Arizona Wildcats quarterback Jayden de Laura has missed three weeks of college football action due to an ankle injury sustained in the third quarter of the clash against Stanford Cardinal. de Laura played for Washington State for two seasons, and has had a significant association with the team. He had termed last year's clash against his former employers, 'personal.'Let us clear the air on his injury status for the game.Jayden de Laura's injury statusArizona coach Jedd Fisch provided an update on whether Jayden de Laura would be ready to face Washington State in Week 7, saying that he should be good to suit up, but it would ultimately be a game-time call."I fully expect Jayden to dress this week," Fisch said. "Even if he's at 90%, he will dress and be the backup. If he is at 100%, he will dress and start. He will be full pads and ready to go, and if not starting, I hope he will be healthy enough to be available in an emergency situation."Can Noah Fifita take over from Jayden de Laura?After Jayden de Laura got injured, Noah Fifita stepped in seamlessly and went 27-of-39 for 232 yards, resulting in three touchdowns in an eventual loss against the 7th ranked Washington Huskies.In the following game against USC, Fifita was sensational, throwing 25-of-35 for 303 yards and five touchdowns, although the Wildcats narrowly lost 43-41 in triple overtime.For his efforts, Fifita was named the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year, giving coach Jedd Fisch a headache for when de Laura returns.Questions arose as to whether Fifita should be Arizona's starting QB until Fisch put the rumors to bed and stood by his QB:“We don’t just listen to others in that decision,” Fisch later said. “Everyone has short-term memories, everyone likes to live in the now, live in the present. Noah has done a fantastic job. Having two quarterbacks is better than none. I think we’re in a very good place at the quarterback position as we move forward.”Fisch counted on his experience in dealing with such matters, explaining the dynamics between a backup and starting QB:“I’ve lived through a lot of these (situations). I’ve lived through situations where your starting quarterback is playing, he’s earned that position. The backup quarterback goes in, the backup quarterback plays well. The starting quarterback goes back in, plays even better than he’s ever played. I’ve seen it the other way. I’ve seen it in every way, shape or form over 25 years and 20 of them coaching quarterbacks."Having two gifted quarterbacks is better than one, and Jedd Fisch will certainly not mind the dilemma.