Salt Lake City, UT (SportsNetwork.com) - Arizona will be on the UCLA bandwagon later on Saturday, but will quickly have to hop off if the Bruins beat USC. First things first. Nick Wilson ran for 218 yards and three touchdowns as the 15th-ranked Wildcats rolled to a 42-10 win over No. 20 Utah on Saturday afternoon. Arizona (9-2, 6-2 Pac-12) is currently one of four two-loss teams in the Pac-12 South. The Wildcats need a UCLA win over USC on Saturday and a Bruins loss to Stanford on Friday along with a win over Arizona State to make it to the Pac-12 title game at Levis Stadium. Anu Solomon was 8-of-17 for 158 yards and carried the ball five times for 22 yards and a score before departing with a foot injury. He was seen in a walking boot in the second half. Jesse Scroggins came in for him in the second half and finished 3-of-5 for 64 yards, while tallying 16 yards on four totes for the Wildcats, who have won three in a row. Devontae Booker provided 142 yards on the ground and Travis Wilson was 16- of-29 for 143 yards with a touchdown and two interceptions for Utah (7-4, 4-4), which has dropped three of its last four games. Booker broke off a 61-yard run to set up an Andy Phillips 28-yard field goal with 5:14 remaining in the third, cutting the deficit to 21-10, and it appeared Utah got even closer a bit later, but a holding penalty nullified a Kaelin Clay punt return for a score. Wilson then bobbled a snap on a 3rd-and-3 from the Arizona 28 and was sacked by William Parks for a loss of seven to take the Utes out of field goal range. Arizona ripped off 21 straight points to put the game away shortly thereafter. Wilson posted a 75-yard TD run on Arizonas next possession and then scampered in from 19 yards out after Jared Tevis intercepted Wilson three plays into Utahs next drive early in the fourth. TraMayne Bondurants 39-yard interception return for a touchdown capped the scoring. Earlier, Utah recorded three-and-outs on its first four possessions, but the Wildcats led just 7-0 despite outgaining the Utes 197-17 in the first quarter. Arizona punted after three plays on its initial touch and a 14-play, 64-yard drive went for not when Casey Skowron missed a 39-yard field goal on its second sequence. The Wildcats, though, found the end zone on their third trek. Solomon hit Austin Hill for a 51-yard gain down to the 11 before keeping it himself for a touchdown a play later for the games first points late in the first. Utah didnt pick up a first down until the early stages of the second, but Jourdon Grandon intercepted Wilson in the end zone on a 3rd-and-6 from the Arizona 23 for a touchback. Two plays after Solomon found Trey Griffey for a 49-yard pickup, Wilson scampered in from 17 yards out to make it 14-0 and Dan Pettinatos 31-yard scoop-and-score on Utahs ensuing drive made it 21-0 with 1:17 to go in the half. Wilson, though, fired an 11-yard TD strike to Westlee Tonga in the back left corner of the end zone to whittle the gap to 21-7 seconds before the break. Game Notes Arizona outgained Utah 520-384 ... Samajie Grant caught four passes for 88 yards for the Wildcats ... Tonga had four receptions for 68 yards ... Arizona was 4-of-12 on third down, while Utah finished 6-of-19. Cheap NFL Jerseys China . The International Ice Hockey Federation says Pavlovs avoided a two-year sanction because he acted "without significant negligence in failing to verify the safety of the supplements he was taking. Wholesale NFL Jerseys . -- D.A. Points was disqualified Friday from the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am for using a training device while waiting to play the 18th hole at Pebble Beach. http://www.cheapjerseysthrowback.com/. The 30-year-old Kottaras served as Kansas Citys backup catcher last season after being claimed off waivers from Oakland in January. Cheap NFL Jerseys . Orlandos Glen Davis tried to get in the way, only to be driven back into the padding under the basket as the Pelicans forward slammed home a windmill jam. Cheap Jersyes . Mats Zuccarello and Derek Stepan scored shootout goals, and backup goalie Cam Talbot earned his second win in two nights as the Rangers shook off a late tying tally and beat the Maple Leafs 2-1 Monday night. AVONDALE, La. -- As Seung-Yul Noh exhaled and tilted his head back in a skyward gaze on the 18th green, fellow South Korean players Y.E. Yang and Charlie Wi charged toward him, spraying him with bottled beer. Noh smiled, removed his hat, held both arms out and