previous week. The then-#18 ranked Wildcats were also missing their starting RB, Nic Grigsby, with ongoing shoulder troubles.

Cal's Giorgio Tavecchio hit four field goals, including a 22-yard go-ahead kick with 4 minutes 46 seconds remaining, to boost the Golden Bears past a desperate UA team.

Tavecchio contributed in other ways, too. After hitting the field goal that put Cal ahead for good, the kicker tackled Arizona's Travis Cobb on a kickoff return. Bolstered by Cobb's return, the Wildcats drove deep into Cal territory.

Arizona faced third-and-three from the Cal 25 when QB Nick Foles dropped back and attempted a short pass. The ball deflected off a Cal defender and back into the hands of Foles, who rolled right and threw it forward again — this time for a completion to WR Delashaun Dean. Foles was flagged for an illegal forward pass, and Arizona was penalized 5 yards from the spot of the penalty, 9 yards behind the line of scrimmage. The Wildcats' field goal unit stood on the sideline when, on fourth-and-17 from the Golden Bears' 39, Foles attempted a desperate pass to David Roberts that was broken up.

Foles' mistake was emblematic of the Cats' struggles. Arizona gained just 274 yards, 174 below its season average. Foles completed 25 of 41 passes for 201 yards and a touchdown, but was intercepted once and sacked three times. Foles had only been sacked four times before all season before the game. [10] The Wildcats rushed for just 73 yards as a team, a 2.6 yards-per-carry average that rarely equates to wins. And yet Arizona had its chances.

Cal scored a late touchdown but botched a PAT attempt, leaving Arizona a chance to drive for a game-tying touchdown and two-point conversion. The Wildcats had hope, but struggled to make the simplest of plays. Their last drive included an incomplete pass, a holding call (which was declined) and two sacks. [11]

Things weren't much better on defense.

California QB Kevin Riley threw for 181 yards and a score, with two interceptions. Vereen had 30 carries for 159 yards, both career highs, including one score. [12] Keola Antolin, who had rushed for 149 yards against the Bears in 2008, was held to 78 yards and a score. This was Cal's fourth straight victory over the Wildcats in Berkeley, and moved them up to #25 in the BCS rankings (they would go on to an 8–5 (5–4 Pac-10) regular season and lose 37–27 to Utah in the 2009 Poinsettia Bowl).

Arizona, on the other hand, seemed to have its relatively high hopes for its first-ever appearance in the Rose Bowl placed in jeopardy with the frustrating road loss.

vs Oregon

No. 11 Oregon Ducks (8–2) vs Arizona Wildcats (6–3) – Game summary
Quarter1234OT2OTTotal
No. 11 Ducks770177644
Wildcats0107147341

