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NCAA Football Champions 3/20/92 [OA 7570] [2]
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NCAA Football Champions 3/20/92 [OA 7570] [2]
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NCAA Football Champions 3/20/92 [OA 7570] [2]
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1
Photo Copy Preservation
WASHINGTON FINGERTIP FACTS
Name: University of Washington
Location: Seattle, Washington
Mailing Address: University of Washington, Graves Bldg., GC-20, Seattle, WA 98195
Founded: November 4, 1861
President: Dr. William P. Gerberding (Macalester College, 1951)
Enrollment: 33,500 (24,500 Undergraduate, 9,000 Graduate)
Director of Athletics: Barbara Hedges (Arizona State, 1963)
Photo Copy Preservation
KEY PHONE NUMBERS
General Department Number: (206) 543-2210
Husky Ticket Office: (206) 543-2200
Media Relations Office: (206) 543-2230
Fax Machine (24 Hours): (206) 543-5000
Pacific-10 Conference: (510) 932-4411
NCAA: (913) 339-1906
U.S. Weather Bureau: (206) 526-6087
Husky Hotline: 54-FEVER (543-3837)
Jentle P.d.
Friday, 1/3/92
Joint national title adds the crowning
touch for the Huskies and their fans
excited?'
"Tears," James said, as if disbe-
By Bud Withers
"Guys could tell he was really
lieving it himself. "It's so difficult to
P-1 Reporter
fired up. I could sense the intensity
express the feeling I have for these
ANAHEIM, Calif. - Maybe it
in his face and in his voice."
kids.
happened back in 1988, when Wash-
Thirty-six years of coaching prep-
"I don't mind sharing it (the
ington rededicated itself to excel-
aration for this day, 36 years of late
championship). For them not to get a
lence. Maybe it was 1989, when the
nights spent recruiting, of early
piece of this
I don't know what
Huskies drubbed Emmitt Smith and
mornings in front of chalkboards,
more our guys could have done."
Florida in the Freedom Bowl.
roiled up and spilled over yesterday,
In his 19th-floor suite, James fell
Or maybe the turning point oc-
when James' Washington team was
into an uneasy sleep in the wee
curred as recently as Monday, when
named No. 1 over Miami in the USA
hours, already informed that The
Don James addressed his football
Today/CNN coaches national football
Associated Press vote had gone ever
team.
poll. Before the Rose Bowl the two
so narrowly to Miami, He and his
"He always goes 30 minutes in
teams had been ranked joint No. 1.
wife ignored the subsequent phone
that meeting," said cornerback Dana
Here at the Marriott Hotel, in a
calls and knocks on the door, which
Hall, "and he goes right through it.
meeting room filled with reporters,
were many.
This time. he stopped and caught
coaches and family, Don James wept.
At 6:30 a.m., James looked at
himself a couple of times. Guys asked
In the audience, his wife of 40 years,
me, 'Do you think he's scared, or just
Carol, wept right along with him.
Carol and feared the worst.
Asked after the morning press
"It's 9:30 in the East." he said.
conference what the champion-
"It wouldn't be fair if one of us
"We haven't won it. Nobody's got
ship means to James, his teary-
the nerve to call and give us the
eyed wife said. "Everything. He
got shut out in the polls," said
Hall. "It's an incredible accom-
news."
really wanted it. He's so stoic, he
doesn't show his emotions."
plishment to go 12-0. I congratu-
Said his wife later, "It, was
late Miami."
almost like somebody in the fam-
Longtime James watchers
"We have to be satisfied," said
ily had died.'
were stunned to see him break
cornerback Walter Bailey. "I'm
Ever the stickler for detail,
down. Asked if she had seen him
satisfied."
James knows exactly how long it
cry in public. Carol James said, "A
"It's fine with me," said defen-
was until the telephone rang.
couple of other times, but those
sive end Andy Mason. "It would be
"Those 11 minutes," he said,
were sad emotions."
really selfish if somebody felt
"Carol and I were about as low as
James, who turned 59 Tues-
cheated by (sharing) it."
you could get. And then about as
day. is well-connected in the
The shared championship
high as you could get."
American Football Coaches Asso-
brings together James and Dennis
Finally, the call came from
ciation, and his peers came
Erickson. the Miami coach, who
Bob Roller. a representative for
through for him and his dominat-
jousted with the Huskies over the
the ad. agency that handles the
ing team.
Apple Cup duringa two-year stint
coaches-poll trophy sponsored by
"I'm not sure I'm that well-
at Washington State
McDonald's.
Carol James took it, and franti-
liked," James joked. "I've got a lot
It also touches Erickson and
of friends, but most of them are
Husky offensive coordinator Keith
cally began calling the James
dead now.
Gilbertson. Erickson is godfather
family. Elsewhere, word was slow
to reach the Husky players, who
The Huskies took the tack that
to Gilbertson's daughter, Kristen.
had spent a restless night partying
if you going to share a champi-
As recently as three years ago,
and being hounded by broadcast-
onship, the piece to have is the
Gilbertson and Erickson would
coaches' vote.
frequently share a cold one at a
media calls.
"I got called at 3 in the
"I think so, said a smiling
Moscow, Idaho, watering hole,
morning by ESPN," said Billy Joe
Hobert, whose quotability has be-
when Erickson was head coach at
WSU and Gilbertson head coach
Hobert, the quarterback.
come renowned. You can't really
"A reporter called me at 3:30."
expect too much out of the press.
at Idaho.
said backup quarterback Mark
"The coaches poll means
"I'm happy for him and his
Brunell. "He wanted to know what
more to us, said Hall. The
guys." said Gilbertson.
coaches know what they re talking
'Everyone knows how I feel,"
thought about Miami. He wanted
me to come down here (in the
about. Writers watch games on TV
said Hobert. 'Ewould love to play
hotel lobby) and do an interview. I
and don't break the game down."
them. Coach Gilbertson and Coach
sàid. 'I'm sorry.'
While Miami and Washington
Erickson are best friends. I'm
have sparred from afar, this
sure Gilby's glad to see them go
"I probably got 10 calls last
seemed a time to embrace at the
undefeated.
night from news media, said
Hall.
final bell, like two spent heavy-
'I'm not. But I'm not going to
By 8 a.m., word had traveled to
weights.
dog Miami in any way. They
deserve it as much as we do."
Mario Bailey on the 15th floor that
But no more.
the Huskies were No. 1.
Champs are champs. said
Mario was running down the
Bailey. "I think we still get to go
Hall, screaming Wake up we re
to the White House don't we
No. Hall said.
THE DESERT SUN
THURSDAY, 10/2/92
Huskies lay claim to
Washington
be No. 1
romps 34-14
in Rose Bowl
Heisman Trophy winner Des-
By MIKE LOPRESTI
mond Howard caught one pass. He
Gannett News Service
averaged only seven yards per punt
PASADENA - Washington came
return.
to plead its case for No. 1. The de-
The Huskies double- and triple-
fense never rested.
teamed him, and were hitting him as
Not until the Michigan offense had
he came off the ball.
been crushed Wednesday like an
"We got right in his face; nobody
empty soda can. Not until the Rose
had done that before," cornerback
Bowl had been won by a shocking 34-
Dana Bailey said. "He was getting
14. Not until the last shred of evi-
frustrated. When we played bump
dence, and the last shreds of the
and run, he didn't know how to react.
Wolverines, were out there for all the
When he knew he wasn't geting the
voters to see.
ball, he didn't run his routes very
Washington, tied with Miami for
fast
No. 1 in USA Today/CNN and No. 2
in Associated Press, is 12-0. To the
"We play against passing games
every week in the Pac-10. We know
Huskies, and most of the Wolverines
how to shut them down."
(10-2), the case is closed. It didn't
James: "We wanted to let Grbac
matter what Miami did later that
know that we knew where No. 21
night in the Orange Bowl It didn't
(Howard) was all the time.'
matter that the Hurricanes out-
Grbac, the nation's leader in
classed Nebraska, 22-0.
"We're No 1,' defensive tackle
pass efficiency, was only 13-for-26
for only 130 yards. A lot of his passes
Steve Emtman said. "I don't want to
sailed out of bounds. Timing in the
hear about Miami. I'm sick of
Michigan passing game was de-
Miami."
stroyed. And Grbac was sacked five
"They're the No. 1 team in the
nation by far," Michigan quarter-
times.
back Elvis Grbac said. "We played
"The pressure was unbelievable,"
Notre Dame and Florida State, and
the quarterback said. "And our offen-
they're 10 times better than those
sive line was doing the best they
guys."
could.'
Added Michigan coach Gary
"Sometimes we didn't throw the
Moeller, "We lost to as good a team
ball when we should have," Moeller
as I've ever seen.
said. "It's protection. It's timing. It's
Washington went at Michigan with
running routes. And they can come
a frantic vengeance, knowing a first
after you."
national title was at stake
The Huskies defense had 13
That's the way they ve practiced
tackles for losses
the last two weeks Coach Don
We fell apart, Howard said
James said. I've never seen them
What defense?" Washington cen-
practice like that
ter Ed Cunningham said. "That was
Emtman shared co-MVP honors
offense. They were in the backfield
with quarterback Billy Joe Hobert,
more than Michigan was.'
who threw two touchdown passes
Perhaps the defining moment of
How did the Huskies' defense
the day came late in the first half,
mash the Wolverines? Let us count
when an interception gave Michigan
the ways.
the ball at the Washington 29 with
Michigan's ground game, the
128 left.
flagship of its fleet for so many
Washington led 13-7, and points of
years gained 72 yards And 53 came
any kind would have put new life into
on one play, a meaningless late
fading Michigan. But on first down,
touchdown by Tyron Wheatley.
Emtman roared in for a sack.
When we can run," Moeller said
we in trouble
JOUKNAL AMERICAN
THURS. JAN. 2, 1992
McGrath
yards on a second-quarter double reverse as the
Wolverines went to their little-used bag of tricks in
search of something that might work, and returned
Miami, Schmiami
it' S
three kickoffs 39 yards and three punts 21. Eight
"touches," 110 yards, no touchdowns. During a
obvious Dawgs are No. 1
season in which he averaged nine "touches," 159
yards and two touchdowns per game, Howard had
better quarters.
N
ever mind Miami. Let's
have Washington play
"We could have got him the ball more, Michigan
that other Washington,
coach Gary Moeller conceded. "But he needs time to
the Redskins, for the real na-
get open, and the quarterback needs time to get him the
ball. They didn't have it. We didn't block.
tional championship.
It was pretty obvious in the
CONSEQUENTLY, Howard batterymate Elvis
Rose Bowl on Wednesday
Grbac, the Big Ten leader in passing efficiency, was
that if a fellow college team is
made to look like Jay Schroeder in Al Davis' worst
in the corner opposite Wash-
nightmare. A decent garbage-time showing boosted
ington - even a college team
Grbac's final numbers to 13 of 26 for 130 yards. He
as highly regarded as fourth-
threw an interception, was dropped five times and got
ranked Michigan - it's not a
nothing done when the game was an issue.
fair fight. The Huskies didn't just beat the Wolverines,
"We didn't dog (blitz) him too often, either," James
they pulverized them 34-14, leaving voters with a
said. "We just got guys up in his face. And we tried to
clear-cut choice in the national-championship election.
let him know that we knew where 21 (Howard) was
going to be, and we'd be around him."
"I don't think it's my job to campaign,' Washington
As one Grbac throw after another sailed over
coach Don James said after the Huskies concluded a
Howard, the Wolverines looked helpless against the
12-0 season. "I just wanted the voters to watch our
football version of Nevada-Las Vegas' "amoeba"
team, watch Miami and vote on what they see."
one defender merging with another so quickly that
Miami may have been impressive against Nebraska
you'd swear there were more than 11 of them on the
in the Orange Bowl, but Washington was dominant,
field. With Howard it was a linebacker or a cornerback
against a better team.
"I don't want my alma mater to lose, but I can't
safety. playing him up close, then getting deep help from a
imagine they're a whole lot better than we are," said
James, a Miami graduate.
"They' show us man-to-man to try to get us to go to
Desmond, then bring somebody over," Moeller said.
"I'm voting for Washington, and I'm going to be
terrifically disappointed if we don't get a piece of it."
"It's protection, it's timing, it's running routes. They
took it all away from us.'
STILL ANOTHER BIG TEN pratfall
And they rubbed it in a bit, Mario Bailey imitating
Michigan's ninth in its last 11 trips here - is certain to
Howard's Heisman pose after catching a 38-yard pass
evoke
a
"Yeah,
but
"
response among Miami
from backup quarterback Mark Brunell for the Huskies'
final touchdown.
sympathizers, but this Michigan team had more to offer
than most of its predecessors.
"He's invited to come to my house and see the real
thing," Howard said.
The Heisman Trophy winner, for starters. And
egad! - a passing game. The Wolverines' 10-1
He was otherwise diplomatic.
pregame record came against a schedule that included
"That definitely was the best defense we've faced,
six bowl teams, which is twice as many as Washington
he said. "They had a linebacker over me, a defensive
faced, and they had outscored their last five opponents
back behind him and the free safety coming over the
204-23.
top. You can't force things against that kind of
coverage."
But it mattered not a wit, none of it, because the
Seattle Huskies thoroughly outclassed Michigan in the
Nor could Michigan run against it, save for Tyrone
vitally important area of team speed. Desmond Howard
Wheatley's 65-yard scoot to a meaningless
fourth-quarter touchdown.
probably was the quickest gent on the field, but he
might as well have been lugging his hefty Heisman
"For as much attention as they paid to Desmond, we
statue with him, as effective as he was against
should have been able to run on them, but we just
Washington's race-you-to-the-ball defenders.
didn't get them blocked," Moeller said. "They're
Howard caught one (1) pass for 35 yards, taking
better than I thought, particularly on defense
away an underthrown ball from cornerback Dana Hall
quicker, faster. Their defense keeps beating you
to set up Michigan's first touchdown. He ran for 15
around, then their offense jumps in and takes over.
They're as good as anybody I've ever seen."
Dan McGrath is a sports columnist with McClatchey N
JHN
You can make numbers dance and sing.
COMMENT
But again, when Washington and Miami
won't be able to settle matters on the field,
A vote
numbers are what you'r left to study.
Not once in its 12 victories did Washing-
ton's opponent outgain the Huskies.
from Miami
Twice Miami's total offense was exceeded
by victims, Florida State and Boston Col-
lege.
Miami survived three close calls. Penn
for Huskies
State and Boston College quarterbacks
were throwing into the end zone for go-a-
head touchdowns in the final minutes.
By GARY LONG
Don't argue that those were long passes.
Knight-Ridder News Service
So was Doug Flutie's. Everyone is well
aware, of course, that Gerry Thomas' 34-
S
plitting the atom must have been
yard field-goal bid for an FSU victory over
simpler.
Miami missed by inches. That's not to
Voting in the Associated Press
detract from the victories. A win is a win
poll ordinarily provides some enjoyment,
is a win.
grist for a weekly column and a prod to be
However, Washington, by contrast, had
that much better informed about your job.
only one 11th-hour scare. The Huskies
Wednesday night, it became a chore
nursed their eventual 24-17 margin at
approaching an ordeal.
California from the early moments of the
Perfection is hard to beat. Determining
fourth quarter.
degrees of perfection scrambles the brain.
Nebraska and Arizona provided com-
How do you say one 12-0 record is better
mon opponents. The Hurricanes whipped
than another? I kept waiting for Washing-
Arizona in Tucson, 36-9. The Huskies
ton or Miami to make the task easier. Nei-
buried the Wildcats, 54-0, on home turf.
ther would.
Those comparative scores meant nothing.
So you juggle whom the contenders
Both won convincingly. The margins
beat, how they won, where they played
didn't matter.
and any other tiny variables. I actually
However, I gave far more credence to
sought a rationale for splitting my vote. I
Washington beating Nebraska by 15
created lists citing edges for both teams. I
points in Lincoln than I did to Miami's 22-
didn't get a balance.
point victory in Miami.
I voted for Washington
and hoped
I know Miami's defense strangled the
for a split championship.
The case for Miami boiled down to a
Cornhuskers. Miami's offense outgained
victory over then-No. 1 Florida State in
Nebraska's, 435-171. I also know that
Tallahassee Nov. 16 and a contention that
Washington dug a 21-9 hole early in the
a team that carries the No. 1 ranking into
second half at Nebraska, partly because of
bowl season and wins shouldn't be
a muffed punt that set up a 2-yard Corn-
hüsker touchdown.
unseated.
Sound arguments. Granted.
Washington's weighed slightly more.
H
owever, Washington wound up
with 618 yards of offense in the
From my own final top 25 ballot, Miami
eventual 36-21 victory, 310 more
had victories over No. 3 FSU, No. 5 Penn
than Nebraska managed against Steve
State, No. 15 Nebraska and No. 22 Tulsa.
Emtman and Co. Neither did it escape my
Washington's victims included No. 4
attention that Michigan had only 94 yards
Michigan, No. 8 California, No. 15 Nebras-
of offense through three periods in the
ka and No. 20 Stanford.
Rose Bowl.
Difficulty of schedule, in my view, was
To the contention that you can't drop a
a tossup.
No. 1 team that wins its bowl, the
Here's where my vote swung to
rejoinder is that the vote is based on a 12
Washington:
game season. A victory over Michigan on
More than balancing the Hurricanes'
a neutral field counted for a lot more with
victory at FSU, the Huskies achieved their
me than Miami's stroll past Nebraska at
four most significant triumphs on neutral
hôme. Michigan is substantially superior
or hostile turf. They beat Michigan in the
to Nebraska. No contest
Rose Bowl, California at California,
Penultimate point: I didn't suddenly
Nebraska at Nebraska and Stanford at
discover Washington. Check the Miami
Stanford.
Herald's preseason football section. My
t's hard to fault Miami for staying
vote for eventual national champion went
I
to the Huskies. That's not to prove I was
home, especially with the Orange
Bowl's $4.3 million payoff. But the
right, only that I've considered Washing-
Hurricanes now have had that huge
ton a power from the start
home-bowl advantage in three of their
Final point: Both the Huskies and Hur-
four championship seasons. Had Miami
ricanes are champions. That's as it should
have worked out.
beaten Florida in the Sugar Bowl instead
of a made-to-order Nebraska that also
(Gary Long is a staff writer for the Mia-
mi Herald who covers Florida State foot-
arrived intimidated, my final vote would
have been Miami No. 1 and Washington
ball. He also votes in the AP poll)
No.2.
JOURNAL - AMERICAN
THURS. JAN. 2, 1992
Dawgs' Rose Bowl win
has a certain ring to it
P
ASADENA,
Calif. - After en-
Bruener caught the ball and positioned his feet
joying their brief
inbounds with the delicate precision of a dancer.
and shining mo-
Six points. Hobert's two-point conversion pass to
ment as America's only
Aaron Pierce provided the icing, and suddenly the
12-0 college football
mission wasn't so much to merely beat Michigan,
team, the Washington
but to deliver a major statement punctuated by an
Huskies
obligingly
exclamation point.
yielded their national
"We started slow," said Cunningham, "but
championship quest to
once we got rolling, man, they didn't know what
the poll sitters here
we were doing. They got so confused, we were
Wednesday night.
balancing the run and the pass so well. It was
But just because a little
beautiful. It's hard for you guys to see, but after a
thing like fate was taken off the Huskies hands
while you could catch the frustration in their faces.
doesn't mean their fingers won't be worked. Soon,
"If the voters watched the second and third
every member of the squad Don James is taking
quarters, they saw football at it's very best."
home to Seattle today will be presented with a
They also saw Desmond Howard, sort of. The
ring, to have and hold, an eternal symbol of the
'91 Heisman Trophy winner, the object of a
school's first unbeaten, untied season since the
defensive game plin designed by Jim Lambright,
flying-wedge era. Whatever else these athletes
was so consistently and thoroughly shadowed,
accomplished before converting the Rose Bowl
quarterback Elvis Grbac eventually cut the
into their very own highlight film, whatever other
multipurpose receiver out of the offense altogether.
crests they'll seek out this week and next year and
Cunningham: "What did he have? One catch? Did
the rest of their lives, they'l be collectively
he show up today? I don't remember seeing him
defined by the 34-14 thumping they gave
out there.")
Michigan's amazed and blue Wolverines.
"It's hard for me to say what happened,"
While most of the rest of the world used the
Howard said, "because when I was running my
Rose Bowl as a chance to take a first glance at the
routes, my back was turned to everything behind
team challenging for No. 1, the Huskies used the
me."
Grandaddy of 'em All to make a case they were the
Here is a taste of what happened, Desmond:
Mother of All College Football Programs in 1991.
Your quarterback and high-school buddy Grbac
They came, they saw, and then they kicked an
was besieged by a swarm of Husky pursuers every
excellent Michigan team into unholy submission
time he tried to plant his feet for a forward pass.
by patiently waiting for their heads to mesh in
Four times Grbac surveyed the defensive
synch with their hearts.
formation - shades of the first few minutes of the
"All week long,' Ed Cunningham, the senior
Washington-Arizona game - and called a time
center and offensive captain, said later, "we talked
out. A case could be made Grbac's time-out
about how the last 10 years of your football life
gesture was Michigan's only offensive call that
would come down to two or three hours."
produced the intended results.
Such admirable purpose does not assure instant
As for Howard, his Heisman pose was
poise.
mimicked first by defensive back Walter Bailey
"I was trying too hard, at first," said Billy Joe
and, later, Mario Bailey, the Huskies'
Hobert, the quarterback who shared co-MVP
record-jreaking receiver.
honors with defensive tackle Steve Emtman. "But
"What I really wanted to see," said Hobert,
I could have been the worst quarterback in the
"was Shane Pahukoa put a great hit on Desmond
country today and nobody would have noticed.
and then do the Heisman pose. I even asked him
That's because the offensive line did such a grmat
to, but it didn't work out that way.
job up front."
It's as if the Washington sideline wanted a late
One broken play, pieced together midway
touchdown only to see one more Howard.
through the third quarter, put the Huskies in a
"They can come to my house," Howard said
position to convert the jabs they were throwing at
with an implied touche, and see the real thing."
the Big Ten champs into a long and winding
Perhaps the Baileys will accept that offer. And
knockout punch. With the score 13-7 - with
when they do, they can hold up their hands, and
Washington, despite having dominated every
show Desmond Howard their new rings, symbolic
phase of the game, a coverage breakdown away
of the real thing.
from working with a deficit Hobert rolled to his
right on a play-action bootleg at Micxigan five.
Hobert had plenty of time, but there was nobody
pen. He waited. Still nobody open. Finally he
noticed Mark Bruener, the freshman tight end,
darting along the baseline of the end zone. Bruener
was looking back at him: Amid the mayhem that
born when 22 men are scurrying and scrapping
inside a 15 yard box a psychic connection had
been established.
THE TACOMA NEWS TRIBUNE
FRI. JAN. 3, 1991
After 11 minutes
aware of the situation.
of misery when all
"When I last talked to (poll representa-
tive) Bob Roller at 2 or 3 or something,
he said most of the votes were in, so
hope had been lost,
when I woke up at 6:30, I just assumed
that we didn't win it and everybody was
too embarrassed to call me to give me
the bad news."
Don James finally
The media poll was one thing. James
had found out shortly after midnight that
The Associated Press poll of writers and
got that national
broadcasters had narrowly favored Mi-
ami. But the coaches the coaches
wouldn't deny one of their own at least a
championship call
share of the championship that, in his
mind, he and his players so richly de-
served
would they?
"We might lose the coaches' poll, too,"
By Don Borst
he said then, his voice empty.
The News Tribune
Please see James, C4
ANAHEIM, Calif. - The phone in the
James suite didn't ring at 5:30 Thursday
morning. Or 5:45. Or 6:00. Or even at 6:30
when Don James awoke with a start, the
lighted numbers on the clock radio pierc-
ing his mind.
James
only 11 minutes after James had
made his mind up that hope was
"That's it," Don James told his wife,
lost - Don and Carol looked at
Carol. "We didn't get it."
Continued from C1
each other for a long moment.
He was convinced that good news from
"Should I get it?" she said.
the folks running the coaches' poll would
And by 6:30, he thought the Hus-
Might as well."
have come by then and the reason nobody
kies had gone 12-0 on the field and
Carol answered, and I didn't
had called was that they were calling
0-2 in the major polls.
want to keep them in any sus-
Miami coach Dennis Erickson instead.
What was he going to do?
pense," said Roller, who was call-
"We just felt every kind of bitter disap-
What was he going to tell his
ing on behalf of the CNN/ USA
pointment. It was unbelievable the feel-
players?
Today Top 25, 'SO I just told her
ing - everything went through our
What was he going to say at the
who I was and that they had won
hearts and our minds," Carol said. "It
news conference scheduled in three
it.
was almost like somebody in the family
hours?
'She sort of gasped and dropped
had died. I know that's not fair to com-
"I don't know what I would have
the phone and said, 'Don, you've
pare - we've been through that. But
said, but I would have been mad.
won.'
that's the feeling we had, more for the
And hurt," James said. "And I
"For about 11 minutes there,
team than for ourselves."
probably would have said some
Carol and I were about as low as
In the 1984 season, they had been
pretty harsh things."
you can get, then as high as you
through a similar night.
When the phone rang at 6:41 -
can get," James said. "Talk about
"But that time," James said of finish-
ing second to Brigham Young, "we were
mostly just hoping. It wasn't anywhere
near as depressing as this one.
This time James's Huskies had gone
going from the outhouse to the
penthouse in 11 minutes
said. "We don't have anything else
12-0, destroyed Michigan in the Rose
we
Bowl, 34-14, 12 hours earlier. It was sup-
made that run."
to prove to anybody.
posed to be the start of one of the happi-
It was 11 minutes, but it might
What do you hear? Is there go-
est, most gratify-
as well have been 11 hours.
And at the morning news confer-
something?" ing to be a parade or rally or
ing days of his
"
life.
ence, there was Roller, handing
We just felt
Instead, he sat
James one of those huge cardboard
As of Thursday afternoon, UW
every kind
there in disbelief.
checks for $50,000 to pay for a
planned. officials said nothing had been
"I had been
scholarship for a non-athlete at
of bitter
awake at differ-
Washington, awarding him the cov-
But according to Bailey and oth-
ent times, and
eted Waterford Crystal McDonald's
er players, there was pretty much
disappointment
I'd always look
Trophy, giving him the official
a rally on the 11th and 15th floors
It was
at the watch and
right to buy his players national
of the Anaheim Marriott late
add the three
championship rings
and
con-
hours," James
firming in him the realization that
Wednesday and early Thursday,
almost like
anyway
said. "I brought
he had taken his 1991 team to the
somebody in
pinnacle of college football.
'We knew we deserved it, line-
down my letter
"There isn't any more we've
backer James Clifford said as he
the family had
and voting poli-
got it," senior captain Mario Bailey
admired the picture of himself and
cies, and I knew
died.
Chico Fraley on the front page of
,
the deadline for
voting was 8:30
Carol James
a.m
Eastern
time 5:30 here
was
The New York Times. "Yesterday
UCLA. Having that close call fresh
was the thing, winning the game.
in their minds enabled them to live
the way we did."
their motto of "Hungrier Than
Ever."
Even after accepting the spoils
"When we didn't win it in '82
of victory, James seemed to have a
hard time absorbing that it was all
and '84, it was because of what we
did. Everybody else helped us, but
over.
it was our own problems that cost
The votes were very close," he
us the national championship,"
said, "and if we don't get one of
James said, alluding to two close
those, we don't get this (pointing to
calls. "I think we pretty well iden-
the trophy), we don't get the rings,
tified what we had to do.'
we don't get to say 'We're No. 1.' "
Win 'em all.
But indeed the Huskies get all of
Later, as James attempted to
those things, in a large part be-
put his feelings into words, he
cause they had the disappointment
broke into tears. The iceman brea-
of 1990 to look back on, when they
keth - which Carol expected, "ber
came up short only because of a
cause it means just so much to him
shocking late-season upset to
it's been his lifelong dream."
THE TACOMA NEWS TRIBUNE
SUN. JAN. 5,1991
Lasting images of a perfect season
SuperMario's Heisman pose
It was probably a bad idea to begin with, but just as with everything
else he attempted all season, Mario Bailey pulled it off. He said he
wanted to show people he was a pretty good player, too. And since he
outshone Mr. Heisman in the Rose Bowl, the pose fit the moment.
Steve Dykes/Los Angeles Times
Mario Bailey borrowed the pose, then backed it up.
Brunell's injury
It was especially weird because he was wearing a green no-contact
jersey, but when Mark Brunell went down in spring practice, roaring in pain
after being hit simultaneously by Donald Jones and Steve Emtman, it
seemed clear it was a big deal. That he was able to return by midseason
was amazing.
Tears of joy
Don James never will seem quite so cold and unemotional again. He
eouldn't hide his humanness or tears when describing the dramatic New
Year's night emotional roller-coaster ride with his wife, Carol: Their fears
that a 12-0 record wouldn't earn the Huskies even a share of the national
championship
and the joy they felt when the phone call came.
Emtman's exultation
Two moments stand out: With an opposing ballcarrier dropped for a
loss, there was Emtman standing flat-footed, leaning back into a limbo
stance, his arms extended skyward. It happened in the opening minutes
against Arizona and then again in the Rose Bowl against Michigan. It was
a good sign for the Huskies.
Leaving Nebraska's Memorial Stadlum
After completing their dramatic, come from behind victory over Ne-
braska, the Huskies ran off the field and through what amounted to a
human tunnel of Cornhuskers fans who were applauding them It's a
tradition at Nebraska, but it was sort of eerie considering that the Huskles
had just run away from the Huskers, 36-21. Washington players and
coaches say that is when they started feeling like they could beat any
team, at any time.
Subplots from Hollywood
Who is Mario Bailey?
With everything the Rose Bowl had going for it, this turned out to be
the most tasty and lasting storyline
and Bailey showed the nation
what they had missed.
Will he or won't he?
From before the season, Emtman has been projected as a very early
first-round NFL pick. With his giant No. 1 ring on order, the possibility of
him returning for his senior season is slim. He says he'll announce a
decision in two weeks.
Billy Joe the Kid
He was a great talker before he ever started a game, and when he
completed his first six passes and led victories at Stanford and Nebraska,
Billy Joe Hobert had shown he could produce on the field as well as in
front of a microphone. Quarterback controversy? Nah.
Haunted by UCLA
There are a couple of ways to view the Huskies' 25-22 last-second loss
to UCLA, their last defeat, in November 1990. It cost the Huskies a shot
at the 1990 national championship, but it gave them addition motivation
to keep striving for the '91 title. Would the '91 Huskies have been
"Hungrier Than Ever" if they had beaten UCLA in '90?
Seeking imperfections
Week in and week out, the Huskies played the kind of football that left
non-believers with nothing to do but look for chinks in the armor. Against
Oregon (a 29-17 victory), the Huskies missed several prime scoring
chances. Against Southern Cal (14-3), they didn't show a killer's instinct.
Against Washington State (56-21), they gave up too many yards. But in
the end, those were the Dawgs' biggest problems of 1991.
What made this team SO good?
The Road
Many coaches feel a difference between a good team and a great team
is how it performs on the road. Consider that the Huskies faced their
three most successful opponents - Nebraska, California and Stanford -
on the road.
And the resulting victories, as well as the rout of Michigan in the Rose
Bowl, illustrated that the Dawgs did not have to be entertaining an
unsuspecting, overmatched foe in Husky Stadium to carry a big bite.
Zero defects
As great a season as. the 10-2 season was in 1990, the only
improvement on defense the Huskies could hope for was in reducing big
plays. That they did, getting closer to their goal of "zero defects."
The breakdowns were few and far between, and none put the Huskies
behind or in position to lose a game. They allowed only four touchdown
plays of longer than 20 yards all season. Last year, even while leading the
league in every defensive category, the big play TD figure was seven.
Turning point
Believe it or not, it had to be Beno Bryant's fumbled punt at the 2-yard
line at Nebraska.
That helped the Cornhuskers take a 21-9 third-quarter lead, but his
teammates wouldn't let him get too down on himself for the colossal
miscue. And after the Huskies drove down the field and were frustrated by
having a touchdown pass called back by penalty, there was Bryant
exploding for a 15-yard touchdown run. Washington's shocking 27-0
comeback was under way.
The QB protection society
Hobert surely was exaggerating when he said he might be the Pac-10's
(CONTINUED)
THE TACOMA NEWS TRIBUNE
SUN. JAN. 5, 1991
worst quarterback, but we'll never know because the offensive line made
him look so good with the protection it gave him. Until he slipped and fell
for a 9-yard loss in the Rose Bowl, that offensive line had allowed only six
sacks all season - and none in the previous four
games.
On the other hand, it's
safe to say the UW de-
GREGON
fense would not be invited
to join the Quarterback
Protection Society. Wash-
ington's defenders
seemed to be doing their
best to endanger the spe-
cies: The Huskies sacked
opposing passers 54
times, and their six in the
Rose Bowl matched Michi-
gan's season total for
sacks. allowed.
Clifford's comeback
When Jim Lambright
tried to congratulate line-
backer Jim Clifford with a
handshake in the lobby of
the team's hotel Jan. 2,
Clifford would have none
of it. He lifted the defen-
sive coordinator off the
floor with a bear hug that
left. "Lambo" wiping away
the tears.
It was much like the in-
The News Tribune
jury that befell Brunell, but
James Clifford's long battle back left
Clifford's occurred just be-
him with a larger appreciation for
fore last season, so he
what the Huskies did in Pasadena.
missed all of 1990 - and
was a real spark for the
defense. He seemed to have a special understanding and appreciation for
the trip to the Rose Bowl and resultant title that most players did not
seem to grasp.
A look ahead
The nucleus of '92
Half the Huskies' Rose Bowl starters won't be back next season (10.
seniors and probably Emtman). Gone will be wide receivers Bailey and
Orlando McKay, tight end Aaron Pierce and linemen Ed Cunningham,
Siupeli, Malamala and Kris Rongen from the offense; and lineman Tyrone
Rodgers, linebackers Donald Jones and Chico Fraley and cornerback Dana
Hall from the defense.
That leaves offensive linemen Lincoln Kennedy and Pete Kaligas (with
part-time starter Jim Nevelle), quarterback Hobert, tailback Bryant and
fullback Matt Jones; and defensive end Andy Mason, linebackers Dave
Hoffmann and Jaime Fields and defensive backs Shane Pahukoa, Walter
Bailey and Tommie Smith
as well as punter John Werdel and kicker
Travis Hanson.
Attractive '92 schedule
After a great road-television schedule for Washington fans in 1991,
most of the Huskies' biggest games in 1992 will be among the seven
home games. Here's here's a look at the tentative schedule:
September: 5 - at Arizona State, 12 - Wisconsin, 19 - Nebraska,
26 - bye
October: 3 - Southern Cal, 10 - California, 17 - at Oregon, 24 -
Pacific, 31 - Stanford
November: 7 - at Arizona, 14 - Oregon State, 21 - at Washington
State.
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
March 20, 1992
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
IN CEREMONY HONORING THE TWO
UNDEFEATED NCAA DIVISION I FOOTBALL TEAMS
The East Room
1:40 P.M. EST
THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Speaker, and distinguished members
of the Congress, Senate and House. We've got some other guests here,
too, and let me single them out. The members of those championship
teams from Jabbo Kenner Youth Football League -- where are those
guys? Over here -- all right -- there they are. Looking good.
(Applause.)
Emiliano Salinas is here with us. Where is he? This
man is the son of the President of Mexico, one of our strongest,
staunchest allies. Emiliano, welcome, welcome. (Applause.)
And did we get Wilson High School? Wilson -- here they
are back here. (Applause.) Another championship ball team. And may
I especially single out Coach James and Coach Erickson who have the
respect of anybody interested in sports in this country. It's great
to have both of you here. (Applause.) And also to the players, the
staffs, the friends and the football fans here and across the
country, Barbara and I just wanted to welcome you here to 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue.
For exactly 200 years this has been the people's house
and today we welcome the people's choice -- the Hurricanes and the
Huskies -- two great teams, both national champions. And some
thought I should take the ball and go outside and try to settle this
thing right now. (Laughter.) No, no my black and white shirt is at
the cleaners. We're not going to do that. I don't need this. I've
got enough problems without getting in the middle of you guys.
(Laughter.)
Let me begin with what we have in common. You guys play
football and in an election year I sometimes feel like a football.
But it's then that I recall what you did this year. Flanked by you
household names, maybe I should be around getting autographs because
this is a star-studded occasion.
First alphabetically -- and I don't want to get into
trouble -- comes Miami. Number one in the Associated Press. Two
years ago we met to celebrate a national title. Today we salute the
nation's current, longest home winning streak -- 45 games --
(applause) -- and the longest regular season winning streak, four
national titles in the past nine years including 1991; only the third
undefeated team in Miami history.
And what memories you've given us. of a college known
as Quarterback U, Gino Toretta, take a bow. Where is the man?
(Applause.) Leon Searcy's not here but I wanted to single him out.
He's an offensive tackle, for those amateurs around here, who wears a
17-EEE shoe -- they call them battleships. (Laughter.) And this
year we are retiring the USS Missouri and I think we ought to
commission him instead. (Laughter.) But I'm sorry he's not with us.
Next we come to Kevin Williams. Kevin promised Brent
Musburger that he'd return a punt for a touchdown and, sure enough,
MORE
- 2 -
he did it. And dealing with politicians, it's always a pleasure to
meet a man of his word.
And defensive end Rusty Medearis is not with us. The
Sack Man, the Hurricane receivers, the ruthless posse -- all. They'd
feel right at home in Washington. And this brings me to Carlos
Huerta, called the Ice Man. Carlos -- where's he? Right here. All
right. Ask the children he helps, in addition to the sick he
comforts and they call him simply "the nice man."
And, finally, Coach Erickson, who spurned "Miami vice"
for virture: Witness the drills that are so self-disciplined that
one player said, "The games are easy. They're a cinch compared to
our practices." (Laughter.)
Out west then we'll shift -- no game was easy for the
opponents of the '91's other co-champion in the USA Today-CNN poll,
the amazing Washington Huskies. And in a way, you foretold the
success of that other Washington team, the Redskins, halfway across
the world, making Don James's 17th season as Huskey coach his finest:
His fourth Rose Bowl victory; the Huskies' first undefeated and
untied club since 1915; a team which made each opponent, yes, bow
down to Washington.
And in once sense, you remind me of the way we were.
Thirty-eight years ago Don graduated -- Don James graduated from
Miami. Applying equal time, Dennis Erickson hails from Washington.
And it's today, though, that we're here to focus on -- on how the
Purple and Gold turned opponents black and blue. And I think of the
Purple Haze of Dave Hoffmann and Lincoln Kennedy, nicknamed the Oval
Office. Now, where are these two guys? (Laughter.) I've got to see
them. I can see one -- all right. (Laughter.) And at 6'7" and 325
pounds, the Pentagon would be more like it. (Laughter.)
Incidentally, I want to salute your dad, a career Navy
man who served in the Gulf. And then there's Outland Trophy and
Lombardi Trophy winner, all-American Heisman Trophy finalist Steve
Emtman -- Steve. You've got them all hiding in the back here.
(Laughter.) All right. Welcome to the White House.
And Mario Bailey Mario, where are you? Right here
next to me -- four years, Rose Bowl heroics, six school records
including receiving yards and touchdowns. And Washington's
quarterback who made 1991 an Ode to Billy Joe -- passing to the three
Smurfs, throwing a school record 22 touchdowns, Billy Joe Hobert
became the second straight Huskey sophomore quarterback to be named
to the Rose Bowl's most-valued player.
And so today, I salute the only two Division I college
football teams to finish undefeated and untied in the same season
since 1976. Teams which showed, as quarterback Joe Capp once said,
"The greatest game in America is called opportunity. Football is a
great expression of it."
The American political system has a playoff to decide a
winner. It's called an election -- presidential election this year.
And as of now the NCAA does not. And yet, in the truest sense, each
of you are winners: undefeated, untied, unbowed.
And so Barbara and I wanted to welcome you here to
extend our most sincere congratulations not just for winning, but for
the example you and especially these two coaches set for the rest of
the country -- to our country -- the greatest, freest land on the
face of the Earth.
Welcome to the White House. Congratulations. And may
God bless all of you. (Applause.)
END
1:46 P.M. EST
University
0
H u
W a S TOURT O n
e
S
ROSES
NEW YE
STAR-NEWS
Rose 99
FRALLY
CALIFORNIA
92
New Year's Number
DENA
STAR-NEWS
Rose Gwide
1992 Rose Bowl
ROSE
BOWL
Washington (11-0) vs. Michigan (10-1)
The Game: The Pac-10 Champion Washington Huskies will face the Big-10 Champion Michigan
Wolverines in the 78th Rose Bowl game.
PASADENA
OF ROSES
Travel Information: Washington will depart from Seattle's Sea-Tac Airport Friday, December 20,
TOURNAMENT
at 8:00 a.m. and is scheduled to arrive at Ontario International Airport at 10:30 a.m. The Huskies will
return to Seattle January 2, at 11:45 a.m.
Team Headquarters: Washington will be headquartered at the Anaheim Marriott, 700 West
Convention Way. The hotel phone number is (714) 750-8000.
Event: 1992 Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif.
Practice Site: The Huskies will practice at the Los Angeles Rams practice facility, 2327 West Lincoln
Date: January 1, 1992
Avenue in Anaheim. The phone number at the Rams facility is (714) 535-7267. Directions will be
Site: The Rose Bowl (104,091)
provided in the Rose Bowl media kit.
Kickoff Time: 2:10 p.m. (PST)
Practice Schedule in Anaheim: Practice will commence Saturday, December 21, at 10:30 a.m.
Practices will be open to the media through December 26. Beginning December 27, practice will be
Television: ABC-TV will broadcast the game
open for the first 30 minutes of each session only. The following schedule is subject to change:
nationally with Keith Jackson describing the ac-
Sat.
December 21
10:30 a.m.
Thu.
December 26
10:30 a.m.
tion and Bob Griese providing the analysis.
Sun.
December 22
10:30 a.m.
Fri.
December 27
10:30 a.m.
Radio: The Rose Bowl can be heard nationally
Mon.
December 23
10:30 a.m.
Sat.
December 28
10:30 a.m.
and throughout the world on NBC Radio with
Tue.
December 24
10:30 a.m.
Sun.
December 29
10:30 a.m.
Joel Meyers calling the action and Jack Snow
Wed.
December 25
Day Off
Mon.
December 30
2:00 p.m.
adding the commentary. Fans can also tune into
The team will have a short walk-through at the Rose Bowl on December 31, at 11:00 a.m. Team photos
the game on their local Husky network to hear
will be taken at that time.
Bob Rondeau, Sam Adkins and Bill Swartz pro-
vide coverage.
Interview Policy: Interviews of all coaches and players will be conducted following each practice
session. Additional interview times will be arranged contingent upon coaches' and players' schedules.
All interview requests should be made through the University of Washington Media Relations staff by
Inside the Guide
contacting Dave Senko or Stacey James. The contact number is (714) 750-8000. Players are not to be
Information
1
disturbed in their hotel rooms. We will attempt to meet all interview requests of accredited media.
Head Coach Don James
6
Washington Press Room: There will be a working press room available for the media at the Husky
Rosters
10
headquarters in the Anaheim Marriott Hotel. Current Husky information and team schedules will be
Players
14
posted daily.
1991 Game Summaries
29
1991 Honors
40
Rose Bowl Press Room: The Rose Bowl Press Room is located in the Plaza Room at the Ritz-Carlton
1991 Statistics
42
Huntington Hotel, 1401 S. Oak Knoll Ave., Pasadena. The press room will open at 12:00 noon on
Updated Records
50
December 26 and be open from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. daily through December 31. Daily schedules and
Bowl Records
52
updated information on both Michigan and Washington will be available. A work room and refresh-
Previous Rose Bowls
54
ments will be provided.
Media Events: The media will be given interview opportunities on a daily basis following scheduled
Credits
practices. A final Rose Bowl coaches press conference is scheduled on Tuesday, December 31, at 10:00
a.m. at the Tournament House.
The 1992 Rose Bowl Media Guide was
published by the University of Washington
Washington
Rose Bowl
Michigan
Media Relations Department, Dave Senko,
director. Its purpose is to assist members of
Dave Senko
Jim Muldoon
Bruce Madej
the media in their coverage of Husky foot-
Stacey James
Wendy Ryer
Jim Schneider
ball. The guide was designed and edited by
Anabeim Marriott
Ritz-Carlton Huntington Hotel
Pasadena Doubletree
Stacey James with contributions from Peter
700 W. Convention Way
1401 S. Oak Knoll Ave.
191 N. Los Pobles Ave.
Buck, Tim Hevly, Craig Heyamoto, Dan
Anaheim, CA 92802
Pasadena, CA
Pasadena, CA
Lepse, Cindy Fester, Dean Jutilla, Jeff
p-(714) 750-8000
(818) 577-6473
(818) 792-2727
Bechthold and Ted Bishop. Design consul-
f-(714) 750-9100
tation and typesetting were provided by the
University of Washington's Publication Ser-
vices, specifically involving Judy Robertson
and Bob Watkins. Photos in the guide are
courtesy of Bruce Terami and Joanie
Komura.
1
Rose B)o C2wide
Husky Quick Facts
The Coaches
Name-University of Washington
Don James: The Husky head coach is the all-time winningest skipper in the Pac-10, boasting 91
Location-Seattle, Washington
conference victories in his 17 seasons at Washington. In his 21 years of head coaching, James has
compiled a record of 168-73-3, including a 143-54-2 mark at Washington highlighted by five Pac-10
Founded-November 4, 1861
titles. James also has a 9-4 record in bowl contests and has three Rose Bowl wins to his credit.
President-William P. Gerberding
Gary Moeller: In just his second season at the Wolverines helm, Moeller has won back to back Big-
Enrollment-34,000 (24,500 Undergraduate)
10 Championships (tied for first in 1990), and has compiled a 19-4 record going into the 1992 Rose
Athletic Director-Barbara Hedges
Bowl. His overall record, including his three-year stint at Illinois, is 25-28-3. This will be his first Rose
(Arizona State, 1963)
Bowl appearance and his first contest against Washington.
Head Football Coach-Don James
(Miami of Florida, 1954)
The Matchup
Stadium-Husky Stadium (capacity 72,500;
The Series: The Huskies and Wolverines will be meeting for the ninth time in a series that began in
dedicated 1920)
1953, with a Michigan 50-0 victory over the Huskies, in Ann Arbor. Michigan currently holds a5-3 edge
Nickname-Huskies
in the series. Two of the encounters have come in Rose Bowls, splitting the series record with one victory
apiece. The Huskies scored a thrilling 27-20 victory over the heavily favored Wolverines in the 1978
Mascot-"Sundodger" (Alaskan Malamute)
Rose Bowl. Michigan revenged that loss three years later in the 1981 Rose Bowl, recording a 23-6
School Song-"Bow Down To Washington"
victory. Husky fans may remember that Wolverine team which featured another talented rusher/
receiver tandem-Butch Woolfolk (860 yards rushing) and Anthony Carter (46 receptions for 750
Conference-Pacific-10 (Pac-10)
yards). Woolfolk was named the game's MVP. That loss is the only blemish Don James has suffered vs.
1991 Record-11-0
Big-10 opponents in 12 seasons (12-1 since 1980). The two teams last met in 1984 when the Huskies
1991 Pac-10 Record-8-0 (first)
traveled to Ann Arbor and escaped with a 20-11 win in front of 103,072 fans at Michigan Stadium.
All-Time Record-547-301-49
The Last Meeting: Hugh Millen's 73-yard bomb to Mark Pattison closed the door on Michigan and
stunned the second-ranked Wolverines, 20-11. Washington forced five turnovers and sacked Michigan
Basic Offense-One-Back
quarterback Jim Harbaugh five times, while Millen kept the Huskies within striking distance the entire
Basic Defense-3-4
game, completing 13 of 16 passes for 165 yards. Washington scored on its second possession of the game
Home Uniforms-Purple jerseys, white
when Jeff Jaeger kicked a 24-yard field goal to cap a 72-yard drive. The Wolverines tied the score midway
numerals, gold pants, gold helmet with
through the second period on a field goal but the Huskies scored 17 unanswered points to move in front
purple and white stripes. Black shoes.
20-3. A two-yard run by Rick Fenney late in the second quarter gave the Huskies a 10-3 advantage.
Washington took a 14 point lead on Millen's pass to Pattison. Jaeger kicked his second field goal of the
Away Uniforms-White jerseys, purple
day with 1:39 remaining in the third period to close out the Huskies' scoring. Michigan's final eight
numerals, purple pants, gold helmet
points came on a two-yard pass from Harbaugh to Vince Bean with just two seconds remaining in the
with purple and white stripes. Black
game.
shoes.
Colors-Purple and Gold
Inside the Numbers
Stat Check: Here is a statistical comparison between this year's
Rose Bowl opponents:
STATISTIC
WASHINGTON
MICHIGAN
Record
11-0
10-1
Points Scored
41.9
36.9
Points Allowed
9.2
15.4
Rushing Offense
231.9
246.3
Passing Offense
240.0
192.9
Total Offense
471.9
439.2
Rushing Defense
67.1
103.8
Passing Defense
170.0
218.5
Total Defense
237.1
322.3
3rd Down Conversion %
524
438
Turnover Margin
1.73 (+19)
91(+10)
NOTE: Statistics are based on a per-game average.
Linebacker Michael Jackson iced Wash-
ington's 1978, 27-20 upset win over Michi-
gan in the Rose Bowl with a late game
interception.
2
Rose Garide
Four Huskies Named to AP All-America Teams
Senior split end Mario Bailey and junior defensive tackle Steve Emtman earned Associated Press
first-team All-America honors, the first time two Huskies have achieved the honor since Reggie Rogers
1991 Husky
and Jeff Jaeger were selected in 1986.
Team Honors
Juniors Dave Hoffmann, linebacker, and Lincoln Kennedy, offensive tackle, were also selected to
the All-America teams.
Awarded December 6, at the
Husky Team Awards Banquet
Emtman is one Husky who is bringing home the hardware. A consensus All-American, Emtman is
being awarded a number of post-season accolades for his success on the gridiron. He has been awarded
Mario Bailey
the Outland Trophy, the Lombardi Award and is the first Husky to be named a Heisman Trophy
KIRO Player of the Year
Finalist. He becomes the first Pac-10 player to win the Lombardi Award since USC's Brad Budde took
Texaco Star Performer of the Year
the honor in 1979, and the first Outland winner since Ron Yary of USC won in 1967. Emtman led the
Team Captain
Husky defensive linemen with 60 tackles, including a team-best 19.5 tackles for losses, 6.5 of which were
Mark Brunell
recorded as quarterback sacks. His 19.5 tackles for loss placed him third on the Husky single-season list,
behind Ron Holmes and Martin Harrison, each of whom accumulated 21. That also moved Emtman
Guy Flaherty Most Inspirational Award
up to eighth on the Husky career list with a total of 36.5 tackles for losses of -137 yards. Emtman
Brett Collins
disrupted opponent game plans, forcing opposing linemen to commit two and sometimes three players
Team Captain
to block him. That allowed teammates to accumulate a record-breaking 129 tackles for loss on the
season.
Ed Cunningham
John P. Angel Offensive Lineman of the Year
Bailey's performance this season has put him in line for a host of post-season accolades as well. The
Team Captain
senior split end from Seattle is wreaking havoc on the record books, setting or tying six school records
and breaking one Pac-10 mark. A quick look at his resume will show you why the
Steve Emtman
5-9 speedster has garnered so much attention:
KIRO Player of the Year
UW Records Set:
John P. Angel Defensive Lineman of the Year
UW Records Tied:
Career: Receiving yards (2,093)
Season: TDs scored (17)
Dana Hall
Career: TD receptions (26)
Game: TD receptions (3)
Chuck Niemi Big Hit Award
Season: TD receptions (17)
Pac-10 Records Set:
Dave Hoffmann
Season: Receptions (62)
Season: TD receptions (17)
Earle T. Glant Tough Husky Award
On the season, Bailey had six multiple TD games. He goes into the Rose Bowl with TD receptions in
Steve Hoffmann
nine of 11 games this season and 13 of 15 dating back to 1990. His receiving numbers compare quite
Mark Dranan Most Inspirational JV Player
favorably to Heisman Trophy candidate Desmond Howard. Bailey caught more passes (1), for more
Award
yards (87) than Howard, but finished with two fewer touchdown receptions. In addition to his AP
selection, Bailey was also chosen First-Team by the Football Writers Association of America and
Donald Jones
Second-Team All-America by The Football News and was named the Pac-10's Co-Offensive Player of
Team Captain
the Year.
Lincoln Kennedy
Hoffmann was also honored by Associated Press as a second-team All-America selection and first-team
L. Wait Rising Offensive Lineman of the Year
by the Football Writers Association of America. Hoffmann led the second-ranked defense in the nation
Chuck Neimi Big Hit Award
with 71 tackles, 16½ of which went for losses including three sacks.
Erik Mahler
Kennedy, the third junior to be honored, completes the quartet of Husky All-Americans, as he was
Kurt Gegner Memorial Award
selected to the AP's third team. At 6-7, 325 pounds, Kennedy anchored an offensive line which powered
the second-most potent offense in the nation, as the Huskies averaged just under 42 points per game.
Orlando McKay
On the season, the Husky line allowed only six quarterback sacks.
Husky Tyee Club Football Athlete of the Year
Tom Nakane
Bob Jarvis Inspirational Walk-On Award
Shane Pahukoa
KING TV Most Improved Player
Future Schedules
Mark Schilder
1992
1993
1994
Brian Stapp Inspirational Non-Letterman
Sept. 5
at Arizona State
Sept. 4
Stanford
Sept. 3
at USC
Award
Sept. 12
Wisconsin
Sept. 11
at Ohio State
Sept. 10
Ohio State
Sept. 19
Nebraska
Sept. 18
Bye
Sept. 17
Brigham Young
Sept. 26
Bye
Sept. 25
East Carolina
Sept. 24
at Wisconsin
Oct. 3
USC
Oct. 2
San Jose State
Oct. 1
UCLA
Oct. 10
California
Oct. 9
at California
Oct. 8
Bye
Oct. 17
at Oregon
Oct. 16
at UCLA
Oct. 15
Arizona State
Oct. 24
Pacific
Oct. 23
Oregon
Oct. 22
at Oregon
Oct. 31
Stanford
Oct. 30
at Arizona State
Oct. 29
Oregon State
Nov. 7
at Arizona
Nov. 6
at Oregon State
Nov. 5
at Stanford
Nov. 14
Oregon State
Nov. 13
USC
Nov. 12
California
Nov. 21
at Washington State
Nov. 20
Washington State
Nov. 19
at Washington State
3
Rose Guide
If Washington Wins, It Will Be
Dawg Bites
the first 12-0 season in UW history.
the first Pac-10 team to finish with an
What Sophomore Jinx? In Don James' tenure at Washington, only three sophomore quarterbacks were
unblemished record since USC won the national
counted on to start more than six games-Steve Pelluer (1981), Mark Brunell (1990) and Billy Joe Hobert
(1991). In each of those years the Huskies have won the Pacific-10 Conference Championship. Both the 1981
championship in 1972.
and 1990 squads claimed Rose Bowl victories over Iowa. This season, Hobert has thrown for a school-record
the first team to win back-to-back Rose Bowl
22 touchdown passes and finished third on the all-time single season passing charts with 2,271 yards.
titles since UCLA accomplished the feat in 1983
and 1984.
On the Road Again: The Huskies will be the visiting team at this year's Rose Bowl wearing their white jerseys
and purple pants. Thus, Michigan will become the fourth nationally ranked team the Huskies have faced on
the third time that a sophomore quarterback
the road, including #11 Nebraska, #14 California and #17 Stanford. In these three previous bouts, the Huskies
has led the Huskies to a Rose Bowl title.
have out-scored their opponents by an average of 34-15. The Dawgs also hold significant advantages in total
the sixth Rose Bowl title.
offense (491.3 to 291.7), net rushing yards (247.3 to 92.3) and first downs (25.3 to 15.7). In those games,
the 13th victory in the last 14 attempts VS. Big-
tailback Jay Barry averaged 111.3 yards and the Huskies defense totalled 32 tackles for losses, including 12
sacks.
10 opponents.
the 14th consecutive win for the Huskies, the
Reloading the Gun: This year's 11-0 record added to the Huskies' current winning seasons streak, upping
most since their streak of 39 wins from 1908-14.
their total to a school record 15 consecutive seasons. California has the second longest streak in the Pac-10
Don James' 10th bowl victory in 14 tries.
with two winning seasons.
Michigan's 10th Rose Bowl loss in 15 games.
Heads You Win, Tails We Lose: Rosencrantz and Guildenstern would have loved this statistic. One of the
few things the Huskies have had trouble winning this season is the coin toss. They have lost nine of the 11 flips
the Pac-10's 19th win in the last 23 Rose Bowl
this year.
contests.
Front-Running: In eight Pac-10 games, Washington trailed their opponents a total of 10:44. Nebraska is the
Hitting the Books
only opponent the Huskies have faced that held a lead over the Dawgs for over half of the game. Nebraska
was up on Washington for nearly two-thirds of the game (39:59), before the Huskies scored 27 unanswered
Below is a list of some of the records the Huskies
points to win the game.
have set or tied this season:
Group Mentality: A total of 23 Huskies recorded tackles for losses this season, including each of the 11
Records Set:
projected Rose Bowl starters, sending opponents 484 yards in the opposite direction. That type of pressure
total offense (5,191 yards)
caused opponents to throw 21 interceptions to 12 different defenders.
first downs (266)
Quarterly Report: Washington's defense finished the season ranked second in the nation in points allowed
first downs allowed (150)
(9.2 ppg.). Overall, the Huskies outscored their opponents 461-101, with the largest scoring margin coming
in the second quarter (178-23). In 44 quarters of action, the defense never allowed an opponent to score twice
season TD passes (26)
in one quarter. The Dawgs, on the other hand, accomplished that task in 21 quarters this season.
tackles for loss (129)
Birthday Wishes: Los Angeles native Beno Bryant will celebrate his 21st birthday on New Year's Day at the
total points (461 tied 1925 team)
Rose Bowl. Bryant fell 57 yards shy of becoming the fifth Husky to rush for 1,000 yards in a season. However,
his 6.0 average per carry was the best ever by a starting Husky running back.
Mario Bailey Bits:
Purple Pain: Consensus All-American Steve Emtman has led a bruising defensive unit that has terrorized
One of four 1991 Husky Co-Captains
opposing backs and stymied would-be blockers. The Huskies front three, consisting of Emtman, Tyrone
Ranks sixth nationally in receiving yards
Rogers and Andy Mason have combined for a total of 44.5 tackles in the opponents backfield. That ratio is
with 94.3 yards per game
better than one tackle for loss to every three tackles made. On 286 first downs this season, the defense stopped
enemy ball carriers for no gain on 146 of those plays, 51% of the time. The Huskies were also one of the most
Tied for 12th nationally in receptions per
relentless in history. The 101 points allowed this season was second only to Miami (100). It was the fewest
game (5.8)
allowed by the Huskies since 1962 when they limited their opponents to 83 points. On the season, only 13
One of six players this season to score over
opponent drives began inside Husky territory. Of those, only two were converted for touchdowns, one of
100 points this season (102)
which was a two-yard drive at Nebraska.
Second in single-season receiving yards
Dawged Defense: Here's a game-by-game look at how Washington has dominated opponent's rushing
with 1,037, two yards shy of the single-
attacks:
season record
Caught at least two TDs in six of 11 games
this year
Has caught at least one TD in each of his
TEAM
ATT
YG
YL
NET
AVG
TD
LG
TFL
SACKS
previous bowl outings (1989 Freedom,
STAN
31
65
37
28
0.9
1
12
11
3
1991 Rose)
NEB
36
162
27
135
3.8
2
27t
8
4
KSU
30
62
79
-17
0.6
0
14
15
8
102 of his 131 career catches have resulted
ARIZ
39
91
61
20
0.8
0
14
19
8
in first downs (78%)
TOL
32
83
35
48
1.5
0
17
8
3
has caught passes in 24 straight games
CAL
36
168
54
114
3.2
1
68t
13
5
has converted 40 of 48 career 3rd down
ORE
27
80
15
65
2.4
1
25t
7
1
ASU
30
100
22
78
2.6
0
13
6
3
grabs into first downs (83%)
USC
36
130
52
78
2.2
0
40
14
5
OSU
51
164
81
83
1.6
1
27
13
1
WSU
42
139
43
96
2.3
0
20
12
TOTALS
390
1244
506
738
1.9
6
68
129
48
4
Rose G-vide
College Football Polls (12-2-91)
The Huskies finished the regular season with an 11-0 record, the first Pac-10 team to go undefeated in the regular season since
USC's national championship team in 1972. Listed below are six prominent national college football rankings.
Associated Press
United Press
The Sporting News
RANK
TEAM
RECORD POINTS
RANK
TEAM
RECORD POINTS
RANK
TEAM
RECORD
1.
Miami (37)
11-0
1475
1.
WASHINGTON (59)
11-0
2219
1.
WASHINGTON
11-0
2.
WASHINGTON (23)
11-0
1461
2.
Miami (30)
11-0
2180
2.
Miami
11-0
3.
Florida
10-1
1358
3.
Michigan (1)
10-1
2026
3.
Florida
10-1
4.
Michigan
10-1
1333
4.
Florida
10-1
2024
4.
Michigan
10-1
5.
Florida State
10-2
1180
5.
Penn State
10-2
1759
5.
Florida State
10-2
6.
Penn State
10-2
1177
6.
Florida State
10-2
1740
6.
Penn State
10-2
7.
Iowa
10-1
1100
7.
Iowa
10-1
1680
7.
Alabama
10-1
8.
Alabama
10-1
1087
8.
Alabama
10-1
1629
8.
Texas A&M
10-1
9.
Texas A&M
10-1
1018
9.
Texas A&M
10-1
1492
9.
Iowa
10-1
10.
Tennessee
9-2
1000
10.
Tennessee
9-2
1482
10.
Tennessee
9-2
11.
Nebraska
9-1-1
955
11.
Nebraska
9-1-1
1446
11.
Nebraska
9-1-1
12.
East Carolina
10-1
786
12.
Clemson
9-1-1
1165
12.
East Carolina
10-1
13.
Clemson
9-1-1
763
13.
East Carolina
10-1
1073
13.
California
9-2
14.
California
9-2
712
14.
California
9-2
1057
14.
Clemson
9-1-1
15.
Colorado
8-2-1
602
15.
Colorado
8-2-1
975
15.
Syracuse
9-2
16.
Syracuse
9-2
591
16.
Syracuse
9-2
902
16.
Colorado
8-2-1
17.
Stanford
8-3
575
17.
Stanford
8-3
785
17.
Stanford
8-3
18.
Notre Dame
9-3
517
18.
Notre Dame
9-3
768
18.
Virginia
8-2-1
19.
Virginia
8-2-1
460
19.
Virginia
8-2-1
607
19.
Notre Dame
8-2-1
20.
Oklahoma
8-3
268
20.
Oklahoma
8-3
515
20.
Oklahoma
8-3
USA Today/CNN (Coaches Poll)
Sagarin
Football News
(USA Today Computer Poll)
RANK
TEAM
RECORD POINTS
RANK
TEAM
RECORD
It.
Miami (31)
11-0
1443
RANK
TEAM
RECORD
POINTS
1.
WASHINGTON
11-0
It.
WASHINGTON (28)
11-0
1443
1.
WASHINGTON
11-0
104.22
2.
Miami
11-0
3.
Michigan
10-1
1335
2.
Miami
11-0
95.54
3.
Michigan
10-1
4.
Florida
10-1
1315
3.
Michigan
10-1
94.65
4.
Florida
10-1
5.
Iowa
10-1
1138
4.
Florida
10-1
94.43
5.
Iowa
10-1
6.
Penn State
10-2
1128
5.
Florida State
10-2
94.42
6.
Alabama
10-1
7.
Florida State
10-2
1102
6.
Penn State
10-2
93.46
7.
Florida State
10-2
8.
Alabama
10-1
1063
7.
Nebraska
9-1-1
93.38
8.
Penn State
9-2
9.
Texas A&M
10-1
1049
8.
Texas A&M
10-1
93.10
9.
Texas A&M
10-1
10.
Nebraska
9-1-1
984
9.
California
9-2
88.98
10.
Nebraska
9-1-1
11.
Tennessee
9-2
915
10.
Stanford
8-3
88.17
11.
Tennessee
9-2
12.
Clemson
9-1-1
803
11.
Alabama
10-1
88.03
12.
East Carolina
10-1
13.
Colorado
8-2-1
664
12.
Tennessee
9-2
87.83
13.
Clemson
9-1-1
14.
East Carolina
10-1
648
13.
Notre Dame
9-3
87.65
14.
California
9-2
15.
California
9-2
624
14.
UCLA
8-3
87.00
15.
Colorado
8-2-1
16.
Syracuse
9-2
600
15.
Oklahoma
8-3
86.56
16.
Syracuse
9-2
17.
Stanford
8-3
468
16.
Colorado
8-2-1
86.11
17.
Virginia
9-2
18.
Notre Dame
9-3
453
17.
Virginia
8-2-1
85.21
18.
Notre Dame
9-3
19.
Virginia
8-2-1
403
18.
Miss. State
7-4
84.25
19.
Stanford
8-3
20.
Oklahoma
8-3
339
19.
Clemson
9-1-1
83.15
20.
Oklahoma
8-3
20.
Syracuse
9-2
82.67
National Team Statistical Leaders
Rushing Defense
Pass Efficiency Defense
Total Defense
Scoring Defense
1. Clemson
56.9
1. Texas
77.37
1.
Texas A&M
222.4
1.
Miami, Fla
9.1
2.
Washington
67.1
2.
Texas A&M
85.10
2.
Washington
237.1
2. Washington
9.2
3.
Florida State
82.2
3.
Washington
85.55
3.
Clemson
249.2
3.
Alabama
10.7
4.
Texas A&M
86.0
4.
Miami, Fla.
88.13
4.
Texas
258.9
4.
Virginia
10.8
5.
Penn State
93.3
5.
Penn State
88.56
5.
Miami, Ohio
270.9
5. Clemson
12.7
6. Florida
100.3
6.
Virginia
91.13
6. Iowa
271.5
6.
Miami, Ohio
12.7
7.
Louisiana Tech
100.5
7.
Arizona State
92.24
7.
Central Mich.
272.8
7.
Oklahoma
13.0
8.
UCLA
100.9
8.
Tulsa
94.26
8.
Georgia Tech
277.8
8. Texas A&M
13.1
9.
Oklahoma
103.6
9.
Georgia Tech
94.49
9.
Penn State
280.5
9.
Texas
13.2
10, Michigan
103.8
10.
Oklahoma
95.22
10.
Florida State
281.3
10.
Bowling Green
13.4
5
Rose Guide
Don James, Head Coach
They call him the dean of the Pacific-10 coaches.
Don James earned that title by building a consis-
tent, nationally-prominent winning program
during the longest current tenure of any confer-
ence coach. All the while James' program has
maintained its trademark class and integrity.
James' 1991 squad might have been his finest
yet. The Huskies go into the 1991 Rose Bowl
ranked second behind Miami of Florida and
could become James first national championship
club. The team rolled through its 1991 schedule
with the first unbeaten and untied record by a
Husky squad since 1915 and won those 11 games
by an average margin of 42 to nine. The Huskies
posted impressive road wins over Stanford,
Nebraska and California, all playing in bowl
games this season. On its way to the 11-0 mark,
the team set 10 school marks, including most
total yards, most first downs, most TD passes and
most TDs. The 461 points also tied a school mark
set by the 1925 team. In addition, the defense
got into the act, racking up a record 129 tackles
for losses. Players such as Mario Bailey and Billy
Joe Hobert also set new school records. The
Huskies were the first Pac-10 team to finish with
an unbeaten, untied record since USC did so in
1972. Under James, Washington earned a
Pac-10 record nine straight bowl invitations
(1979-87) and 12 in the last 13 years. James has
produced 15 consecutive winning seasons and
16 of his 17 UW teams have finished in the upper
division of the conference race. A total of 12 of
Don James
those teams have finished either first or second
in the league, including two straight Pac-10
The all-time winningest coach in Husky history
four weeks and No. 1 at the conclusion of the
championships. James' Huskies capped the 1990
with an overall record of 143-54-2 in 17 seasons
season by The Football News and the Chicago
season by defeating Iowa in the Rose Bowl,
at the UW, James owns the most Pac-8/Pac-10
Tribune. The 1985 club, like '83, was a pre-
46-34. During his UW career, he has led his
victories in the history of the prestigious confer-
season No. 1 pick. The 1990 Husky unit climbed
Husky teams to victories in nine of 12 bowl
ence with 91. In 1988, he surpassed the mark of
as high as No. 2 in the national polls and led all
appearances, including three Rose Bowls.
70 conference victories established by former
Division I-A schools in rushing defense and
Washington closed out the last decade with the
USC coach John McKay with a 28-27 home
turnover margin.
distinction of having won more games than any
victory over California.
The Seattle-based Gold Helmet Banquet and
other Pac-10 school in the 1980s. Washington
James, still a leading voice in the AFCA, is also
Columbus (O.) Touchdown Club both named
won 84 games, two better than UCLA's 82 victo-
active in the NCAA, having served on several
James the College Coach of the Year in 1984.
ries and six more than USC's total of 78 wins.
committees during his career. He is currently a
That wasn't the first time. Previously, he was
James' Huskies were the only team in the Pac-10
member of the NCAA Professional Sports Liai-
voted National Coach of the Year (Kodak) in
to have a winning season each year during the
son Committee. He is also active in many local
1977, District Coach of the Year, West Coast
1980s.
civic affairs, including the Boy Scouts, March of
Coach of the Year, Pacific-10 Coach of the Year
That winning legacy has carried over into the
Dimes, American Cancer Fund, Junior Achieve-
and Seattle's Man of the Year in Sports, to name
1990s as James guided the Huskies to 10-2 and
ment and Cystic Fibrosis.
a few. In June, 1987, James was enshrined in the
Florida Citrus Bowl Hall of Fame. A number of
11-0 records (including a 1991 Rose Bowl win)
It is his on-field accomplishments that have
and a 15-1 mark in conference play. For mold-
earned James acclaim. He is admired nationally
publications-Sports Illustrated, Sport, Inside
ing the 1990 Washington team into one of most
for his teams' disciplined offenses, rock-solid
Sports, Playboy, The Miami Herald and most
dominant Pac-10 teams in history, James was
defenses and well-drilled special teams.
recently Don Heinrich's Pro Preview-have all,
honored as a conference co-Coach of the Year,
at various times, named James as the best in the
sharing that award with California's Bruce
Four James-coached clubs in the 1980's were
business.
Snyder. He also was named a District Coach of
ranked No. 1 in the country at some point in the
season in at least one major poll or magazine.
In his 16 previous years at Washington, James
the Year by the AFCA.
The 1982 club was ranked No. 1 by the wire
has seen 87 Husky players drafted by the NFL,
James, 59, served as President of the American
service polls for seven straight weeks. The 1983
including 65 during the 1980s. Thirty-eight of
Football Coaches Association in 1989, gaining
club was a pre-season No. 1 choice. The 1984
his players have been drafted in the first five
the lofty position by a vote of his peers. Among
club was ranked No. 1 by the wire services for
rounds, including seven first-round picks. More
Pacific-10 coaches he is peerless.
6
R
Garide
Don James, Head Coach
than two dozen other James products have gone
to the USFL and CFL, and numerous Huskies
have made the NFL as free agents.
Don James' Coaching Record
Several of James' assistant coaches have moved
Head Coach
on to head coaching positions following their
stay at Washington. Among the former assistant
OVERALL
CONFERENCE
coaches now serving as head coaches are Jim
Mora (New Orleans Saints), Jim Heacock (Illi-
YEAR
SCHOOL
RECORD
PCT.
RECORD
PCT.
nois State), Gary Pinkel (Toledo), Skip Hall
1971
Kent State
3-8
273
0-5
1000
(Boise State) and Bob Stull (Missouri). USC
1972
Kent State
6-5-1
.542
4-1
800
quarterbacks coach Ray Dorr was also a James'
Tangerine Bowl (Tampa 21, KSU 18)
aide who later went on to become the head
1973
Kent State
9-2
818
4-1
800
coach at Southern Illinois.
1974
Kent State
7-4
.636
2-3
.400
A capsule look at his previous 16 Washing-
Totals
Four Years
25-19-1
.567
10-10
.500
ton teams:
1975
Washington
6-5
.545
5-2
.714
1976
Washington
5-6
.455
3-4
.429
A late-season loss at home against UCLA prob-
1977
Washington
10-2
.833
7-0
1.000
ably cost the 1990 Huskies their first national
championship. James' squad entered Week 10
Rose Bowl (UW 27, Michigan 20)
rated second nationally behind Notre Dame.