soaked it all in. The 22-year-old overcame windy conditions and the pressure that goes with attempting to secure a maiden PGA Tour triumph, shooting a 1-under 71 on Sunday to win the Zurich Classic by two shots. He also knew he achieved another goal of providing some joy to a nation that has been reeling since a passenger ship capsized April 16, leaving 300 missing or dead. "Hopefully, theyll be happy," said Noh, who wore black and yellow ribbons on his white golf hat to honour victims of the ferry accident. While Noh, the leader through three rounds, never fell out of first, he did make his first three bogeys of the tournament and briefly fell into a tie with Keegan Bradley, the 2011 PGA Championship winner who had the gallery behind him. But Bradley did himself in with a bogey on the fifth hole and a triple bogey on the sixth. "I actually played pretty well," Bradley said. "Just made one bad swing on 6 and had a bunch of lip-outs." Noh remained steady enough-- even with wind gusting up to 30 mph -- to hold off the remaining challengers. "Very challenging today out there, especially playing with Keegan, a major champion, and heavy wind," Noh said. Noh needed a few clutch shots on the back nine, including a chip out of a grassy downhill lie on the edge of a bunker on 13, which hit the flag on a bounce, setting up a routine birdie putt. On 16, with wind in his face, Noh landed his approach 3 feet from the hole to set up his last birdie, then made a 14-foot par putt on 17 to assure a two-shot cushion on the final hole, uncharacteristically pumping his first afterward. "Yeah, that was a clutch putt," Noh said, explaining that it left him "very comfortable" on 18. Noh had made 77 previous PGA Tour starts, never finishing better than tied for fourth at the 2012 AT&T National. He took the third-round lead in New Orleans while becoming the first to play 54 holes at TPC Louisiana without a bogey. The seventh first-time PGA Tour winner in the last 10 years in the New Orleans event, Noh finished at 19-under 269 and earned $1,224,000. He was playing for the first time with caddie Scott Sajjtinac, who seemed awe struck by Nohs combination of talent, wisdom and sense of calm for a player so young.dddddddddddd "Hes going to be good," Sajtinac said. "He was unflappable. You need to be unflappable to win on the PGA Tour." Andrew Svoboda and Robert Streb tied for second. Svoboda had a 69. Streb shot 70, including an eagle on the second hole, and was one shot off the lead after a birdie on 8, but his tee shot was pushed into water by a crosswind on the par-3 ninth hole, and he made double-bogey. Jeff Overton, who briefly pulled within a stroke of Noh on the back nine, had a 70 to finish fourth at 16 under. Bradley wound up with a 75 to tie for eighth at 13 under. On Saturday, Bradley worked his way into the final group, two strokes behind Noh, with a 65. Bradley was within a stroke after the first hole Sunday, which saw Noh hit his drive into mulch right of the fairway en route to his first bogey. Bradley then birdied the par-5 second hole to tie Noh. But just a few holes later, Bradley missed a par putt from less than 2 feet, and followed that up by hitting his drive into the water on No. 6. Then, he three-putted to complete a pivotal two-hole stretch in which he dropped four strokes. While Bradley never recovered from his front-nine falter, Noh still had to ward off a challenge from Overton, who was one stroke back after his 20-foot birdie putt on 10. Overton, however, bogeyed 11 when he hit his drive into a bunker left of the fairway and his second shot over the fairway and right of the cart path. Noh, meanwhile, has the victory he needed to get into The Players Championship next month, and his first Masters next spring. "Dreams come true," Noh said. "When I started at 7 playing golf, I dreamed of always playing (on the) PGA Tour ... or playing any major, especially the Masters." Divots: Robert Garrigus, who narrowly made the cut Friday, had the best score Sunday with a 64. The round included a 374-yard drive with a tail wind on 18, which he birdied to tie for fifth at 14 under, along with two-time heart transplant recipient Erik Compton. Garrigus, who would have earned nothing had he been one stroke worse during the first two rounds, took home $248,200. ... Ben Martin, who shot a course-record 62 in the first round and was 14 under through 22 holes, was 3 over on the last 50 holes. He tied for 15th with David Toms. ' ' '