at Arizona Stadium • Tucson, AZ

  • Date: November 21, 2009
  • Game time: 6:00 p.m.
  • Game weather: Clear, 69 °F (21 °C)
  • Game attendance: 57,863
  • Referee: Larry Farina
  • TV announcers (ABC): Brent Musburger (play by play), Kirk Herbstreit (analyst), Lisa Salters (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (10:57) ORE – Jeremiah Masoli 14-yard run, Morgan Flint kick (Drive: 9 plays, 74 yards, 4:03; Oregon 7–0)
Second quarter
  • (10:10) ORE – Jeff Maehl 9-yard pass from Jeremiah Masoli, Morgan Flint kick (Drive: 8 plays, 72 yards, 4:00; Oregon 14–0)
  • (1:59) ARIZ – Juron Criner 5-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 5 plays, 44 yards, 2:19; Oregon 14–7)
  • (0:00) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 47-yard field goal (Drive: 7 plays, 37 yards, 0:49; Oregon 14–10)
Third quarter
  • (10:39) ARIZ – Nick Booth 8-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 4 plays, 31 yards, 1:55; Arizona 17–14)
Fourth quarter
  • (13:57) ARIZ – William Wright 5-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 10 plays, 71 yards, 3:35; Arizona 24–14)
  • (10:57) ORE – Jeremiah Masoli 1-yard run, Morgan Flint kick (Drive: 10 plays, 79 yards, 2:54; Arizona 24–21)
  • (8:02) ORE – Morgan Flint 43-yard field goal (Drive: 5 plays, 19 yards, 1:54; Tied 24–24)
  • (7:41) ARIZ – Juron Criner 71-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 1 play, 71 yards, 0:14; Arizona 31–24)
  • (0:06) ORE – Ed Dickson 8-yard pass from Jeremiah Masoli, Morgan Flint kick (Drive: 15 plays, 80 yards, 3:05; Tied 31–31)
First overtime
  • ORE – Jeff Maehl 4-yard pass from Jeremiah Masoli, Morgan Flint kick (Drive: 5 plays, 25 yards; Oregon 38–31)
  • ARIZ – Juron Criner 3-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 7 plays, 25 yards; Tied 38–38)
Second overtime
  • ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 41-yard field goal (Drive: 4 plays, 25 yards; Arizona 41–38)
  • ORE – Jeremiah Masoli 1-yard run (Drive: 4 plays, 25 yards; Oregon 44–41)
StatisticsOREARIZ
First downs2222
Total yards459441
Rushing yards37–17535–127
Passing yards284314
Passing: Comp–Att–Int26–47–130–47–1
Time of possession27:5247:08
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
OregonPassing Jeremiah Masoli 26/47, 284 yards, 3 TD, INT
Rushing LaMichael James 19 carries, 117 yards
Receiving Jeff Maehl 12 receptions, 114 yards, 2 TD
ArizonaPassingNick Foles30/46, 314 yards, 4 TD, INT
RushingGreg Nwoko16 carries, 58 yards
ReceivingJuron Criner5 receptions, 93 yards, 3 TD

In a PAC-10 conference showdown that prompted College Gameday to pay its first visit to the University of Arizona campus, the outcome of the game would ultimately send the winning team to the Rose Bowl Game. The Fans and the Arizona Wildcats players all wore red with the intent to "Red Out Oregon". [13]

Oregon QB Jeremiah Masoli's touchdown plunge on third-and-goal in the second overtime period gave the Ducks a come-from-behind, 44–41 victory over the U of A before 57,863 fans at Arizona Stadium and a national TV audience (ESPN on ABC). The Ducks overcame a 10-point fourth-quarter deficit to force overtime, then scored touchdowns on both their possessions. Hundreds of red-clad Arizona students from the "Zona Zoo" student section were on the sidelines, preparing for a victory party, when Masoli hit tight end Ed Dickson for an 8-yard touchdown with six seconds left in regulation to tie the game.

The teams traded scores in the first overtime; Arizona started the second OT with the ball and hit a field goal only to watch the Ducks drive 25 yards in four plays for the win.

Masoli was brilliant in a 15-play, 80-yard drive at the end of regulation, converting on two fourth-down plays to get deep into Arizona territory. With Oregon trailing 31–24, Masoli found Dickson in the middle of the end zone. Kicker Morgan Flint's PAT tied it at 31, forcing the first overtime game at Arizona Stadium since 2003.

Oregon started overtime with the ball, and drove quickly. LaMichael James' 21-yard run moved the Ducks to Arizona's 4. On third-and-goal, Masoli found Jeff Maehl for a 4-yard touchdown. The Wildcats tied the game on its ensuing possession when QB Nick Foles hit Juron Criner for a 3-yard score, the receiver's third touchdown of the night. Arizona HC Mike Stoops instantly sent place-kicker Alex Zendejas out to tie it, though a two-point conversion could have won the game.

The Wildcats had the ball to start the second overtime but gained just 1 yard on three plays. Zendejas gave the UA a 41–38 lead with a 41-yard field goal. It didn't last. Masoli found Dickson on a 23-yard pass on Oregon's first play of the second overtime. The Ducks gained a yard on their next two plays, setting up third-and-goal from the 1. Masoli faked on a lead-option play and ran in the score.