1978
Washington
7-4
.636
6-2
750
However, a 24-22 defeat by the Bruins dropped
1979
Washington
10-2
.833
6-1
.857
the Huskies from any possible national title con-
Sun Bowl (UW 14, Texas 7)
tention. Still, Washington finished with a 46-34
1980
Washington
9-3
.750
6-1
.857
win over Iowa in the Rose Bowl and a number
Rose Bowl (Michigan 23, UW 6)
five ranking in the final polls along with a 10-2
1981
Washington
10-2
.833
6-2
750
record. The club had three All-Americans-
Rose Bowl (UW 28, Iowa 0)
Greg Lewis, Steve Emtman and Jeff Pahukoa-
1982
Washington
10-2
.833
6-2
750
and Lewis also won the inaugural Doak Walker
Aloha Bowl (UW 21, Maryland 20)
Award as the nation's top running back. The
1983
Washington
8-4
.667
5-2
.714
Huskies set numerous school records and led
Aloha Bowl (Penn State 13, UW 10)
the nation in rushing defense and turnover mar-
1984
Washington
11-1
.917
6-1
.857
gin.
Orange Bowl (UW 28, Oklahoma 17)
Washington finished with a flourish in 1989,
1985
Washington
7-5
.583
5-3
.625
winning its last three games of the season and
Freedom Bowl (UW 20, Colorado 17)
seven of its last eight to earn its 11th bowl ap-
1986
Washington
8-3-1
.708
5-2-1
.688
pearance under James. The Huskies posted a
Sun Bowl (Alabama 28, UW 6)
surprisingly easy 34-7 win over Southeastern
1987
Washington
7-4-1
.625
4-3-1
.563
Conference representative Florida in the 1989
Independence Bowl (UW 24, Tulane 12)
Freedom Bowl, the Dawgs' 10th bowl appear-
1988
Washington
6-5
.545
3-5
.375
ance in the last 11 years. Washington finished 8-
1989
Washington
8-4
.667
5-3
.625
4 overall and had a 5-3 conference mark. The
Freedom Bowl (UW 34, Florida 7)
introduction of the one-back offense proved suc-
1990
Washington
10-2
.833
7-1
.875
cessful and exciting, as the Huskies stretched out
Rose Bowl (UW 46, Iowa 34)
defenses by land and by air.
1991
Washington
11-0
1.000
8-0
1.000
Close, but not close enough. That was the story
Totals
17 years
143-54-2
.726
93-34-2
729
of the 1988 James Gang, which finished 6-5
Head Coach
(21 years)
168-73-3
.695
103-44-2
.698
overall and 3-5 in the Pac-10. Washington lost
1971-74-Conference Record from Mid-American Conference games.
five football games by a total of 15 points, includ-
1975-Present-Conference Record from Pacific-8 and Pacific-10 Conference games.
ing a pair of one-point losses and two more
three-point losses. The Huskies fashioned their
Assistant Coach
12th straight winning season, but saw the
YEAR
SCHOOL
RECORD
PCT.
YEAR
SCHOOL
RECORD
PCT.
school's consecutive bowl game streak snapped
1959
Florida State
4-6
400
1966
Michigan
6-4
.600
at nine.
1960
Florida State
3-6-1
350
1967
Michigan
4-6
400
James' 1987 Huskies had their moments-good
1961
Florida State
4-5-1
450
Totals
Two Years
10-10
.500
and bad-but still managed a trip to the Inde-
1962
Florida State
4-3-3
550
1968
Colorado
4-6
400
pendence Bowl in Shreveport, La., where they
1963
Florida State
4-5-1
450
1969
Colorado 8-3
727
bested Tulane, 24-12. Washington's 7-4-1 sea-
1964
Florida State
9-1-1
863
son was good enough for a third-place Pac-10
Liberty Bowl (CU 47, Alabama 33)
Gator Bowl (FSU 36, Oklahoma 19)
1970
Colorado
6-5
545
finish. Senior quarterback Chris Chandler en-
tered the season as a Heisman Trophy candidate
1965
Florida State
4-5-1
.450
Liberty Bowl (Tulane 17, CU 3)
and proved to be the nation's top senior quarter-
Totals
Seven Years
32-31-8
507
Totals
Three Years
18-14
.563
Assistant Coach (12 years)
60-55-8
.520
7
Rose B). Guide
Don James, Head Coach
back prospect, being the first NFL draft pick
apprenticeship in some outstanding programs,
among quarterbacks. Senior linebacker David
including: Colorado (1968-70), Michigan
Rill was selected first-team CoSIDA/GTE Aca-
(1966-67) and Florida State (1959-65). He was
demic All-America for the second consecutive
also a freshman coach at Kansas while earning
season.
his master's degree and coached at South-
Washington's 1986 rendition featured a pair of
west HS in Miami (Fla.) before joining the
Seminoles.
consensus All-America performers, placekicker
Jeff Jaeger and defensive end Reggie Rogers.
James grew up in the football hotbed of
The squad taxed scoreboards all season, tallying
Massillon, Ohio, where he played quarterback
more points (372) than any team to that point in
and defensive back for two state championship
modern Husky history on the way to an 8-3-1
teams at Washington High School. He accepted
mark. James' Huskies finished tied for second in
the Pac-10 and earned their eighth-straight
postseason appearance, facing Alabama in the
Sun Bowl.
Coaching Honors
YEAR HONOR
The 1985 Huskies came within two one-point
losses of representing the Pac-10 in the Rose
1971
Named Head Coach at Kent State
Bowl. As it was, those losses were representative
1972
Mid-American Coach-of-the-Year
Ohio Coach-of-the-Year
of a roller-coaster season that saw Washington
1973
Coached in Ohio Shrine Game
finish 6-5 in the regular season. The Huskies
Coached in North-South Shrine Game
were invited to the Freedom Bowl, where they
1974
Coached in Ohio Shrine Game
downed Colorado 20-17 to cap a 7-5 season.
Named Head Coach at Washington
1975
Pac-8 Co-Coach-of-the-Yean
The 1984 club fashioned the most wins (11-1) in
1976
Coached in American Bowl
school history, and marked the fifth time in a
1977
American Football Coaches Association
period of eight years that Washington teams won
National Coach-of-the-Year
at least 10 games. Washington, 9-0 at one point
in 1984, climaxed the season with a 28-17 victory
Don James
UPI National Coach-of-the-Week
Coached Rose Bowl Champions
over Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. That win
Michigan. The Wolverines downed Washington
1978
Coached in East-West Shrine Game
earned the club a mythical National Champion-
23-6, avenging a 1978 Rose Bowl loss to the
Coached in Japan Bowl
ship in the eyes of the Chicago Tribune and
1979
Huskies. Washington finished 9-3.
Coached Sun Bowl Champions
Football News. Associated Press, UPI and USA
1980
Pac-10 Coach-of-the-Year
Today/CNN all ranked the Huskies No. 2. In any
In 1979, Washington parlayed a 9-2 regular sea-
West Coast Coach-of-the-Year
case, it was Washington's highest final ranking
son and Pac-10 runner-up finish into an invita-
District IX Coach-of-the-Year
ever.
tion to the Sun Bowl, where the Huskies de-
Coached in Rose Bowl
1981
feated Texas, 14-7. The Sun Bowl title gave
Coached Rose Bowl Champions
James' 1983 club won six of its first seven games,
Named Seattle P-I's Sports Star-of-the
Washington a 10-2 record. That 1979 season
Year
snapped USC's NCAA-record scoring streak
kicked off a six-year period in which Washington
Athlon Publications National Coach of
with a 24-0 shutout and were within one game of
would record a glittering 58-14 overall record,
the Year
the Pac-10 title before suffering a loss in the
good for an .805 winning percentage.
1982
Named Playboy's Pre-season National
season finale. The Huskies were invited to the
Coach-of-the-Year
Aloha Bowl, where they lost a 13-10 decision to
During the 1978 season, Washington did not
Coached Aloha Bowl Champions
Penn State to finish 8-4.
earn a postseason bowl bid. Still, the Huskies
Coached in Hula Bowl
recorded a fine 7-4 mark with three of the four
1983
Coached in Aloha Bowl
His 1982 club was ranked No. 1 in the country
losses coming by a touchdown or less.
1984
Coached Orange Bowl Champions
for seven weeks before being upset by Stanford.
Columbus, Ohio, Touchdown Club
A 17-13 victory over Arizona State opened the
The 1977 season provided James' first confer-
National Coach-of-the-Year
door for a third straight Pac-10 title but the door
ence crown at Washington as the Huskies shook
Gold Helmet College Coach-of-the-
closed in a season-ending 24-20 loss to Washing-
off several early losses, upset USC and benefited
Year
ton State (only the second loss to a Northwest
from two forfeitures to go 9-2. Washington met
Miami Herald Coach-of-the-Year
Michigan in the Rose Bowl and won 27-20 to
1985
opponent in 24 meetings). As Pac-10 runner-up,
Coached Freedom Bowl Champions
1986
Coached in Sun Bowl
Washington was invited to the inaugural Aloha
finish 10-2.
1987
Inducted Florida Citrus Bowl Hall of
Bowl, where the Huskies downed Maryland 21-
James' first two Husky clubs (1975-76) were
Fame
20 to finish the season 10-2.
basically .500 outfits (6-5 and 5-6), but those
Coached Independence Bowl
The 1981 Huskies shook off conference losses to
teams still established a legacy of first division
Champions
conference finishes. Those were the foundation
1988
Arizona State and UCLA and won the Pac-10
Pac-10's All-Time Winningest Coach
years in a football program that would soon grow
1989
President, American Football Coaches
title with late-season wins over USC and Wash-
Association
ington State. The Huskies then downed Iowa
by leaps and bounds.
Coached Freedom Bowl Champions
28-0 in the Rose Bowl-James' second Rose
James was hired at Washington on December
1990
Pac-10 Co-Coach of the Year
Bowl win-to finish 10-2.
23, 1974. In the previous four seasons (1971-
AFCA Region] V Coach of the Year
His 1980 club was upset early by Oregon and
74), he was head coach at Kent State where he
Coached Rose Bowl Champions
Chevrolet Coach of the Year
Navy but again bounced back late in the year to
posted a 25-19-1 overall record and took Kent
1991
Pac-10 Coach of the Year
record four straight conference wins, take the
State to its first-ever bowl game. Before landing
Coached in Rose Bowl
Pac-10 title and earn a Rose Bowl berth opposite
his first head coaching job, James served his
8
Rose
G2vide
Don James, Head Coach
a scholarship to Miami of Florida where he set
five school passing records. He graduated in
1954 with various academic and military honors,
Don James Versus All Opponents
and earned the Optner Trophy honoring
Miami's top scholar-athlete.
(1971-1991)
James was commissioned a Second Lieutenant
SEASON
SEASON
in the U.S. Army (1st Transportation Corps)
LAST
LAST
where he served two years before resuming his
OPPONENT
W
L
T
MET
OPPONENT
W
L
T
MET
studies at the University of Kansas and doubled
Air Force
1
0
0
1980
Northern Illinois
0
2
0
1972
as the Jayhawks' freshman football coach. He
Akron
1
0
1
1974
Northwestern
3
0
0
1984
graduated in 1957 with a master's degree in
Alabama
0
3
0
1986
Ohio
2
2
0
1974
Education and then returned to Miami (South-
Arizona
7
2
1
1991
Ohio State
1
0
0
1986
west H.S.) where he coached football and bas-
Arizona State
+8
5
0
1991
Oklahoma
1
0
0
1984
ketball.
Army
1
0
0
1988
Oklahoma State
1
1
0
1985
Bowling Green
3
2
0
1986
Oregon
14
3
0
1991
He then turned to the college ranks at Florida
Brigham Young
1
1
0
1986
Oregon State
14
1
0
1991
State where he would remain seven years while
California
11
2
0
1991
Pacific
2
0
0
1987
being elevated to assistant head coach and de-
Central Michigan
2
0
0
1974
Penn State
0
1
0
1983
Cincinnati
0
1
0
1971
Pittsburgh
0
1
0
1979
fensive coordinator. It was at FSU where James
Colorado
1
3
0
1990
Purdue
4
0
0
1990
really began to make a name for himself as a
Eastern Michigan
2
0
0
1974
San Diego State
1
2
0
1982
defensive mastermind. In his four seasons as a
Florida
1
0
0
1989
San Jose State
3
0
0
1990
defensive coordinator, the Seminoles recorded
Fresno State
1
0
0
1979
Stanford
12
3
0
1991
13 shutouts, held three teams to a single field
Houston
2
0
0
1985
Syracuse
1
1
0
1977
goal and held 14 others to only one touchdown.
Indiana
0
2
0
1978
Tampa
0
1
0
1972
The 1964 season (9-1-1) was capped by a 35-19
Iowa
2
0
0
1990
Texas
1
1
0
1979
win over Oklahoma in the Gator Bowl.
Iowa State
0
1
0
1971
Texas A&M
1
1
0
1989
Kansas
1
0
0
1978
Texas El Paso
I
0
0
1982
James moved to Michigan where he served as
Kansas State
2
0
0
1991
Texas Tech
2
0
0
1982
head defensive coach for two seasons, and then
Louisiana State
0
1
0
1983
Toledo
4
1
0
1991
moved farther west to Colorado where he served
Louisville
1
1
0
1973
Tulane
I
0
0
1987
as defensive coordinator for three years and
Marshall
4
0
0
1974
UCLA
+ 6
7
1
1990
helped the Buffaloes to a pair of Liberty Bowl
Maryland
1
0
0
1982
USC
8
8
0
1991
Miami, Ohio
2
3
0
1984
Utah
1
0
0
1979
appearances. After a dozen years in the assistant
Michigan
3
1
0
1992
Utah State
I
1
0
1974
coaching ranks, James was hired by Mike Lude
Minnesota
1
1
0
1977
Virginia
I
0
0
1976
to become head coach at Kent State University.
Mississippi State
+ 1
0
0
1977
Washington State
13
4
0
1991
James would remain at Kent State for four sea-
Navy
2
1
0
1983
Western Michigan
2
2
0
1974
Nebraska
1
0
0
1991
Wyoming
I
0
0
1979
sons (1971-74) and compile a 25-19-1 overall
North Carolina State
1
0
0
1971
Xavier
2
0
0
1972
record. His club upset North Carolina State 21-
21-YEAR TOTALS
168
73
3
(.695)
10 in his very first game as a head coach. He took
Bold type 1991 opponent
Kent State to its first-ever bowl game (Tangerine
+Includes forfeit win(s)
Bowl) the following year and was named both
NOTES:
Mid-American Coach of the Year and Ohio Col-
lege Coach of the Year. His 1973 team produced
James' Record vs. All 1991 Opponents: 94-29-1 (.762)
a 9-2 season, best in school history. Following a
James' Record vs. 1991 Non-Conference Opponents: 7-1-0 (.875)
7-4 mark in 1974, Joe Kearney offered James
James' Record vs. 1991 Pacific-10 Conference Opponents: 87-28-1 (.754)
the Washington job and he accepted two days
before Christmas.
His success at Washington wasn't far away.
Don and his wife, Carol, also a native of
Massillon and a graduate of Miami (Fla.), have
three adult children, Jeff, Jill and Jeni, and five
grandchildren. Daughter Jeni is a 1991 graduate
of the University of Washington and a former
member of the Husky Rally squad.
The Husky coach was born December 31, 1932.
He is an avid reader and runner, and an accom-
plished golfer who recorded his third hole-in-
one in June, 1985. He has hiked to the summit of
Mt. Rainier and also completed his first mara-
thon in the 1987 Seattle Marathon.
9
Rose Guide
1991 University of Washington Huskies
NO
NAME
POS
HT
WT
DOB
YR
EX
HOMETOWN (HIGH SCHOOL/JC)
53
Aselin, Jeff
OG
6-2
250
5/12/72
FR
RS
Huntington Beach, CA (Edison)
88
Bailey, Bruce
TE
6-5
245
7/28/70
JR
SQ
Seattle, WA (Roosevelt)
5
Bailey, Mario
SE
5-9
168
11/30/70
SR
2V
Seattle, WA (Franklin)
23
Bailey, Walter
CB
5-11
190
3/16/70
JR
1V
Portland, OR (Benson Tech)
99
Banchero, Angelo
TE
6-4
205
12/6/71
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (O'Dea)
83
Barnes, Doug
SLB
6-6
220
4/21/73
FR
HS
Carson, CA (Verbum Dei)
21
Barry, Damon
SE
6-1
185
3/27/72
FR
RS
Northglenn, CO (Northglenn)
42
Barry, Jay
TB
5-11
190
10/29/69
JR
2V
Northglenn, CO (Kent/Denver)
67
Battle, Eric
OG
6-2
270
4/14/73
FR
HS
Carson, CA (Banning)
38
Beedle, Nathan
PK
5-11
150
1/19/73
FR
HS
San Diego, CA (Mt. Carmel)
14
Bjornson, Eric
QB
6-5
215
12/15/71
FR
RS
Oakland, CA (Bishop O'Dowd)
31
Bockert, Jeff
ILB
6-4
225
10/29/72
FR
HS
Vancouver, WA (Prairie)
62
Bridge, Todd
OT
6-5
280
8/6/69
JR
SQ
Montesano, WA (Montesano)
3
Brooks, Shermonte
FL
5-11
185
4/10/71
SO
RS
Tacoma, WA (Clover Park/E Wash.)
85
Bruener, Mark
TE
6-5
230
9/16/72
FR
HS
Aberdeen, WA (Weatherwax)
11
Brunell, Mark
QB
6-2
205
9/17/70
JR
1V
Santa Maria, CA (St. Joseph)
29
Bryant, Beno
TB
5-11
178
1/1/71
JR
2V
Los Angeles, CA (Dorsey)
27
Bunch, Brandon
SE
5-11
176
2/21/73
FR
HS
Federal Way, WA (Decatur)
13
Butler, Eric
TB
5-8
170
10/29/72
FR
RS
Osceola, FL (Osceola)
45
o
Butler, Hillary
ILB
6-2
225
1/5/71
SO
1V
Tacoma, WA (Lakes)
73
Calman, Geme
ILB
6-0
221
2/11/73
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (Seattle Prep)
32
Chambers, Richie
WLB
6-2
212
8/31/72
FR
RS
Lake Stevens, WA (Lake Stevens)
53
Clifford, James
ILB
6-2
230
3/23/70
JR
2V
Seattle, WA (Ingraham)
46
Collins, Brett
WLB
6-2
228
10/8/68
SR
3V
Portland, OR (Glencoe)
73
Conlan, Brian
OT
6-6
290
5/7/72
FR
RS
Delta, B.C. (South Delta)
82
Conwell, Ernie
TE
6-3
220
8/17/72
FR
HS
Kent, WA (Kentwood)
24
Cox, Shawn
CB
6-2
180
4/12/70
JR
SQ
Bellevue, WA (Interlake)
97
Crabbe, Jason
PK
5-11
175
1/29/71
JR
SQ
Laguna Beach, CA (Laguna Beach)
79
Cunningham, Ed
C
6-3
285
8/17/69
SR
3V
Alexandria, VA (Mt. Vernon)
40
Davis, Andrew
TB
5-9
180
3/8/70
JR
TR
Spanaway, WA (Spanaway)
37
Derrow, Mike
ILB
6-1
230
8/22/72
FR
RS
Federal Way, WA (Decatur)
43
Devers, Demetrius
ILB
6-0
230
8/30/73
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (Garfield)
68
Dibble, Robb
MG
6-4
220
1/21/71
FR
RS
Bellingham, WA (Bellingham)
76
Disante, John
OT
6-3
280
4/15/73
FR
HS
No. Hollywood, CA (Notre Dame)
10
Doctor, William
CB
5-11
176
5/26/69
SR
3V
El Paso, TX (Andress)
92
Emerson, P.A.
TE
6-4
245
4/20/70
so
1V
Irvine, CA (Woodbridge)
90
Emtman, Steve
DT
6-4
285
4/16/70
JR
2V
Cheney, WA (Cheney)
36
Erwin, Kelii
WLB
6-0
175
6/4/73
FR
HS
Honolulu, HI (Punahou)
88
Ewaliko, Mike
DT
6-4
270
9/21/72
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (Highline)
75
Farr, D'Marco
MG
6-1
265
6/9/71
SO
SQ
San Pablo, CA (Kennedy)
3
Fields, Jaime
WLB
6-0
230
8/28/70
JR
2V
Lynwood, CA (Lynwood)
47
Fountaine, Jamal
SLB
6-3
230
1/29/71
SO
lv
San Francisco, CA (Lincoln)
39
Fraley, Chico
ILB
6-2
217
4/21/69
SR
2V
Rowland Hts., CA (Bishop Amat)
36
Frank, J.J.
FB
5-11
186
3/9/71
JR
SQ
Everett, WA (Everett)
66
Gallagher, Tom
OT
6-5
290
6/4/70
SO
SQ
Puyallup, WA (Puyallup)
65
Garcia, Frank
C
6-1
283
1/28/72
FR
RS
Phoenix, AZ (Maryvale)
17
Gaspard, Curtis
SE
5-11
175
2/23/69
SR
1V
New Orleans, LA (McDonogh 35)
36
Goodwin, Jay
TB
6-0
223
8/12/70
JR
TR
Oakland, CA
11
Green, Darrell
CB
5-7
160
11/26/72
FR
RS
San Francisco, CA (Balboa)
93
Green, Phil
PK
6-3
200
1/30/70
JR
HS
Anchorage, AK (Service)
12
Greenlaw, Scott
CB
6-0
190
11/26/71
FR
HS
Issaquah, WA (Issaquah)
32
Grimes, Charleston
FB
5-11
215
8/8/72
FR
RS
New Orleans, LA (Jesuit)
26
Hairston, Russell
CB
5-11
189
11/14/71
FR
RS
Bellevue, WA (Newport)
5
Hall, Dana
CB
6-3
202
6/8/69
SR
3V
Diamond Bar, CA (Ganesha)
7
Hanson, Travis
PK
6-0
185
3/6/72
so
IV
Spokane, WA (Mead)
20
Harrell, Darren
CB
5-10
190
1/14/69
JR
SQ
Tacoma, WA (Clover Pk/Pierce)
41
Harris, Eugene
TB
5-11
193
3/16/70
JR
SQ
Bellevue, WA (Newport)
79
Highfield, Trevor
MG
6-4
280
12/7/72
FR
HS
West Linn, OR (West Linn)
12
Hobert, Billy Joe
QB/P
6-3
225
1/8/71
so
SQ
Puyallup, WA (Puyallup)
54
Hoffmann, Dave
ILB
6-2
225
6/24/70
JR
2V
San Jose, CA (Pioneer)
91
Hoffmann, Steve
DE
6-6
250
1/16/73
FR
HS
San Jose, CA (Pioneer)
18
Huard, Damon
QB
6-4
210
7/9/73
FR
HS
Puyallup, WA (Puyallup)
24
Huckaby, Eteka
TB
6-1
200
10/2/71
FR
RS
Sunnyvale, CA (Homestead)
54
Hudson, Jeff
OG
6-2
280
9/5/72
FR
RS
Tacoma, WA (Stadium)
49
Humble, Larry
FL
6-0
180
7/7/70
so
SQ
Vancouver, WA (Evergreen)
77
Ilsley, David
OG
6-5
279
9/29/69
JR
SQ
Napa, CA (Vintage)
1
Johnson, Denton
FL
5-8
185
12/11/69
so
SQ
Missouri City, TX (Episcopal)
34
Johnson, Leif
FB
5-11
215
8/31/70
so
IV
Seattle, WA (Kennedy)
48
Jones, Donald
SLB
6-1
230
3/26/69
SR
3V
Gladys, VA (Campbell)
22
Jones, Matt
FB
6-2
215
11/10/70
so
1V
Portland, OR (Central Catholic)
1
Jones, Louis
ROV
6-2
208
2/6/72
FR
RS
Los Angeles, CA (Venice)
56
Kaligis, Pete
OG
6-2
260
6/1/71
SO
SQ
Bellingham, WA (Bellingham)
10
ide
NO
NAME
POS
HT
WT
DOB
YR
EX
HOMETOWN (HIGH SCHOOL/JC)
8
Kaufman, Napoleon
TB
5-9
170
6/7/73
FR
HS
Lompoc, CA (Lompoc)
75
Kennedy, Lincoln
OT
6-7
325
2/12/71
JR
2V
San Diego, CA (Morse)
69
Kesi, Patrick
oT
6-3
305
9/10/73
FR
HS
Honolulu, HI (Farrington)
35
Killpatrick, David
ROV
6-1
208
5/14/72
FR
RS
Anchorage, AK (West)
9
Kralik, Joe
FL
5-10
185
12/14/70
SO
1V
Puyallup, WA (Puyallup)
90
Kuhrau, Clayton
C
6-4
230
1/3/72
FR
RS
Seatle, WA (Roosevelt)
25
Lal, Sanjay
SE
5-11
175
7/23/69
JR
SQ
Los Angeles, CA (Miramonte)
43
Lehman, Larry
FL
6-0
190
3/15/73
FR
HS
Poway, CA (Mt. Carmel)
64
Leick, Scott
oT
6-3
265
3/22/72
FR
RS
Renton, WA (Hazen)
74
Lustyk, Mike
DT
6-3
270
6/24/70
JR
2V
Bellevue, WA (Interlake)
25
Lyons, Lamar
FS
6-3
208
3/25/73
FR
RS
Los Angeles, CA (St. Monica)
6
Mack, Damon
SE
6-0
182
1/11/70
JR
SQ
Gardena, CA (Gardena)
70
Malamala, Siupeli
OT
6-6
310
1/15/69
SR
3V
Kailua, HI (Kalaheo)
78
Marino, Matt
OT
6-0
255
11/14/72
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (Shorecrest)
13
Mason, Andy
DE
6-2
238
8/31/71
so
1V
Longview, WA (Mark Morris)
86
Mays, Shell
DE
6-0
235
8/26/69
SR
SQ
Tacoma, WA (Lincoln)
81
McCarthy, D.J.
FL
5-9
165
7/26/71
so
TR
Boca Raton, FL (B. Raton/L.B. City)
4
McKay, Orlando
FL
5-11
178
10/2/69
SR
2V
Mesa, AZ (Mesa)
39
Mekanik, Ardi
TB
5-10
185
11/17/72
FR
HS
Houston, TX (Stratford)
10
Meyer, Jeff
QB
6-1
170
1/9/73
FR
HS
Granada Hills, CA (Chaminade Prep)
46
Montecucco, Ryan
FB
5-11
180
5/18/71
FR
HS
Olympia, WA (Capital)
7
Moore, Josh
CB
6-1
190
9/29/72
FR
RS
Torrance, CA (West Torrance)
80
Moore, Shaun
TE
6-3
225
8/21/71
so
SQ
Spanaway, WA (Bethel)
16
Nakane, Tom
QB
6-3
198
4/12/70
JR
SQ
Spokane, WA (Gonzaga Prep)
99
Navidi, Keith
DT
6-6
260
7/12/72
FR
RS
Yorba Linda, CA (Esperanza)
20
Neal, Leon
TB
5-9
170
9/11/72
FR
HS
Long Beach, CA (Paramount)
41
Nelson, Eddie
SLB
6-3
217
1/28/72
FR
HS
Tacoma, WA (Lincoln)
52
Nevelle, Jim
OG
6-2
265
1/7/71
SO
SQ
Palmdale, CA (Palmdale)
61
Norman, John
OG
6-2
290
12/26/69
SR
SQ
Battle Ground, WA (Battle Ground)
21
Pahukoa, Shane
FS
6-3
202
11/25/70
JR
2V
Marysville, WA (Marys./Pilchuck)
60
Peterson, Andrew
OG
6-5
290
6/11/72
FR
RS
Port Orchard, WA (South Kitsap)
84
Pierce, Aaron
TE
6-5
240
9/6/69
SR
3V
Seattle, WA (Franklin)
71
Pierson, Pete
OT
6-5
279
2/4/71
SO
SQ
Portland, OR (David Douglas)
66
Pollman, Tyson
DE
6-2
235
6/1/72
FR
RS
Randle, WA (White Pass)
96
Posenecker, Eric
P
5-11
160
12/10/70
FR
RS
Haleiwa, HI (St. Louis)
19
Posey, Dana
FS
5-11
165
5/20/69
SR
SQ
Arlington, WA (Arlington)
23
Redmond, Terry
FL
5-8
170
11/15/71
so
SQ
Novato, CA (Novato)
63
Reiner, David
C
6-6
295
4/14/69
so
SQ
N.Hollywood, CA (Harvard School)
4
Reser, Reggie
CB
5-10
175
1/7/73
FR
HS
Pasadena, CA (John Muir)
27
Robinson, Dante
WLB
6-3
215
1/21/69
JR
RS
Santa Barbara, CA (Santa Barbara)
57
Rodgers, Tyrone
MG
6-3
265
4/27/69
SR
1V
Carson, CA (Banning)
72
Rongen, Kris
OG
6-5
290
8/20/69
SR
SQ
Federal Way, WA (Jefferson)
19
Rosborough, Joel
FL
6-3
180
4/14/73
FR
HS
Long Beach, CA (Jordan)
68
Schilder, Mark
C
6-4
260
10/4/72
FR
HS
Kent, WA (Kent-Meridian)
52
Schmidt, Donovan
SLB
6-3
230
1/16/72
FR
RS
Palm Springs, CA (Palm Springs)
55
Smith, Danianke
DE
6-2
230
4/6/70
JR
IV
Long Beach, CA (Poly)
15
Smith, Tommie
FS
6-2
212
8/7/71
JR
2V
Lancaster, CA (Antelope Valley)
83
Spillinger, Matt
SE
5-10
165
12/4/71
so
SQ
Port Orchard, WA (S. Kitsap)
15
Spring, Travis
SE
5-11
170
12/1/72
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (Franklin)
49
Springstead, Steve
ILB
6-1
220
8/18/70
SO
IV
Lacey, WA (Timberline)
6
Steward, Michael
CB
6-0
175
12/8/72
FR
HS
Long Beach, CA (Wilson)
89
Stuart, Scott
TE
6-4
240
5-20-69
SR
TR
Ridgefield, WA (Prairie)
8
Tailele, Paxton
ROV
6-2
208
9/17/66
SR
1V
Laie, HI (Kahuku/Coll. of Desert)
93
Thomas, Justin
SLB
6-5
230
6/26/73
FR
HS
Spokane, WA (Ferris)
30
Thomas, Richard
FB
5-9
205
3/16/72
FR
HS
Kent, WA (Kentwood)
31
Turner, Darius
FB
6-0
235
1/3/70
JR
2V
Gardena, Calif. (Warren)
45
Ulman, Peter
P
6-1
175
2/7/73
FR
HS
Portland, OR (Jesuit)
28
Washington, Richard
FS
5-11
190
5/28/73
FR
HS
Long Beach, CA (Poly)
42
Weindl, Jaime
ILB
6-2
212
9/28/73
FR
HS
Palo Alto, CA (Palo Alto)
48
Wells, Jay
FB
5-11
225
8/5/71
FR
RS
Arroyo Grande, CA (Arroyo Grande)
98
Werdel, John
P
6-2
188
3/6/71
JR
SQ
Bakersfield, CA (Garces Memorial)
58
Willis, Donald
OG
6-2
330
7/15/73
FR
HS
Lompoc, CA (Cabrillo)
28
Yasutake, Greg
P
5-9
175
2/9/73
FR
HS
Honolulu, HI (Mid-Pacific)
16
Ziegler, Zario
ROV
6-2
202
12/14/71
so
SQ
Lewiston, ID (Highland)
94
Zitkovich, Kevin
SE
5-11
178
4/30/73
FR
HS
Federal Way, WA (Decatur)
HEAD COACH: Don James (Miami, FL, '54) 17th Year (UW Record: Won 143, Lost 54, Tied 2)
ASSISTANT COACHES: Myles Corrigan, Tight Ends; Keith Gilbertson, Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line; Randy Hart, Defensive Line; Jim Lambright, Assistant Head Coach
& Defensive Coordinator/Inside Linebackers; Matt Simon, Running Backs; Larry Slade, Secondary; Chris Tormey, Outside Linebackers; Bill Wentworth, Wide Receivers; Jeff
Woodruff, Quarterbacks.
(Revised 11/25)
11
Rose B)ow1) G-vide
1991 University of Washington Huskies
NO
NAME
POS
PRONOUNCED
NO
NAME
POS
PRONOUNCED
1
Jones, Louis
ROV
43
Devers, Demetrius
ILB
1
Johnson, Denton
FL
43
Lehman, Larry
FL
3
Fields, Jaime
WLB
(HIGH-me)
45
o
Butler, Hillary
ILB
3
Brooks, Shermonte
FL
45
Ulman, Peter
P
4
McKay, Orlando
FL
46
Collins, Brett
WLB
4
Reser, Reggie
CB
46
Montecucco, Ryan
FB
5
Bailey, Mario
SE
(MAH-ree-oh)
47
o
Fountaine, Jamal
SLB
(Juh-Mall fahn-tane)
5
Hall, Dana
CB
48
Jones, Donald
SLB
6
Mack, Damon
SE
48
Wells, Jay
FB
6
Steward, Michael
CB
49
o
Springstead, Steve
ILB
7
Hanson, Travis
PK
49
Humble, Larry
FL
7
Moore, Josh
CB
52
Nevelle, Jim
OG
(Nuh-VELL)
8
D
Tailele, Paxton
ROV
(Tuh-lay-lay)
52
Schmidt, Donovan
DE
8
Kaufman, Napoleon
TB
53
Aselin, Jeff
OG
9
o
Kralik, Joe
FL
(KRAW-lick)
53
Clifford, James
ILB
10
Doctor, William
CB
54
Hoffmann, Dave
ILB
10
Meyer, Jeff
QB
54
Hudson, Jeff
OG
11
Brunell, Mark
QB
(Brew-nell)
55
o
Smith, Danianke
DE
(Duh-KNOCK-un)
11
Green, Darrell
CB
56
Kaligis, Pete
OG
(CAL-uh-gus)
12
Hobert, Billy Joe
QB/P
57
0
(HOE-bert)
Rodgers, Tyrone
MG
12
Greenlaw, Scott
FS
58
Willis, Donald
OG
13
Butler, Eric
TB
60
Peterson, Andrew
OG
13
Mason, Andy
DE
61
Norman, John
OG
14
Bjornson, Eric
QB
(BE-YORN-son)
62
Bridge, Todd
OT
15
Smith, Tommie
FS
63
Reiner, David
C
15
Spring, Travis
SE
64
Leick, Scott
OT
(Like)
16
Nakane, Tom
QB
65
Garcia, Frank
C
16
Ziegler, Zario
ROV
66
Gallagher, Tom
OT
17
Gaspard, Curtis
SE
(GAS-pahrd)
66
Pollman, Tyson
DE
Huard, Damon
67
18
QB
Battle, Eric
OG
68
19
Rosborough, Joel
FL
Dibble, Robb
MG
19
Posey, Dana
FS
68
Schilder, Mark
C
20
Harrell, Darren
CB
69
Kesi, Patrick
OT
20
Neal, Leon
TB
70
Malamala, Siupeli
OT
(Soo-pell-ee MALL-uh-MALL-uh)
21
Barry, Damon
SE
71
Pierson, Pete
OT
21
Pahukoa, Shane
FS
(Pow-uh-KOH-uh)
72
Rongen, Kris
OG
(Wrong-un)
22
0
Jones, Matt
FB
73
Conlan, Brian
OG
23
Bailey, Walter
CB
73
Calman, Geme
ILB
23
Redmond, Terry
FL
74
00
Lustyk, Mike
DT
(LUHS-tick)
24
Cox, Shawn
CB
75
Farr, D'Marco
MG
24
(Uh-TAKE-uh)
75
TB
Kennedy, Lincoln
OT
Huckaby, Eteka
25
Lal, Sanjay
SE
76
Disante, John
OT
25
Lyons, Lamar
FS
77
Ilsley, David
OG
26
Hairston, Russell
CB
78
Marino, Matt
OT
27
Robinson, Dante
WLB
79
Cunningham, Ed
C
27
Bunch, Brandon
SE
79
Highfield, Trevor
MG
28
Washington, Richard
FS
80
Moore, Shaun
TE
28
Yasutake, Greg
P
81
McCarthy, D.J.
FL
29
Bryant, Beno
TB
(Bean-oh)
82
Conwell, Ernie
TE
83
30
Thomas, Richard
FB
Barnes, Doug
SLB
31
00
83
Turner, Darius
FB
Spillinger, Matt
SE
84
...
31
Bockert, Jeff
ILB
Pierce, Aaron
TE
32
Chambers, Richie
WLB
85
Bruener, Mark
TE
(Brew-ner)
86
32
Mays, Shell
DE
Grimes, Charleston
FB
34
FB
(Layf)
88
Johnson, Leif
Bailey, Bruce
TE
88
35
ROV
Ewaliko, Mike
DT
Killpatrick, David
89
36
Goodwin, Jay
TB
Stuart, Scott
TE
36
WLB
90
Erwin, Kelii
Emtman, Steve
DT
FB
90
36
Frank, J.J.
Kuhrau, Clayton
C
ILB
91
Hoffmann, Steve
DE
37
Derrow, Mike
92
o
Emerson, P.A.
TE
38
Beedle, Nathan
PK
39
00
ILB
93
Thomas, Justin
SLB
Fraley, Chico
93
39
TB
Green, Phil
PK
Mekanik, Ardi
40
TB
94
Davis, Andrew
Zitkovich, Kevin
SE
96
41
TB
Posenecker, Eric
P
Harris, Eugene
97
41
Nelson, Eddie
SLB
Crabbe, Jason
PK
42
00
Barry, Jay
TB
98
Werdel, John
P
99
42
Weindl, Jaime
ILB
Banchero, Angelo
TE
99
Navidi, Keith
DT
(NUH-vee-dee)
HEAD COACH: Don James (Miami, FL, '54) 17th Year (UW Record: Won 143, Lost 54, Tied 2)
ASSISTANT COACHES: Myles Corrigan, Tight Ends; Keith Gilbertson, Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line; Randy Hart, Defensive Line; Jim Lambright, Assistant Head Coach
& Defensive Coordinator/Inside Linebackers; Matt Simon, Running Backs; Larry Slade, Secondary; Chris Tormey, Outside Linebackers; Bill Wentworth, Wide Receivers; Jeff
Woodruff, Quarterbacks.
(Revised 11/25)
12
Rose B). W Gwide
Husky Depth Chart
Offense
Defense
SE
5
Mario Bailey (5-9, 168, Sr.)
SLB
48
Donald Jones (6-1, 230, Sr.)
17
Curtis Gaspard (5-11, 175, Sr.)
47
Jamal Fountaine (6-3, 230, So.)
21
Damon Barry (6-1, 185, RS-Fr)
52
Donovan Schmidt (6-3, 230, Fr.)
WT
75
Lincoln Kennedy (6-7, 325, Jr.)
DE
13
Andy Mason (6-2, 238, So.)
66
Tom Gallagher (6-5, 290, So.)
55
Danianke Smith (6-2, 230, Jr.)
MG
57
Tyrone Rodgers (6-3, 265, Sr.)
WG
72
Kris Rongen (6-5, 290, Sr.) or
75
D'Marco Farr (6-1, 265, So.)
60
Andrew Peterson (6-6, 285, RS-Fr.)
DT
90
Steve Emtman (6-4, 280, Jr.)
C
79
Ed Cunningham (6-3, 285, Sr.)
74
Mike Lustyk (6-3, 270, Jr.)
65
Frank Garcia (6-1, 283, RS-Fr.)
WLB
3
Jaime Fields (6-0, 230, Jr.) or
SG
52
Jim Nevelle (6-2, 265, So.)
46
Brett Collins (6-2, 228, Sr.)
56
Pete Kaligis (6-2, 255, So.)
27
Dante Robinson (6-3, 215, Jr.)
ST
70
Siupeli Malamala (6-6, 305, Sr.)
LIB
54
Dave Hoffmann (6-2, 225, Jr.)
71
Pete Pierson (6-5, 279, So.)
53
James Clifford (6-2, 230, Jr.)
77
David Ilsley (6-5, 274, Jr.)
49
Steve Springstead (6-1, 220, So.)
TE
84
Aaron Pierce (6-5, 240, Sr.)
RIB
39
Chico Fraley (6-2, 217, Sr.)
85
Mark Bruener (6-5, 230, Fr.)
45
Hillary Butler (6-2, 225, So.)
88
Bruce Bailey (6-5, 245, Jr.)
37
Mike Derrow (6-1, 230, RS-Fr.)
QB
12
Billy Joe Hobert (6-3, 225, So.)
LC
5
Dana Hall (6-3, 202, Sr.)
11
Mark Brunell (6-2, 205, Jr.)
7
Josh Moore (6-1, 190, RS-Fr.)
14
Eric Bjornson (6-5, 210, RS-Fr.)
RC
23
Walter Bailey (5-11, 190, Jr.)
FB
22
Matt Jones (6-2, 215, So.)
10
William Doctor (5-11, 176, Sr.)
31
Darius Turner (6-0, 235, Jr.) or
26
Russell Hairston (5-11, 180, RS-Fr.)
34
Leif Johnson (5-11, 215, So.)
ROV
15
Tommie Smith (6-2, 212, Jr.)
TB
29
Beno Bryant (5-11, 178, Jr.)
35
Dave Killpatrick (6-1, 208, RS-Fr.)
42
Jay Barry (5-11, 190, Jr.)
FS
21
8
Napoleon Kaufman (5-8, 170, Fr.)
Shane Pahukoa (6-3, 202, Jr.)
1
Louis Jones (6-2, 208, RS-Fr.)
FL
4
Orlando McKay (5-11, 178, Sr.)
25
Lamar Lyons (6-3, 208, RS-Fr.)
9
Joe Kralik (5-10, 173, So.)
6
Damon Mack (6-0, 182, Jr.)
Specialists
PK
7
Travis Hanson (6-0, 185, So.)
KO
97
Jason Crabbe (5-11, 175, Jr.)
H
14
Eric Bjornson (6-5, 210, RS-Fr.)
11
Mark Brunell (6-2, 205, Jr.)
P
98
John Werdel (6-2, 188, Jr.)
12
Billy Joe Hobert (6-3, 225, So.)
PR
29
Beno Bryant (5-11, 178, Jr.)
8
Napoleon Kaufman (5-8, 170 Fr.)
KR
8
Napoleon Kaufman (5-9, 170, Fr.)
42
Jay Barry (5-11, 190, Jr.)
LS
88
Bruce Bailey (6-5, 245, Jr.)
Letters earned.
13
Rose B)ow1) Guide
Husky Players
K-State placed him eighth
has TD catches in
Mario Bailey
SE
5
13 of last 15 games dating back to last year
during that span, has scored 22 TDs in 16 games
Walter Bailey
CB
23
has turned 40 of 48 catches on third down into
5-9
167
SR.
first downs (83%)
of his 131 career catches,
5-11
190
JR.
Seattle, Washington
102 have led to first downs (78%).
Portland, Oregon
1991: A co-captain and a starter at split end in all
Bailey Game-By-Game in 1991
1991: Started nine of 11 games at right cornerback
11 games
leads team with 62 catches for 1,037
OPPONENT
PC
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
earned Pac-10 Second-Team Defense hon-
yards and a school record 17 touchdowns
Stanford
5
54
10.8
1
26t
ors
led club with seven interceptions for 114
garnered Pac-10 Co-Offensive Player of the Year,
Nebraska
7
97
13.9
0
25
Kansas St.
7
22.4
2
7lt
yards
and
two
TDs
first UW defensive back to
157
sharing the honor with Cal's Mike Pawlawski
Arizona
5
89
17.8
2
29t
have seven interceptions since Tony Bonwell did
one of eight Huskies named First-Team All-Pac-
Toledo
6
170
28.3
3
70t
so in 1972
tied for seventh nationally in
10
earned first-team All-America honors voted
California
1
35
35.0
1
35t
interceptions and was second in the Pac-10 be-
by the Football Writers Association of America
Oregon
7
108
15.4
2
29t
ASU
7
139
19.9
1
27
hind UCLA's Carlton Gray
only games he did
considered one of the best receivers in UW
USC
4
37
9.3
0
14
not start this year were against Kansas State and
history
set school marks for single season
Oregon St.
6
79
13.2
3
27t
USC
suffered a sprained ankle early in ASU
receptions (62), single season TD catches (17),
WSU
7
72
10.3
2
20t
game which sent him to the sidelines for the rest
career yards (2,093), career TD receptions (26)
Totals
62
1037
16.7
17
71t
of the game
did not start the following week
and TD catches in a game (3/tied)
scored 102
Career Receiving
at USC but came of the bench to contribute in
points, one of only five players in the nation to
14-3 win over the Trojans
had
31
tackles
this
YEAR
PC
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
break the 100-point plateau in 1991
goes into
1988
4
32
8.0
0
12
season with high of six vs. Oregon and five against
the Rose Bowl with catches in 24 straight games
1989
25
357
14.3
3
31
both USC and Cal
credited with five passes
scored in nine of 11 games with multiple TD
1990
40
667
16.7
6
47t
broken up during the season
totaled two
games against Kansas State (2), Arizona (2), To-
1991
62
1037
16.7
17
71t
fumble recoveries, one at Stanford and one vs.
Totals
131
2093
15.9
26
71t
ledo (3), Oregon (2), Oregon St. (3) and Washing-
ASU
his fumble recovery on kickoff against
ton St. (2)
the only games he failed to score
Bailey's Career Highs
ASU helped set up second UW touchdown in 44-
this year were against Nebraska and USC
16 win
ranked nationally in receiving yards (6th), catches
Receptions- 8 vs. Colorado, 9/29/90
that play came moments after his
interception helped set up UW's first score
(12th/tie) and scoring (5th)
was
first
in
the
Yards 170 VS. Toledo, 10/12/91
his other return for a TD came in the Apple Cup
Pac-10 in yards, third in catches and second in
Touchdowns - 3 vs. Oregon St., 11/16/91; vs.
when he returned a Drew Bledsoe pass 37 yards
scoring
had four 100-yard receiving games
Toledo 10/12/91
for a score in the second quarter to help UW build
with highs of 170 against Toledo and 157 against
Longest Catch - 71 vs. Kansas State, 9/28/91
a 26-7 lead
in all, six of his seven thefts led
Kansas State
the 170 yards VS. Toledo was
Longest Touchdown Reception - 71 vs. Kansas
directly to UW scores (5 TDs, 1 FG)
intercep-
fourth best effort in UW history and 157 vs.
State, 9/28/91
tion at Stanford helped set up key first half score
honored by UW coaching staff as one of three
defensive players of the game at Cal
can also
be called upon for kick return duty and was
credited with three returns early in the year
against Stanford (one) and Nebraska (two).
Career Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT FUM/REC P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1990
5
0
5
0/0
3
2
0/0
0/0
1991
19
12
31
0/2
5
7
1/1
0/0
Totals
24
12
36
0/2
8
9
1/1
0/0
Split end Mario Bailey stretches for one of his school-record 17 touchdown catches.
14
R B). DC2ide
Career Receiving
Jay Barry
YEAR
PC
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Mark Bruener
42
1989
1
1
1.0
0
1
TB
1990
0
0
0.0
0
TE
85
0
5-11
190
JR.
1991
6
75
12.5
1
32t
6-5
230
FR.
Totals
7
76
10.9
1
32t
Northglenn, Colorado
Aberdeen, Washington
(Note:
Attempted
one
pass
vs.
Washington
State,
11/23/91)
1991: Shared starting tailback duties with Beno
1991: One of two true freshman to see playing
Bryant
gave a solid account of himself through-
Barry's Career Highs
time this season
worked as the back-up tight
out the year and finished with 146 carries for 718
Rushing Attempts-20 vs. Oregon, 10/26/91
end to Aaron Pierce and contributed on special
yards and nine rushing TDs
totalled 10 touch-
Rushing Yards vs. California, 10/19/91
teams while appearing in all 11 games
UW
downs on the season, nine rushing and one re-
Longest Run-81 yards vs. Nebraska, 9/21/91
coaches feel he has a very bright future
joined SE Mario Bailey to form only
Longest Scoring Run-81 yards VS. Nebraska, 9/21/91
ceiving
Most Rushing TDs-3 vs. Washington St., 11/17/90
despite having no college experience, he gave a
tandem in UW history to score 10 touchdowns
Most Receptions- vs. ASU, 11/2/91
good account of himself in his first season
apiece in one season
finished seventh in the
grabbed five passes for 57 yards with catches
Pac-10: in rushing and eighth in scoring
started
against Arizona, Toledo, ASU and WSU (2)
four games (Stanford, Nebraska, K-State and
two grabs VS. WSU resulted in 27 yards, including
ASU) and saw significant time in all 11 contests
Mark Brunell
a 17-yarder
had several key blocks during the
could be considered one of the big surprises
for the Huskies this season
displayed tough-
QB
11
year and earned praise from his teammates and
coaching staff
also credited with a Big Hit vs.
ness and durability
big effort against Califor-
6-2
205
JR.
Toledo.
nia showed 19 carries for career best 143 yards
Santa Maria, California
which won him Pac-10 Offensive Player of the
Week honors
scored on a nine-yard run in that
1991: Bounced back from spring knee surgery to
game
also had great effort against Nebraska
play a role in the Huskies' overall success
Beno Bryant
with 11 carries for 110 yards
his
81-yard
missed the first two games against Stanford and
TB
29
fourth quarter run closed the door on the
Nebraska while still rehabilitating his knee
Cornhuskers and it gave the Huskies a 36-21
5-11
178
saw first action in week three against Kansas State
JR.
victory
it was the longest run of his career and
when he took over for Billy Joe Hobert on the
Los Angeles, California
tied the seventh longest TD run in UW history,
final play of the third quarter
played in eight
last achieved in 1977
had big days against
of the final nine games as Hobert's back-up
1991: The Huskies' leading rusher with 158
Oregon (84 yds.) and Stanford (81 yds.; 2 TDs)
only game he did not play was at USC
com-
carries for 943 yards
fourth leading rusher in
added two rushing TDs vs. Kansas State
pleted 26 of 44 passes for 333 yards with four TDs
the Pac-10 and fifth in all-purpose yardage
scored TDs in the first six games before his string
and two interceptions
started
27
drives
and
the three-year letterman alternated as a starter
was snapped against Oregon
UW coaches
the Huskies scored on 10 of those
saw his
with Jay Barry at tailback and the pair more than
chose him as an Offensive Player of the Week
most significant playing time against ASU when
made up for the departure of Greg Lewis
against Nebraska, Cal and USC.
he played most of the second half, completing 8
named to the Pac-10 Honarable Mention Team
of 13 passes for 84 yards
also saw extended
extremely valuable to the Husky offense and
Barry Game-By-Game in 1991
duty at Oregon State
in
limited
time
VS.
special teams
slowed by a knee injury early in
OPPONENT
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Arizona, completed five of seven attempts, two of
the season which he hurt in a preseason scrim-
Stanford
18
87
6
81
4.5
2
23t
which were touchdowns
tossed two addi-
mage
shook off the effects of that to hit the
Nebraska
11
114
4
110
10.0
1
81t
62
0
62
6.9
2
12
tional TDs, a season long of 32 yards VS. Toledo
rushing century mark four times
had a num-
Kansas St.
9
Arizona
13
0
39
3.0
1
13t
and one in the Apple Cup against cross-state rival
ber of outstanding efforts during the year
the
39
Toledo
10
30
1
29
2.9
1
12
WSU
rushed 13 times for 25 yards with a
first came at Nebraska where he ran 17 times for
California
19
154
11
143
7.5
1
35
season high of 18 yards at Oregon State
scored
139 yards and scored a TD in the Huskies' 36-21
Oregon
20
84
0
84
4.2
0
15
Arizona St.
12
22
0
22
1
his lone rushing TD in final vs. WSU when he
come-from-behind win in Lincoln
helped
1.8
5
USC
11
44
4
40
3.6
0
11
scored from five yards out
gives the Huskies
bail the Huskies out at Cal when he broke a 17-
Oregon St.
15
75
5
70
4.7
0
18
a very capable back-up.
17 tie with a 65-yard TD scamper moments after
WSU
8
40
2
38
4.8
1
15
the Golden Bears had tied the score
added
Totals
146
751
33
718
4.9
10
81t
Career Passing
four catches for 51 yards to his effort which won
Career Rushing
YEAR
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
him Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week plau-
1989
12
6
2
57
.500
0
14
dits
had perhaps his brightest moment at
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
1990
253
118
8
1732
.466
14
67
1989
26
100
0
100
3.8
0
12
USC when he ran for a career-best 158 yards on
1991
44
26
2
333
.591
4
32t
1990
20
102
0
102
5.1
3
16
Totals
309
150
12
2122
.485
18
67
26 carries and scored both TDs in Washington's
1991
146
751
33
718
4.9
10
8lt
14-3 victory
one of his scores was a 55-yarder
Totals
192
953
33
920
4.8
13
81t
Career Rushing
gained 127 yards on 24 carries in Apple Cup
win over WSU
chosen as the Pac-10 Co-
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
1989
4
12
0
12
3.0
0
14
Offensive Player of the Week
considered
one
1990
105
547
103
444
4.2
10
47t
of the "big play" performers in the conference
1991
13
36
11
25
1.9
1
15
Totals
122
595
the Huskies' main punt return man with 33 to his
114
481
3.9
11
47t
15
Rose B)o Guide
credit for 267 yards (8.1 avg.) and one TD
his
Bryant Game-By-Game in 1991
Career Rushing
lone TD came on a 53-yard run against Kansas
OPPONENT
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG.
TD
LG
State which helped him tie a Pac-10 record with
Stanford
13
31
9
22
1.7
1
9
1989
4
12
0
12
3.0
0
14
four career TD returns
finished third in the
Nebraska
17
139
0
139
8.2
1
18
1990
73
402
16
386
5.3
5
73t
Pac-10 in punt return yardage
already owns
Kansas St.
14
85
0
85
6.1
1
18
1991
158
973
33
943
6.0
8
65t
Arizona
10
97
4
93
9.3
1
41
Totals
235
the UW career record for punt returns with 834
1387
49
1338
5.7
13
73t
Toledo
12
117
0
117
9.8
0
56
yards
has 2,990 career all-purpose yards which
California
12
104
5
99
8.3
1
65t
Career Receiving
puts him fifth on the all-time UW list
owns
Oregon
11
25
5
20
1.8
0
4
some of the longest scoring runs in UW history
Arizona St.
11
38
3
35
3.2
0
9
YEAR
PC
YDS
AVG.
TD
LG
1989
USC
26
158
0
158
6.1
1
4
2
55t
4.0
0
4
has seven TDs of 50 or more yards, including
1990
7
70
10.0
0
Oregon St.
8
48
0
48
6.0
0
13
23
three on punt returns
the UW coaches named
1991
WSU
131
127
5.3
11
24
92
4
1
39
8.4
0
24
him as one of the Offensive Players of the Week
Totals
158
973
Totals
30
943
6.0
8
19
166
65t
8.7
0
24
for his play vs. Nebraska, Kansas St., Arizona,
Career Punt Returns
Toledo, California, USC and Oregon St.
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG.
TD
LG
1989
1
7
7.0
0
7
1990
36
560
15.6
3
82t
1991
33
267
8.1
1
53t
Totals
70
834
11.9
4
72t
Career All-Purpose Yards
YEAR
RUSH
REC
PUNT
KO
TOTAL
1989
12
4
7
409
432
1990
386
70
560
212
1228
1991
943
92
267
28
1330
Totals
1341
166
834
649
2990
Hillary Butler
ILB
45
6-2,
225
so.
Tacoma, Washington
1991: Made his mark as a key reserve and special
teams player
backed up Chico Fraley at inside
linebacker all year and his great speed made him
one of the top coverage men on special teams
was lauded four times for his play on kicking
teams
despite his reserve status, he still finished
sixth on the team in tackles with 41 stops
was
named a Kicking Team Player of the Week four
times (KSU, Arizona, Cal and OSU)
contrib-
uted a career-best 10 tackles VS. ASU and had
seven VS. Arizona which included five solo stops
had tackles for losses against Arizona and
OSU and shared one against Kansas State.
James Clifford
ILB
53
6-2
230
JR.
Seattle, Washington
1991: Made a nice recovery from 1990 knee
surgery to become a contributor on the Husky
defensive unit
listed second on the depth
behind Dave Hoffmann most of the year but saw
action in all 11 games
finished in the top 10 in
tackles with 32
most productive day came
against Arizona State, as he recorded eight tack-
Beno Bryant, the Pac-10 record holder for most punt-return touchdowns, returns one 53
les and broke up two passes
game action
yards for a score against Kansas State.
16
Rose BowD Gwide
increased as the year moved on
caused
a
game after that he did not kick off was at Califor-
fumble at OSU and also recovered one in the
nia when he did not make the travel squad
was
William Doctor
same game
also had a fumble recovery against
also pressed into duty as the team's placekicker
CB
10
Toledo which led to a Husky first quarter TD
when Hanson was bothered by a bad back against
shared three tackles for loss and also shared asack
Toledo
also shared placekicking duties against
5-11
176
SR.
VS. Arizona
had his first career interecption
Kansas State and Arizona in lopsided UW wins
El Paso, Texas
in the win over Arizona and that also set up a TD
for the year he made 11 of 13 PATs and
credited with a kickoff return of 11 yards at
missed his only field goal attempt from 42 yards
1991: Spent much of the season as Walter Bailey's
Cal
has 219 career tackles to his credit.
named a UW Kicking Team Player of the
back-up at right cornerback but did make two
Week for his efforts against ASU, USC and OSU.
starts during the season against K-State and USC
Career Defensive Statistics
saw duty as the Huskies' first defensive back
YEAR
UT
AT TOTAL FUM/REC P/DEF INT T/LOSS
SACKS
off the bench when team went into nickel defen-
1988
8
11
19
0/0
0
1
0/0
0/0
sive scheme
contributed 13 tackles with a
1989
88
76
164
1/1
5
0
11/22#
2/8
1991
13
23
36
1/2
2
1
2/3.5#
Ed Cunningham
high of four against Kansas State
had three
0.5/2
Totals
109 110 219
2/3
7
2
13/25.5#
2.5/10
C
79
against ASU
his lone interception of the year
# Sacks are included in TFL
came in the end zone against K-State and it led to
6-3
285
SR.
a Husky TD.
Alexandria, Virginia
Brett Collins
46
1991: One of four team co-captains
started all
OLB
11 games, anchoring an offensive line which
6-2
228
SR.
allowed a mere six quarterback sacks on the
season, tops in the Pac-10
earned first team
Portland, Oregon
All-Pac-10 and Pac-10 All-Academic team hon-
ors
named to the GTE All-Academic Team
1991: One of the Husky co-captains
split time
for second straight year
considered one of the
at weakside linebacker with Jaime Fields this
top centers in the nation
consistently graded
season and played in all 11 games with starts in
out as one of the best Husky linemen during the
three of those games (ASU, USC and OSU)
year
was named as a Husky Offensive Player
earned All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention accolades
of the Week a total of seven times
cited with
his 17 tackles were the lowest since his sopho-
a Big Hit at Nebraska by the UW coaches
more season when he had just 17 in a season cut
strong as both a run blocker and pass protector
short to eight games by an elbow injury
play was instrumental in UW setting numer-
slowed early this year with an ankle problem
ous offensive marks this year.
had season high four stops VS. WSU and was
credited with three tackles vs. USC and two each
in wins over Stanford, KSU and Oregon
had
a sack against Kansas State and caused a fumble
in the game
also credited with fumble recov-
ery at Stanford and a Big Hit by the UW coaches
his 118 career tackles include 18 career tack-
les for loss.
Career Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT TOTAL FUM/REC P/DEF INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1988
22
10
32
0/2
0
0
3/31#
1/15
1989
9
8
17
0/0
0
0
2/4#
1/2
1990
29
23
52
1/0
2
0
12/61#
5/31
1991
5
12
17
1/1
0
0
1/7#
1/7
Totals
65
53
118
2/3
2
0
18/103#
8/55
# Sacks are included in TFL
Jason Crabbe
K
97
5-11
175
JR.
Laguna Beach, California
1991: A walk-on that ended up handling kickoff
duties for the Huskies
took over those duties
Brett Collins, one of four co-captains, goes
Ed Cunningham, first team All-Pac-10 se-
full-time against Arizona after Travis Hanson
into pass coverage.
lection, also received Pac-10 All-Academic
handled them in the first three games
the only
honors.
17
Rose BowD Guide
even drewsome Heisman Trophyvotes
earned
coaches for his play against Stanford, Nebraska
Steve Emtman
All-Pac-10 honors and was named the Pac-10
and California and drew praise along with other
90
Defensive Player of the Year
finished second
members of the defensive unit in six other games
DT
on the club with 60 tackles and was one of the
suffered a bruised lower leg against ASU
6-4
280
JR.
major reasons the UW defensive unit was consid-
which kept him off the field for all but a few plays
Cheney, Washington
ered one of the best in the country and nationally
grabbed his first career interception against
ranked in all Division I-A defensive categories
Stanford on the first play in the second half in the
1991: Considered the top defensive lineman in
of his 60 tackles, 19.5 were for losses totalling
opener
also batted down two passes in the win
the country
UW's first consensus All-America
50 yards
recorded six and a half sacks for
won Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week
since Reggie Rogers in 1986
named
to
virtu-
minus 33 yards
was the only Husky player to
honors for his performance against Nebraska
ally every All-America team
won
the
Lombardi
have at least one tackle for loss in all 11 games
when he had eight tackles, including two for
Award and the Outland Trophy
chosen as The
with a high of four vs. Arizona which were part of
losses in the 36-21 come-from-behind win
Football News Defensive Player of the Year
his team-high 10 stops
singled out by the UW
has 36.5 career tackles for loss which ranks eighth
on the all-time UW list
also ranks ninth on the
all-time tackles for loss yardage charts with-137.
Emtman Game-By-Game in 1991
OPPONENT
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
Stanford
1
2
3
0/0
2
1
1.0/1
0/0
Nebraska
5
3
8
0/0
0
0
2.0/2
1/1
Kansas St.
4
1
5
0/0
0
0
2.0/8
1/7
Arizona
6
4
10
0/0
0
0
4.0/9
1/5
Toledo
2
4
6
0/0
0
0
1.0/7.5
1/7.5
California
3
0
3
0/0
0
0
2.0/3
0/0
Oregon
3
1
4
0/0
0
0
2.0/5
1/4
Arizona St.
0
2
2
0/0
0
0
0.5/2.5
0/0
USC
3
2
5
0/0
0
0
1.0/1
0/0
Oregon St.
3
5
8
0/0
0
0
2.0/6
1/5
WSU
1
5
6
0/0
1
0
2.0/5
0.5/3.5
Totals
31
29
60
0/0
3
1
19.5/45
6.5/33
Career Defensive Statistics
OPPONENT
UT AT TOTAL FUM/REC P/DEF INT T/LOSS
SACKS
1989
11
8
19
0/1
0
0
1/2#
0/0
1990
29
26
55
1/1
1
0
16/85#
7.5/63
1991
31
29
60
0/0
3
1 19.5/50# 6.5/33
STATE
Totals
71
63
134
1/2
4
136.5/137#14/96
# Sacks are included in TFL
D'Marco Farr
MG
75
6-1
265
so.
San Pablo, California
1991: Worked primarily as a back-up at middle
guard behind Tyrone Rodgers
had 14 tackles
with a high of four in the opener at Stanford
added three VS. WSU, including a shared tackle
for loss
played in all 11 games and has also
seen some playing time on PAT and field goal
units
gets good inside pressure and has three
and a half sacks this year, one against Toledo and
California and one and a half at Stanford
also
had a tackle for loss against Toledo
recovered
a fumble against Arizona following a sack by
Shane Pahukoa and ran it back 13 yards
batted down a pass at line of scrimmage late in
Nebraska game.
The most-decorated player in University of Washington history, Steve Emtman beats a
Washington State double team on his way to Cougar QB Drew Bledsoe.
18
Rose B) "D Gwide
of those were sacks for -47.5 yards
had an
UW safety
had his lone interception against
Jaime Fields
impressive opening day at Stanford with five
3
Cal and returned it 29 yards and also caused a
OLB
tackles, including three for losses totalling nine
fumble in the game
came up with a fumble
yards
included in that number was a sack for
6-0
230
recovery vs. Arizona.
JR.
minus six yards
productive day in win over
Lynwood, California
WSU with five tackles and two and a half sacks
Career Defensive Statistics
one of those was a sack of Drew Bledsoe in the
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1991: Hard-hitting junior that appeared in all 11
end zone which resulted in a safety
his other
1989
18
18
36
0/0
0
1
5/14#
2/10
games and was the starter at weakside linebacker
sacks came against Nebraska, K-State and Cal
1990
12
8
20
1/0
1
0
8.5/52#
3/36
in eight of those games
shared playing time
1991
17
the play resulted in a 10-yard loss and a fumble
15
32
4/1
4
1
12.5/57.5#
6.5/47.5
Totals
47
41
88
5/1
5
2
26/123.5#
11.5/93.5
with senior Brett Collins and registered 32 tack-
which was recovered by Paxton Tailele and led to
# Sacks are included in TFL
les along with a team-best four caused fumbles
a UW insurance TD which gave the Huskies a
garnered Pac-10 honorable mention status
29-21 fourth quarter lead
caused a fumble
broke up four passes and contributed 12.5
against Toledo which led to a score and forced a
tackles for losses for -57.5 yards
six and a half
fumble in the Oregon State game which led to a
Jamal Fountaine
OLB
47
6-3
230
so.
San Francisco, California
1991: Backed up Donald Jones at strongside
linebacker but still played in all 11 games
was
a contributor on the Husky special teams as well
finished the year with 13 tackles with a high of
three stops against K-State, Toledo and OSU
earned mention from the UW staff for his defen-
sive play against Oregon State and was also cited
for a Big Hit vs. Toledo
had two sacks in the
win over ASU for losses totalling 10 yards
shared a sack vs. Arizona
his fumble recovery
against OSU led to a Husky score.
Chico Fraley
ILB
39
6-2
210
SR.
Rowland Hts., California
1991: Veteran member of the UW defensive unit
that started all 11 games at inside linebacker
opposite Dave Hoffmann named first team
All-Pac-10
finished the year with 42 tackles
which gave him 282 for his UW career
has
probably played more defensive snaps than any
current UW defensive player
cited by the UW
coaches for his play against K-State and was also
honored with the first unit for outstanding play in
39
six other games
has also starred on special
teams in his career and blocked a punt against
Inside linebacker Chico Fraley helped lead the Husky defense which limited opposing
offenses to 67.1 yards per game.
19
Rose Guide
Oregon this fall which led to a field goal
had
two other blocks earlier in his career against
caused
Tom Gallagher
Frank Garcia
Purdue and Florida (both in 1989)
oT
66
C
65
fumbles at Stanford and vs. K-State.
6-5
290
so.
6-1 283 RS-FR.
Career Defensive Statistics
Puyallup, Washington
Phoenix, Arizona
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1988
54
74
128
0/2
3
2°
1/1#
0/0
1991: Spent the year listed as the number two
1991: Played in all 11 games as a backup to
1989
24
23
47
0/0
3
1
3/10#
0/0
weakside tackle behind Lincoln Kennedy
1990
40
25
65
0/3
11
0
12/45#
4.5/25.5
starting center Ed Cunningham along with duty
1991
20
22
42
2/1
2
0
7/17#
2/7
played in eight of 11 games
missed the Cal
on the kickoff return, extra point and field goal
Totals
138
144
282
2/6
19
3°
23/73#
6.5/32.5
and Oregon games with a knee injury and sat out
units
is expected to take over the center
"Includes TD return vs. Army; #Sacks are included in TFL
the USC game
saw a lot of playing time
position next spring should his development con-
against Toledo, ASU and Kansas State when the
tinue as it has in the past year
playing time was
Husky second unit saw extended duty
one of
limited in the first three games before he saw
four former Puyallup players on the UW roster.
extended duty against Toledo in the fifth game
also played a good deal against ASU and OSU
credited with a Big Hit vs. Toledo.
Curtis Gaspard
SE
17
5-11
170
SR.
New Orleans, Louisiana
1991: Played in a number two role behind Mario
Bailey and was the team's third receiver
used
when the Huskies go to three or four wideouts
did make a start against Toledo in Orlando
McKay's absence due to a hip injury
former
walk-on that has made a contribution through
hard work
has grabbed 18 passes for 201 yards
in his career
still looking for his first career TD
made three catches against Stanford and
Toledo and two each VS. Nebraska, Arizona,
Oregon, OSU and WSU.
Dana Hall
CB
5
6-3
202
SR.
Diamond Bar, California
1991: Started all 11 games at left cornerback and
was named first team All-Pac-10
finished
in
a
tie for fourth on the club with 42 tackles and led
the squad in fumble recoveries with three
had
season high seven tackles against both Stanford
and USC and led all secondary personnel with 10
passes broken up, including three VS. Stanford
his fumble recoveries came against Stanford,
Oregon, ASU and OSU
named the Kicking
Team Player of the Week following win over
Stanford
blocked a punt against Oregon State
which resulted in a safety
has always been a
standout on UW special teams and had a blocked
punt against Arizona as a junior
lone intercep-
tion came against Nebraska in a game in which he
was slowed by bruised ribs
credited with two
Cornerback Dana Hall uses his 4.35 speed in the 40-yard dash to thwart opposing receivers.
20
Rose Guide
Big Hits vs. Cal and another vs. Oregon and
over the kickoff duties against Oregon
long
Nebraska.
Travis Hanson
7
kick this year was against Oregon when he made
Career Defensive Statistics
PK
a 44-yarder
also had a 43-yard effort against
Stanford
was successful on 40 of 44 PATs
6-0
185
SO.
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
finished fifth in the Pac-10 in field goals
his 11
1988
27
21
48
0/0
1
0
0/0
0/0
Spokane, Washington
career field goals ranks 9th on the all-time UW
1989
9
11
20
0/0
7
0
0/0
0/0
list.
1990
33
15
48
0/1
6
3 2.5/7.5#
0/0
1991
32
10
42
1/0
10
1 0.5/1#
0/0
1991: Has been Washington's regular placekicker
Totals
101
57
158
1/1
24
4
3/8.5
0/0
most of the season
the only game he missed
Career Kicking Statistics
# Sacks are included in TFL
this year was against Toledo when he was still
YEAR
0-19
20-29
30-39
40-49
50+
PAT
TP
troubled by a back problem
struggled early
1990
0-0
0-0
0-0
3-4
0-0
21-21
30
due to his injury
finished the year with eight
1991
1-1
3-5
2-3
2-6
0-0
40-44
64
Totals
1-1
3-5
2-3
5-10
0-0
61-65
94
of 15 field goals, including three field goals each
against Oregon and ASU
was handling both
kickoffs and placements until Jason Crabbe took
Billy Joe Hobert
QB
12
6-3
225
SO.
Puyallup, Washington
1991: Displayed remarkable poise and maturity
in his first season as the Husky starter
drew
the starting assigment in all 11 games and led the
Huskies to their first unbeaten season since 1916
named honorable mention All-Pac-10 team
proved to be one of the most productive
sophomore quarterbacks in UW history
his
2271 passing yards were most for a sophomore
since Sonny Sixkiller in 1970 (2,303)
finished
the year with 173 completions in 285 attempts for
2,271 yards with 22 TDs and just 10 interceptions
finished second in the conference in passing
and fourth in total offense
also ranked nation-
ally in passing (13th) and total offense (22nd)
his 22 TDs set a new UW record, breaking the old
mark of 20 by Chris Chandler in 1986
his
passing ability added another dimension to the
UW offensive scheme and it helped the Huskies
set new school marks for most points, most total
yards, most first downs and most TDs
was the
first QB to pass for more than 60 percent (.607)
since Steve Pelluer did so in 1983 (.673)
was
one of the top passers in the country despite
never having started a game prior to this season
directed the Huskies on 121 drives and the
team scored on 53 of those, including 47 TDs
won Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week honors
for his effort against Stanford in his first start
when he completed 21 of 31 for 244 yards with
two TDs
came back two weeks later to win the
award again with a strong effort at Nebraska
when he hit on 23 of 40 for 283 yards and led a
UW comeback from 21-9 down to a 36-21 sec-
ond half win
ran for two scores at Nebraska
named ABC-TV's Chevrolet Player of the
Game for UW following wins over Stanford and
Nebraska
tossed four TDs in win at Oregon
State and three more in victories over K-State,
Oregon, Toledo and WSU
completed 70
Record-setting sophomore signal caller Billy Joe Hobert rolls away from pressure in
percent of his tosses on three occasions (OSU,
Washington's 29-7 win over Oregon.
Toledo and K-State) and failed to complete 50
21
Rose Guide
Dave Hoffmann
LB
54
6-2
220
JR.
