1 Huge Play Saturday

doochuk

Registered User
Forum Member
May 17, 2000
1,731
8
38
Oregon
WASHINGTON AT A PICK VS UCLA
I KNOW ALL ABOUT WASHINGTON BEING A BAD TEAM NO PASS "D' AND SO ON AND SO FORTH..........BUT THEY WIN THIS GAME BY A TD.......I HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR A SPOT TO TAKE THEM AND THIS IS THE TIME
 

Scott4USC

Fight On!
Forum Member
Sep 11, 2002
5,410
18
38
44
I agree with you. I am a Trojan fan, and i know the pac 10 pretty well. Washington should win this game and i bet them pretty heavy.

UCLA starting QB out for year, and UCLA will be starting a freshman at HUSKY stadium. Very hostile environment. Washington defense is poor against the pass but pretty good against the run. UCLA will be very conservative and will run a freshman EBELL all day.

I just don't see a Freshman QB beating Washington at Washington. I also heard good practice reports out of Washington and I ses a 10pt win by the Huskies. UCLA will turn the ball over plenty and hopefully Picket has a good day passing.
 

pt1gard

Registered
Forum Member
Apr 7, 2002
7,377
3
0
seattle
UW article

UW article

UW Football
UW's slide continues

By Bob Condotta
Seattle Times staff reporter



Oh, there was a bright spot this weekend for Washington, though you had to look hard to see it.

You had to look to San Jose, Calif., in fact, where the San Jose State Spartans were plastered by Boise State, 45-8.

What does that have to do with anything?

Well, there had been speculation when the Spartans started out 4-2 that they might be a perfect fit for the Silicon Valley Bowl, played on their own field, where they would face the No. 6 team from the Pac-10. Which, given the current plight of the Huskies, may be the best UW can hope for, potentially setting up a sequel of the game no one wanted to see in the first place.

But San Jose State's loss dropped the Spartans to 4-5, meaning the chances of the Spartans getting bowl eligible grew that much more slim.

Washington's chances of getting there, however, may not be much better after a 27-16 loss at Arizona State dropped its record to 4-4 for the first time in 25 years. UW returns to action Saturday at 4 p.m. against UCLA at Husky Stadium.

ASU sacked UW quarterback Cody Pickett eight times in holding the Huskies to just 252 yards, their lowest total since being held to 236 at UCLA in 1999. ASU did it by double-teaming Reggie Williams, daring the Huskies to run or throw the ball elsewhere, and pressuring Pickett relentlessly. The plan worked, as Williams had three catches ? just one in the first three quarters ? with no one else on offense able to pick up the slack, mostly because the line was dominated all night. Washington had only three points until scoring two touchdowns in the last 3:47.

UW's defense, meanwhile, held ASU to 229 yards ? the fewest allowed by the Huskies this season ? and only 184 through the air, more than only Wyoming among Washington opponents. But the defense gave up a few big plays that led to ASU touchdowns to start each half, putting the Huskies in a quick hole.

And the special teams were a disaster, with one short punt, one botched punt and a long kickoff return leading to 17 ASU points.

Afterward, neither UW Coach Rick Neuheisel nor his players had much new to say.

The game's story line was slightly different than other Huskies losses this season ? the offense imploding when the defense finally achieves some respectability ? but the ending was all too familiar.

"I think our team is dealing with some major adversity," Neuheisel said yesterday. "And it's now crunch time in terms of what we are going to make of the rest of the season. ... The reality is we are 4-4 and we have four very tough ballgames left and we need to get back to some fundamental football so that we can give ourselves the best possible chance to be successful in those games."

But Neuheisel has said similar words before. And if the players have started doubting, it's easy to see why. Here are some numbers indicating just how bad things have gotten:

? The Huskies are 5-7 in their last 12 games dating to last season, with three wins coming against Idaho, San Jose State and Wyoming. The last time Washington endured such a similar stretch was when it went 4-8 in the last 10 games of 1998 and the first two games of 1999 ? the last 10 games of the Jim Lambright regime and first two for Neuheisel.

? The Huskies are 0-5 in their last five away games, 0-6 in their last six games away from Seattle ? the Holiday Bowl is technically a neutral field. UW hasn't won a road game in more than a year, last winning at Arizona State on Oct. 27, 2001. The last time the UW lost five straight road games was the 1988 and 1989 seasons.

? The Huskies are 1-3 in conference play for the first time since 1988, when the Huskies lost to UCLA, USC and Oregon by a combined 10 points. UW finished 3-5 and in sixth place in conference play that season, the last time the Huskies had a losing conference record and finished lower than fifth place.

? UW has lost its last five games against ranked opponents dating to last season and is in danger of not beating a ranked team for the first time since 1988. UW has been outscored 211-116 in those five games.

