Arizona head coach Brent Brennan is pushing for more than noise this week; he’s calling for respect. At his Wednesday press conference, Brennan challenged Wildcats fans to pack Arizona Stadium, “make this thing the hostile environment we know it can be,” but he also emphasized restraint. “Let’s be respectful in this thing. We’re better than that. Make it incredibly hard on BYU, but let’s be respectful in the process.”
His reminder comes amid rising tensions. In a previous matchup in Boulder, Colorado’s program was fined $50,000 by the Big 12 after spectator chants directed at BYU were deemed discriminatory and hateful. Brennan’s words make clear he wants Arizona fans to bring energy, but not cross the line that has drawn fines and condemnation.
It’s a fine balance to strike. Rivalries and home atmospheres are pillars of college sports. Yet Brennan is signaling that how his team competes off the field matters, too. He is asking fans to challenge the opponent mentally and atmospherically while upholding the standards of respect a modern program demands.
Stadiums often host tens of thousands of fans who feel connected to the identity of a team and school. When behavior in the stands spirals into discrimination, it tarnishes not just a game but a program’s reputation. Brennan’s pre‑game message is as much about accountability as it is about home-field advantage.
Whatever happens on Saturday, Arizona will have had a chance to test both the decibel levels and the character of its fan base. Brennan has given clear instructions: create intensity, demand attention, but temper it with dignity. That might not show up on stat sheets, but it’s an important leadership signal in high-stakes rivalry football.