San Jose, California
1991: One of the leaders of the Husky defense
led the club in tackles for the second straight
year with 71 stops named to the Football
Writers Association of America All-America team
is the first UW All-America linebacker since
Tony Caldwell and Mark Stewart earned those
plaudits in 1982
named a first team All-Pac-10
selection as well
always seems to be around
the football and plays with controlled intensity on
the field
has a knack for coming up with a key
play in every game and is always at his best in big
games
top tackle effort was against WSU with
12
had outstanding effort against USC with 10
tackles earning him Pac-10 Defensive Player of
the Week honors
included in his 10 tackles
were five for losses totalling 30 yards and of those
five, two were sacks for -20 yards
credited
with nine stops at Cal and eight vs. Stanford and
Nebraska
Dave Hoffmann, who led the Huskies in tackles, drops back into pass coverage during last
had 16.5 tackles for loss during the
year's Rose Bowl win.
year and those put him second on the Huskies
in addition to his five vs. USC, he had three
against Stanford
caused three fumbles and
percent of his passes just two times (Arizona and
Career Passing
broke up four passes
had a fumble recovery
USC)
rushed for five TDs
averaged over
YEAR
PA
PC
YDS
PCT
INT
TD
LG
against Stanford and his lone interception came
200 yards a game in total offense with a high of
1990
6
4
41
.667
0
0
23
against Nebraska and he returned it 25 yards to
318 vs. Nebraska
when he was at the helm of
1991
285
173
2271
.607
10
22
71t
squelch a final Nebraska threat late in the fourth
the UW offense, the team converted 65 of 125
Totals
291
177
2312
.608
10
22
71t
quarter
cited by the UW staff for play against
third down conversions (52%)
singled out by
Career Rushing
Stanford and also as a member of the number one
the UW coaches for his play against Nebraska,
defense in six other games.
Kansas State, Toledo, ASU and OSU
can also
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG.
TD
LG
1990
12
109
4
105
8.8
1
35
be called upon to punt for the Huskies as he did
1991
33
117
61
56
1.7
5
19
Career Defensive Statistics
earlier this year in the first four games before
Totals
45
226
65
161
3.6
6
35
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
giving way to John Werdel
averaged 38.3 on
1989
25 26
51
0/0
0
0
4/13#
1/6
16 kicks with a 59-yarder to his credit against
Hobert's Career Highs
1990
48 31
79
3/1
4
0
7/43.5#
2.5/15.5
1991
39 32
71
3/1
4
Stanford.
Passes Attempted - 40 VS. Nebraska, 9/21/91
1 16.5/65.5#
3/24
Totals 112 89 201
6/2
8
1 27.5/122# 6.5/45.5
Passes Completed - 23 vs. Nebraska, 9/21/91;
# Sacks are included in TFL
Hobert Game-By-Game
vs. Oregon, 10/26/91
Passing in 1991
Passing Yards - 283 vs. Nebraska, 9/21/91
OPPONENT
PA
PC
YDS
PCT
INT
TD
LG
TD Passes - 4 VS. Oregon St., 11/16/91
Stanford
31
21
244
.677
I
2
30
Leif Johnson
Nebraska
40
23
283
.575
2
1
25
Longest Pass - 71 yards to Mario Bailey VS. K-
34
Kansas St.
18
13
234
.722
0
3
71t
State, 9/28/91
FB
Arizona
15
5
72
.333
0
0
21
1
3
70t
Rushing Attempts - 7 vs. Nebraska, 9/21/91
5-11
203
so.
Toledo
17
12
220
.706
California
34
15
189
.441
1
1
35t
Rushing Yards - 35 VS. Nebraska, 9/21/91
Seattle, Washington
Oregon
36
23
256
.639
2
3
29t
Arizona St
24
17
228
.708
0
2
35
Longest Run - 19 vs. Nebraska, 9/21/91
25
14
.560
2
0
15
Total Offense - 318 VS. Nebraska, 9/21/91
1991: Saw duty as both a reserve fullback and
USC
119
Oregon St.
19
14
190
.737
0
4
27t
special teams performer for the Huskies
played
WSU
26
16
236
.615
1
3
69t
in all 11 games
rushed 17 times for 100 yards
Totals
285
173
2271
.697
10
22
71t
while working as the number two and number
three fullback
one of the top kick coverage
players with 14 tackles to his credit
best effort
was three stops vs. WSU
had two stops in four
games and was given credit for causing a fumble
22
Rose W Guide
against ASU on a kickoff which was recovered by
against WSU
is considered Washington's best
Walter Bailey and led to a UW first period TD
Donald Jones
rusher among linebackers
has 33.5 tackles for
also had a recovery against Arizona
saw his
most extensive action as a running back against
OLB
48
loss in his career among his 81 career tackles and
of those 33.5, 20.5 are QB sacks resulting in 139
ASU
best effort as a runner was against
6-1
230
SR.
yards in losses
ranks eighth on the all-time list
Toledo when he ran four times for 35 yards,
Gladys, Virginia
for career tackles for loss and sixth in yards lost
including a 23-yarder
lone career TD came in
(183.5)
caused a fumble in win over WSU.
opener at Stanford when he ran 12 yards for a TD
1991: Husky co-captain and a starter in all 11
in the final period
honored as a Kicking
games at strongside linebacker
tackle totals
Career Defensive Statistics
Teams Player of the Week against K-State.
were down slightly from previous season but was
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
still a force to be reckoned with
compiled 30
1989
9
9
18
1/0
0
0
9/51#
6/35
tackles and nearly half of those were for losses
1990
17 16 33
1/0
2
0
10/60.5#
6/56.5
1991
19 11 30
3/0
0
0
14.5/72#
8.5/47.5
(14.5)
had tackles for loss in seven of 11 games
Totals 45 36 81
5/0
2
0
33.5/183.5#
20.5138
with a high of four vs. K-State
three of those
# Sacks are included in TFL
four were QB sacks
had two sacks in the finale
Matt Jones
FB
22
6-2
215
so.
Portland, Oregon
1991: Started all 11 games at fullback
carried
the ball just 43 times for 222 yards
named
honorable mention All-Pac-10
made
strides
as a blocker and also showed promise as a re-
ceiver with 14 catches for 131 yards
will
probably be best remembered for his run from
punt formation in the win over USC
faced
with a fourth and four from the USC 38, the
Huskies short snapped to the blocking back Jones,
who ran for eight yards and a first down
the
Huskies went on to score a key TD
busiest day
came against Nebraska when he ran eight times
for 37 yards
most productive afternoon was
49-yard effort VS. Oregon which included a 36-
yard burst
scored TDs against Arizona and
Toledo
has lost just one yard in his brief UW
career on 62 attempts and that one yard came
against Oregon
earned plaudits as a UW
Offensive Player of the Week for his effort in wins
over Stanford, K-State, Toledo and OSU.
Career Rushing
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG.
TD
LG
1990
19
158
0
158
8.3
3
39t
1991
43
223
1
222
5.2
2
36
Totals
62
381
I
380
6.1
5
39t
Career Receiving
YEAR
PC
YDS
AVG.
TD
LG
1990
4
27
6.8
0
0
1991
14
131
9.4
0
20
Totals
18
158
8.8
0
20
A senior outside linebacker, Donald Jones garnered first-team All-Pac-10 honors for the
second consecutive year.
23
Rose Guide
reserve role against WSU
named a UW Of-
Louis Jones
FS
1
Pete Kaligis
56
fensive Player of the Week for his effort against
OG
Nebraska, K-State, Arizona, Toledo and Oregon
6-2 208 RS-FR.
rest prior to Rose Bowl should help him get
6-2
260
so.
ready for the date with Michigan
considered
Los Angeles, California
Bellingham, Washington
the strongest player on the Huskies with a bench
press over 500 pounds.
1991: Hard-hitting red-shirt freshman who ap-
1991: A nagging knee problem limited his play-
peared in all 11 games as a reserve at safety and
ing time during several parts of the season
was
special teams player backed up Shane Pahukoa
the starter at strongside guard against Stanford
most of the season after starting the year as a
and Nebraska before knee woes forced him to
reserve at roverback (strong safety)
versatility
miss the K-State game
returned
Napoleon Kaufman
to
start
the
allows him to play either spot finished
the
year
Toledo and Cal games before sharing time with
TB
with 19 tackles with a high of six vs. Oregon State
Jim Nevelle against Oregon and ASU, although
5-9
170
FR.
had four against ASU and Toledo
grabbed
he did start the latter game
missed the USC
Lompoc, California
his first career interception in the Oregon game.
and Oregon State games before returning in a
1991: Promising true freshman back that ap-
peared in all 11 games for the Huskies
was
listed as the third tailback and was also utilized as
a kick returner for the squad
one of the most
highly sought after players to ever enroll at Wash-
ington and showed flashes of his outstanding
potential in his limited time this year
has
exceptional speed and cutting ability
third
leading rusher on the Huskies with 67 carries for
307 yards with four TDs
best day came against
Arizona when he gained 71 yards on nine carries
had 59 on 11 rushes vs. ASU and 50 yards on
12 carries against OSU
added five catches for
39 yards
scored his first collegiate TD on a
three-yard fourth quarter run VS. K-State
scored on two short runs vs. OSU and also against
Arizona
returned eight punts for 66 yards
with a long of 16 vs. ASU and OSU and had seven
kickoff returns for 119 yards with a long of 25
against OSU.
Career Rushing
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG.
TD
LG
1991
67
331
24
307
4.6
4
19
Career Receiving
YEAR
PC
YDS
AVG.
TD
LG
1991
5
39
7.8
0
17
Additional Career Statistics: 8 punt returns
for 66 yards (8.3); 7 kickoff returns for 119 yards
(17.0).
Lincoln Kennedy
OT
75
6-7
325
JR.
San Diego, California
1991: Started all 11 games at weakside tackle
made the move full-time to tackle this year after
spending his sophomore year at both guard and
tackle
garnered first team All-Pac-10 honors
his consistent play was instrumental in UW
At 6-7, 325 pounds, offensive guard Lincoln Kennedy helped the Husky offense average
setting several school offensive records
coaches
almost 42 points per contest.
24
Rose B) Garide
chose him as an Offensive Player of the Week
for loss for -67 yards which was also second best
following victories over Stanford, Arizona, To-
Mike Lustyk
ledo, K-State, Oregon, OSU and California
74
credited with a tackle for loss in every game
earned high grades for his effort in the win at
DT
but one (Oregon) and had sacks in seven outings
with a high of two against K-State (-14 yds.) and
California
also earned Big Hit Award from
6-3
270
JR.
WSU
(-10
yds.)
season best of six tackles
coaches for plays against Nebraska, Cal and
Bellevue, Washington
came against Cal and OSU
recovered
a
fumble
Oregon
one of the biggest tackles in the
on a Tommie Smith hit against Arizona which
country
at
6-7,
325
pounds
should rank as one
1991: Listed as the number two defensive tackle
helped set up a 13-yard TD run by Jay Barry in
of the top linemen in the nation in 1992.
behind Steve Emtman
played in the first two
the
opening
period
made
five
tackles
and
games before suffering a knee injury (left knee)
blocked an Iowa punt in the Rose Bowl last year.
vs. Kansas St. which required arthroscopic sur-
gery in early October
missed
the
next
three
Career Defensive Statistics
David Killpatrick
35
games before returning for the Oregon game
YEAR
UT AT TOTFUM/REC P/DEF INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
played in seven games overall and had four tack-
1990
13
7
20
1/0
0
0
4/13.5#
2.5/14.5
SS
les
those came against OSU (2), Stanford and
1991
21
19
40
0/1
0
0
15.5/67#
8/50
6-1 208 RS-FR.
Totals
34
26
60
1/1
0 0 19.5/80.5# 10.5/64.5#
WSU
is also capable of playing middle guard
Anchorage, Alaska
# Sacks are included in TFL
and has worked at that position.
1991: Worked as both a reserve in the secondary
and as a special teams performer
was listed
number two at strong safety at the close of the
Siupeli Malamala
Orlando McKay
season where he was neck and neck with Paxton
Tailele
credited with 17 tackles with a high of
OT
70
FL
4
5-11
178
SR.
four against Oregon St.
two of those were for
6-6 310 SR.
Mesa, Arizona
losses totalling 10 yards
credited with a Big
Kailua, Hawaii
Hit by the coaches for a play against Arizona.
1991: Started 10 of 11 games at flanker opposite
1991: Starting strongside tackle for the Huskies
Mario Bailey and gave the Huskies a strong 1-2
started 10 of 11 games with his lone miss
receiving punch
turned in a solid senior sea-
coming against ASU when he was out with a knee
son with a career best 47 catches for 627 yards
Joe Kralik
injury suffered against Oregon
named
second
with
six
TDs
9
twice hit the century mark with
team
All-Pac-10
FL
one of the most experienced
a season best 110 yards on five grabs VS. WSU
players on the Husky offensive line with nearly
5-10 185 so.
including a 69-yard catch and run for a score early
three years starting experience under his belt
Puyallup, Washington
in the opening period
it was the longest TD
won Offensive Player of the Week mention from
catch of his career
the only game he missed
the coaching staff for his effort against Stanford,
was against Toledo when he was out with a hip
1991: Had his season limited to six games due to
Cal, Oregon, K-State and Oregon State
part
injury
caught a pass in all 10 games he played
a broken hand which he suffered in the week
of an offensive unit that helped set numerous
and goes into the Rose Bowl with catches in 22
prior to the Nebraska game
missed
four
scoring and total offense marks in 1991.
straight games
a track performer with excep-
games before returning against California
tional speed which makes him a threat whenever
finished with three catches for the year with one
he gets in the open field
his nine catches for
grab against Stanford, ASU and OSU
teamed
105 yards against Oregon were his most catches
up with former prep teammate, Billy Joe Hobert,
Andy Mason
ever in a game
made two critical catches
on 20-yard scoring toss at Stanford
listed
DE
13
against
Nebraska
caught an eight-yard scor-
second on the depth chart behind Orlando McKay
has five career catches, including two last year
6-2
238
so.
ing toss from Billy Joe Hobert in the fourth
quarter at Nebraska which put the Huskies on
for 13 yards.
Longview, Washington
top, 22-21, in their win at Lincoln
moments
earlier, he had a critical fourth and eight catch
1991: Gave a good account of himself in his first
from the Nebraska 30 which picked up 15 yards
season as a starter
started 10 of 11 games and
and led to a Beno Bryant TD on the next play
finished seventh in tackles with 40
the
only
which made it 21-16
chosen as a UW Offen-
game he did not start was against K-State when
sive Player of the Week for his play against
Danianke Smith earned the start
the two had
Stanford, Nebraska, K-State, ASU, OSU and
staged a close battle for the starting berth through-
WSU
his 96 career catches ranks seventh on
out the season
finished just a half a sack shy of
the all-time list and his 1,407 yards also ranks
leading the team in that category (Donald Jones
seventh.
led with 8.5)
for the season had 15.5 tackles
25
Rose B) Guide
McKay Game-By-Game in 1991
Kaligis battled knee problems
made his first
OPPONENT
PC
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Josh Moore
Stanford
7
67
9.6
0
CB
7
start against Kansas State and started the follow-
18
ing week against Arizona
his other starts came
Nebraska
6
67
11.2
1
17
against Oregon, USC, OSU and WSU
drew
Kansas St.
4
79
19.8
1
28t
6-1 190 RS-FR.
Arizona
1
11
11.0
0
11
high marks from the UW coaches for his play
Toledo
Torrance, California
Did Not Play
against Cal and Oregon St
originally came to
California
2
14
7.0
0
8
UW as a center before moving to guard.
Oregon
9
105
11.7
1
17
1991: Saw action in all 11 games in a reserve
ASU
5
73
14.6
1
35
USC
3
30
10.0
0
15
capacity at cornerback where he was listed num-
Oregon St.
5
71
14.2
1
18t
ber two behind Dana Hall
utilized when the
WSU
5
110
22.0
1
69t
Huskies were in pass siuations and also when the
Shane Pahukoa
Totals
47
627
13.3
6
69t
second unit was in the game
also
played
with
21
some of the kicking teams
was listed third
FS
Career Receiving
early in the year but his strong play elevated him
6-3
202
JR.
YEAR
PC
YDS
AVG.
TD
LG
to the back-up slot much of the latter part of the
Marysville, Washington
1988
0
0
0.0
0
0
1989
30
443
14.8
4
44
year
appears to have the ability to be a future
1990
19
337
15.9
3
47
contributor
made six tackles and broke up two
1991: Grabbed the starting free safety spot in the
1991
47
627
13.3
6
69t
passes
his first career theft came against
spring and held it with solid play throughout the
Totals
96
1407
14.7
13
69t
Stanford and it led to a UW touchdown
his
year
Husky coaches felt he improved each
McKay's Career Highs
second came late in the fourth quarter against K-
week during the season
claimed second team
State.
All-Pac-Ten honors
led all secondary person-
Receptions - 9 vs. Oregon, 10/26/91
nel with 57 tackles which was also third best on
Yards - 120 vs. Arizona, 9/23/89
the club
may be the hardest hitter in the UW
Touchdowns - 1 several times
secondary
had three Big Hit Awards during
Longest Catch - 69 yards VS. Washington St.,
Jim Nevelle
the year
11/23/91
OG
52
had a career-high nine tackles against
Oregon and made eight stops against WSU and
Longest Touchdown Reception - 69 yards vs.
seven
against
Cal
broke up six passes and
6-2
265
so.
Washington St., 11/23/91
intercepted three passes
made a crucial end
Palmdale, California
zone interception late in the second period at
USC which thwarted a Trojan scoring drive
1991: Shared the starting strongside guard spot
his others were against K-State and Oregon
with Pete Kaligis
started six of 11 games
had a big sack against Arizona which resulted in
played in a reserve role early in the year but his
a fumble and a 13-yard return by D'Marco Farr
playing time increased as the year moved on as
late in the second quarter
finished with three
caused fumbles and one recovery (Toledo).
Career Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1989
11
4
15
0/0
0
1
0/0
0/0
1990
14
7
21
0/0
4
1
1/4
0/0
1991
30
27
57
3/1
6
3 1.5/7# 1/6
Totals
55
38
93
3/1
10
5 2.5/11# 1/6
# Sacks are included in TFL
I
Andrew Peterson
OG
60
6-5 290 RS-FR.
Port Orchard, Washington
1991: Talented red-shirt freshman that played in
a reserve capacity in 10 of 11 games at weakside
guard
did not play at California
backed up
Kris Rongen and will go into Rose Bowl listed
number two at that spot
saw extended playing
time in the latter stages of the season as he gained
more game experience
has the size and ability
to become a starter in the near future.
Flanker Orlando McKay looks back at a defender en route to a 69-yard touchdown.
26
Rose
Aaron Pierce
84
Dante Robinson
LB
27
Kris Rongen
TE
OG
72
6-5
240
SR.
6-3
215
JR.
6-5
290
SR.
Seattle, Washington
Santa Barbara, California
Federal Way, Washington
1991: Started all 11 games at tight end
1991: Former walk-on who won his first letter as
1991: Broke into the starting lineup during spring
benefitted from increased emphasis on passing
a key member of the Husky special teams and as
drills and started all 11 games at weakside guard
game by catching career high 23 passes for 280
a reserve linebacker
originally was a safety at
had never started a game prior to this season
yards
named second-team All-Pac-10 selec-
UW before moving to linebacker
credited
his previous years at Washington had seen
tion
however, did not score a touchdown after
with 17 tackles with highs of three against Ari-
him play tackle and center in addition to guard
grabbing four his junior season
best effort was
zona,
ASU
and
WSU
caused a fumble against
provided steady play in the offensive line as
at Cal when he caught four for 44 yards
had
Washington State late in the fourth quarter which
the Huskies set a number of school offensive
three catches in three other starts against Ne-
was recovered by Mike Derrow in 56-21 UW win
marks
had one of his best games in win at
braska, USC and OSU
won plaudits from the
had two tackles for loss during the season
California when he was cited as a Husky Offen-
UW staff for his play against K-State, Cal, Oregon
against Arizona and ASU
his first career
sive Player of the Week
also lauded for his
and OSU when he was one of the team's Offen-
interception against Toledo helped set up a Husky
play against Oregon State and Kansas State.
sive Players of the Week
had four catches in
TD pass by Mark Brunell.
the 1991 Rose Bowl against win over Iowa.
Career Receiving
Danianke Smith
YEAR
PC
YDS
AVG.
TD
LG
1988
6
102
17.0
0
33
Tyrone Rodgers
2
5.5
I
57
DE
55
1989
11
6
MG
6-2
230
1990
16
JR.
191
11.9
4
39
6-3
265
SR.
1991
23
280
12.2
0
30
Long Beach, California
Totals
47
584
12.4
5
39
Carson, California
Pierce's Career Highs
1991: Started just one game at defensive end,
1991: The Husky starter in all 11 games at
but was a valuable reserve, appearing in all 11
Receptions - 4 vs. Arizona, 11/3/90; Iowa,
middle
guard
finished the campaign with 29
games
shared much of the playing time at his
1/1/91 and Cal, 10/19/91
tackles, including nine and a half tackles for losses
spot with Andy Mason
finished with 21 tackles
Yards - 66 vs. Arizona, 11/3/90
for -25 yards
earned honorable mention All-
for the year
also recovered two fumbles,
Touchdowns - 2 vs. Washington St., 11/17/90
Pac-10 accolades
one of those was a sack for
broke up a pass and had one and a half tackles for
Longest Catch - 39 yards vs. Arizona, 11/3/90
minus three yards
although a first-year starter,
loss
his lone start came against Kansas State,
he provided steady play in the middle and was
in which he tallied three tackles
his first
Longest Touchdown Reception -34 yards vs.
one of the reasons the Huskies were among the
Washington St., 11/17/90
fumble recovery came against Arizona and it led
national leaders in rushing and total defense
to a UW score by Beno Bryant
his other
had his best tackle effort at USC when he had five
recovery was against Oregon State
honored
as
stops in win over the Trojans
it
also
included
one of the UW Defensive Players of the Week
Pete Pierson
two for losses totalling five yards
had two and
following the game
credited with a tackle for
71
a half tackles for losses against Oregon
shared
loss against Toledo
won mention from UW
OT
sacks against Arizona and ASU
had his lone
coaches for his kicking team play against Oregon.
6-5
279
SO.
fumble recovery against the Wildcats.
Portland, Oregon
Career Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1991: Proved to be a valuable backup when he
Tommie Smith
1990
11
10
21
0/2
0
0
4/23.5#
3/20.5
stepped in as a starter for Siupeli Malamala at
1991
10
19
29
0/1
0
0
9.5/25.0#
1/3
SS
15
strongside tackle against Arizona State
Totals
21
19
50
0/3
0
0
gave a
13.5/48.5#
4/23.5
6-2
212
JR.
good account of himself in his first varsity start
# Sacks are included in TFL
Antelope Valley, California
worked at both strongside guard and tackle dur-
ing the year and is capable of playing either
position
got his first extended playing time
1991: Began the year as a reserve behind Shane
against Toledo when he played nearly three quar-
Pahukoa, but quickly returned to the starting
lineup following the third game
made
his
first
ters of the game for Malamala and won mention
as an Offensive Player of the Week
also saw a
start against Arizona at strong safety and stayed in
member
the starting lineup the rest of the way
missed
lot of playing time against Oregon
a
of the Husky PAT and field goal units
spring ball last year which forced him to play
experi-
ence this season should bode well for him in the
catch-up during early fall drills
one of the
future.
most talented players on the UW club and a one
that makes things happen when he is on the field
despite his slow start, he still managed to
finish eighth in tackles with 37
he also caused
27
Rose Gwide
a fumble (Arizona), broke up two passes and
contributed six and a half tackles for losses for -
Darius Turner
25 yards which included two sacks
31
John Werdel
made one
interception but it was a memorable one
FB
P
98
picked off a Drew Bledsoe pass vs. WSU at the
6-0
235
JR.
6-2
188
JR.
Husky five-yard line and returned it 86 yards to
Gardena, California
Bakersfield, California
thwart a WSU score
four plays later, the
Huskies scored to up the margin to 42-14
it
1991: Failed to start a game for the first time in
1991: Won his first letter by virtue of being the
was fifth longest return in UW history
also
his UW career
troubled early in the year with
team's regular punter over the last seven games
excelled on special teams and was honored three
a back problem which almost made him ques-
turned in a strong performance in his first year
times as a UW Kicking Team Player of the Week
tionable for the season
missed the Stanford
in that role
the walk-on averaged a solid 40.8
blocked a punt against Oregon which was the
game and then saw brief kicking team action
yards per punt for 31 kicks
his 31 punts were
second of his career (first was vs. USC in 1989)
against Nebraska before seeing his first duty at
not enough to qualify him for ranking in the Pac-
was also used on kickoff returns and had eight for
fullback against K-State
playing time increased
10 although his average would have placed him
136 yards with a long of 40 vs. K-State.
as he worked himself back into football condition
second behind WSU's Jason Hanson
the only
listed as number two fullback going into the
games he did not punt were at Nebraska and
Career Defensive Statistics
Rose Bowl
starting experience and blocking
against
Kansas
St
his
best
(and
busiest)
after-
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
ability make him a tough player to overlook
noon came at California when he averaged 43.3
1989
5
2
7
0/0
0
0
0/0
0/0
carried the ball just 23 times for 83 yards and
on seven kicks, including a 51-yarder
aver-
1990
40 21
61
2/0
3
4
4.5/17#
0.5/3.5
scored twice
also caught three passes for 22
aged 49.5 on two punts vs. Arizona
long
kick
1991
20
17
37
1/0
2
1
6.5/25#
2/11
Totals
65
105
3/0
5
yards with one of those being a four-yard pass
was 58 yards vs. Toledo
his
first
punt
of
the
40
5
11/42#
2.5/14.5
# Sacks are included in TFL
from Billy Joe Hobert against WSU which was
year travelled 49 yards at Stanford had one
(Note: Has a blocked punt vs. USC, 1989; VS. Oregon, 1991; interception
the first of his career
three rushes produced
kick blocked vs. Oregon
is
a
former
UW
VS. Iowa in Rose Bowl)
25 yards against Oregon which was a season best
quarterback that returned to football this season
his rushing TDs came against ASU and OSU
after a year away.
earned a Big Hit Award vs. OSU.
Career Statistics
Paxton Tailele
SS
8
Career Rushing
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
LG
BLK
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG.
TD
LG
1991
31
1266
40.8
58
1
6-2
208
SR.
1989
22
93
0
93
4.2
2
21
1990
45
180
7
173
3.8
2
19
Laie, Hawaii
1991
23
84
1
83
3.6
2
18
Totals
90
357
9
349
3.9
6
21
1991: Played as both a starter and reserve during
Career Receiving
the year
made starts in the first three games of
the season at strong safety before Tommie Smith
YEAR
PC
YDS
AVG.
TD
LG
1989
4
23
5.8
0
9
moved into the starter's spot
suffered a bro-
1990
3
23
7.7
0
9
ken left thumb against Oregon which sidelined
1991
3
22
7.3
1
11
him for the next four games
was
ready
for
the
Totals
10
68
6.8
1
11
last two games vs. OSU and WSU but did not play
is expected to be at full strength at the Rose
Bowl
season total were 20 tackles, including
five against Nebraska and Kansas State
had
three tackles for loss for -11 yards and one sack
for minus four (vs. Arizona)
came up with a
big fumble recovery against Nebraska when he
fell on a loose ball following a sack by Jaime Fields
which led to a UW insurance TD (29-21)
the
UW coaches awarded him with two Big Hits vs.
Stanford in the opener.
Junior strong safety Tommie Smith finished eighth on the squad with 37 tackles.
28
Rose B). Guide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 42, Stanford 7
(9/2/91)
1. Florida State
10. Houston
19. Michigan State
At Stanford Stadium
238 total net yards and a mere 28 yards on
2. Michigan
11. Tennessee
20. Alabama
3. Miami
(Palo Alto, CA)
the ground. Stanford Heisman Trophy can-
12. Colorado
21. Texas A&M
didate Glyn Milburn, who managed only 16
4. Washington
13. Texas
22. Ohio State
5. Penn State
14. Nebraska
23. UCLA
September 7, 1991
yards on 11 carries, was unable to penetrate
6. Florida
15. Iowa
24. Syracuse
Weather: Clear and 70 degrees
the dominating pursuit of the Husky de-
7. Notre Dame
16. Southern Cal
25. Brigham Young
S. Clemson
17. Georgia Tech
Attendance: 45,273
fense. On the day, Stanford was forced into
9. Oklahoma
18. Auburn
six turnovers, committing three fumbles
and throwing three interceptions.
Game Summary
After a scoreless first quarter, Washington
Sophomore quarterback Billy Joe Hobert
converted a trio of short drives for touch-
staged a successful starting debut, throwing
downs in the second quarter. Jay Barry, in
for 244 yards and two touchdowns, while
his debut at tailback, opened the scoring
guiding the Husky offense to 415 total yards
rush with an 11-yard touchdown burst, for a
in a 42-7 season-opening blowout over the
7-0 lead.
Stanford Cardinal.
Beno Bryant, who saw limited action due to
Hobert, who became a starter when Rose
a preseason injury, got a touchdown of his
Bowl MVP Mark Brunell suffered a pre-
own on the next drive, completing a six play,
"That's one heck of a football team,
season knee injury, conducted one of the
48-yard drive to take a 14-0 lead.
and one heck of a defense. You have
finest quarterbacking debuts in Washing-
Stanford cut that lead to seven when
to hand it to them. They come at
ton history, completing 21 of 31 passes for
Tommy Vardell plunged into the endzone
you full speed ahead from all
244 yards and two touchdowns. Perhaps his
from one yard out with 2:02 remaining in
angles, and make it tough to get
most crucial pass of the day came on a 26-
the first half.
anything established on the ground.
yard floater to Mario Bailey in the endzone
That's an excellent defense. I don't
with just :09 remaining in the first half. The
The sentimental touchdown of the day
think we'll see any better one this
play gave Washington a 21-7 lead and the
came in the second half, as Hobert threw a
season."
momentum going into the second half.
20-yard scoring strike to his Puyallup High
-Dennis Green, Stanford Cardinal
School teammate, Joe Kralik. Barry scored
That momentum carried over to the de-
head coach
his second touchdown on a 23-yard jaunt
fense, which limited the Cardinal offense to
and Leif Johnson added extra insurance on
a 12-yard run for the final 35 point margin.
Scoring Summary
Drive
UW
2
13:42
J. Barry, 11-yard run (Hanson kick)
5-38
UW
2
9:43
Bryant, 7-yard run (Hanson kick)
6-48
SU
2
2:02
Vardell, 1-yard run (Mills kick)
8-41
UW
2
0:09
Hobert, 26-yard pass to M. Bailey (Hanson kick)
6-50
UW
4
14:02
Hobert, 20-yard pass to Kralik (Hanson kick)
9-49
UW
4
11:59
J. Barry, 23-yard run (Hanson kick)
3-55
UW
4
1:30
Johnson, 12-yard run (Hanson kick)
4-27
Score By Quarters
Washington
0
21
0
21
-
42
Individual Statistics
Stanford
0
7
0
0
-
7
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Team Statistics
Wash.
Stan.
Washington-J. Barry 18-81-2; M. Jones 4-23; Bryant 13-22-1; Johnson 2-26-1; Harris 2-8;
First Downs
24
17
Hobert 1-5; Kaufman 6-2
Rushing
47-154
31-28
Stanford-Vardell 13-29-1; Milburn 11-16; Hatzenbuhler 1-2; Lasley 1-1; Stenstrom 3-(-8);
Passing: Comp-Att-I
23-34-1
20-46-3
Palumbis 2-(-12)
Passing Yards
261
210
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Total Offense
81-415
77-238
Washington-Hobert 21-31-1-244-2; Bjornson 2-3-0-17
Yards/Play
5.1
3.0
Fumbles-Lost
2-1
3-3
Stanford-Palumbis 14-22-2-141-0
Interceptions-Yards
3-5
1-18
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Total Turnovers
2
6
Washington-McKay 6-61; Bailey 4-46-1; Gaspard 2-23; M. Jones 2-21; Pierce 1-9
Penalties
9-80
5-33
Stanford-Pinckney 4-41; Walsh 2-30; Wetnight 2-24; Milburn 2-12; Vardell 1-(-3)
Punting
8-42.0
8-33.7
Punt Returns
4-43
4-36
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Kickoff Returns
2-31
4-118
Washington-Emtman 1-3; Moore 1-2; W. Bailey 1-0
Third Down Efficiency
7-16
5-16
Stanford-Richardson 1-18
Fourth Down Efficiency
1-1
1-1
Sacks By Defense
4-24
0
Possession Time
29:22
30:38
29
Rose B) G-vide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 36, Nebraska 21
(9/16/91)
1 Florida State
10, Iowa
19 Colorado
At Memorial Stadium
Washington began their comeback on the
2. Miami
11. Notre Dame
20. Pittsburgh
(Lincoln, NE)
next series, as Hobert led the Huskies on a
3. Michigan
12. Penn State
21. Houston
4. Washington
18. Auburn
22. Southern Cal
September 21, 1991
12 play, 76-yard drive capped by a Beno
5. Florida
14. Baylor
23, Mississippi State
6. Tennessee
15 Texas A&M
Weather: Clear and 73 degrees
Bryant 15-yard touchdown blast.
24. California
7, Oklahoma
16. Ohio State
25. Georgia
Attendance: 76,304
The Huskies gained momentum through-
8. Clemson
17. Georgia Tech
out the second half, scoring on their first
9. Nebraska
18. Syracuse
three possessions of the fourth quarter to
secure the win. Hobert connected with
Game Summary
flanker Orlando McKay on an eight-yard
The Huskies reeled off 27 unanswered
touchdown pass to take a 22-21 lead.
points in the second half to overtake the
Hobert scored his second rushing touch-
ninth-ranked Cornhuskers and halt
down of the evening on the next series, a
Nebraska's 20-game home winning streak
three-yard dive, midway through the fourth
against non-conference foes.
quarter.
Billy Joe Hobert earned Pac-10 Player of
The defense stymied the Cornhusker of-
the Week honors for his second-consecu-
fense in the final period, creating two Ne-
tive game by completing 23 of 40 passes for
braska turnovers and denying any scoring
"Washington's offense is good.
283 yards. He threw for one touchdown
opportunities.
Their defense is superlative. They
and ran for two others, while engineering
compare with some of the very best,
the Husky offense to 618 yards in total
Jay Barry iced the game with 5:38 to play, as
even with Miami in the Orange
offense, the most surrendered by a Ne-
he galloped 81 yards down the sideline for
Bowl three years ago. There will
braska team since 1956.
the final score of the game.
probably be a lot of good teams that
won't come as close as we did to-
Nebraska recovered a muffed punt on the
The Huskies rushed for 335 yards, exactly
Washington two-yard line with just under
200 more than they allowed the vaunted
night."
six minutes remaining in the third quarter.
Cornhusker option attack. Washington
-Tom Osborne, Cornhusker head
They took advantage of the opportunity on
threw for 283 yards, while holding Ne-
coach, following a 36-21 loss to
braska to 173, and overcame three turn-
the very next play, as Derek Brown scored
Washington.
to give Nebraska a 21-9 lead.
overs and 91 yards in penalties.
Scoring Summary
Drive
NEB
1
8:41
D. Brown, 27-yard run (Bennett kick)
6-76
UW
2
9:07
Hobert, 9-yard run (PAT failed)
10-98
NEB
2
3:40
Bostick, 42-yard pass from McCant (Bennett kick)
5-51
UW
3
12:27
Hanson, 43-yard field goal
8-51
NEB
3
5:32
D. Brown, 2-yard run (Bennett kick)
1-2
UW
3
0:19
Bryant, 15-yard run (Hanson kick)
12-76
UW
4
11:20
McKay, 8-yard pass from Hobert (pass failed)
6-69
UW
4
7:26
Hobert, 3-yard run (Hanson kick)
8-33
Score By Quarters
UW
4
5:38
J. Barry, 81-yard run (Hanson kick)
3-79
Washington
0
6
10
20
-
36
Nebraska
7
7
7
0
-
21
Individual Statistics
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Team Statistics
Wash.
Neb.
Washington-Bryant 17-139-1; J. Barry 11-110-1; M. Jones 8-37; Hobert 7-36-2; Kaufman 3-9;
First Downs
31
15
Johnson 1-5
Rushing
47-335
36-135
Nebraska-D. Brown 21-100-2; Jones 3-29; McCant 12-6
Passing: Comp-Att-I
23-40-2
12-29-2
Passing Yards
283
173
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Total Offense
87-618
65-308
Washington-Hobert 23-40-2-283-1
Yards/Play
7.1
4.7
Nebraska-McCant 12-28-2-173-1; Joseph 0-1-0
Fumbles-Lost
3-1
1-1
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Interceptions-Yards
2-25
2-5
Total Turnovers
3
3
Washington-M. Bailey 7-97; McKay 6-67-1; M. Jones 3-40; Pierce 3-39; Gaspard 2-31;
Penalties
8-91
4-29
Bryant 2-9
Punting
5-41.0
9-44.3
Nebraska-Bostick 4-63-1; Hughes 3-50; D. Brown 2-29; C. Jones 1-17; Muhammad 1-8;
Punt Returns
4-9
3-33
Turner 1-6
Kickoff Returns
4-55
4-35
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Third Down Efficiency
7-14
6-16
Washington-Hoffmann 1-25; Hall 1-0
Fourth Down Efficiency
1-1
0-0
4-18
Nebraska-Wilhite 1-5; Legette 1-0
Sacks By Defense
1-1
Possession Time
35:38
24:22
30
Rose G2vide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 56, Kansas State 3
(9/23/91)
1. Florida State
Husky Stadium (Seattle, WA)
touchdowns and Mario Bailey, who had two
10. Penn State
19. Georgia Tech
2. Miami
(tie) Syracuse
20 California
September 28, 1991
touchdown catches.
3. Michigan
12. Bavlor
21. Mississippi State
4. Washington
13. Auburn
22 Alabama
Weather: Overcast
The Washington defense turned in another
5. Tennessee
14. Florida
23. North Carolina
6. Oklahoma
15. Ohio State
and 62 degrees
spectacular effort, limiting Kansas State to
24. Arizona State
7. Clemson
16. Nebraska
25. Illinois
Attendance: 71,638
negative 17 yards on the ground and a mere
8. Notre Dame
17. Colorado
253 yards in total offense. The Dawgs also
9. Iowa
18. Pittsburgh
forced five turnovers, as four different play-
ers recorded interceptions and the Huskies
Game Summary
pounced on a fumble.
The Huskies scored on six of their first
The game was also highlighted by the first
seven possessions en route to a 56-3 victory
in their home-opener. Washington led 35-
appearance of Rose Bowl MVP Mark
3 at the half and added another three scores
Brunell, who saw game action for the first
in the final two quarters to tie the record for
time since suffering a serious knee injury in
most points scored by a Don James-
the spring. Brunell quarterbacked the Hus-
coached squad.
kies in the third and fourth quarters, com-
pleting one of four passes for six yards
Beno Bryant added his name to the Pac-10
record book when he returned a fourth
Bailey finished with seven catches for 157
quarter punt 53 yards for a touchdown. It
yards to go with his two touchdowns and
"They are better than Colorado
(last year) because they are more
was the fourth of his career, placing him in
Orlando McKay added four grabs for 79
balanced. This team can run it, they
a tie with UCLA's Sam Brown (1953-55).
yards and one touchdown.
can pass it and they can beat you
Other offensive stars included Jay Barry,
Bryant led eight Husky rushers with 85
yards and a touchdown on 14 carries while
with the kicking game. You name it,
who rushed for 62 yards and scored a pair of
this team can do it."
true freshman Napoleon Kaufman scored
his first collegiate touchdown on a three-
-Elijah Alexander, Kansas State
yard scamper.
defensive end
Scoring Summary
Drive
UW
1
13:08
J. Barry, 3-yard run (Hanson kick)
6-45
UW
1
10:12
M. Bailey, 71-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
5-87
UW
1
3:21
Bryant, 4-yard run (Hanson kick)
7-58
UW
2
12:22
Barry, 11-yard run (Hanson kick)
7-79
UW
2
3:45
McKay, 28-yard pass from Hobert (Johnson pass from Bjornson)
2-35
KSU
2
0:00
Wright, 42-yard field goal
9-50
UW
3
4:20
M. Bailey, 32-yard pass from Hobert (Crabbe kick)
9-80
UW
4
11:05
Bryant, 53-yard punt return (Crabbe kick)
UW
4
6:39
Kaufman, 3-yard run (Crabbe kick)
2-8
Score By Quarters
Individual Statistics
Washington
20
15
7
14
-
56
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Kansas State
0
3
0
0
-
3
Washington-Bryant 14-85-1; J. Barry 9-62-2; Kaufman 6-31-1; Harris 3-27; M. Jones 4-23;
Johnson 2-5; Turner 2-5; Brunell 1-0
Team Statistics
Wash.
KSU
Kansas State-Rawlings 4-14; Gallon 8-10; Madden 2-3; J. Smith 1-0; Sanft 1-(-1); Smargiasso
7-(-17); Watson 7-(-26)
First Downs
23
15
Rushing
41-238
30-(-17)
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Passing: Comp-Att-I
14-22-1
21-32-4
Washington-Hobert 13-18-0-234-3; Brunell 1-4-1-6-0
Passing Yards
240
270
Kansas State-Watson 17-23-1-232; Smargiasso 4-9-3-38
Total Offense
63-478
62-253
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Yards/Play
7.6
4.1
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
3-1
Washington-M. Bailey 7-157-2; McKay 4-79-1; Pierce 2-7; Johnson 1-(-3)
Interceptions-Yards
4-20
1-0
Kansas State-M. Smith 12-174; Benton 2-21; Jones 2-20; Rawlings 1-20; Hernandez 1-13;
Total Turnovers
1
5
Campbell 1-11; Gallon 1-6; Sanft 1-5
Penalties
5-30
7-44
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Punting
1-40.0
6-40.3
Washington-W. Bailey 1-20; Doctor 1-0; Pahukoa 1-0; Moore 1-0
Punt Returns
3-109
0-0
Kansas State-Price 1-0
Kickoff Returns
1-40
8-132
Third Down Efficiency
6-9
6-14
Fourth Down Efficiency
0-1
0-0
Sacks By Defense
8-61
0-0
Possession Time
26:48
33:12
31
Rose B)owT G-vide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 54, Arizona 0
(9/30/91)
1. Florida State
10. Syracuse
19 North Carolina
Husky Stadium (Seattle, WA)
The Huskies then erupted for 27 points
2. Miami
11. Bavlor
20 Alabama
October 5, 1991
during a ten-minute span in the second
3. Washington
12. Penn State
21. Georgia Tech
4. Tennessee
13. Florida
22. Illinois
Weather: Clear and 74 degrees
quarter with cornerback Walter Bailey re-
5. Oklahoma
14. Ohio State
23. Texas A&M
6. Clemson
15. Nebraska
24. UCLA
Attendance: 72,495
turning an interception 24 yards for a score
to finish the scoring.
7. Michigan
16. Auburn
25. Colorado
8. Notre Dame
17. Pittsburgh
Mario Bailey hauled in two TD catches for
9. Iowa
18. California
Game Summary
the second consecutive week, both from
back-up quarterback Mark Brunell who en-
The Huskies parlayed seven Wildcat turn-
tered the game in the second quarter after
overs into 27 points and held the potent
starter Billy Joe Hobert left with a pinched
Arizona rushing attack to just 30 yards.
nerve in his neck. Brunell continued to im-
It was the second-largest margin of victory
prove, connecting on five of seven passes
in the Don James era, the worst Arizona
for 93 yards and no interceptions.
road defeat in history and the first time the
Beno Bryant led 11 Washington runners
Wildcats had been shutout since 1971.
with 93 yards on 10 carries, while freshman
Washington led just 7-0 at the end of the
Napoleon Kaufman added 71 yards on nine
first period but Pac-10 Defensive Player of
rushes. The Huskies finished with 280 yards
"Their defense is dominant. Steve
the Week Steve Emtman had already set
on 56 carries, an average of 5.0 per rush.
Emtman has to be the best lineman
the pace, rocking Wildcat quaterback
The Wildcats ran the ball 39 times, losing
in the country. Nobody blocks him
George Malauulu for losses on Arizona's
yardage on 19 of those attempts while gain-
and the folks around him are great
first two plays from scrimmage. The Husky
ing over ten yards only once.
football players. Washington is as
defense would ultimately limit Arizona to a
good a team as the Pac-10 has had,
miniscule 30 yards rushing on 39 carries,
The Huskies spread the wealth as eight
and an offensive total of just 142 yards.
different players had a hand in Wash-
ever."
ington's eight touchdowns.
-Dick Tomey, Arizona head coach
Scoring Summary
Drive
UW
1
7:15
J. Barry, 13-yard run (Hanson kick)
5-34
UW
2
12:24
Hobert, 1-yard run (Hanson kick)
7-70
UW
2
8:11
M. Bailey, 29-yard pass from Brunell (Hanson kick)
7-51
UW
2
4:57
M. Jones, 1-yard run (Hanson kick)
4-12
UW
2
1:56
W. Bailey, 24-yard interception return (Hanson kick failed)
UW
3
10:16
M. Bailey, 23-yard pass from Brunell (Crabbe kick)
6-53
UW
3
2:46
Bryant, 13-yard run (Crabbe kick)
3-54
UW
4
8:25
Kaufman, 9-yard run (Crabbe kick)
6-46
Individual Statistics
Score By Quarters
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Washington
7
27
14
6
-
54
Washington-Bryant 10-93-1; Kaufman 9-71-1; Harris 8-41; J. Barry 13-39-1; Johnson 3-11;
Arizona
0
0
0
0
-
0
M. Jones 3-10-1; Hobert 3-7-1; Huckaby 1-5; Turner 2-5; Bjornson 2-3; Brunell 2-(-5)
Arizona-Carter 8-19; Lt. Lovett 3-16; Gilbert 5-10; B. Johnson 3-1; Levy 2-(-1); Prickett 1-(-7);
Team Statistics
Wash.
Ariz.
Malauulu 17-(-8)
First Downs
25
9
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Rushing
56-280
39-30
Washington-Brunell 5-7-0-93-2; Hobert 5-15-0-72-0
Passing: Comp-Att-I
10-22-0
8-17-2
Arizona-Malauulu 8-17-2-112-0
Passing Yards
165
112
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Total Offense
78-445
56-142
Washington-M. Bailey 5-89-2; Gaspard 2-22; Bruener 1-22; Pierce 1-21; McKay 1-11
Yards/Play
5.7
2.5
Fumbles-Lost
1-0
5-5
Arizona-Vaughn 3-34; Levy 2-25; Lr. Lovett 1-19; Lockhart 1-17; Julian 1-17
Interceptions-Yards
3-50*
0-0
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Total Turnovers
0
7
Washington-W. Bailey 1-24; Clifford 1-13; Farr 1-13
Penalties
3-30
9-71
Arizona-none
Punting
5-35.8
9-37.8
Punt Returns
2-11
3-33
Kickoff Returns
0-0
9-160
Third Down Efficiency
5-13
1-11
Fourth Down Efficiency
1-2
0-0
Sacks By Defense
8-39
2-9
Possession Time
32:27
27:33
o includes intercepted fumble return
32
Rose Guide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 48, Toledo 0
(10/7/91)
1. Florida State
10. Florida
19. Alabama
Husky Stadium (Seattle, WA)
different quarterbacks had a hand in scores.
2. Miami
11. Ohio State
20. Illinois
October 12, 1991
Billy Joe Hobert threw three touchdown
3. Washington
12. Pittsburgh
21. Texas A&M
4. Tennessee
13. California
22. Georgia
Weather: Partly cloudy
passes, all to Bailey, Mark Brunell threw
5. Michigan
14. Nebraska
23 Mississippi
6. Oklahoma
15. Syracuse
24. Auburn
and 65 degrees
one and Eric Bjornson scored Washington's
final points on a nine-yard run, his first
7. Notre Dame
16. North Carolina State
25. Colorado
Attendance: 72,266
8. Baylor
17. Iowa
collegiate touchdown.
9. Penn State
18. Cleinson
The Washington defense continued to
dominate, limiting Toledo to just 48 rushing
Game Summary
yards and allowing the Rockets to convert
Mario Bailey hauled in three touchdown
only two of 16 third down opportunities. In
passes, giving him seven in the past three
addition, the Rockets managed just eight
weeks, and the Washington defense re-
first downs en route to 160 yards in total
corded their second consecutive shutout in
offense.
a 48-0 whitewashing of former Husky of-
fensive coordinator Gary Pinkel's Toledo
Beno Bryant racked up 117 yards on 12
club.
carries to lead ten Washington runners,
while Jay Barry scored both on the ground
Bailey hauled in six balls covering 170
and through the air. He scored on a two-
yards, the highlight being a 70-yard touch-
yard run in the first quarter and converted a
down strike from Billy Joe Hobert in the
34-yard screen-pass for a touchdown in the
"Washington is a better team than
second quarter.
third quarter.
last season because its defense is
After an interception on their first play from
The seven Washington scores took a com-
better. They are on a mission here."
scrimmage, Washington's offense scored
bined 18:13, an average of just over two and
Gary Pinkel, Toledo head coach
touchdowns on its next five possessions to
a half minutes apiece. Four of the Washing-
take a 34-0 halftime lead. The Huskies
ton drives took less than 1:47.
and former Husky assistant,
comparing the 1991 team with last
cruised through the second half, as three
season's Husky squad which finished
fifth in the national polls.
Scoring Summary
Drive
UW
1
11:22
M. Bailey, 28-yard pass from Hobert (Crabbe kick)
4-85
UW
1
7:08
M. Bailey, 4-yard pass from Hobert (Crabbe kick)
4-44
UW
1
3:22
M. Jones, 2-yard run (Crabbe kick)
5-34
UW
2
14:46
M. Bailey, 70-yard pass from Hobert (Crabbe kick failed)
3-75
UW
2
9:04
J. Barry, 1-yard run (Crabbe kick)
11-69
UW
3
2:13
J. Barry, 34-yard pass from Brunell (Crabbe kick)
3-35
UW
4
3:03
Bjornson, 9-yard run (Crabbe kick)
10-50
Individual Statistics
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Washington-Bryant 12-117; Kaufman 11-39; Johnson 4-35; J. Barry 10-29-1; Brunell 3-13;
Score By Quarters
Turner 3-11; Bjornson 1-9-1; M. Jones 3-5-1; Harris 1-1; Huckaby 1-0
Washington
21
13
7
7
-
48
Toledo-McBeth 9-31; Cowan 5-12; Donaldson 3-9; T. Williams 3-3; Meger 6-18; Capen 3-(-3);
Toledo
0
0
0
0
-
0
Nelson 3-(-4)
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Team Statistics
Wash.
Toledo
Washington-Hobert 12-17-1-220-3; Brunell 3-8-1-50-1; Bjornson 2-3-0-19-0
Toledo-Meger 9-17-1-87-0; Capen 3-13-0-25-0
First Downs
21
8
Rushing
49-259
32-48
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Passing: Comp-Att-I
17-28-2
12-30-1
Washington-M. Bailey 6-170-3; Gaspard 3-29; Mack 2-18; Bryant 2-16; J. Barry 1-32-1;
Passing Yards
289
112
Turner 1-11; Bruener 1-8; Pierce 1-5
Total Offense
77-548
62-160
Toledo-Goodwin 3-19; Marrow 2-64; Williams 2-5; Lajeski 1-12; Donaldson 1-9; Tombaugh
Yards/Play
7.1
2.6
1-8; Cowan 1-(-5)
Fumbles-Lost
2-1
2-1
Interceptions-Yards
1-4
2-22
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Total Turnovers
3
2
Washington-Robinson 1-4
Penalties
6-60
6-53
Toledo-Gant 1-18; Borgerding 1-4
Punting
4-42.5
11-37.6
Punt Returns
7-26
2-6
Kickoff Returns
1-7
8-140
Third Down Efficiency
10-15
2-16
Sacks By Defense
3-18
0
Possession Time
30:49
29:11
33
Rose B). Guide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 24, California 17
(10/14/91)
At Memorial Stadium
1. Florida State
10. Penn State
19 Texas A&M
yards, over 100 yards below their season
2. Miami
11. North Carolina State
20 Pittsburgh
(Berkeley, CA)
average.
3. Washington
12. Oklahoma
21. Clemson
4. Michigan
13. Illinois
22. Colorado
October 19, 1991
Cal scored first on a 59-yard pass from
5. Notre Dame
14. Alabama
23. East Carolina
6. Florida
15. lowa
Weather: Sunny and 68 degrees
Pawlawski to Sean Dawkins in the first
24. Syracuse
7. California
16. Baylor
25. Arizona State
Attendance: 74,500
quarter. Washington answered with a 35-
8. Tennessee
17. Georgia
yard pass from Billy Joe Hobert to Mario
9. Nebraska
18. Ohio State
Bailey with :58 seconds remaining in the
quarter.
Game Summary
The Huskies took a 17-10 lead into the half,
Beno Bryant's 65-yard run in the first
minute of the fourth quarter proved to be
on a 23-yard Travis Hanson field goal and a
the game-winner as Washington held off
nine-yard Jay Barry run. Cal tied the score
previously unbeaten and seventh-ranked
at 17 with one second remaining in the third
California 24-17 at Berkeley.
quarter on Lindsey Chapman's 68-yard
burst. Bryant answered with the game win-
California had a chance to tie or win in the
ner on the next Washington possession.
waning minutes but cornerback Walter Bai-
ley broke up a Mike Pawlawski pass attempt
Barry, who earned ABC-TV player of the
on the final play of the game to secure the
game and Pac-10 player of the week honors,
led the Washington rushing attack with 143
win.
yards and one touchdown on 19 carries.
"Against that good of a football
The defense had another big game as five
Bryant, battling the after effects of a week-
team, a team that motivated and
different Huskies recorded sacks, and both
long flu bug, finished with 99 yards on 12
that skilled you need to play damn
Bailey and Jaime Fields had interceptions.
carries.
perfect."
Washington forced two fumbles and re-
corded 13 tackles for loss, limiting the po-
Touted as a potential Heisman Trophy can-
-Bruce Snyder, California
didate, Russell White managed only 55
head coach
tent Golden Bear running attack to 114
yards.
Scoring Summary
Drive
CAL
1
2:30
Dawkins, 59-yard pass from Pawlawski (Brien kick)
3-59
UW
1
0:58
M. Bailey, 35-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
5-80
UW
2
10:07
Hanson, 23-yard field goal
14-57
CAL
2
5:08
Brien, 50-yard field goal
13-47
UW
2
0:49
J. Barry, 9-yard run (Hanson kick)
4-67
CAL
3
0:01
Chapman, 68-yard run (Brien kick)
2-80
UW
4
13:56
Bryant, 65-yard run (Hanson kick)
2-64
Individual Statistics
Score By Quarters
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Washington
7
10
0
7
24
Washington-J. Barry 19-143-1; Bryant 12-99-1; M. Jones 6-26; Brunell 1-(-5); Hobert 5-(-11)
|
California
7
3
7
0
-
17
California-Chapman 7-81-1; White 15-55; Zomalt 4-11; Pawlawski 10-(-33)
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Washington-Hobert 15-34-1-189-1
Team Statistics
Wash.
Cal.
California-Pawlawski 18-41-2-215-1
First Downs
21
15
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Rushing
43-252
36-114
Washington-Bryant 4-51; Pierce 4-44; M. Bailey 1-35-1; M. Jones 3-35; McKay 2-14; J. Barry
Passing: Comp-Att-I
15-34-1
18-41-2
1-10
Passing Yards
189
215
Total Offense
77-441
77-329
California-Dawkins 2-72-1; Semien 2-49; Treggs 5-47; Zomalt 6-26; Caldwell 2-14;
Yards/Play
5.7
4.3
Chapman 1-7
Fumbles
4-0
2-0
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Interceptions
2-29
1-11
Washington-Fields 1-29; W. Bailey 1-0
Total Turnovers
1
2
California-Barsala 1-11
Penalties
8-71
5-34
Punting
7-43.3
7-42.4
Punt Returns
3-12
1-4
Kickoff Returns
2-29
4-85
Third Down Efficiency
7-16
9-22
Fourth Down Efficiency
0-0
3-4
Sacks By Defense
5-31
I-2
Possession Time
29:13
30:47
34
Ro se. Bowl C2ide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 29, Oregon 7
(10/21/91)
1. Florida State
10. California
19 Clemson
Husky Stadium (Seattle, WA)
game, giving the Huskies their final score
2. Miami
11. Iowa
20 East Carolina
October 26, 1991
on the day.
3.
Washington
12. North Carolina State
21. Oklahoma
4. Michigan
13. Texas A&M
22. Baylor
Weather: Overcast and
The defense did nothing to hurt its status as
5. Notre Dame
14. Ohio State
23. Pittsburgh
6. Florida
15. Tennessee
24. Georgia
49 degrees with swirling winds
one of the nation's best, holding the Ducks
7. Alabama
16. Colorado
25. Arkansas
Attendance: 72,318
to 129 total yards, 65 on the ground, and
8. Penn State
17. Illinois
forcing four turnovers. Oregon penetrated
9. Nebraska
18. Syracuse
Washington territory only twice, as the
Huskies held the Ducks scoreless for the
Game Summary
first 55 minutes of the game. Sean Burwell
Quarterback Billy Joe Hobert tossed three
spoiled the Huskies' third consecutive shut-
touchdown passes, including two to Mario
out attempt with a 25-yard touchdown run
Bailey and another to Orlando McKay, as
following a Husky blocked punt.
the third-ranked Washington Huskies
posted a 29-7 victory over Oregon.
The Husky special teams was equally im-
pressive. They were responsible for two
Bailey's two scores gave him 11 for the year,
blocked punts and placekicker Travis
breaking the Husky single-season mark of
Hanson made all three of his field goal
"I said before the game that Wash-
10 held by Dave Williams (1965). Bailey's
attempts, connecting from 44, 28 and 33
ington is the best team I've seen in
TD's covered 18 and 29 yards and gave the
yards, marking his best day as a Husky.
this league ever, and I still stand by
Huskies a 13-0 advantage, early in the sec-
that. I thought we made them work
ond quarter. Both Bailey (108) and Orlando
Hobert finished his day 23 of 36 for 256
for it. The main problem was we
McKay (105) topped the century mark in
yards, while Mark Brunell chipped in two of
couldn't move the football against
receiving yards. McKay's touchdown cov-
two for another 18 yards. Jay Barry led a
them."
ered 16 yards with 6:20 remaining in the
sextet of Husky rushers with 84 yards.
Rich Brooks, Oregon Ducks head
coach, who earlier claimed
Scoring Summary
Drive
Washington to be the best team he
UW
1
4:42
M. Bailey, 18-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
12-64
had seen in his 30-plus years as player
UW
2
14:54
M. Bailey, 29-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick blocked)
6-45
and coach in the Pac-10.
UW
2
10:51
Hanson, 44-yard field goal
4-7
UW
2
8:59
Hanson, 28-yard field goal
4-14
UW
3
10:37
Hanson, 33-yard field goal
6-16
UW
4
6:20
McKay, 16-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
7-63
UO
4
4:21
Burwell, 25-yard run (McCallum kick)
1-25
Individual Statistics
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Washington-J. Barry 20-84; M. Jones 5-49; Kaufman 7-36; Turner 3-25; Bryant 11-20;
Hobert 3-(-21)
Score By Quarters
Oregon-Burwell 19-48-1; Shedrick 3-11; Crowston 3-4; Musgrave 2-2
Washington
7
12
3
7
29
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
-
Oregon
0
0
0
7
-
7
Washington-Hobert 23-36-2-256-3; Brunell 2-2-0-18-0
Oregon-Musgrave 6-13-1-57-0; Crowston 2-8-2-7-0
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Team Statistics
Wash.
Oregon
Washington-McKay 9-105-1; M. Bailey 7-108-2; Kaufman 2-18; Gaspard 2-17; Pierce 2-13;
First Downs
27
8
Turner 1-7; J. Barry 1-5; M. Jones 1-1
Rushing
49-193
27-65
Oregon-A. Jones 3-37; Brown 2-18; Burwell 1-4; Thomason 1-4; Moore 1-1
Passing: Comp-Att-I
25-38-2
8-21-3
Passing Yards
274
64
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Total Offense
87-467
48-129
Washington-Pahukoa 1-32; W. Bailey 1-31; L. Jones 1-0
Yards/Play
5.4
2.7
Oregon-Williams 1-4; Oliver 1-0
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
2-1
Interceptions-Yards
3-63
2-4
Total Turnovers
2
4
Penalties
13-110
7-43
Punting
3-21.7
8-29.1
Punt Returns
5-6
2-28
Kickoff Returns
2-32
6-78
Third Down Efficiency
9-18
2-12
Fourth Down Efficiency
1-2
0-0
Sacks By Defense
1-4
2-26
Possession Time
35:40
24:20
35
Rose Gwide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 44, Arizona State 16
(10/28/91)
1. Florida State
Husky Stadium (Seattle, WA)
the ASU 16, leading to Barry's record-
10. California
19. North Carolina State
2. Miami
11. Iowa
20. Oklahoma
November 2, 1991
setting score. Before the Sun Devils had a
3. Washington
12. Texas A&M
21. Baylor
4. Michigan
13. Ohio State
22. Georgia
Weather: Sunny and 52 degrees
chance to run a second offensive play, the
Huskies maintained a 14-0 lead.
5. Notre Dame
14. Tennessee
23. UCLA
Attendance: 72,405
6. Florida
15. Colorado
24. Arkansas
The Sun Devil defense entered the contest
7. Alabama
16. Clemson
25. Fresno State
S. Peun State
17. East Carolina
allowing a mere 15 points per game, but the
9. Nebraska
18. Syracuse
Huskies continued to break it open in the
Game Summary
second quarter with 17 unanswered points
The undefeated Washington Huskies re-
to up the margin to 31-0 at the intermis-
ceived superlative efforts from both their
sion. Washington held a 243-40 edge in
offense and their defense as they posted a
total offense at the half.
convincing 44-16 victory over Arizona
State.
Travis Hanson converted three field goals
for the second consecutive week, helping
Jay Barry scored on a one-yard plunge, his
the Washington offense eclipse the 40-
10th TD of the season, and Mario Bailey
point plateau for the fifth time in eight
snagged a 15-yard touchdown reception,
games.
his 12th on the year, to mark the first time in
Washington history that two players have
Hobert and Brunell combined for 312 yards
recorded double-figure touchdowns in a
passing, 139 of which went to Mario Bailey
single season.
on seven receptions. It marked the fourth
"We were clearly dominated by
100-plus receiving day of the season for
Walter Bailey got things started on the first
Washington today, dominated by a
Bailey.
play from scrimmage, when he intercepted
great football team."
a Bret Powers pass at the Arizona State 33
Hobert was pulled early in the third quarter
-Larry Marmie, Arizona State head
yard-line. Seven plays later, quarterback
after completing 17 of 24 attempts for 228
coach, following the Huskies 44-16
Billy Joe Hobert teamed up with Orlando
yards and two touchdowns.
win over the Sun Devils.
McKay on a nine-yard scoring toss to take
Freshman Napoleon Kaufman led the Hus-
an early 7-0 lead.
kies in rushing with 59 electrifying fourth-
On the ensuing kickoff, Leif Johnson forced
quarter yards.
a fumble which Walter Bailey recovered at
Scoring Summary
Drive
UW
1
11:23
McKay, 9-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
7-33
UW
1
8:55
Barry, 1-yard run (Hanson kick)
5-16
UW
2
14:56
Hobert, 5-yard run (Hanson kick)
5-18
UW
2
12:13
M. Bailey, 15-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
4-42
UW
2
1:42
Hanson, 18-yard field goal
13-62
UW
3
12:52
Turner, 1-yard run (Hanson kick)
7-83
UW
3
4:37
Hanson, 27-yard field goal
9-55
Score By Quarters
ASU
3
0:37
Snyder, 11-yard pass from Powers (Charles from Powers)
9-57
ASU
4
9:02
Washington
14
17
10
3
-
44
Davison, 1-yard run (Charles run)
9-52
Arizona State
0
0
8
8
16
UW
4
3:05
Hanson, 30-yard field goal
11-58
I
Individual Statistics
Team Statistics
Wash.
ASU
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
First Downs
23
17
Washington-Kaufman 11-59; Bryant 11-35; J. Barry 12-22-1; Turner 6-18-1; M. Jones 3-13;
Rushing
51-177
30-78
Passing: Comp-Att-I
19-42-1
Harris 1-12; Johnson 3-10; Hobert 3-9-1; Brunell 1-(-1)
25-37-0
Arizona State-Davison 14-61-1; Fisher 11-15; Charles 2-14; Powers 3-(-12)
Passing Yards
312
153
Total Offense
88-489
72-231
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Yards/Play
5.6
3.2
Washington-Hobert 17-24-0-228-2; Brunell 8-13-0-84-0
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
2-2
Arizona State-Powers 19-42-1-153-1
Interceptions-Yards
1-2
0-0
Total Turnovers
0
3
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Penalties
13-103
7-45
Washington-M. Bailey 7-139-1; McKay 5-73-1; J. Barry 2-29; Kaufman 2-14; M. Jones 2-8;
Punting
3-37.0
7-36.6
Bryant 2-7; Pierce 1-17; D. Barry 1-11; Gaspard 1-8; Kralik 1-6; Bruener 1-0
Punt Returns
0-0
4-54
Arizona State-Guliford 5-82; Fisher 4-5; Snyder 3-25-1; Brasher 2-11; Davison 2-4;
Kickoff Returns
3-27
9-112
Charles 1-20; McCoy 1-3; Moss 1-3
Third Down Efficiency
10-20
5-17
Fourth Down Efficiency
1-4
3-5
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Sacks By Defense
3-12
0-0
Washington-W. Bailey 1-2
Possession Time
36:47
23:13
Oregon-none
36
Rose G-vide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 14, Southern Cal 3
(11/4/91)
1. Florida State
10. Iowa
19. Ohio State
At L.A. Memorial Stadium
As a team, the Huskies rolled to 237 yards
2. Washington
11. Nebraska
20. Oklahoma
(Los Angeles, CA)
on the ground on 48 carries. Meanwhile,
(tie) Miami
12. Texas A&M
21. Baylor
4. Michigan
13. Tennessee
22. UCLA
November 9, 1991
the Husky defense held Southern Cal to a
5. Notre Dame
14. Colorado
23 Georgia
15. Clemson
24. Virginia
Weather: Partly sunny
mere 78 yards on 36 attempts.
6. Florida
7. California
16. East Carolina
25. Indiana
and 72 degrees
It was the first back-to-back Husky victories
8. Alabama
17. Syracuse
in the series since the 1981 and 1983 sea-
9. Penn State
18. North Carolina State
Attendance: 59, 320
sons. (The teams did not meet in 1982).
Washington was held to a season-low 119
Game Summary
yards passing. Mario Bailey led the receiv-
ing corps with four catches and a personal
Junior Beno Bryant, a Los Angeles native
low of 37 yards. Bailey failed to score,
from Dorsey High School, ran for a career-
breaking a six-game touchdown streak.
best 158 yards and tallied both Husky
scores as the Huskies staged a conquest at
Linebacker Dave Hoffmann led the Dawgs
the Coliseum for the first time since 1980.
defensively, recording 10 tackles including
two sacks and five tackles for loss.
Bryant's scoring runs of 55 and seven yards
Hoffmann earned Pac-10 Defensive Player
gave the Huskies a 14-0 halftime advantage
of the Week honors for his performance.
they would not relinquish.
"There's no question in my mind
Bryant also earned honors, as he was named
that Washington is the best team in
The Husky defense registered five sacks,
the Pac-10's Co-Offensive Player of the
recorded 14 tackles for loss and held the
the country. They've got a balanced
Week.
offense, a fantastic defense and
Trojans without a touchdown for the sec-
ond straight season (USC was shutout 31-0
Washington's 9-0 mark matches their best
they're strong in the kicking game.
last season). Washington turned back
starting record since 1984.
In my years of experience, I haven't
seen a better overall team."
threats from the 34, 27, nine- and one-yard
lines.
-Larry Smith, Southern Cal
head coach
Scoring Summary
Drive
UW
1
7:38
Bryant, 55-yard run (Hanson kick)
5-80
UW
2
10:38
Bryant, 7-yard run (Hanson kick)
12-70
USC
3
12:56
Dudum, 23-yard field goal
8-56
Individual Statistics
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Washington-Bryant 26-158-2; J. Barry 11-40; M. Jones 4-19; Hobert 5-13; Turner 2-7
USC-Strother 14-40; Crayton 6-38; Spears 2-6; Perry 7-1; Bender 2-(-1); R. Johnson 5-(-6)
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Score By Quarters
Washington-Hobert 14-25-2-119-0
USC-Perry 14-29-1-196-0; R. Johnson 3-7-0-31-0
Washington
7
7
0
0
-
14
Southern Cal
0
0
3
0
3
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
-
Washington-M. Bailey 4-37; Pierce 3-32; McKay 3-30; Bryant 1-9; M. Jones 1-7;
Gaspard 1-5; J. Barry 1-(-1)
Team Statistics
Wash.
USC
USC-Morton 8-83; Hannah 3-77; Jackson 2-14; Conway 1-46; Scott 1-11; Banta 1-2;
First Downs
18
17
Strother 1-(-6)
Rushing
48-237
36-78
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Passing: Comp-Att-I
14-25-2
17-36-1
Washington-Pahukoa 1-0
Passing Yards
119
227
USC-Pace 1-4; Oliver 1-0
Total Offense
73-356
72-305
Yards/Play
4.9
4.2
Fumbles-Lost
1-1
2-0
Interceptions-Yards
1-0
2-4
Total Turnovers
3
1
Penalties
4-45
4-30
Punting
6-41.3
8-34.5
Punt Returns
7-26
2-7
Kickoff Returns
1-15
2-27
Third Down Efficiency
8-16
5-18
Fourth Down Efficiency
1-1
1-3
Sacks By Defense
5-37
0
Possession Time
31:57
28:03
37
Rose Gride
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 58, Oregon State 6
(11/11/91)
At Parker Stadium
1. Florida State
10 Tennessee
19. Ohio State
TD tosses went to Mario Bailey- covering
2. Miami
11 Nebraska
20. Baylor
(Corvallis, OR)
five, 27 and 18 yards - vaulting Bailey into
3. Washington
12. Notre Dame
21. Virginia
the Pac-10 record book for the most touch-
4. Michigan
13. Texas A&M
22. Stanford
November 16, 1991
5. Florida
14. East Carolina
23. Brigham Young
6. California
15 Clemson
24 North Carolina State
Weather: Rain and 55 degrees
down receptions in a season (15). Hobert's
fourth TD pass went to flanker Orlando
7. Alabama
16. Colorado
25. Illinois
Attendance: 31, 588
McKay, on an 18-yard connection with 1:08
8. Penn State
17 Syracuse
9. Iowa
18. Oklahoma
remaining in the first half.
Hobert's effort earned him Pac-10 Offen-
Game Summary
sive Player of the Week honors for the third
Washington clinched its second straight
time this season.
Pacific-10 Conference title and Rose Bowl
berth on the road and in the rain, scoring
The Husky defense limited Oregon State to
83 total yards and did not allow a touch-
the most points by a Husky team since 1974
in the process.
down, the fifth time in ten games an oppo-
nent was held out of the endzone. The Hus-
A fumble on the game's first series allowed
kies did not allow a pass completion in the
Oregon State to jump to an early 3-0 lead,
game and forced seven OSU fumbles.
but Washington scored on six of its next
seven possessions to take a commanding
Jay Barry led the Huskies rushing attack,
44-6 halftime lead.
compiling 75 yards on 15 carries. Napoleon
Kaufman added 50 yards and a pair of
"I really feel like Washington is the
Sophomore Billy Joe Hobert completed 14
touchdowns on 12 carries.
best team in the country. I can't see
of his 19 attempts for 190 yards and four
The Huskies finished with a 474-83 advan-
Florida State or Miami being as
touchdowns, and he ran for an additional
good on defense as Washington."
score, all in the first half. Three of Hobert's
tage in total net yards.
