Washington Huskies

PAC 12

High school highlights: Nov. 18 

November, 18, 2012
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Recapping the weekend's prime-time performances from Washington's 2013 recruiting class:

Troy Williams (Harbor City, Calif./Narbonne): The Gauchos improved to 12-0 after a 45-0 victory over Los Angeles Garfield. The nation’s No. 2-rated dual-threat quarterback completed 13 of 19 passes for 193 yards and four touchdowns. He also had six carries for 59 yards.

Lavon Coleman (Lompoc, Calif./Lompoc): The Braves piled up 380 rushing yards during a 49-6 victory over Culver City (Calif.) in the CIF Southern Section Western Division quarterfinals. Coleman finished with 121 rushing yards and a touchdown on 21 carries.

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What we learned in the Pac-12: Week 12

November, 18, 2012
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What did we learn in Week 12? Read on.

Barring a miracle, Oregon won't play for the national title, and even its Pac-12 supremacy is threatened: Oregon's hopes to play for a national title for the second time in three years took a huge and likely catastrophic hit with a 17-14 overtime loss to Stanford. The Ducks' chances to win the Pac-12 for a fourth consecutive year also are in doubt. If Stanford prevails at UCLA on Saturday, the Cardinal would win the North Division and would host UCLA on Nov. 30 for the Pac-12 title and Rose Bowl berth. Yes, they'd play a second time within a week.

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Johnathan Franklin
Jeff Gross/Getty ImagesJohnathan Franklin rushed for 171 yards and two touchdowns in UCLA's win over USC.
The football monopoly in L.A. is over: UCLA whipped USC to capture the Pac-12 South Division, and there is no asterisk, as there was when the Bruins represented the South at Oregon last year. The Bruins jumped to an early lead and then didn't wilt when the Trojans charged back. First-year coach Jim Mora, who is now clearly in the conference coach of the year race, has emphasized mental toughness and discipline, and in a single season he seems to have changed the culture in Westwood. By the way, this is good news: The Pac-12 will benefit if the USC-UCLA game is again nationally and regionally meaningful.

USC's business is finished: It's official: The Trojans' 2012 season is a massive failure. A preseason national title contender, USC is now 7-4 overall and 5-4 in Pac-12 play. It may not be ranked this week. QB Matt Barkley, the preseason Heisman Trophy favorite who spoke of "unfinished business" when he opted to return for his senior year, suffered an injury late against the Bruins, and his business might be finished without another shot at soon-to-be No. 1 Notre Dame. While coach Lane Kiffin told reporters that he was certain of his return in 2013, it's pretty clear Kiffin will top hot-seat projections next summer.

The Pac-12 will have eight bowl-eligible teams: Arizona State's blowout win over Washington State gave the conference eight bowl-eligible teams, while Utah's loss to Arizona ensured there won't be a ninth. The Utes, Colorado, Washington State and California will stay home during the holidays. Further, if Oregon wins the Civil War and Stanford beats UCLA, the conference is almost certain to get two BCS bowl teams, with the UCLA-Stanford winner in the Pac-12 title game going to the Rose Bowl and the Ducks getting an at-large selection, likely to the Fiesta Bowl. That would mean an extra $6.1 million the conference could split up.

Tedford's tenure in California is likely at an end: While there continue to be supporters for Cal coach Jeff Tedford, a fifth consecutive defeat to end the season, particularly a 62-14 blowout at Oregon State, feels like a capper to his 11-year tenure in Berkeley. Tedford is liked and respected and probably will land on his feet and get another head-coaching opportunity, but the Bears have fallen behind in the conference pecking order -- heck, the Bay Area pecking order -- and they have bills to pay while facing growing fan apathy. A decision could come as soon as Sunday.

3 up, 3 down: Washington 38, Colorado 3 

November, 18, 2012
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A look at positives and negatives from Washington’s 38-3 win at Colorado.

THREE UP

1. Keith Price: The offense struggled at the start against Colorado, but the Huskies figured things out in the third quarter, erupting for 17 points. The quarterback led the way and finished the day completing 22 of 29 passes for 248 yards and five touchdowns -- he tied a school record -- spread around to five receivers.

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Final: Washington 38, Colorado 3

November, 17, 2012
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Washington started slowly at Colorado, but Keith Price led a second-half onslaught with a career-high five touchdown passes as the Huskies rolled 38-3.

Price, who started the season slowly, and the Huskies continued their upswing. They can post their first eight-win season since 2001 with a win at Washington State next week.

