Arizona ruins Bruins’ unblemished record
TUCSON, Ariz. – The house of cards that UCLA has lived in the past month came crashing down on Saturday night.
Willie Tuitama, an 18-year-old freshman in his second college start, threw for two early touchdowns and Arizona rolled for 519 yards in a 52-14 rout of the previously unbeaten and seventh-ranked Bruins.
“It was wild out there,” Tuitama said, “really crazy.”
Arizona, which had lost 19 of its last 21 Pacific-10 Conference home games, rushed for 320 yards. Mike Bell had 153 yards in 16 attempts, including an 8-yard TD run. Gilbert Harris added a career-best 116 yards in 16 attempts, one of them a 17-yarder for a score.
“It was one of those things you dream of,” said Bell, a senior who has experienced so many bad Saturdays of losing football. “It was just a blessing for it to finally happen here.”
Freshman Mike Thomas caught five passes for 104 yards. He had a 48-yard TD catch and a 17-yard TD run, both in the first quarter to help give second-year coach Mike Stoops by far his biggest victory.
It was the highest-ranked team to lose to Arizona (3-6, 2-4) since the Wildcats beat No. 1 Washington 16-3 in Tucson on Nov. 7, 1992.
“Obviously we did not play to our capabilities as an offense, defense, special teams – and we got outcoached as well,” UCLA coach Karl Dorrell said. “It was one of those humble butt-kickings that you’re going to have to take and get yourselves ready to play again next week.”
Hundreds of fans, mostly students, stormed the field at the finish. Some climbed the goal posts in jubilation, but couldn’t bring them down.
The Bruins (8-1, 5-1 Pac-10) had come from behind in the fourth quarter to win in three of their previous four games, including erasing a 21-point deficit last week against Stanford. That wasn’t going to happen this time, not with the Wildcats up 52-7 after three quarters.
“This team, we think we have a lot of character, we think we have a lot of heart,” UCLA quarterback Drew Olson said. “It’s going to have to come out, and we’ll see what we’re really made of this next week.”
UCLA’s Maurice Drew gained 41 yards in 12 carries. Olson completed 23 of 38 for 232 yards, including two TDs to Marcedes Lewis to tie the school record for scoring passes in a season with 25. The record-tying toss came against the Wildcats’ second-string defense with 6:07 remaining. Lewis caught 11 passes for 131 yards, the most receptions by a Bruins player in 13 years. But that was about the extent of a UCLA offense that entered the game averaging just less than 43 points per game.
“It’s not an upset,” Wildcats safety Darrell Brooks said. “We knew we were going to do this all along. You can ask anyone in this locker room.”
Arizona scored TDs on its first four possessions, led 31-7 at the half, then scored two TDs in a 53-second span early in the second half to go up 45-7.
“They just kept the pedal to the metal,” UCLA safety Jarrad Page said. “They were sure of everything they were doing and kept doing everything fast, and we just weren’t fast enough.”
Marcus Hollingsworth broke up Olson’s lateral pass and, after prompting from teammates, jumped on the ball in the end zone to give Arizona a 52-7 lead with 4:09 to play in the third.