The result left Arizona reeling, especially since the Wildcats appeared to have the game in hand in the fourth quarter. Arizona led by a touchdown late when Foles attempted to put the game away with a pass into the end zone; WR Terrell Turner tipped the ball, and Oregon's Talmadge Jackson III intercepted it and took a touchback.

Wide receiver David Douglas fumbled at the Ducks' 2 in the first quarter. CB Trevin Wade dropped a sure interception in the second half, and Zendejas missed a short field goal that would have put the UA up by 6.

The Wildcats' defense, so solid all night, forced two Masoli fumbles but couldn't recover them. That only made it worse. "We let a lot of good things slip away", safety Cam Nelson said. "I don't really know what else to say."

In winning, Oregon eliminated Arizona from Rose Bowl contention. Masoli finished with 345 yards of total offense and six touchdowns. [14]

at Arizona State

Arizona Wildcats (6–4) at Arizona State Sun Devils (4–7) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Wildcats770620
Sun Devils0031417

at Sun Devil StadiumTempe, AZ

  • Date: November 28, 2009
  • Game time: 1:30 p.m.
  • Game weather: Partly Cloudy, 70 °F (21 °C)
  • Game attendance: 55,989
  • Referee: Brian O'Cain
  • TV announcers (ABC): Terry Gannon (play-by-play), David Norrie (analyst)
Game information
First quarter
  • (3:54) ARIZ – Keola Antolin 67-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 3 plays, 84 yards, 1:18; Arizona 7–0)
Second quarter
  • (3:50) ARIZ – Orlando Vargas 23-yard blocked punt return, Alex Zendejas kick (Arizona 14–0)
Third quarter
  • (6:50) ASU – Thomas Weber 26-yard field goal (Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 0:57; Arizona 14–3)
Fourth quarter
  • (11:54) ASU – Kyle Williams 44-yard pass from Danny Sullivan, Thomas Weber kick (Drive: 7 plays, 96 yards, 2:49; Arizona 14–10)
  • (7:50) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 30-yard field goal (Drive: 11 plays, 63 yards, 3:58; Arizona 17–10)
  • (2:02) ASU – Kyle Williams 14-yard pass from Danny Sullivan, Thomas Weber kick (Drive: 9 plays, 48 yards, 3:46; Tied 17–17)
  • (0:00) ARIZ – Alex Zendejas 32-yard field goal (Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 1:03; Arizona 20–17)
StatisticsARIZASU
First downs1314
Total yards265303
Rushing yards23–11730–86
Passing yards148217
Passing: Comp–Att–Int24–43–017–33–0
Time of possession28:4731:13
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
ArizonaPassingNick Foles24/43, 148 yards
RushingKeola Antolin7 carries, 78 yards, TD
ReceivingDelashaun Dean4 receptions, 30 yards
Arizona StatePassingDanny Sullivan14/28, 168 yards, 2 TD
Rushing Dimitri Nance 23 carries, 115 yards
Receiving Kyle Williams 9 receptions, 130 yards, 2 TD

Alex Zendejas kicked a 32-yard field goal as time expired, and the Wildcats defeated their primary in-state rival, Arizona State (ASU), 20–17 in Tempe to retain the Territorial Cup.

Arizona won after ASU's Kyle Williams – who had caught the tying touchdown pass minutes earlier – muffed a punt to give the Wildcats the ball at the ASU 22-yard line. Keola Antolin scored on a 67-yard run and Orlando Vargas blocked a punt and returned it for a touchdown for the Wildcats, who have beaten the Sun Devils in back-to-back seasons for the first time since 1997–98.

Dimitri Nance ran for 115 yards for the Sun Devils, who lost their last six games, matching the school record for consecutive losses in a season.