Jerry Pettibone, Oregon State
head coach
Scoring Summary
Drive
OSU
1
12:39
J. Burke, 32-yard field goal
4-2
UW
1
8:31
M. Bailey, 5-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
11-78
UW
1
8:18
Safety (Paulson recovered fumble in endzone)
0-0
UW
1
7:11
M. Bailey, 27-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
3-49
UW
2
14:56
M. Bailey, 18-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
9-77
UW
2
10:18
Kaufman, 8-yard run (Hanson kick)
9-58
UW
2
8:03
Hobert, 11-yard run (Hanson kick)
3-11
OSU
2
2:36
J. Burke, 41-yard field goal
10-56
UW
2
1:08
McKay, 18-yard pass from Hobert (Hanson kick)
8-72
UW
3
0:58
Kaufman, 1-yard run (Hanson kick)
11-54
UW
3
0:00
Turner, 5-yard run (Hanson kick)
3-24
Individual Statistics
Score By Quarters
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Washington
16
28
14
0
-
58
Oregon State
3
3
0
0
-
6
Washington-J. Barry 15-70; Kaufman 12-50-2; Bryant 8-48; Brunell 3-18; M. Jones 1-13;
Hobert 4-10-1; Johnson 2-8; Bjornson 1-8; Turner 3-7-1
Oregon State-Paulson 5-35; Morton 5-19; Barry 5-17; Johnson 6-14; Browning 11-1; Thomas
Team Statistics
Wash.
OSU
4-1; R. Miller 5-1; Willis 1-0; J.J. Young 9-(-5)
First Downs
28
6
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Rushing
49-232
51-83
Washington-Hobert 14-19-0-190-4; Brunell 5-7-0-52-0; Bjornson 0-1-0-0
Passing: Comp-Att-I
19-27-0
0-4-0
Oregon State-Browning 0-4-0-0
Passing Yards
242
0
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Total Offense
76-474
55-83
Yards/Play
6.2
1.5
Washington-M. Bailey 6-79-3; McKay 5-71-1; Pierce 3-38; Gaspard 2-24; M. Jones 1-12; Kralik
Fumbles-Lost
4-4
7-3
1-11; Kaufman 1-7
Interceptions-Yards
0-0
0-0
Oregon State-none
Total Turnovers
4
3
Interceptions (No-Yds)
Penalties
3-20
6-30
Punting
2-35.0
8-36.0
Washington-none
Punt Returns
6-31
0-0
Oregon State-none
Kickoff Returns
4-79
9-125
Third Down Efficiency
9-13
3-15
Fourth Down Efficiency
1-1
2-2
Sacks By Defense
1-5
0
Possession Time
28:52
31:08
38
Rose B. Gwide
AP Poll Top 25
Washington 56, Washington State 21
(11/18/91)
1. Miami
10. Tennessee
19. Oklahoma
Husky Stadium (Seattle, WA)
Two of his tosses went to Mario Bailey,
2. Washington
II. Nebraska
20. Virginia
November 23, 1991
giving Bailey a total of 17 on the season,
3. Florida State
12. Texas A&M
21. Stanford
4. Michigan
13. East Carolina
22. North Carolina State
Weather: Rain and 50 degrees
which tied Hugh McElhenny and Chuck
5. Florida
14. Clemson
23. Tulsa
Carroll for most touchdowns in a season.
6., California
15. Colorado
24. Georgia
Attendance: 72,581
Bailey's 72 yards gave him 1,037 for the
7. Penn State
16. Syracuse
25. UCLA
8. Alabama
17. Notre Dame
season, leaving him just two yards shy of the
9. Iowa
18. Ohio State
single season record. However, Bailey did
Game Summary
become only the second Husky to top the
The Huskies completed their first-ever 11-
1,000-yard receiving plateau in a single sea-
0 season with a convincing victory over their
son.
cross-state rival, the Washington State Cou-
Hobert's other scoring toss came on the
gars. The 56 point effort by the Huskies set
game's opening drive, as he hit Orlando
an Apple Cup record, breaking last season's
McKay with a 69-yard scoring bolt on first
mark of 55 points.
and 25. McKay finished with 110 yards on
The 56 points gave Washington a season
five catches.
total of 461, an average of 41.9 ppg. That
Washington State rushed for 96 yards, be-
mark ties the 1925 Husky squad as the most
coming the ninth team in 11 games which
prolific scoring team in Husky history. The
failed to reach the 100-yard mark.
modern scoring mark of 391 points (1990)
was obliterated by the '91 Huskies.
The victory extended the Washington win-
"I think Washington is a great foot-
ning streak to 13 games, dating back to last
ball team. That defense is awesome
Billy Joe Hobert threw three scoring passes,
season, and their first unbeaten, untied sea-
and Steve Emtman is a tremendous
giving him a school record of 22 in his first
son since 1915 (7-0-0).
player."
season at the helm of the Husky offense.
Mike Price, Washington State
head coach
Scoring Summary
Drive
UW
1
12:53
McKay, 69-yard pass from Hobert (kick blocked)
6-81
WSU
1
4:12
Olobia, 33-yard pass from Bledsoe (J. Hanson kick)
13-89
UW
2
14:08
Turner, 4-yard pass from Hobert (pass failed)
6-27
UW
2
12:29
W. Bailey, 37-yard int. return (Barry pass from Hobert)
UW
2
8:30
M. Bailey, 20-yard pass from Brunell (run failed)
4-40
UW
2
1:09
Safety (Fields sacks Bledsoe)
UW
3
7:53
Bryant, 21-yard run (T. Hanson kick)
9-67
WSU
3
1:06
Wright-Fair, 3-yard pass from Bledsoe (J. Hanson kick)
4-55
UW
4
12:39
M. Bailey, 7-yard pass from Hobert (T. Hanson kick)
4-9
WSU
4
11:04
Bobo, 15-yard pass from Bledsoe (J. Hanson kick)
7-82
UW
4
10:37
J. Barry, 8-yard run (T. Hanson kick)
3-60
UW
4
3:50
Brunell, 5-yard run (T. Hanson kick)
5-31
Score By Quarters
Individual Statistics
Washington
6
22
7
21
I
56
Washington State
7
0
7
7
-
21
Rushing (Att-Yds-TD)
Washington-Bryant 24-127-1; J. Barry 8-38-1; Kaufman 2-10; Hobert 2-9; Turner 2-5; Brunell
2-5; M. Jones 2-4; McKay 1-(-2); Huckaby 1-(-2)
Team Statistics
Wash.
WSU
Washington State-Wright-Fair 20-94; Sparks 7-24; Eucker 0-4; Carr 2-2; Scott 1-0; Pattinson
First Downs
25
22
2-(-1); Williams 1-(-2); Bobo 1-(-4); Bledsoe 8-(-21)
Rushing
44-194
42-96
Passing (Comp-Att-I-Yds-TD)
Passing: Comp-Att-I
18-30-1
21-42-2
Washington-Hobert 16-26-1-236-3; Brunell 2-3-0-30-1; J. Barry 0-1-0
Passing Yards
266
334
Washington State-Bledsoe 18-35-2-295-3; Pattinson 3-7-0-39-0
Total Offense
74-460
84-430
Yards/Play
6.2
5.1
Receiving (Rec-Yds-TD)
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
4-1
Washington-M. Bailey 7-72-2; McKay 5-110-1; Gaspard 2-28; Bruener 2-27; Pierce 1-25;
Interceptions-Yards
2-123
1-2
Turner 1-4
Total Turnovers
1
6
Washington State-Bobo 9-151-1; Williams 2-42; Schexnayder 2-26; DeLaCruz 2-15;
Penalties
11-109
16-169
Wright-Fair 2-3-1; Kennedy 1-48; Olobia 1-33-1; Pointer 1-9; Borden 1-7
Punting
4-37.8
7-33.9
Punt Returns
2-43
1-(-2)
Interceptions (No-Yds-TD)
Kickoff Returns
4-64
5-62
Washington-T. Smith 1-86; W. Bailey 1-37-1
Third Down Efficiency
9-15
4-16
Washington State-Hunter 1-2
Fourth Down Efficiency
0-0
2-2
Sacks By Defense
7-35
0-0
Possession Time
26:49
33:11
39
Rose B)ow1) Guide
1991 Husky Honors
Mario Bailey
Chico Fraley
1st Team All-America (AP Football Writers)
1st Team All-Pac-10
2nd Team All-America (Football News)
Dana Hall
Pac-10 Co-Offensive Player of the Year
1st Team All-Pac-10
1st Team All-Pac-10
Chuck Niemi "Big Hit" Award
KIRO Player of the Year
KOMO Back/Receiver of the Year
Travis Hanson
Pac-10 All-Academic Honorable Mention
Team Captain
Texaco Star Performer of the Year
Billy Joe Hobert
Texaco Star Performer (Arizona, Oregon St.)
All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention
Metropolitan Savings Player of the Week (Toledo, Oregon, ASU,
Pac-10 Player of the Week (Stanford, Nebraska)
Oregon St.)
ABC/Chevrolet Player of the Week (Stanford, Nebraska)
Texaco Star Performer (Stanford)
Walter Bailey
2nd Team All-Pac-10
Metropolitan Savings Player of the Game (Stanford)
Texaco Star Performer (Arizona St., Oregon St.)
Jay Barry
Dave Hoffmann
Pac-10 Player of the Week (Oct. 19)
AT&T Long Distance Award (Nebraska)
Ist Team All-America (Football Writers)
ABC/Chevrolet Player of the Game (California)
2nd Team All-America (AP)
Pac-10 Player of the Week (California)
3rd Team All-America (Football News)
1st Team All-Pac-10
Texaco Star Performer (California)
Metropolitan Savings Player of the Week (California)
Pac-10 Player of the Week (USC)
Texaco Star Performer (USC)
Mark Brunell
Earle T. Glant "Tough Husky" Award
Guy Flaherty "Most Inspirational" Award
Steve Hoffmann
Beno Bryant
Mark Drenan Most Inspirational JV Player Award
Pac-10 Co-Offensive Player of the Week (USC)
Metropolitan Savings Player of the Week (Nebraska, USC)
Donald Jones
1st Team All-Pac-10
Texaco Star Performer (USC, Kansas St.)
All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention
Metropolitan Savings Player of the Week (Kansas St.)
Team Captain
Brett Collins
All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention
Matt Jones
All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention
Team Captain
Ed Cunningham
Lincoln Kennedy
1st Team All-Pac-10
3rd Team All-America (AP)
1st Team All-Pac-10
Pac-10 All-Academic Team
#101 Club Scholarship Award
Morris Trophy Award (Top Offensive Lineman in the Pac-10)
John P. Angel Offensive Lineman of the Year
L. Wait Rising Offensive Lineman of the Year
Team Captain
Chuck Niemi "Big Hit" Award
Erik Mahler
Steve Emtman
Heisman Trophy finalist
Kurt Gegner Memorial Award
Outland Trophy winner
Siupeli Malamala
Lombardi Award winner
2nd Team All-Pac-10
1st Team All-America (AP, Football News, Walter Camp, Football
Orlando McKay
Writers, Kodak)
Pac-10 All-Academic Team
Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year
Husky Tyee Club "Football Athlete of the Year"
Morris Trophy Award Winner (Top Defensive Lineman in the
Tom Nakane
Pac-10)
Bob Jarvis Inspirational Walk-On Award
1st Team All-Pac-10
UPI Lineman of the Year
Jim Nevelle
Football News Defensive Player of the Year
Pac-10 All-Academic Honorable Mention
KIRO Player of the Year
Shane Pahukoa
John P. Angel Defensive Lineman of the Year
2nd Team All-Pac-10
Pac-10 Player of the Week (Arizona)
Texaco Star Performer (Oregon)
Texaco Star Performer (Nebraska)
KING TV Most Improved Player
Metropolitan Savings Player of the Week (Arizona)
Aaron Pierce
Jaime Fields
2nd Team All-Pac-10
All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention
Tyrone Rodgers
All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention
Mark Schilder
Brian Stapp "Inspirational Non-Letterman" Award
40
Rose B). Guide
1991 All-Pacific-10 Conference Football Team
First Team Offense
Second Team Offense
QB
Mike Pawlawski, Sr., California
QB
Drew Bledsoe, So., Wash. St.
RB
Tommy Vardell, Sr., Stanford
RB
Glyn Milburn, Jr., Stanford
RB
Russell White, Jr., California
RB
Kevin Williams, Jr. UCLA
WR
Mario Bailey, Sr., Washington
WR
Eric Guliford, Jr., Arizona St.
WR
Sean LaChapelle, Jr., UCLA
WR
Chris Walsh, Sr., Stanford
TE
Clarence Williams, Jr., Wash. St.
TE
Aaron Pierce, Sr., Washington
C
Ed Cunningham, Sr., Washington
Jeff Thomason, Sr., Oregon
OL
Troy Auzenne, Sr., California
C
Steve Gordon, Sr., California
OL
Lincoln Kennedy, Jr. Washington
OL
Siupeli Malamala, Sr., Washington
OL
Bob Whitfield, Jr., Stanford
OL
John Fina, Sr., Arizona
OL
Vaughn Parker, So., UCLA
OL
Todd Steussie, So., California
OL
Tony Boselli, Fr., USC
OL
Craig Novitsky, So., UCLA
PK
Doug Brien, So., California
PK
Jason Hanson, Sr., Wash. St.
AP
Chuck Levy, Fr., Arizona
AP
Glyn Milburn, Jr. Stanford
First Team Defense
Second Team Defense
DL
Steve Emtman, Jr., Washington
DL
Mack Travis, Jr., California
DL
Marcus Woods, Sr., Oregon
DL
Mike Chalenski, Jr. UCLA
DL
Shane Collins, Sr., Arizona St.
DL
David Webb, Jr. USC
LB
Donald Jones, Sr., Washington
LB
Arnold Ale, Jr., UCLA
LB
Ron George, Jr. Stanford
LB
Brett Wallerstedt, Jr., Arizona St.
LB
Dave Hoffman, Jr., Washington
LB
Anthony McClanahan, So., Wash. St.
LB
Chico Fraley, Sr., Washington
LB
Kurt Barber, Sr., USC
CB
Dana Hall, Sr., Washington
CB
Walter Bailey, Jr., Washington
CB
Phillippi Sparks, Sr., Arizona St.
CB
Carlton Gray, Jr., UCLA
S
Matt Darby, Sr., UCLA
S
David Wilson, Sr., California
S
Eric Castle, Jr., Oregon
S
Shane Pahukoa, Jr., Washington
P
Jason Hanson, Sr., Wash. St.
P
Ron Dale, Sr., USC
RS
Curtis Conway, So., USC
RS
Terry Vaughn, So., Arizona
Co-Offensive Players of the Year:
Mario Bailey, WR, Washington
Mike Pawlawski, QB, California
Defensive Player of the Year:
Steve Emtman, DT, Washington
Pacific-10 Coach of the Year:
Don James, Washington
All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention (Washington players only):
Beno Bryant, TB, Jr.; Brett Collins, OLB, Sr.; Jaime Fields, OLB, Jr.; Billy Joe Hobert, QB, So.; Matt Jones, FB, So.;
Tyrone Rodgers, MG, Sr.
41
Rose Gwide
1991 Washington Defensive Starters
(Number of starts in parentheses)
MIDDLE
STRONG
WEAK
FREE
D. TACKLE
GUARD
D. END
OLB
LEFT ILB
RIGHT ILB
OLB
RIGHT CB
LEFT CB
ROVER
SAFETY
Stanford
Emtman
Rodgers
Mason
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Fields
Bailey
Hall
Tailele
Pahukoa
Nebraska
Emtman
Rodgers
Mason
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Fields
Bailey
Hall
Tailele
Pahukoa
Kansas St.
Emtman
Rodgers
D. Smith (1)
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Fields
Doctor
Hall
Tailele (3)
Pahukoa
Arizona
Emtman
Rodgers
Mason
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Fields
Bailey
Hall
T. Smith
Pahukoa
Toledo
Emtman
Rodgers
Mason
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Fields
Bailey
Hall
T. Smith
Pahukoa
California
Emtman
Rodgers
Mason
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Fields
Bailey
Hall
T. Smith
Pahukoa
Oregon
Emtman
Rodgers
Mason
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Fields
Bailey
Hall
T. Smith
Pahukoa
ASU
Emtman
Rodgers
Mason
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
Bailey
Hall
T. Smith
Pahukoa
USC
Emtman
Rodgers
Mason
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
Doctor (2)
Hall
T. Smith
Pahukoa
Oregon St.
Emtman
Rodgers
Mason
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins(3)
Bailey
Hall
T. Smith
Pahukoa
WSU
Emtman (11)
Rodgers (11)
Mason (10)
Jones (11)
Hoffmann (11)
Fraley (11)
Fields (8)
Bailey (9)
Hall (11)
T. Smith (8)
Pahukoa (11)
1991 Washington Offensive Starters
(Number of starts in parentheses)
WEAK
WEAK
STRONG
STRONG
TIGHT
QUARTER-
SPLIT END
TACKLE
GUARD
CENTER
GUARD
TACKLE
END
BACK
FULLBACK
TAILBACK
FLANKER
Stanford
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Kaligis
Malamala
Pierce
Hobert
M. Jones°
Barry
McKay
Nebraska
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Kaligis
Malamala
Pierce
Hobert
M. Jones
Barry
McKay
Kansas St.
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Nevelle
Malamala
Pierce.
Hobert
M. Jones
Barry
McKay
Arizona
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Nevelle
Malamala
Pierce
Hobert
M. Jones
Bryant
McKay
Toledo
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Kaligis
Malamala
Pierce
Hobert
M. Jones
Bryant
Gaspard (1)
California
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Kaligis
Malamala
Pierce
Hobert
M. Jones
Bryant
McKay
Oregon
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Nevelle
Malamala
Pierce
Hobert
M. Jones
Bryant
McKay
ASU
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Nevelle
Malamala
Pierce
Hobert
M. Jones
Barry (4)
McKay
USC
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Kaligis (5)
Pierson (1)
Pierce
Hobert
M. Jones
Bryant
McKay
Oregon St.
Bailey
Rongen
Kennedy
Cunningham
Nevelle
Malamala
Pierce
Hobert
M. Jones
Bryant
McKay
WSU
Bailey (11)
Rongen (11)
Kennedy (11)
Cunningham (11)
Nevelle
(6)
Malamala (10)
Pierce (11)
Hobert (11)
M. Jones (11)
Bryant (7)
McKay (10)
"Huskies opened games with extra receiver
NOTE: Crabbe handled kickoffs when sharing time with Hanson
Huskies in NCAA Rankings
Individual
Passing-Billy Joe Hobert (12th)
Total Offense-Billy Joe Hobert (24th)
Receiving (Catches)-Mario Bailey (12th [tie] in catches per game at 5.6)
Receiving (Yards)-Mario Bailey (6th; 94.27)
Interceptions-Walter Bailey (tied for 6th)
Scoring-Mario Bailey (6th at 9.27 ppg)
Team
Rushing Offense-17th
Passing Offense-22nd
Total Offense-7th at 471.9
Scoring-2nd at 41.9 (Fresno St. is 1st at 44.2)
Rushing Defense-2nd at 237.1 (Texas A&M 1st at 222.4;
Clemson 3rd at 263.1)
Scoring Defense-2nd at 9.2 (Miami is 1st at 9.1; Alabama 3rd at 10.7)
Turnover Margin-2nd at +1.73 (Penn St. is 1st at 1.83)
42
Rose
e
1991 Washington Football Statistics (11-0, 8-0)
Washington Results
Rushing
UW
OPP
ATT
PLAYER
TC
YG
YL
NET
AVG
TD
LG
S.
7
°at Stanford
42
7
45,273
B. Bryant, tb
158
973
30
943
6.0
8
65t
S.
21
at Nebraska
36
21
76,304
J. Barry, tb
146
751
33
718
4.9
10
81t
S.
28
Kansas State
56
3
71,638
N. Kaufman, tb
67
331
24
307
4.6
4
19
O.
5
°Arizona
54
0
72,495
Mt. Jones, fb
43
223
1
222
5.2
2
36
O.
12
Toledo
48
0
72,266
L. Johnson, fb
17
100
0
100
5.9
1
23
O.
19
°at California
24
17
74,500
E. Harris, tb
15
89
0
89
5.9
0
14
O.
26
*Oregon
29
7
72,318
D. Turner, fb
23
84
1
83
3.6
2
18
N.
2
*Arizona State
44
16
72,405
B. Hobert, qb/p
33
117
61
56
1.7
5
19
N.
9
°at USC
14
3
59,320
M. Brunell, qb
13
36
11
25
1.9
1
15
N.
16
°at Oregon State
58
6
31,588
E. Bjornson, qb
4
20
0
20
5.0
1
9t
N. 23
*Washington State
56
21
72,581
E. Huckaby, tb
3
5
2
3
1.0
0
5
. Denotes Pac-10 Conference game
O. McKay, fl
1
0
2
-2
-2.0
0
-2
Team
1
0
13
-13
-13.0
0
0
Washington
524
2729
178
2551
4.9
34
81t
Team Statistics
Opponents
390
1244
506
738
1.9
6
68t
UW
OPP
Total First Downs
266
150
Receiving
Rush/Pass/Pen
128/123/15
57/80/13
Total Net Yards
5191
2608
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Total Plays
861
730
M. Bailey, se
62
1037
16.7
17
71t
Play Average
6.03
3.57
O. McKay, fl
47
627
13.3
6
69t
Game Averge
471.9
237.1
A. Pierce, te
23
280
12.2
0
30
Net Yards Rushing
2551
738
C. Gaspard, se
18
201
11.2
0
18
Total Carries
524
390
Mt. Jones, fb
14
131
9.4
0
20
Play Average
4.87
1.89
B. Bryant, tb
11
92
8.4
0
24
Game Average
231.9
67.1
J. Barry, tb
6
75
12.5
1
32t
Net Yards Passing
2640
1870
M. Bruener, te
5
57
11.4
0
22
Att/Comp/Int
337/203/12
340/156/21
N. Kaufman, tb
5
39
7.8
0
17
Gain Per Attempt
7.83
5.50
J. Kralik, fl
3
37
12.3
1
20t
Game Average
240.0
170.0
D. Turner, fb
3
22
7.3
1
11
Punts/Average
48/39.1
87/37.8
D. Barry, se
2
18
9.0
0
11
Punt Returns/Avg.
47/7.9
17/8.1
D. Mack, se
2
18
9.0
0
13
Int. Returns/Avg.
22%/14.6
12/5.5
B. Bailey, te
1
9
9.0
0
9
Kick Returns/Avg.
24/15.8
70/15.5
L. Johnson, fb
1
-3
-3.0
0
-3
Penalties/Yards
83/749
76/581
Washington
203
2640
13.0
26
71t
Fumbles/No. Lost
17/8
33/18
Opponents
156
1870
12.0
6
59t
Touchdowns
63
12
Run/Pass/Ret
34/26/3
6/6/0
PATs/Attempts
51/58
10/10
Total Offense (Leaders Only)
2-pt Conv/Att
2/5
2/2
Field Goal Attempts
8/16
5/9
PLAYER
G PLYS
R
P
TOT
GM/AVG
PL/AVG
HI GM
Safeties
2
B. Hobert, qb/p
11
318
56
0
2271
2327
211.5
7.3
318
Total Points
B. Bryant, tb
11
158
943
0
943
461
85.7
6.0
101
158
J. Barry, tb
11
147
718
0
Game Average
718
41.9
65.3
4.9
143
9.2
Washington
11
861
2551
2640
5191
Time of Possession
471.9
6.0
618
344:22
315:38
Opponents
11
730
738
1870
2608
237.1
3.6
Game Average
430
31:18
28:42
All-Purpose Running
PLAYER
G
RUSH
P/REC
P/RET
K/RET
I/RET
FG/R
TOTAL
GAME AVG
HI GM
B. Bryant, tb
11
943
92
267
28
0
0
1330
120.9
194
M. Bailey, se
11
0
1037
0
0
0
0
1037
94.3
170
J. Barry, tb
11
718
75
0
39
0
0
832
75.6
153
Washington
11
2551
2640
370
379
321
0
6261
569.2
707
Opponents
11
738
1870
137
1082
66
0
3893
353.9
492
Passing
PLAYER
G
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
YDS/GM
YDS/ATT
CMP/GM
HI GM
B. Hobert, qb/p
11
285
173
10
2271
.607
22
71t
206.5
8.0
15.7
283
M. Brunell, qb
8
44
26
2
333
.591
4
32t
41.6
7.6
3.3
93
E. Bjornson, qb
11
7
4
0
36
.571
0
11
3.3
5.1
0.4
19
J. Barry, tb
11
1
0
0
0
.000
0
0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0
Washington
11
337
203
12
2640
.602
26
71t
240.0
7.8
18.5
312
Opponents
11
340
156
21
1870
.459
6
59t
170.0
5.5
14.2
334
43
Rose B)owD de
1991 Washington Football Statistics
Field Goals
Third Down Conversions
PLAYER
0-19
20-29
30-39
40-49
50+
PLAYER
CONV
ATT
PCT
PEN
4TH
T. Hanson, pk
1-1
3-5
2-3
2-6
0-0
B. Hobert, qb/p
65
125
.520
2
5-8
J. Crabbe, pk
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-1
0-0
M. Brunell, qb
15
27
.556
0
1-3
Washington
1-1
3-5
2-3
2-7
0-0
E. Bjornson, qb
4
10
.400
1
0-1
Opponents
0-0
1-2
1-2
2-3
1-2
T. Nakane, qb
2
2
1.000
0
0-0
Team
0
0
.000
0
1-1
Washington
86
164
.524
3
7-13
Opponents
47
172
.273
3
12-18
Scoring
Score By Quarters
PLAYER
TD
PAT
2XP
FG
SA
TP
M. Bailey, se
17
102
1
2
3
4
TOTAL
J. Barry, tb
11
1-1
68
8-15
Washington
105
178
72
106
-
461
T. Hanson, pk
40-44
64
Opponents
24
23
32
22
-
101
B. Bryant, tb
9
54
O. McKay, fl
6
36
B. Hobert, qb/p
5
0-3
30
Interceptions
N. Kaufman, tb
4
24
D. Turner, fb
3
18
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
M. Jones, fb
2
12
W. Bailey, cb
7
114
16.3
2
37t
W. Bailey, cb
2
12
S. Pahukoa, fs
3
32
10.7
0
32
J. Crabbe, pk
11-13
0-1
11
J. Moore, cb
2
2
1.0
0
2
L. Johnson, fb
1
1-0
8
T. Smith, fs
1
86
86.0
0
86
J. Kralik, fl
1
6
J. Fields, wlb
1
29
29.0
0
29
E. Bjornson, qb
1
0-1
6
D. Hoffmann, ilb
1
25
25.0
0
25
M. Brunell, qb
1
6
J. Clifford, ilb
1
13
13.0
0
13
Team
0-1
2
4
D. Farr, mg
1°
13
13.0
0
13
Washington
63
51-58
2-5
8-16
2
461
D. Robinson, wlb
1
4
4.0
0
4
Opponents
12
10-10
2-2
5-9
101
S. Emtman, dt
1
3
3.0
0
3
D. Hall, cb
1
0
0.0
0
0
W. Doctor, cb
1
0
0.0
0
0
L. Jones, rov
1
0
0.0
0
0
Punt Returns
Washington
22°
321
14.6
2
86
Opponents
12
66
5.5
0
18
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
°Includes intercepted fumble return(s).
B. Bryant, tb
33
267
8.1
1
53t
N. Kaufman, tb
8
66
8.3
0
16
Defensive Statistics
R. Hairston, cb
4
17
4.3
0
8
D. Hall, cb
1
14
14.0
0
14
TACKLES
FUM
PA
TACKLES
C. Fraley, ilb
1
6
6.0
0
6
Washington
47
370
7.9
1
53t
PLAYER
UT-AT
TOT
C/R
DF
FOR LOSS
SACKS
Opponents
17
137
8.1
0
21
D. Hoffmann, lb
39-32
71
3/1
4
16.5-65.5
3.0-24.0
S. Emtman, dt
31-29
60
3
19.5-50.0
6.5-33.0
S. Pahukoa, fs
30-27
57
3/1
6
1.5-7.0
1.0-6.0
D. Hall, cb
32-10
42
2/3
10
0.5-1.0
Punting
C. Fraley, ilb
20-22
42
2/1
2
7.0-17.0
2.0-7.0
H. Butler, ilb
19-22
41
2.5-8.5
A. Mason, de
21-19
40
/1
15.5-67.0
8.0-50.0
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
BL
LG
T. Smith, fs
20-17
37
1/
2
6.5-25.0
2.0-11.0
J. Werdel, P
31
1266
40.8
1
58
J. Clifford, ilb
13-23
36
1/2
2
2.0-3.5
0.5-2.0
B. Hobert, qb/p
16
612
38.3
0
59
Team
1
0
0.0
0
0
J. Fields, wlb
17-15
32
4/1
4
12.5-57.5
6.5-47.5
W. Bailey, cb
19-12
31
/2
5
1.0-1.0
Washington
48
1878
39.1
1
59
D. Jones, slb
19-11
30
3/
14.5-72.0
8.5-47.5
Opponents
87
3285
37.8
3
68
T. Rodgers, mg
10-19
29
/1
9.5-25.0
1.0-3.0
D. Smith, de
9-12
21
/2
1
1.5-6.0
0.5-4.0
P. Tailele, rov
10-10
20
/1
3
3.0-11.0
1.0-3.0
Kickoff Returns
L. Jones, rov
4-15
19
D. Robinson, wlb
11-6
17
1/
2.0-2.0
D. Killpatrick, rov
9-8
17
2.0-10.0
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
D. Farr, mg
7-10
17
/1
1
5.0-23.0
3.5-20.0
T. Smith, fs
8
136
17.0
0
40
B. Collins, wlb
5-12
17
1/1
1.0-7.0
1.0-7.0
N. Kaufman, tb
7
119
17.0
0
25
L. Johnson, fb
6-8
14
1/1
J. Barry, tb
2
39
19.5
0
20
S. Springstead, ilb
4-10
14
1
W. Bailey, cb
3
39
13.0
0
17
J. Fountaine, slb
8-5
13
/1
2.5-13.5
2.5-13.5
B. Bryant, tb
2
28
14.0
0
18
W. Doctor, cb
6-7
13
1.0-1.0
J. Clifford, ilb
1
11
11.0
0
11
L. Lyons, fs
6-5
11
D. Schmidt, ilb
1
7
7.0
0
7
R. Chambers, wlb
5-2
7
1
Washington
24
379
15.8
0
40
M. Derrow, ilb
2-5
7
1/1
1.0-4.0
Opponents
70
1082
15.5
0
42
J. Moore, cb
2-4
6
2
S. Mays, de
3-1
4
M. Lustyk, dt
2-2
4
M. Jones, fb
3-0
3
/1
D. Turner, fb
1-2
3
Sixteen others
11-3
14
/6
1.0-6.5
0.5-3.5
44
Rose W Gwide
The Last Time
100-Yard Rusher
Four Field Goals
Kickoff Returned For TD
by UW
127 yds. Beno Bryant vs. Washington
by UW
John McCallum vs. Texas A&M,
by UW
Anthony Allen vs. Pitt, 10/20/79
St., 11/23/91
9/9/89
(99 yards)
by Opp.
100 yds. Derek Brown, Nebraska,
by Opp.
Troy Bussanich, Oregon State,
by Opp.
Robert Parker, BYU, 10/20/86
9/21/91
10/31/87
(94 yds.)
Two 100-Yard Rushers
50 Yard+ Field Goal
Interception Returned For TD
by UW
Beno Bryant (139) & Jay Barry (110)
by UW
Jeff Jaeger VS. Oregon, 10/22/83
by UW
Walter Bailey vs. Washington St.,
vs. Nebraska, 9/21/91
(54 yards)
11/23/91 (37 yds)
by Opp.
Channing Williams (154) & Darryl
by Opp.
Doug Brien, California, 10/19/91
by Opp.
Carlton Gray, UCLA, 10/28/89
Harris (108), ASU, 11/1/86
(50 yards)
(65 yards)
200-Yard Rusher
Missed Point After Kick
Fumble Recovered For TD
by UW
205, Greg Lewis VS. California,
by UW
Travis Hanson VS. Washington State,
by UW
Eric Lambright VS. Miami (Ohio),
10/27/90
11/23/91
9/29/84
by Opp.
220, Jon Volpe, Stanford, 10/29/88
by Opp.
Brad Daluiso, UCLA, 11/10/90.
by Opp.
Mike Hudson, Oklahoma State, 9/7/85
Three Rushing TDs
Two Interceptions
Fumble Returned For TD
by UW
Jay Barry vs. Washington St., 11/17/90
by UW
Charles Mincy vs. Iowa, 1/1/91
by UW
Eric Briscoe vs. Stanford, 10/20/90
by Opp.
Darryl Harris, Arizona State, 11/1/86
by Opp.
Deon Figures, Colorado, 9/19/90
(17 yards)
300-Yard Passer
Three Interceptions
Scored A Safety
by UW
428 yds. Cary Conklin vs. ASU,
by UW
Tim Meamber VS. Northwestern,
by UW
vs. Washington State (Fields tackles
11/4/89
9/8/84
Bledsoe), 11/23/91
by Opp.
302 yds. Bill Musgrave, Oregon,
by Opp.
Purdue (Snap out of end zone),
10/13/90
Made 20+ Tackles
9/16/89
Three TD Passes
by UW
24, Chico Fraley VS. USC, 10/15/88
by Opp.
22, Chris Spielman, Ohio State,
Surpassed 500 Yards Total Offense
by UW
Billy Joe Hobert vs. Washington St.,
9/13/86
by UW
548 yds. vs. Toledo, 10/12/91
11/23/91
by Opp.
531 yds. UCLA, 10/9/83
by Opp.
Drew Bledsoe, Washington State,
Punt Returned For TD
11/23/91
Scored A Shutout
by UW
Beno Bryant vs. Kansas State, 9/28/91
100-Yard Receiver
(53 yards)
by UW
vs. Toledo, 10/12/91, (48-0), Seattle
by Opp.
Glyn Milburn, Stanford, 10/20/90
by Opp.
UCLA, 11/7/81 (31-0), Los Angeles
by UW
110, Orlando McKay vs. Washington
(57 yards)
St., 11/23/91
Back-to-Back Shutouts
by Opp.
151 yds. Phillip Bobo, Washington
Blocked Punt For TD
State, 11/23/91
by UW
vs. Arizona, 10/5/91, & Toledo,
by UW
Dana Hall (Andy Mason) vs. Iowa,
10/12/91
200-Yard Receiver
1/1/91
by Opp.
USC, 11/4/61 & Oregon State,
by Opp.
Dereck Moore (Kevin Curvey), ASU,
11/11/61
by UW
223 yds. Andre Riley vs. Arizona State,
10/6/90
11/4/89
Scored 50 points
Punt Blocked (No TD)
Three TD Receptions
by UW
vs. Washington State, 11/23/91
by UW
Dana Hall VS. Oregon State, 11/16/91,
(56-21) Seattle
by UW
Mario Bailey VS. Oregon State,
(Kollas punt)
by Opp.
Alabama, 10/11/75, (52-0) Tuscaloosa
11/16/91
by Opp.
Mohammed Oliver, Oregon, 10/26/91,
by Opp.
James Lofton, Stanford, 10/15/77
(Werdel punt)
Scored 60 points
Three Field Goals
by UW
VS. Oregon, 66-0 (10/26/74), Seattle
by Opp.
UCLA, 62-13 (11/3/73), Los Angeles
by UW
Travis Hanson vs. Arizona State,
11/2/91
by Opp.
Troy Bussanich, Oregon State,
Played To A Tie
10/31/87
by UW
VS. Arizona, 11/7/87 (21-21), Tucson
45
Rose Garide
Washington Game-by-Game Team Statistics
Rushing Statistics
Punt Returns Statistics
C
YG
YL
NET
AVG
TD
LG
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Stanford
47
198
44
154
3.3
4
23t
Stanford
4
43
10.8
0
24
Nebraska
47
340
5
335
7.1
4
81t
Nebraska
4
9
2.3
0
6
Kansas State
41
239
1
238
5.8
4
18
Kansas State
3
109
36.3
1
53t
Arizona
56
293
13
280
5.0
5
41
Arizona
2
11
5.5
0
6
Toledo
49
263
4
259
5.3
3
56
Toledo
7
26
3.7
0
14
California
43
289
37
252
5.9
2
65t
California
3
12
4.0
0
11
Oregon
49
225
32
193
3.9
0
36
Oregon
5
6
1.2
0
8
Arizona State
51
185
8
177
3.5
3
16
Arizona State
4
54
13.5
0
40
USC
48
242
5
237
4.9
2
55t
USC
7
26
3.7
0
17
Oregon State
49
251
19
232
4.7
4
18
Oregon State
6
31
5.2
0
16
Washington State
44
204
10
194
4.4
3
39
Washington State
2
43
21.5
0
36
Totals
524
2729
178
2551
4.9
34
81t
Totals
47
370
7.9
1
53t
Passing Statistics
Total Offense Statistics
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
PLAYS
RUSH
PASS
TOTAL
Stanford
34
23
1
261
.677
2
30
Stanford
81
154
261
415
Nebraska
40
23
2
283
.575
1
25
Nebraska
87
335
283
618
Kansas State
22
14
1
240
.636
3
71t
Kansas State
63
238
240
478
Arizona
22
10
0
165
.455
2
29t
Arizona
78
280
165
445
Toledo
28
17
2
289
.607
4
70t
Toledo
77
259
289
548
California
34
15
1
189
.441
1
35t
California
77
252
189
441
Oregon
38
25
2
274
.658
3
29t
Oregon
87
193
274
467
Arizona State
37
25
0
312
.676
2
35
Arizona State
88
177
312
489
USC
25
14
2
119
.560
0
15
USC
73
237
119
356
Oregon State
27
19
0
242
.704
4
27t
Oregon State
76
232
242
474
Washington State
30
18
1
266
.600
4
69t
Washington State
74
194
266
460
Totals
337
203
12
2640
.602
26
71t
Totals
861
2551
2640
5191
Receiving Statistics
Interceptions Statistics
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Stanford
23
261
11.3
2
30
Stanford
3
5
1.7
0
3
Nebraska
23
283
12.3
1
25
Nebraska
2
25
12.5
0
25
Kansas State
14
240
17.1
3
71t
Kansas State
4
20
5.0
0
20
Arizona
10
165
16.5
2
29t
Arizona
3°
50
16.7
1
24t
Toledo
17
289
17.0
4
70t
Toledo
1
4
4.0
0
4
California
15
189
12.6
1
35t
California
2
29
14.5
0
29
Oregon
25
274
11.0
3
29t
Oregon
3
63
21.0
0
32
Arizona State
25
312
12.5
2
35
Arizona State
1
2
2.0
0
2
USC
14
119
8.5
0
15
USC
1
0
0.0
0
0
Oregon State
19
242
12.7
4
27t
Oregon State
0
0
0.0
0
0
Washington State
18
266
14.8
4
69t
Washington State
2
123
61.5
1
86
Totals
203
2640
13.0
26
71t
Totals
22°
321
14.6
2
86
Punting Statistics
Scoring By Quarters
NO
YDS
AVG
BL
LG
IST
2ND
3RD
4TH
TOTAL
Stanford
8
336
42.0
0
59
Stanford
0
21
0
21
42
Nebraska
5
205
41.0
0
45
Nebraska
0
6
10
20
36
Kansas State
1
40
40.0
0
40
Kansas State
20
15
7
14
56
Arizona
5
179
35.8
0
54
Arizona
7
27
14
6
54
Toledo
4
170
42.5
0
58
Toledo
21
13
7
7
48
California
7
303
43.3
0
51
California
7
10
0
7
24
Oregon
3
65
21.7
1
38
Oregon
7
12
3
7
29
Arizona State
3
111
37.0
0
47
Arizona State
14
17
10
3
44
USC
6
248
41.3
0
47
USC
7
7
0
0
14
Oregon State
2
70
35.0
0
45
Oregon State
16
28
14
0
58
Washington State
4
151
37.8
0
41
Washington State
6
22
7
21
56
Totals
48
1878
39.1
1
59
Totals
105
178
72
106
461
46
Rose DC'ide,
Opponents Game-by-Game Team Statistics
Rushing Statistics
Punt Returns Statistics
C
YG
YL
NET
AVG
TD
LG
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Stanford
31
65
37
28
0.9
1
12
Stanford
3
28
9.3
0
21
Nebraska
36
162
27
135
3.8
2
27t
Nebraska
3
33
11.0
0
19
Kansas State
30
62
79
-17
-0.6
0
14
Kansas State
0
0
0.0
0
0
Arizona
39
91
61
30
0.8
0
14
Arizona
3
33
11.0
0
16
Toledo
32
83
35
48
1.5
0
17
Toledo
2
6
3.0
0
6
California
36
168
54
114
3.2
1
68t
California
1
4
4.0
0
4
Oregon
27
80
15
65
2.4
1
25t
Oregon
2
28
14.0
0
14
Arizona State
30
100
22
78
2.6
1
13
Arizona State
0
0
0.0
0
0
USC
36
130
52
78
2.2
0
40
USC
2
7
3.5
0
4
Oregon State
51
164
81
83
1.6
0
27
Oregon State
0
0
0.0
0
0
Washington State
42
139
43
96
2.3
0
20
Washington State
1
-2
-2.0
0
-2
Totals
390
1244
506
738
1.9
6
68t
Totals
17
137
8.1
0
21
Passing Statistics
Total Offense Statistics
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
PLAYS
RUSH
PASS
TOTAL
Stanford
46
20
3
210
.435
0
19
Stanford
77
28
210
238
Nebraska
29
12
2
173
.414
1
42t
Nebraska
65
135
173
308
Kansas State
32
21
4
270
.656
0
36
Kansas State
62
-17
270
253
Arizona
17
8
2
112
.471
0
19
Arizona
56
30
112
142
Toledo
30
12
1
112
.400
0
50
Toledo
62
48
112
160
California
41
18
2
215
.439
1
59t
California
77
114
215
329
Oregon
21
8
3
64
.381
0
17
Oregon
48
65
64
129
Arizona State
42
19
1
153
.452
1
20
Arizona State
72
78
153
231
USC
36
17
1
227
.472
0
46
USC
72
78
227
305
Oregon State
4
0
0
0
.000
0
0
Oregon State
55
83
0
83
Washington State
42
21
2
334
.500
3
52
Washington State
84
96
334
430
Totals
340
156
21
1870
.459
6
59t
Totals
730
738
1870
2608
Receiving Statistics
Interceptions Statistics
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Stanford
20
210
10.5
0
19
Stanford
1
18
18.0
0
18
Nebraska
12
173
14.4
1
42t
Nebraska
2
5
2.5
0
5
Kansas State
21
270
12.9
0
36
Kansas State
1
0
0.0
0
0
Arizona
8
112
14.0
0
19
Arizona
0
0
0.0
0
0
Toledo
12
112
9.3
0
50
Toledo
2
22
11.0
0
18
California
18
215
11.9
1
59t
California
1
11
11.0
0
11
Oregon
8
64
8.0
0
17
Oregon
2
4
2.0
0
4
Arizona State
19
153
8.1
I
20
Arizona State
0
0
0.0
0
0
USC
17
227
13.4
0
46
USC
2
4
2.0
0
4
Oregon State
0
0
0.0
0
0
Oregon State
0
0
0.0
0
0
Washington State
21
334
15.9
3
52
Washington State
1
2
2.0
0
2
Totals
156
1870
12.0
6
59t
Totals
12
66
5.5
0
18
Punting Statistics
Scoring By Quarters
NO
YDS
AVG
BL
LG
1ST
2ND
3RD
4TH
TOTAL
Stanford
8
270
33.8
0
44
Stanford
0
7
0
0
7
Nebraska
9
399
44.3
0
68
Nebraska
7
7
7
0
21
Kansas State
6
242
40.3
0
51
Kansas State
0
3
0
0
3
Arizona
9
340
37.8
0
60
Arizona
0
0
0
0
0
Toledo
11
414
37.6
0
45
Toledo
0
0
0
0
0
California
7
297
42.4
0
56
California
7
3
7
0
17
Oregon
8
233
29.1
2
46
Oregon
0
0
0
7
7
Arizona State
7
256
36.6
0
45
Arizona State
0
0
8
8
16
USC
8
345
43.1
0
55
USC
0
0
3
0
3
Oregon State
7
252
36.0
1
46
Oregon State
3
3
0
0
6
Washington State
7
237
33.9
0
50
Washington State
7
0
7
7
21
Totals
87
3285
37.8
3
68
Totals
24
23
32
22
101
47
Rose B) Guide
1991 Washington Miscellaneous Single-Game Statistics
Individual
Longest Punt:
59 yards, Billy Joe Hobert vs.
Stanford
Most Rushing Attempts:
26, Beno Bryant vs. USC
Most Field Goals Att.:
3, Travis Hanson vs. California,
Most Yards Rushing:
158, Beno Bryant vs. USC
Oregon & Arizona State
Longest TD Run:
81 yards, Jay Barry vs. Nebraska
Most Field Goals Made:
3, Travis Hanson vs. Oregon &
Arizona State
Longest Run, No Score:
56 yards, Beno Bryant vs. Toledo
Most Consecutive FGs Made:
9, Orlando McKay VS. Oregon
6, Travis Hanson vs.
Most Pass Receptions:
Oregon to present
Most Yards Receiving:
170, Mario Bailey vs. Toledo
Longest Field Goal:
44 yards, Travis Hanson
Most Passes Attempted:
40, Billy Joe Hobert vs. Nebraska
vs. Oregon
Most Passes Completed:
23, Billy Joe Hobert vs. Nebraska
& Oregon
Team
Most Yards Passing:
283 yards, Billy Joe Hobert
vs. Nebraska
Most First Downs:
31 vs. Nebraska
Most TD Passes:
4, Billy Joe Hobert vs.
Rushing:
15 vs. Kansas State & Arizona
Oregon State
Passing:
16 vs. Nebraska
Most Passes Intercepted:
2, Billy Joe Hobert vs. Nebraska,
Penalty:
5 vs. Washington State
Oregon & USC
Most Yards Rushing:
335 vs. Nebraska
Longest TD Pass:
71 yards, Billy Joe Hobert to
Most Yards Passing:
312 vs. Arizona State
Mario Bailey vs. Kansas State
Most Yards Total Offense:
618 vs. Nebraska
Longest Pass, No TD:
35 yards, Billy Joe Hobert to
Orlando McKay vs. Arizona State
Most Fumbles:
4 vs. California & Oregon State
Lost:
Most Total Offense Att.:
47, Billy Joe Hobert vs. Nebraska
4 vs. Oregon State
Most Yards Total Offense:
318, Billy Joe Hobert VS. Nebraska
Most Interceptions:
4 vs. Kansas State
Most Penalties:
Most TDs:
3, Mario Bailey vs. Toledo &
13 vs. Oregon & Arizona State
Yards:
Oregon State
110 vs. Oregon
Most Punts:
9 vs. Stanford
Most Rushing TDs:
2, Barry vs. Stan. & KSU; Hobert
vs. Neb.; Bryant vs. USC;
Best Punt Average:
44.0 yards Stanford
Kaufman vs. OSU
Most Kickoff Returns:
4 vs. Nebraska, Oregon State &
Most TD Receptions:
3, Mario Bailey vs. Toledo &
Washington State
Kansas State
Yards:
79 vs. Oregon State
Most Punt Returns:
6, Beno Bryant vs. USC
Most Punt Returns:
7 vs. Toledo & USC
Yards:
109 vs. Kansas State
Most Punt Return Yards:
109, Beno Bryant vs. Kansas State
Longest TD Punt Return:
53 yards, Beno Bryant vs.
Kansas State
Longest Return, No Score:
40 yards, Beno Bryant vs. Kansas
State & Arizona State
Most Kickoff Returns:
3, Napoleon Kaufman vs.
Washington State
Most Kickoff Return Yards:
45, Napoleon Kaufman VS.
Washington State
Longest TD Kickoff Return:
None
Longest Return, No Score:
40 yards, Tommie Smith VS.
Kansas State
Most Interceptions:
1, on 22 occasions
Most Interception Return Yards:
86, Tommie Smith vs.
Washington State
Longest TD Interception Return:
37 yards, Walter Bailey VS.
Washington State
Longest Int. Return, No. Score:
86, Tommie Smith VS.
Washington State
Most Punts:
8, Billy Joe Hobert VS. Stanford
Most Yards Punting:
347, Billy Joe Hobert vs. Stanford
48
Rose B). W Guide
1991 Opponents' Miscellaneous Single-Game Statistics
Individual
Team
Most Rushing Attempts:
21, Derek Brown (Nebraska)
Most First Downs:
22, Washington State
Most Yards Rushing:
100 yards, Derek Brown
Rushing:
10, Washington State
(Nebraska)
Passing:
13, Stanford
Longest TD Run:
68 yards, Lindsey Chapman
Penalty:
3, Stanford
(California)
Most Yards Rushing:
135, Nebraska
Longest Run, No Score:
40 yards, Estrus Crayton (USC)
Most Yards Passing:
334, Washington State
Most Pass Receptions:
12, Michael Smith (Kansas State)
Most Yards Total Offense:
430, Washington State
Most Yards Receiving:
174, Michael Smith (Kansas State)
Most Fumbles:
7, Oregon State
Most Passes Attempted:
42, Bret Powers (Arizona State)
Lost:
5, Arizona
Most Passes Completed:
19, Bret Powers (Arizona State)
Most Interceptions:
2, Nebraska, Toledo, Oregon &
Most Yards Passing:
295, Drew Bledsoe (Washington
USC
State)
Most Penalties:
16, Washington State
Most TD Passes:
3, Drew Bledsoe (Washington
Yards:
169, Washington State
State)
Most Punts:
11, Toledo
Most Passes Intercepted:
3, Jason Smargiasso (Kansas State)
Best Punt Average:
44.3, Nebraska
Longest TD Pass:
59 yards, Mike Pawlawski to Sean
Most Kickoff Returns:
9, Arizona, Arizona State &
Dawkins (California)
Oregon State
Longest Pass, No TD:
52 yards, Drew Bledsoe to Phillip
Yards:
160, Arizona
Bobo (Washington State)
Most Punt Returns:
4, Stanford
Most Total Offense Att.:
51, Mike Pawlawski (California)
Yards:
36, Stanford
Most Yards Total Offense:
274, Drew Bledsoe (Washington
State)
Most TDs:
2, Derek Brown (Nebraska)
Most Rushing TDs:
2, Derek Brown (Nebraska)
Most TD Receptions:
1, on six occasions
Most Punt Returns:
3, Glyn Milburn (Stanford) &
Terry Vaughn (Arizona)
Most Punt Return Yards:
33, Terry Vaughn (Arizona)
Longest TD Punt Return:
None
Longest Return, No Score:
21 yards, Glyn Milburn (Stanford)
Most Kickoff Returns:
7, Gerald Benton (Kansas State)
Most Kickoff Return Yards:
122 (7 returns), Gerald Benton
(Kansas State)
Longest TD Kickoff Return:
None
Longest Return, No Score:
42 yards, Glyn Milburn (Stanford)
& Marcus Goodwin (Toledo)
Most Interceptions:
1, by 12 individuals
Most Interception Return Yards:
18, Albert Richardson (Stanford)
& Jim Gant (Toledo)
Longest TD Interception Return:
None
Longest Int. Return, No. Score:
18 yards, Albert Richardson
(Stanford) & Jim Gant (Toledo)
Most Punts:
11, Brian Borders (Toledo)
Most Yards Punting:
414, Brian Borders (Toledo)
Longest Punt:
68, Mike Stigge (Nebraska)
Most Field Goals Att.:
2, Jamie Burke (Oregon State)
Most Field Goals Made:
2, Jamie Burke (Oregon State)
Most Consecutive FGs Made:
2, Jamie Burke (Oregon State)
Longest Field Goal:
50 yards, Doug Brien (California)
49
Rose G-vide
Single-Season Leaders
Total Offense
Receptions
Punting (Post-1950)
RUSH
PASS
TOT
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
NO
YDS
AVG
1. Cary Conklin (1989)
-67
2569
2502
1. Mario Bailey (1991)
62
1037
16.7
17
1. Skip Boyd (1973)
69
2964
43.0
2. Steve Pelluer (1983)
164
2212
2376
2. Jim Krieg (1970)
54
738
13.7
2
2. Skip Boyd (1974)
57
2407
42.2
3. Billy Joe Hobert (1991)
56
2271
2327
3. Andre Riley (1989)
53
1039
19.3
4
3. Jeff Partridge (1982)
65
2739
42.1
4. Sonny Sixkiller (1970)
-35
2303
2268
4. Paul Skansi (1982)
50
631
12.6
3
4. Thane Cleland (1986)
47
1938
41.2
5. Mark Brunell (1990)
440
1732
2176
5. Orlando McKay (1991)
47
627
13.3
6
5. Channing Wyles (1990)
66
2707
41.0
6. Chris Chandler (1986)
113
1994
2107
6. Lonzell Hill (1985)
46
696
15.1
8
6. John Werdel (1991)
31
1266
40.8
7. Tom Flick (1980)
-87
2178
2091
Vince Weathersby (1985)
46
314
6.8
1
7. Don Martin (1966)
51
2079
40.7
8. Sonny Sixkiller (1971)
-102
2068
1966
8. Lonzell Hill (1986)
43
721
16.8
8
Rich Camarillo (1979)
51
2077
40.7
9. Cary Conklin (1988)
116
1833
1949
Darryl Franklin (1987)
43
712
16.6
3
9. Gene Willis (1971)
41
1666
40.6
10. Chris Chandler (1987)
136
1739
1875
10. George Black (1952)
42
637
15.2
7
10. Jeff Partridge (1981)
53
2122
40.0
Anthony Allen (1982)
42
558
13.3
6
Bob Schloredt (1959)
52
2081
40.0
Rushing
Receiving Yards
Punt Returns
TC
NYG
AVG
1. Greg Lewis (1990)
229
1279
5.6
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
NO
YDS
AVG
2. Joe Steele (1978)
237
1111
4.7
1. Andre Riley (1989)
53
1039
19.3
4
1. Beno Bryant (1990)
36
560
15.6
3. Hugh McElhenny (1950)
179
1107
6.2
2. Mario Bailey (1991)
62
1037
16.7
17
2. Bill Cahill (1971)
26
421
16.2
4. Greg Lewis (1989)
239
1100
4.8
3. Tom Scott (1971)
35
820
23.4
6
3. Andre Riley (1986)
36
392
10.9
5. Ron Rowland (1976)
203
1002
4.9
4. Dave Williams (1965)
38
795
20.9
10
4. Steve Bramwell (1964)
29
314
10.8
6. Robin Earl (1976)
188
963
5.1
5. Jim Krieg (1970)
54
738
13.7
2
5. Mark Lee (1979)
21
271
12.9
7. Beno Bryant (1991)
158
943
60
6. Brian Slater (1988)
38
737
19.4
7
6. Beno Bryant (1991)
33
267
8.1
8. Hugh McElhenny (1951)
169
936
5.5
7. Lonzell Hill (1986)
43
721
16.8
8
7. Nesby Glasgow (1977)
29
266
9.2
9. Jacque Robinson (1982)
222
926
4.2
8. Darryl Franklin (1987)
43
712
16.6
3
8. Luther Carr (1958)
17
238
14.0
10. Jacque Robinson (1984)
195
901
4.6
9. Brian Slater (1987)
38
696
18.3
5
Ray Horton (1980)
18
238
13.2
Lonzell Hill (1985)
46
696
15.1
8
10. William Doctor (1988)
35
236
6.7
Passing
Touchdowns
PA
PC
PCT
TD
YDS
Pass Interceptions
1. Cary Conklin (1989)
365
208
.570
16
2569
NO
NO
YDS
AVG
2. Sonny Sixkiller (1970)
362
186
.514
15
2303
1. Mario Bailey (1991)
17
1. Al Worley (1968)
14
130
9.3
3. Billy Joe Hobert (1991)
285
173
.607
22
2271
Hugh McElhenny (1951)
17
2. Bill Albrecht (1951)
12
140
11.7
4. Steve Pelluer (1983)
317
213
.672
11
2212
Chuck Carroll (1928)
17
3. Larry Hatch (1946)
8
114
14.3
5. Tom Flick (1980)
280
168
.600
15
2178
4. Chuck Carroll (1927)
15
4. Walter Bailey (1991)
7
114
16.3
6. Sonny Sixkiller (1971)
297
126
.424
13
2068
5. George Wilson (1925)
14
5. Jay Stoves (1943)
7
139
19.9
7. Chris Chandler (1986)
275
160
.582
20
1994
Hugh McElhenny (1950)
14
Dick Sprague (1950)
7
8. Don Heinrich (1950)
221
134
.606
14
1846
Jacque Robinson (1984)
14
Tony Bonwell (1972)
7
67
9.6
9. Cary Conklin (1988)
302
153
.507
11
1833
8. Joe Steele (1977)
13
8. Roberto Jourdan (1972)
6
106
17.7
10. Chris Chandler (1987)
249
128
.514
9
1739
9. Joe Steele (1979)
12
Bob Schloredt (1959)
6
53
8.8
10. Jay Barry (1991)
11
George Fleming (1959)
6
27
4.5
Scoring
Mark Brunell (1990)
11
Eric Briscoe (1990)
6
5
0.8
Greg Lewis (1989)
11
TD
PAT
FG
TP
Pete Taggares (1972)
11
Tackles For Loss
1. Hugh McElhenny (1951)
17
23
0
125
2. Chuck Nelson (1982)
0
34
25
109
NO
3. Chuck Carroll (1928)
17
2
0
104
1. Ron Holmes (1983)
21
4. Mario Bailey (1991)
17
0
0
102
Martin Harrison (1989)
21
5. Jeff Jaeger (1984)
0
30
22
96
3. Steve Emtman (1991)
19.5
6. Jeff Jaeger (1086)
0
42
17
93
4. Dennis Brown (1987)
19
7. Chuck Carroll (1927)
15
1
0
91
5. Doug Martin (1977)
17
8. Jeff Jaeger (1983)
0
27
20
87
Mark Stewart (1981)
17
9. George Wilson (1925)
14
1
0
85
Fred Small (1984)
17
Chuck Nelson (1980)
0
31
18
85
8. Dave Hoffman (1991)
16.5
9. Travis Richardson
16.5
10. Doug Martin (1978)
16
Fletcher Jenkins (1981)
16
Steve Emtman (1990)
16
50
Rose Guide
Career Leaders
Total Offense
Receptions
Punting (Post-1950)
RUSH
PASS
ToT
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
NO
YDS
AVG
1. Sonny Sixkiller (1970-72)
-208
5496
5288
1. Paul Skansi (1979-82)
138
1723
12.5
13
1. Jeff Partridge (1981-82)
118
4861
41.2
2. Steve Pelluer (1980-83)
342
4603
4945
2. Mario Bailey (1988-91) 131
2093
15.9
26
Skip Boyd (1972-74)
194
7987
41.2
3. Cary Conklin (1987-89)
93
4850
4943
3. Vince Weathersby
3. Channing Wyles (1988-90)
122
4851
39.8
4. Chris Chandler (1984-87)
261
4161
4422
(1985-88)
130
918
7.1
2
4. Don Feleay (1975-76)
127
4998
39.4
5. Don Heinrich (1949-52)
-62
4392
4330
4. Scott Phillips (1973-76)
111
1866
16.8
8
5. Rich Camarillo (1979-80)
103
4050
39.3
6. Warren Moon (1975-77)
429
3277
3706
5. Lonzell Hill (1983-86)
103
1641
15.9
16
6. Thane Cleland (1983-86)
215
8438
39.2
7. Chris Rowland (1973-75)
220
2966
3186
6. Anthony Allen (1979-82)
99
1372
13.7
11
7. Don Martin (1965-67)
143
5595
39.1
8. Joe Steele (1976-79)
3091
46
3137
7. Orlando McKay
8. Bob Schloredt (1958-60)
121
4654
38.5
3171
3076
(1988-91)
96
1407
14.7
13
9. Tom Flick (1976-80)
-95
9. Rick Redman (1962-64)
134
5042
37.6
10. Greg Lewis (1987-90)
8. Darryl Franklin (1984-87) 92
1393
15.1
6
2678
0
2678
10. Jeff Huget (1966-68)
51
1908
37.4
9. Brian Slater (1985-88)
87
1648
18.9
16
Rushing
10. Bill Earley (1950-52)
83
1264
15.2
9
Punt Returns
TC
NYG
AVG
Receiving Yards
NO
YDS
AVG
1. Joe Steele (1976-79)
663
3091
4.7
1. Beno Bryant (1989-)
70
834
11.9
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
2. Greg Lewis (1987-90)
529
2678
5.1
2. Steve Bramwell (1963-65)
59
704
11.9
3. Vince Weathersby (1985-88)
572
2653
4.6
1. Mario Bailey (1988-91)
131
2093
15.9
26
3. Bill Cahill (1970-72)
49
668
13.6
4. Hugh McElhenny (1949-51)
451
2499
5.5
2. Scott Phillips (1973-76)
111
1866
16.8
8
4. Calvin Jones (1970-72)
47
596
12.7
5. Robin Earl (1973-76)
463
2351
5.1
3. Paul Skansi (1979-82)
138
1723
12.5
13
5. Nesby Glasgow (1975-78)
86
579
6.7
6. Jacque Robinson (1981-84)
503
2300
4.6
4. Brian Slater (1985-88)
87
1648
18.9
16
6. Andre Riley (1986-89)
64
559
8.7
7. Toussaint Tyler (1977-80)
389
1898
4.9
5. Lonzell Hill (1983-86)
103
1641
15.9
16
7. George Fleming (1958-60)
44
480
10.9
8. Junior Coffey (1962-64)
335
1604
4.8
6. Spider Gaines (1975-78)
66
1529
23.2
16
8. Ray Horton (1979-82)
55
465
8.5
9. Rick Fenney (1983-86)
338
1437
4.3
7. Orlando McKay
9. Ron Milus (1982-85)
49
410
8.4
(1988-91)
96
1407
14.7
13
10. Kyle Stevens (1976-80)
293
1413
4.8
10. Charlie Mitchell (1960-62)
35
342
9.8
8. Darryl Franklin (1984-87)
92
1393
15.1
6
9. Anthony Allen (1979-82)
99
1372
13.7
11
Passing
10. Aaron Williams (1979-82)
81
1370
17.0
13
Pass Interceptions
PA
PC
PCT
TD
YDS
NO
YDS
AVG
Touchdowns
1. Sonny Sixkiller (1970-72)
811
385
.475
35
5496
1. Al Worley (1966-68)
18
130
7.2
2. Cary Conklin (1987-89)
747
401
.537
31
4850
2. Larry Hatch (1946-48)
16
-
-
NO
3. Steve Pelluer (1980-83)
755
436
.577
30
4603
3. Vestee Jackson (1983-85)
13
1. George Wilson (1923-35)
254
19.4
37
4. Don Heinrich (1949-52)
610
335
.549
33
4392
Joe Steele (1976-79)
Roberto Jourdan (1972-75)
13
166
12.8
37
5. Chris Chandler (1984-87)
587
326
.546
32
4161
3. Hugh McElhenny (1949-51)
Bill Albrecht (1951-52, 54)
13
161
12.4
35
6. Warren Moon (1975-77)
496
242
.488
19
3277
4. Chuck Carroll (1926-28)
6. Calvin Jones (1970-72)
11
100
9.1
32
7. Tom Flick (1976-80)
418
252
.603
24
3171
-
5. Mario Bailey (1988-91)
7. Dick Sprague (1950-52)
10
-
26
8. Chris Rowland (1973-75)
475
201
.423
24
2966
6. Jacque Robinson (1981-84)
George Fleming (1958-60)
10
25
49
4.9
9. Hugh Millen (1984-85)
435
247
.568
11
2616
7. Greg Lewis (1987-90)
Ray Horton (1979-82)
10
48
4.8
24
10. Billy Joe Hobert (1990-)
291
177
.608
22
2312
8. Bo Cornell (1968-70)
10. Walter Bailey (1989-)
9
124
13.8
19
Toussaint Tyler (1977-80)
Bob Pederson (1965-67)
9
185
20.6
19
Scoring
Pete Taggares (1971-73)
Bob Schloredt (1958-60)
9
132
14.7
19
Tony Bonwell (1971-72)
9
114
12.7
TD
PAT
FG
TP
Bill Cahill (1970-72)
9
109
12.1
1. Jeff Jaeger (1983-86)
0
118
80
358
Frank Reed (1973-75)
9
65
7.2
2. Chuck Nelson (1980-82)
0
94
59
271
Eugene Burkhalter (1987-89)
9
74
8.2
3. Hugh McElhenny (1949-51)
35
23
0
233
Eric Briscoe (1987-90)
9
58
6.4
4. George Wilson (1923-25)
37
2
0
224
Joe Steele (1976-79)
37
1°
0
224
Tackles For Loss
6. Steve Robbins (1974-77)
0
108
35
213
7. Chuck Carroll (1926-28)
32
3
0
195
NO
8. Mario Bailey (1988-91)
26
0
0
156
1. Ron Holmes (1982-84)
48
9. Steve Wiezbowski (1970-72)
0
99
17
150
2. Mark Stewart (1979-82)
47
Jacque Robinson (1981-84)
25
0
0
150
3. Dennis Brown (1986-89)
41
. Two-point conversion
4. Doug Martin (1977-70)
39
5. Reggie Rogers (1984-86)
38
6. Martin Harrison (1986-89)
37
7. Travis Richardson (1987-90)
37.5
8. Steve Emtman (1989-)
36.5
9. Donald Jones (1989-91)
33.5
10. Fletcher Jenkins (1979-81)
29
51
Rose B). Guide
Washington's Bowl Game Records
Individual Records
Team Records
Most First Downs: 28 VS. Florida (1989 Freedom Bowl)
Rushing Records
Most Rushing Attempts: 55 vs. Wisconsin (1960 Rose Bowl)
Longest TD Run: 53 yards, Lloyd Phelps vs. Hawaii (1938 Pineapple Bowl)
Most Yards Rushing: 222 vs. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
Longest Run, No Score: 44 yards, Greg Lewis vs. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
Most Passes Attempted: 56 vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Rushing Attempts: 28, Jacque Robinson VS. Oklahoma (1985 Orange Bowl)
Most Passes Completed: 35 VS. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Yards Rushing: 142, Jacque Robinson vs. Iowa (1982 Rose Bowl)
Most Yards Passing: 369 vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Rushing TDs: 2, Jacque Robinson vs. Iowa (1982 Rose Bowl)
Most Total Offensive Plays: 89 vs. Florida (1989 Freedom Bowl)
2, Warren Moon vs. Michigan (1978 Rose Bowl)
Most Yards Total Offense: 433 vs. Florida (1989 Freedom Bowl)
2, Mark Brunell VS. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
Most Fumbles: 4 VS. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
4 VS. Alabama (1986 Sun Bowl)
Passing Records
Most Fumbles Lost: 4 vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Longest TD Pass: 71 yards, Tim Cowan to Anthony Allen VS. Maryland (1982 Aloha
Most Penalties: 13 vs. Colorado (1985 Freedom Bowl)
Bowl)
Most Penalty Yards: 88 vs. Colorado (1985 Freedom Bowl)
Longest Pass, No Score: 65 yards, Bob Schloredt to George Flemingvs. Wisconsin
Most Points 1st Quarter: 17 VS. Wisconsin (1960 Rose Bowl); vs. Florida (1989
(1960 Rose Bowl)
Freedom Bowl)
Most Passes Attempted: 53, Tim Cowan vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Points 2nd Quarter: 23 vs. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
Most Passes Completed: 33, Tim Cowan vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Points 3rd Quarter: 10 vs. Michigan (1978 Rose Bowl)
Most Yards Passing: 350, Tim Cowan vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Points 4th Quarter: 15 vs. Iowa (1982 Rose Bowl)
Most Pass Interceptions: 3, Paul Sicuro vs. Oklahoma (1985 Orange Bowl)
3, Bill Siler vs. Illinois (1964 Rose Bowl)
3, Chris Chandler Tulane (1987 Independence Bowl)
Receiving Records
Most Pass Receptions: 10, Paul Skansi vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Yards Receiving: 152, Anthony Allen vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most TD Receptions: 3, Anthony Allen vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Washington's Bowl
Return Records
Longest TD Punt Return: 57 yards, Anthony Allen vs. Penn State (1983 Aloha
Most Valuable Players
Bowl)
(Announced by Bowl Committee)
Longest Punt Return, No Score: 69 yards, Jimmy Johnson vs. Hawaii (1938 Pine
Apple Bowl)
PLAYER OF
YEAR
BOWL
THE GAME
SCORE
Longest TD Kickoff Return: None
1926
Rose
George Wilson, rb
Alabama 20, Washington 19
Longest Kickoff Return, No Score: 53 yards, Kyle Stevens vs. Michigan (1978
Rose Bowl)
1960
Rose
Bob Schloredt qb
Washington 44, Wisconsin 8
Longest TD Interception Return: 37 yards, Charles Mincy VS. Iowa (1991 Rose
George Fleming, rb
Bowl)
1961
Rose
Bob Schloredt qb
Washington 17, Minnesota 7
Longest Interception Return, No Score: 40 yards, George Wilson VS. Alabama
1978
Rose
Warren Moon, qb
Washington 27, Michigan 20
(1926 Rose Bowl)
1979
Sun
Paul Skansi, wr
Washington 14, Texas 7
Doug Martin, dt
Kicking Records
1982
Rose
Jacque Robinson, rb
Washington 28, Iowa 0
Longest Field Goal: 44 yards, George Fleming vs. Minnesota (1961 Rose Bowl)
1982
Aloha
Tim Cowan, qb
Washington 21, Maryland 20
Most Field Goals: 2, Chuck Nelson vs. Michigan (1981 Rose Bowl)
Tony Caldwell, lb
2, Jeff Jaeger vs. Colorado (1985 Freedom Bowl)
1983
Aloha
Danny Greene, wr
Penn State 13, Washington 10
2, Jeff Jaeger vs. Alabama (1986 Sun Bowl)
1985
Orange
Jacque Robinson, rb
Washington 28, Oklahoma 17
2, Steve Robbins vs. Michigan (1978 Rose Bowl)
Ron Holmes, dt
2, John McCallum vs. Florida (1989 Freedom Bowl)
1985
Freedom
Chris Chandler, qb
Washington 20, Colorado 17
2, Travis Hanson VS. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
1986
Sun
Steve Alvord, dl
Alabama 28, Washington 6
Longest Punt: 63 yards, George Wilson vs. Alabama (1926 Rose Bowl)
1987
Independence
Chris Chandler, qb
Washington 24, Tulane 12
Most Punts: 9, Thane Cleland vs. Penn State (1983 Aloha Bowl)
1989
Freedom
Cary Conklin, qb
Washington 34, Florida 7
9, Fred Abel vs. Navy (1924 Rose Bowl)
1991
Rose
Mark Brunell, qb
Washington 46, Iowa 34
52
Rose s1 Gæide
1991 Pacific-10 Conference Football Statistics-Team
(through games of November 23)
Rushing Offense
Rushing Defense
G
CAR
YDS
AVG
TD
YPG
G
CAR
YDS
AVG
TD
YPG
Washington
11
524
2,551
4.9
34
231.9
Washington
11
390
738
1.9
6
67.1
California
11
518
2,361
4.6
26
214.6
UCLA
11
403
1,110
2.8
13
100.9
UCLA
11
499
2,309
4.6
22
209.9
Stanford
11
458
1,437
3.1
16
130.6
Arizona
11
528
2,159
4.1
23
196.3
California
11
455
1,669
3.7
14
151.7
USC
11
507
2,039
4.0
22
185.4
Arizona State
11
486
1,714
3.5
13
155.8
Oregon State
11
620
1,903
3.1
11
173.0
Oregon
11
508
1,796
3.5
11
163.3
Stanford
11
484
1,812
3.7
29
164.7
USC
11
467
2,064
4.4
16
187.6
Arizona State
11
492
1,657
3.4
15
150.6
Oregon State
11
511
2,311
4.5
30
210.1
Washington State
11
440
1,320
3.0
15
120.0
Arizona
11
530
2,399
4.5
26
218.1
Oregon
11
414
1,243
3.0
7
113.0
Washington State
11
568
2,528
4.5
28
229.8
Passing Offense
Passing Efficiency Defense
G
ATT
COM
INT
PCT
YDS
TD
YPG
G
ATT
COM
PCT
YDS
TD
INT
RATING
Washington State
11
395
218
16
55.2
3,028
19
275.3
Washington
11
340
156
45.9
1870
6
21
85.55
UCLA
11
332
203
15
61.1
2,710
17
246.4
Arizona State
11
290
143
49.3
1676
9
23
92.24
Washington
11
337
203
12
60.2
2,640
26
240.0
California
11
350
183
52.3
2204
16
22
107.70
California
11
326
195
14
59.8
2,546
21
231.5
UCLA
11
365
196
53.7
2452
10
18
109.31
Stanford
11
339
201
11
59.3
2,514
15
228.5
Oregon
11
295
155
52.5
1887
14
15
111.77
Arizona State
11
317
168
15
53.0
2,030
9
184.5
Arizona
11
303
167
55.1
2059
15
7
123.91
Oregon
11
330
154
16
46.7
1,860
12
169.1
Washington State
11
248
133
53.6
1987
13
13
127.75
USC
11
295
152
15
51.5
1,837
6
167.0
Stanford
11
297
169
56.9
2166
14
7
129.00
Arizona
11
198
98
16
49.5
1,253
8
113.9
USC
11
288
158
54.9
2188
16
11
129.37
Oregon State
11
82
29
2
35.4
473
4
43.0
Oregon State
11
270
163
60.4
2026
17
6
139.73
Total Offense
Total Defense
G
PL
YDS
AVG
TD
YPG
G
PL
YDS
AVG
TD
YPG
Washington
11
861
5,191
6.0
60
471.9
Washington
11
730
2,608
3.6
12
237.1
UCLA
11
831
5,019
6.0
39
456.3
Arizona State
11
776
3,390
4.4
22
308.2
California
11
844
4,907
5.8
47
446.1
UCLA
11
768
3,562
4.6
23
323.8
Washington State
11
835
4,348
5.2
34
395.3
Stanford
11
755
3,603
4.8
30
327.5
Stanford
11
823
4,326
5.3
44
393.3
Oregon
11
803
3,683
4.6
25
334.8
USC
11
802
3,876
4.8
28
352.4
California
11
805
3,873
4.8
30
352.1
Arizona State
11
809
3,687
4.6
24
335.2
USC
11
755
4,252
5.6
32
386.5
Arizona
11
726
3,412
4.7
31
310.2
Oregon State
11
781
4,337
5.6
47
394.3
Oregon
11
744
3,103
4.2
19
282.1
Arizona
11
833
4,458
5.4
41
405.3
Oregon State
11
702
2,376
3.4
15
216.0
Washington State
11
816
4,515
5.5
41
410.5
Scoring Offense
Home Attendance
Scoring Defense
G
PTS
PPG
G
TOTAL
AVG
G
PTS
PPG
Washington
11
461
41.9
Washington
6
433,703
72,284
Washington
11
101
9.2
California
11
406
36.9
USC
6
385,226
64,204
UCLA
11
187
17.0
Stanford
11
351
31.9
Stanford
7
365,906
52,272
Arizona State
11
210
19.1
UCLA
11
317
28.8
Arizona State
5
260,810
52,162
California
11
226
20.5
Washington State
11
280
25.5
California
7
346,500
49,500
Stanford
11
228
20.7
Arizona
11
248
22.5
Arizona
7
346,015
49,431
Oregon
11
248
22.5
USC
11
229
20.8
UCLA
5
245,760
49,152
USC
11
276
25.1
Arizona State
11
218
19.8
Oregon
5
207,569
41,514
Washington State
11
340
30.9
Oregon
11
186
16.9
Oregon State
6
149,812
24,969
Arizona
11
361
32.8
Oregon State
11
125
11.4
Washington State
5
109,502
21,900
Oregon State
11
365
33.2
53
Rose B)ow9) G²ᵢde
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1924
ROSES
Washington 14, Navy 14
YEARS MEN
STAR-NEWS
Washington missed a field goal "by a scant
Washington 7-yard line. Three line plunges
three feet" as time expired and the Huskies
netted no gain, but on fourth down the
NUMBER
PASADORAL
settled for a 14-14 tie with the heavily fa-
Middies used the basketball toss from
vored Midshipmen of the Naval Academy
McKee to Cullen around right end for the
in the 1924 Rose Bowl, played before
touchdown. The extra point made it 14-7 at
40,000 fans.
the half.
