Veteran Pac-12 CB and potential Oregon target enters transfer portal

The Ducks need an instant-impact player in the secondary to help replace Christian Gonzalez. A prime candidate just became available.

If the Oregon Ducks are looking for a veteran cornerback who can come to Eugene through the transfer portal and help fill the void left by Christian Gonzalez, then a new candidate has popped up who certainly fits the mold.

On Tuesday it was announced that former Arizona Wildcats cornerback Christian Roland-Wallace would enter the portal as a graduate transfer, looking for a new team with which to play his final collegiate season and potentially boost his NFL draft stock.

In his four years at Arizona, Roland-Wallace has played in 41 total games, racking up 169 tackles with 2 INT and 15 passes defended.

Wallace is expected to be one of the more coveted veteran defenders in the portal, and it would be smart for the Ducks to reach out to him quickly. He is obviously familiar with the level of play in the Pac-12 and has done well against that competition in the past.

With Gonzalez making the leap to the NFL, this could be a perfect answer for the Ducks to add an instant-impact player to the defense.

Christian Roland-Wallace’s Transfer Portal Profile

Know the Opponent: Arizona’s athletic defense is still a work in progress

Arizona will throw out athletic defenders on the field, but the results aren’t quite there as of yet.

Oregon has the kind of offense that the 2022 Arizona Wildcats dread. The Ducks are far from one-dimensional. The Ducks can run the ball just as well as they can throw it.

Arizona has shown the ability to limit the passing game, but the Wildcats haven’t been able to stop anyone’s run game, something Oregon will look to exploit on Saturday night.

As a team, Arizona is giving up 213 yards on the ground. One reason is that their front seven is a talented, but young group. The Ducks will need to look out for defensive end Hunter Echols, a fifth-year senior that leads the Wildcats with 3.5 sacks and 6.5 tackles for loss.

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According to Oregon head coach Dan Lanning, the Ducks expect Arizona to mix up formations up front in order to cause confusion.

“Their front, that’s built a little bit off their front. I know their defensive coordinator (Johnny Nansen) has a front background as well,” he said. “But I think they’ll play a variety of fronts; they’ll be three down, they’ll be four down, they change their blitz packages a good amount. And obviously, they try to play to his (Echols) skill sets and use his talents. He’s a good player. He’s disruptive and it shows up.”

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The Wildcat secondary is pretty good and it’s led by safety Christian Young, a senior from Houston. He was second on the team last season with 68 tackles. So far this season, Young has 29 tackles through five games.

Junior Christian Roland-Wallace is Arizona’s most experienced and best corner and he’ll surely get himself acquainted with Duck receiver Troy Franklin. It’ll be a good test for Oregon’s receivers and tight ends. Arizona hasn’t allowed a receiver to go for over 100 yards as of yet.

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Blitz-happy Wildcats could cause some problems for Oregon offense

Arizona blitzes most of the time when on defense, and that will create a unique challenge for the Ducks.

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For a team that’s rebuilding, the most difficult part is trying to figure out what kind of defense, or offense for that matter is best to run according to the personnel that is on the roster right now.

Arizona has decided the way to go is to blitz the quarterback. And if that doesn’t work, then blitz again.

After three games, quite literally, it’s been a hit-and-miss strategy for the Wildcats under first-year head coach Jedd Fisch and defensive coordinator Don Brown. Arizona knew exactly what it was getting in Brown as the long-time assistant coach has the moniker of “Dr. Blitz.”

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But the Wildcats are prone to giving up the big play. BYU scored a touchdown of 67 yards in the first game and then San Diego State found the end zone on plays of 55, 25, and 40 yards, all in the first half. All three opponents, including Northern Arizona, had their fair share of plays of 20 yards that were not scoring plays.

That’s the bad.

The good comes from ranking second in the Pac-12 with 21 tackles for loss, only behind Oregon State. Nose tackle Kyon Barrs, who leads the team with 3.5 tackles for loss, and cornerback Christian Roland-Wallace, who is considered to be a premier shutdown corner.

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The stats don’t bear it out (just one interception thus far) because opponents tend to throw on the other side of the field. In Arizona’s five games in 2020, he ranked third on the team in tackles and tied for the team lead in pass break-ups.

Oregon offensive coordinator Joe Moorhead says Roland-Wallace can cause havoc for an offense in multiple ways.

“His length and his physicality in the run game and at the line of scrimmage (make him a challenge),” he said. “He has very good short-distance quickness and the ability to redirect and the scheme that Coach Brown utilizes gives him a lot of opportunities to press at the line of scrimmage and challenge the receivers.”

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While opponents know the Wildcats will be blitzing, the difficult part, according to Oregon head coach Mario Cristobal is figuring out where it’s coming from and prepare for every possible scenario.

“The challenge this week is two personnel groupings that are very different in what they do out of them,” he said. “We have to be at our very best, got to study them thoroughly and got to have a good plan because they do affect the quarterback. They get a lot of penetration and create negative plays in the run game as well.”

As long as the Ducks get more explosion plays than negative ones, they should be just fine when the final horn sounds on this contest.

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