Down 14–0 at halftime, the Sun Devils rallied and appeared ready to force Arizona into their second overtime situation of the season with 2:02 remaining. On 4th-and-12 from Arizona's 14, ASU QB Danny Sullivan rolled out of the pocket and fired a strike to a diving Williams in the back of the end zone. It was their second scoring connection of the quarter, following a 44-yarder with 11:54 to go.

Arizona defense was led by Ricky Elmore who had 2 sacks, 5 tackles and 1 forced fumble.

Then came a critical ASU error. Williams muffed a Keenyn Crier punt, and the Wildcats' Mike Turner recovered at the Sun Devils' 22-yard line. Four plays later, Zendejas, a Phoenix-area native (some of his Glendale, Arizona family were in attendance), trotted on and nailed the game-winner.

The game ended with a scuffle at midfield. ASU linebacker Vontaze Burfict took a swing at UA backup longsnapper Ricky Wolder. Vontaze Burfict a true-freshman at 6feet 3 inches and 245 pounds swung wildly at Wolder without making any contact. Players from both sides had to be separated so they could clear the field.

This was Mike Stoops' third win over Arizona State, and arguably the most important one of his career. [15] [16]

at No. 18 USC

Arizona Wildcats (7–4) at No. 18 USC Trojans (8–3) – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Wildcats770721
No. 18 Trojans077317

at Los Angeles Memorial ColiseumLos Angeles, CA

  • Date: December 5, 2009
  • Game time: 1:30 p.m.
  • Game weather: Cloudy, 59 °F (15 °C)
  • Game attendance: 83,753
  • Referee: Jack Folliard
  • TV announcers (ABC): Mike Patrick (play by play), Craig James (analyst), Heather Cox (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (8:49) ARIZ – Delashaun Dean 4-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 8 plays, 37 yards, 3:20; Arizona 7–0)
Second quarter
  • (12:25) USC – Ronald Johnson 16-yard pass from Matt Barkley, Jordan Congdon kick (Drive: 13 plays, 80 yards, 5:17; Tied 7–7)
  • (4:35) ARIZ – Nick Foles 1-yard run, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 15 plays, 90 yards, 7:50; Arizona 14–7)
Third quarter
  • (1:46) USC – Allen Bradford 5-yard run, Jordan Congdon kick (Drive: 7 plays, 53 yards, 3:17; Tied 14–14)
Fourth quarter
  • (7:13) USC – Jordan Congdon 37-yard field goal (Drive: 12 plays, 54 yards, 5:58; USC 17–14)
  • (3:14) ARIZ – Juron Criner 36-yard pass from Nick Foles, Alex Zendejas kick (Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 3:59; Arizona 21–17)
StatisticsARIZUSC
First downs1720
Total yards321282
Rushing yards29–8231–138
Passing yards239144
Passing: Comp–Att–Int22–40–120–37–1
Time of possession31:1828:42
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
ArizonaPassingNick Foles22/40, 239 yards, 2 TD, INT
RushingKeola Antolin13 carries, 51 yards
ReceivingJuron Criner6 receptions, 71 yards, TD
USCPassing Matt Barkley 20/37, 144 yards, TD, INT
Rushing Allen Bradford 11 carries, 66 yards, TD
Receiving Damian Williams 8 receptions, 51 yards

In the season finale, WR Juron Criner dived into the end zone with a 36-yard touchdown pass from Nick Foles with 3:14 to play, and Arizona secured a 21–17 victory USC.

Foles passed for 239 yards and two touchdowns and ran for another score for the Wildcats, who finally beat USC for the first time in coach Mike Stoops' tenure by scoring the final touchdown in a defense-dominated game. Foles went 22 of 40 but made several clutch throws, including an early touchdown pass to WR Delashaun Dean. [17]

The Wildcats ended a seven-game losing streak against USC, and the Wildcats also have their first win over the Trojans during the Pete Carroll era. The Trojans, who came into the contest ranked #20 in the Associated Press poll, dropped out of the national rankings with the loss and dropped to #24 in the BCS standings.

