The Arizona Wildcats are where many thought Oregon would be right now.
Picked to finish last in the Pac-12 South, Arizona is 7-3 and headed for a bowl game to be determined.
Considered a strong bounce-back candidate after a down year, Oregon is 5-5 and fighting for a postseason berth.
They still could end up with identical 7-5 regular-season records — an outcome that would require the Ducks to defeat the Wildcats on Saturday in Eugene. But the current vibe around each program feels different.
Arizona has won five of six and is brimming with hope thanks to the emergence of Khalil Tate, the sophomore quarterback-turned-Heisman Trophy candidate. Oregon has lost four of five and is still trying to find its footing under first-year coach Willie Taggart.
It wasn’t supposed to go this way. But when does it ever in the unpredictable world of sports?
UA coaches and players could sense a change in the offseason after last year’s 3-9 debacle. They were optimistic. But no one knew, including Wildcats coach Rich Rodriguez.
Rodriguez never had experienced anything quite like 2016. At West Virginia — and even at Michigan — his teams gradually improved. They never endured the three- and four-win drops that befell Arizona the past two seasons.
“What has caused the turnaround?†Rodriguez asked this week. “I’ve been thinking: Is it a turnaround? Or are we staying the course and just trying to get better in all aspects? I think it’s been more that.â€
Several Arizona veterans have developed and improved over the past year. But three other factors have played an even bigger role in putting the Wildcats ahead of their perceived schedule:

