1989 Arizona Wildcats football team

{{short description|American college football season}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}

{{Infobox college sports team season

| year = 1989

| team = Arizona Wildcats

| sport = football

| image =

| image_size =

| conference = Pacific-10 Conference

| short_conf = Pac-10

| APRank = 25

| record = 8–4

| conf_record = 5–3

| head_coach = Dick Tomey

| hc_year = 3rd

| off_coach = Rip Scherer

| oc_year = 2nd

| off_scheme =

| def_coach = Larry Mac Duff

| dc_year = 3rd

| def_scheme =

| captain =

| stadium = Arizona Stadium

| champion = Copper Bowl champion

| bowl = Copper Bowl

| bowl_result = W 17–10 vs. NC State

}}

{{1989 Pacific-10 Conference football standings}}

The 1989 Arizona Wildcats football team represented University of Arizona during the 1989 NCAA Division I-A football season. The offense scored 248 points while the defense allowed 178 points. Led by head coach Dick Tomey in his third season, the Wildcats played to an 8–4 record (5–3 in Pac-10) and participated in the first Copper Bowl which, ironically, was held at their home stadium. The Wildcats defeated North Carolina State in the bowl game.

Before the season

Arizona had completed the 1988 season with a 7–4 record, but missed out on a bowl game (likely due to losing to ranked teams as well as fewer bowls at the time). Fans believed that Tomey was building the team to success and the Wildcats entered 1989 with high expectations.{{Cite news|title=Wildcat football prepares for '89 season, hopes for more success|newspaper=Arizona Daily Star|date=August 22, 1989}} The team earned a top-20 ranking in the preseason.

Schedule

{{CFB schedule

| rankyear = 1989

| poll = AP

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = September 2

| w/l = w

| rank = 18

| opponent = Stanford

| site_stadium = Arizona Stadium

| site_cityst = Tucson, AZ

| tv = KMSB

| score = 19–3

| attend = 48,712

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = September 9

| w/l = l

| nonconf = y

| away = y

| rank = 20

| opponent = Texas Tech

| site_stadium = Jones Stadium

| site_cityst = Lubbock, TX

| tv = Prime

| score = 14–24

| attend = 35,940

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = September 16

| w/l = w

| nonconf = y

| opponent = Oklahoma

| opprank = 6

| site_stadium = Arizona Stadium

| site_cityst = Tucson, AZ

| tv = Prime

| score = 6–3

| attend = 50,931

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = September 23

| w/l = w

| rank = 23

| opponent = Washington

| opprank = 11

| site_stadium = Arizona Stadium

| site_cityst = Tucson, AZ

| tv = Prime

| score = 20–17

| attend = 50,935

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = September 30

| w/l = l

| away = y

| rank = 17

| opponent = Oregon

| site_stadium = Autzen Stadium

| site_cityst = Eugene, OR

| tv = Prime

| score = 10–16

| attend = 39,631

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = October 14

| w/l = w

| opponent = UCLA

| opprank = 22

| site_stadium = Arizona Stadium

| site_cityst = Tucson, AZ

| tv = ABC

| score = 42–7

| attend = 51,562

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = October 21

| w/l = w

| away = y

| rank = 22

| opponent = Washington State

| opprank = 15

| site_stadium = Martin Stadium

| site_cityst = Pullman, WA

| tv = Prime

| score = 23–21

| attend = 36,090

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = October 28

| w/l = w

| nonconf = y

| rank = 17

| opponent = Pacific (CA)

| site_stadium = Arizona Stadium

| site_cityst = Tucson, AZ

| tv = KMSB

| score = 38–14

| attend = 46,449

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = November 4

| w/l = l

| away = y

| rank = 15

| opponent = California

| site_stadium = California Memorial Stadium

| site_cityst = Berkeley, CA

| tv = ABC

| score = 28–29

| attend = 29,000

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = November 11

| w/l = l

| rank = 25

| homecoming = y

| opponent = USC

| opprank = 9

| site_stadium = Arizona Stadium

| site_cityst = Tucson, AZ

| tv = ABC

| score = 3–24

| attend = 52,606

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = November 25

| w/l = w

| away = y

| opponent = Arizona State

| site_stadium = Sun Devil Stadium

| site_cityst = Tempe, AZ

| gamename = rivalry

| tv = ESPN

| score = 28–10

| attend = 74,926

}}

|{{CFB schedule entry

| date = December 31

| w/l = w

| nonconf = y

| neutral = y

| opponent = NC State

| site_stadium = Arizona Stadium

| site_cityst = Tucson, AZ

| gamename = Copper Bowl

| tv = TBS

| score = 17–10

| attend = 37,237

| source = {{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-bangor-daily-news-wildcats-down-wolf/140179829/|work=The Bangor Daily News|title=Wildcats down Wolfpack 17–10|date=January 2, 1990|accessdate=February 3, 2024|via=Newspapers.com}}

}}

}}

Rankings

{{Further|1989 NCAA Division I-A football rankings}}

{{Ranking movements

| poll1title = AP

| poll1firstweek = 0

| poll1lastweek = 16

| poll1_0=18

| poll1_1=20

| poll1_2=RV

| poll1_3=23

| poll1_4=17

| poll1_5=RV

| poll1_6=RV

| poll1_7=22

| poll1_8=17

| poll1_9=15

| poll1_10=25

| poll1_11=RV

| poll1_12=RV

| poll1_13=RV

| poll1_14=RV

| poll1_15=RV

| poll1_16=25

| poll1_17=

| poll1_18=

| poll1_19=

| poll2title = Coaches

| poll2firstweek =0

| poll2lastweek =16

| poll2_0=NR

| poll2_1=NR

| poll2_2=RV

| poll2_3=RV

| poll2_4=15

| poll2_5=RV

| poll2_6=RV

| poll2_7=19

| poll2_8=16

| poll2_9=16

| poll2_10=RV

| poll2_11=RV

| poll2_12=RV

| poll2_13=20 T

| poll2_14=RV

| poll2_15=RV

| poll2_16=RV

| poll2_17=

| poll2_18=

| poll2_19=

| poll2_20=

}}

Game summaries

=Stanford=

{{Empty section|date=November 2022}}

=At Texas Tech=

The Wildcats (ranked 20th) visited Texas Tech for their first road game of the season after winning against Stanford to start the year. The Red Raiders were fired up in front of their home crowd and outplayed Arizona with a rushing attack for the upset victory.{{Cite news|title=Texas Tech's ground game too much for UA|newspaper=The Arizona Republic|date=September 10, 1989}}

=Oklahoma=

Arizona battled sixth-ranked Oklahoma in a home showdown. The game was mostly dominated by the defenses of both teams and led to the Wildcats and Sooners each scoring a single field goal. Late in the fourth quarter, Arizona drove into Sooner territory, and drilled a field goal in the closing seconds for a 6–3 upset victory and avenging the Wildcats’ loss to the Sooners in the previous season.{{Cite news|title=Arizona stuns No. 6 Sooners|newspaper=Arizona Daily Star|date=September 17, 1989}} This remains the most recent meeting to date between Arizona and Oklahoma.

=Washington=

Riding high on their momentum after upsetting Oklahoma, the Wildcats faced off against Washington (ranked 11th). For the second game in a row, Arizona took its opponent down to the finish. They held the Huskies in check throughout most of the contest and scored a field goal as time expired to get the win.{{Cite news|title=Wildcats edge Washington on last-second kick for second consecutive year|newspaper=Arizona Daily Wildcat|date=September 25, 1989}} It was the Wildcats’ second consecutive win over Washington that ended on a winning kick and their first win over the Huskies at home. Also, it was the second consecutive week that Arizona won against a ranked opponent with a last-second field goal.

=At Oregon=

{{Empty section|date=November 2022}}

=UCLA=

After losing at Oregon, Arizona hosted UCLA (ranked 22nd). The Wildcats’ offense was too much for the Bruins, and Tomey picked up his first victory over them.{{Cite news|title=Wildcats rout UCLA|newspaper=Arizona Daily Star|date=October 15, 1989}}

=At Washington State=

The Wildcats traveled to Pullman for a top-25 showdown against 15th-ranked Washington State. Arizona did enough to narrowly defeat the Cougars.{{Cite news|title=Wildcats edge No. 15 Washington State|newspaper=Tucson Citizen|date=October 22, 1989}}

=Pacific=

{{Empty section|date=November 2022}}

=At California=

Arizona traveled to Berkeley to visit California and paid their respects in the wake of the earthquake disaster that rocked the Bay Area and the nation three weeks prior.{{Cite news|title=Wildcats prepare to visit Cal, pay tribute to quake victims|newspaper=Arizona Daily Star|date=November 1, 1989}} An emotional Golden Bears team would rally from behind and barely got past the 15th-ranked Wildcats.{{Cite news|title=Cal comes back to drop No. 15 Wildcats|newspaper=Arizona Daily Wildcat|date=November 6, 1989}} The loss ended all chances of contention for a potential Rose Bowl berth for Arizona.