Arizona is also the first non-Stanford team in the Pac-10 to defeat USC in the Coliseum during the Carroll era (Stanford defeated Carroll's teams in the Coliseum in 2001, 2007, and 2009 while the Big 12's Kansas State defeated the Trojans in the Coliseum in 2001—the only other victory by a team over a USC home team coached by Carroll). With the Wildcats' win, Arizona State becomes the only remaining Pac-10 team that has never beaten the Trojans in the Carroll era.

With a final regular season overall record of 8–4, Arizona accepted an invitation to the 2009 Pacific Life Holiday Bowl after this game. The Trojans were invited to the 2009 Emerald Bowl in San Francisco, they defeated Boston College 24–13.

vs No. 22 Nebraska (Holiday Bowl)

No. 22 Arizona Wildcats (8–4) vs No. 20 Nebraska Cornhuskers (9–4) – Game summary
(2009 Pacific Life Holiday Bowl)
Quarter1234Total
No. 22 Wildcats00000
No. 20 Cornhuskers101310033

at Qualcomm StadiumSan Diego, CA

  • Date: December 31, 2009
  • Game time: 6:00 p.m.
  • Game weather: Cool, overcast, 52 °F (11 °C)
  • Game attendance: 64,607
  • Referee: Tom Zimorski
  • TV announcers (ESPN): Chris Fowler (play-by-play), Craig James (analyst), Jesse Palmer (analyst), Erin Andrews (sideline reporter)
Game information
First quarter
  • (13:45) NEB – Zac Lee 4-yard run, Alex Henery kick (Drive: 2 plays, 5 yards, 0:48; Nebraska 7–0)
  • (8:53) NEB – Alex Henery 47-yard field goal (Drive: 7 plays, 31 yards, 3:08; Nebraska 10–0)
Second quarter
  • (11:57) NEB – Rex Burkhead 5-yard run, Alex Henery kick (Drive: 7 plays, 82 yards, 3:41; Nebraska 17–0)
  • (8:25) NEB – Alex Henery 50-yard field goal (Drive: 7 plays, 14 yards, 2:26; Nebraska 20–0)
  • (0:35) NEB – Alex Henery 41-yard field goal (Drive: 12 plays, 44 yards, 6:07; Nebraska 23–0)
Third quarter
  • (10:07) NEB – Alex Henery 22-yard field goal (Drive: 11 plays, 41 yards, 4:53; Nebraska 26–0)
  • (3:39) NEB – Niles Paul 74-yard pass from Zac Lee, Alex Henery kick (Drive: 6 plays, 89 yards, 3:12; Nebraska 33–0)
Fourth quarter
  • No scoring plays
StatisticsARIZNEB
First downs619
Total yards109396
Rushing yards20–6348–223
Passing yards46173
Passing: Comp–Att–Int10–31–113–25–0
Time of possession21:4838:12
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
ArizonaPassingNick Foles9/29, 48 yards, INT
RushingKeola Antolin11 carries, 69 yards
ReceivingDelashaun Dean3 receptions, 24 yards
NebraskaPassing Zac Lee 13/23, 173 yards, TD
Rushing Rex Burkhead 17 carries, 92 yards, TD
Receiving Niles Paul 4 receptions, 123 yards, TD

Nebraska wide receiver Niles Paul was named Offensive MVP.

Nebraska safety Matt O'Hanlon was named Defensive MVP.

The Cornhuskers, coming off a heartbreaking loss to Texas in the 2009 Big 12 Championship Game (thereby missing a chance at a BCS bowl game berth), defeated the Wildcats 33–0 for the first shutout in the history of the Holiday Bowl. This was a rematch of the two teams, who faced each other in the 1998 Holiday Bowl, where Arizona defeated Nebraska 23–20.

