Arizona Has A Rare Chance To Make Noah Fifita's Final Run Matter

As Arizona stakes its claim in the Big 12 spotlight, Noah Fifita takes center stage as a dark horse in the Heisman race, showcasing the Wildcats ambitions for a standout season.

Arizona has every reason to put Noah Fifita front and center this fall, even if the Heisman chatter is a long shot.

The buzz around him nationally is light, and that’s no mystery. Fifita and the Wildcats are coming off a very good, surprising 2025 season, but neither is viewed by most people as one of the country’s elite.

That perception might end up holding up by season’s end. Then again, Arizona is clearly hoping 2026 tells a different story.

This feels like the kind of year where the opportunity won’t come around again soon.

That’s why the Wildcats are leaning into Fifita the way they are. He’s the face of the program, the player who should be promoted at every turn, and Arizona even handed out his “resume” at Big 12 Media Days as part of the push.

“I think we’re incredibly blessed to have a quarterback like Noah Fifita that definitely has a Heisman resume, and some of you all can check that data in front of you, because I think we passed out a resume to everybody in the building,” Arizona coach Brent Brennan said. “Noah Fifita is the best story in college football.”

And that story runs out after this season.

Fifita’s third straight year as the unquestioned starter is about to begin, and by the time he’s done - health permitting - he should own Arizona’s career passing touchdowns and passing yards records, along with, ideally, wins. His impact goes well beyond the box score, too. In the locker room and away from it, Arizona has gotten a special player and person, one who will be extremely hard to replace.

Which is exactly why the Wildcats are making the most of this moment now.

The pressure is real, even if it’s being wrapped in optimism. Tre Spivey made that clear when he spoke to the Arizona Daily Star’s Justin Spears at Big 12 Media Days.

“We want to go out there and get him that Heisman,” receiver Tre Spivey told the Arizona Daily Star’s Justin Spears at Big 12 Media Days. “That’s all we can talk about, making sure that Noah gets the Heisman this year.”

Chris Hunter was just as direct.

“He’s the greatest quarterback in the nation. We believe that. We do everything we can to make sure the whole world knows that.”

That’s the kind of talk teammates usually reserve for their own guy, and if it helps the group play with a little more edge or focus, Arizona won’t complain. Still, the reality is that Fifita’s Heisman odds are a long way from the top.

FanDuel Sportsbook has him at +10000. Even so, the fact that Arizona can speak about him in those terms without it sounding absurd says plenty about where this program is right now.

Heisman or not, the Wildcats have a senior quarterback at a high level. Some around the conference even see him as the best QB in the Big 12.

There’s also a bigger historical backdrop here. The last time Arizona entered a season with a quarterback this experienced and productive was 2011, when senior Nick Foles returned and led a team that won four games. That season ended in disappointment and helped cost Mike Stoops his job, though none of that was Foles’ fault.

This time feels different. That 2011 team was heading into trouble after a long losing streak to close the previous season.

Arizona now comes off a strong finish, and there isn’t the same sense that a collapse is waiting around the corner. That matters, and it’s a big reason the program is comfortable putting Fifita out in front of everyone.

The Wildcats are also staring at a roster that will look very different next year. They’ll need a new quarterback, and likely an unproven one.

Plenty of other key contributors are expected to move on through graduation or the professional ranks. College football changes fast these days, and Arizona’s future could also be affected by possible departures of coordinators Seth Doege and Danny Gonzales, both of whom are prime candidates to be poached.

For now, though, Arizona has enough to believe it can hang with the Big 12’s best. The roster may not be the most talented on paper, but it looks good enough to compete, and with a few breaks, the Wildcats could be in the mix for a conference title and a playoff berth late in the season.

That confidence starts at quarterback. At most positions, Arizona can feel solid.

At quarterback, it believes it has the edge more often than not. Fifita won’t be perfect, but he has already shown he can make every throw, and his scrambling ability only adds to the danger.

With more comfort in the offense, he looks like a player who can tilt games.

Best player in the country? That’s a harder sell.

Best version of Noah Fifita? That’s enough to win a lot of games and leave him with a legacy as one of Arizona’s greats.

In Other News...

ESPN Just Sized Up Arizonas 2026 Ceiling And Fans Will Debate It

ESPNs latest College Football Power Index has Arizona football in a spot that should at least keep the conversation lively around Tucson. The Wildcats land 34th nationally in the preseason projection, with a forecast that points to a 7.3-4.8 regular season and an 80.1% chance of reaching six wins or more, a sign that the model sees a team with a solid baseline even if the ceiling is still being debated.

The Big 12 picture is where the projection gets more interesting, because Arizona is slotted fourth in the league and given a 4.2% shot at winning the conference. A strength of schedule ranked 53rd overall leaves room for movement either way, with matchups against Texas Tech, BYU, Utah, West Virginia and Iowa State likely to do most of the shaping, and that mix of manageable and demanding games is exactly what will fuel the argument over whether the Wildcats are being undersold or properly sized up. [Read more 🡒]