=USC=

On homecoming day, the Wildcats hosted ninth-ranked USC and former Arizona coach Larry Smith. Arizona was no match for the Trojans’ big talent and only managed one field goal against them in a loss and Tomey was outcoached by Smith yet again.{{Cite news|title=No. 9 USC takes down Arizona, seals Pac-10 title|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=November 12, 1989}} USC clinched the Pac-10 title and Rose Bowl berth with the win and prevented Arizona from getting a perfect home record.{{Cite news|title=Trojans wrap up Rose Bowl berth; UA lacked big play, not big heart|newspaper=Arizona Daily Star|date=November 12, 1989}}

=At Arizona State=

{{see also|Arizona-Arizona State football rivalry}}

To conclude the regular season, Arizona took a trip to Arizona State for the rivalry game. In an attempt to change their fortunes against the Wildcats, the Sun Devils wore gold jerseys in the game, making their uniforms all gold.{{Cite news|title=ASU to go all gold vs. UA|newspaper=The Arizona Republic|date=November 23, 1989}}

However, in the game, ASU's uniform change didn't help any matters, as the Wildcats overcame an early deficit and dominated the second half on their way to yet another win to extend their dominance over ASU.{{Cite news|title=The Wildcats continue their dominance|newspaper=Arizona Daily Star|date=November 26, 1989}}{{Cite news|title=Wildcats good as gold, again|newspaper=The Arizona Republic|date=November 26, 1989}}

Wildcat players reacted to Arizona State's gold uniforms by calling them “bananas”.{{Cite news|title=ASU uniforms looked like 'bananas' in Wildcats' win|newspaper=Arizona Daily Wildcat|date=November 27, 1989}} After the game, perhaps due to the loss, ASU decided that they would likely never wear the gold jerseys again for the foreseeable future, although they would wear them one last time in 1990 in a loss to USC.{{Cite news|title=ASU football considering retirement of gold jerseys after loss to USC|newspaper=The State Press|date=October 30, 1990}} In 2021, ASU would bring back the gold jerseys in a home win over Colorado and would completely wear all-gold against USC later that year.{{Cite news|title=ASU unveils gold jerseys for home game against Colorado|newspaper=The Arizona Republic|date=September 22, 2021}}{{Cite news|title=Gold rush: ASU to don all-gold vs. USC|newspaper=The Arizona Republic|date=November 3, 2021}}

=Copper Bowl (vs NC State)=

{{main|1989 Copper Bowl}}

{{see also|1989 NC State Wolfpack football team}}

The Wildcats played in their first bowl game under Tomey. In the inaugural Copper Bowl that was held at their home stadium, Arizona faced NC State.{{Cite news|title=Home Bowl: Wildcats to play first Copper Bowl game at Arizona Stadium|newspaper=Arizona Daily Wildcat|date=December 13, 1989}} In front of a raucous crowd that mostly Arizona fans, the Wildcats narrowly got past the Wolfpack in a low-scoring affair.{{Cite news|title=Wildcats win Copper Bowl, 17–10|newspaper=Arizona Daily Star|date=January 1, 1990}}{{Cite news|title=Wildcats edge NC State in inaugural Copper Bowl on home field|newspaper=Tucson Citizen|date=January 1, 1990}} The game was played on New Year's Eve and on the final day of the 1980s before turning to the 1990s. Also, the Copper Bowl was Arizona's first bowl win in the Tomey era.

Personnel

{{American football roster/Header|year=1989|team=Arizona Wildcats|teamcolors=y

|offensive_players=

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Michael|last=Bates|pos=RB|link=y|dab=Michael Bates (American football)}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Stuart|last=Betty|pos=QB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=John|last=Brandom|pos=OL}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=David|last=Eldridge|pos=RB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=John|last=Fina|pos=OL|link=y}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Nick|last=Fineanganofo|pos=OL}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Art|last=Greathouse|pos=RB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Richard|last=Griffith|pos=TE}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Mario|last=Hampton|pos=RB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Kyle|last=Jan|pos=WR|pos2=KR}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Kip|last=Lewis|pos=WR}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=George|last=Malauulu|pos=QB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Reggie|last=McGill|pos=RB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Olatide|last=Ogunfidtimi|pos=WR}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Glenn|last=Parker|pos=OL|link=y}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Errol|last=Sapp|pos=RB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Melvin|last=Smith|pos=RB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Mike|last=Streidnig|pos=RB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Paul|last=Tofflemire|pos=OL}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Ronald|last=Veal|pos=QB}}