The Wildcats were held to just 109 total yards of offense and just 6 first downs. The 'Huskers were led on offense by WR Niles Paul who had 4 catches for 123 yards, including a touchdown, which accounted for 74 of his receiving yards. Quarterback Zac Lee threw for 173 yards and the touchdown to Paul. Rex Burkhead of Nebraska led all rushers with 89 yards and a touchdown on 17 carries. This also marked the first time in Nebraska's 46 game, bowl game history that it has shut out a team in postseason. However, this was the third time in Arizona's bowl history that they have been shut out, the second time in a game in San Diego. The Wildcats lost the 1921 San Diego East-West Christmas Classic to Centre College 38–0 and the 1990 Aloha Bowl to Syracuse 28–0. Prior to the 2009 Holiday Bowl no team had scored less than 10 points in a game. The game also marked Nebraska's first 10-win season since 2003.

Notes

Awards and honors

All-Pacific-10 Conference Team:

Related Research Articles

In American football, the Fog Bowl was the December 31, 1988 National Football League (NFL) playoff game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Chicago Bears. A dense fog rolled over Chicago's Soldier Field during the 2nd quarter, cutting visibility to about 15–20 yards for the rest of the game. The Eagles moved the ball effectively all game and their quarterback Randall Cunningham recorded 407 passing yards despite the low visibility; but they could not advance the ball into the end zone. Many players complained that they could not see the sidelines or first-down markers. The Bears ended up winning the game by a score of 20–12. The game eventually was named #3 on NFL Top 10's Weather Games.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2006 Indianapolis Colts season</span> 54th season in franchise history; second Super Bowl win

The 2006 Indianapolis Colts season was the franchise's 54th season in the National Football League (NFL), the 23rd in Indianapolis and the 5th season under head coach Tony Dungy. The team failed to improve on their regular season record of 14–2 from the 2005 season, finishing at 12–4. However, they did improve upon their postseason performance and advanced further into the playoffs, winning Super Bowl XLI.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 New York Giants season</span> 83rd season in franchise history; third Super Bowl win

The 2007 season was the New York Giants' 83rd in the National Football League (NFL), their 32nd playing their home games at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, and their fourth under head coach Tom Coughlin.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 New Orleans Saints season</span> NFL team season

The 2007 season was the New Orleans Saints' 41st season in the National Football League (NFL), their 32nd playing home games at the Louisiana Superdome and their second under head coach Sean Payton. The team tried to improve upon its 10–6 record in 2006 and its third division title—the Saints' first in the NFC South. Their other two division titles were in the NFC West, prior to the league's 2002 realignment. After opening up the pre-season in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game against the Pittsburgh Steelers on August 5, 2007, the Saints ended with a 3–2 pre-season record. The Saints opened the regular season with a nationally televised game against the defending Super Bowl XLI champion Indianapolis Colts, but ultimately had a disappointing season, finishing 2007 with a 7–9 record and were officially eliminated from postseason contention for the first time since 2005. The Saints also had no player make the Pro Bowl for the first time since their 1–15 1980 season.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2008 Washington Redskins season</span> NFL team season

The 2008 season was the Washington Redskins' 77th in the National Football League (NFL) and their first under head coach Jim Zorn.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2008 Arizona Cardinals season</span> American National Football League season

The 2008 season was the Arizona Cardinals' 89th in the National Football League (NFL), their 21st season in Arizona, and their second under head coach Ken Whisenhunt. The season marked the Cardinals' first Super Bowl appearance, coming as a result of their victory against the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFC Championship. The Cardinals slogan for the season was "Shock The World!" Riding the back of quarterback Kurt Warner, who had gone from being a backup for the St. Louis Rams in 1999 to leading the Greatest Show on Turf to a Super Bowl XXXIV victory, and franchise wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald, the Cardinals went on a playoff run for the ages after having won just one playoff game in the last sixty years, as Warner once again recreated the magic he had captured with the Rams.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2008 Arizona Wildcats football team</span> American college football season