Price completed 22 of 29 passes for 248 yards with no interceptions.

The Buffaloes' (1-10, 1-7) woes continued. Connor Wood started at quarterback, but he was pulled after completing 3 of 6 passes for 11 yards with two interceptions. The Buffs were outgained 476 yards to 141, and they surrendered five turnovers.

With a loss to Utah on Friday, Colorado will finish with the worst record in school history.

HuskyNation Mailbag: Nov. 16 

November, 16, 2012
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SEATTLE -- With two Pac-12 contests and a bowl game left in 2012, Washington’s season has hit the backstretch.

However, while the Huskies are facing those few final games, the program’s second season -- the recruiting season -- is reaching its crescendo.

Washington is preparing for its final recruiting push before signing day. There are plenty of prime prospects weighing their final decisions, with Washington getting at least a passing glance.

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#BlueChipBattles: Nov. 16

November, 16, 2012
11/16/12
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Alvin Kamara, Derrick GreenESPN.comUncommitted 2013 running backs Alvin Kamara and Derrick Green.

ESPN 100 running backs Alvin Kamara and Derrick Green can score from anywhere on the field thanks to their breakaway speed, an attribute that makes them very attractive recruits to the Oregon Ducks. Oregon's pursuit of the duo headlines this week’s #BlueChipBattles. Insider

Click through for our list to rank the top 10 recruiting battlesInsider.

Top 10 recruit Gordon down to three 

November, 15, 2012
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The news came over at 11:59 p.m. ET Thursday night. ESPN 100 power forward Aaron Gordon (San Jose, Calif./Archbishop Mitty), the No. 7 overall recruit in the Class of 2013, trimmed his list to a trio of programs, including two from the Pac-12.

"Aaron has narrowed his list to Arizona, Washington and Kentucky in no particular order," his mom, Shelly Gordon, wrote in an email.

It's not a commitment and there's no timetable on his decision, but it is significant news. Gone from the list are Kansas, California and Oregon. The Blake Griffin clone is one of the few recruits left on the board who can alter the landscape of a class.

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Keep an eye on: WR Jackson Keimig 

November, 15, 2012
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REDMOND, Wash. -- For the first two years of Kasen Williams’ high school career, Jeff Chandler worked as the Sammamish (Wash.) Skyline athletic director.

He watched as the receiver showed a mix of humility and athleticism that pointed toward a future filled with Division I success.

While Williams has matured into a sophomore standout at Washington, Chandler is now the football coach at Redmond (Wash.). He sees some similarities between Williams and Mustangs sophomore receiver Jackson Keimig.

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FEDERAL WAY, Wash. -- Chico McClatcher wandered the Washington sideline wearing a Huskies hat.

The sophomore running back (Federal Way, Wash./Federal Way) watched as Washington prepared to play Utah last week. He is still a few years away from putting on a college uniform, but he can already picture playing at the next level.

“It’s beautiful,” McClatcher said. “I like seeing all these college players live their dreams. That’s my dream, to go to college and play football.”

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Huard: Huskies on the rise for 2013

November, 15, 2012
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ESPN analyst Brock Huard takes a look at programs that will rise and fall in 2013 and places Washington among the risers.

Click hereInsider to get his breakdown on the Huskies' chances next year and to read the rest of the list.

