The 1973 Arizona Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona as a member of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) during the 1973 NCAA Division I football season. Led by first-year head coach Jim Young, the Wildcats compiled an overall record of 8âÂÂ3 with a mark of 6âÂÂ1 in conference play, sharing the WAC title rival Arizona State. The Sun Devils won the head-to-head matchup to clinch the conference's bowl bid, and Arizona was left out of the postseason.
Young was brought in by Arizona to replace Bob Weber, who was fired after the 1972 season. The Wildcats believed that Young would rebuild the team and to return them to their winning ways.
Schedule
Personnel
Coaching staff
Roster
- Bill Adamson, mg
- Dennis Anderson, s
- Mike Battles, s
- Jay Bledsoe, og
- Charlie Gorham, k
- Glen Gresham, lb
- Rich Hall, dt
- Willie Hamilton, rb
- Allyn Haynes, og
- Bruce Hill, qb
- Dan Howard, te
- Leon Lawrence, db
- Rex Naumetz, de
- Brian Murray, ot
- Mark Neal, wr
- Jim O'Connor, ot
- Vince Phason, cb
- Ransom Terrell, lb
- Jim Upchurch, rb
- Bruce Walker, dt
- Roussell Williams, cb
- Bob Windisch, c
Statistics
Passing
Rushing
Receiving
Awards
All-WAC (1st Team)
- Jim O'Connor (OT)
- Willie Hamilton (RB)
- Roussell Williams (CB)
- Ransom Terrell (LB)
- Wally Brumfield (DE)
All-WAC (Second Team)
- Jay Bledsoe (OG)
- Bob Windisch (C)
- T Bell (WR)
- Jim Upchurch (RB)
- Mike Dawson (DT)
- Glen Gresham (LB)
- Mike Battles (FS)
- Leon Lawrence (SS)
- Charlie Gorham (K)
- Mitch Hoopes (P)
WAC Rookie of the Year: Bruce Hill
WAC Coach of the Year: Jim Young
Season notes
- Despite sharing the WAC title, Arizona did not earn a bowl invitation due to its loss to Arizona State and a lack of bowl spots available at the time. The head-to-head loss to ASU was a major reason behind the Wildcats being uninvited for a bowl. Had they beaten ASU and won the WAC outright, the Wildcats would have earned a spot in the Fiesta Bowl.
- Three of ArizonaâÂÂs coaching staff would become future Wildcat head coaches. Larry Smith (defensive coordinator) would have a successful tenure with the Wildcats that began in 1980, and John Mackovic (offensive coordinator) was hired in 2001 and his Wildcat tenure would turn out to be a failure. A third coach, Mike Hankwitz, replaced Mackovic as ArizonaâÂÂs coach during a disastrous 2003 season.
- Many Wildcats fans as well as the Tucson community credited Young for turning the program around after his predecessorâÂÂs failed tenure with the team. Young would be awarded the WAC coach of the year for his efforts.
References