The 2008 Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona in the 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team's head coach was Mike Stoops, in his fifth year at Arizona. The Wildcats played their home games at Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Arizona and compete in the Pacific-10 Conference. Arizona finished the 2008 regular season with a record of 7–5, and faced BYU in the Las Vegas Bowl on December 20, their first postseason appearance since 1998; they defeated the Cougars 31–21 for a final record of 8–5. In that game, the Wildcats' 31 points were the most put up by the team in any of their bowl appearances. Senior wide receiver Mike Thomas, playing in his final game as a Wildcat, also got the Pac-10 record of most receptions by any wide receiver in the Pac-10. Senior Quarterback Willie Tuitama was named MVP for the 2008 Las Vegas Bowl, by throwing 328 yards, 2 pass TD's and 1 rush TD.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2009 Oregon Ducks football team</span> American college football season

The 2009 Oregon Ducks football team represented the University of Oregon as member of the Pacific-10 Conference the 2009 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by head coach Chip Kelly in his first season as a head coach at the Division I FBS level. Kelly was only the third Ducks head coach since 1977 and led the Ducks to a Pac-10 championship and was named Pac-10 Coach of the Year. He took over for Mike Bellotti.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2009 UCLA Bruins football team</span> American college football season

The 2009 UCLA Bruins football team represented the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in the 2009 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Under second-year head coach Rick Neuheisel, they opened the season at the Rose Bowl on September 5 against San Diego State. The last game of the season, against USC was moved from the "Championship Saturday" weekend of December. Instead, the UCLA–USC rivalry game was played on Saturday, November 28 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2009 Washington Huskies football team</span> American college football season

The 2009 Washington Huskies football team represented the University of Washington in the 2009 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team's head coach was Steve Sarkisian, who replaced Tyrone Willingham following a winless 2008 season. The Huskies played their home games at Husky Stadium in Seattle, Washington. The Huskies finished the season 5–7 and 4–5 in Pac-10 play.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2010 Oregon Ducks football team</span> American college football season

The 2010 Oregon Ducks football team represented the University of Oregon in the 2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by Chip Kelly in his second season as a head coach. The Ducks played their home games at Autzen Stadium for the 44th straight year.

The 1985 Oregon State Beavers football team represented Oregon State University in the 1985 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Beavers started the season 2–0, their best start in 18 years, but lost all but one of their remaining games to post their 18th consecutive losing season. The Beavers' 3–8 record was their best in seven years. The 1985 season is best known for Oregon State's 21–20 win over Washington, the largest point spread upset before Stanford's 2007 win over USC.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2010 Arizona Wildcats football team</span> American college football season

The 2010 Arizona Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona in the college football season of 2010. The team's head coach was Mike Stoops. The Wildcats played their home games at Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Arizona. They finished with a record of 7–6 and a loss to Oklahoma State in the Alamo Bowl.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 Auburn Tigers football team</span> American college football season

The 2013 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Gus Malzahn, who was in his first season as head coach at Auburn, although he served as offensive coordinator from 2009 to 2011. The Tigers played their home games at Jordan–Hare Stadium in Auburn, Alabama and competed in the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 Oregon Ducks football team</span> American college football season

The 2014 Oregon Ducks football team represented the University of Oregon in the 2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by second-year head coach Mark Helfrich and played their home games at Autzen Stadium for the 48th straight year. They are a member of the Pac-12 Conference in the North Division.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 Arizona Wildcats football team</span> American college football season

The 2014 Arizona Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona in the 2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The season was the Wildcats's 115th overall, 37th as a member of the Pac-12 Conference (Pac-12) and its fourth within the Pac-12 South Division. The team was led by head coach Rich Rodriguez, in his third year, and played its home games at Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Arizona for the 86th straight year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 UCLA Bruins football team</span> American college football season

The 2014 UCLA Bruins football team represented the University of California, Los Angeles in the 2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by third-year head coach Jim L. Mora and played its home games at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. They were members of the South Division of the Pac-12 Conference. The team was featured in the Pac-12 Network's The Drive program.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 Auburn Tigers football team</span> American college football season