What to watch in the Pac-12: Week 12

November, 15, 2012
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A few storylines to keep an eye on this week:
  1. And the winner in the North is ...? Could be Oregon. If the Ducks can get past visiting Stanford this week, they'll lock up the division and earn a spot in the Pac-12 championship game. They still have to go through Oregon State next week -- but wins over both of those clubs should help them in the BCS standings. Well, at least on the computer side. The Ducks hold the No. 1 spot in both human polls. So if they win out, they will be in the national championship game. The North Division winner could be Stanford, too. If the Cardinal win this weekend and close out with a victory at UCLA next week, Stanford and Oregon will each have one conference loss, with the Cardinal holding the tiebreaker.
  2. And the winner in the South is ...? We'll see Saturday, but we know it will be from Los Angeles. The USC-UCLA rivalry hasn't been one of late. UCLA's last victory over the Trojans came in 2006 -- a 13-9 win that snapped USC's NCAA record of 63 consecutive games scoring at least 20 points and also cost the Trojans a spot in the BCS title game. The scenario is winner-take-all -- regardless of what happens next week.
  3. On the bubble: Arizona State and Utah are both trying to make the postseason. ASU has the easier road, needing just one win to lock up bowl eligibility. And it hosts a Washington State team that is winless in conference play. Utah has to first beat Arizona at home this week, then win at Colorado next. The Utes are yet to win a road game this year.
  4. QB carousel: Seems like it wouldn't be a normal week in the Pac-12 if there weren't quarterback issues. Almost half of the league has uncertainty at the position heading into this weekend. Arizona's Matt Scott might not be able to go again this week; same for Cal's Zach Maynard. Nick Hirschman suffered a concussion last week for Colorado, Jeff Tuel was injured for Washington State, opening the door for Connor Halliday's five touchdowns. And the Sean Mannion-Cody Vaz back-and-forth continues at Oregon State, pending Vaz's health.
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    Ka'Deem Carey
    Rick Scuteri/US PresswireUtah's chances at the postseason hinge on doing a better job stopping Ka'Deem Carey than Colorado.
    Quality matchups: If the Utes do want to get into the postseason, they'll have to find a way to slow down Arizona running back Ka'Deem Carey, who rushed for a Pac-12 record 366 yards and five touchdowns in last week's victory over Colorado. It's Utah's strength as a defense versus Arizona's strength as an offense. You can say the same for the Oregon-Stanford matchup, which pits Oregon's league-best rushing attack against Stanford's conference-leading rush defense.
  6. Gone in 60 seconds: Per the folks at ESPN Stats & Information, Stanford is the only FBS team that hasn't allowed a touchdown drive of three plays or fewer; it is also one of only five teams that has not allowed a touchdown in less than a minute. Oregon, of course, leads the FBS in touchdown drives that last one minute or less. Stopwatches at the ready.
  7. The SoCal tight-end factor: More super-cool stuff from the Stats & Info group: Matt Barkley and Brett Hundley have combined to throw 17 touchdowns and zero interceptions when targeting their tight ends. Hundley completes 75.6 percent of his passes when targeting a tight end; Barkley is at 67.2 percent. Could make for an interesting sidebar to Saturday's matchup.
  8. Off and running: Washington's Bishop Sankey heads to Colorado as one of the hottest running backs in the conference right now. He ha rushed for 351 yards and four touchdowns in his past two games and last week became the 11th player in UW history to reach the 1K milestone. Expect him to add to that total. Colorado ranks last in the conference against the run, yielding 227.6 yards per game on the ground to go with a conference-worst 25 rushing touchdowns allowed.
  9. Decisions, decisions: When California coach Jeff Tedford gets back to the Bay Area following the Bears' trip to Oregon State, he'll have sit down with athletic director Sandy Barbour to discuss the future of Cal football and what role -- if any -- he plays in it. Walking into that meeting with a victory over the No. 16 Beavers would probably go over better than closing out the year on a five-game losing streak.

Five storylines: Washington-Colorado 

November, 15, 2012
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SEATTLE -- Here are five storylines as Washington prepares to travel to Colorado this weekend:

1. Third-down conversions: To be successful on defense, it helps when a team can get off the field on third down. Against Utah, Washington allowed just one conversion on third down as the Utes went 1-for-13.

While the Huskies were able to stop Utah throughout the game, the Utes struggled to slow down Washington, which converted 7 of 15 third downs.

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UW tries to flip Myles Jack from UCLA 

November, 15, 2012
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When Myles Jack (Bellevue, Wash./Bellevue) announced he planned to play college football at UCLA in June, he more or less expected to put the recruiting process behind him.

After he put on a blue-and-gold Bruins hat and explained how the university “just felt like home,” the 6-foot-2, 230-pound linebacker figured he could turn his attention to his senior season.

But when it comes to recruiting, the announcement has become more like the halfway point in the process for top prospects.

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Ryan Turman to join Huskies as walk-on 

November, 14, 2012
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It started with a Facebook message.

Ryan Turman received the note from Washington’s coaching staff early Monday morning. It didn’t say much, just asked the 5-foot-11, 195-pound receiver (Bellevue, Wash./Interlake) to call as soon as he had a chance.

The call led to an offer to join the Huskies’ program as a walk-on next season.

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Huskies invite Mason Stone to walk on 

November, 14, 2012
11/14/12
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During each of Washington’s wins over top-10 teams, Mason Stone had the opportunity to stand on the Huskies' sideline before the game.

The 6-foot, 170-pound safety talked with his teammate Devante Downs -- a junior running back with a Washington offer -- about what it would be like to have the opportunity to play in front of 60,000 fans in a purple-and-gold uniform.

After the Huskies’ coaching staff recently invited Stone to join the program as a preferred walk-on, he has his chance.

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