The Huskies, coached to a 10-1 record
The game settled into a defensive struggle
coming into the game by third-year coach
in the third quarter. Washington was un-
40,000 at the Rose Bowl
Enoch Bagshaw, had to fight back twice,
able to advance the ball against Navy and
falling behind 7-0 early and later trailing
the Middies marched the field but could
14-7 to the well-drilled Middies of Annapo-
not score, thwarted by Husky center
lis. The Naval Academy (5-1-1) used a so-
Chalmers Walter's interception of an errant
phisticated passing attack, a style not seen
McKee pass inside the Husky 20-yard line
before on the West Coast, to confuse the
early in the quarter. Navy also missed a field
Husky defense in the first half. Navy com-
goal as time expired in the period.
pleted all 11 passes it attempted in the first
half, and hit 14 in a row before the Huskies
Midway through the fourth period the Hus-
managed to stop one. Navy completed 16-
kies got a break. Trapped deep in its own
of-20 for the day.
end, Navy mis-snapped the ball in punt
formation, with the Huskies recovering the
Navy opened the scoring at the start of the
loose ball on the Navy 10-yard line.
second period on a 20-yard pass from quar-
terback Ira McKee to halfback Carl Cullen.
Two line plays netted the Huskies a loss of
Navy dominated the first period with its
two yards and a third-down pass attempt
unorthodox passing offense, completing six
also failed, leaving the Dawgs with a fourth-
tosses, but was unable to score before time
and-12 situation. Washington lined up,
expired in the period. The Midshipmen
then had fullback Elmer Tesreau jump up
used a short, two-handed, basketball toss
to the line, and the end dropped back, leav-
for the bulk of their passing attack.
ing the left guard Jimmy Bryan eligible to
catch a pass. Bryan delayed, then released
Washington answered on its next drive.
and gathered in Abel's pass, stumbling
Husky guard Jim Bryan trapped the Navy
across the goal line for the touchdown. The
kick at midfield. The Huskies tried the line
Sherman-booted extra point made it 14-14.
for no gain, and then Husky quarterback
Fred Abel threw a 30-yard pass out of punt
Washington had one last chance to win, as
formation to Kinsley Dubois on the right
the Huskies drove to the 25-yard line with
wing. Left halfback George Wilson took the
less than five minutes to play on a long pass
next play off-tackle 14 yards for the Hus-
from Abel to Wilson. Washington's field
kies' first touchdown. The extra point by
goal attempt by Leonard Zeil from 24 yards
Lester Sherman made it 7-7.
out had the distance but curved left. Navy
took over on downs at the 20, and advanced
Final Rankings
After an exchange of punts, Navy com-
as far as midfield when the game ended.
pleted a 45-yard pass over center to the
None.
Score by Quarters
Scoring
NAVY
0
14
0
0
-
14
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
UW
0
7
0
7
-
14
2 NAVY-Cullen, 20-yard pass from McKee, (McKee Kick)
2 UW-Wilson, 14-yard run, (Sherman Kick)
Team Statistics
2 NAVY-Cullen, 7-yard pass from McKee, (McKee Kick)
UW
NAVY
4 UW-Bryan, 12-yard pass from Abel, (Sherman Kick)
9
First Downs
15
137
Net Yards Rushing
187
65
Net Yards Passing
175
202
Total Offense
362
3-8-2
Passing
16-20-2
9-33.0
Punting
5-33.8
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
4-20
Penalties
2-10
54
Rose B) C2ide
TOURNAMENT of ROSES
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1926
Alabama 20, Washington 19
Coach Enoch Bagshaw's Huskies, 10-0-1
John Cole. The Huskies missed both PAT
CALIFORNIA
entering the Rose Bowl game, built a 12-0
kicks in the first half-something that
1926
lead, dominating the first half, only to lose
would have its greatest impact at game's
the lead and the game in 12 frantic minutes
end.
of the third quarter as Alabama, 9-0, scored
20 unanswered points. Husky All-American
Trailing by 12 points after the half, "Pooley"
halfback George Wilson, named the bowl's
Hubert took it upon himself to bring Ala-
Most Valuable Player, was out of the game
bama back. From the Washington 42-yard
line, he called his own number five con-
with an injury during the scoring binge as
45,000 at the Rose Bowl
"Bama took a lead Washington could not
secutive times, carrying the ball a total of 58
overcome in front of 45,000 fans at the Rose
yards for the Crimson Tide score. On its
Bowl.
next possession, Alabama returned the
kickoff to its own 21-yard line. Five line
The game is remembered as Wilson's great-
plunges carried the ball to the 39. Alabama
est, and is one that is rated a classic in Rose
then struck on a 61-yard bomb from Hubert
Bowl history.
to Johnny Mack Brown to give Alabama its
Damon Runyon covered the contest for the
first lead in the game, 14-12.
Universal Service and put it succinetly: "As
Alabama continued its attack after recover-
George Wilson went, so went Washington.
ing a Washington fumble at midfield. An-
If there ever was a one-man football team,
other long pass to Brown, this one from
George was it. When Wilson was on the
Grant Gillis for 40 yards, placed the Tide on
field it was a ball game."
the Washington 5-yard line. Brown carried
Wilson played 38 minutes and was out with
the ball the final 5 yards for a 20-12 Crim-
son Tide lead.
injury for 22. During the 38 he played,
Washington scored three touchdowns and
Wilson returned to lead the frantic Husky
gained 300 yards. Alabama threatened, but
comeback attempt in the final period. Ala-
failed to score. During the 22 minutes
bama was on the Husky 15-yard line, threat-
Wilson was on the sideline, Washington
ening to seal its victory, but the Tide could
gained a total of 14 yards and failed to score.
not convert a fourth-and-one situation.
Alabama, under coach Wallace Wade,
Washington took over on its own 12-yard
notched the three touchdowns and two
line.
conversions which won the game during
Wilson's defensive absence.
Wilson gained 17 yards on first down and
three plays later Paton advanced to the
Wilson took a lateral to the "Bama 1-yard
"Bama 43 around left end. After a short
line in the first quarter, and provided the
Wilson pass for a first down, the Husky left
blocking for right halfback Harold Paton's
halfback threw to quarterback George
1-yard plunge that gave the Huskies a 6-0
Guttormsen for a 27-yard touchdown.
lead.
The extra point by Gene Cook put Wash-
In the second quarter, a 36-yard Wilson run
ington within one, 20-19. Washington's
Final Rankings
paved the way for Washington's second
final threat ended with an interception at
None.
touchdown, a pass from Wilson to left end
midfield just before time expired.
Score by Quarters
Scoring
UA
0
0
20
0
-
20
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
UW
6
6
0
7
-
19
1 UW-Paton, 1-yard run, (Kick Failed)
2 UW-Cole, 20-yard pass from Wilson, (Kick Failed)
Team Statistics
3 UA-Hubert, 8-yard run, (Buckler Kick)
UW
UA
3 UA-Brown, 61-yard pass from Hubert, (Buckler Kick)
13
First Downs
15
3 UA-Brown, 5-yard run, (Kick Failed)
220
Net Yards Rushing
220
4 UW-Guttormsen, 27-yard pass from Wilson, (Cook Kick)
94
Net Yards Passing
141
314
Total Offense
361
Individual Leaders
7-16-2
Passing
4-14-3
Rushing-Wilson (UW) 15-139; Hubert (UA) 15-97; Brown (UA) 12-76; Paton (UW) 11-43.
6-37.5
Punting
5-40.8
1-1
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
1-15
Penalties
0-0
55
Rose B) G-vide
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1937
Pittsburgh 21, Washington 0
The University of Pittsburgh, 7-1-1 under
20. The Pitt pass defense stiffened with the
coach John "Jock" Sutherland, dominated
return of the Golden Panther starters and
both sides of the ball, handing coach James
the Huskies ended up turning the ball over
Phelan's 7-1-1 Huskies a 21-0 defeat in
on downs after a fourth-down pass fell in-
front of 87,196 fans at the Rose Bowl-then
complete.
NEW
YEARS
the largest crowd at a Rose Bowl game. Pitt
DAY
notched three touchdowns, one on a 71-
The half ended with Pittsburgh still holding
a 7-0 lead.
yard interception return, and held the
Huskies to only 153 yards of total offense
The Huskies kicked off to open the second
R30
while racking up 300 yards themselves.
half, and the Panthers took over on their
BOW
After an exchange of punts in the first pe-
own 27. Washington got the break it had
PASADENA
riod, Pitt took over on its own 45. On second
been looking for when Pitt fumbled on
down, left halfback Marshall Goldberg took
second down, with right end Frank Peters
a reverse to the Husky 35 and then halfback
recovering for the Dawgs. The Huskies
Bob LaRue took the same play to the
squandered the opportunity, however, as
Washington 10. Fullback Frank Patrick
Haines threw a first-down interception.
25
scored on a 1-yard plunge three plays later
On the ensuing drive, Pitt drove 75 yards
for an early 7-0 Golden Panther lead.
for a touchdown. LaRue raced to the Husky
Pitt held the Huskies to end the first quarter
30 on a man-in-motion play through the
middle of the line. From there the Panthers
87,196 at the Rose Bowl
leading 7-0, and Washington put together
one of its only sustained drives of the day to
simply stuck it to Washington, using five
begin the second period of play, against 10
plays into the center of the line, with the
Pitt second-teamers. All-America left end
fullback, Patrick, plunging over from the 5
for his second touchdown.
Bill Daddio was the only starter playing for
the Panthers at the time.
Washington's final comeback attempt was
The Huskies drove as far as the Pitt 40 but
snuffed when Daddio intercepted a left-
the passing offense bogged down, forcing a
handed lateral attempt on the Husky 35 and
punt on fourth-and-four. Pitt promptly
returned it 71 yards for the clinching
drove to the Husky 35, almost strictly on
touchdown. Pitt eventually ran out the
blasts through the middle of the line. On
clock on the Husky 4-yard line.
first down the Panthers tried to cross up the
Pittsburgh claimed the Rose Bowl title with
Dawgs with a pass, but reserve halfback
a display of power football. The Panthers
Frank Waskowitz intercepted the pass. On
attempted only four passes and used their
first down, Waskowitz passed to Byron
speediest back, Goldberg, largely in a decoy
Haines who carried to the Pitt 36, followed
role with Patrick and LaRue running play
by another Waskowitz to Haines pass to the
after play through the middle of the line.
Final Rankings
Scoring
AP
5th
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
1 UP-Patrick, 1-yard run, (Daddio Kick)
Score by Quarters
3 UP-Patrick, 5-yard run, (Daddio Kick)
UP
7
0
7
7
-
21
4 UP-Daddio, 71-yard interception return, (Daddio Kick)
UW
0
0
0
0
-
0
Individual Leaders
Team Statistics
Rushing-LaRue (UP) 15-109; Goldberg (UP) 10-36; Patrick (UP) 11-42; Haines (UW) 8-26.
UW
UP
8
First Downs
11
57
Net Yards Rushing
254
96
Net Yards Passing
46
153
Total Offense
300
7-18-4
Passing
2-4-2
6-29.7
Punting
5-39.6
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
1-0
0-0
Penalties
2-20
56
Rose B. Gwide
PIGSKIN-REVIEW
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1944
Southern California 29, Washington 0
A regular Pacific Coast Conference season
kick and the Trojans had a 7-0 lead at the
was not played in 1943 because of wartime
half.
travel restrictions, so the Northern Division
Southern California converted on a similar
champion, Washington, faced the Southern
Division champion, Southern California, in
play midway through the third period when
the Rose Bowl. The Rose Bowl winner
Callahan pulled in another pass from
would reign as champion of the Pacific
Hardy-this time in a crowd of Husky
Coast Conference.
defenders-for a score, and with the sec-
ond Jamison PAT, USC had a 14-0 lead.
The Trojans (7-2) ended Washington's
perfect season (4-0) by upsetting the
Trojan left end Gordon Gray also caught
heavily favored Huskies, 29-0, with four
two touchdown passes, one late in the third
touchdown passes to uncovered receivers
period from Hardy and the final one in the
in front of 68,000 at the Rose Bowl. Earlier
fourth quarter from left-handed quarter-
in the season the Southern California team
back Ainslie Bell. Bell had started the game
lost to the 4th Air Force Flyers, 35-0, while
but gave way to Hardy in a scheme planned
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Washington defeated this same club handi-
to settle down Hardy, the Trojans' usual
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
ly, 27-7. Because of a lack of opponents
starter. USC coach Jeff Cravath felt Hardy
during wartime, the Rose Bowl game was
had played better in a reserve role the year
before.
the first activity in two months for coach
68,000 at the Rose Bowl
Pest Welch's Washington Huskies.
Southern California added points on a
Washington controlled the first period,
blocked punt early in the fourth quarter
twice driving deep into Trojan territory, but
when Husky quarterback Everett Austin,
was unable to convert the drives into points.
handling the punting duties, could not get a
Washington could not run against the USC
punt away out of his own end zone. The
line inside the 40 and was unable to mount
blocked punt, compliments of Trojan tackle
a passing attack the entire day, completing
Harry Plank, was covered by Washington
only five tosses for 51 yards with three
fullback Wally Kramer in the end zone for
interceptions. The second period was simi-
the automatic safety.
lar, as the Trojans continued to attempt to
Washington led in net rushing yardage,
run against Washington's larger defensive
134-117, but was dominated in passing
line with little success.
yards 113-51. The Huskies also fumbled
Late in the period the Trojans turned to the
twice, and although they recovered both
air, negating Washington's size advantage
times, the drops helped stop drives. USC,
with quick passes to their fleet ends. USC
which entered the game with a reputation
had a fourth down on the Washington 11
as fumbling champions of the country (the
with only 40 seconds remaining in the half
Trojans lost 29-of-50 fumbles on the year)
did not lose either of its two fumbles.
when Trojan quarterback Jim Hardy tossed
to halfback George Callahan, who made a
The loss was Washington's third consecu-
final move at the goal line for the touch-
tive in Rose Bowl play and provided the
Final Rankings
down. Dick Jamison added the point-after
Trojans their seventh consecutive Rose
AP
12th
Bowl win.
Score by Quarters
Scoring
USC
0
7
13
9
-
29
UW
0
0
0
0
-
0
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
2 USC-Callahan, 11-yard pass from Hardy, (Jamison Kick)
Team Statistics
3 USC-Callahan, 10-yard pass from Hardy, (Jamison Kick)
UW
USC
3 USC-Gray, 21-yard pass from Hardy, (Kick Failed)
7
First Downs
8
4 USC-Safety, Austin punt blocked in the end zone
134
Net Yards Rushing
117
4 USC-Gray, 15-yard pass from Bell, (Jamison Kick)
51
Net Yards Passing
113
Individual Leaders
185
Total Offense
230
5-22-3
Passing
9-16-0
Rushing-George Callahan (USC) 6-46; Al Akins (UW) 9-41; Sam Robinson (UW) 9-35; Edwin Saenz (USC) 10-
26; Milford Dreblow (USC) 4-24;
7-35.9
Punting
10-37.5
2-0
Fumbles-Lost
2-0
1-10
Penalties
3-25
57
Rose
46TH ANNUAL GAME
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1960
Washington 44, Wisconsin 8
A capacity crowd watched the underdog
Schoonover, to slice the lead to nine points,
Washington Huskies score more Rose Bowl
17-8.
points than any other West Coast team in
history, rolling to six touchdowns and a field
Washington responded quickly to quell any
goal over the slower Badgers of Wisconsin.
idea of a Badger comeback. Fleming had
Wisconsin, 8-1 coming into the game un-
another long punt return, this one for 55
der fourth-year coach Milt Bruhn, was fa-
yards, and Schloredt followed the return
PROGRAM
50°
vored by 6-1/2 points over a Husky squad
with a 23-yard pass to end Lee Folkins.
that featured no seniors among its starters.
Folkins made an outstanding leaping snag
in the end zone to extend the Dawgs' lead to
Washington, coached by Jim Owens to a
24-8.
9-1 record before the bowl game, gambled
early and late, attempting fourth-down
Washington continued to keep Wisconsin
plays in the first as well as the fourth quar-
off balance in the third quarter. Fullback
ter. On the Huskies' second drive of the
Ray Jackson pounded away on five plays for
46 yards of the 66-yard touchdown drive.
WISCONSIN vs.
game, with the score still tied at zero, Wash-
WASHINGTON
ington quarterback Bob Schloredt audibled
He scored on a 2-yard dive.
JANUARY 1, 1960 PASADENA, CALIFORNIA
twice on fourth down, leading to halfback
The Huskies hammered the final nail into
Don McKeta's 6-yard touchdown run. Soon
the Badger coffin by stopping the Big Ten
after, Washington recovered the first of
representatives on four consecutive plays
four Wisconsin fumbles and Husky half-
inside the 10-yard line. Taking over on its
100,809 at the Rose Bowl
back George Fleming booted a 36-yard
own 7, Washington marched 93 yards in 10
field goal for a 10-0 lead.
plays to score again. The drive included
another Schloredt fourth-down conversion,
Fleming provided a dramatic example of
this one from his own 16-yard line.
the Huskies' superior speed, returning a
punt 53 yards for a touchdown and adding
Schloredt scored on a 3-yard keeper to up
the lead to an insurmountable 38-8.
his own extra point for a 17-0 lead. Wiscon-
Schloredt and Fleming were named Co-
sin put together its only scoring drive of the
game on the strength of three completed
Most Valuable Players by the Rose Bowl
committee.
passes. Tom Wiesner gained the final 4
yards to score. The Badgers converted a
The Husky reserves notched Washington's
two-point conversion, a pass from quarter-
final score as backup quarterback Bob
back Dale Hackbart to left end Allan
Hivner lobbed a 3-yard pass to halfback
Don Millich.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
1 UW-McKeta, 6-yard run, (Fleming Kick)
1 UW-Fleming, 36-yard FG
Final Rankings
1 UW-Fleming, 53-yard punt return, (Fleming Kick)
AP
8th
2 WISC-Wiesner, 4-yard run, (Schoonover pass from Hackbart)
UPI
7th
2 UW-Folkins, 23-yard pass from Schloredt, (Fleming Kick)
3 UW-Jackson, 2-yard run, (Fleming Kick)
Score by Quarters
4 UW-Schloredt, 3-yard run, (Fleming Kick)
WISC
0
8
0
0
-
8
4 UW-Millich, 1-yard pass from Hivner, (Pass Failed)
UW
17
7
7
13
-
44
Individual Leaders
Team Statistics
Rushing-Schloredt (UW) 21-81; Jackson (UW) 12-61; Hobbs (WISC) 7-32.
UW
WISC
Passing-Hackbart (WISC) 11-25-0-145; Schloredt (UW) 4-7-0-102.
16
First Downs
13
Receiving-Fleming (UW) 1-65; Schoonover (WISC) 3-57.
215
Net Yards Rushing
123
137
Net Yards Passing
153
352
Total Offense
276
7-13-0
Passing
14-32-0
6-36.0
Punting
6-36.8
2-0
Fumbles-Lost
4-4
7-85
Penalties
3-18
58
Rose
W
Guide
ROSE BOWL
Rose Bowl-January 2, 1961
47th Annual Game
Washington 17, Minnesota 7
MINNESOTA vs
WASHINGTON
Washington, 9-1 under fourth-year coach
Still unable to move against the fast-react-
JANUARY 2, 1961
Jim Owens, entered the 1961 Rose Bowl as
ing Washington line, Minnesota punted. A
Pasadina, 50Finator
defending champions but decided under-
clipping penalty on the return left the
dogs. The Minnesota Gophers, 8-1 and
Huskies on their own 13, and they lost 6
coached by Murray Warmath, entered the
yards on their first play. Schloredt punted
game atop the national polls. They left with
from the 7-yard line to the Husky 47. Min-
a 17-7 setback courtesy of an explosive
nesota took over with its first good scoring
Husky start and the determined second-
chance but the Gophers could not convert.
half defense of Owens' players.
The Gophers drove to the 32 and then
turned the ball over on downs.
Washington used its superior quickness to
offset Minnesota's size advantage in the
Washington quickly marched down the
early going.
field. Jackson carried for 10 yards and then
The Huskies scored their first points in a
Fleming took a pitch to the 48. Faced with a
fourth-down-and-three situation on Min-
second-and-two, Schloredt called his own
nesota's 27-yard line. Halfback George
number on the quarterback sneak. Minne-
Fleming kicked a 44-yard field goal, putting
sota was expecting an outside play.
Washington on the scoreboard first and
Schloredt slid through the middle, broke
Fleming into the Rose Bowl record book
loose to the right, picked up an important
with the longest field goal kick in its history.
block from end Folkins, and didn't get
97,314 at the Rose Bowl
caught until he was dragged down on the
Quarterback Bob Schloredt, who missed
18, a 31-yard gain. Jackson gained 3 up the
the second half of the season with an injury,
middle, then Schloredt rolled out and car-
entered the game in the first quarter replac-
ried the ball to the 7-yard line. Jackson
ing starter Bob Hivner. Schloredt promptly
carried it to the 1-foot line and Schloredt
fired a 12-yard pass to fullback Ray Jackson.
scored the touchdown on a sneak. With
Jackson followed the reception with a 30-
Fleming's PAT, Washington had 17
yard run to the Gopher 30. Three line
points-all that the Huskies would score-
plunges later, the ball rested on the Gopher
and a 17-0 lead at the half.
18 as the first quarter ended. The Huskies
were using mostly outside tosses to advance
Minnesota scored its only points of the
the ball, a pattern the Gophers did not ad-
game in the third quarter, taking advantage
just to defensively until the second half.
of one of Washington's three fumbles to set
to work on the Husky 32. The Gophers
Charlie Mitchell, a Husky halfback, took a
drove 32 yards, scoring on an 18-yard op-
toss around the right side for another 10
tion play. Right halfback Bill Munsey took
yards to the Gopher 8 to open the second
the pitch from Gopher quarterback Sandy
quarter. Schloredt advanced to the 3-yard
Stephens, scoring on his third carry of the
line, losing the opportunity to score when
day. James Rogers added the PAT.
he slipped. After an incomplete pass,
Schloredt hit halfback Brent Wooten with a
Schloredt was named Most Valuable
Final Rankings
3-yard toss for the first touchdown in the
Player, the second time in as many years he
AP
6th
was accorded the honor.
47th annual Rose Bowl game. Fleming's
UPI
None.
extra point put the Dawgs up 10-0.
Score by Quarters
UM
0
0
7
0
-
7
Scoring
UW
3
14
0
0
-
17
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
Team Statistics
1 UW-Fleming, 44-yard FG, 6:30
2 UW-Wooten, 3-yard pass from Schloredt, 1:25 (Fleming Kick)
UW
UM
2 UW-Schloredt, 1-yard run, 10:46 (Fleming Kick)
11
First Downs
14
3 UM-Munsey, 18-yard run, 5:35 (Rogers Kick)
177
Net Yards Rushing
202
16
Net Yards Passing
51
Individual Leaders
193
Total Offense
253
Rushing-Schloredt (UW) 5-68; Jackson (UW) 13-60; Stephens (UM) 10-51.
2-5-0
Passing
5-18-3
Passing-Johnson (UM) 3-8-0-30; Stephens (UM) 2-10-3-21; Schloredt 2-4-0-16.
8-41.3
Punting
6-43.3
Receiving-Hagberg (UM) 1-18; Hall (UM) I-15; Jackson (UW) 1-12.
3-2
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
6-50
Penalties
8-35
59
Rose Bowl) Gwide
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1964
Golden Anniversary
Illinois 17, Washington 7
The Huskies entered their third Rose Bowl
After an exchange of punts to open the
in five years in a familiar position-as an
second quarter, Illinois fumbled on its own
underdog. Coach Pete Elliott's Illinois
27-yard line on a first-down play. Washing-
team had a 7-1-1 regular-season record
ton took over and quickly scored. Siler car-
and was ranked third in the country, while
ried for 3 yards on first down, and on second
the Huskies had overcome an 0-3 start to
down he threw 18 yards to right end Joe
finish the year 6-4 under seven-year head
Mancuso, who was downed on the 6. Wash-
coach Jim Owens, with only a loss to UCLA
ington scored on an option play, with Siler
in Los Angeles blemishing their seven-
pitching to right halfback Kopay for the 6-
game run to the roses.
yard touchdown. Medved added the PAT
kick.
Washington featured a hard-driving ground
RoseBonl
game anchored by quarterback Bill Dou-
Washington kicked off and Illinois drove
glas, fullback Junior Coffey, and future pro
down the field, keeping the ball for almost
halfbacks Ron Medved and Dave Kopay.
eight minutes. Faced with a fourth-and-
ILLINOIS VS. WASHINGTON
The defense earned its reputation as a hard-
four on the Washington eight, Illini quar-
hitting group which was almost impossible
terback Fred Custardo dropped back to
50th ANNUAL GAME JANUARY 1964 PASADENA CALIFORNIA OFFICIAL PROGRAM $1.00 (incl. tax)
to run against, anchored by a future Husky
pass and was sacked for a 4-yard loss by
assistant coach, end Jim Lambright. The
Mancuso. Washington took over on its own
Illini featured perhaps the most famous
12, but Siler fumbled on second down with
alumnus of the 1964 Rose Bowl, linebacker
96,957 at the Rose Bowl
center Bruce Capel recovering for Illinois
Dick Butkus.
on the 15, allowing UI's Jim Plankenhorn to
The Huskies started play as though they
kick a 32-yard field goal as time expired in
the first half.
were anything but underdogs. Steve
Bramwell, now the Husky team doctor,
Illinois converted another Washington
took the opening kickoff out to Washing-
turnover into points early in the second
ton's 22-yard line. Kopay took the first play
half. Siler was intercepted at midfield. The
around right end for 9 yards and the Hus-
ball was returned to the Washington 32
kies were off and running.
where Illinois started its second scoring
The opening drive marched down field,
drive. The Illini scored in six plays for a 10-
slowed only by three penalties (two offsides
7 lead, helped by a Washington piling-on
and a backfield-in-motion call). On a first-
penalty.
and-10 play from the Illinois 26, quarter-
Washington had a chance to go ahead at the
back Bill Douglas used a quarterback
end of the third quarter, but on a third-and-
keeper through the middle of the line for a
seven, Siler's pass was picked off on the
gain of 12. It proved to be a costly first
Illinois 4-yard line. Illinois responded with
down. Douglas was injured on the play and
the only full drive of the day, moving from
left the field on a stretcher, out for the day.
the Husky 15-yard line, 85 yards for the
Final Rankings
Backup quarterback Bill Siler entered the
touchdown. Almost as important as the
game and completed the first pass he at-
points was the fact that Illinois ate up eight
UPI
15th
tempted, but left end Al Libke fumbled on
minutes of the final quarter on the drive.
AP
None.
the Illini 6-yard line.
Score by Quarters
UI
0
3
7
7
-
17
Scoring
UW
0
7
0
0
-
7
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
2 UW-Kopay, 7-yard run, 8:26 (Medved Kick)
Team Statistics
2 UI-Plankenhorn, 32-yard FG, 14:59
UW
UI
3 UI-Warren, 2-yard run, 8:03 (Plankenhorn Kick)
12
First Downs
22
4 UI-Grabowski, 10-yard run, 6:59 (Plankenhorn Kick)
114
Net Yards Rushing
291
69
Net Yards Passing
59
Individual Leaders
183
Total Offense
350
Rushing-Grabowski (UI) 23-125; Wheatland (UI) 10-55; Kopay (UW) 4-29
8-19-3
Passing
6-15-0
Passing-Custardo (UI) 4-7-0-43; Siler (UW) 6-17-3-46.
3-43.0
Punting
4-39.0
Receiving-Fearn (UI) 3-24; Libke (UW) 3-19.
5-3
Fumbles-Lost
5-3
5-25
Penalties
6-64
60
Rose B) Guide
Rose Bowl-January 2, 1978
Washington 27, Michigan 20
JANUARY2/PASADENA,CALIFORNIA
Washington, 9-2 in the regular season after
That lead was short-lived, however, as the
two forfeit wins were awarded by the
Wolverines struck back in just two plays.
NCAA, capped its 1977 Cinderella season
Left-handed Michigan quarterback Rick
in the 64th annual Rose Bowl with a thrill-
Leach gunned a 76-yard bomb to Curt
ing 27-20 upset victory over heavily favored
Stephenson to put the Wolverines on the
Michigan before 105,312 fans. Don James
board, just 50 seconds after Washington
directed his team from a 1-3 early-season
constructed its largest lead.
record to a 7-4 mark, winning seven of its
last eight games en route to Washington's
Washington lit up the scoreboard for the
first bowl victory in 17 years.
final time when Steve Robbins hit a 28-yard
three-pointer. The field goal widened the
The Huskies were led from the outset by
Pac-8 champions' lead to 27-7 with just
Pac-8 Co-Player of the Year and eventual
0:50 remaining in the third period.
Rose Bowl MVP, quarterback Warren
Moon. On Washington's first possession,
Michigan wasn't about to be embarrassed
Moon led the Huskies 49 yards in 10 plays
as the Wolverines marched 78 yards on 11
and scored the touchdown himself on a 2-
plays to open the fourth quarter, culminat-
VASHINGTONMICHIGAN
yard jaunt to open the scoring, 7-0.
ing the drive with a 2-yard Russell Davis
dive for six points. Gregg Willner added the
James' squad parlayed a 62-yard Moon to
PAT and Michigan was back in business,
Spider Gaines pass into a 30-yard field goal
closing the gap to 27-14. As Washington's
105,312 at the Rose Bowl
to extend the lead to 10-0 early in the sec-
game turned conservative, Michigan again
ond quarter. Washington came right back
scored on a Leach pass to Stanley Edwards.
on its next possession to finish the first-half
However, the momentum swung back
scoring with a 60-yard drive and another
Washington's way on the next play as
Moon touchdown run-this time from 1-
Willner missed the conversion on a bad
yard out.
snap and the Washington lead remained
Washington outgained the Wolverines by a
seven points at 27-20.
wide margin of 246 total yards to 111 as the
The game turned into a defensive battle in
first-half gun went off. The Huskies con-
the final minutes as Washington inter-
veyed thoughts of a rout when Moon threw
cepted two Leach passes, including a
a 28-yard touchdown strike early in the
Michael Jackson pickoff at Washington's
third quarter to his favorite target, Gaines.
own 3-yard line with just over a minute
The 24-0 bulge seemed insurmountable
remaining. Cornerback Nesby Glasgow
with just 5:21 remaining in the third
ended the Pasadena Classic with another
quarter.
interception as time ran out on Michigan.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
Final Rankings
1 UW-Moon, 2-yard run, 8:23 (Robbins Kick)
AP
10th
2 UW-Robbins, 30-yard FG, 4:27
UPI
9th
2 UW-Moon, 1-yard run, 11:34 (Robbins Kick)
3 UW-Gaines, 28-yard pass from Moon, 9:39 (Robbins Kick)
Score by Quarters
3 UM-Stephenson, 76-yard pass from Leach, 10:29 (Willner Kick)
UM
0
0
7
13
-
20
3 UW-Robbins, 28-yard FG, 3:39
UW
7
10
10
0
-
27
4 UM-Davis, 2-yard run, 3:39 (Willner Kick)
4 UM-Edwards, 32-yard pass from Leach, 11:16 (Kick Failed)
Team Statistics
UW
UM
Individual Leaders
17
First Downs
22
Rushing-R. Davis (UM) 18-79; Steele (UW) 13-77; Edwards (UM) 15-74; Gipson (UW) 15-48.
164
Net Yards Rushing
149
Passing-Leach (UM) 14-27-2-239; Moon (UW) 12-23-2-188.
234
Net Yards Passing
239
Receiving-Clapton (UM) 5-84; Gaines (UW) 4-122; Greenwood (UW) 3-28; R. Davis (UM) 3-26.
398
Total Offense
388
13-24-2
Passing
14-27-2
5-39.0
Punting
4-42.5
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
2-1
6-47
Penalties-Yards
3-11
61
Rose G²vide
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1981
Michigan 23, Washington 6
Washington, finishing the regular season
On Washington's second possession, Flick
with a 9-2 record and ranked 16th nation-
marched the club 63 yards to just inside the
ally in both polls, met Big Ten champion
Wolverine 1-yard line. But on fourth-and-
Michigan, the 5th-ranked team in the coun-
one from point-blank range, Toussaint
try, in the Rose Bowl under circumstances
Tyler was stopped for no gain. Although
reminiscent of their 1978 meeting at the
one official prematurely signalled a touch-
same venue. The Huskies again entered the
down, he was overruled by the linesman.
Pasadena Classic as decided underdogs, but
this time could not pull off the upset.
The Huskies again appeared to have scored
Rather than the drama of the 27-20 victory
a touchdown when center Mike Reilly
over Michigan just three years earlier,
snared Kyle Stevens' mid-air fumble mid-
Washington suffered a disappointing 23-6
way through the second period, and ran it
THE 1981
defeat despite outplaying the winners for
into the end zone, but the play was ruled
dead.
ROSEIBOWL
the first half.
The Huskies came out impressive, but
While Washington was outplaying its
rival-the Huskies led in total offense
TON VS MICHIGAN
there was a sense that nothing would go
their way. On the third play of the game,
269-133-Michigan led 7-6 going into the
locker room at half. The second half was a
Tom Flick found Aaron Williams over the
middle, but only after the ball was tipped
different story, i.e., all Michigan. The Hus-
into his hands. The play went for 52 yards,
kies were held to just 10 third-quarter plays
104,863 at the Rose Bowl
but was called back due to offensive pass
while Michigan scored 16 second-half
interference.
points.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
2 UW-Nelson, 35-yard FG, 7:10
2 UM-Woolfolk, 6-yard run, 3:39 (Haji-Sheikh Kick)
2 UW-Nelson, 26-yard FG, 0:00
3 UM-Haji-Sheikh, 25-yard FG, 8:48
3 UM-Carter, 7-yard pass from Wangler, 2:11 (Haji-Sheikh Kick)
4 UM-Edwards, 1-yard run, 4:02 (Kick Failed)
Individual Leaders
Rushing-Woolfolk (UM) 26-182; Edwards (UM) 19-68; Stevens (UW) 17-59.
Passing-Flick (UW) 23-39-2-282; Wangler (UM) 12-20-0-145.
Receiving-Allen (UW) 6-101; Bayle (UW) 6-45; Carter (UM) 5-68.
Final Rankings
AP
17th
UPI
16th
Score by Quarters
UM
0
7
10
6
-
23
UW
0
6
0
0
-
6
Team Statistics
UW
UM
20
First Downs
23
92
Net Yards Rushing
292
282
Net Yards Passing
145
374
Total Offense
437
23-39-2
Passing
12-20-0
5-39.2
Punting
6-47.3
2-1
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
5-32
Penalties-Yards
3-37
62
Rose B. G2wide
THE 1982
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1982
OSE BOWL
Washington 28, Iowa 0
Washington, 9-2 in regular-season play,
before the half when fullback Vince Coby
entered the 1982 Rose Bowl in a familiar
smashed over from a yard out to climax a
position-as underdogs. For the fourth
60-yard march.
time in four postseason appearances, the
Huskies' bowl opponent was rated the fa-
Iowa made its deepest penetration in the
vorite and for the third time, Don James'
third period-to the Husky 29-but was
club ignored the odds. Washington re-
stymied by a Ken Driscoll interception.
corded the first Rose Bowl shutout in 28
Robinson took over again in the final stanza,
years, a 28-0 whitewash of Big Ten cham-
gaining 66 yards on three carries, including
the final 34 yards on a nifty run up the right
pion Iowa.
side, to cap a 69-yard drive that put the
The two clubs battled to a scoreless tie after
Huskies ahead 21-0. The UW onslaught
one quarter, although Washington did get
ended with quarterback Tim Cowan's
inside the Hawkeye 30-yard line twice
3-yard reverse with 7:13 to go.
thanks to the Husky kicking game. First
cornerback Ray Horton returned an Iowa
Washington took advantage of two Iowa
punt 48 yards to the Iowa 29, then punter
fumbles and picked off three Hawkeye
ASHINGTON vs IOWA
Jeff Partridge was roughed in the act to
passes to turn the tide in its favor. Robinson
keep another drive going until it stalled at
gained 142 net yards on just 20 carries to
the Hawkeye 28.
pace the ground game, and quarterback
Steve Pelluer completed 15-of-29 passes
105,611 at the Rose Bowl
Eventual Rose Bowl MVP Jacque Robin-
for another 142 yards.
son broke the scoring ice early in the second
period, bulling over from 1-yard out to cap a
Inside linebackers Mark Jerue (13) and Ken
65-yard drive. Robinson romped for 34
Driscoll (11) led the stop troops. Driscoll
and defensive backs Vince Newsome and
yards on seven carries during the drive.
Washington upped its lead to 13-0 just 0:19
Derek Harvey each grabbed an enemy pass.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
2 UW-Robinson, 1-yard run, 10:09 (Nelson Kick)
2 UW-Coby, 1-yard run, 0:19 (Pass Failed)
4 UW-Robinson, 34-yard run, 9:47 (Skansi, Pass from Pelluer)
4 UW-Cowan, 3-yard run, 7:13 (Nelson Kick)
Individual Leaders
Rushing-Robinson (UW) 20-142; Granger (UI) 13-80; Bohannon (UI) 10-44; Jackson (UW) 8-24.
Passing-Pelluer (UW) 15-29-1-142; Bohannon (UI) 6-14-2-33; Gales (UI) 4-7-1-51.
Receiving-Brown (UI) 6-52; Allen (UW) 5-68; Skansi (UW) 4-69; Rosborough (UW) 2-10.
Final Rankings
AP
10th
UPI
7th
Score by Quarters
UW
0
13
0
15
-
28
UI
0
0
0
0
I
0
Team Statistics
UW
UI
22
First Downs
14
186
Net Yards Rushing
180
142
Net Yards Passing
84
328
Total Offense
264
15-29-1
Passing
10-21-3
7-35.6
Punting
5-47.0
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
2-2
3-28
Penalties-Yards
6-73
63
Rose B) wD Guide
77th
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1991
ROSE BOWL
Washington 46, Iowa 34
GAME
Husky sophomore quarterback Mark Brunell
than 40 points to the high-scoring Huskies.
JANUARY 1991 PASADENA,
WASHINGTON VS IOWA
passed for a pair of touchdowns and ran for
two more to lead Pac-10 champion Wash-
The strong tradition of Don James special
ington to a convincing 46-34 win over Iowa.
teams surfaced early in this game when red-
Washington and Iowa combined for 80
shirt freshman Andy Mason blocked an Iowa
points, making the 77th Rose Bowl the high-
punt that was scooped up by junior
est scoring in history. The opportunistic
cornerback Dana Hall, who sprinted in for a
touchdown. With less than five minutes
Huskies built a 33-7 halftime lead, with two
first-half touchdowns coming courtesy of
elapsed, Washington led 10-0. After Iowa
the UW defense.
closed to 10-7 with 12:39 left in the half,
Washington erupted for 23 consecutive
The Pasadena victory left Washington 10-2
points.
for the season, while Iowa dropped to 8-4.
The game marked Washington's 12th bowl
A 38-yard Travis Hanson field goal, and a
appearance in the 16-year coaching reign of
37-yard interception return by senior
Don James, who improved his bowl record
cornerback Charles Mindy gave Washing-
to 9-3, including 3-1 in the Rose Bowl.
ton momentum. Two touchdowns gener-
ated by Brunell, on a 5-yard run and a 22-
Left-handed Brunell's running and passing
yard pass to Mario Bailey, gave the Huskies
skills earned him Rose Bowl MVP honors as
their nearly insurmountable 33-7 lead at
he completed 14 of 22 passes for 163 yards.
intermission.
101,273 at the Rose Bowl
Washington faithful also rejoiced in the re-
Iowa threw a scare into the Huskies as
turn of senior All-America running back
Greg Lewis, who spent the month prior to
Hawkeye quarterback Matt Rodgers rallied
the Rose Bowl rehabilitating an injured knee.
his team for 27 second-half points. Iowa
Lewis hadn't lost astep, however, as he rushed
fullback Nick Bell's 20-yard touchdown run
for a game-high 128 yards on 19 carries.
with 5:07 to play pulled the Hawkeyes within
13 at 39-26. But Washington's Brunell put
Washington's defense, ranked first in the
out the fire on the next possession with a 31-
nation in stopping the run, allowed Iowa just
yard scoring completion to Bailey. A late
139 net yards on the ground, recorded five
Iowa score made the score 45-34 as Wash-
sacks and forced five turnovers (four inter-
ington held on to claim the Pac-10's second
ceptions) in the game. Iowa also became the
consecutive Rose Bowl win and eighth in the
sixth team in 1990-91 to surrender more
past 10 years.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
1 UW-Hanson, 23-yard FG, 9:14
1 UW-Hall, 27-yard return of blocked punt, 7:15 (Hanson Kick)
2 UI-Bell, 15-yard run, 12:39 (Skillett Kick)
Final Rankings
2 UW-Hanson, 38-yard FG, 9:57
AP
5th
2 UW-Mincy, 37-yard interception return, 8:22 (Pass Failed)
UPI
5th
2 UW-Brunell, 5-yard run, 2:44 (Hanson Kick)
USA Today/CNN 5th
2 UW-M. Bailey, 22-yard pass from Brunell, :58 (Hanson Kick)
3 UI-Rodgers, 7-yard run, 12:53 (Skillett Kick)
Score by Quarters
3 UW-Brunell, 20-yard run, 3:27 (Run Failed)
UI
0
7
7
20
-
34
4 UI-Rodgers, 9-yard run, 6:27 (Run Failed)
UW
10
23
6
7
-
46
4 UI-Bell, 20-yard run, 5:07 (Pass Failed)
4 UW-M. Bailey, 31-yard pass from Brunell, 4:43 (Hanson Kick)
Team Statistics
4 UI-Saunders, 12-yard pass from Rodgers, 2:23 (Velicer, pass from Rodgers)
UW
UI
Individual Leaders
19
First Downs
19
222
Net Yards Rushing
139
Rushing-Lewis (UW) 19-128; Bell (UI) 11-64; Bryant (UW) 3-47; Brunell (UW) 10-28; Montgomery (UI)
163
Net Yards Passing
315
4-26; Stewart (UI) 7-21; Kujawa (UI) 2-16; Mt. Jones (UW) 5-16; Rodgers (UI) 15-12; Turner (UW) 1-4;
385
Total Offense
454
Barry (UW) 1-1; Hobert (UW) 1-(-2).
25-14-2
37-17-4
Passing-Rodgers (UI) 34-15-3-196; Brunell (UW) 22-14-1-163; Hobert (UW) 3-0-1-0; Hughes (UI) 1-1-
Passing
0-66; Titley (UI) 1-1-0-53; Skillett (UI) 1-0-1-0.
4-41.8
Punting
6-33.3
Receiving-Saunders (UI) 5-99; Pierce (UW) 4-32; Bell (UI) 3-85; M. Bailey (UW) 2-53; Stewart (UI) 2-40;
3-1
Fumbles-Lost
4-1
Kilpack (UW) 2-22; Montgomery (UI) 2-6; Filloon (UI) 1-53; McKay (UW) 1-17; Hughes (UI) 1-12; Cross
5-45
Penalties-Yards
8-55
(UI) 1-9; Whitaker (UI) 1-9; Mt. Jones (UW) 1-3; Titley (UI) 1-2; Lewis (UW) 1-0.
64
Washington's Bowl Record (12-7-1)
DATE
BOWL
OPPONENT
UW
OPP
ATTEN
Jan. 1, 1924
Rose
Navy
14
14
40,000
Jan. 1, 1926
Rose
Alabama
19
20
45,000
Jan. 1, 1937
Rose
Pittsburgh
0
21
87,196
Jan. 1, 1938
Pineapple
Hawaii
53
13
13,500
Jan. 1, 1944*
Rose
USC
0
29
68,000
Jan. 1, 1960
Rose
Wisconsin
44
8
100,809
Jan. 2, 1961
Rose
Minnesota
17
7
97,314
Jan. 1, 1964
Rose
Illinois
7
17
96,957
Jan. 2, 1978
Rose
Michigan
27
20
105,312
Dec. 22, 1979
Sun
Texas
14
7
33,412
Jan. 1, 1981
Rose
Michigan
6
23
104,863
Jan. 1, 1982
Rose
Iowa
28
0
105,611
Dec. 25, 1982
Aloha
Maryland
21
20
30,055
Dec. 26, 1983
Aloha
Penn State
10
13
37,212
Jan. 1, 1985
Orange
Oklahoma
28
17
56,294
Dec. 30, 1985
Freedom
Colorado
20
17
30,961
Dec. 25, 1986
Sun
Alabama
6
28
48,722
Dec. 19, 1987
Independence
Tulane
24
12
41,683
Dec. 30, 1989
Freedom
Florida
34
7
33,858
Jan. 1, 1991
Rose
Iowa
46
34
101,273
A regular Pacific Coast Conference schedule was not played because of wartime travel
restrictions in 1943, so Northern Division winner (Washington) met Southern Division
winner (Southern California) in the Rose Bowl.
Rose Bowl Record: Won 5, Lost 5, Tied 1
Other Bowls Record: Won 7, Lost 2
All Bowls Record: Won 12, Lost 7, Tied 1
19
WASHINGTON
FOOTBALL
91
Rose Bowl Champions
OF
UW
20
RODGERS
79
49
Mario Bailey, Split End
Brett Collins, Linebacker
Ed Cunningham, Center
Donald Jones, Linebacker
W
1991 Husky Football
1990 Results (10-2, 7-1)
DATE
RESULT
SITE
ATTENDANCE
Sept. 8
Washington 20, San Jose State 17
Seattle, Wash.
66,337
Sept. 15
Washington 20, Purdue 14
West Lafayette, Ind.
33,113
Sept. 22
Washington 31, Southern Cal 0
Seattle, Wash.
72,617
Sept. 29
Colorado 20, Washington 14
Boulder, Colo.
52,868
Oct. 6
Washington 42, Arizona State 14
Tempe, Ariz.
62,738
Oct. 13
Washington 38, Oregon 17
Seattle, Wash.
73,498
Oct. 20
Washington 52, Stanford 16
Palo Alto, Calif.
36,500
Oct. 27
Washington 46, California 7
Seattle, Wash.
71,427
Nov. 3
Washington 54, Arizona 10
Seattle, Wash.
70,111
Nov. 10
UCLA 25, Washington 22
Seattle, Wash.
71,925
Nov. 17
Washington 55, Washington State 10
Pullman, Wash.
37,600
Jan. 1
+
Washington 46, Iowa 34
Pasadena, Calif.
101,273
°Pacific-10 Conference Game
+Rose Bowl
Future Husky Football Schedules
1992
1993
1994
1995
Sept. 5
at Arizona State
SEPT. 4
STANFORD
Sept. 3
at USC
SEPT. 2
ARIZONA
STATE
SEPT. 12
WISCONSIN
Sept. 11
at Ohio State
SEPT. 10
OHIO STATE
SEPT. 19
NEBRASKA
Sept. 18
Bye
SEPT. 17
BYU
Sept. 9
Bye
Sept. 26
Bye
SEPT. 25
EAST CAROLINA
Sept. 24
at Wisconsin
Sept. 16
at Ohio State
OcT. 3
USC
OcT. 2
SAN JOSE STATE
OcT. 1
UCLA
SEPT. 23
ARMY
OCT. 10
CALIFORNIA
Oct. 9
at California
Oct. 8
Bye
Sept. 30
at Oregon State
Oct. 17
at Oregon
Oct. 16
at UCLA
OCT. 15
ARIZONA
Oct. 7
NOTRE DAME
STATE
Oct. 24
PACIFIC
OCT. 23
OREGON
Oct. 14
at Stanford
Oct. 22
at Oregon
Oct. 21
at Arizona
OCT. 31
STANFORD
Oct. 30
at Arizona State
OCT. 29
OREGON
Nov. 7
at Arizona
Nov. 6
at Oregon State
OCT. 28
USC
STATE
Nov. 14
OREGON
Nov. 13
USC
Nov. 4
OREGON
Nov. 5
at Stanford
STATE
Nov. 11
Nov. 20
WASHINGTON
at UCLA
Nov. 12
CALIFORNIA
STATE
Nov. 21
at Washington
Nov. 18
WASHINGTON
Nov. 19
at Washington
STATE
State
State
°Note: Future schedules subject to change.
Home Games in Bold
Information
W
Table of Contents
information
1990 Review
Husky Experience
taff Directory
2
San Jose State
110
Academic Excellence
160-161
Media Information
3
Purdue
111
William P. Gerberding
162
Vashington Media
4
Southern California
112
James R. Collier
163
Colorado
113
Facilities/Attendance Records
164-171
991 Preview
Arizona State
114
Barbara A. Hedges
172
Husky Outlook
6-10
Oregon
115
Pacific-10 Conference
173
Husky Numerical Roster
11
Stanford
116
Seattle
174
Husky Alphabetical Roster
12-13
California
117
Husky Geographical Roster
14
Arizona
118
Husky History
Squad Breakdown
15
UCLA
119
Team Records
176
Husky Depth Chart
16
Washington State
120
Individual Records
177
Rose Bowl
121
Single-Season Leaders
178-179
Husky Coaching Staff
1990 Final Statistics
122-125
Career Leaders
180-181
Don James
18-25
1990 Starters
126
The Last Time
182
Coaching History
25
1990 Player Awards
127
Washington's Longest
183
Assistant Coaches
26-30
1990 Pacific-10 Report
128-132
Top 20 Performances
184
Graduate Assistants
31
1990 All-Conference Team
133
Scoring Records
185
All-Time Coaches
32
1990 All-Academic Team
134
Opponents High Games
186
Year-By-Year Leaders
186-190
Husky Players
Bowl Summary
Washington Honor Roll
190
Returning Players
34-83
1924 Rose Bowl
136
Husky Awards
190-196
Newcomers
84-90
1926 Rose Bowl
137
Draft Picks
197-198
1937 Rose Bowl
138
Hall of Fame
200
Opponents
1938 Pineapple Bowl
139
Year-By-Year Results
201-211
Stanford
92
1944 Rose Bowl
140
Washington Lettermen
211-216
Nebraska
93
1960 Rose Bowl
141
Kansas State
94
1961 Rose Bowl
142
Arizona
95
1964 Rose Bowl
143
Toledo
96
1978 Rose Bowl
144
Credits
California
97
1979 Sun Bowl
145
Oregon
98
1981 Rose Bowl
146
The 1991 University of Washington Football Media Guide was
published by the Sports Information Office, Dave Senko, director.
Arizona State
99
1982 Rose Bowl
147
Its purpose is to assist members of the media in their coverage of
Southern California
100
1982 Aloha Bowl
148
Husky football in 1991. The guide was edited by Dave Senko with
contributions from Cindy Fester, Tim Hevly, Leslie Keast, Paul
Oregon State
101
1983 Aloha Bowl
149
Kirk, Dan Lepse and Chip Lydum. Design consultation and
typesetting were provided by the University of Washington's
Washington State
102
1985 Orange Bowl
150
Publications Services, specifically involving Judy Robertson and
Pacific-10 Series Records
103-106
1985 Freedom Bowl
151
Bob Watkins. Photos in the guide are courtesy of Bruce Terami,
Joanie Komura, Jim Barry and AllSport. Campus photos are
Non-League Series Records
107
1986 Sun Bowl
152
courtesy of the UW's Photographic Services' photographers Davis
Pacific-10 Composite Schedule
108
1987 Independence Bowl
153
Freeman and Mary Levin. The photo on the back cover is courtesy
of Max R. Jensen. The Sports Information Office extends its
1989 Freedom Bowl
154
thanks to all members of past sport information staffs that have
1991 Rose Bowl
155
assisted in compiling information that is an integral part of this
guide.
Husky Bowl Records
156-158
Washington Football Fingertip Facts
Name-University of Washington
Athletic Director-Barbara Hedges (Arizona
1990 Pac-10 Record-7-1 (first)
Location-Seattle, Washington
State 1963)
All-Time Record-536-301-49
Mailing Address-Graves Building, GC-20
Head Football Coach-Don James (Miami
Basic Offense-One-Back
University of Washington
of Florida 1954)
Basic Defense-3-4
Seattle, WA 98195
Stadium-Husky Stadium (capacity 72,500;
dedicated 1920)
Home Uniforms-Purple jerseys, white
Founded-November 4, 1861
Nickname-Huskies
numerals, gold pants, gold helmet
President-Dr. William P. Gerberding
with purple and white stripes.
Enrollment-34,000
Mascot-"Sundodger" (Alaskan Malamute)
Away Uniforms-White jerseys, purple
School Song-"Bow Down to Washington"
numerals, purple pants, gold helmet
Conference-Pacific-10 (Pac-10)
with purple and white stripes.
1990 Record-10-2
Colors-Purple and Gold
1
W
Information
Directory
Key Administration Phone Numbers
(Area Code 206)
President-Dr. William P. Gerberding
543-5010
Football-Don James (17th year)
543-2242
Provost-Laurel L. Wilkening
543-7632
Assistant (TEs)-Myles Corrigan (5th year)
543-8105
Executive Vice President-Tallman Trask III
543-6410
Assistant (Off. Coord, OL)-Keith Gilbertson (3rd year)
685-2890
Vice President (Development)-Marilyn B. Dunn
543-2565
Assistant (Def. Line)-Randy Hart (4th year)
543-8060
Vice President (Health Sciences)-John N. Lein
543-7202
Assistant (Asst. Head Coach, Def. Coord., ILBs)-
543-2226
Vice President (Minority Affairs)-Myron Apilado
685-0774
Jim Lambright (23rd year)
Vice President (Student Affairs)-Ernest B. Morris
543-4024
Assistant (RBs)-Matt Simon (9th year)
543-6011
Vice President (University Relations)-James R. Collier
543-2560
Assistant (DBs)-Larry Slade (6th year)
543-2236
Senior Assistant Attorney General-Lloyd Peterson
543-4150
Assistant (OLBs)-Chris Tormey (9th year)
543-2232
Faculty Representative-Dr. Richard Dunn
543-2690
Assistant (WRs)-Bill Wentworth (1st year)
543-2235
Alumni Director-Jon Rider
543-0540
Assistant (QBs)-Jeff Woodruff (9th year)
543-0345
Secretary-Peggy Watson (7th year)
543-2223
Athletic Department Directory
Golf (Men)-Bill Tindall (9th year)
325-844
Golf (Women)-Mary Lou Mulflur (9th year)
543-034
(Area Code 206)
Guidance & Counseling Director-Gertrude Peoples (20th year)
543-232
Assistant Director-Nancy Clarke (4th year)
543-908
Assistant Director-Rob Post (1st year)
543-061
General Department Number
543-2210
Administrative Assistant-Cheryl Forsberg (12th year)
543-229
Husky Ticket Office
543-2200
Learning Specialist-Jane Rosenberg (1st year)
543-242
Husky Sports Hotline
54-FEVER
543-5000
Gymnastics (Women)-Bob Levesque (2nd year)
543-182
Automatic Telecopier/FAX
Assistant-Tanya Service (2nd year)
543-641:
Promotions/Advertising-Kyle Kallander (7th year)
543-526
Athletic Director-Barbara Hedges (1st year)
543-2212
Women's Promotions-Cindy Holt (6th year)
543-308
Assistant to the Director-TBA
Recruiting Coordinator-Dick Baird (7th year)
543-229
Secretary-Helen Gulickson (11th year)
543-2215
Recruiting Assistant-Abner Thomas (3rd year)
543-7409
Sr. Associate Director-Donald Smith (21st year)
543-4976
Program Assistant-Nadine LaVonne (7th year)
685-1159
Sr. Associate Director-Kit Green (16th year)
543-2279
Soccer (Men)-Ron Carter (7th year)
543-4209
Administrative Assistant-Bev Duke (8th year)
543-2279
Assistant-Ken Fuegmann (3rd year)
543-4209
Exec. Associate Director (Business)-Mike Alderson (10th year)
685-7554
Soccer (Women)-Dang Pibulvech (1st year)
685-396
Associate Director (Funding)-Pete Liske (7th year)
543-2234
Assistant-TBA
Assistant to Director-Dean Suddath (8th year)
543-2460
Home
Office
Program Assistant-Ruth Joseph (12th year)
543-2214
Program Assistant-Joanne Harder (5th year)
543-2214
Sports Information Director-Dave Senko
Associate Director (Facilities)-Dee Glueck (5th year)
543-7373
(3rd year)
823-4531
543-8333
Assistant Director (Public, Media Relations)-Dave Senko
543-8333
Assistant Director-Cindy Fester (4th year)
523-7895
543-2230
(3rd year)
Assistant Director-Dan Lepse (2nd year)
783-1320
543-2230
Band Director-Bill Bissell (21st year)
543-7383
Assistant Director-Chip Lydum (7th year)
485-5397
543-2230
Assistant Director-Doug Cheney (4th year)
543-0824
Program Assistant-Joan Burton (1st year)
524-1327
543-2230
Baseball-Bob MacDonald (16th year)
543-9365
Strength Coach-Rick Huegli (11th year)
685-7516
Assistant-Ken Knutson (6th year)
543-2919
Assistant-Eric Hohn (3rd year)
543-7396
Basketball (Men)-Lynn Nance (3rd year)
543-2240
Student/Athlete Employment Coordinator-Jim Dillon (10th year). 685-2634
Assistant-Russ Critchfield (3rd year)
543-5264
Assistant Coordinator-Al Cordova (8th year)
543-2330
Assistant-Trent Johnson (3rd year)
543-2282
Swimming (Men & Women)-Earl Ellis (23rd year)
685-1536
Basketball (Women)-Chris Gobrecht (7th year)
543-0732
Assistant-Joann Brislin (12th year)
543-2172
Assistant-Kathy Anderson (7th year)
543-8070
Tennis (Men)-Doug Ruffin (10th year)
543-1131
Assistant-Willette White (7th year)
685-2098
Tennis (Women)-Lisa Moldrem (9th year)
543-1116
Crew (Program Coordinator & Men)-Bob Ernst (17th year)
543-2136
Ticket Manager-Gae Burr (16th year)
543-6205
Assistant-Jiri Zapletal (5th year)
543-5249
Assistant Manager-Donna Strom (11th year)
543-2200
Crew (Women)-Jan Harville (12th year)
543-1117
Track & Field (Men)-Ken Shannon (24th year)
543-7914
Assistant-Eleanor McElvaine (2nd year)
543-8886
Assistant-Mike Johnson (7th year)
543-6710
Cross Country (Men & Women)-Mike Johnson (6th year)
543-6710
Track & Field (Women)-Orin Richburg (7th year)
685-7429
Equipment Manager-Tony Piro (11th year)
543-2249
Assistant-Bob Otrando (6th year)
543-0811
Assistant Equipment Manager-Bart Fullmer (3rd year)
543-2249
Trainer-Dennis Sealey (14th year)
543-2239
Assistant Equipment Manager-Jim Hagland (9th year)
685-0102
Assistant-Doug Calland (9th year)
543-2239
Assistant Equipment Manager-Jose Naguit (4th year)
543-2249
Assistant-Maren Hansen (3rd year)
543-2239
Event Manager-Vern Wagner (5th year)
543-2246
Assistant-Cheryl Parker (2nd year)
543-2239
Assistant to Event Manager-Dick Erickson (25th year)
543-8900
Assistant-Vic Belfiore (2nd year)
543-2239
Film/Video Manager-Moe Herman (3rd year)
543-7387
Assistant-Mike Wilson (2nd year)
543-2239
Travel Coordinator-Natalie Andreas (2nd year)
685-0100
Volleyball (Women)-Debbie Buse (4th year)
543-0432
Assistant-Steve Nimocks (4th year)
543-0810
2
Information
W
Media Information
all Practice: Fall practice begins Mon-
photo credential at the table located in the
terview area. The elevator will leave again
ay, August 19. Practices will be held twice
west end zone. No tripods are allowed on the
immediately following the end of the game.
day for the first two weeks at 9:25 a.m. and
field. Failure to adhere to these regulations,
Sports Information personnel will escort the
:55 p.m. Regular-season practice time is
or any interference with play, is reason for
media to the interview room (assembly room,
:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Me-
expulsion.
stadium tunnel) and will bring athletes to
ia practice passes may be obtained from
Pressbox Elevator: The pressbox elevator
the interview room by request. The visiting
he Sports Information office, Room 202,
is located on the lower level of the south side
Sports Information Director determines
Graves Building.
of Husky Stadium. The elevator is used by
post-game interview procedure for the visit-
press as well as handicapped fans. Only
ing locker room.
nterview Policy: Please contact the Sports
nformation office for ALL interview re-
accredited media will be allowed access to
Post-Game Working Area: A working area
quests. A minimum of 24 hours notice is
the elevator and pressbox. Please arrive at
in the Graves Building lower level (Aca-
equested so that the Sports Information
least an hour-and-a-half before kickoff to
demic Services Center) will be made avail-
taff will have ample time to make arrange-
insure your arrival at the press area well
able for all writers following each home
nents with players and coaches. Athletes
before game time. Media members do have
game. It is recommended that all media use
are typically available before or after prac-
priority elevator use, so be sure to indicate to
this area for filing stories, rather than re-
tice Monday through Thursday on a first-
the elevator usher that you are a credentialed
turning to the pressbox. Final statistics and
come, first-serve basis. Athletes are not
member of the media.
coaches quotes will be available in the
available for interviews on Friday or on
Services: Quarterly play-by-play accounts,
working press area. Telephones and fax
Saturday prior to the game.
machines are also available.
computerized halftime and final statistics,
Press Credentials: All credentials should
scoring summaries and coaches' quotes will
Husky Stadium: Husky Stadium is located
be requested from Sports Information Di-
be distributed in the pressbox and in the
five miles north of downtown Seattle and
rector Dave Senko either in writing or by
Graves Building following the end of the
approximately 30 minutes north of Sea-Tac
telephone. Requests should be made at least
game. Play-by-play information, statistics,
Airport. To get to the stadium from down-
one week prior to the game. Credentials will
injury updates, etc., will be reported over
town Seattle, take I-5 North and take the
be mailed if time permits. Otherwise, they
the internal pressbox public address system.
520 East (Bellevue/Kirkland) Exit. Take the
will be left at Will Call at the west side of the
A light lunch will be served prior to kickoff
Montlake Exit and turn left at the stoplight.
stadium. Will Call opens at 9:00 a.m. on
and at halftime.
Husky Stadium is on the right side of the
game days. Visiting media should make re-
road.
quests through the visiting Sports Informa-
Statisticians-Spotters: Qualified statisti-
tion Director.
cians and spotters are available if you con-
Mondays with Coach James: Coach Don
tact the Sports Information Office one week
James holds a press conference each Mon-
Parking: Press parking is located in two
in advance of the game. A minimum fee of
day morning at 10 a.m. during the season in
areas designated E-11 and C-21. The E-11
$25 per person is recommended.
the Husky Hall of Fame Room in Hec
lot is located on the northwest perimeter of
Telephones: The Sports Information De-
Edmundson Pavilion, beginning Monday,
the stadium. The C-21 lot is an underground
partment has two telephone lines installed
September 2. The opposing coach will be
garage located due west from Husky Sta-
in the pressbox (543-2230 and 543-2231).
available following the James press confer-
dium, directly across Montlake Boulevard.
Parking passes should be requested through
These lines are for Sports Information use
ence via speakerphone whenever possible.
All members of the media are invited to
the Sports Information office. Visiting me-
only. If media members require telephones,
please call Pat Jones of the University of
attend these weekly conferences.
dia should make requests through the visit-
ing Sports Information Director.
Washington Telecommunications Depart-
Best Time to Reach Coach James: Coach
ment at (206) 543-0133. The Telecommu-
James can be reached weekdays between
Photographers: Photo passes are available
nications Department will arrange to have
1:30 and 2:30 p.m. at 543-2223.
for accredited news media. They should be
phone lines installed at your expense.
Pro Scout Tickets: Pro scouts should con-
ordered in the same manner as press cre-
dentials. Visiting media should make re-
Adapters: Three-pronged adapters are re-
tact the Husky Sports Information Office at
quests through the visiting Sports Informa-
quired for operation of electronic equip-
543-2230 to purchase tickets for scouting
tion Director. Photographers may work from
ment and are not provided. Please be sure to
purposes.
the sidelines in accordance with NCAA rules.
bring your own three-pronged adapters.
Telecopy/Fax Machine: The Washington
In no case may a photographer shoot from in
Post-Game Interviews: The elevator will
Sports Information Office is equipped with
front of either team's bench. Passes should
leave the pressbox level with eight and four
an automatic telecopy/facsimile machine.
be worn in plain sight. Armbands must be
minutes remaining in the game for all mem-
To send documents, call (206) 543-5000.
picked up prior to kickoff by showing a
bers of the media wishing to go to the in-
3
W
Information
Washington Media
Newspapers
Radio
Seattle Times (AM and PM), Fairview North and John, Seattle,
KOMO (1000), (Washington Flagship Station) 100 Fourth Avenu
WA, 98109, (206) 464-2275, 1-800-343-6319. S.E.-Cathy Henkel.
North, Seattle, WA, 98109, (206) 443-4140. S.D.-Bill Swart
Assoc. Ed.-Blaine Newnham. Col-Steve Kelley. Writer-Dick
(Sideline Reporter), Bob Rondeau (Play-by-Play), Sam Adkin
Rockne, Craig Smith. FAX: (206) 464-3255.
(Color). FAX: (206) 443-8128.
Seattle Post-Intelligencer (AM), 101 Elliot Ave. W., Seattle,
KIRO (710), 2807 Third Ave., Seattle, WA, 98121, (206) 728
WA, 98119-4220, (206) 448-8373. S.E.-Bill Knight. Asst. S.E.-
5484. S.D.-Pete Gross, Steve Thomas, Tom Glasgow. FAX: (206
Glenn Drosendahl. Assoc. Ed. and Col.-John Owen. Col.-Art
441-4180.
Thiel. Writer-Dan Raley FAX: (206) 448-8164.
KJR (950), 190 Queen Anne Ave. North, Seattle, WA, 98109, (206
Tacoma Morning News-Tribune (AM), 1950S. State St., Tacoma,
286-2372/286-2386. Exec. Producer-Rick DuPree, Bol
WA, 98411, (206) 597-8680. Exec. S.E.-Greg Gibson. Col.-Bart
Blackburn, Dave Grosby, Rick Turner. FAX (206) 286-2376.
Wright. Writer-Don Borst. FAX: (206) 597-8274.
KING (1090), 333 Dexter Ave., North., Seattle, WA, 98124, (206
Everett Herald (AM), Grand and California, Everett, WA, 98201,
448-3647. FAX: (206) 448-0928.
(206) 339-3470. S.E.-Kirby Arnold. Col.-Larry Henry. Writer-
Gary Nelson. FAX: (206) 339-3464.
Bremerton Sun (PM), 545 Fifth St., Bremerton, WA, 98301,
Husky Radio Broadcasts
(206) 377-3711, S.E.-Chuck Stark. Asst. S.E. and Writer-
Husky football games are broadcast live over radio station
Terry Mosher. FAX: (206) 377-9237.
KOMO, AM 1000, part of the Athletic Department's multi-
Bellevue Journal-American (AM), 1705 132nd Ave. N.E.,
million dollar radio package. KOMO's radio network
Bellevue, WA, 98004, (206) 453-4255. S.E.-TBA. FAX: (206)
includes stations throughout the state of Washington and
635-0603. Writer-Rick Alvord.
in Alaska and Oregon.
The Daily Olympian (AM), 1268 East Fourth Ave., Olympia,
The KOMO radio broadcast team is a veteran, respected group
WA, 98507. (206) 754-5432. S.E.-Ron Matthews. Writer-Jeff
of three individuals. Bob Rondeau, a well-known KOMO-TV
Redd. FAX: (206) 754-5408.
sports reporter, provides the play-by-play description of all
The Daily (AM), 132 Communications Bldg., University of Wash-
Husky games with former Seattle Seahawks' quarterback
ington, Seattle, WA, 98195. (206) 543-2700. S.E.-TBA. FAX:
Sam Adkins providing analysis and color commentary. Side-
(206) 543-2345.
line reports are provided by KOMO radio's sports director,
Bill Swartz.
Associated Press, 201 Boren Avenue North, Seattle, WA, 98109,
(206) 682-1812, S.E.-Jim Cour. FAX: (206) 621-1948.
The Husky Network
STATION
FREQUENCY
LOCATION
United Press International, 101 Elliott Avenue West, Suite 110,
KAYO
1450 AM
Seattle, WA, 98119, (206) 283-3262. S.E.-Dennis Anstine. FAX:
Aberdeen, Wash.
99.3 FM
(206) 283-0408.
KBRC
1430 AM
Mt. Vernon, Wash.
KELA
1470 AM
Centralia, Wash.
Television
KEYF
1050 AM
Spokane, Wash.
KOMO-TV (ABC, Channel 4), 100 Fourth Avenue North, Seattle,
KAST
92.9 FM
Astoria, Oregon
WA, 98109, (206) 443-4006. S.D.-Bruce King Rick Meeder, Bob
KFAR
660 AM
Fairbanks, Alaska
Rondeau, Graham Crow. FAX: (206) 443-3422.
KICY
850 AM
Nome, Alaska
KKSD
1080 AM
Anchorage, Alaska
KIRO-TV (CBS, Channel 7), 2807 3rd Avenue, Seattle, WA,
KLOG
1490 AM
Kelso, Wash.
98121, (206) 728-7777/728-8789. S.D.-Wayne Cody, Ron Callan,
KMAS
1030 AM
Shelton, Wash.
Steve Raible, Linda Cohn FAX: (206) 441-4840.
KMWX
1460 AM
Yakima, Wash.