? UW's 4-4 overall record is its worst start since 1977, when Huskies began 1-3, then won six of their last seven to take the conference title. (Because of forfeits, the UW's 1977 record is officially listed at 10-2.)

? UW is 112th in the nation in rushing offense, averaging 79.5 yards per game after having never been held below 100 yards per game in any previous season.
 

pt1gard

Registered
Forum Member
Apr 7, 2002
7,377
3
0
seattle
article #2

article #2

UW Football
Make or break? Neuheisel, UW seek an end to talk of calamity

By Bob Condotta
Seattle Times staff reporter

TEMPE, Ariz. ? The booster sidled up to the reporter at a Washington practice this week and made what seemed an almost hyperbolic statement.

"This," he said, referring to Washington's game tonight at 7 at Arizona State, "is the biggest game of Rick Neuheisel's career here."

Really? Bigger than the 2001 Rose Bowl and all the games that got them there? Bigger than last year's Apple Cup, which helped dull the thud of the last month of that season? Bigger than the win over Colorado in 1999 that prevented an 0-3 start and finally got Neuheisel's career at Washington going in the right direction?

But look closer, and it just may be.

As the Huskies enter tonight's game, the perception is of a program on the brink of disaster, threatening to post the school's first losing record since 1976 and possibly miss its first bowl game for non-probation reasons since 1988. The perception further is that what is happening to the Huskies now ? an inability to run, play defense and win tough games on the road ? is exactly what happened at Colorado near the end of Neuheisel's four-year tenure there, a scenario that has UW fans suddenly leery about the future.

Lose tonight, and the perception takes one more step toward becoming reality in the eyes of increasingly skeptical fans.

But win, and Neuheisel's claims take on more credibility ? that most of what has happened so far is due to youth and injuries and that all that is required to turn things around are a lot of hard work and patience.

The Huskies come into tonight's game with a 4-3 record that the players understand better than anyone is deceptive. In reality, Washington has lost to the only three decent teams it has played, falling behind early and never really recovering in two of them.

And after last week's 41-21 defeat at USC came the first public hints that the losing is starting to wear thin. After the game, defensive tackle Terry Johnson criticized the team's defensive scheme and has since not been allowed to talk to reporters.

On Monday, three of the team's seniors, all of whom played for Neuheisel's predecessor, Jim Lambright, said this team lacks the toughness and tenacity of the teams of past years that were filled with Lambright recruits.

"When they are facing adversity, there's not a lot of heart there," said guard Elliott Zajac, referring to the team's younger players. "We are struggling with chemistry, unity, heart, everything. All the way you look at it, that's how we are struggling right now."

That was followed by the claims of a former UW running back, Leon Neal, on KJR that he doesn't think the Huskies will win another game this season.

The losses and the talk led to a team that seemed on edge this week. Neuheisel appeared to be wearing a sterner face than ever, and players reported that practices were as serious and as intense as any this season.


"Even though we lost last week, I think the whole team has bounced back," said sophomore left tackle Khalif Barnes. "This was one of the best weeks of practices we've had in a long time.


"You'd probably figure most teams would go into the can after losing two Pac-10 games and the media is all over them and they are trying to figure out why they can't run and why they can't pass-defend. I think most teams would go into the can after that, but I don't think we did. I think we responded well. I felt practices were more intense and faster and guys weren't always going through the motions. Guys were hitting harder. It was almost like scrimmaging out here every day."

Still, the Huskies have talked of turning up the heat in practice before, and it hasn't gotten them much.

And one big hitch today is that Arizona State, picked ninth in the preseason Pac-10 media poll, is far better than anyone anticipated. The Sun Devils are 6-2 overall and 3-0 and tied with Washington State for first place in the Pac-10 after winning at Oregon 45-42 on Oct. 19, and ranked for the first time since 1999.

Arizona State has done it with a wicked passing game ? QB Andrew Walter set a Pac-10 record with 536 yards last week ? and resiliency. Arizona State rallied from a 22-0 deficit to win at San Diego State and trailed 21-0 before beating Oregon last week.

"Being 21 and 22 points down and winning makes a team play with more confidence, which is good as long as we don't get overconfident," said Walter, who diplomatically downplayed any notion that he's drooling at the thought of facing a UW defense that ranks 113th in the nation in pass defense.

While the Washington secondary will get a huge test from Walter and Arizona State wide receiver Shaun McDonald, who leads the Pac-10 with 941 receiving yards, the Huskies know one of the best defenses would be mounting a running game that would keep Walter and McDonald off the field.

Neuheisel has not named a starter at running back this week, but indications are that Rich Alexis may once again be No. 1 after sitting out the USC game last week.


Maybe Alexis will be rejuvenated by returning to the field where he ran for an 86-yard touchdown in 2000, when he looked like a future star and the program a dynasty in the making.


"It's another chance to right the ship," Neuheisel said.


But if the Huskies take on much more water, that soon could be an impossible task.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top