Saturday, September 28, 2019

Grant Gunnell, defense propel Arizona past UCLA in Pac-12 opener

arizona-ucla-final-score-recap-college-football-2019-highlights-wildcats-bruins Casey Sapio-USA TODAY Sports

On a night when Arizona Wildcats were without two of their biggest offensive weapons, they were going to need others to step up in order to begin Pac-12 play on a high note.

Turns out those heroes weren’t just of the offensive variety, as the Wildcat defense did more than its part in aiding a 20-17 win over the UCLA Bruins on Saturday night in front of 38,283 fans at Arizona Stadium.

True freshman quarterback Grant Gunnell looked solid in his first career start, and Gary Brightwell’s 10-yard touchdown run with 10:51 left in the fourth quarter served as the game-winning score. But it was also the play of veteran defenders like Tony Fields II, Colin Schooler and Lorenzo Burns who had the greatest impact in slowing down a UCLA offense that scored 63 points last week in a shocking comeback win at Washington State.

UCLA, which gained 657 yards overall and 8.76 per play at WSU, managed only 445 yards and 5.2 per play against the Wildcats. The Bruins had 70 on their final drive but had to settle for a potential game-tying 39-yard field goal, which JJ Molson missed wide right with 34 seconds left.

Combined with the 14 points allowed last time out against Texas Tech, Arizona (3-1, 1-0) has given up just 31 points in its last two games. That’s the fewest the Wildcats have yielded in consecutive games since September 2013 when they gave up 26 to UTSA and UNLV.

Gunnell, called on to start after Khalil Tate was ruled out with an apparent hamstring injury, threw for 352 yards on 29-of-44 passing with a 75-yard TD pass to Bam Smith. That score gave Arizona a 13-10 lead with 8:17 left in the third quarter, after UCLA (1-4, 1-1) had extended its 7-6 halftime lead with a 37-yard field goal from Molson.

Gunnell threw 29 times in the first half, with Arizona running just 13 times in the opening 30 minutes as the Wildcats opted to lean on their young passer rather than several rushing options with junior J.J. Taylor out due to an ankle injury.

Gunnell got Arizona into the red zone three times in the first half but only managed two Lucas Havrisik field goals, of 40 and 41 yards, after he missed his first try from 34 yards out.

UCLA led 7-0 after its first possession, going 85 yards in 12 plays after Arizona threw five times before punting. But the Bruins managed only 100 yards the rest of the first half as the Wildcat defense buckled down. That unit forced two turnovers on downs and also got an interception from Burns, his third of the season and ninth for Arizona.

Arizona finished with 451 yards, gaining only 99 on the ground. It was its lowest rushing output since managing 72 in a 42-10 loss at Utah last October, and the 30 carries were their fewest since rushing 26 times against BYU in the 2016 season opener.

The Wildcats hit the road for their first conference game next Saturday at Colorado, where they have won three straight including the 2017 contest in which Tate ran for an FBS quarterback-record 327 yards.



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