KING-TV (NBC, Channel 5), 333 Dexter Ave. N., Seattle, WA,
*KOMO
1000 AM
Seattle, Wash.
98124, (206) 448-3946. S.D.-Tony Ventrella, Lou Gellos, Bill
KOMW
680 AM
Omak, Wash.
Rockey, Carlos Del Valle. FAX: (206) 448-4525.
KONA
610 AM
Tri-Cities, Wash.
KONP
1450 AM
Port Angeles, Wash.
KSTW-TV (Ind., Channel 11), 2320 N. 19th, Tacoma, WA, 98411,
KPQ
560 AM
Wenatchee, Wash.
(206) 572-5789. S.D.-Rod Simons. Jesse Jones, Tony Potts. FAX:
KPUG
1170 AM
Bellingham, Wash.
(206) 272-7581.
KQUE
920 AM
Olympia, Wash.
KCPQ-TV (Ind., Channel 13), 4400 Steilacoom Blvd., Tacoma,
KRSA
850 AM
Petersburg, Alaska
WA, 98499, (206) 625-1313 or (206) 383-9592. Promotions Dir-
KTKN
930 AM
Ketchikan, Alaska
Bob Galvin. S.D.-Keith Shipman. FAX: (206) 383-9551.
KVAC
1490 AM
Forks, Wash.
KVAN
1550 AM
Prime Sports Northwest, 18 West Mercer St., Seattle, WA,
Vancouver, Wash.
98119, (206) 281-7800. Contact: Mike Oddino. FAX: (206) 283-
°Flagship Station
6106.
4
1991 PREVIEW
&
W
1991 Preview
Husky Outlook
Great achievements spawn high expecta-
named Pac-10 Co-Defensive Player of the
fense could rise to a new level this year wit
tions. Just ask Don James.
Year.
ever-improving talent and depth. Offens
The venerable dean of Pac-10 coaches took
Washington's special teams were also a fac-
presents some unexpected challenges ii
his Huskies on a 12-game romp last season
tor as All-Pac-10 return specialist, sopho-
light of the quarterback change.
that resulted in a 10-2 record (7-1 Pac-10)
more Beno Bryant, led the conference in
"I have the same feeling about Billy Jo
and his third Rose Bowl crown.
punt returns (second nationally), including
(Hobert) as I did about Mark (Brunell)
three for touchdowns.
Several prominent members from Wash-
year ago at this time," says James. "The
ington's fifth-ranked squad return, sparking
James, the winningest coach in Pac-10 his-
both had good springs and we have confi
national championship projections for
tory entering his 17th season, now finds his
dence in their abilities going into the sea
1991. Much of that enthusiatic talk has
quarterback situation mirroring last sea-
son. The only difference is that we don'
been tempered by the loss of junior quar-
son's. young, unproven player, in this case
have the luxury of two non-league games
terback Mark Brunell, last year's Rose
third-year sophomore Billy Joe Hobert,
this year."
Bowl MVP, who suffered a knee injury in
must mature quickly if the Huskies are to
Returning this spring are 39 lettermen, in
spring practice and may miss the upcoming
shine.
cluding seven offensive starters, seven de
season.
The next pack of Huskies will not have the
fensive starters and one kicking specialist.
Brunell led the Huskies to their first Pac-10
luxury of obscurity, since the 1991 Wash-
The biggest initial gap to fill is one left by
Conference championship since 1981, cap-
ington club is likely to garner high pre-
All-America tailback Lewis, who mastered
ping the memorable centennial season with
season rankings. The Huskies will sneak up
his one-back role as a runner, blocker and
a 46-34 Rose Bowl win over Iowa.
on no one.
receiver. Lewis, the Pac-10 Offensive
An early season 20-14 loss at Colorado, the
James, who earned conference Coach of
Player of the Year, led the conference in
eventual national titlist, kept the UW off the
the Year recognition last season for the
rushing with 127.9 ypg and missed the 100-
top spot in the final polls. A last-minute
third time in his career, has led Washington
yard rushing mark just once last season, due
drive inside the Colorado 10-yard line came
to 14 consecutive winning seasons and 11
to injury. Junior Beno Bryant, who already
up short when four consecutive passes
bowl games. James' tradition of solid de-
owns a big reputation for his kick and punt
missed their mark.
returns, will enter fall camp No. 1. Jay
Washington was easily the class of the Pac-
10 loop, clinching the Rose Bowl berth at
the earliest date since 1970. The UW de-
feated conference opponents by an average
margin of 30 points per game and scored
50-or-more points on three occasions.
The Huskies were firing on all cylinders in
1990 with a balanced offense that featured
the talents of prolific rusher Greg Lewis,
the inaugural Doak Walker Award winner
and Washington's single season rushing
leader with 1,279 yards. Brunell's danger-
ous blend of passing and running helped
him earn second team All-Pac-10 honors.
But neither player will be in the backfield
for the September 7 opener at Stanford.
Defensively, Washington led the nation in
rush defense (66.8 ypg) and turnover mar-
gin (+2.1) while allowing an average of just
13.7 points in 11 regular season games.
Spearheading the defensive effort was sec-
ond team All-America defensive tackle
Steve Emtman, who, as a sophomore, was
Billy Joe Hobert
6
1991 Preview
W
lusky Outlook
Sarry and Eugene Harris are in the run-
passing and 444 yards rushing). The left-
tive Bailey, one of four UW co-captains this
ing for playing time.
hander accounted for 24 touchdowns (14
fall, led Washington in receiving a year ago
passing, 10 rushing). Third-year sophomore
with 40 catches for 667 yards (16.7 avg.)
Vashington's tight end situation was in tat-
Billy Joe Hobert (6-3, 225), who narrowly
with six TDs, plus two catches-both for
ers following spring ball after the top four
lost the starting job to Brunell last year, is
scores-in the '91 Rose Bowl. He was the
layers at that position were out of action.
suddenly the man of the hour. While
only Husky to record at least one catch in all
Depth on the offensive line is still a con-
Brunell presented defenses with the ulti-
12 games and was named honorable men-
ern.
mate challenge-defending his arm and
tion All-Pac-10. Bailey is Mr. Clutch, con-
Big Steve Emtman is a leading candidate
feet-Hobert resembles the more tradi-
verting 54 of his 69 career catches (71%)
or the coveted Outland Trophy and
tional drop-back passer. Brunell is a rangy
into first downs. McKay is a national-caliber
Lombardi Award entering his junior season
scrambler. Hobert is a big righty who came
track & field runner in the 400m who offers
t defensive tackle.
to Washington with immense expectations
speed on the football field. McKay's pro-
Another player sure to draw All-America
as the 1988 state player of the year from
duction last season dipped slightly with 19
mention is senior outside linebacker
Puyallup (Wash.) High School. Hobert
catches for 337 yards (17.7 avg.), down from
Donald Jones, a pass rusher extraor-
comes off an excellent spring session after
his sophomore campaign of 30 catches for
dinaire. Jones recorded 10 tackles for losses
which he was named the squad's most im-
443 yards and four TDs. But McKay has
totaling 61 yards and was named first team
proved back and kicker/punter. Hobert
made his share of significant catches. Depth
All-Pac-10 by the league's coaches.
completed 17 of 28 passes for 212 yards
is a concern in three-receiver alignments.
with three touchdowns and two intercep-
Several players contended for the third and
In the off-season, former Husky offensive
tions in the annual spring game. Hobert, a
fourth spots in the rotation last spring, in-
coordinator Gary Pinkel accepted a job as
dual threat performer, will also handle the
cluding: LaMar Mitchell (6-1, 204, Sr.),
head football coach at Toledo, causing a re-
punting duties this fall. He garnered play-
selected as the most improved receiver in
alignment within the UW coaching staff.
ing time in seven games last year, including
spring ball; Curtis Gaspard (5-11, 170,
Offensive line coach Keith Gilbertson as-
a brief Rose Bowl stint. Hobert completed
Sr.), who played in all 12 games last season
sumes additional responsibilities as offen-
just 4 of 6 passes for 41 yards in 1990.
and finished with five catches; Joe Kralik
sive coordinator, while former wide re-
Despite those numbers, the coaching staff
(5-10, 173, So.), a possession receiver;
ceiver coach Jeff Woodruff will move over
believes he has the tools to step in at the
Damon Barry (6-1, 185, RS-Fr.), highly
to coach the quarterbacks. Bill Went-
Pac-10 level. No. 2 quarterback Eric
regarded on scout teams last season; and
worth, most recently an assistant at Fuller-
Bjornson (6-5, 210, RS-Fr.) is a tall athlete
Damon Mack (6-0, 182, Jr.). Eric Alozie
ton State, joins the Husky program as wide
who, prior to Brunell's injury, was a likely
(5-11, 200, Sr.), a quarterback in 1990, re-
receiver coach.
clipboard-carrying candidate. Bjornson's
turned to wide receiver during the spring.
The schedule next fall calls for season-
growth and maturity as a player is now para-
opening road games at conference rival
mount to the cause. The luxury of a red-
Stanford and Big Eight foe Nebraska. A 2-
shirt year for incoming freshman Damon
0 start would create impressive momentum
Huard (6-4, 210), who hails from Hobert's
for the Huskies who play the next five of six
Puyallup High, may have vanished with
games at home.
Brunell's injury. As for Brunell, who
needed his medial collateral and anterior
Following is a breakdown of the Huskies by
cruciate ligaments repaired by surgery, his
position.
early rehabilitation progress was encourag-
ing. At press time, Brunell was improving
Quarterback
ahead of schedule.
Starters Returning: None.
Wide Receiver
Starters Lost: Mark Brunell (knee injury
suffered in spring practice).
Starters Returning: SE Mario Bailey, FL
The injury heard 'round the Pac-10 in-
Orlando McKay.
volved fourth-year junior quarterback
Starters Lost: None.
Mark Brunell's (6-2, 205) right knee. In
The top-two receivers are productive senior
one fateful instant, Washington's strong
veterans-a plus for quarterback Hobert.
and deep position was reduced to an uncer-
Seniors Mario Bailey (5-9, 157) and Or-
MarioBailey
tain future. The Huskies lose Brunell's im-
lando McKay (5-11, 178) each have three
pressive total offense numbers (1,732 yards
years of starting experience. The diminu-
7
W
1991 Preview
Husky Outlook
Tight End
much of spring practice because of a recur-
rushing TDs at Washington State. Harri
ring knee injury. Red-shirt freshman Jeff
went head-to-head with Lewis three year
Starters Returning: Aaron Pierce.
Jackson (6-4, 225) is a good, young pros-
ago for the starting tailback job and every
pect who moved up to No. 1 midway
one knows who won that competition. Bu
Starters Lost: None.
through spring practice before suffering a
Harris is again in position to challenge if h
Attrition took its toll in the spring. By the
minor neck injury. Washington's ability to
can stay healthy.
end of spring practice, four scholarship
run the football successfully during the
Greg Lewis years was strongly predicated
The Huskies can expect to use two full
tight ends were missing from action and
on tight end play. Many questions remain as
backs. There are two quality players ii
Bruce Bailey, who went into spring drills
fall drills commence.
Darius Turner (6-0, 224, Jr.), a load of
as an offensive guard, was listed No. 1. The
ballcarrier, and Matt Jones (6-2, 205, So.)
pecking order for playing time at this posi-
tion is still to be determined entering the
Running Back
a hard-running back who has a propensity
for making defenders miss, especially in the
season. A nine-game starter in 1990, Aaron
Pierce (6-5, 228, Sr.) missed spring prac-
Starters Returning: FB Darius Turner.
secondary. Turner started every game las
season and gained 173 yards on 45 carrie:
tice due to a suspension levied by the Husky
Starters Lost: TB Greg Lewis (fifth round
(4.0 avg.). Jones averaged 8.3 yards per
coaching staff. Pierce was a valuable re-
draft pick, Denver Broncos).
carry last season, totaling 158 yards with
ceiver who had 16 catches for 191 yards
with four TDs, plus four more catches in
The most productive running back of the
three TDs. Sophomore Leif Johnson (5
the Rose Bowl. He is expected back. Wash-
16-year Don James era, Greg Lewis, has
11, 203) rounds out the fullback corps and
ington lost consistent tight end Mark
moved on. James often referred to All-
has seen substantial action on special teams
America Lewis as "a complete football
When employing the one-back set, James
Kilpack to graduation. Therefore, the tight
player." He was a durable, dependable
doesn't limit the competition to tailbacks
end position is as green as the Pacific
rusher who gained momentum as a game
The best back will play. James also hopes to
Northwest landscape. Converted defensive
tackle P.A. Emerson (6-4, 245, So.) en-
wore on. Lewis was a team leader who ex-
develop a receiving threat out of the
backfield, a skill at which Lewis was un-
tered spring drills as the starter, but was
celled in the classroom. When you extract
matched.
slowed by a sprained ankle. Emerson is a
Lewis' raw rushing numbers (1,279 yards
physical blocker who earned enough play-
on 229 carries, 8 TDs) from the offense,
Offensive Line
ing time for a letter, but has not caught a
that's significant enough. His leadership
pass in his career. Ditto for backups Shaun
could be more sorely missed.
Moore (6-3, 226, So.) and Rodney Ellison
Starters Returning: C Ed Cunningham,
The heir apparent to Lewis' tailback job is
(6-3, 225, Jr.), who are both looking for
WT/WG Lincoln Kennedy, ST Siupeli
junior Beno Bryant (5-11, 175), a speed
Malamala.
their first career receptions. Ellison sat out
merchant of the first order. Although
Washington's recent running back scene
Starters Lost: SG Dean Kirkland (11th
was dominated by Lewis, Bryant has made
round draft pick, Buffalo Bills), WT/WG
his presence known. Bryant is already a
Jeff Pahukoa (12th round draft pick, Los
record-setting punt returner, finishing sec-
Angeles Rams).
ond nationally in 1990. He was first team
Since assistant coach Keith Gilbertson
All-Pac-10 as a return specialist. As testi-
joined the Husky staff two years ago, his
mony to his speed, he returned three punts
offensive line has blossomed into one of the
for long-distance touchdowns (52, 70 and
top units in the country. Much of Greg
82 yards) and broke loose for a 73-yard
Lewis' accomplishments as a running back
touchdown run vs. Arizona. Bryant dis-
have to be credited to Gilbertson's offen-
played durability when he filled in for an
sive line. Washington loses two NFL-
injured Lewis vs. Washington State, rush-
caliber players in Jeff Pahukoa, who played
ing 23 times for 112 yards. However, he was
guard and tackle during his UW career, and
limited to less than one half of action during
guard Dean Kirkland. Gilbertson will be
the spring game after suffering a broken
intent on finding depth to complement
scapula (shoulder blade). Two other jun-
what looks like another strong starting five.
iors, Jay Barry (5-11, 190) and Eugene
Three returning players could have the
Harris (5-11, 184), are also expected to
words All-America written next to their
contribute. Barry is not a big back, but the
names following the season. Book-end tack-
Northglenn, Colo. native possesses surpris-
les Siupeli Malamala (6-6, 300, Sr.), on
ing power. Barry rushed 20 times for 102
the strong side, and Lincoln Kennedy
Beno Bryant
yards as a sophomore and racked up three
(6-7, 315, Jr.) on the weak side, might be the
8
1991 Preview
W
Iusky Outlook
est pair in the country. Kennedy, in fact,
quicker than Richardson, but the coaches
vas named to Playboy's preseason All-
would like to seem him increase his size.
merica team. Malamala, honorable men-
Backing up Emtman are Mike Lustyk
on All-Pac-10 last season, is entering his
(6-3, 265, Jr.), who had an outstanding
hird season as a starter and will be counted
spring, and Keith Navidi (6-6, 266,
pon to take his game to another level. The
RS-Fr.). The middle guard candidates also
ersatile Kennedy was named second team
include D'Marco Farr (6-1, 265, So.), the
All-Pac-10 last year and has started at guard
squad's most improved defensive lineman
nd tackle during his career. He will move
in the spring, and Terrance Powe (6-2,
out to Pahukoa's vacated tackle spot.
250, Sr.). Competing with Mason at defen-
Malamala and Kennedy are both extremely
sive end are Danianke Smith (6-2, 226,
quick, despite their hulking frames. Center
Jr.) and Shell Mays (6-0, 230, Sr.). Despite
and team co-captain Ed Cunningham
the newcomers in the starting lineup, this
6-3, 280, Sr.) shored up his position nicely
year's defensive front could rival the 1990
ast fall, following the departure of first
unit that led the nation in rush defense
round draft pick Bern Brostek (LA Rams).
(66.8 ypg).
Cunningham started every game and was
named honorable mention All-Pac-10. A
Inside Linebacker
good student, Cunningham was selected
second team Academic All-America and
Starters Returning: Chico Fraley, Dave
first team All-Pac-10 Academic. Both guard
Steve Emtman
Hoffmann.
positions are open and Kris Rongen (6-5,
280, Sr.), in his fifth year, inherits the weak
Starters Lost: None.
Not many people outside of Washington
side slot. Young talents Pete Kaligis (6-2,
state had heard of a big farm boy named
Everybody is back. Husky handicappers
255, So.), who has been hampered by a
Steve Emtman (6-4, 280, Jr.) prior to last
have been calling this the "year of the line-
knee injury throughout his career, and Jim
season. But the word is out. Emtman's force
backer." Junior Dave Hoffmann (6-2,
Nevelle (6-2, 265, So.), who can double as a
on the defensive front was not news to con-
220) earned honorable mention All-Pac-10
center, will compete on the strong side.
ference coaches, who voted him Pac-10 Co-
honors and led the Huskies in tackles (79)
Squad members looking for playing time at
Defensive Player of the Year as a sopho-
last season, stepping in admirably for in-
guard also include David Ilsley (6-5, 274,
more. Emtman was also the first sopho-
jured team leader James Clifford (6-2,
Jr.), who is finally back after suffering a
more ever to win the prestigious Morris
240, Jr.). Clifford, the Pac-10's leading tack-
fractured lower leg in the spring of '90;
Trophy, honoring the league's top defen-
ler in 1989 and a probable honors candidate
Andrew Peterson (6-6, 285, RS-Fr.), a
sive lineman. He should be able to improve
entering last season, suffered a season-end-
highly touted young player; and John
upon his second team All-America acco-
ing knee injury during 1990 pre-season
Norman (6-2, 290, Sr.) a walk-on from
lades from a year ago. He is already a pre-
drills. Clifford participated in non-contact
Battle Ground, Wash. Vying for playing
season All-America pick by several football
drills during the spring and is listed No. 2
time at the tackles are: Tom Gallagher
publications. Emtman recorded 55 tackles,
behind Hoffmann this fall. Fifth-year se-
(6-5, 270, So.); Pete Pierson (6-5, 275,
with 16 tackles for losses totaling 85 yards.
nior Chico Fraley (6-2, 210), second on
So.); Scott Leick (6-4, 275 RS-Fr.); Brian
Included in that total were 7.5 sacks. Since
the club with 65 tackles in '90, will enter his
Conlan (6-6, 285, RS-Fr.); and Todd
Outland Trophy overtures are evident,
fourth season as a starter. Fraley is listed
Bridge (6-5, 268, Jr.). Two young linemen
Emtman will draw plenty of attention on
No. 2 entering the fall, however, because of
with little game experience will backup
the field. Therefore, his supporting cast be-
academic deficiencies. As a result, Hillary
Cunningham at center, Frank Garcia
comes quite important. Expected to as-
Butler (6-2, 218, So.), who played in all 12
(6-2, 283, RS-Fr.) and David Reiner (6-6,
sume the middle guard job is Tyrone
games last year, is the starter opposite
280, So.).
Rodgers (6-3, 265, Sr.), the one-time Okla-
Hoffmann. Butler is a soon-to-be star who
homa Sooner who battled back from a knee
was named the team's most improved line-
Defensive Line
injury to earn playing time last fall. Rodgers
backer after spring practice. Youngsters
is an impact player in his own right who, if
Steve Springstead (6-1, 215, So.), Mike
Starters Returning: DT Steve Emtman.
healthy, could be sitting on a big year. At
Derrow (6-1, 220, RS-Fr.) and Tyson
defensive end, Washington will miss Travis
Pollman (6-2, 235, RS-Fr.) will be in the
Starters Lost: DE Travis Richardson (free
Richardson's experience and quickness.
hunt for playing time, particularly on spe-
agent, B.C. Lions), MG John Cook (12th
Projected starter Andy Mason (6-2, 228,
cial teams.
round, Chicago Bears).
So.), a converted linebacker, is even
9
W
1991 Preview
Husky Outlook
Outside Linebacker
moved to rover. Smith is an impact playe
who collected four interceptions during th
Starters Returning: SLB Donald Jones,
regular season and recorded 61 tackles
WLB Brett Collins.
third on the team last year. Smith had ai
Starters Lost: None.
outstanding Rose Bowl outing, recording
team-high seven tackles with an intercep
A fearsome sight for opposing quarterbacks
tion and caused fumble. But Smith, now
is the form of All-Pac-10 strongside line-
rover, will enter fall practice as a backup
backer Donald Jones (6-1, 226, Sr.), a UW
due to missing spring practice. The No.
team captain this season. The fifth-year se-
rover is Paxton Tailele (6-2, 212, Sr.),
nior from Gladys, Va. is a menacing pass
hard-hitting athlete who played behind
rusher, who is also proficient in stopping
Briscoe last fall. Tailele, a transfer two years
the run. Coach James believes Jones' ability
ago from the College of the Desert who did
rates All-America consideration. Every
not play high school football, has matured
third tackle for the ultra-quick Jones re-
quickly at the college level. Three red-shir
sulted in an opponent loss as he accumu-
freshmen could contribute early at either
lated 33 total tackles and 10 for losses total-
safety position and certainly on specia
ing 60.5 yards. The weak-side tandem of
teams. They include Lamar Lyons (6-3
Brett Collins (6-2, 228, Sr.) and Jaime
208), Louis Jones (6-2, 203) and Dave
Fields (6-0, 230, Jr.) only solidifies the posi-
Killpatrick (6-1, 208). Washington's sec-
tion. Although sharing the same spot, both
ondary has been outstanding during assis-
players have banked considerable starting
tant coach Larry Slade's five seasons and
experience. Collins, one of four Husky co-
Dana Hall
this year's group should uphold that stan-
captains this season, is a three-year
dard.
letterman, who finished fifth on the club in
tackles (52) while starting 10 games, includ-
Charles Mincy and second team All-Pac-10
Kicking Specialists
ing the Rose Bowl. Fields began last season
rover Eric Briscoe, who led the team with
as a starter, but suffered an injured ankle in
six interceptions. Despite the loss of Mincy,
Starters Returning: PK Travis Hanson.
the second game. Jamal Fountaine (6-3,
Washington's cornerback fortunes appear
Starters Lost: P Channing Wyles.
225, So.) and Virgil Jones (6-1, 220, Sr.)
solid. Three-year letterman Dana Hall
are both lettermen who will back up Don
Travis Hanson (6-0, 178, So.) stepped in
(6-3, 202, Sr.), a hurdler and sprinter on the
Jones on the strong side. Richie Cham-
to take over the placekicking chores for the
Husky track team, started 11 games last
bers (6-2, 220, RS-Fr.), beginning his sec-
latter five games of 1990, including the
season and recorded three interceptions.
ond year in the program, is available for
Rose Bowl. Atlhough James found the
Hall also returned a blocked punt for a
depth on the weak side. As with the inside
placekicking adequate (Mike Dodd made
touchdown in the Rose Bowl. At the other
7-12 FG, 27-27 PAT, while Hanson made
'backers, all starters return, making this
corner is William Doctor (5-11, 176, Sr.),
group a formidable one, indeed.
3-4 FG, 21-21 PAT), he was not happy with
another three-year letterman who has
the distance of kickoffs. Hanson is No. 1 this
Secondary
logged some starting experience. Backing
fall and Husky coaches hope the Spokane
up Doctor is Walter Bailey (5-11, 190, Jr.),
native will step up to the challenge. Backup
Starters Returning: CB Dana Hall, FS
a high-caliber athlete who may end up
quarterback Billy Joe Hobert (6-3, 225,
Shane Pahukoa/FS Tommie Smith.
pushing for a starting job. Bailey was voted
So.), as he did last year, may try his luck as a
the most improved defensive back during
kickoff man.
Starters Lost: ROV Eric Briscoe (free
spring practice. Also in the cornerback
agent, B.C. Lions), CB Charles Mincy (fifth
depth are Lawrence Goncalves (5-11,
Washington's punting game was in good
round draft pick, Kansas City Chiefs).
183, So.), Russell Hairston (5-11, 175,
shape with now-departed Channing Wyles
Don James credits last year's secondary
RS-Fr.), Josh Moore (6-1, 190, RS-Fr.)
handling the duties. Wyles averaged 41.0
with making many of the 1990 Huskies'
and walkon Shawn Cox (6-2, 180, Jr.).
yards per attempt and offered the consis-
tency that James likes in his always-re-
aggressive defensive plans work. Because of
The safety positions will feature some new
spected kicking game. Hobert, with his
outstanding man-to-man coverage, the de-
faces and a position change. Shane
powerful leg, enters fall camp as the No. 1
fensive linemen and linebackers were able
Pahukoa (6-3, 196, Jr.) and Tommie
punter and he averaged 44.0 yards on three
to gamble with pressure schemes. Two
Smith (6-2, 212, Jr.) shared time at free
attempts in the spring football game.
prominent seniors from that secondary
safety last fall. Pahukoa enters fall drills as
Hanson will attempt double duty as a
have departed, All-Pac-10 cornerback
the No. 1 free safety, since Smith has been
placekicker/punter.
10
1991 Preview
W
Husky Numerical Roster
o
NAME
POS
PRONOUNCED
NO
NAME
POS
PRONOUNCED
1
Denton Johnson
SE
42
Jay Barry
TB
3
Jaime Fields
WLB
(HIGH-me)
45
Hillary Butler
ILB
3
Joe Kralik
FL
(KRAW-lick)
46
Brett Collins
WLB
4
Reggie Reser
DB
47
Jamal Fountaine
SLB
(Juh-MALL fahn-tane)
4
Orlando McKay
FL
48
Donald Jones
SLB
5
Mario Bailey
SE
(MAH-ree-oh)
48
Jay Wells
FB
5
Dana Hall
CB
49
Steve Springstead
ILB
6
Damon Mack
FL
49
Larry Humble
FL
6
Michael Steward
CB
50
Mike Hill
LB
7
Travis Hanson
PK
51
Bruce Beyers
LB
7
Josh Moore
CB
52
Jim Nevelle
OG
(Nuh-VELL)
8
Paxton Tailele
ROV
(Tuh-lay-lay)
52
Donovan Schmidt
ILB
8
Napoleon Kaufman
RB
53
James Clifford
ILB
9
Eric Alozie
SE
(Uh-LOW-zee)
53
Jeff Aselin
OT
9
Lawrence Goncalves
CB
(Gone-SAHL-vuhs)
54
Dave Hoffmann
ILB
0
William Doctor
CB
54
Jeff Hudson
OT
0
Kaala Shea
QB
55
Danianke Smith
DE
(Duh-KNOCK-un)
1
Mark Brunell
QB
(Broo-NELL)
56
Pete Kaligis
OG
(CAL-uh-gus)
1
Darren Harrell
CB
57
Tyrone Rodgers
MG
2
Billy Joe Hobert
QB/P
(HOE-bert)
58
Paul Wight
ILB
(White)
2
Ricky Cobb
FS
60
Andrew Peterson
OG
3
Andy Mason
DE
61
John Norman
OG
.3
Eric Butler
FL
62
Todd Bridge
OT
.4
Eric Bjornson
QB
(BE-YORN-son)
63
David Reiner
C
15
Tommie Smith
FS
64
Scott Leick
OT
(Like)
15
Travis Spring
WR
65
Frank Garcia
C
16
Zario Ziegler
DB
66
Tom Gallagher
OT
16
Tom Nakane
QB
(Nuh-KAHN-ee)
66
Tyson Pollman
ILB
17
Curtis Gaspard
SE
(GAS-pahrd)
67
Charles Battle
OL
17
Andy Trimakas
FS
68
Robb Dibble
DE
18
Marshall Magee
ROV
(Muh-GEE)
69
Patrick Kesi
OL
18
Damon Huard
QB
70
Siupeli Malamala
OT
(Soo-pell-ee MALL-uh-MALL-uh)
19
Dana Posey
CB
71
Pete Pierson
OT
19
Joel Rosborough
WR
71
Terrance Powe
MG
(Poh)
20
Darrell Green
CB
72
Kris Rongen
OG
(WRONG-gun)
20
Leon Neal
RB
73
Brian Conlan
OT
21
Shane Pahukoa
FS
(Pow-uh-KOH-uh)
74
Mike Lustyk
DT
(LUHS-tick)
21
Damon Barry
SE
75
D'Marco Farr
MG
(Duh-mark-oh)
22
Matt Jones
FB
75
Lincoln Kennedy
OT
22
Eric Simpson
CB
77
David Ilsley
OG
23
Walter Bailey
CB
78
Donald Willis
OL
23
Terry Redmond
FL
79
Ed Cunningham
C
24
Eteka Huckaby
TB
(Uh-TAKE-uh)
79
Trevor Highfield
DL
24
Shawn Cox
CB
80
Shaun Moore
TE
25
Lamar Lyons
ROV
81
Mark Bruener
TE
25
Sanjay Lal
SE
82
Ernie Conwell
TE
26
Russell Hairston
CB
83
Jim McCoy
TE
27
Brandon Bunch
WR
83
Douglas Barnes
LB
27
Dante Robinson
ROV
84
Aaron Pierce
TE
28
Richard Washington
DB
85
Jeff Jackson
TE
29
Beno Bryant
TB
(Bean-oh)
86
Shell Mays
DE
29
Louis Jones
FS
86
0
LaMar Mitchell
FL
30
Richard Thomas
RB
87
Rodney Ellison
TE
30
Jayson Turner
DB
88
Bruce Bailey
TE
31
Darius Turner
FB
88
Mike Ewaliko
DE
32
Richie Chambers
WLB
89
James Sawyer
SE
32
Charleston Grimes
FB
90
Steve Emtman
DT
34
Leif Johnson
FB
(Layf)
90
Clayton Kuhrau
C
35
David Killpatrick
ROV
91
Steve Hoffmann
DL
36
Demetrius Devers
LB
92
P.A. Emerson
TE
37
Mike Derrow
ILB
93
Shermonte Brooks
SE
37
Matt Spillinger
FL
93
Justin Thomas
DL
38
Ricardo Aquirre
LB
95
00
Virgil Jones
WLB
39
Chico Fraley
ILB
97
Jason Crabbe
PK
41
Shandon Cyrus
MG
99
Keith Navidi
DT
(Nuh-VEE-dee)
41
Eugene Harris
TB
99
Angelo Banchero
TE
11
W
1991 Preview
Husky Alphabetical Roster
NO
NAME
POS
HT
WT
DOB
YR
EXP
HOMETOWN (High School/JC)
38
Aguirre, Ricardo
LB
5-10
187
2/13/73
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (Issaquah)
9
o
Alozie, Eric
SE
5-11
190
6/30/69
SR
lv
San Bernardino, CA (Cajon)
53
Aselin, Jeff
OT
6-2
240
5/12/72
FR
RS
Huntington Beach, CA (Edison)
88
Bailey, Bruce
TE
6-5
245
7/28/70
JR
SQ
Seattle, WA (Roosevelt)
5
Bailey, Mario
SE
5-9
157
11/30/70
SR
2V
Seattle, WA (Franklin)
23
o
Bailey, Walter
CB
5-11
190
3/16/70
JR
1V
Portland, OR (Benson Tech)
99
Banchero, Angelo
TE
6-4
200
12/6/71
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (O'Dea)
83
Barnes, Douglas
LB
6-6
215
4/21/73
FR
HS
Carson, CA (Verbum Dei)
21
Barry, Damon
SE
6-1
185
3/27/72
FR
RS
Northglenn, CO (Northglenn)
42
Barry, Jay
TB
5-11
190
10/29/69
JR
2V
Northglenn, CO (Kent/Denver)
67
Battle, Charles
OL
6-2
265
4/14/73
FR
HS
Carson, CA (Banning)
51
Beyers, Bruce
LB
5-10
198
7/20/66
SO
HS
Burien, WA (Highline)
14
Bjornson, Eric
QB
6-5
210
12/15/71
FR
RS
Oakland, CA (Bishop O'Dowd)
56
Bockert, Jeff
LB
6-4
230
10/29/72
FR
HS
Vancouver, WA (Prairie)
62
Bridge, Todd
OT
6-5
268
8/6/69
JR
SQ
Montesano, WA (Montesano)
81
Bruener, Mark
TE
6-5
230
9/16/72
FR
HS
Aberdeen, WA (Weatherwax)
93
Brooks, Shermonte
SE
5-11
185
4/10/71
so
RS
Tacoma, WA (Clover Park)
11
0
Brunell, Mark
QB
6-2
205
9/17/70
JR
1V
Santa Maria, CA (St. Joseph)
29
Bryant, Beno
TB
5-11
175
1/1/71
JR
2V
Los Angeles, CA (Dorsey)
27
Bunch, Brandon
WR
5-11
170
2/21/73
FR
HS
Federal Way, WA (Decatur)
13
Butler, Eric
FL
5-8
165
10/29/72
FR
RS
Osceola, FL (Osceola)
45
0
Butler, Hillary
ILB
6-2
218
1/5/71
SO
1V
Tacoma, WA (Lakes)
32
Chambers, Richie
WLB
6-2
205
8/31/72
FR
RS
Lake Stevens, WA (Lake Stevens)
53
Clifford, James
ILB
6-2
240
3/23/70
JR
2V
Seattle, WA (Ingraham)
12
Cobb, Ricky
FS
6-0
201
5/15/70
JR
SQ
Reno, NV (Procter Hug)
46
Collins, Brett
WLB
6-2
228
10/8/68
SR
3V
Portland, OR (Glencoe)
73
Conlan, Brian
OT
6-6
285
5/7/72
FR
RS
Delta, B.C. (South Delta)
82
Conwell, Ernie
TE
6-3
225
8/17/72
FR
HS
Kent, WA (Kentwood)
24
Cox, Shawn
CB
6-2
180
4/12/70
JR
SQ
Bellevue, WA (Interlake)
97
Crabbe, Jason
PK
5-11
175
1/29/71
JR
SQ
Laguna Beach., CA (Laguna Beach)
79
Cunningham, Ed
C
6-3
285
8/17/69
SR
3V
Alexandria, VA (Mt. Vernon)
41
Cyrus, Shandon
MG
5-11
233
7/8/70
JR
SQ
Kaneohe, HI (Mid-Pacific)
37
Derrow, Mike
ILB
6-1
220
8/22/72
FR
RS
Federal Way, WA (Decatur)
36
Devers, Demetrius
LB
6-0
220
8/30/73
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (Garfield)
68
Dibble, Robb
DE
6-4
220
1/21/71
FR
RS
Bellingham, WA (Bellingham)
76
Disante, John
OL
6-3
275
4/15/73
FR
HS
No. Hollywood, CA (Notre Dame)
10
Doctor, William
CB
5-11
176
5/26/69
SR
3V
El Paso, TX (Andress)
87
Ellison, Rodney
TE
6-3
225
12/15/69
JR
SQ
Sacramento, CA (El Camino)
92
o
Emerson, P.A.
TE
6-4
235
4/20/70
so
1V
Irvine, CA (Woodbridge)
90
Emtman, Steve
DT
6-4
280
4/16/70
JR
2V
Cheney, WA (Cheney)
88
Ewaliko, Mike
DT
6-4
270
9/21/72
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (Highline)
75
Farr, D'Marco
MG
6-1
265
6/9/71
SO
SQ
San Pablo, CA (Kennedy)
3
Fields, Jaime
WLB
6-0
230
8/28/70
JR
2V
Lynwood, CA (Lynwood)
47
o
Fountaine, Jamal
SLB
6-3
225
1/29/71
so
1V
San Francisco, CA (Lincoln)
39
Fraley, Chico
ILB
6-2
210
4/21/69
SR
2V
Rowland Hts., CA (Bishop Amat)
36
Frank, J.J.
FB
5-11
186
3/9/71
JR
SQ
Everett, WA (Everett)
66
Gallagher, Tom
OT
6-5
270
6/4/70
SO
SQ
Puyallup, WA (Puyallup)
65
Garcia, Frank
C
6-2
283
1/28/72
FR
RS
Phoenix, AZ (Maryvale)
17
o
Gaspard, Curtis
SE
5-11
170
2/23/69
SR
IV
New Orleans, LA (McDonogh 35)
9
Goncalves, Lawrence
CB
5-11
183
4/14/71
so
SQ
Spokane, WA (Ferris)
20
Green, Darrell
CB
5-7
160
11/26/72
FR
RS
San Francisco, CA (Balboa)
32
Grimes, Charleston
FB
5-11
195
8/8/72
FR
RS
New Orleans, LA (Jesuit)
26
Hairston, Russell
CB
5-11
175
11/14/71
FR
RS
Bellevue, WA (Newport)
5
Hall, Dana
CB
6-3
202
6/8/69
SR
3V
Diamond Bar, CA (Ganesha)
7
o
Hanson, Travis
PK
6-0
178
3/6/72
so
1V
Spokane, WA (Mead)
11
Harrell, Darren
CB
5-10
185
1/14/69
JR
SQ
Tacoma, WA (Clover Pk/Pierce)
41
Harris, Eugene
TB
5-11
184
3/16/70
JR
SQ
Bellevue, WA (Newport)
79
Highfield, Trevor
DL
6-4
280
12/7/72
FR
HS
West Linn, OR (West Linn)
50
Hill, Mike
LB
6-0
210
1/25/69
SO
SQ
Bellevue, WA (Bellevue)
12
Hobert, Billy Joe
QB/P
6-3
225
1/8/71
SO
SQ
Puyallup, WA (Puyallup)
54
Hoffmann, Dave
ILB
6-2
220
6/24/70
JR
2V
San Jose, CA (Pioneer)
91
Hoffmann, Steve
DL
6-6
245
1/16/73
FR
HS
San Jose, CA (Pioneer)
18
Huard, Damon
QB
6-4
210
7/9/73
FR
HS
Puyallup, WA (Puyallup)
24
Huckaby, Eteka
TB
6-1
195
10/2/71
FR
RS
Sunnyvale, CA (Homestead)
54
Hudson, Jeff
OT
6-3
265
9/5/72
FR
RS
Tacoma, WA (Stadium)
49
Humble, Larry
FL
6-0
180
7/7/70
SO
so
Vancouver, WA (Evergreen)
77
Ilsley, David
OG
6-5
274
9/29/69
JR
SQ
Napa, CA (Vintage)
12
1991 Preview
W
Iusky Alphabetical Roster
0
NAME
POS
HT
WT
DOB
YR
EXP
HOMETOWN (High School/JC)
5
Jackson, Jeff
TE
6-4,
225
1/16/72
FR
RS
Newport Beach., CA (Corona del Mar)
1
Johnson, Denton
SE
5-8
185
12/11/69
so
SQ
Missouri City, TX (Episcopal)
4
0
Johnson, Leif
FB
5-11
203
8/31/70
so
IV
Seattle, WA (Kennedy)
8
Jones, Donald
SLB
6-1
226
3/26/69
SR
3V
Gladys, VA (Campbell)
9
Jones, Louis
FS
6-2
203
2/6/72
FR
RS
Los Angeles, CA (Venice)
2
0
Jones, Matt
FB
6-2
205
11/10/70
so
IV
Portland, OR (Central Catholic)
5
Jones, Virgil
SLB
6-1
220
4/1/69
SR
2V
Tacoma, WA (Lakes)
6
Kaligis, Pete
OG
6-2
255
6/1/71
so
SO
Bellingham, WA (Bellingham)
8
Kaufman, Napoleon
RB
5-9
170
6/7/73
FR
HS
Lompoc, CA (Lompoc)
5
Kennedy, Lincoln
OT
6-7
315
2/12/71
JR
2V
San Diego, CA (Morse)
$9
Kesi, Patrick
OL
6-3
285
9/10/73
FR
HS
Honolulu, HI (Farrington)
5
Killpatrick, David
ROV
6-1
208
5/14/72
FR
RS
Anchorage, AK (West)
3
Kralik, Joe
SE
5-10
173
12/14/70
so
IV
Puyallup, WA (Puyallup)
0
Kuhrau, Clayton
C
6-4
215
1/3/72
FR
RS
Seatle, WA (Roosevelt)
25
Lal, Sanjay
SE
5-11
175
7/23/69
JR
SQ
Los Angeles, CA (Miramonte)
64
Leick, Scott
OT
6-4
275
3/22/72
FR
RS
Renton, WA (Hazen)
4
Lustyk, Mike
DT
6-3
265
6/24/70
JR
2V
Bellevue, WA (Interlake)
25
Lyons, Lamar
FS
6-3
208
3/25/73
FR
RS
Los Angeles, CA (St. Monica)
6
Mack, Damon
SE
6-0
182
1/11/70
JR
SQ
Gardena, CA (Gardena)
8
Magee, Marshall
OLB
5-7
185
6/16/69
SR
SQ
Kent, WA (Meridian/Shasta JC)
70
Malamala, Siupeli
OT
6-6
300
1/15/69
SR
3V
Kailua, HI (Kalaheo)
13
Mason, Andy
DE
6-2
228
8/31/71
SO
IV
Longview, WA (Mark Morris)
86
Mays, Shell
DE
6-0
230
8/26/69
SR
SQ
Tacoma, WA (Lincoln)
83
McCoy, Jim
TE
6-2
200
4/11/70
SR
SQ
Redmond, WA (Eastside Catholic)
4
McKay, Orlando
FL
5-11
178
10/2/69
SR
2V
Mesa, AZ (Mesa)
86
Mitchell, LaMar
FL
6-1
204
9/21/68
SR
IV
Stockton, CA (Tokay)
7
Moore, Josh
CB
6-1
190
9/29/72
FR
RS
Torrance, CA (West Torrance)
80
Moore, Shaun
TE
6-3
220
8/21/71
so
IV
Spanaway, WA (Bethel)
16
Nakane, Tom
QB
6-3
195
4/12/70
JR
SQ
Spokane, WA (Gonzaga Prep)
99
Navidi, Keith
DT
6-6
266
7/12/72
FR
RS
Yorba Linda, CA (Esperanza)
20
Neal, Leon
RB
5-9
175
9/11/72
FR
HS
Long Beach, CA (Paramount)
52
Nevelle, Jim
OG
6-2
265
1/7/71
SO
SQ
Palmdale, CA (Palmdale)
61
Norman, John
OG
6-2
290
12/26/69
JR
SQ
Battle Ground, WA (Battle Ground)
21
Pahukoa, Shane
FS
6-3
196
11/25/70
JR
2V
Marysville, WA (Marys./Pilchuck)
60
Peterson, Andrew
OG
6-6
285
6/11/72
FR
RS
Port Orchard, WA (South Kitsap)
S4
Pierce, Aaron
TE
6-5
240
9/6/69
SR
3V
Seattle, WA (Franklin)
71
Pierson, Pete
OT
6-5
275
2/4/71
SO
SQ
Portland, OR (David Douglas)
66
Pollman, Tyson
ILB
6-2
235
6/1/72
FR
RS
Randle, WA (White Pass)
19
Posey, Dana
CB
5-11
160
5/20/69
JR
SQ
Arlington, WA (Arlington)
71
Powe, Terrance
MG
6-2
250
3/25/69
SR
SQ
Carson, CA (Banning)
23
Redmond, Terry
FL
5-8
170
11/15/71
so
SQ
Novato, CA (Novato)
63
Reiner, David
C
6-6
280
4/14/69
SO
SQ
N.Hollywood CA (Harvard School))
4
Reser, Reggie
DB
5-10
170
1/7/73
FR
HS
Pasadena, CA (John Muir)
27
Robinson, Dante
ROV
6-3
208
1/21/69
JR
RS
Santa Barbara, CA (Santa Barbara)
57
Rodgers, Tyrone
MG
6-3
265
4/27/69
SR
1V
Carson, CA (Banning)
72
Rongen, Kris
OG
6-5
280
8/20/69
SR
SQ
Federal Way, WA (Jefferson)
19
Rosborough, Joel
WR
6-3
185
4/14/73
FR
HS
Long Beach, CA (Jordan)
89
Sawyer, James
SE
5-11
184
6/14/69
SR
RS
San Jose, CA (Archbishop Mitty)
52
Schmidt, Donovan
ILB
6-3
230
1/16/72
FR
RS
Palm Springs, CA (Palm Springs)
10
Shea, Kaala
QB
6-2
185
6/9/72
FR
RS
Honolulu, HI (Iolani)
22
Simpson, Eric
CB
6-1
172
5/25/72
FR
RS
Portland, OR (Sunset)
55
Smith, Danianke
DE
6-2
226
4/6/70
JR
1V
Long Beach, CA (Poly)
15
Smith, Tommie
ROV
6-2
212
8/7/71
JR
2V
Lancaster, CA (Antelope Valley)
37
Spillinger, Matt
FL
5-10
165
12/4/71
FR
RS
Port Orchard, WA (South Kitsap)
15
Spring, Travis
WR
5-11
175
12/1/72
FR
HS
Seattle, WA (Franklin)
49
Springstead, Steve
ILB
6-1
215
8/18/70
SO
1V
Lacey, WA (Timberline)
6
Steward, Michael
DB
6-0
175
12/8/72
FR
HS
Long Beach, CA (Wilson)
8
Tailele, Paxton
ROV
6-2
212
9/17/66
SR
IV
Laie, HI (Kahuku/Coll. of Desert)
93
Thomas, Justin
DL
6-5
245
6/26/73
FR
HS
Spokane, WA (Ferris)
30
Thomas, Richard
RB
5-9
200
3/16/72
FR
HS
Kent, WA (Kentwood)
17
Trimakas, Andy
FS
6-1
190
4/15/71
FR
RS
Seattle, WA (The Bush School)
31
Turner, Darius
FB
6-0
224
1/3/70
JR
2V
Gardena, CA (Warren)
30
Turner, Jayson
ROV
6-0
178
12/16/69
JR
RS
Redmond, WA (Redmond)
28
Washington, Richard
DB
5-11
190
5/28/73
FR
HS
Long Beach, CA (Poly)
48
Wells, Jay
FB
5-11
220
8/5/71
FR
RS
Arroyo Grande, CA (Arroyo Grande)
58
Wight, Paul
ILB
6-0
205
12/2/70
so
SQ
Seattle, WA (Roosevelt)
78
Willis, Donald
OL
6-2
305
7/15/73
FR
HS
Lompoc, CA (Cabrillo)
16
Ziegler, Zario
DB
6-2
180
12/14/71
SO
SQ
Lewiston, ID (Highland)
13
W
1991 Preview
Husky Geographical Roster
Alaska
San Jose-Dave Hoffmann (Pioneer)
Washington
Anchorage-David Killpatrick (West)
Steve Hoffmann (Pioneer)
Aberdeen-Mark Bruener (Weatherwax)
James Sawyer (Archbishop Mitty)
Arlington-Dana Posey (Arlington)
Arizona
San Pablo-D'Marco Farr (Kennedy)
Battle Ground-John Norman (Battle Ground)
Mesa-Orlando McKay (Mesa)
Santa Barbara-Dante Robinson (Santa Barbara)
Bellevue-Shawn Cox (Interlake)
Santa Maria-Mark Brunell (St. Joseph)
Phoenix-Frank Garcia (Maryvale)
Russell Hairston (Newport)
Stockton-LaMar Mitchell (Tokay)
Eugene Harris (Newport)
California
Sunnyvale-Eteka Huckaby (Homestead)
Mike Hill (Bellevue)
Torrance-Josh Mooore (West Torrance)
Arroyo Grande-Jay Wells (Arroyo Grande)
Mike Lustyk (Interlake)
Yorba Linda-Keith Navidi (Esperanza)
Carson-Douglas Barnes (Verbum Dei)
Bellingham-Robb Dibble (Bellingham)
Charles Battle (Banning)
Colorado
Pete Kaligis (Bellingham)
Terrance Powe (Banning)
Burien-Bruce Beyers (Highline)
Northglenn-Damon Barry (Northglenn)
Tyrone Rodgers (Banning)
Cheney-Steve Emtman (Cheney)
Jay Barry (Kent Denver)
Diamond Bar-Dana Hall (Ganesha)
Everett-J.J. Frank (Everett)
Gardena-Damon Mack (Gardena)
Florida
Federal Way-Brandon Bunch (Decatur)
Darius Turner (Warren)
Mike Derrow (Decatur)
Osceola-Eric Butler (Osceola)
Huntington Beach-Jeff Aselin (Edison)
Kris Rongen (Jefferson)
Irvine-P.A. Emerson (Woodbridge)
Hawaii
Kent-Ernie Conwell (Kentwood)
Laguna Beach-Jason Crabbe (Laguna Beach)
Honolulu-Patrick Kesi (Farrington)
Marshall Magee (Meridian)
Lancaster-Tommie Smith (Antelope Valley)
Kaala Shea (Iolani)
Richard Thomas (Kentwood)
Lompoc-Napoleon Kaufman (Lompoc)
Laie-Paxton Tailele (Kahuku)
Lacey-Steve Springstead (Timberline)
Donald Willis (Cabrillo)
Kailua-Siupeli Malamala (Kalaheo)
Lake Stevens-Richie Chambers (Lake Stevens)
Long Beach-Leon Neal (Paramount)
Kaneohe-Shandon Cyrus (Mid-Pacific)
Longview-Andy Mason (Mark Morris)
Joel Rosborough (Jordan)
Marysville-Shane Pahukoa (Marysville-Pilchuck)
Danianke Smith (Poly)
Idaho
Montesano-Todd Bridge (Montesano)
Michael Steward (Wilson)
Lewiston-Zario Ziegler (Highland)
Port Orchard-Matt Spillinger (South Kitsap)
Richard Washington (Poly)
Andrew Peterson (South Kitsap)
Los Angeles-Beno Bryant (Dorsey)
Louisiana
Puyallup-Tom Gallagher (Puyallup)
Louis Jones (Venice)
New Orleans-Curtis Gaspard (McDonogh 35)
Billy Joe Hobert (Puyallup)
Sanjay Lal (Miramonte)
Charleston Grimes (Jesuit)
Damon Huard (Puyallup)
Lamar Lyons (St. Monica)
Joe Kralik (Puyallup)
Lynwood-Jaime Fields (Lynwood)
Nevada
Randle-Tyson Pollman (White Pass)
Napa-David Ilsley (Vintage)
Reno-Ricky Cobb (Proctor Hug)
Redmond-Jim McCoy (Eastside Catholic)
Newport Beach-Jeff Jackson (Corona del Mar)
Jayson Turner (Redmond)
North Hollywood-John Disante (Notre Dame)
Oregon
Renton-Scott Leick (Hazen)
David Reiner (Harvard School)
Portland-Walter Bailey (Benson Tech)
Seattle-Ricardo Aguirre (Issaquah)
Novato-Terry Redmond (Novato)
Brett Collins (Glencoe)
Angelo Banchero (O'Dea)
Oakland-Eric Bjornson (Bishop O'Dowd)
Matt Jones (Central Catholic)
Bruce Bailey (Roosevelt)
Palmdale-Jim Nevelle (Palmdale)
Pete Pierson (David Douglas)
Mario Bailey (Franklin)
Palm Springs-Donovan Schmidt (Palm Springs)
Eric Simpson (Sunset)
James Clifford (Ingraham)
Pasadena-Reggie Reser (John Muir)
West Linn-Trevor Highfield (West Linn)
Demetrius Devers (Garfield)
Rowland Heights-Chico Fraley (Amat)
Mike Ewaliko (Highline)
Texas
Sacramento-Rodney Ellison (El Camino)
Leif Johnson (Kennedy)
El Paso-William Doctor (Andress)
San Bernardino-Eric Alozie (Cajon)
Clayton Kuhrau (Roosevelt)
San Diego-Lincoln Kennedy (Morse)
Missouri City-Denton Johnson (Episcopal)
Aaron Pierce (Franklin)
San Francisco-Jamal Fountaine (Lincoln)
Travis Spring (Franklin)
Virginia
Darrel Green (Balboa)
Andy Trimakas (The Bush School)
Alexandria-Ed Cunningham (Mt. Vernon)
Paul Wight (Roosevelt)
Gladys-Donald Jones (Campbell)
Spanaway-Shaun Moore (Bethel)
Canada 1
Spokane-Lawrence Goncalves (Ferris)
Alaska 1
Travis Hanson (Mead)
60
Tom Nakane (Gonzaga Prep)
Justin Thomas (Ferris)
6
Tacoma-Shermonte Brooks (Clover Park)
1
Hillary Butler (Lakes)
Darren Harrell (Clover Park)
Jeff Hudson (Stadium)
1
2
Virgil Jones (Lakes)
2
Hawaii 5
49
Shell Mays (Lincoln)
Vancouver-Jeff Bockert (Prairie)
Larry Humble (Evergreen)
2
British Columbia-Canada
2
2
Delta-Brian Conlan (South Delta Senior Secondary)
1
14
1991 Preview
W
Husky Squad Breakdown
Returning Lettermen (39)
Non-Lettermen With Varsity Time (21)
Brett Collins, wlb
Shane Pahukoa, fs
Bruce Bailey, te
Pete Kaligis, og
Ed Cunningham, c
Tommie Smith, fs
Todd Bridge, ot
Damon Mack, se
William Doctor, cb
Darius Turner, fb
Shawn Cox, cb
Marshall Magee, rov
Chico Fraley, ilb
Eric Alozie, se
Shandon Cyrus, mg
Shaun Moore, te
Dana Hall, cb
Walter Bailey, cb
D'Marco Farr, mg
Jim Nevelle, og
Donald Jones, slb
Mark Brunell, qb
J.J. Frank, fb
John Norman, og
Siupeli Malamala, ot
Hillary Butler, lb
Tom Gallagher, ot
Pete Pierson, ot
James Clifford, ilb
P.A. Emerson, te
Lawrence Goncalves, cb
Terry Redmond, fl
Aaron Pierce, te
Jamal Fountaine, lb
Eugene Harris, tb
David Reiner, c
Mario Bailey, se
Curtis Gaspard, se
Billy Joe Hobert, qb-p
Kris Rongen, og
Jay Barry, tb
Travis Hanson, pk
Larry Humble, fl
Beno Bryant, tb
Leif Johnson, fb
Steve Emtman, dt
Matt Jones, fb
Jaime Fields, wlb
Joe Kralik, fl
Dave Hoffmann, ilb
Andy Mason, de
Scholarship Red-Shirt Freshmen (18)
Virgil Jones, slb
LaMar Mitchell, fl
Lincoln Kennedy, ot
Tyrone Rodgers, mg
Damon Barry, se
Louis Jones, fs
Mike Lustyk, dt
Danianke Smith, de
Eric Bjornson, qb
David Killpatrick, rov
Orlando McKay, fl
Steve Springstead, lb
Richie Chambers, lb
Scott Leick, ot
Paxton Tailele, rov
Brian Conlan, ot
Lamar Lyons, fs
Mike Derrow, lb
Josh Moore, cb
"Varsity letters earned
Frank Garcia, c
Keith Navidi, dt
Russell Hairston, cb
Andrew Peterson, og
Eteka Huckaby, tb
Tyson Pollman, lb
Jeff Jackson, te
Donovan Schmidt, lb
Lettermen Lost (16)
Eric Briscoe, s, 3V
Mark Kilpack, te, 3V
John Cook, mg, 2V
Dean Kirkland, og, 3V
Adam Cooney, ot, 4V
Greg Lewis, tb, 4V
Mike Dodd, k, 1V
Charles Mincy, cb, 2V
Non-Lettermen (34)
Rich Hicks, cb, 2V
Jeff Pahukoa, ot, 3V
Jason Jensen, ot, IV
Travis Richardson, de, 4V
Ricardo Aguirre, lb
Clayton Kuhrau, C
Marc Jones, fl, 2V
Rick Schulberg, og, 2V
Jeff Aselin, ot
Sanjay Lal, se
Mark Jones, lb, 4V
Channing Wyles, p, 2V
Angelo Banchero, te
Shell Mays, de
Bruce Beyers, lb
Jim McCoy, te
Shermonte Brooks, se
Tom Nakane, qb
Eric Butler, fl
Dana Posey, cb
Ricky Cobb, fs
Terrance Powe, ng
Incoming Scholarship Freshmen (23)
Jason Crabbe, pk
Dante Robinson, rov
Robb Dibble, de
James Sawyer, se
Douglas Barnes, lb
Patrick Kesi, ol
Rodney Ellison, te
Kaala Shea, qb
Eric Battle, ol
Leon Neal, rb
Darrell Green, cb
Eric Simpson, cb
Jeff Bockert, lb
Reggie Reser, db
Charleston Grimes, fb
Matt Spillinger, fl
Mark Bruener, te
Joel Rosborough, wr
Darren Harrell, cb
Andy Trimakas, fs
Brandon Bunch, wr
Travis Spring, wr
Mike Hill, lb
Jayson Turner, rov
Ernie Conwell, te
Michael Steward, cb
Jeff Hudson, og
Jay Wells, fb
Demetrius Devers, lb
Justin Thomas, dl
David Ilsley, og
Paul Wight, lb
John DiSante, ol
Richard Thomas, fb
Denton Johnson, se
Zario Ziegler, cb
Mike Ewaliko,dt
Richard Washington, db
Trevor Highfield, dl
Donald Willis, ol
Steve Hoffmann, dl
Damon Huard, qb
*Enrolled in winter quarter
Napoleon Kaufman, rb
1991
15
W
1991 Preview
Husky Depth Chart
Offense
Defense
SE
5
Mario Bailey (5-9, 157, Sr.)
SLB
48
Donald Jones (6-1, 226, Sr.)
* 17
Curtis Gaspard (5-11, 170, Sr.)
95
Virgil Jones (6-1, 220, Sr.)
6
Damon Mack (6-0, 182, Jr.)
0 47
Jamal Fountaine (6-3, 225, So.)
21
Damon Barry (6-1, 185, RS-Fr)
DE
* 13
Andy Mason (6-2, 228, So.)
WT
75
Lincoln Kennedy (6-7, 315, Jr.)
o 55
Danianke Smith (6-2, 226, Jr.)
66
Tom Gallagher (6-5, 270, So.)
86
Shell Mays (6-0, 230, Sr.)
64
Scott Leick (6-4, 275, RS-Fr.)
MG
*57
Tyrone Rodgers (6-3, 265, Sr.)
WG
72
Kris Rongen (6-5, 280, Sr.)
75
D'Marco Farr (6-1, 265, So.)
77
David Ilsley (6-5, 274, Jr.)
DT
90
61 John Norman (6-2, 290, Jr.)
Steve Emtman (6-4, 280, Jr.)
74
Mike Lustyk (6-3, 265, Jr.)
C
79
Ed Cunningham (6-3, 280, Sr.)
99
Keith Navidi (6-6, 266, RS-Fr.)
65
Frank Garcia (6-2, 283, RS-Fr.)
WLB
David Reiner (6-6, 280, So.)
3
63
Jaime Fields (6-0, 230, Jr.)
46
Brett Collins (6-2, 228, Sr.)
SG
52 Jim Nevelle (6-2, 265, So.) or
32
Richie Chambers (6-2, 205, RS-Fr.)
56
Pete Kaligis (6-2, 255, So.) or
60
LIB
Andrew Peterson (6-6, 285, RS-Fr.)
54
Dave Hoffmann (6-2, 220, Jr.)
53
James Clifford (6-2, 240, Jr.)
ST
70
Siupeli Malamala (6-6, 300, Sr.)
37
Mike Derrow (6-1, 220, RS-Fr.)
71
Pete Pierson (6-5, 275, So.)
0 49
Steve Springstead (6-1, 215, So.)
62
Todd Bridge (6-5, 268, Jr.)
RIB
73
Brian Conlan (6-6, 285, RS-Fr.)
45
Hillary Butler (6-2, 218, So.)
39
Chico Fraley (6-2, 210, Sr.)
TE
88
Bruce Bailey (6-5, 245, Jr.)
66
Tyson Pollman (6-2, 235, RS-Fr.)
80
Shaun Moore (6-3, 220, So.)
LC
85 Jeff Jackson (6-4, 225, RS-Fr.)
5
Dana Hall (6-3, 202, Sr.)
26
84
Aaron Pierce (6-5, 240, Sr.)
Russell Hairston (5-11, 175, RS-Fr.)
7 Josh Moore (6-1, 190, RS-Fr.)
QB
12
Billy Joe Hobert (6-3, 225, So.)
RC
10
14
Eric Bjornson (6-5, 210, RS-Fr.)
William Doctor (5-11, 176, Sr.)
16
* 23
Tom Nakane (6-3, 195, Jr.)
Walter Bailey (5-11, 190, Jr.)
9
Larry Goncalves (5-11, 183, So.)
FB
31
Darius Turner (6-0, 224, Jr.)
ROV
*
8
* 22
Matt Jones (6-2, 205, So.)
Paxton Tailele (6-2, 212, Sr.)
35
o 34
Leif Johnson 5-11, 203, So.)
Dave Killpatrick (6-1, 208, RS-Fr.)
00 15
Tommie Smith (6-2, 212, Jr.)
TB
29
Beno Bryant (5-11, 175, Jr.)
FS
21
42
Jay Barry (5-11, 190, Jr.)
Shane Pahukoa (6-3, 196, Jr.)
41
Eugene Harris (5-11, 184, Jr.)
25 Lamar Lyons (6-3, 208, RS-Fr.)
29 Louis Jones (6-2, 203, RS-Fr.)
FL
**
4
Orlando McKay (5-11, 178, Sr.)
* 86
LaMar Mitchell (6-1, 204, Sr.)
Letters earned.
*
3
Joe Kralik (5-10, 173, So.)
Specialists
PK
0
7 Travis Hanson (6-0, 178, So.)
97 Jason Crabbe (5-11, 175, Jr.)
P
12
Billy Joe Hobert (6-3, 225, So.)
o
7
Travis Hanson (6-0, 178, So.)
16
HUSKY COACHING STAFF
Hust
W
Husky Coaching Staff
Don James, Head Coach
They call him the dean of the Pacific-10 coaches.
Don James earned that title by building a consis-
tent, nationally-prominent winning program
during the longest current tenure of any confer-
ence coach. All the while James' program has
maintained its trademark class and integrity.
Under James, Washington earned a Pac-10
record nine straight bowl invitations (1979-87)
and 11 in the last 12 years. James has produced
14 consecutive winning seasons and 15 of his 16
UW teams have finished in the upper division of
the conference race. A total of 11 of those teams
have finished either first or second in the league,
including last season's Pac-10 championship
squad. James' Huskies capped the 1990 season
by defeating Iowa in the Rose Bowl, 46-34.
During his UW career, he has led his Husky
teams to victories in nine of 12 bowl appear-
ances, including three Rose Bowls.
Washington closed out the last decade with the
distinction of having won more games than any
other Pac-10 school in the 1980s. Washington
won 84 games, two better than UCLA's 82 victo-
ries and six more than USC's total of 78 wins.
James' Huskies were the only team in the Pac-10
to have a winning season each year during the
1980s.
That winning legacy has carried over into the
1990s as James guided the Huskies to a 10-2
record (including Rose Bowl win) and a 7-1
mark in conference play. For molding the 1990
Don James
Washington team into one of most dominant
Pac-10 teams in history, James was honored as a
for his teams' disciplined offenses, rock-solid
recently Don Heinrich's Pro Preview-have al
conference co-Coach of the Year, sharing that
defenses and well-drilled special teams.
at various times, named James as the best in th
award with California's Bruce Snyder. He also
business.
Four James-coached clubs in the 1980's were
was named a District Coach of the Year by the
ranked No. 1 in the country at some point in the
In his 16 years at Washington, James has seen 8
AFCA.
season in at least one major poll or magazine.
Husky players drafted by the NFL, including 6
James, 58, served as President of the American
The 1982 club was ranked No. 1 by the wire
during the 1980s. Thirty-eight of his player
Football Coaches Association in 1989, gaining
service polls for seven straight weeks. The 1983
have been drafted in the first five rounds, includ
the lofty position by a vote of his peers. Among
club was a pre-season No. 1 choice. The 1984
ing seven first-round picks. More than tw
Pacific-10 coaches he is peerless.
club was ranked No. 1 by the wire services for
dozen other James products have gone to th
four weeks and No. 1 at the conclusion of the
USFL and CFL, and numerous Huskies hav
The all-time winningest coach in Husky history
season by The Football News and the Chicago
with an overall record of 132-54-2 in 16 seasons
made the NFL as free agents.
Tribune. The 1985 club, like '83, was a pre-
at the UW, James owns the most Pac-8/Pac-10
season No. 1 pick. The 1990 Husky unit climbed
Several of James' assistant coaches have move
victories in the history of the prestigious confer-
as high as No. 2 in the national polls and led all
on to head coaching positions following thei
ence with 83. In 1988, he surpassed the mark of
Division I-A schools in rushing defense and
stay at Washington. Among the former assistan
70 conference victories established by former
turnover margin.
coaches now serving as head coaches are Jin
USC coach John McKay with a 28-27 home
Mora (New Orleans Saints), Jim Heacock (Illi
victory over California.
The Seattle-based Gold Helmet Banquet and
nois State), Gary Pinkel (Toledo), Skip Hal
Columbus (0.) Touchdown Club both named
(Boise State), Bob Stull (Missouri) and the late
James, still a leading voice in the AFCA, is also
James the College Coach of the Year in 1984.
Dick Scesniak (Kent State). USC quarterback
active in the NCAA, having served on several
That wasn't the first time. Previously, he was
coach Ray Dorr was also a James' aide who late
committees during his career. He is currently a
voted National Coach of the Year (Kodak) in
went on to become the head coach at Southern
member of the NCAA Professional Sports Liai-
1977, District Coach of the Year, West Coast
Illinois.
son Committee. He is also active in many local
Coach of the Year, Pacific-10 Coach of the Year
civic affairs, including the Boy Scouts, March of
and Seattle's Man of the Year in Sports, to name
A capsule look at his Washington teams:
Dimes, American Cancer Fund, Junior Achieve-
a few. In June, 1987, James was enshrined in the
A late-season loss at home against UCLA prob
ment and Cystic Fibrosis.
Florida Citrus Bowl Hall of Fame. A number of
ably cost the 1990 Huskies their first nationa
It is his on-field accomplishments that have
publications-Sports Illustrated, Sport, Inside
championship. James' squad entered Week 10
earned James acclaim. He is admired nationally
Sports, Playboy, The Miami Herald and most
rated second nationally behind Notre Dame
18
Husky Coaching Staff
W
on James, Head Coach
owever, a 24-22 defeat by the Bruins dropped
e Huskies from any possible national title con-
ention. Still, Washington finished with a 46-34
Don James' Coaching Record
in over Iowa in the Rose Bowl and a number
ve ranking in the final polls along with a 10-2
Head Coach
ecord. The club had three All-Americans-
OVERALL
CONFERENCE
reg Lewis, Steve Emtman and Jeff Pahukoa-
YEAR
SCHOOL
RECORD
PCT.
RECORD
PCT.
nd Lewis also won the inaugural Doak Walker
ward as the nation's top running back. The
1971
Kent State
3-8
.273
0-5
.000
Iuskies set numerous school records and led
1972
Kent State
6-5-1
.542
4-1
.800
he nation in rushing defense and turnover
Tangerine Bowl (Tampa 21, KSU 18)
hargin.
1973
Kent State
9-2
.818
4-1
.800
1974
Kent State
7-4
.636
2-3
.400
Vashington finished with a flourish in 1989,
inning its last three games of the season and
Totals
Four Years
25-19-1
.567
10-10
.500
even of its last eight to earn its 11th bowl ap-
1975
Washington
6-5
.545
5-2
.714
earance under James. The Huskies posted a
1976
Washington
5-6
.455
3-4
.429
urprisingly easy 34-7 win over Southeastern
1977
Washington
10-2
.833
7-0
1.000
Conference representative Florida in the 1989
Rose Bowl (UW 27, Michigan 20)
freedom Bowl, the Dawgs' 10th bowl appear-
1978
Washington
7-4
.636
6-2
.750
nce in the last 11 years. Washington finished 8-
1979
Washington
10-2
.833
6-1
.857
overall and had a 5-3 conference mark. The
Sun Bowl (UW 14, Texas 7)
ntroduction of the one-back offense proved suc-
1980
Washington
9-3
.750
6-1
.857
essful and exciting, as the Huskies stretched out
lefenses by land and by air.
Rose Bowl (Michigan 23, UW 6)
1981
Washington
10-2
.833
6-2
.750
Close, but not close enough. That was the story
Rose Bowl (UW 28, Iowa 0)
of the 1988 James Gang, which finished 6-5
1982
Washington
10-2
.833
6-2
.750
overall and 3-5 in the Pac-10. Washington lost
Aloha Bowl (UW 21, Maryland 20)
five football games by a total of 15 points, includ-
1983
Washington
8-4
.667
5-2
.714
ng a pair of one-point losses and two more
three-point losses. The Huskies fashioned their
Aloha Bowl (Penn State 13, UW 10)
12th straight winning season, but saw the
1984
Washington
11-1
.917
6-1
.857
school's consecutive bowl game streak snapped
Orange Bowl (UW 28, Oklahoma 17)
at nine.
1985
Washington
7-5
.583
5-3
.625
Freedom Bowl (UW 20, Colorado 17)
[ames' 1987 Huskies had their moments-good
and bad-but still managed a trip to the Inde-
1986
Washington
8-3-1
.708
5-2-1
.688
bendence Bowl in Shreveport, La., where they
Sun Bowl (Alabama 28, UW 6)
bested Tulane, 24-12. Washington's 7-4-1 sea-
1987
Washington
7-4-1
.625
4-3-1
.563
son was good enough for a third-place Pac-10
Independence Bowl (UW 24, Tulane 12)
finish. Senior quarterback Chris Chandler en-
1988
Washington
6-5
.545
3-5
.375
tered the season as a Heisman Trophy candidate
1989
Washington
8-4
.667
5-3
.625
and proved to be the nation's top senior quarter-
Freedom Bowl (UW 34, Florida 7)
back prospect, being the first NFL draft pick
1990
Washington
10-2
.833
7-1
.875
among quarterbacks. Senior linebacker David
Rose Bowl (UW 46, Iowa 34)
Rill was selected first-team CoSIDA/GTE Aca-
demic All-America for the second consecutive
Totals
16 years
132-54-2
.707
85-34-2
.711
Head Coach (20 years)
157-73-3
.680
95-44-2
.681
season.
1971-74-Conference Record from Mid-American Conference games.
Washington's 1986 rendition featured a pair of
1975-Present-Conference Record from Pacific-8 and Pacific-10 Conference games.
consensus All-America performers, placekicker
Jeff Jaeger and defensive end Reggie Rogers.
Assistant Coach
The squad taxed scoreboards all season, tallying
YEAR
SCHOOL
RECORD
PCT.
YEAR
SCHOOL
RECORD
PCT.
more points (372) than any team in modern
Husky history on the way to an 8-3-1 mark.
1959
Florida State
4-6
.400
1966
Michigan
6-4
.600
James' Huskies finished tied for second in the
1960
Florida State
3-6-1
.350
1967
Michigan
4-6
.400
Pac-10 and earned their eighth-straight
1961
Florida State
4-5-1
.450
Totals
Two Years
10-10
.500
postseason appearance, facing Alabama in the
1962
Florida State
4-3-3
.550
1968
Colorado
4-6
.400
Sun Bowl.
1963
Florida State
4-5-1
.450
1969
Colorado
8-3
.727
The 1985 Huskies came within two one-point
1964
Florida State
9-1-1
.863
Liberty Bowl (CU 47, Alabama 33)
losses of representing the Pac-10 in the Rose
Gator Bowl (FSU 36, Oklahoma 19)
1970
Colorado
6-5
.545
Bowl. As it was, those losses were representative
1965
Florida State
4-5-1
.450
Liberty Bowl (Tulane 17, CU 3)
of a roller-coaster season that saw Washington
Totals
Seven Years
32-31-8
.507
Totals
Three Years
18-14
.563
finish 6-5 in the regular season. The Huskies
Assistant Coach (12 years)
60-55-8
.520
19
W
Husky Coaching Staff
Don James, Head Coach
were invited to the Freedom Bowl, where they
studies at the University of Kansas and double
downed Colorado 20-17 to cap a 7-5 season.
as the Jayhawks' freshman football coach. H
The 1984 club fashioned the most wins (11-1) in
graduated in 1957 with a master's degree
school history, and marked the fifth time in a
Education and then returned to Miami (Soutl
period of eight years that Washington teams won
west H.S.) where he coached football and bai
ketball.
at least 10 games. Washington, 9-0 at one point
in 1984, climaxed the season with a 28-17 victory
He then turned to the college ranks at Florid
over Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. That win
State where he would remain seven years whil
earned the club a mythical National Champion-
being elevated to assistant head coach and de
ship in the eyes of the Chicago Tribune and
fensive coordinator. It was at FSU where Jame
Football News. Associated Press, UPI and USA
really began to make a name for himself as
Today/CNN all ranked the Huskies No. 2. In any
case, it was Washington's highest final ranking
ever.
