This is the most common of the similar "sideoats" gramas and one of the most common grasses in Arizona. Side-oats Grama grows medium-high: usually knee-high to hip-high. The spikelets can be red or green as you have seen and they tend to droop downward. Side-oats Grama is perennial.
There are five other "sideoats" type gramas in Arizona, so
this one would not be listed as an easy grass except that it is so common and
the others are not. Watch out especially for Bouteloua aristidoides (Needle Grama), which has
generally fewer and much longer branches (to 1/4 inch or more) holding its
undrooping spikelets. The other look-alikes have bushier spikelets with longer
awns, and are mostly restricted to southeast Arizona.
Porter's Melic (Melica porteri) is rather similar in that it consists of short branches
on one side of the rachis. It occurs only in southeast Arizona.