|defensive_players=

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Zeno|last=Alexander|pos=LB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Todd|last=Burden|pos=DB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Darren|last=Case|pos=LB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Reggie|last=Gaddis|pos=DL}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Scott|last=Geyer|pos=DB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Ken|last=Hakes|pos=DL}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Jeff|last=Hammerschmidt|pos=DB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Richard|last=Holt|pos=DB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Reggie|last=Johnson|pos=DL}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Darryl|last=Lewis|pos=DB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Arnulf|last=Mobley|pos=LB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Donnie|last=Salum|pos=LB}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Chris|last=Singleton|pos=LB|link=y|dab=Chris Singleton (American football)}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Anthony|last=Smith|pos=DL}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Chris|last=Wright|pos=DB}}

|special_teams_players=

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Gary|last=Coston|pos=K}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=John|last=Nies|pos=P}}

{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Doug|last=Pfaff|pos=K}}

}}

{{American football roster/Footer|roster_url=|accessdate=

|head_coach=

|asst_coach=

}}

Team players drafted into the NFL

class="wikitable" width="80%"
align="center" style="background:#121849;color:red;"

| Player

PositionRoundPickNFL club
align="center" bgcolor=""

| Chris Singleton

Linebacker18New England Patriots
align="center" bgcolor=""

| Anthony Smith

Defensive end111Los Angeles Raiders
align="center" bgcolor=""

| Glenn Parker

Tackle369Buffalo Bills
align="center" bgcolor=""

| John Nies

Punter6154Buffalo Bills
align="center" bgcolor=""

| Donnie Salum

Linebacker10250Atlanta Falcons
align="center" bgcolor=""
{{Cite web|title=1990 NFL Draft Listing|url=https://www.pro-football-reference.com/years/1990/draft.htm|access-date=2021-12-10|website=Pro-Football-Reference.com|language=en}}

Season notes

  • The Wildcats completed the decade of the 1980s with a resurgence and built a winning success under Tomey and Smith, and continued into the 1990s with more domination.
  • Arizona won four games against ranked opponents this season (the team went winless against them in 1988).
  • After this season, Arizona did not play Texas Tech again until 2019.
  • This was the last season in which Arizona scheduled Oklahoma. Although the Wildcats were successful for most of the 1990s, the Sooners would become a powerhouse team at the turn of the century, and by scheduling future games against each other, Arizona believed they would never defeat Oklahoma again.{{Cite news|title=Wildcats can't afford to schedule tough non-conference football opponents due to high costs and fears over losing big|newspaper=Tucson Citizen|date=May 18, 2004}}
  • This was the last season in which the team had a large red “A” on their helmets. The “A” (which was known as the original “Block ‘A’”) would be replaced by a newer “A” in the following season, as the school wanted to energize its image to represent its academics and sports teams.{{Cite news|title=UA hopes new logo will convey image of more than just athletic prowess|newspaper=Arizona Daily Star|date=February 15, 1989}}
  • Arizona Stadium changed its midfield logo again. It featured the current “Block ‘A’” logo with the words “Bear Down” below it in blue letters. The “Block ‘A’” (also known as the “Big ‘A’” or the “Academic ‘A’”) debuted earlier in the year and was used in tandem with the red “A” logo that used on the helmets and on top of Arizona Stadium scoreboard. In 1990, the “Block ‘A’” logo would become the university's full-time logo and appeared on the team's helmets.{{Cite news|title=UA has new logo on Arizona Stadium midfield|newspaper=Tucson Citizen|date=September 1, 1989}} The older logo would continue to be used on the scoreboard until end of the 1992 season.
  • The Copper Bowl was the first of only two bowl games that the Wildcats played on their home turf, with the other occurring in 1997. In addition, due to bowl games being neutral-site games, the Copper Bowl was considered a neutral game for Arizona instead of a home game, even though it was played at Arizona Stadium.{{Cite news|title=Copper Bowl will not be considered a home game for Wildcats|newspaper=Arizona Daily Star|date=December 30, 1989}}
  • For the first time since 1985, an Arizona player did not win the Pac-10 defensive player of the year award, ending a streak of three seasons.
  • This was the last season in which Arizona's helmets featured the “Red ‘A’” on them, as they switched to helmets with the “Block ‘A’” on them in 1990. The “Red ‘A’” would continue to be used on top of the scoreboard through the 1992 season.

References