James' 1983 club won six of its first seven games,
snapped USC's NCAA-record scoring streak
Coaching Honors
with a 24-0 shutout and were within one game of
YEAR HONOR
the Pac-10 title before suffering a loss in the
season finale. The Huskies were invited to the
1971
Named Head Coach at Kent State
1972
Aloha Bowl, where they lost a 13-10 decision to
Mid-American Coach-of-the-Year
Ohio Coach-of-the-Year
Penn State to finish 8-4.
1973
Coached in Ohio Shrine Game
His 1982 club was ranked No. 1 in the country
Coached in North-South Shrine Game
for seven weeks before being upset by Stanford.
1974
Coached in Ohio Shrine Game
A 17-13 victory over Arizona State opened the
Named Head Coach at Washington
1975
Pac-8 Co-Coach-of-the-Year
door for a third straight Pac-10 title but the door
1976
Coached in American Bowl
closed in a season-ending 24-20 loss to Washing-
Don James
1977
American Football Coaches Association
ton State (only the second loss to a Northwest
National Coach-of-the-Year
opponent in 24 meetings). As Pac-10 runner-up,
Washington was invited to the inaugural Aloha
Michigan in the Rose Bowl and won 27-20 to
UPI National Coach-of-the-Week
finish 10-2.
Coached Rose Bowl Champions
Bowl, where the Huskies downed Maryland 21-
1978
Coached in East-West Shrine Game
20 to finish the season 10-2.
James' first two Husky clubs (1975-76) were
Coached in Japan Bowl
basically .500 outfits (6-5 and 5-6), but those
1979
Coached Sun Bowl Champions
The 1981 Huskies shook off conference losses to
1980
Pac-10 Coach-of-the-Year
Arizona State and UCLA and won the Pac-10
teams still established a legacy of first division
West Coast Coach-of-the-Year
title with late-season wins over USC and Wash-
conference finishes. Those were the foundation
District IX Coach-of-the-Year
ington State. The Huskies then downed Iowa
years in a football program that would soon grow
Coached in Rose Bowl
28-0 in the Rose Bowl-James' second Rose
by leaps and bounds.
1981
Coached Rose Bowl Champions
Bowl win-to finish 10-2.
James was hired at Washington on December
Named Seattle P-I's Sports Star-of-the
Year
His 1980 club was upset early by Oregon and
23, 1974. In the previous four seasons (1971-
Athlon Publications National Coach-of-
Navy but again bounced back late in the year to
74), he was head coach at Kent State where he
the-Year
record four straight conference wins, take the
posted a 25-19-1 overall record and took Kent
1982
Named Playboy's Pre-season National
Pac-10 title and earn a Rose Bowl berth opposite
State to its first-ever bowl game. Before landing
Coach-of-the-Year
Michigan. The Wolverines downed Washington
his first head coaching job, James served his
Coached Aloha Bowl Champions
apprenticeship in some outstanding programs,
Coached in Hula Bowl
23-6, avenging a 1978 Rose Bowl loss to the
Huskies. Washington finished 9-3.
including: Colorado (1968-70), Michigan
1983
Coached in Aloha Bowl
(1966-67) and Florida State (1959-65). He was
1984
Coached Orange Bowl Champions
In 1979, Washington parlayed a 9-2 regular sea-
also a freshman coach at Kansas while earning
Columbus, Ohio, Touchdown Club
National Coach-of-the-Year
son and Pac-10 runner-up finish into an invita-
his master's degree and coached at Southwest
Gold Helmet College Coach-of-the-
tion to the Sun Bowl, where the Huskies de-
HS in Miami (Fla.) before joining the Semi-
Year
feated Texas, 14-7. The Sun Bowl title gave
noles.
Miami Herald Coach-of-the-Year
Washington a 10-2 record. That 1979 season
1985
James grew up in the football hotbed of
Coached Freedom Bowl Champions
kicked off a six-year period in which Washington
1986
Coached in Sun Bowl
would record a glittering 58-14 overall record,
Massillon, Ohio, where he played quarterback
1987
Inducted Florida Citrus Bowl Hall of
good for an .805 winning percentage.
and defensive back for two state championship
Fame
teams at Washington High School. He accepted
Coached Independence Bowl
During the 1978 season, Washington did not
a scholarship to Miami of Florida where he set
Champions
earn a postseason bowl bid. Still, the Huskies
five school passing records. He graduated in
1988
Pac-10's All-Time Winningest Coach
recorded a fine 7-4 mark with three of the four
1954 with various academic and military honors,
1989
President, American Football Coaches
losses coming by a touchdown or less.
and earned the Optner Trophy honoring
Association
The 1977 season provided James' first confer-
Miami's top scholar-athlete.
Coached Freedom Bowl Champions
1990
Pac-10 Co-Coach of the Year
ence crown at Washington as the Huskies shook
James was commissioned a Second Lieutenant
AFCA Region V Coach of the Year
off several early losses, upset USC and benefited
in the U.S. Army (1st Transportation Corps)
Coached Rose Bowl Champions
from two forfeitures to go 9-2. Washington met
where he served two years before resuming his
20
Husky Coaching Staff
W
on James, Head Coach
efensive mastermind. In his four seasons as a
efensive coordinator, the Seminoles recorded
3 shutouts, held three teams to a single field
Don James Versus All Opponents
oal and held 14 others to only one touchdown.
he 1964 season (9-1-1) was capped by a 35-19
(1971-1990)
in over Oklahoma in the Gator Bowl.
SEASON
SEASON
ames moved to Michigan where he served as
LAST
LAST
ead defensive coach for two seasons, and then
OPPONENT
W
L
T
MET
OPPONENT
W
L
T
MET
noved farther west to Colorado where he served
Air Force
1
0
0
1980
Northern Illinois
0
2
0
1972
S defensive coordinator for three years and
Akron
1
0
1
1974
Northwestern
3
0
0
1984
Alabama
0
3
0
1986
Ohio
2
2
0
1974
elped the Buffaloes to a pair of Liberty Bowl
Arizona
6
2
1
1990
Ohio State
1
0
0
1986
ppearances. After a dozen years in the assistant
Arizona State
+7
5
0
1990
Oklahoma
1
0
0
1984
oaching ranks, James was hired by Mike Lude
Army
1
0
0
1988
Oklahoma State
1
1
0
1985
O become head coach at Kent State University.
Bowling Green
3
2
0
1986
Oregon
13
3
0
1990
ames would remain at Kent State for four sea-
Brigham Young
1
I
0
1986
Oregon State
13
1
0
1989
ons (1971-74) and compile a 25-19-1 overall
California
10
2
0
1990
Pacific
2
0
0
1987
Central Michigan
2
0
0
1974
Penn State
0
1
0
1983
ecord. His club upset North Carolina State 21-
Cincinnati
0
1
0
1971
Pittsburgh
0
1
0
1979
0 in his very first game as a head coach. He took
Colorado
1
3
0
1990
Purdue
4
0
0
1990
Kent State to its first-ever bowl game (Tangerine
Eastern Michigan
2
0
0
1974
San Diego State
1
2
0
1982
Bowl) the following year and was named both
Florida
1
0
0
1989
San Jose State
3
0
0
1990
Mid-American Coach of the Year and Ohio Col-
Fresno State
1
0
0
1979
Stanford
11
3
0
1990
ege Coach of the Year. His 1973 team produced
Houston
2
0
0
1985
Syracuse
1
1
0
1977
9-2 season, best in school history. Following a
Indiana
0
2
0
1978
Tampa
0
1
0
1972
7-4 mark in 1974, Joe Kearney offered James
Iowa
2
0
0
1990
Texas
1
1
0
1979
he Washington job and he accepted two days
Iowa State
0
1
0
1971
Texas A&M
1
1
o
1989
Kansas
1
0
0
1978
Texas El Paso
1
0
0
1982
before Christmas.
Kansas State
1
0
0
1981
Texas Tech
2
0
0
1982
His success at Washington wasn't far away.
Louisiana State
0
1
0
1983
Toledo
3
1
0
1974
Louisville
I
1
0
1973
Tulane
1
0
0
1987
Don and his wife, Carol, also a native of
Marshall
4
0
0
1974
UCLA
+ 6
7
1
1990
Massillon and a graduate of Miami (Fla.), have
1982
USC
7
8
0
1990
Maryland
1
0
0
three adult children, Jeff, Jill and Jeni, and five
Miami, Ohio
2
3
0
1984
Utah
1
0
0
1979
grandchildren. Daughter Jeni is a 1991 graduate
Michigan
3
1
0
1984
Utah State
1
1
0
1974
of the University of Washington and a former
Minnesota
1
1
0
1977
Virginia
1
0
0
1976
Mississippi State
+ 1
0
0
1977
Washington State
12
4
0
1990
member of the Husky Rally squad.
1974
Navy
2
1
0
1983
Western Michigan
2
2
0
The Husky coach was born December 31, 1932.
Nebraska
0
0
0
Wyoming
1
0
0
1979
He is an avid reader and runner, and an accom-
North Carolina State
1
0
0
1971
Xavier
2
0
0
1972
20-YEAR TOTALS
157
73
3
(.680)
plished golfer who recorded his third hole-in-
one in June, 1985. He has hiked to the summit of
Bold type 1991 opponent
Mt. Rainier and also completed his first mara-
+Includes forfeit win(s)
thon in the 1987 Seattle Marathon.
NOTES:
James' Record vs. All 1991 Opponents: 83-29-1 (.739)
James' Record vs. 1991 Non-Conference Opponents: 4-1-0 (.800)
James' Record vs. 1991 Pacific-10 Conference Opponents: 79-28-1 (.736)
21
W
Husky Coaching Staff
Year-By-Year With Don James
1971
1974
Kent State
Kent State
Captains: Fred Blosser, Stan Boykin
Captains: Tom Buchheit, Ken Dooner, Art Gissendaner
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
KS
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
KS
I
OPP.
ATTENI
Sept. 11
W
at North Carolina State
23
-
21
24,300
Sept. 7
W
at Central Michigan
21
-
14
18,325
Sept. 18
L
at Cincinnati
20
-
42
7,329
Sept. 14
W
at Syracuse
20
-
14
20,798
Sept. 25
L
0
at Ohio
21
-
37
16,781
Sept. 21
L
Ohio
0
-
20
15,267
Oct. 2
L
Iowa State
14
-
37
11,511
Sept. 28
W
at Eastern Michigan
13
-
0
12,000
Oct. 9
L
at Western Michigan
0
-
31
17,200
Oct. 5
W
Western Michigan
28
I
6
11,357
Oct. 16
L
Bowling Green
33
-
46
13,643
Oct. 12
L
at Bowling Green
10
I
26
10,493
Oct. 23
W
at Xavier
24
-
13
3,250
Oct. 19
L
Utah State
24
I
27
9,722
Oct. 30
L
Northern Illinois
7
-
26
10,545
Oct. 26
W
Akron
51
-
14
15,200
Nov. 6
W
Marshall
21
-
0
6,844
Nov. 2
W
at Marshall
35
-
7
9,121
Nov. 13
L
Miami (Ohio)
0
-
30
7,967
Nov. 9
L
at Miami (Ohio)
17
I
19
13,562
Nov. 20
L
at Toledo
6
-
41
20,201
Nov. 16
W
Toledo
35
14
7,400
169
-
324
254
161
Overall Record: 3-8, .273; Mid-American Record: 0-5, .000 (6th)
Overall Record: 7-4, .636; Mid-American Record: 2-3, .400 (4th)
James' Kent State Record: 3-8 (.273)
James' Kent State Record: 25-19-1 (.567)
James' Career Record: 3-8 (.273)
James' Career Record: 25-19-1 (.567)
1972
1975
Kent State
Washington
Captains: Larry Hayes, Jeff Murrey, Rich Oden
Captains: Al Burleson, Dan Lloyd, Ray Pinney, John Whitacre
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
KS
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND
Sept. 9
at Akron
13
-
13
25,131
Sept. 13
L
at Arizona State
12
-
35
50,194
Sept. 16
L
at Louisville
0
-
34
20,122
Sept. 20
L
Texas
10
-
28
56,000
Sept. 23
W
Ohio
37
-
14
8,215
Sept. 27
W
Navy
14
I
13
53,000
Sept. 30
L
San Diego State
0
-
14
5,415
Oct. 4
W
at Oregon
27
-
17
28,500
Oct. 7
L
0
Western Michigan
12
-
13
7,738
Oct. 11
L
at Alabama
0
I
52
58,000
Oct. 14
W
o
at Bowling Green
14
-
10
20,507
Oct. 18
L
Stanford
21
I
24
45,000
Oct. 21
W
Xavier
26
-
16
15,497
Oct. 25
W
Oregon State
35
-
7
43,500
Oct. 28
L
at Northern Illinois
7
-
28
12,126
Nov. 1
W
at UCLA
17
-
13
29,158
Nov. 4
W
at Marshall
16
-
14
12,425
Nov. 8
L
at California
24
-
27
43,270
Nov. 11
W
at Miami (Ohio)
21
-
10
7,165
Nov. 15
W
o
Southern California
8
-
7
53,700
Nov. 18
W
Toledo
27
-
9
20,715
Nov. 22
W
Washington State
28
27
57,100
Dec. 29
L
Tampa (Tangerine Bowl)
18
-
21
196
- 250
191
-
196
Overall Record: 6-5, .545; Pacific-8 Record: 5-2, 714 (3rd, Tie)
Overall Record: 6-5-1, .542; Mid-American Record: 4-1, .800 (1st)
James' Washington Record: 6-5 (.545)
James' Kent State Record: 9-13-1 (.413)
James' Career Record: 31-24-1 (.563)
James' Career Record: 9-13-1 (.413)
1973
1976
Kent State
Washington
Captains: Jack Lambert, Gary Pinkel, Eddie Woodard
Captains: Mike Baldassin, Robin Earl, Charles Jackson, Scott Phillips
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
KS
I
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND
Sept. 15
W
Louisville
10
I
3
10,217
Sept. 11
W
Virginia
38
I
17
40,412
Sept. 22
W
at Ohio
35
-
7
14,450
Sept. 18
L
Colorado
7
-
21
43,383
Sept. 30
L
at San Diego State
9
I
17
28,461
Sept. 25
L
Indiana
13
-
20
40,425
Oct. 6
W
at Western Michigan
39
I
15
19,300
Oct. 2
W
Minnesota
38
I
7
40,694
Oct. 13
W
Bowling Green
21
-
7
25,137
Oct. 9
W
at Oregon State
24
-
12
27,096
Oct. 20
W
Eastern Michigan
34
-
20
14,426
Oct. 16
L
at Stanford
28
I
34
36,000
Oct. 27
W
at Utah State
27
-
16
8,703
Oct. 23
W
Oregon
14
I
7
43,129
Nov. 3
W
Marshall
35
-
3
9,004
Oct. 30
L
UCLA
21
30
47,187
Nov. 10
L
Miami (Ohio)
10
I
20
27,363
Nov. 6
L
California
0
-
7
42,932
Nov. 17
W
at Toledo
51
-
16
12,012
Nov. 13
L
0
at Southern California
3
-
20
49,264
Nov. 24
W
Central Michigan
28
-
7
3,870
Nov. 20
W
at Washington State (Spokane)
51
I
32
35,800
299
I
131
237
207
Overall Record: 9-2, .818; Mid-American Record: 4-1, .800 (2nd)
Overall Record: 5-6, .455; Pacific-8 Record: 3-4, .429 (4th, Tie)
James' Kent State Record: 18-15-1 (.544)
James' Washington Record: 11-11 (.500)
James' Career Record: 18-15-1 (.544)
James' Career Record: 36-30-1 (.545)
22
Husky Coaching Staff
W
ear-By-Year With Don James
977
1980
Vashington
Washington
aptains: Dave Browning, Blair Bush, Warren Moon, Mike Rohrbach
Captains: Tom Flick, Ken Gardner, Rusty Olsen, Randy Van Divier
ATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
-
ept. 10
W
+
Mississippi State
18
-
27
45,050
Sept. 13
W
Air Force
50
-
7
44,999
-
ept. 17
W
San Jose State
24
-
3
36,489
Sept. 20
W
Northwestern
45
7
49,975
ept. 24
L
at Syracuse
12,839
Sept. 27
L
0
20
22
Oregon
10
-
34
56,282
-
17
19
31,895
Oct. 4
W
at Oklahoma State
24
-
18
ct. 1
L
at Minnesota
48,200
-
ct. 8
W o
at Oregon
54
-
0
29,500
Oct. 11
W 0
at Oregon State
41
-
6
33,000
ct. 15
W
o
Stanford
45
-
21
46,529
Oct. 18
W
at Stanford
27
-
24
60,066
Navy
10
24
48,841
ct. 22
W
0
Oregon State
14
-
6
46,677
Oct. 25
L
-
ct. 29
W +°
at UCLA
12
20
38,692
Nov. 1
W
Arizona State
25
-
0
48,691
-
ov. 5
W
0
at California
50
31
38,812
Nov. 8
W
Arizona
45
22
49,341
-
ov. 12
W 0
Southern California
28
-
10
59,501
Nov. 15
W
at Southern California
20
-
10
55,512
ov. 19
W
o
Washington State
35
-
15
60,964
Nov. 22
W
at Washington State (Spokane)
30
-
23
34,577
Michigan (Rose Bowl)
27
20
105,312
Jan. 1
L
Michigan (Rose Bowl)
6
-
23
104,863
in. 2
W
-
344
- 194
333
198
Forfeit-used ineligible player(s)
Overall Record: 9-3, .750; Pacific-10 Record: 6-1, .857 (1st)
overall Record: 10-2, .833; Pacific-8 Record: 7-0, 1.000 (1st)
James' Washington Record: 47-22 (.681)
ames' Washington Record: 21-13 (.618)
James' Career Record: 72-41-1 (.636)
ames' Career Record: 46-32-1 (.589)
1978
1981
Washington
Washington
Captains: Nesby Glasgow, Scott Greenwood, Michael Jackson, Jeff Toews
Captains: James Carter, Vince Coby, Fletcher Jenkins, Mark Jerue
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
45,134
Sept. 9
L
o
UCLA
7
-
10
55,780
Sept. 12
W
Pacific
34
-
14
Kansas
31
2
49,624
Sept. 19
W
Kansas State
20
-
3
52,343
Sept. 16
W
-
7
14
40,244
Sept. 26
W
at Oregon
17
-
3
40,695
Sept. 23
L
at Indiana
-
Sept. 30
W 0
at Oregon State
34
-
0
30,000
Oct. 3
L
Arizona State
7
-
26
50,410
Dct. 7
L
Alabama
17
-
20
60,975
Oct. 10
W
at California
27
-
26
33,600
Oct. 17
W
Oregon State
56
-
17
Dct. 14
W o
at Stanford
34
-
31
58,079
52,324
Dct. 21
W o
Oregon
20
14
49,602
Oct. 24
W
at Texas Tech
14
-
7
36,335
Dct. 28
W o
Arizona State
41
-
7
54,866
Oct. 31
W
Stanford
42
-
31
53,504
0
31
41,818
Nov. 4
Arizona
31
Nov. 7
L
0
W
o
-
21
47,587
at UCLA
-
Nov. 11
o
at Southern California
10
28
54,071
Nov. 14
W
Southern California
13
-
3
59,870
L
-
-
Nov. 25
at Washington State (Spokane)
8
35,187
Nov. 21
W
Washington State
23
10
W
o
38
60,052
-
270
155
Jan. 1
W
Iowa (Rose Bowl)
28
-
0
105,611
Overall Record: 7-4, .636; Pacific-10 Record: 6-2, .750 (2nd, Tie)
281
171
James' Washington Record: 28-17 (.622)
Overall Record: 10-2, .833; Pacific-10 Record: 6-2, 750 (1st)
[ames' Career Record: 53-36-1 (.594)
James' Washington Record: 57-24 (.704)
James' Career Record: 82-43-1 (.655)
1979
1982
Washington
Washington
Captains: Phil Foreman, Doug Martin, Antowaine Richardson, Joe Steele
Captains: Anthony Allen, Ken Driscoll, Paul Skansi, Mark Stewart
UW
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
-
Sept. 8
W
Wyoming
38
-
2
47,530
Sept. 11
W
Texas-El Paso
55
-
0
53,966
Sept. 15
W
Utah
41
-
7
49,735
Sept. 18
W
at Arizona
23
-
13
48,984
Sept. 22
W
0
at Oregon
21
-
17
42,500
Sept. 25
W
Oregon
37
-
21
57,059
Sept. 29
W
Fresno State
49
-
14
47,376
Oct. 2
W
San Diego State
46
-
25
55,528
Oct. 6
W
o
Oregon State
41
-
0
49,881
Oct. 9
W
California
50
-
7
56,911
Oct. 13
W +
at Arizona State
7
-
12
70,912
Oct. 16
W
at Oregon State
34
-
17
38,000
Oct. 20
L
Pittsburgh
14
-
26
52,485
Oct. 23
W
Texas Tech
10
-
3
58,458
34
14
35,757
Oct. 30
L
o
at Stanford
31
-
43
Oct. 27
W 0
at UCLA
53,871
-
Nov. 3
W D
at California
28
-
24
25,000
Nov. 6
W
UCLA
10
-
7
58,558
Nov. 10
L
o
Southern California
17
-
24
60,527
Nov. 13
W
at Arizona State
17
-
13
72,021
at Washington State
20
24
36,571
Nov. 17
W
0
Washington State
17
-
7
56,110
Nov. 20
L
O
-
Dec. 22
W
Texas (Sun Bowl)
14
-
7
33,412
Dec. 25
W
Maryland (Aloha Bowl)
21
-
20
30,055
321
- 154
354
193
Overall Record: 10-2, .833; Pacific-10 Record: 6-1, .857 (2nd)
Overall Record: 10-2, .833; Pacific-10 Record: 6-2, .750 (2nd)
James' Washington Record: 38-19 (.667)
James' Washington Record: 67-26 (.720)
James' Career Record: 63-38-1 (.623)
James' Career Record: 92-45-1 (.670)
+ Forfeit-used ineligible player(s)
23
W
Husky Coaching Staff
Year-By-Year With Don James
1983
1986
Washington
Washington
Captains: Dean Browning, Stewart Hill, Rick Mallory, Steve Pelluer
Captains: Steve Alvord, Rick Fenney, Kevin Gogan, Rod Jones, Tim
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
Peoples, Reggie Rogers
Sept. 10
W
at Northwestern
34
-
0
26,165
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTENI
Sept. 17
W
Michigan
25
-
24
60,638
Sept. 13
W
Ohio State
40
-
7
61,071
Sept. 24
L
at Louisiana State
14
-
40
82,390
Sept. 20
W
Brigham Young
52
-
21
61,197
Oct. 1
W
Navy
27
-
10
59,912
Sept. 27
L
at Southern California
10
-
20
58,023
Oct. 8
W
Oregon State
34
-
7
60,354
Oct. 4
W
California
50
-
18
58,911
Oct. 15
W
Stanford
32
-
15
60,270
Oct. 11
W
at Stanford
24
-
14
52,000
Oct. 22
W
at Oregon
32
-
3
44,303
Oct. 18
W
Bowling Green
48
-
0
57,075
Oct. 29
L
at UCLA
24
-
27
60,094
Oct. 25
W
Oregon
38
-
3
58,466
Nov. 5
W
at Arizona
23
-
22
48,808
Nov. 1
L
at Arizona State
21
-
34
71,589
Nov. 12
W
Southern California
24
-
0
60,690
Nov. 8
W
at Oregon State
28
-
12
29,541
Nov. 19
L
Washington State
6
-
17
59,220
Nov. 15
T
UCLA
17
-
17
59,916
Dec. 26
L
Penn State (Aloha Bowl)
10
-
13
37,212
Nov. 22
W
at Washington State
44
-
23
40,000
285
- 178
Dec. 25
L
Alabama (Sun Bowl)
6
28
48,722
Overall Record: 8-4, .667; Pacific-10 Record: 5-2, .714 (2nd)
378
197
James' Washington Record: 75-30 (.714)
Overall Record: 8-3-1, 708; Pacific-10 Record: 5-2-1, .688 (2nd, Tie)
James' Career Record: 100-49-1 (.670)
James' Washington Record: 101-39-1 (.720)
James' Career Record: 126-58-2 (.683)
1984
1987
Washington
Washington
Captains: Dan Eernissee, Danny Greene, Tim Meamber, Jim Rodgers
Captains: Chris Chandler, Darryl Franklin, Brian Habib, David Rill
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND
Sept. 8
W
Northwestern
26
-
0
55,364
Sept. 5
W
Stanford
31
-
21
W
73,676
Sept. 15
at Michigan
20
-
11
103,072
Sept. 12
W
Purdue
28
-
10
W
70,492
Sept. 22
Houston
35
-
7
61,045
Sept. 19
L
at Texas A & M
12
-
29
58,178
Sept. 29
W
Miami (Ohio)
53
-
7
56,900
Sept. 26
W
Pacific
31
-
3
Oct. 6
69,605
W
at Oregon State
19
-
7
40,000
Oct. 3
L
at Oregon
22
-
29
Oct. 13
W
44,421
at Stanford
37
-
15
44,500
Oct. 10
W
Arizona State
27
-
14
Oct. 20
73,883
W
Oregon
17
-
10
58,088
Oct. 17
L
Southern California
23
-
37
Oct. 27
W
71,678
Arizona
28
-
12
59,876
Oct. 31
W
Oregon State
28
-
12
Nov. 3
66,392
W
California
44
-
14
59,462
Nov. 7
T
at Arizona
21
-
21
Nov. 10
50,021
L
at Southern California
7
16
71,838
Nov. 14
L
0
at UCLA
14
-
47
Nov. 17
70,332
W
0
at Washington State
38
-
29
40,000
Nov. 21
W
Washington State
34
-
19
74,038
Jan. 1
W
Oklahoma (Orange Bowl)
28
-
17
56,294
Dec. 19
W
Tulane (Independence Bowl)
24
12
41,683
352
- 145
295
- 254
Overall Record: 11-1, .917; Pacific-10 Record: 6-1, .857 (2nd)
Overall Record: 7-4-1, .625; Pacific-10 Record: 4-3-1, .563 (3rd)
James' Washington Record: 86-31 (.735)
James' Washington Record: 108-43-2 (.712)
James' Career Record: 111-50-1 (.688)
James' Career Record: 133-62-3 (.679)
1985
1988
Washington
Washington
Captains: Vestee Jackson, Joe Kelly, Hugh Millen, Dennis Soldat
Captains: Ricky Andrews, Darryl Hall, Aaron Jenkins, Mike Zandofsky
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND
Sept. 7
L
Oklahoma State
17
I
31
60,320
Sept. 10
W
at Purdue
20
-
6
56,125
Sept. 14
L
at Brigham Young
3
-
31
65,476
Sept. 17
W
Army
31
-
17
66,128
Sept. 21
W
at Houston
29
-
12
20,522
Sept. 24
W
San Jose State
35
-
31
63,692
Sept. 28
W
UCLA
21
-
14
60,425
Oct. 1
L
UCLA
17
-
24
71,224
Oct. 5
W
at Oregon
19
-
13
44,383
Oct. 8
W
at Arizona State
10
-
0
70,934
Oct. 12
W
at California
28
-
12
49,000
Oct. 15
L
at Southern California
27
-
28
62,974
Oct. 19
L
o
Oregon State
20
-
21
58,771
Oct. 22
L
at Oregon
14
-
17
45,978
Nov. 2
W
Stanford
34
-
0
58,625
Oct. 29
W
Stanford
28
-
25
68,272
Nov. 9
L
o
at Arizona State
7
36
67,474
Nov. 5
L
Arizona
13
-
16
65,604
Nov. 16
W
Southern California
20
I
17
59,417
Nov. 12
W
California
28
I
27
58,823
Nov. 23
L
c
Washington State
20
21
59,887
Nov. 19
L
at Washington State
31
-
32
40,000
Dec. 30
W
Colorado (Freedom Bowl)
20
-
17
30,961
254
223
238
-
225
Overall Record: 6-5, .545; Pacific-10 Record: 3-5, .375 (6th)
Overall Record: 7-5, .583; Pacific-10 Record: 5-3, 625 (4th, Tie)
James' Washington Record: 114-48-2 (.701)
James' Washington Record: 93-36 (.721)
James' Career Record: 139-67-3 (.672)
James' Career Record: 118-55-1 (.681)
24
Husky Coaching Staff
W
ear-By-Year With Don James
989
1990
Washington
Washington
Captains: Dennis Brown, Cary Conklin, Martin Harrison, Andre Riley
Captains: Eric Briscoe, Dean Kirkland, Greg Lewis, Travis Richardson
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
DATE
W/L
OPPONENT
UW
-
OPP.
ATTEND.
ept. 9
W
Texas A & M
19
-
6
69,434
Sept. 8
W
San Jose State
20
-
17
66,337
Sept. 16
W
Purdue
38
-
9
66,392
Sept. 15
W
at Purdue
20
-
14
33,113
Sept. 23
L
o
at Arizona
17
-
20
50,935
Sept. 22
W
Southern California
31
-
0
72,617
Sept. 30
L
Colorado
28
-
45
69,152
Sept. 29
L
at Colorado
14
-
20
52,868
Dct. 7
L
0
at Southern California
16
-
24
58,410
Oct. 6
W
at Arizona State
42
-
24
62,738
Dct. 14
W
0
Oregon
20
-
14
70,442
Oct. 13
W
Oregon
38
-
14
73,498
Dct. 21
W
at California
29
-
16
20,000
Oct. 20
W
at Stanford
52
-
17
36,500
Dct. 28
W
o
at UCLA
28
-
27
48,801
Oct. 27
W
California
46
-
16
71,427
Nov. 4
L
Arizona State
32
-
34
64,695
Nov. 3
W
Arizona
54
-
7
70,111
Nov. 11
W
at Oregon State
51
-
14
32,147
Nov. 10
L
UCLA
22
-
25
71,925
Nov. 18
W
Washington State
20
-
9
73,527
Nov. 17
W
Washington State
55
-
10
37,600
Dec. 30
W
Florida (Freedom Bowl)
34
-
-
7
33,858
Jan. 1
W
Iowa (Rose Bowl)
46
34
101,273
332
225
440
-
184
Overall Record: 8-4, .667; Pacific-10 Record: 5-3, .625 (2nd, Tie)
Overall Record: 10-2, .833; Pacific-10 Record: 7-1, .875 (1st)
James' Washington Record: 122-52-2 (.699)
James' Washington Record: 132-54-2 (.708)
James' Career Record: 147-71-3 (.672)
James' Career Record: 157-73-3 (.680)
Washington Coaching Records
YEARS
COACH (ALMA MATER)
WON
LOST
TIED
PCT.
Longest UW Coaching Career
1889-90
No Coaches
0
1
1
.250
Jim Owens
17 years
1889-90
No Coaches
0
1
1
.250
Don James
16 years
1892-93
William B. Goodwin (Yale)
2
4
1
.357
James M. Phelan
11 years
1894
Charles Cobb (Harvard)
1
1
1
.500
1895-96,1898
Ralph Nichols (Washington)
7
4
1
.625
Most UW Career Wins
1897
Carl Clemens (Stanford)
1
2
0
.333
Don James
132
1899
A.S. Jeffs (Minnesota)
4
1
1
.750
Jim Owens
99
1900
J. Sayre Dodge (Indiana)
1
2
2
James M. Phelan
65
.400
1901
Jack Wright (Columbia)
3
3
0
.500
1902-04
Jim Knight (Princeton 1896)
15
4
1
.775
Best UW Career Winning Percentage
1905
Oliver Cutts (Harvard)
4
2
2
.625
Gilmour Dobie
.975 (58-0-3)
1906-07
Victor Place (Dartmouth)
8
5
6
.579
Jim Knight
.775 (15-4-1)
1908-16
Gilmour Dobie (Minnesota 1904)
58
0
3
.975
A.S. Jeffs
.750 (4-1-1)
1
Don James
.708 (132-54-2)
1917-19
Claude J. Hung (DePauw, 1911)
7
4
.625
1920
Leonard B. "Stub" Allison (Carleton)
1
5
0
.167
1921-29
Enoch Bagshaw (Washington 1907)
63
22
6
.725
1930-41
James M Phelan (Notre Dame 1919)
65
37
8
.627
1942-47
Ralph "Pest" Welch (Purdue 1930)
27
20
3
.570
1948-52
Howard Odell (Pittsburgh 1934)
23
25
2
.480
1953-55
John Cherberg (Washington 1933)
10
18
2
.367
1956
Darrell Royal (Oklahoma 1950)
5
5
0
.500
1957-74
Jim Owens (Oklahoma 1950)
99
82
6
.545
1975-
Don James (Miami, Fla, 1954)
132
54
2
.708
101 years
21 coaches
536
301
49
.633
Ties computed as half won, half lost.
Records reflect NCAA-recognized forfeits.
25
W
Husky Coaching Staff
Assistant Coaches
Myles Corrigan-Tight End Coach
Year at Washington-Fifth as tight end
degree in speech and English, with a mino
coach
spent two seasons as a graduate
in physical education, from Cal State-
assistant working with the offensive and
Northridge in 1968
Master's degree ii
defensive lines
is junior varsity head
education from the University of San Fran
coach
works with kickoff return team.
cisco in 1983
post-graduate studies ii
Off-Field Responsibilities-Summer fit-
educational administration at the Univer
ness program, summer player correspon-
sity of Washington, 1986-87. Personal-
dence, alumni groups and Fellowship of
Will welcome the hopeful return of Aaror
Christian Athletes. Previous Coaching
Pierce, who had 16 receptions in 1990, bu
Experience-Corona del Mar (Calif.)
will be working with an relatively inexperi-
High School, 1969-70
Mission Viejo
enced group at tight end in 1991. Family-
(Calif.) High School, 1970-71
Servite
Myles and his wife, Suzanne, have two sons
(Calif.) High School, 1971-77
San Ber-
Brent (15) and Todd (10). Birthdate-
nardino (Calif.) High School, 1977-78
February 9, 1944.
Westminster (Calif.) High School, 1978-80
offensive coordinator at Puget Sound,
1981-85
graduate assistant (working
with offensive line) at Washington, 1986-
87. Playing Career-A knee injury during
his freshman season as a quarterback at Los
Angeles City College cut short his collegiate
playing career. Education-Bachelor's
Keith Gilbertson-Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line Coach
Year at Washington-Third as offensive
who enjoyed considerable success as head
line coach and first as offensive coordinator.
coach at Idaho
he has a long-standing
Off-Field Responsibilities-Player jobs,
association with University of Miami (Fla.)
officials, rules and recruiting. Previous
head coach Dennis Erickson that reached
Coaching Experience-Graduate assis-
its peak when the two teamed up at Idaho in
tant coach at Idaho State, 1971-74
assis-
1982 and 1985
Gilbertson led the Van-
tant coach at Western Washington, 1975
dals to an 11-2 season in 1988, the best
graduate assistant coach at Washington,
mark in school history
Idaho advanced
1976
assistant coach (offensive coordi-
to the NCAA Division I-AA semifinals and
nator) at Utah State, 1977-81
assistant
he was named Big Sky Coach of the Year
coach (offensive coordinator) at Idaho,
Gilbertson built a 28-9 (.757) record in
1982
assistant coach, Los Angeles Ex-
three seasons at Idaho, with two of his
press, 1983-84
assistant coach (offen-
teams winning Big Sky titles (1987-88)
sive coordinator) at Idaho, 1985
head
the 1988 team was rated No. 1 in the final
coach at Idaho, 1986-88. Playing Ca-
Div. I-AA poll
had all five of his interior
reer-Played for the University of Hawaii
linemen earn mention on the All-Pac-10
as a defensive lineman in 1969-70 under
team in 1990, including two first team picks.
Dave Holmes
also played at Snohomish
two of those were NFL draft picks last
(Wash.) High School, where he matched up
spring-Dean Kirkland (Buffalo) and Jeff
against Everett High product Dennis
Pahukoa (LA Rams)
returns three start-
Erickson, the former Washington State and
ers, including tackle Lincoln Kennedy, a
current Miami coach. Education-
preseason Playboy All-American. Fam-
Snohomish High School, 1966
Bachelor
ily-Married to the former Barbara
of Science Degree in social science with a
Sommars
has two daughters, Anne (18)
minor in physical education from Western
and Kristen (2) and a son, David, born last
Washington in 1974. Personal-Gilbert-
May. Birthdate-May 15, 1948.
son is a highly-reputed offensive tactician
26
Husky Coaching Staff
W
ssistant Coaches
Randy Hart-Defensive Line Coach
Year at Washington-Fourth as defen-
degree in education from Ohio State in
sive line coach
also works with Husky
1970
earned Master's Degree in higher
point after and field goal block defense
education administration from Ohio State
teams. Off-Field Responsibilities-
in 1972. Personal-Has accrued outstand-
Medical staff, pro relations, eligibility and
ing coaching experience, serving under the
insurance. Previous Coaching Experi-
likes of the late Woody Hayes, Jim Young
ence-Graduate assistant (worked with of-
(former head coach at Arizona, Purdue &
fensive line) at Ohio State, 1970-71
Army) and Earle Bruce (currently head
offensive line coach at University of Tampa,
coach at Colorado State)
one of three
1972
defensive line coach at Iowa State,
Husky coaches with roots in Ohio
will
1973-76
defensive line coach at Purdue,
coach a defensive line led by junior All-
1977-81
defensive line coach at Ohio
American Steve Emtman, considered a
State, 1982-87. Playing Career-Let-
prime Outland Trophy candidate in 1991
tered three years each in football, wrestling
also coached defensive end Dennis
and track at South High School in
Brown, who was selected in the second
Willoughby, Ohio
was named team cap-
round of the 1990 NFL draft by the San
tain and league MVP in football at South
Francisco 49ers. Family-Randy and his
High
went on to letter three years in
wife, Linda, are the parents of two sons, Jay
football as an offensive guard at Ohio State
(14) and John (12). Birthdate-March 9,
was a member of the Ohio State club
1948.
that defeated USC 27-16 in the 1969 Rose
Bowl. Education-Bachelor of Science
Jim Lambright-Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Coordinator
Year at Washington-Fifth as assistant
fensive units have ranked high among con-
head coach, 14th as defensive coordinator
ference statistical leaders and all of them
and 23rd season overall
coaches inside
have finished in the top half of the Pac-10
linebackers and coordinates the defensive
total defense statistics each year
the
kicking game. Off-Field Responsibili-
1991 Huskies led the nation in rushing de-
ties-Defensive depth, research, equip-
fense (66.8) and turnover margin (+2.09)
ment, managers and the summer Husky
and led the Pac-10 in virtually every defen-
Football Camp. Previous Coaching Ex-
sive category
his 1984 club was the con-
perience-Assistant coach, Fife (Wash.)
ference leader in total defense and turnover
High School, 1965-66
assistant coach,
margin, and gave up the least points in the
Shoreline Community College, 1966-69
Pac-10
that team led the nation in
joined Washington staff in 1969 as line-
takeaways (51)
he has coached the likes
backer coach, and also served as secondary
of Michael Jackson (formerly of the Seattle
coach and defensive coordinator under Jim
Seahawks) and 1986 NFL first-round pick
Owens. Playing Career-Four-sport
Joe Kelly (New York Jets). Family-Jim
letterman at Everett (Wash.) High School
and his wife, Lynne, have six adult children.
attended University of Washington,
Birthdate-April 26, 1942.
where he was a two-year letterman at de-
fensive end in 1963-64
earned all-con-
ference and All-Coast honors in 1964, won
Guy Flaherty Most Inspirational Award in
1964
also named Everett's Man of the
Year in Sports in 1964. Education-Bach-
elor of Arts degree in education and physi-
cal education from Washington in 1965.
Personal-Lambright's previous 13 de-
27
W
Husky Coaching Staff
Assistant Coaches
Matt Simon-Running Back Coach
Year at Washington-Ninth as a full-time
starting inside linebacker at Eastern Ne
assistant in charge of running backs
was
Mexico for four straight years. Personal-
a graduate assistant working with defensive
Coached All-American tailback Gre
backs at Washington in 1982
also works
Lewis, who won the inaugural Doak Walke
with placekickers and kickoff return per-
Award as the nation's top running back i
sonnel. Off-Field Responsibilities-
1990
Lewis finished his UW career wit
Spring coaches clinic, spring game, grading
2,678 yards, including a record 1,279 las
and facilities. Previous Coaching Experi-
year
served as position coach of tailbac
ence-Student assistant (worked with run-
Jacque Robinson (1981-84), the only playe
ning backs) at Eastern New Mexico in 1976
in college history to win most valuabl
assistant football and track coach at
player awards in both the Rose Bowl (1982
Portales (N.M.) High School, 1977
and Orange Bowl (1985)
Huskies le
graduate assistant (coached inside line-
Pac-10 in rushing in both 1982 and 199
backers) at Eastern New Mexico in 1977
under Simon. Education-Bachelor's de
assistant football and track coach at Borger
gree in physical education and history fron
(Texas) High School, 1978
assistant
Eastern New Mexico in 1976
Master'
coach (inside and outside linebackers, tight
degree in physical education from Easter
ends, wide receivers) at Texas-El Paso,
New Mexico in 1978. Family-Matt ano
1979-81
graduate assistant at Washing-
his wife, Melanie, have a daughter, Mical
ton, 1982. Playing Career-Defensive
(4) and a son, Matt Jr. (3). Birthdate-
lineman at Burgess High School in El Paso
December 6, 1953.
during prep career
went on to be a
Larry Slade-Secondary Coach
Year at Washington-Sixth as secondary
English from Shepherd College in 1973.
coach
also works with kickoff team and
Personal-Loses All-Pac-10 cornerback
onside kickoff team. Off-Field Responsi-
Charles Mincy and co-captain Eric Briscoe,
bilities-Scouting, summer film study, fall
but returns starters Dana Hall and Tommie
film exchange, newspapers. Previous
Smith
four of Slade's UW proteges,
Coaching Experience-Offensive line
Charles Mincy (Kansas City, 1991), Le-Lo
coach and residence hall director at Shep-
Lang (Denver Broncos, 1990), Tim Peoples
herd College, Shepherdstown, W.Va.,
(St. Louis Cardinals, 1987) and Tony
1973-78
defensive line coach at Shep-
Zackery (New England Patriots, 1989),
herd College, 1978-80
defensive coor-
have been selected in the NFL draft
was
dinator, Shepherd College, 1980-82
awarded NFL Minority Coaching Fellow-
tight end coach at University of Richmond
ship in summer of 1989 and worked at Se-
(Va.), 1982-83
secondary coach and re-
attle Seahawks training camp. Family-
cruiting coordinator at Howard University,
Married and wife's name is Izetta
has a
Washington, D.C., 1983-84
secondary
son, Herbie (21), currently serving in the
coach at Southern Illinois University,
U.S. Marine Corps and a daughter.
Carbondale, Ill., 1984-85. Playing Ca-
Lyndsey (1). Birthdate-April 6, 1951.
reer-Two-time All-West Virginia Confer-
ence offensive guard at Shepherd College,
1970-71
honorable mention Little All-
America, 1971
named Most Valuable
Lineman of 1971 Civitan Bowl
member
of Shepherd's 1972 and 1973 league cham-
pionship teams. Education-Bachelor of
Science degree in biology and a minor in
28
Husky Coaching Staff
W
ssistant Coaches
Chris Tormey-Outside Linebacker Coach
Year at Washington-Fifth as outside
whom return in 1991
his punt return
linebacker coach and eighth overall
also
unit ranked 3rd nationally in 1990
also
oversees punt return team
previously
coached All-Pac-10 tight end Rod Jones,
coached tight ends for three seasons. Off-
who caught more passes (75) than any tight
Field Responsibilities-Housing, food,
end in UW history and linebacker Martin
team travel and academic counseling. Pre-
Harrison, a 10th round pick of the 49ers in
vious Coaching Experience-Assistant
1990
has a younger brother, Pete, who
football coach and physical education in-
was a letterman linebacker for the Huskies
structor at Spokane's Gonzaga Prep, 1978-
(1977-79). Family-Married to the former
79
graduate assistant coach at the Uni-
Kellie Jones, and they have two daughters,
versity of Washington, 1980-81
assis-
Leah (2) and Emily (under a year).
tant football coach at the University of
Birthdate-May 1, 1955.
Idaho, 1982-83. Playing Career-Three-
year letterman linebacker at Gonzaga Prep
in Spokane
all-city choice in 1971-72
three-year letterman linebacker at
Idaho
two-time All-Big Sky choice and
two-time Vandal defensive player of the
year. Education-Bachelor's degree in
distributive education from Idaho in 1978.
Personal-Coached All-Pac-10 lineback-
ers Donald Jones and Brett Collins, both of
Bill Wentworth-Wide Receiver Coach
Year at Washington-First year on staff
records and tied five more
welcomes the
also works with kicking game. Off-
return of the Huskies' two starting receivers
Field Responsibilities-Awards ban-
from last year, Mario Bailey and Orlando
quet, AV equipment and films and highlight
McKay. Family-Married and his wife's
film. Previous Coaching Experience-
name is Karen
she is also a graduate of
student coach at Purdue, 1978-79
Indiana University's Law School
his
graduate assistant coach (working with sec-
father, Jack, is the Dean of the Indiana
ondary & receivers) at Indiana Univer-
University School of Business. Birth-
sity, 1982-83
volunteer assistant coach
date-February 17, 1958
(working with offensive line) at Louisiana
State, 1984-85
offensive line coach at
Idaho, 1986-87
secondary coach at Cal
State-Fullerton, 1988 and offensive coordi-
nator and quarterback coach at Cal State-
Fullerton, 1989-90. Playing Career-
Played football and baseball at Cornell Col-
lege in Mt. Vernon, Iowa for two seasons
before transferring to Purdue. Educa-
tion-Bachelor of Arts degree from
Purdue University in 1980
earned a law
degree from Indiana University in 1984.
Personal-Was a member of Keith Gil-
bertson's staff at Idaho in 1986-87
as
offensive coordinator at Cal State-Fuller-
ton in 1989, the club broke 43 school
29
W
Husky Coaching Staff
Assistant Coaches
Jeff Woodruff-Quarterback Coach
Year at Washington-Ninth on staff and
gree in physical education from Kent Stat
first as quarterbacks coach
spent previ-
in 1979. Personal-Coached a pair of wid
ous seven seasons as wide receiver coach
receivers selected in the 1985 NFL draf
also coaches punters and punt team
and one each in the 1987-1990 drafts
il
was a full-time assistant working with tight
1985, Danny Greene was picked in th
ends in 1983 and also coordinated Husky
third round by the Seattle Seahawks and
JV program. Off-Field Responsibili-
Mark Pattison was chosen by the Los Ange
ties-Winter conditioning program, in-
les Raiders in the seventh round; big-pla
centive boards, weight and running pro-
wide receiver Lonzell Hill is now with the
grams. Previous Coaching Experi-
New Orleans Saints; Darryl Franklin wa
ence-Graduate assistant (working with
drafted in the fifth round by the Los Ange
wide receivers) at Kent State, 1979-80
les Rams in 1988, receiver Brian Slater wa
graduate assistant (working with tight
chosen in the 11th round of the 1989 draf
ends) at Washington, 1980-81
defen-
by the Pittsburgh Steelers and Andre Rile
sive secondary coach and recruiting coor-
was selected by the Cincinnati Bengals in
dinator at Nevada-Reno, 1982. Playing
the 12th round of the 1990 draft
il
Career-Three-sport letterman (football,
serving a three-year appointment as secre
basketball, baseball) at Ravenna (Ohio)
tary of the American Football Coaches
High School
one-year letterman quar-
Association's Assistant Football Coaches
terback/defensive back and punter at Kent
Committee. Family-Married to the
State
earned George J. Altman award
former Jill James, and they have two sons
as top scholar-athlete at Kent State his
Jared, (11) and Jordan (4), and a daughter
senior year. Education-Bachelor's de-
Jessica (6). Birthdate-February 22, 1957
Graduate Assistant Coaches
Rick Courtright
Jeff Mills
Offensive Line
Secondary
Courtright, 30, joins the Huskies this sea-
Mills, 26, returns for his second season on
son to assist coach Keith Gilbertson with
the coaching staff. His father coached
the offensive line. Courtright spent the
high school football in Indiana and Iowa
last two years as the head coach at Teton
for 18 years and his brother, Jay, is cur-
High School (Driggs, Idaho) after a sea-
rently an assistant coach at Boise State.
son as an assistant coach in Hendricks,
Mills began his coaching career at West-
Minn. and a season scouting for Wheaton
ern Washington in 1988 and he assisted at
College. Courtright graduated from
Drake in 1989, coaching the tight ends
Wheaton in 1983 where he was a four-year
and offensive line. He was a co-captain at
football letterman. During his high school
WWU as a senior, playing quarterback
career, Courtright was a four-year starter
and outside linebacker and earning two
at linebacker and was all-city, all-confer-
ence and captain for three straight years. He is pursuing his graduate
varsity letters. A communications gradu-
ate student, Mills attended Urbandale (Iowa) High School and earned his
degree in educational administration. His wife, Lois, is a career consultant.
bachelor's degree from WWU in 1988. His wife, Karmen, is the manager of
a travel agency.
30
Husky Coaching Staff
W
Graduate Assistant Coaches
Ron Milus
John Thompson
Outside Linebackers
Offensive Line
Milus, 27, enters his first season on the
Thompson, 24, returns for his second sea-
staff and will assist with the outside line-
son on the Husky staff after assisting with
backers. Milus coached the last three
the outside linebackers and the defensive
years at Lincoln High School in Tacoma
line last year. This year he will assist Keith
under his father, Bill Milus. A four-year
Gilbertson with the offensive line.
UW letterman at cornerback, Milus also
Thompson was a four-year letterman at
earned recognition as a punt returner,
Lambuth College in Jackson, Tenn., play-
racking up 49 career returns for 400 yards
ing middle linebacker and defensive end.
and one touchdown. At cornerback, Milus
Prior to joining the Huskies, he worked
registered 83 tackles, five interceptions
for one year at Dartmouth College,
and 10 pass deflections. He graduated
coaching the wide receivers. He is pursu-
from Washington with a degree in society
ing a graduate degree in public adminis-
and justice. His wife's name is Sandra and they have one child, Ryan (1).
tration after earning his undergraduate degree in political science. Thomp-
son is single. His parents, John and Mary Thompson, reside in Boca Raton,
Fla.
Joe Saunders, Jr.
Wide Receivers
Al Tufono
Saunders, 31, joins the Husky staff this
Inside Linebackers
season and will assist coach Bill
Wentworth with the wide receivers.
Tufono, 26, joins the Husky coaching staff
Saunders is a certified special education
and will assist with coaching the inside
teacher and is pursuing his graduate de-
linebackers. Tufono began his coaching
gree in education. A graduate of Franklin
career at his alma mater, Iolani High
High School in Seattle, Saunders played
School (Honolulu, Hawaii), where he
college football at Walla Walla Commu-
coached for two years. Tufono graduated
nity College and the University of Ne-
from Washington with a degree in politi-
vada-Reno. He received first team all-
cal science and is now pursuing a graduate
conference honors at both schools.
degree in public administration. Tufono
Saunders coached at Reed High School
was a three-year Husky letterman at in-
(Sparks, Nev.) for three seasons and at Hug High School (Reno, Nev.) for
side linebacker. During his career at
one season. He has also coached track for nine seasons, including two as
Washington, he recorded 55 tackles and
head coach at Hug High School. His wife, Joyce, is a teacher at Linbergh
five pass deflections. At Iolani, he was an all-state selection at linebacker
High School. They have two children, Caitlin Channele (3) and Lindsey
and defensive end for three straight years and also lettered in basketball
Ella (2).
and track. He was honorable mention all-state in basketball for two years,
and state discus champion his sophomore year. Tufono is single.
Tony Softli
Running Backs
Softli, 31, joins the Husky staff to assist
Matt Simon with the running backs. He is
pursuing a degree in the fine arts of pho-
tography. Softli's coaching experience
ranges from little league to British-Ameri-
can football. In his most recent position,
Softli was the head coach and general
manager of the Falcons British-American
football team in Blackpool, England. Prior
to that, he spent four years coaching semi-
pro and minor professional football teams
and three years with the Issaquah Little
League Association. Softli was a running back for two years at Walla Walla
Community College before playing one season as a linebacker on the
Washington squad. His father, uncle and brother are all former Husky
football players. Softli is single.
31
W
Husky Coaching Staff
All-Time Husky Coaches
Here is an all-time list of men who have
NAME
YEAR(S)
NAME
YEAR(S
served as coaches for the Husky football
Goodwin, William
1892-93
Roberts, Al
1977-8
team. It is most likely not a complete list,
Graves, D.V.
1922-38, 1942-45
Roderick, Jack
1950
particularly for the early years because of a
Grimm, Bill
1923-24
Root, Reg
1948-5.
lack of complete information. If you know
Guttormsen, George
1929
Rosenzweig, Jim
195
of oversights and can help document them,
Hall, Skip
1975-86
Roskie, Ken
1951-53
provide them to us.
Haroldson, Bill
1946
Roswell, George
1954
Head coaches appear in bold. All others
Harris, Chick
1975-80
Royal, Darrell
1956
were either assistant coaches or freshmen
Harris, Bill
1984-85
Ryan, Bob
1974-75
coaches.
Hart, Randy
1988-Present
Saban, Lou
1953
Heacock, Jim
1983-87
Sandberg, Roy
1942-47
NAME
YEAR(S)
Heatly, Dick
1957-63
Savage, C.
1925
Allen, Chuck
1974
Hunt, Claude
1917-19
Scesniak, Dick
1975-78
Allison, L.B.
1919, 1920
Jackson, Ray
1971-76
Schloredt, Bob
1963-73
Anderson, Jelly
1948, 1953
James, Don
1975-Present
Seiler, Clyde
1953
Austin, Jerry
1948
Jeffs, A.S.
1899
Sherman, Les
1926
Bagdro, Morris
1946-53
Johnson, Richard
1938-40
Simon, Matt
1983-Present
Bagshaw, Enoch
1921-29
Jones, Tugboat
1962
Slade, Larry
1986-Present
Baker, John
1953-56
Keiffer, Ike
1973-74
Slivinski, Steve
1945
Bohart, Milt
1954
Kerr, Bud
1954-55
Smith, George
1922
Brockmeyer, A.F.
1921
Klinge, Dick
1939-40
Solon, Loren
1920
Campbell, Mike
1956
Knight, Jim
1902-04
Spear, Abe
1937
Carlson, Wes
1949
Kofler, Otto
1967-72
Spellman, Bart
1925-30
Carter, George
1892
Kopay, Tony
1973-74
Stahley, Skip
1950-52
Cheek, Jerry
1968-72
Lambright, Jim
1969-Present
Stubner, Abe
1954
Cherberg, John
1946-52, 1953-55
Lamont, Dan
1930-32
Stull, Bob
1975-83
Clark, Newman
1922
Lindskog, Vern
1954
Sutherland, Jim
1955
Clark, Earl
1927-29
Lounsberry, Jim
1950-51
Sutton, Wayne
1914-16, 1923-29
Clark, Bert
1957-63
Luck, O.H.
1907
Swarthout, Jack
1956
Clemens, Carl
1897
Marx, Bill
1953-55
Talley, Darold
1952
Cobb, Charles
1894
Mathews, R.L.
1921
Tappin, Warren
1951
Collins, Ed
1930
McInroe, Lloyd
1926
Terry, Ron
1956
Comstock, N.
1900
McKeta, Don
1964-65
Thompson, Mel
1966-72
Cook, Gene
1928-29
McLarney, Art
1946
Thompson, Chuck
1973
Core, Whitey
1958-60
Michael, Mike
1951
Tindall, Ben
1920
Corrigan, Miles,
1987-Present
Minitti, Joe
1949-50
Tipps, Tom
1957-69
Coryell, Don
1950
Mitchell, Sam
1953-54
Tormey, Chris
1984-Present
Cutting, Joe
1908-09
Monroe, Bob
1964-67
Ullin, C.W.
1935-37
Cutting, Jud
1927, 1929
Mora, Jim
1975-77
Walker, Chesty
1957-65
Cutts, Oliver
1905
Moriarty, Chuck
1920
Walters, Chalmers
1925
Dailey, Ervin
1921
Moss, Perry
1950-51
Walters, Trent
1981-83
Dailey, Walter
1924
Mucha, C.
1936-37
Warsinski, Jim
1954
DeAngelis, Jimmy
1950-52
Nichols, Ralph
1895-96, 1898, 1899
Weetman, Marv
1969-72
Dobie, Gilmour
1908-16
Nunnelee, Gery
1956
Welch, Ralph1930-37,1939-41, 1942-47
Dodge, J. Sayre
1900
Odell, Howard
1948-52
Wentworth, Bill
1991-Present
Doll, Don
1955
Olson, Chuck
1950-52
White, Don
1960-68
Dorazio, Dan
1984-88
Ottele, Dick
1950
Wick, Sanford
1920-21
Dorr, Ray
1975-83
Owens, Jim
1957-74
Wilcox, Chester
1930-41
Duggins, Herb
1942-44, 1947
Palmer, Bob
1932
Wiley, Jim
1952
Eakins, Max
1911-13
Pease, John
1978-82
Willsey, Ray
1956
Eckmann, Ray
1922-29
Peasley, Ed
1961-65
Wilson, Abe
1925
Everson, Bob
1973-74
Phelan, James
1930-41
Woerner, William
1930, 1932-34
Fleming, Don
1948-49
Phillips, Dave
1964-68
Woodruff, Jeff
1983-Present
Friedman, Jack
1966-68
Pinkel, Gary
1979-90
Woody, Ken
1973-74
Gayton, Carver
1968-69
Pittman, Jim
1956
Wright, Bill
1928-30
Gilbertson, Keith
1989-Present
Place, Victor
1906-07
Wright, Jack
1901
Goodwin, John
1967-71
Pollom, Norm
1957-59
32
HUSKY PLAYERS
39
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Eric Alozie*
Bruce Bailey
Split End
Tight End
5-11, 190
Senior
9
6-5, 245
Junior
88
San Bernardino, Calif.
Seattle, Wash.
(Cajon)
(Roosevelt)
Personal-Born June 30, 1969, in Cleveland, Ohio
has two
Personal-Born July 28, 1970, in Seattle, Wash.
father, Larry
brothers
graduated last June with a degree in psychology
is an attorney and played varsity football at Dartmouth
mother
cousin, Dwight Hicks, is a former All-Pro defensive back with the
name is Mary Ann
has two brothers, Peter (18) and Andrew (7
San Francisco 49ers
cousin, Jason Hicks (Dwight's brother),
and a sister, Robin (16)
Peter is a freshman football player a
played at the University of Miami, Fla.
likes to spend time with
Princeton
graduated from high school with a 3.37 GPA
friends, dance and travel.
member of the Honor Roll and Torch Honor Society
a
Nationa
Washington-Has split time between the receiving corps and
Football Foundation Hall of Fame nominee
received the Seattl
quarterback since arriving at UW
worked at split end and flanker
All-Metro Scholar-Athlete award
political science major
in the spring after spending the 1990 season as a reserve quarter-
enjoys basketball, skiing and windsurfing.
back (fourth on depth chart)
moved back to split end during '91
Washington-Three-year squad member seeking his first varsit
spring practice
enters fall drills as the UW's No. 5 flanker but his
letter
former walk-on who earned a scholarship last year
athletic ability could help him find a spot on special teams either as
good athlete who has played tight end, center, tackle and guard
a return or coverage man
averaged nearly 32 yards on four
since becoming a Husky
began spring drills at weakside guar
returns in the spring game
1990-did not appear in a game
before being switched to tight end when a shortage arose at that spo
during the season although he did play in a UW junior varsity game
will probably remain there when fall drills open
lack
against Wenatchee Valley
1989-played in all 12 games and
experience at his new position but is a willing worker who will do al
earned his first varsity letter as a flanker/kickoff returner
did not
the little things needed to improve his game
could also be used
catch a pass in live action
had the squad's top kickoff return
as a long snapper if needed
weighed just 185 pounds when he
average (22.6 yards per return)
returned 12 kickoffs for 271
walked on as a freshman in 1988
1990-moved to center in the
yards with a long of 36 yards
moved from quarterback to flanker
spring, he finished the year number three behind Ed Cunningham
early in '89 spring practice
surged to a starting role in part
and Jim Nevelle
activity was limited to reserve duty in six of the
because of injuries at the position, and displayed good moves and
final seven games
did not play against UCLA
saw his mos
the ability to get open
caught one pass for 22 yards in the Purple
extensive duty against ASU when he played almost the entire fina
and White game
1988-served as backup quarterback behind
period
1989-squad member who saw reserve duty at offensive
starter Cary Conklin and appeared in four games
used primarily
tackle, but did not letter played three games, participating in
as run-option quarterback in short yardage situations
rushed
three quarters of each
1988-red-shirt season
worked out
four times for zero yards and was one-for-seven passing for zero
with the scout squad at tight end.
yards with no touchdowns or interceptions
capped '88 spring
drills with an impressive performance in the annual Purple and
Roosevelt-Two-year letterman under coach Dave Hookfin
White game
rallied the White squad from a 13-0 halftime deficit
played both tight end and defensive end final three seasons
to a 14-13 win
fired scoring strikes of 69 yards and 58 yards on
played tight end and outside linebacker freshman year, but did not
letter
the first two possessions of the second half to lead his club to victory
an All-Metro League selection as a tight end senior season
also rushed for 51 yards via the option
1987-red-shirt
hauled in 17 passed for 310 yards and three touchdowns for the
spent the bulk of first year running scout offense.
Roughriders while recording five sacks as a defensive end
best
season
game was a non-league tilt against Port Angeles in which he had six
Cajon-Three-year letterman quarterback and defensive back
receptions for 98 yards and one touchdown
also lettered two
earned first-team all-league honors his junior and senior seasons
seasons in basketball
averaged 10 points and six rebounds per
an All-CIF selection
picked as one of the top five blue chip
game during senior season.
candidates in San Bernardino County (Sun Telegram)
All-
Southeastern Los Angeles all-purpose runner
led his team to the
league title despite being picked to finish fourth in preseason
scored two touchdowns in 24-17 win over Ganesha in sectional
quarterfinals
also competed in track.
34
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
on a 22-yard reception against Texas A&M
best game came in
Mario Bailey**
Rose Bowl in Huskies' 28-27 come-from-behind win over UCLA
Split End
when he had six receptions for 80 yards with a 19-yard, fourth
quarter touchdown reception
had four catches for 53 yards,
5-9, 157
Senior
5
including a crucial seven-yard, fourth-down reception on the win-
ning drive against the Bruins
converted 80 percent of his catches
into first downs
named Metropolitan Federal Savings Player of
Seattle, Wash.
the Game, Texaco Star Performer and UW Offensive Player of the
(Franklin)
Week vs. UCLA
1988-saw game action as a true freshman, but
did not earn a letter
made his college debut at Oregon
played
in each of Washington's last five games of '88
joined
classmates
Orlando McKay and James Clifford as players passing up a red-shirt
season.
Franklin-Three-year letterman wide receiver and defensive back
as a senior, four votes in Best in the West poll (Long Beach Press-
Personal-Born November 30, 1970, in Oakland, Calif.
father,
Telegram), All-Metro (Seattle Times), Star Times team and Blue
Villiam, is a paint foreman and mother, Margaret, is the Red Carpet
Chip list (Seattle Times), Best in the Northwest team (Tacoma
Club Service Director with United Airlines
has an older brother,
News-Tribune)
missed three games with ankle injury, but still
Villiam
is majoring in advertising
was a member of high
had 30 catches and seven touchdowns also intercepted five
chool honor roll his senior year
enjoys fishing and bike riding in
passes on defense
as junior, All-Metro and Metro Co-Player of
the Year, second-team all-state
is spare time.
had 40 receptions, including
nine for touchdowns, and four interceptions as a junior
best
Washington-Two-year letterman at split end
a team co-
game was in junior campaign, when he recorded 12 catches for 187
aptain this year
has excellent quickness and the ability to take a
yards and three touchdowns
also a two-time All-Metro guard in
it after making a catch
extremely elusive receiver who uses
basketball for the Quakers.
extraordinary quickness to get open
very soft hands
should be
n line for a strong senior season and could contend for post-season
Receiving
nonors
listed as the starter at split end
1990-was
the
starter
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
n all 12 games at split end, including the Rose Bowl
won his
1988
4
32
8.0
0
12
second varsity letter
finished the campaign as the club's top
1989
25
357
14.3
3
31
receiver with 40 receptions for 667 yards and six touchdowns
1990
40
667
16.7
6
47t
added two catches in the Rose Bowl win over Iowa and they were
TOTAL
69
1056
15.3
9
47t
both for touchdowns
the first was a 22-yard grab with less than a
ninute left before halftime and the other came in the final period
Bailey's Career Game-by-Game Receiving
with 4:43 remaining and it covered 31 yards
was the only Husky
o catch at least one pass in all 12 games
an HM All-Pac-10
1988
choice
had his most productive game of the year at Colorado
OPPONENT
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
when he caught eight passes for 141 yards all in the second half
Stanford
1
7
7.0
0
7
won Metropolitan Federal Savings Player of the Game and Texaco
Arizona
2
13
6.5
0
8
Star Performer honors after the game
it was a career high and his
California
1
12
12.0
0
12
first 100-yard game at UW
also hit the century mark against
TOTAL
4
32
8.0
0
12
Oregon with seven grabs for 111 yards
earned mention from
UW coaches for his play against the Ducks
finished strong,
1989
catching TD passes in the final four contests and in five of the last six
OPPONENT
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
one of his TD receptions was a 47-yarder against Arizona
Texas A&M
2
26
13.0
1
22t
games
which was a career best
also had a late TD grab vs. UCLA
has
Purdue
3
49
16.3
0
22
been a key man when the Huskies pick up a first down via the
Arizona
3
56
18.6
0
31
passing route
for his career, has converted 54 of 69 catches
Colorado
2
40
20.0
1
25
(regular season) into Husky first downs (78%), including 17 of 21 on
USC
1
8
8.0
0
8
third down (81%)
goes into 1991 with 69 career catches for 1,056
UCLA
6
80
13.3
1
26
yards (15.3 avg.) with nine TD's
counting bowl games, he has
ASU
6
75
12.5
0
23
caught 73 passes for 1,143 yards (15.7 avg.) with 12 touchdowns
OSU
2
23
11.5
0
12
1989-was Washington's first wide receiver off the bench and third
Florida
2
34
17.0
1
2lt
receiver in the "trips" sets
finished fifth on squad in receptions
TOTAL
25
357
14.3
3
31
with 25 for 357 yards and three touchdowns
averaged 14.3 yards
per catch, third-best on the team
added two catches for 34 yards,
including a 21-yard touchdown reception, in win over Florida in the
Freedom Bowl
scored Washington's first touchdown of the year
35
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Mario Bailey, Continued
player
played in all 12 games and finished with five tackles
1990
added three more in the Rose Bowl
worked at left cornerbad
OPPONENT
NO
YDS
TD
LG
behind All-Pac-10 choice Charles Mincy
AVG
had his most impres
San Jose St.
2
26
13.0
1
16t
sive performance in Washington's 42-14 win over Arizona State
October
Purdue
3
54
18.0
0
24
picked off two passes in the game and broke up tw
others
USC
4
60
15.0
1
18
one of those thefts included a 42-yard return which wa
Colorado
8
141
17.6
0
40
the second longest of the year by a Husky defender
had tw
ASU
2
17
8.5
0
12
tackles against Stanford and his other stops came against ASU
UCLA and WSU
7
his lone KO return came in the finale a
Oregon
111
15.9
0
24
Stanford
2
34
17.0
I
19
Washington State and it covered 12 yards
1989-gained valu
California
4
48
12.0
0
21
able practice experience and learned the defensive schemes, bu
Arizona
3
64
21.3
1
47t
was not eligible to play as a transfer
selected Backup Player o
UCLA
2
37
18.5
1
32t
the Week twice by the coaching staff for his work on the scout squa
WSU
3
75
25.0
1
37t
before the USC and Washington State games.
Iowa
2
53
26.5
2
3lt
Western Washington-One-year letterman
won conference
TOTAL
40
667
16.7
6
47t
Freshman of the Year honors as a strong safety for the NAIA Viking
Official NCAA statistics and totals above do not include bowl games.
also garnered honorable mention all-league accolades
started five games, making 42 tackles and breaking up five passes
Bailey's Career Highs
had one interception, forced two fumbles and recovered another
returned a punt 89 yards for a score against Pacific Lutheran
Receptions-8 at Colorado, 9/29/90.
averaged 16.9 yards on seven punt returns and 21.2 yards on 19
Yards-141 at Colorado, 9/29/90.
kickoff returns.
Touchdowns-2 vs. Iowa, 1/1/91
Long Reception-47 yards vs. Arizona, 11/3/90.
Benson Tech-An honorable mention USA Today All-America
selection
earned first-team offensive and defensive all-state
Longest Touchdown Reception-47 yards vs. Arizona, 11/3/90.
recognition
an All-America pick by Super Prep and Street and
Smith
mentioned on the Tacoma News-Tribune Best in the
Northwest list
received three votes in the Long Beach Press-
Telegram Best in the West poll
runner-up for state Defensive
Walter Bailey*
Player of the Year
three-time Portland Interscholastic League
selection
rushed for 912 yards as a senior and completed two
Cornerback
touchdown passes
picked off three passes
gained 997 yards
5-11, 190
rushing as a junior
23
two-year basketball letterman who averaged
18.0 points as a senior, earning second-team All-City League honors
Junior
also a standout track and field athlete, he won the Oregon State
Portland, Ore.
Class AAA long jump title as a senior and junior (best of 23-11)
(Benson Tech/Western
ran a leg on the state champion mile relay team.
Washington)
Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1990
5
0
5
0/0
3
2
0/0
0/0
Personal-Born March 16, 1970, in Portland, Ore
the young-
est of six children, including four brothers and one sister
father,
Robert, is a security guard
mother, Joan, owns and operates her
own day-care center
drama major
enjoys listening to music
and playing tennis.
Washington-One-year letterman and former transfer from West-
ern Washington University
had an outstanding spring session
and was chosen the Most Improved Defensive Back for the Huskies
listed number two at right cornerback but is capable of becom-
ing a starter
could emerge in that role when fall drills begin
one of the best athletes on the UW club and could also be utilized
returning punts
is the team's best coverage man in the secondary
coaches feel he could develop into a fine Pac-10 cornerback
1990-won his first letter as a reserve cornerback and special teams
36
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Damon Barry
Jay Barry**
Split End
Tailback
6-1, 185
21
5-11, 190
RS-Freshman
Junior
42
Northglenn, Colo.
Northglenn, Colo.
(Northglenn)
(Kent Denver Country Day)
Personal-Born March 27, 1972, in Denver, Colo
brother, Jay,
Personal-Born October 29, 1969, in Denver, Colo,
father,
is a junior running back at Washington
father, Odell, played two
Odell, is a former Denver Broncos running back now working in
vears with the Denver Broncos in the mid-60s and now is an owner
real estate
mother's name is Glenda
has
one
brother,
of a real estate company.
mother's name is Glenda
had an
Damon, a red-shirt freshman receiver for the Huskies
business
outstanding 3.83 GPA in high school
won
Mark
E.
Duncan
administration major
enjoys playing the drums and collecting
Memorial Academic Award, the U.S. Presidential Academic Fitness
insects in his spare time.