The 2014 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Gus Malzahn, who was in his second season as head coach at Auburn. The Tigers played their home games at Jordan–Hare Stadium in Auburn, Alabama and competed in the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They finished the season 8–5, 4–4 in SEC play to finish in a tie for fourth place in the Western Division. They were invited to the Outback Bowl where they lost to Wisconsin.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2018 Arizona Wildcats football team</span> American college football season

The 2018 Arizona Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona in the 2018 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The season marked the Wildcats's 119th season. They played their home games at the Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Arizona and competed members of the South Division in the Pac-12 Conference. They were led by first-year head coach Kevin Sumlin. The Wildcats finished the season 5–7 and did not qualify for a bowl game. They went 4–5 in Pac-12 play, tying USC for third place in the South Division.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2021 UCLA Bruins football team</span> American college football season

The 2021 UCLA Bruins football team represented the University of California, Los Angeles during the 2021 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by fourth-year head coach Chip Kelly and competed as members of the South Division in the Pac-12 Conference. Entering this season, Nike became the new apparel sponsor for the team, replacing former supplier Under Armour, and the Bruins' football uniforms bore the Jordan Brand.

References

  1. Finley, Ryan (September 5, 2009). "Wildcats win season opener against Central Michigan". Arizona Daily Star . Retrieved September 5, 2009.
  2. Finley, Ryan (September 12, 2009). "Grigsby Scores Twice in Wildcats Win". Arizona Daily Star . Retrieved September 12, 2009.
  3. Archived 2009-09-24 at the Wayback Machine Iowa/UA Recap. Retrieved September 20, 2009.
  4. Finley, Ryan (September 19, 2009). "Arizona Wildcats Football: Iowa Wins 27–17". Arizona Daily Star . Retrieved September 19, 2009.
  5. Finley, Ryan (September 27, 2009). "UA Gets Its Revenge". Arizona Daily Star . Retrieved September 27, 2009.
  6. Finley, Ryan (September 26, 2009). "Final: Arizona 37, Oregon State 32". Arizona Daily Star . Retrieved September 26, 2009.
  7. Baum, Bob (October 12, 2009). "Wildcats Still Stunned by Game's Wild Finish". The Seattle Times . Retrieved January 8, 2010.
  8. Finley, Ryan (October 11, 2009). "Agony of Da Feet". Arizona Daily Star . Retrieved October 11, 2009.
  9. "Arizona erases 15-point deficit to clip Stanford". ESPN.com. October 17, 2009. Archived from the original on December 13, 2017. Retrieved January 8, 2010.
  10. Kroichick, Ron (November 15, 2009). "Bears' defense holds in taming of Wildcats". San Francisco Chronicle . Archived from the original on November 17, 2009. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
  11. Ryan Finley (November 15, 2009). "UA thrown for a loop". Arizona Daily Star. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
  12. "Cal Football Postgame Notes – vs. Arizona (Saturday, November 14)". University of California. Archived from the original on March 7, 2012. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
  13. Abbott, Michael. "Arizona Wildcats Want Red-Out Against Oregon Ducks". Bleacher Report. Retrieved July 27, 2012.
  14. Finley, Ryan (November 22, 2009). "Doubly Disappointing". Arizona Daily Star . Retrieved November 22, 2009.
  15. Finley, Ryan (November 29, 2009). "A Boot and a Kick". Arizona Daily Star . Retrieved November 29, 2009.
  16. "Arizona's Desert Survival". San Francisco Chronicle . November 29, 2009. Retrieved November 29, 2009.
  17. "Arizona rallies to beat USC", Greg Beacham, Associated Press, on azcentral.com, December 5, 2009
  18. Harvey, Steve (September 24, 2009). "College Football – Bottom 10". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved September 24, 2009.
  19. "Pac-10 Football Awards and All-Conference Announced". Pacific-10 Conference. December 7, 2009. Archived from the original on December 12, 2009. Retrieved December 7, 2009.