Award, the Kappa Alpha Psi (Denver Chapter) Academic Award,
Washington-Two-year letterman tailback
will begin fall work-
and was a National Honor Society member
plans
to
major
in
outs listed number two behind Beno Bryant
a hard-working
business.
back who runs hard on every play
should also be an important
Washington-Talented young wide receiver who will be trying to
special teams player as he has been his first two seasons
was the
crack the UW depth chart at split end
listed number four behind
top UW rusher in the spring with 30 carries for 97 yards to his credit
Mario Bailey, Curtis Gaspard and Damon Mack going into fall drills
also caught seven passes
1990-earned his second letter
showed promise in his red-shirt campaign in 1990 and did some
was the club's third tailback and also one of the top special teams
good things in the spring
1990-red-shirted by the Huskies
players
ran 20 times for 102 yards during the year with three
travelled with the team to the Rose Bowl
named Backup Player
TD's
had one rush for one yard in the Rose Bowl
was
of the Week on six occasions
productive in Washington's 55-10 win over Washington State, rush-
ing eight times for 27 yards and three TD's
scored on a pair of
Northglenn-Three-year letterman and starter who played wide
receiver all three years and free safety as a senior
had 55 catches
one-yard runs and also on a two-yard run
played on all kicking
his defensive
teams and distinguished himself with six tackles and a fumble
for 745 yards and seven touchdowns as a senior
stats included six interceptions and six sacks along with 66 solo
recovery
his recovery came against UCLA and it was a critical
named first-team All-Front Range
one
picked up a muffed punt by Scott Miller and it helped set up
tackles
team co-captain
a Husky TD which evened the game at 22-all
credited with two
Conference as a wide receiver and free safety and was also chosen
first team all-state (Rocky Mountain News and Denver Post)
had
big hits by the coaches against California
blocked a punt in the
third period against Arizona
won mention from the UW staff for
40 catches as a junior and named first-team team All-Front Range
team MVP in 1989 and named to Street & Smith's
his kicking team play against Arizona and UCLA
1989-
Conference
Top 100
named first-team All-American by Max Emfinger
finished third on the club in rushing with 100 net yards on 26 carries
best game as-a prep was VS. Fairview when he caught 13 passes with
(3.8 average) with no touchdowns and a long run of 12 yards during
three touchdowns and 20 solo tackles
prep coach was Dan Gallas
the regular season
caught one pass for one yard
rushed for
captain of the basketball team
averaged 18.5 ppg and played
career-high 40 yards on 10 carries VS. Purdue rushed five times
also lettered in track, qualifying
for 30 net yards in UW's Freedom Bowl win and broke loose for a
in the all-state basketball game
for State on a relay team
named Northglenn High School
30-yard gain late in the contest
1988-red-shirt season spent
Outstanding Male Athlete of the Year for 1990 and was a recipient
working with the scout team.
of the U.S. Marine Corps Distinguished Athlete Award.
Kent Denver Country Day-Four-year letterman running back
and defensive back
as a senior, named honorable mention All-
America (USA Today), all-state (all classifications), AA all-state and
Player of the Year (Rocky Mountain News) and AA all-state (Denver
Post)
led the state as a senior when he rushed for 1,726 yards and
23 touchdowns as a senior; finished No. 8 in all-time Colorado
career rushing (4,175 yards) and scored 50 career touchdowns
also intercepted 28 passes in high school career
top game as a
senior was vs. Lutheran when he rushed for 250 yards and five
touchdowns
team was undefeated in Metro League play during
career (1984-87) and won AA state championship in 1985
37
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Jay Barry, Continued
basketball letterman who averaged 22 ppg
named second-team
Todd Bridge
all-state and Metro League MVP as a senior
second-team all-
Offensive Tackle
state in lacrosse as a sophomore
was a district champion in track
in the 100m (10.93) and 200m as a senior.
6-5, 268
Junior
62
Rushing
Montesano, Wash.
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
1989
26
100
0
100
3.8
0
12
(Montesano)
1990
20
102
0
102
5.1
3
16
TOTAL
46
202
0
202
4.4
3
16
Eric Bjornson
Quarterback
Personal-Born August 6, 1969, in Ellensburg, Wash.
father
6-5, 210
14
Steve, is a high school vice principal and a former football lettermar
RS-Freshman
at Central Washington
mother, Lynne, is a first-grade teacher
has one sister, Darcie (14)
good high school student with 3.3
Oakland, Calif.
GPA
made school's honor roll every quarter was Lion's Club
(Bishop O'Dowd)
Boy of the Month
history major who would like to teach and
coach after graduation
rooms with Mark Brunell and Dave
Hoffmann enjoys swimming, fishing and lifting weights.
Washington-Three-year varsity squad member
has been in
the UW system for three seasons and has played all three spots on
the line-guard, center and tackle
worked at guard the entire
spring but will open fall drills at tackle where he is listed number
Personal-Born December 15, 1971, in San Francisco, Calif.
three at strongside tackle behind Siupeli Malamala and Pete
Pierson
chosen as a scholar-athlete by the Oakland Tribune and was also a
has worked hard to gain size and strength which has held
National Football Foundation Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete as a
him back in the past
1990-began the season at strongside
senior
had a 4.02 GPA and earned some college credits while in
guard before moving to center early in the season where he was
high school
majoring in mathematics.
fourth on the depth chart for most of the year
saw action in just
one quarter each against both Arizona and Washington State
Washington-Will begin the pre-season listed second on the
1989-played on the scout squad the entire season and did not
depth chart behind Billy Joe Hobert by virtue of the injury to Mark
letter
earned backup Player of the Week recognition from
Brunell
coaches like his size, intelligence and his overall vision
coaching staff for his play with the scout team prior to the regular-
on the field
has a good arm but needs to play and gain game
season finale against Washington State
1988-red-shirt
season
experience
made strides in the spring and will have to be ready
practiced at offensive guard.
to play when fall drills begin now that Brunell appears to be out for
the season
1990-red-shirted
toiled as the team's third
Montesano-Three-year football letterman
played tight end
and linebacker in first two seasons, but moved to the offensive and
quarterback behind Brunell and Hobert
made all the road trips.
defensive lines as senior
two time All-West Cowlitz League OL/
Bishop O'Dowd-Started at quarterback for three straight years
DL
as senior, Blue Chip list (Seattle Times) and Best in the
completed 118-of-211 passes for 1,418 yards and 14 touchdowns
Northwest (Tacoma News-Tribune)
team ranked third in the
in 1989
scored just one rushing touchdown during the year, but
state as senior and won league for seventh consecutive year
that key score led his team to the East Shore Athletic League title
lettered four years in basketball and track & field
fourth in state
over Richmond Kennedy
team finished 10-1 and advanced to
shot put and discus as a sophomore
won state Class A shot put
the CIF North Coast playoffs
won second-team All-East Shore
title as junior (52-0) and finished third in the discus (154-4)
won
Athletic League honors as a senior and was also honorable mention
discus title and finished second in the shot as senior.
All-East Bay
completed 109-of-196 passes for 1,421 yards as a
junior with 10 touchdown passes after completing 82-of-176 for
1,235 yards and 12 touchdowns as a sophomore
his three-year
totals were 309 completions in 583 attempts (.530) for 4,074 yards
and 36 touchdowns
had five touchdown passes in one game as a
sophomore against Albany High School and threw for 340 yards
with three touchdowns against Encinal
named to the Tacoma
News-Tribune's Western 100
prep coach was Paul Perenon
also played basketball and baseball
averaged 14.2 ppg in basket-
ball.
38
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
1970)
has rushed for a TD in nine straight games including the
Mark Brunell*
Rose Bowl
his most impressive statistic was in the passing
department
had six interceptions in the first four games and then
Quarterback
had just two in the final seven regular season games and both of
6-2, 205
11
those came in one game (UCLA)
worked
his
streak
of
consecu-
Junior
tive passes without an interception to 128 before the Bruins' Eric
Turner picked off a pass in the final quarter
he
was
trying
to
Santa Maria, Calif.
break Steve Pelluer's school record of 137 without an interception
(St. Joseph)
in all, he played six games without an interception
the only
game he failed to throw a TD pass was against Arizona State and the
Huskies prevailed, 42-14
had three scoring passes in the season
finale against Washington State and two each against Stanford and
Arizona
scored or passed for at least one TD in all 11 games
during the year
even got into the act as a receiver against
California, scoring on an 11-yard pass from halfback Beno Bryant
averaged nearly 200 yards a game (197.8) in total offense for the
Personal-Born September 17, 1970, in Los Angeles, Calif.
year and figured in 23 touchdowns for the Huskies (14 passing, 8
ather, David, is a teacher and coach who played college baseball at
rushing and 1 reception)
started 140 drives as the UW quarter-
Cal Poly-SLO
father was also the LA City Player of the Year in
back and Washington scored on 50 of those (36%) with 40 TD's to
aseball as a senior in high school
mother, Sharon, is an escrow
his credit
his 2,176 yards in total offense were the 4th best effort
officer
high school honor roll student with a 3.9 GPA
history
in UW history
1989-served as Cary Conklin's backup
najor
is the first left-handed quarterback in the 17-year Don
played in three games, but did not letter
completed 6 of 12
ames era and the first Husky lefty since Sandy Lederman (1953-
passes (.500) for 57 yards with two interceptions
saw first
5)
enjoys listening to music, playing guitar and surfing.
collegiate action in the second game of the season vs. Purdue
Washington-Fourth-year junior who won his first letter last sea-
entered the Purdue game with 1:56 to go in the third quarter
on as the Huskies' starting quarterback
was expected to play a
finished his outing against the Boilermakers by completing 2 of 6
key role in UW success again in 1991 before he suffered an injury to
attempts for 19 yards and one interception
eight games later,
his right knee (anterior cruciate) in a spring scrimmage
the
saw his next action at Oregon State and completed 4 of 6 passes for
njury required surgery and it will probably cause him to miss the
38 yards and one interception
was close to starting the second
1991 season
the UW medical staff feels the earliest he could
half at California because of a pulled abdominal muscle suffered by
possibly return, if everything goes well, is in November
1990-
Conklin, but Conklin was able to finish out the game
had an
made the most of his first year as a starter
won
his
first
varsity
impressive stint in the Freedom Bowl win, running for a 20-yard
etter and was named the Outstanding Player in the 1991 Rose Bowl
touchdown and hitting on 3 of 5 passes for 25 yards
1988-red-
also won second team All-Pac-10 honors behind Oregon's Bill
shirt season
included in travel squad.
Musgrave
beat out a number of other touted quarterbacks for
St. Joseph-Three-year letterman quarterback
also played
that honor
showed exceptional poise for a player with limited
safety as a senior
three-year starter
named to The Sporting
game experience going into the season
had a big game in the
News Top 100
eight votes in Best in the West (Long Beach Press-
Rose Bowl, completing 14 of 22 passes for 163 yards with two TD's
Telegram)
chosen to Western 100 (Tacoma News-Tribune) and
and one interception
also rushed 10 times for 48 yards and
Super Prep All-America teams
two time all-league QB
two
scored twice on runs of five and 20 yards
got
off
to
a
slow
start
time All-Desert Mountain Conference (First Interstate)
All-
early in the year, but came on to lead the Huskies to their first Rose
Santa Barbara County. (Santa Barbara News-Press) as a senior
Bowl berth since 1981
had a big effort vs. USC, throwing for 197
completed 148-of-273 pass attempts for 2,086 yards and 10 touch-
yards and running for 38 more in 31-0 victory
was equally adept
downs as a senior
all-league and second team All-Santa Barbara
as a runner and passer and his statistics reflected this
finished
County as a junior
completed 502-of-912 passes for 5,893 yards
second on the squad in rushing with 105 carries for 444 yards and
and 41 touchdowns during high school career
had
top
game
of
eight TD's and completed 118 of 253 passes for 1,732 yards with 14
405 yards and four touchdowns passing vs. Santa Paula as a senior
TD's and just eight interceptions
the UW coaching staff consid-
team advanced to CIF finals in 1986 and CIF semi-finals in '87
ers him the best running quarterback for the Huskies since Warren
was a second-team all-league guard in basketball and was a four-
Moon in 1977
his rushing total was the most by a UW quarter-
time all-league baseball player
was recruited by California,
back since Denny Fitzpatrick gained 697 in 1974 and it was the most
Stanford, UCLA and USC.
by a Pac-10 quarterback since Ronald Veal of Arizona rushed for
566 in 1987
ran for 47 yards on Washington's second play from
Passing
scrimmage against San Jose State in the opener to help set up a field
YEAR
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
goal
matched that 47-yard scamper a week later against Purdue,
1989
12
6
2
57
.500
0
14
but this one was for a TD, in the 20-14 victory on the road
had
1990
253
118
8
1732
.466
14
67
76 yards rushing at Purdue which was his best performance until he
TOTAL
265
124
10
1789
.468
14
67
gained 87 yards against California on the ground
his 1,732 yards
passing were the second best effort ever by a UW sophomore
quarterback (exceeded only by Sonny Sixkiller's 2,303 yards in
39
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Mark Brunell, Continued
Brunell Game-by-Game Passing
Rushing
1989
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
1989
4
12
0
12
3.0
0
14
OPPONENT
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
1990
105
547
103
444
4.2
10
47t
Purdue
6
2
1
19
.333
0
14
TOTAL
109
559
103
456
4.2
10
47t
Oregon St.
6
4
1
38
.667
0
38
Florida
5
3
0
25
.600
0
14
Total Offense
TOTAL
12
6
2
57
.500
0
38
YEAR
RUSH
PASS
TOTAL
1989
12
57
1990
69
1990
444
1732
2176
OPPONENT
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
TOTAL
456
1789
2245
San Jose St.
27
7
1
66
.259
1
16t
Purdue
24
11
1
150
.458
1
35t
Brunell Game-by-Game Rushing
USC
23
12
1
197
.522
1
67
Colorado
34
16
3
190
.471
1
40
1989
Arizona St.
19
13
0
163
.684
0
51
Oregon
22
11
0
193
.500
1
45t
OPPONENT
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Stanford
16
9
0
148
Purdue
.563
2
35t
1
2
0
2
2.0
0
2
California
21
10
0
181
.476
1
56t
Oregon St.
3
10
0
10
3.3
0
9
Arizona
18
11
0
169
Florida
.611
2
1
47t
20
0
20
20.0
1
20t
UCLA
34
10
2
137
TOTAL
.294
1
4
12
47
0
12
3.0
0
9
Washington St.
15
8
0
138
.533
3
37t
1990
Iowa
22
14
1
163
.636
2
32
OPPONENT
TC
YG
YL:
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
TOTAL
253
118
8
1732
.466
14
67
San Jose State
10
78
14
64
6.4
0
47
*Official NCAA statistics and totals above do not include bowl games.
Purdue
16
96
20
76
4.8
1
47t
USC
8
41
3
38
4.8
0
11
Colorado
9
15
Brunell's Career Highs
11
4
0.4
1
5
Arizona St.
12
57
12
45
3.8
1
18
Passes Attempted-34 vs. UCLA, 11/10/90 & Colorado, 9/29/90
Oregon
13
69
13
56
4.3
2
17
Passes Completed-16 vs. Colorado, 9/29/90
Stanford
3
14
0
14
4.7
1
7
California
7
Passing Yards-197 vs. USC, 9/21/90
96
9
87
12.4
1
34
Arizona
8
18
12
6
0.8
1
7
Touchdown Passes-3 vs. Washington St., 11/17/90
UCLA
9
30
5
25
2.8
1
14
Rushing Attempts-16 vs. Purdue, 9/15/90
Washington St.
10
33
4
29
2.9
1
6
Rushing Yards-87 vs. California, 10/27/90
Iowa
10
48
20
28
2.8
2
20t
Rushing TD's-2 vs. Oregon, 10/13/90; vs. Iowa, 1/1/91
TOTAL
105
547
103
444
4.2
10
47t
Longest Run-47 vs. San Jose State, 9/8/90 & Purdue, 9/15/90
Total Plays-43 VS. UCLA, 11/10/90 & Colorado, 9/29/90
Total Offense Yards-268 vs. California, 10/27/90; 249 vs.
Oregon, 10/13/90; 235 VS. USC, 9/22/90.
Husky Fact
Pacific-10 Overall and Conference Win-Loss Records During the 1980s
The Pacific-10 Conference football team with the most victories in the last decade? The Washington Huskies, with 84 wins in the 1980s.
OVERALL
CONFERENCE
SCHOOL
W
L
T
PCT
W
L
T
PCT
Washington
84
33
2
.760
51
24
2
.675
UCLA
82
30
6
.720
52
20
5
.708
Southern California
78
36
3
.679
56
17
2
.760
Arizona State
74
36
4
.667
40
27
4
.592
Arizona
67
40
5
621
42
30
5
.578
Washington State
53
55
4
.491
33
40
4
.455
Oregon
50
58
4
.464
31
44
2
.416
Stanford
44
65
2
.405
30
47
2
.392
California
37
69
4
.355
22
55
4
.284
Oregon State
22
85
4
.216
10
63
4
.159
40
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
eight touchdowns, including three of 70 or more yards
twice
Beno Bryant**
selected as the Pac-10's Special Teams Player of the Week (Arizona
Tailback
amd Washington St.)
UW coaches named him as one of the
team's Kicking Game Players of the Week on seven occasions
5-11, 175
29
was Greg Lewis' understudy at tailback for the first nine games
Junior
before being pressed into full-time service against UCLA when
Lewis went down with a knee injury
he also was the starter
Los Angeles, Calif.
against Washington State when Lewis was out and had his best
(Dorsey)
outing as a runner in his first start, rushing 23 times for 112 yards for
his first 100-yard game
finished third on the squad in rushing
with 73 attempts for 386 yards and five TD's.
also had seven
catches for 70 yards
ran three times for 47 yards in the Rose
Bowl and had a 38-yard run to his credit in the win
has
outstand-
ing breakaway speed and had the longest run from scrimmage by a
Husky, a 73-yard scoring dash VS. Arizona,
even got his name
in the scoring column as a passer when he threw an 11-yard TD pass
Personal-Born January 1, 1971, in Los Angeles, Calif.
given
to Mark Brunell against California
was UW's top kickoff return
irst name is Wilson
has two older brothers
father, Wilson, is
man but had just 10 returns for a 21.2 average with a long of 35
computer technician and his mother, Evelyn, works in accounting
against Stanford and Arizona
ranked eighth in the conference in
had a 3.2 GPA in high school
was on the honor roll as a senior
all-purpose yards with 1,228 yards (111.6 yards-per-game)
his
hails from same high school as former Huskies Vince
best game during the season was against Arizona when he had 194
Veathersby and Charles Mincy
pre-social work major.
yards
had 183 vs. Arizona State and 147 against Washington St.
Washington-Two-year letterman who has made an impact as a
1989-earned first letter primarily as a kickoff returner
one
productive return man and running back
backed
up
Greg
Lewis
of three true freshmen-along with Shane Pahukoa and Tommie
is a sophomore and is listed as the starter at tailback going into the
Smith-to letter
returned 20 kickoffs for 409 yards (20.5 yard
991 fall drills
suffered a broken shoulder in the spring game but
average) with a long of 45 yards
led the team in kickoff return
e should be at full strength when fall drills resume
is probably
yardage
finished eighth in the Pac-10 in kickoff returns
long
he swiftest back in the UW stable with a 40-yard dash time to his
return of 45 yards came at USC
also had 43-yarder at California
credit
that speed gives him explosive, big-play potential which
and a 37-yarder vs. Colorado
had a career high of five returns for
he demonstrated last year
rushing, receiving and kick return
103 yards against Arizona State
best game average was 32.5
abilities make him a prime all-purpose threat
has
also
competed
yards per return at Cal (two attempts)
also finished fifth on the
as a sprinter for the Husky track team, but did not run last spring,
squad in rushing with 24 yards on seven carries with no touchdowns
nstead concentrating on football after doing double duty his first
and a long run of 17 yards at Oregon State.
two years
ran opening leg of UW's Pac-10 winning 4x400m relay
Dorsey-Lettered in football and track
fóotball coach was Paul
team (3:06.92) in 1990 along with football teammate Orlando
Knox
rushed for 1,400 yards on 120 carries as a senior and caught
McKay
went on to compete on 4x400m relay team that finished
10
passes
for
130
yards
helped his squad to a 9-3 record and a
fifth at NCAA Championships (3:04.73)
ran
4x100m
relay,
200m
berth in the city playoffs where it reached the section semis
and 400m at the conference championships in 1990
established
scored 17 touchdowns in 1988
won a number of honors, includ-
personal bests in the 200m (21.54) and 400m (47.28) in 1990
ing all-city, MVP of the league and Player of the Year in the league
1990-won his second varsity letter and was chosen first team All-
excelled in track as a sprinter and 400-meter man
won the
Pac-10 as a return man
contributed as both a runner and record-
state 400-meter title during senior year (47.52) and ran the anchor
setting punt return man for the Huskies and established himself as
leg on the mile relay which won the state title
has run a 46 flat in
one of the most dangerous punt return men in college football
the 400 and was one of the best in the nation in that category on the
ranked second nationally in punt returns with a 15.6 average to
prep level as a senior
clocked the fastest 400 time in the state of
Colorado's Dave McCloughan
nearly set a new Pac-10 record for
California during senior track season (46.63) was
fifth
in
the
state
most punt return yards in one season when he finished with 36
400-meters as a junior
was second in the 400 at the 1989 Arcadia
returns for 560 yards
the all-time record was 570 by USC's Mike
National Meet and was also second in both the 100 and 200
won
Battle set in 1967 on 47 returns
broke Bill Cahill's school record
the Sunkist Invitational 60-yard dash for prep football players in
for season punt return yards (421)
had three returns for touch-
Southern California with a clocking of 6.22 in the winter of 1989.
downs which tied a school (Mark Lee, 1979) and conference mark
(four others including Lee)
had a 52-yard return for a score in
Rushing
the opener against San Jose State which helped seal the UW's 20-17
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NET
AVG
TD
LG
win and then returned his second for a score against Arizona State
1989
4
12
0
12
3.0
0
14
when he raced 82 yards which was the fifth longest in UW history
1990
73
402
16
386
5.3
5
73t
his other came against Arizona when he scored from 70 yards out
TOTAL
77
414
16
398
5.2
5
73t
also had returns of 39 yards against Oregon, 38 yards vs. Colorado
and 34 yards against California
already ranks fifth in career punt
returns on UW list
had two punt returns for 33 yards in the Rose
Bowl, including a 29-yarder
Averaged 40.0 yards for each of his
41
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Beno Bryant, Continued
Punt Returns
Hillary Butler*
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Inside Linebacker
1989
1
7
7.0
0
7
1990
36
560
15.6
3
82t
6-2, 218
TOTAL
37
567
15.3
3
82t
Sophomore
45
All Purpose Running
Tacoma, Wash.
YEAR
RUSH
REC
PUNT
KO
TOTAL
(Lakes)
1989
12
4
7
409
432
1990
386
70
560
212
1228
TOTAL
398
74
567
621
1660
(Note: Attempted and completed one pass for 11-yard TD to Mark Brunell VS.
California, 10/27/90).
Personal-Born January 5, 1971, in San Francisco, Calif.
ha
two brothers and two sisters
father, Arthur, is a professiona
Bryant Game-by-Game Rushing
soldier in the Army
mother's name is Dolores
travele
extensively with father
has lived in Germany, Belgium, Kansas
1989
Ohio and San Francisco
cousin, Andre Thornton, played base
OPPONENT
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
ball for the Cleveland Indians
.
another cousin, Sidney Thornton
Purdue
4
10
5
5
1.3
0
6
played six years with the Pittsburgh Steelers and was on two Supe
Oregon St.
3
20
1
19
6.3
0
17
Bowl clubs
another cousin, the late Gary Lewis, played with th
TOTAL
7
30
6
24
3.4
0
17
49ers
speech major.
1990
Washington-Won his initial varsity letter as a backup to Chico
OPPONENT
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Fraley and as a special teams performer
appears to have all the
San Jose St.
2
3
4
-1
-0.5
0
3
tools to be an outstanding linebacker and just needs to be on the
Purdue
field
0
0
0
0
0.0
0
0
has excellent speed and quickness and reminds the UW
USC
8
28
2
26
3.3
0
10
coaches of former Husky, Joe Kelly, a former number one draft picl
Colorado
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
of the Cincinnati Bengals and currently with the New York Jets
Arizona St.
6
21
3
18
3.0
1
6
height and frame can carry more weight
one of the fastest inside
linebackers
Oregon
6
46
3
43
7.2
1
29t
better than 4.5 speed in the 40-yard dash and has
Stanford
9
35
1
34
3.8
0
14
enough speed to play the roverback position according to the UW
California
coaches
6
43
0
43
7.2
1
13
worked with the number one unit all during the spring
Arizona
1
73
0
73
73.0
1
73t
and will be battling Chico Fraley for the starting inside linebacke
UCLA
12
39
1
38
3.2
1
13
spot when fall drills begin
voted the Most Improved Linebacker
Washington St.
23
114
2
112
4.9
0
14
in the spring
1990-appeared in all 11 games and the Rose Bow
Iowa
3
47
0
47
15.7
0
38
and won his first varsity letter
primarily a backup and specia
TOTAL
73
402
16
386
5.3
5
73t
teams player for the Huskies
led all UW players in tackles on the
kickoff team with 10
spent the season second on the depth at
°Official NCAA statistics and totals above do not include bowl games
inside linebacker behind Chico Fraley
contributed 22 tackles
including 17 solo stops
added two stops in the Rose Bowl
Bryant's Career Highs
broke up a pass and had a fumble recovery against Washington State
had season best five tackles against California and chipped in
Rushing Attempts-23 vs. Washington St., 11/17/90.
with four apiece vs. ASU and Arizona received a Big Hit Award
Rushing Yards-112 VS. Washington St., 11/17/90.
from the UW coaches for a play against Colorado
also won
Longest Run-73 yards vs. Arizona, 11/3/90.
kicking team mention against San Jose State. 1989-red-shirt sea-
Receptions-2 vs. Stanford, 10/20/90.
son
Backup Player of the Week three times and honorary scout
Yards-26 vs. Stanford, 10/20/90.
team captain VS. Arizona State.
Longest Reception-23 yards vs. Stanford, 10/20/90.
Lakes-All-South Puget Sound League and all-area senior year as
Punt Returns-5 in four games.
a linebacker
second team All-SPSL as a tight end
led team in
Yards-131 vs. Arizona St., 10/6/90.
tackles and interception returns as a senior
also lettered in track
Longest Return-82 yards vs. Arizona St., 10/6/90.
and basketball
went to the state meet in the 100m dash his senior
year
ran third leg on state title mile relay team
also competed
in the 200m and the 300m low hurdles
led basketball team in
points scored in his senior year.
Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1990
17
5
22
0/1
0
0
0/0
0/0
42
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Richie Chambers
James Clifford*
Linebacker
Inside Linebacker
6-2, 205
32
6-2, 240
RS-Freshman
Junior
53
Lake Stevens, Wash.
Seattle, Wash.
(Lake Stevens)
(Ingraham)
ersonal-Born August 31 1972, in San Antonio, Texas
has a
Personal-Born March 23, 1970, in Seattle, Wash,
father's
bunger brother, Craig, and a younger sister, Kera
had
a
3.4
high
name is Ed and mother's name is Pat
has two older sisters
an
chool GPA and was an honor roll student
pre-Arts and Science
uncle, Rusty Morrison, played football at Central Washington
hajor.
majoring in personnel management
had a 3.27 high school GPA
Vashington-Coming off a red-shirt season
made great strides
was drafted while in high school by the Seattle Mariners
the spring and showed improvement physically which he'll need
received Ingraham's 1988 Outstanding Citizenship Award
en-
continue to do
expected to go into fall camp listed third
joys playing basketball and lifting weights in leisure time.
ehind Jaime Fields and Brett Collins at weakside linebacker
Washington-His 1990 season came to a screeching halt in the
990-red-shirted
played weakside linebacker behind Brett
first week of fall drills when he suffered a right knee injury which
Collins, Jaime Fields and Virgil Jones most of the year.
required surgery
was expected to be one of the UW team leaders
Lake Stevens-Three-year starter who played linebacker and
and one of the top linebackers in the Pac-10 Conference based on
alfback
his highly-productive sophomore season
used a red-shirt season
rushed for 1,058 yards and scored 16 touchdowns as a
enior and averaged 6.7 yards-per-carry
had a 229-yard game
last year since he didn't sit out his freshman season
appears to
gainst Edmonds during his career
ran for 669 yards as a junior
have returned physically and it should be full go when fall drills
won first team team All-Wesco as a junior and senior and second
begin
did not participate in any contact last spring as he contin-
eam all-area both years
played for coach Fred Emerson
ued his rehabilitation, but took part in all other aspects of spring ball
was
is an emotional leader
lso an outstanding wrestler
finished second in the state at 190
a great hitter
exceptional against
ounds as a junior and then came back to win the state title as a
the run and should be one of the keys to the Huskies' attacking
was third in the state track meet in the intermediate and
defense
take-charge attitude shows in practice and on game days
enior
igh hurdles his junior year
state champion in the 110m and
is listed behind Dave Hoffmann at one of the inside spots heading
00m Class AA hurdles as a senior
Voted Snohomish County
into fall practice, but if he is healthy, the UW staff expects he'll find
Athlete of the Year and the Everett Herald Athlete of the Year in
a way to get into the lineup
1990-missed the entire campaign
989.
after suffering a right knee injury at the start of fall practice which
Husky Fact
later required surgery
suffered the injury on the first day of
practice in pads in August
spent nearly a month on the sidelines
undergoing rehabilitation before attempting to play just prior to the
Bowl 'Em Over
USC game attempted to play but his knee was not 100 percent
No major athletic conference has enjoyed more bowl success
and he opted for surgery shortly after
1989-the Pac-10's
than the Pacific-10 Conference. The league has won nearly 55
leading tackler with 164 stops
won his second letter in his first
percent of its bowl games. Below are the all-time records for
year as a starter
was in double figures in tackles in nine of 11
major collegiate conferences from 1902-90. Last year the
games with a high of 27 against USC
his 27-tackle effort earned
conference had five teams participate in post-season play,
him Chevrolet/ABC-TV's Player of the Game for the Huskies
including the Huskies, who bested Iowa, 46-34, in the Rose
also chosen as the Metropolitan Federal Player of the Game (by
Bowl.
vote of Husky Media) and the Texaco Star Performer (by KOMO
CONFERENCE
W
L
T
PCT
Radio)
his other big games were against Arizona State (19 stops)
Pacific-10
70
57
6
.549
and Arizona (19 tackles) and Washington State (17 tackles, three for
Atlantic Coast
52
46
3
.530
loss/sack)
overall he had nine tackles for losses, broke up five
Southeastern
107
95
10
.528
passes, caused one fumble and recovered two others
had one of
Big 8
55
59
1
.483
the year's big plays when he hit Oregon tight end Joe Meerten and
Big Ten
46
52
0
.470
caused a fumble which he recovered at the UW 40-yard line in the
Western Athletic
25
29
2
.464
last minute-and-a-half, allowing the Huskies to run out the clock to
Southwest
66
79
9
.458
preserve a 20-14 win
picked as UW's Defensive Player of the
Week for his play against California
collected 17 tackles, includ-
43
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
James Clifford, Continued
spring drills
1990-did not play in a varsity game and his loi
ing one for loss, a sack, a fumble recovery and two pass deflections
activity came in a junior varsity game against Wenatchee Valley
was named honorable mention All-Pac-10 and he was also
spent much of the year behind Tommie Smith, Shane Pahokoa ai
recipient of the Earle T. Glant "Tough Husky" Award as voted on by
Louis Jones at free safety
1989-practiced at the rover positic
the coaching staff
1988-played in all 11 games, predominantly
suffered a knee sprain in the UW junior varsity's 31-6 victo
on the kickoff coverage team
had 19 total tackles (eight solo, 11
over Yakima Valley CC on September 22
1988-red-shi
assists)
intercepted a fumble in the California game
was the
season while laboring on the scout team
six times named Backu
only true freshman to letter
one of three freshmen, along with
Player of the Week by Husky coaching staff.
wide receivers Mario Bailey and Orlando McKay, to earn varsity
Procter Hug-Two-year letterman free safety and quarterback
time.
earned second team all-state and first team all-conference honors
Ingraham-Four-year letterman linebacker and fullback
a free safety during junior season
as a
was a three-year letterman
senior, named honorable mention All-America (USA Today), all-
basketball and averaged 26.0 points per game as a senior
an Al
state (Sportswriters Assn., Seattle P-I), Star Times and Blue Chip
America selection (USA Today, Street and Smith's) in senior yea
(Seattle Times)
three-time All-Metro linebacker
1987 Metro
during summer, was voted MVP of the state football all-sta
Defensive Player of the Year
Best in the Northwest team
game (Sertoma Classic) and, the following night, earned MV
(Tacoma News-Tribune) as a senior
recorded 142 (94 solo/48
honors again in the state all-star basketball game with a 25-poir
assists) tackles in eight games and rushed 48 times for 356 yards (7.4
performance.
avg.) and six touchdowns as a senior
four-year letterman first
baseman/designated hitter in baseball who was drafted by the Se-
attle Mariners in spring of '88
all-state as a senior
hit .381
with a slugging percentage of .714 as a senior
three-time All-
Metro selection
hit .410 with a league-leading nine home runs as
Brett Collins
a junior.
Weakside Linebacker
Defensive Statistics
6-2, 228
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF INT°
T/LOSS
SACKS
Senior
46
1988
8
11
19
0/0
0
1
0/0
0/0
1989
88
76
164
1/1
5
0
11/22#
2/8
Portland, Ore.
TOTAL
96
87
183
1/1
5
1
11/22#
2/8
(Glencoe)
°Includes intercepted fumble; #tackles for loss include sacks.
Ricky Cobb
Free Safety
Personal-Born October 8, 1968, in Sheridan, Wyo.
has on
sister
6-0, 201
graduated from high school with a 3.4 GPA
is majorin
12
in political science
scholar-athlete representative for the Metro
Junior
League in high school
enjoys playing basketball and golf and
Reno, Nev.
listening to music in his spare time.
(Procter Hug)
Washington-Three-year letterman who has been a starter each O
those seasons
will be a Husky co-captain this fall
was in
battle with Jaime Fields for the starting weakside linebacker spot in
spring drills before a thigh injury forced him to miss the final weel
of drills and the spring game.
possesses outstanding work habits
and gets the most out of his ability. works hard both on and off the
field
one of the best linebackers against the run and improved as
a pass rusher
Personal-Born May 15, 1970, in Reno, Nev.
has made progress as a player each of the last three
mother, Lynette,
is a U.S. Postal Worker
years and the coaching staff expects him to continue to do so
has one younger sister, Adrienne
an
uncle, Louis Wright, had a distinguished NFL career with the
both Collins and Fields have been starters in the past and they
Denver Broncos
majoring in African-American Studies
should wage another battle this fall for the starting spot
1990-
enjoys reading and listening to music.
picked up his third varsity letter
began the season as a backup to
Jaime Fields at weakside linebacker, but when Fields went down
Washington-Fourth-year junior
has yet to see his first varsity
with an ankle injury against Purdue, he stepped in and turned in an
game action
did not participate in spring drills due to scholastic
outstanding year
capped his strong campaign by winning second
problems which could make it difficult for him to work himself into
team All-Pac-10 honors
picked up Big Hit Award from UW staff
the picture at free safety
has outstanding athletic ability and is a
for hits against USC and Stanford and his play against the Cardinal
hard-working player
listed third in the depth at free safety after
earned him a nomination. from the Husky staff as the Pac-10
44
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
rett Collins, Continued
Brian Conlan
efensive Player of the Week
his nine stops against Stanford
ere a season high and three of those were for losses
also had a
Offensive Tackle
ck in the win
compiled 52 tackles to tie Eric Briscoe for fifth
made four stops in the Rose Bowl and one of
6-6, 285
ace on the squad
ose was a sack for minus nine yards
also
broke
a
pass
RS-Freshman
73
up
used a fumble vs. Stanford and broke up two passes
had 12
Delta, British Columbia,
ckles for loss for -61 yards and five of those were QB sacks
Canada
sulting in 31 yards in losses
two of his sacks came against
alifornia
added eight tackles VS. Oregon and seven vs. Colorado
(South Delta Senior
had tackles for losses in nine of 11 games
1989-appeared
in
Secondary)
ght games with starts in the first three games against Texas A&M,
urdue and Colorado
was a reserve the next five games before a
islocated elbow against UCLA sent him to the sidelines for the
nal three games
returned to action in the Freedom Bowl win
ver Florida
finished the year with 17 tackles, including a season
Personal-Born May 7, 1972, in Kamloops, British Columbia,
est of seven vs. Texas A&M, which also included a tackle for loss
Canada
has one older brother, Greg
hails
from
same
high
recorded a sack against Purdue
1988-started seven games
school as former Husky defensive lineman, Harald Hasselbach
weakside linebacker following an injury to Greg Travis
earned
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
is first college start at UCLA and recorded three tackles
played
10 games, missing only the Stanford game due to an elbow injury
Washington-Coming off a red-shirt season
has the size to be
also served on the kickoff coverage team
had
32
total
tackles
a future contributor but needs to improve his strength and gain
22 solo, 10 assists), two recovered fumbles and two tackles for
some game experience
will probably enter fall drills listed fourth
osses totaling 16 yards
recorded a career-high eight tackles vs.
at strongside tackle behind Siupeli Malamala, Pete Pierson and
Todd Bridge
1990-red-shirted
played strongside tackle
Arizona
recovered two fumbles against Washington State
ad a 15-yard sack of Rodney Peete at USC
throughout the season
earned mention from the UW staff as a
1987-red-shirt
eason
worked out at the rover back position
earned Backup
Backup Player of the Week on seven occasions.
Player of the Week honors five times.
South Delta-Three-year letterman and starter
played offen-
sive and defensive tackle and also worked at nose guard and offen-
Glencoe-Two-year letterman free safety and running back
an
nonorable mention All-America in The Sporting News, USA Today
sive guard
won first-team team all-province plaudits as a senior
and was All-Pac East Conference
was that conference's defen-
nd Bally-National High School Coaches Association publications
sive MVP in 1989
won first-team All-Pac East Conference
received five Best in the West votes (Long Beach Press Tele-
honors as a junior
named to the Western 100 (Tacoma News-
tram)
first-team All-Metro League as a running back and
lefensive back
all-state (Oregonian and Eugene Register-
Tribune)
high school coach was Ron Uyeyama.
Guard) RB/DB
Metro Co-Offensive Player of the Year
Dregonian Offensive Player of the Year
named to Max
Emfinger's All-Regional Blue Chip team
John Carpenter Prep
Athlete of the Year finalist
led his team to a perfect 14-0 record
and the Oregon AAA State Championship his senior season
Husky Fact
ushed for a total of 780 yards in his last five games en route to the
The NCAA's Best Bowlers
state championship
rushed for 194 yards in semifinal game VS.
Here is a list of coaches with the most bowl victories, all-time. Of the coaches
Benson and 197 yards in the final vs. Corvallis
chosen to play in
with nine bowl wins, Husky coach Don James and Georgia Tech's Bobby Dodd
the Oregon Shrine All-Star Game
also competed for three years
have the best winning percentage (.692) behind FSU's Bobby Bowden (.750).
in basketball and track.
COACH
WINS
RECORD
Paul "Bear" Bryant
15
15-12-2
Defensive Statistics
Joe Paterno
14
13-7-1
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
Bobby Bowden
10
10-3-1
1988
22
10
32
0/2
0
0
3/31#
1/15
John Vaught
10
10-8-0
17
0/0
0
0
2/4#
1/2
Bobby Dodd
9
9-4-0
1989
9
8
1990
29
23
52
1/0
2
0
12/61#
5/31
Don James
9
9-4-0
Johnny Majors
9
9-6-0
TOTAL
60
41
101
1/2
2
0
17/96#
7/48
Tom Osborne
9
8-10-0
Barry Switzer
8
8-5-0
#Tackles for loss include sacks.
Lou Holtz
8
7-6-2
Darrell Royal
8
8-7-1
Vince Dooley
8
8-10-2
Terry Donahue
7
7-2-1
Bob Devaney
7
7-3-0
Dan Devine
7
7-3-0
Charlie McLendon
7
7-6-0
45
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Oregon State
moved to tackle during spring of '89
1988-
Ed Cunningham
played in 10 games as a reserve.. started the season as a backt
Center
center behind Bern Brostek and Jeff Chandler before moving out
guard when injuries hit in late September just before the UCL
6-3, 285
79
game
alternated as the number two man at both left and rigl
Senior
guard the rest of the year
had moved from guard to cento
Alexandria, Va.
during spring practice
won honorable mention Pac-10 Al
Academic honors
1987-was red-shirted his first season wit
(Mt. Vernon)
the Huskies
worked at offensive guard.
Mount Vernon-Three-year letterman offensive lineman
earned all-district, all-region, all-state (AAA), All-Metro, Al
Gunston League and All-South honors
named Best Offensiv
Lineman in Virginia (Roanoke Times)
All-South U.S. Tear
(Orlando Sentinel)
also competed in track
qualified for 198
Junior Olympics (Seattle), competing in the shot put.
Personal-Born August 17, 1969, in Washington, D.C.
has two
brothers and a sister
graduated with a 3.7 GPA
major is
business administration in which he carries a 3.44 GPA
took the
winter quarter off last year to work as an intern in the accounting
department of the Metropolitan Washington Airport Authority
was named the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame's Vir-
ginia Scholar Athlete of the Year (1987)
earned honor roll
honors all four years of high school
member of the National
Mike Derrow
Honor Society, Math Honor Society and French Honor Society
likes to lift weights and listen to music in spare time.
Linebacker
Washington-Three-year letterman offensive lineman and a team
6-1, 220
captain this year
expected to be one of the top centers in the
RS-Freshman
37
conference this season and could be in line for league post-season
mention
brings intelligence, quickness and strength to the spot
Federal Way, Wash.
gifted athlete who has the ability to play tackle, guard or center
(Decatur)
as he has done in his career
returned to center chores in spring
of 1990 (from offensive tackle) and made a smoother transition than
the coaches expected
one of the top students on the squad with
a 3.44 GPA in business/finance
twice named to the Pac-10 All-
Academic team (1989, 1990) and was HM one season (1988)
was
also honored by Honda as a scholar-athlete the week of the Purdue
game last year
named to the GTE Academic All-America Dis-
trict VIII team the last two seasons and was named second team
Personal-Born August 22, 1972, in Seattle, Wash
is an only
child
GTE/Academic All-America last fall
major is pre-Arts and Sciences
interested in a career in
1990-gave
a
good
account
of himself in his first full season as a starter at center for the Huskies
broadcasting.
capped his year by winning honorable mention on the All-Pac-
Washington-Showed some promise in spring drills
gave
10 squad
took over for former Husky All-American Bern
good account of himself in a number of areas
has good strength
Brostek, the Los Angeles Rams' first round pick
provided the
and picked up the UW system quickly
needs to improve his foot
Huskies with solid play in the middle and earned strong grades for
speed but has the ability to contribute on special teams
will open
efforts against Arizona State and Oregon and was also cited with the
fall practice as the third inside linebacker behind Dave Hoffmann
entire offense for efforts vs. USC, Stanford, California, Arizona and
and James Clifford
1990-red-shirted
was named Backup
WSU
named to the Pac-10 All-Academic team
1989-was
Player of the Week fives times during the year.
voted to District VIII CoSIDA All-Academic Team and was named
Decatur-A three-year letterman and varsity starter
had a
to the Pac-10 All-Academic team
started two games at weakside
school record 136 tackles as a senior after registering 88 as a junior
tackle, filling in for injured Adam Cooney
also started a trio of
played linebacker all three years and also played tight end,
games (Oregon State, Washington State and Florida) at weakside
fullback and did a stint on the offensive line as a sophomore
team
guard
replaced starter Dean Kirkland at weak guard during the
captain as a junior and senior
won first-team team All-South
first quarter versus Texas A&M, playing most of the game in
Puget Sound League honors as a senior after winning honorable
Washington's 19-6 win
endured a separated shoulder early in
mention recognition as a junior
team MVP in 1989 and twice
the Oregon game
missed the balance of that game and did not
named his school's best defensive player
his best effort as a
travel to Berkeley for the California game the following weekend
senior was against Federal Way when he had 12 unassisted tackles,
returned to action as Dean Kirkland's backup at guard in the
73 yards rushing and one touchdown
played in the East-West
UCLA game
named UW Offensive Player of the Week at
All-Star game
played for coach Gregg Flynn.
46
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
35 for 236 yards
earned coaches' recognition as Kicking Team
William Doctor
Player of the Game against Arizona with three kickoff returns for 74
Cornerback
yards, including his career long of 43 yards, and three punt returns
for 34 yards
1987-red-shirt season
was a three-time
5-11, 176
10
Backup Player of the Week.
Senior
Andress-Three-year letterman tailback and free safety
All-
El Paso, Texas
District 1-AAAAA defensive back
all-region, all-city and all-
district his senior season
named to the post-season Top 100 List
(Andress)
(Houston Chronicle) and Max Emfinger's Blue Chip all-region team
earned all-city (second team) and all-district (first team) honors
for basketball
was álso the district's 400-meter champion in track
named District 1-AAAAA Male Athlete of the Year (1986-87).
Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1989
14
3
17
0/0
3
0
2/3
0/0
ersonal-Born May 26, 1969, in Heidelberg, West Germany
1990
13
5
18
0/0
3
2
1/2
0/0
as two brothers and two sisters
brother, Tyrus, is a wide
TOTAL
27
8
35
0/0
6
2
3/5
0/0
eceiver at Texas
graduated from high school with a 3.7 GPA
hajoring in management
earned Academic All-America and
Kickoff Returns
National Honor Society accolades in high school
listed in Who's
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Vho Among American High School Students
enjoys reading
1988
15
299
19.9
0
43
nd playing basketball in his spare time.
1989
2
26
13.0
0
25
TOTAL
17
325
19.1
0
43
Vashington-Three-year letterman cornerback who begins fall
Irills No. 1 at right corner
has good speed, running 40-yard dash
Punt Returns
n
4.5 seconds
one of the veteran members of the Husky
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
econdary and has been a starter in each of the last three seasons
1988
35
236
6.7
0
21
lthough not on a regular basis
his game experience will be
1989
2
4
2.0
0
6
eneficial
1990-won his third letter, appearing in all 11 games
TOTAL
37
240
6.5
0
21
nd the Rose Bowl
was a reserve in the first 10 games at right
cornerback behind Dana Hall before moving into the starting
ineup for the final game at Washington State where he turned in a
trong effort
also utilized on some special teams
played in
hickel and dime situations during the season and finished with 18
ackles and three pass breakups
had a tackle for loss vs. USC
nade three tackles in the Rose Bowl and broke up a pass
had
a
season best five stops against Stanford and also broke up a pass in the
game
had two breakups vs. Purdue
picked off two passes
during the year, including one against Washington State which he
returned 10 yards
his other, which was the first of his career,
came against California and it helped set up a UW score
1989-
nade three starts during the campaign at right cornerback and
appeared in eight games
started the Texas A&M and Purdue
games before a broken finger kept him out of the Arizona game
his only other start came against Oregon
worked as a reserve in
the other five games and with special teams
was also utilized as
a return man in the first couple of games
returned two punts for
four yards against Texas A&M and two kickoffs for 26 yards in the
same game
had a total of 17 tackles for the year and won his
second letter
made six tackles against USC and four in the
opener against Texas A&M
broke up three passes and recorded
tackles for loss against A&M and UCLA
earned mention from
the coaching staff for a Big Hit against Texas A&M
1988-
played in all but first game (against Purdue), primarily on special
teams
began the season as backup punt return specialist, behind
Andre Riley, but with season-ending knee injury to Riley in the
William Doctor
Army game, became No. 1 punt returner and moved onto the kick
return team as well
was team's second-leading kickoff returner,
with 15 returns for 299 yards, and led the team in punt returns with
47
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Rodney Ellison
P. A. Emerson*
Tight End
Tight End
6-3, 225
Junior
87
6-4, 235
Sophomore
92
Sacramento, Calif.
Irvine, Calif.
(El Camino)
(Woodbridge)
Personal-Born December 15, 1969 in Chico, Calif.
father,
Personal-Born April 20, 1970, in San Bernardino, Calif.
ha
Rodney, and mother, Beatrice, are both sales managers
has an
one older sister, Arlise, who was a track star at UCLA and wh
older sister and a younger brother
cousin, Mervyn Fernandez, is
competed in the U.S. Olympic Festival in summer of 1989
a wide receiver with the LA Raiders
another cousin, Andrew
father's name is Arthur and his mother's is Lillie
full name
Toney, played several years with the Philadelphia 76ers
sociol-
Prince Arthur Emerson II
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
ogy major
earned Omega Psi Phi Outstanding Black Student
Award his senior year in high school
Washington-Earned his first letter in 1990
talented athlet
enjoys music, dancing and
playing tennis in his spare time.
who began his career as a defensive lineman before moving to tigh
end
troubled each of his first two seasons with injuries which
Washington-Has been a tight end and free safety since becoming
have
slowed
his
progress
had an excellent opportunity last sprin
a Husky
moved to tight end in the spring of 1990 to help shore up
when he was listed as the number one tight end at the start of spring
the position
has remained there, but injuries have hampered
but suffered a sprained left ankle in the third practice which kep
him throughout his career
slowed by knee problems last spring
him out for the rest of the drills
the time missed is expected to
and full-time status for 1991 is uncertain
1990-bothered by a
put him a little behind when the team begins practice in the fall
knee injury which he suffered in the spring and was never able to
1990-played in all 12 games primarily on special teams (kickof
crack the top three at tight end
did not play in any of the games
return, point after and field goal teams) in earning his first letter
1989-non-letterman free safety who played in just four games
was the team's third tight end much of the year behind Aaron Pierco
all season
played in the first three games and then saw action
and Mark Kilpack
did not catch a pass
had one KO return fo
against Oregon
most of his work was on special teams
nine yards credited to him vs. WSU
started fall practice on the
1988-red-shirt season
was a five-time Backup Player of the
defensive line before an early switch to tight end
1989-red
Week selection at free safety.
shirt season
worked out with the defensive line
traveled with
El Camino-Three-year letterman defensive back and linebacker
the club to the Freedom Bowl
slowed early in fall drills with
All-Metro, Union All-Star, CVC All-Conference and honorable
right knee injury but returned to practice with the club the rest O
mention all-state safety as a senior
second-team All-Greater
the season.
Sacramento (Sacramento Bee) and Western 100 team (Tacoma
Woodbridge-Two-year letterman in football and also partici-
News-Tribune) as a senior
three-year starter at safety
honor-
pated in basketball
helped his club to a 12-2 record in 1988 and
able mention all-league as sophomore and junior
team was
the team was runner-up in CIF Southern Section playoffs
was ar
ranked second in the state during sophomore season
led El
honorable mention All-America and all-state pick and was also an
Camino in total tackles as a senior and junior
had three intercep-
All-CIF choice as a senior
was also an All-Pacific Coast League
tions as a senior and ran two back for scores
also lettered in
choice
showed his versatility by playing tight end, offensive
basketball, baseball and track
was all-city and all-league in
tackle, defensive end and defensive tackle as a senior
partici-
basketball and track as a senior
set a school record in the 200m
pated in the Orange County All-Star game following his senior year
(21.1) and helped set school mark in the 4x100m relay (42.00).
played for coach Rick Gibson.
48
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
shared Defensive Player of the Week honors with Travis
Steve Emtman*
Richardson against Colorado and John Cook vs. UCLA in two of
Defensive Tackle
those 10 games and was honored as a member of the entire defense
in five others. 1989-appeared in 11 of 12 games and made three
6-4, 280
90
starts in place of Dennis Brown against California, UCLA and ASU
Junior
when Brown was out with a foot injury
played a strong game
against UCLA
had a critical fumble recovery in the game which
Cheney, Wash.
helped set up a Husky first half score in the UW's comeback win
(Cheney)
over the Bruins
had 19 tackles for the year with a high of five vs.
Oregon when he stepped in for Brown in the opening half
had
one tackle-for-loss at USC
had four stops in three other games-
USC, California and Arizona State
contributed two stops in the
Freedom Bowl
the only game he did not play was at Arizona
1988-red-shirt season.
Cheney-Three-year letterman offensive and defensive lineman
ersonal-Born April 16, 1970, in Spokane, Wash.
father,
as a senior, honorable mention All-America (USA Today), all-
imes, is a farmer
mother's name is Darla
has two older
state (Sportswriters Association, Seattle P-I, Tacoma News-Tri-
rothers
is majoring in small business management
nomi-
bune), All-Frontier League OL/DL, Frontier League Co-Lineman
ated as a football All-American by Bally and the National High
of the Year, Blue Chip (Seattle Times), and Western 100 and Best in
chool Coaches Association
enjoys hunting, fishing, skiing and
the Northwest (Tacoma News-Tribune)
led team in tackles (85
eightlifting in spare time.
unassisted)
had 17 solo stops in two outings, vs. Pullman and
West Valley
two-year starter for basketball team that advanced
Vashington-Considered one of the top defensive linemen in the
to state AA tournament junior year
two-time state AA champion
buntry
should be a strong contender for All-America honors
in discus with a personal record of 184 feet.
ong with the Outland Trophy and the Lombardi Award
highly-
otivated, intense performer
has continued to improve his
Defensive Statistics
rength since arriving at UW and possesses very disciplined work
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
abits according to his coaches
a very physical player
poten-
1989
11
8
19
0/1
0
0
1/2#
0/0
al to be one of the finest defensive linemen to ever play at UW
1990
29
26
55
1/1
1
0
16/85#
7.5/63
VO letters
has already been named to the 1991 Playboy and the
TOTAL
40
34
74
1/2
1
0
17/87#
7.5/63
ollege and Pro Football Newsweekly All-America teams
#Tackles for loss include sacks.
990-turned in a superb sophomore year in his first as a full-time
tarter for the Huskies
emerged as one of the top defensive
nemen in the nation
named second team All-America by both
P and The Sporting News and HM by UPI
was also selected
Co-Defensive Player of the Year in the Pac-10 Conference and
ecame the first sophomore to ever win the prestigious Morris
Trophy as the Pac-10's Top Defensive Lineman (league also picks
ffensive winner)
the award is voted on by offensive linemen and
ice versa
also named first team All-Pac-10 and has a chance to
ecome first UW player to win first team All-Conference accolades
hree years in succession since Calvin Jones did so from 1970-72
ed all UW defensive linemen in tackles with 55 and 16 of those were
or losses totalling 85 yards
had a tackle for loss in all 12 games
counting the Rose Bowl) and was the only player to do so
made
hree stops in the Rose Bowl victory and one of those was a 15-yard
ack of Iowa's Matt Rodgers
among his 16 tackles for loss during
the regular-season, were seven and a half quarterback sacks which
resulted in 63 yards in losses, best on the squad
played consistent
football all year and was one of the big reasons the Huskies led the
country in rushing defense (66.8) and allowed the opposition a
meager 1.9 yards per rush
had a season best nine tackles against
Arizona which included three tackles for loss and added eight more
against UCLA with two for losses
recorded six stops against San
lose State, Purdue and Colorado
his lone fumble recovery came
against Purdue (he also caused the miscue) and it helped set up
Washington's first TD, a 47-yard run by Mark Brunell
earned a
Big Hit Award from the coaches against USC
won special
mention from the UW coaches for his play in 10 of 11 games
Steve Emtman
49
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Mike Ewaliko
D'Marco Farr
Defensive Tackle
Middle Guard
6-4, 270
Freshman
88
6-1, 265
Sophomore
75
Seattle, Wash.
San Pablo, Calif.
(Highline)
(Kennedy)
Personal-Born September 21, 1972 in Honolulu
an only child
Personal-Born June 9, 1971,
has two older brothers
on
mother, Jolene, is a secretary at Boeing and his father, George,
Andre, played at UCLA in 1988 and another, Mario, plays at C
lives in Hawaii
his cousin is former UW track standout Rod
State-Northridge
his cousin is Mel Farr, who played at UCL
Ewaliko, a two-time conference javelin champion and qualifier for
and with the Detroit Lions and who had two sons that were als
the 1980 U.S. Olympic team who did not compete due to the
UCLA gridders
his father, Sam Lewis, is a printer and h
boycott
enjoys surfing and lifting weights
pre-Arts and
mother, Linda, is a computer operations analyst
hails from san
Sciences major.
high school in Richmond, Calif., as former Husky standout, Spid
Washington-First year in the program
originally planned to
Gaines
general studies major with an interest in psychology an
enroll at UW last fall but instead ended up enrolling at Seattle
sociology.
Central Community College
will have four years of eligibility
Washington-Third year in UW program
has yet to letter but
remaining
took part in spring drills and worked at defensive
good spring has moved him into a position where he could challeng
tackle
last fall's layoff will hurt him and it could be a period of
for increased playing time
voted the Most Improved Defensiv
time before he is ready to challenge for varsity playing time.
Lineman in the spring
is a good pass rusher and could also b
Highline-Two-year letterman at defensive end and tight end
used in goal-line situations where his size could help
worked
won All-Seamount League honors on both sides of the ball as a
defensive tackle much of the spring before a late switch to middl
senior
top offensive lineman in the league as a senior
played
guard
goes into fall practice number two behind Tyron
in the East-West All-State game
played part of his prep career at
Rodgers
1990-spent most of his time as the number thre
Kentwood High School before spending two years at Highline
defensive tackle behind Steve Emtman and Mike Lustyk
sa
also played basketball for two seasons.
spot duty in five games late in the year and finished with four tackles
including three for losses totalling 15 yards
also had one and
half sacks
had a sack against ASU and shared one agains
Husky Fact
Stanford
1989-red-shirt season
traveled with the team t
James Leads the PAC
the Freedom Bowl
played middle guard all of his freshmat
Husky head coach Don James is the winningest coach
season.
(conference victories) in Pac-10 history with 83 wins. Currently
John F. Kennedy-One of the top prep performers in Norther
in second place is UCLA's Terry Donahue with 76 league wins.
California in 1988
named to the all-state team and was also All
Below is the top 10 list of winningest coaches (conference
Northern California for coach Steve Alameda
twice named All
victories) going into the 1991 season.
Golden Bay League
team won a sectional title in 1988
played
W
L
T
PCT.
both guard and defensive end and recorded 105 tackles as a senio
1. Don James, Washington (1975-)
83
36
2 .694
and had two blocked punts for touchdowns
also participated ii
2. Terry Donahue, UCLA (1976-)
76
33
5 .689
track and soccer.
3. John McKay, USC (1960-75)
70
17
3 .794
Defensive Statistics
4. Howard Jones, USC (1925-40)
65
23
12
.710
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
5. O. E. Hollingberry, WSU (1926-42)
64
43
10
.590
1990
2
2
4
0/0
0
0
3/15#
1.5/12
6. Larry Smith, Ariz (1980-86), USC (1987-)
56
24
4 .691
7. Jim Owens, Washington (1957-74)
54
57
2 .487
#Tackles for loss include sacks.
8. Jim Phelan, Washington (1930-41)
51
31
8 .611
9. Lon Stiner, OSU (1933-48)
49
42
13
.534
10. Henry Sanders, UCLA (1949-57)
47
11
1 .805
10. Tommy Prothro, OSU & UCLA (1955-70) 47
19
3 .703
50
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
KOMO Radio, the Husky Flagship station
had another fine
Jaime Fields*
afternoon against Oregon when he had six tackles and two passes
defensed
Weakside Linebacker
grabbed his first career interception in the win and it
was a big one
intercepted a Bill Musgrave pass and returned it 13
6-0, 230
Junior
3
yards which helped set up the Huskies' winning touchdown, a three-
yard run by Cary Conklin
also established himself as one of the
team's top special teams players
had nine special teams tackles,
Lynwood, Calif.
second on the club to Mark Jones
had three special teams tackles
(Lynwood)
against Arizona and was UW's Kicking Team Player of the Week
also scored his first career touchdown when he recovered a blocked
punt by Chico Fraley against Florida in the Freedom Bowl
1988-redshirt season
earned coaches' recognition as Backup
Player of the Week last two weeks of the season.
Lynwood-Two-year letterman linebacker and free safety
two-
time All-CIF and All-San Gabriel League
All-Southeast (LA
ersonal-Born August 28, 1970, in Lynwood, Calif.
father,
Times) as a junior and senior
was a Super Prep preseason All-
Villiam, is a truck driver and mother, Peggy, is a U.S. Postal Worker
American
had 78 tackles as a senior free safety and 130 as a
has one older sister, Tanesia
business major
hobbies
junior linebacker
Lynwood advanced to the CIF semi-finals his
nclude playing basketball, fishing and swimming.
junior season
also lettered two years in track
was named the
league's Most Valuable Sprinter as a senior
turned in career-best
Vashington-A two-year letterman
has been a starter for parts
performances of 10.6 in the 100m and 22.1 in the 200m.
f the last two seasons and will no doubt figure prominently in UW
efensive plans for 1991
battled Brett Collins for the starting
Defensive Statistics
veakside linebacker slot last spring and either could be the starter
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
vhen the Huskies open against Stanford
strength and speed are
1989
18
18
36
0/0
0
1
5/14#
2/10
xceptional and is one of the hardest hitters on the defensive unit
1990
12
8
20
1/0
1
0
8.5/52#
3/36
eems to have the knack for making the big play
has been a rover
TOTAL
30
26
56
1/0
1
I 13.5/66# 5/46
back in the past so brings good pass coverage skills to the linebacker
(Note: Scored TD on fumble recovery VS. Florida in Freedom Bowl.)
pot.
one of the most physically talented players on the UW
lefensive unit
has run a 4.49 40-yard dash, has a bench press in
#Tackles for loss includes sacks.
he mid-300 range and has also squatted 550 pounds, all of which
are among the best marks on the club
1990-earned
his
second
varsity letter
started the year as the regular at weakside line-
backer but suffered a sprained left ankle against Purdue which
caused him to miss the next four games
returned
against
Stanford and played in the final five games of the campaign where
ne backed up Brett Collins and played special teams
got off to a
strong start before his injury and recorded eight tackles in the
opener against San Jose State when he was one of three players
chosen by the UW staff as Defensive Players of the Week
four
and a half of those were for losses totalling 29 yards
had a key
third down sack in the 20-17 win when he dropped the Spartans'
Ralph Martini for a 15-yard loss early in the fourth period which
moved the visitors out of UW territory and forced a punt
finished
the year with 20 tackles and nearly half of those were for losses
had
four tackles and two more sacks against Purdue before going to the
sidelines
also caused a fumble in the game
UW staff gave him
two Big Hit Awards in the game following his return, his best day
was against Arizona when he had five tackles and one and a half
tackles for loss
made two tackles in the Rose Bowl
1989-
made six starts during the campaign
first career start at USC in
place of injured Eric Briscoe at rover
started at rover against
Oregon and California but then switched to weakside linebacker
because of injuries there and started the final three games against
Oregon State, Washington State and Florida
finished with 36
tackles, including a big day against Washington State in which he
recorded a season-high 13 tackles
coaches gave him two Big Hit
Jamie Fields
awards vs. the Cougars
two of his tackles were for losses and he
also had two sacks
selected as the Texaco Star Performer by
51
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Jamal Fountaine*
Chico Fraley***
Strongside Linebacker
Inside Linebacker
6-3, 225
Sophomore
47
6-2, 210
Senior
39
San Francisco, Calif.
Rowland Heights, Calif.
(Lincoln)
(Bishop Amat)
Personal-Born January 29, 1971, in San Francisco, Calif.
has
Personal-Born April 21, 1969, in Los Angeles, Calif.
has on
two younger brothers
his father, David, is a business executive
brother, Paul
father, Charles Fraley, is an X-ray technician an
and his mother, Tanya, is a child-care consultant
graduated with
mother, Carrie McMiller, is an accountant
is a sociology majo
a 3.4 GPA
business major
was on the honor roll as both a
hobbies include cars, video games and computers.
junior and senior
enjoys watching football, meeting people and
playing with remote controlled cars in his free time.
Washington-Three-year letterman at inside linebacker
one
Washington's most experienced players with three years of soli
Washington-Good young prospect who earned his first varsity
game experience
big play performer-both on defense and of
letter a year ago
finished the spring listed third at strongside
special teams
expected to be one of the leaders of the UV
linebacker and was waging a battle with Virgil Jones for backup spot
defensive unit and his leadership will be important
needs
t
behind starter Donald Jones
coaches like his intensity
runs
keep his weight up
coaching staff placed him with second unit
il
well and will certainly be a contributor on special teams because of
spring due to academic problems
backed up Hillary Butle
his speed and athletic ability
1990-earned his first varsity letter
during that time and will begin fall drills listed with the second uni
based primarily on his participation with special teams
finished
1990-finished the campaign as the team's second leading
the year with four tackles
played in eight games overall and the
tackler with 65 stops, 14 fewer than team leader Dave Hoffmann
Rose Bowl
compiled two stops against Stanford and one each VS.
started all 11 games and the Rose Bowl and was chosen second tean
Arizona and Washington State
was listed third at strongside
All-Pac-10 for his efforts
one of the leaders of the UW defensive
linebacker at the end of the year
1989-red-shirt season
unit that ranked first nationally in rushing defense and turnove
named Backup Player of the Week eight times
voted the Mark
margin
led all Husky players with 11 passes defensed and tied fo
Drennan Most Inspirational Junior Varsity Player
made the trip
third with 12 tackles for losses which accounted for 47 yards in losses
to the Freedom Bowl with the Huskies.
also had four and a half sacks for 25.5 yards in losses
played
Abraham Lincoln-Won three letters playing both tight end and
one of the best games of his career against Arizona when he
linebacker
his prep coach was Ray Greggains
twice named
contributed a game-high 12 tackles, including three for losses
all-city and All-Bay Area and earned some All-America mention
also recovered a fumble and broke up a pass and was chosen as ABC
had 125 tackles in 1988 and also grabbed 39 passes for 675 yards
Chevrolet Player of the Game for the Huskies
won Pac-1(
his top effort as a senior was against Lowell High School when he
Defensive Player of the Week honors in Washington's 54-10 victory
had six catches for 200 yards and two pass interceptions, including
had three fumble recoveries during the year against Colorado
one for a touchdown
scored 11 touchdowns as a senior, including
Arizona and Washington State
was in double figures (11 stops)
two on defense
rarely left the field his senior year and starred on
against San Jose State and he had nine tackles against Colorado
special teams
participated in the North-South Shrine Game
while playing against his former high school teammate, Eric
also won two track letters and another in basketball
twice won
Bieniemy
had a season best two sacks against WSU in the finale
the city shot put crown and also was a standout hurdler
his best
made three tackles in the Rose Bowl and intercepted a pass
effort in the shot was 56-9.
which was his only one of the year
also broke up a pass in the
game
1989-started six of the Huskies' first seven games before
Defensive Statistics
suffering broken ribs in the opening half against California which
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
sidelined him the rest of the campaign
the only game he did not
1990
1
3
4
0/0
0
0
0/0
0/0
start during that span was against USC when Hoffmann drew the
starting nod
finished with 47 tackles, including highs of 12
against Arizona and 10 against Oregon
broke up three passes and
had his only interception in the fourth quarter against Texas A&M
had three tackles for loss
his play on special teams included
a blocked punt against Purdue in the opening period which helped
set up a Husky touchdown and another blocked punt against Florida
in the Freedom Bowl which was recovered by Jaime Fields for a
52
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
hico Fraley, Continued
uchdown
1988-started all 11 games at inside 'backer along-
Tom Gallagher
de Ricky Andrews
finished second on the squad in total tackles
Offensive Tackle
ith 128 (54 solo, 74 assists) finished tied for sixth in the Pac-10 with
6-5, 270
1.6 tackles per game
recovered two fumbles, intercepted two
asses and had three pass breakups
recorded double figures
Sophomore
77
ckles on seven occasions
piled up a career-high 24 tackles (14
Puyallup, Wash.
blos, 10 assists) at USC
also had 19 tackles against Army and 17
California
recovered fumbles VS. USC and California
(Puyallup)
tercepted one pass against Army and Oregon
returned
an
terception 72 yards for a touchdown late in the fourth quarter to
eal a 31-17 Washington victory against Army
was overmatched
hysically on occasion, but was superb in pursuit situations
gave
ndications of big-play ability when he blocked four punts in con-
rolled scrimmages during '88 spring drills
1987-red-shirt
eason
was named Backup Player of the Week three times.
Personal-Born July 4, 1970, in Tacoma, Wash.
has two
Bishop Amat-Three-year letterman inside linebacker
team
younger sisters
father, Jim, is a sergeant in the Washington State
aptured Angelus League title senior year, advancing to sectional
Highway Patrol and his mother, Cathy, works in the records depart-
uarterfinals for third straight season
senior squad posted an
ment at Puyallup High School
had a 3.0 GPA and won a pair of
1-1 record, climbing to No. 3 in USA Today poll at one time
student awards while in high school, including Student of the
oted Most Valuable Defensive Player in Angelus League, All-
Month as a sophomore
one of four scholarship players at the UW
Angelus League Linebacker
All-San Gabriel Valley Linebacker
from his high school
the others are quarterback Billy Joe Hobert,
LA Times)
All-Big Five Linebacker (First Interstate) preseason
split end Joe Kralik and quarterback Damon Huard
likes to lift
onorable mention Blue Chip List (LA Herald-Examiner)
hon-
weights, ride his bike and ski in his free time
speech major.
rable mention All-State (Cal-Hi Football)
collected four votes
Washington-Two-year squad member
has yet to earn his first
n Best in the West Poll (Long Beach Press-Telegram)
amassed
letter
finished spring practice listed second behind Lincoln
33 tackles as a senior
also lettered two years in track
covered
Kennedy at weakside tackle
has the size and potential to be a
he 300-meter intermediate hurdles in a school record time of 38.7
good player and just needs to play
former defensive tackle who
seconds
won the Angelus League title in that event.
moved to offense at the end of spring drills in 1990
coaches felt
his combination of size and quickness could best be showcased on
Defensive Statistics
the offensive line
1990-troubled by a broken right foot (in-
EAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
jured in pre-game drills at Stanford) which limited him to appear-
988
54
74
128
0/2
3
2°
1/1#
0/0
ances in just two games against USC and Oregon in a reserve role
989
24
23
47
0/0
3
1
3/10#
0/0
1989-red-shirt season
worked out with the scout squad as
1990
40
25
65
0/3
11
0
12/45#
4.5/25.5
a tackle on the defensive side of the ball
named Backup Player of
TOTAL
118
122
240
0/5
17
3
16/56#
4.5/25.5
the Week twice and was honorary scout team captain vs. Oregon
State.
Includes TD return vs. Army.
#Tackles for loss includes sacks.
Puyallup-Won three letters while playing for coach Mike Huard
played both ways all three seasons and was a team captain his
Husky Fact
senior season when he earned all-state, all-area and All-South Puget
Sound League honors
also won honorable mention All-America
Washington's Nickname-Huskies
accolades
helped team to state Class AAA title as a junior and to
the second round of the playoffs his final campaign
also played
Washington teams were called "Sundodgers" before the 1920s,
originating when a college magazine of the same name was
basketball for three years, helping the squad to a sixth-place state
banned from campus and, in protest, students adopted the
finish in 1989.
name for their teams. But the "Sundodgers" didn't do much for
the Northwest's image, so a committee set out in 1921 to pick a
new name.
The decision came down to "Malamutes" and "Huskies." The
committee felt those were appropriate because of Seattle's
nearness to the Alaskan frontier. The "Husky" was voted the
most appropriate.
Eight Alaskan Malamutes have served as the Husky mascot.
They include Frosty I, Wasky, Ski, Denali, King Chinook,
Regents Denali, and current mascots, Sundodger and Redoubt.
53
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Frank Garcia
Curtis Gaspard*
Center
Split End
6-2, 283
RS-Freshman
65
5-11, 170
Senior
17
Phoenix, Ariz.
New Orleans, La.
(Maryvale)
(McDonogh 35)
Personal-Born on January 28, 1972
has
four
brothers
and
two
Personal-Born February 23, 1969, in New Orleans, La.
one
sisters
enjoys hunting and fishing in his free time
had a 3.4
six children
has older brothers Carol, twins Merritt and Malfred
high school GPA
has travelled to New Zealand
pre-Arts and
and older sisters, Sondra and Carla
mother, Annie, is a teache
Sciences major
considering a career in criminal law.
is a general studies major with an interest in media relations
Washington-Promising freshman red-shirt center
started
enjoys music and basketball in his spare time.
spring drills as the number three center but a good spring moved
Washington-A former UW walk-on player
earned a scholar
him solidly into the backup spot behind Ed Cunningham
ship last year and ended up being a key reserve for the Huskies
coaches like his size and strength for the position and feel he is ready
heads into fall drills listed number two at split end behind Mari
to play if needed
could have a good future in the UW program
Bailey
1990-red-shirted
has made significant mental and physical improvement ii
won the Mark Drennan Most Inspira-
the last two years as evidenced by his increased playing time
had
tional Junior Varsity Player Award
was named a Backup Player of
to overcome difficulties of non-scholarship athlete
the Week a total of eight times.
good speed
1990-won his first varsity letter
played in all 11 games and
Maryvale-Three-year letterman and starter at offensive tackle
the Rose Bowl in a reserve capacity and finished the year with five
and on the defensive line
team captain as a senior who helped his
catches for 44 yards
had three of those catches in the win a
squad to a 10-2 record
team advanced to state quarterfinals
Purdue and they accounted for 23 yards
made a 15-yard catch in
Won AAAAA all-state honors as a junior and senior and was also All-
the opener against San Jose State and his other reception came
Arizona as a senior
won All-Metro Conference accolades three
against Stanford and it covered six yards
1989-did not get into
years running
team was 30-5 in his three seasons
state
a varsity game
1988-walked on and worked with the scou
heavyweight wrestling champion as a junior and senior after
team.
finishing third as a freshman and sophomore
had 29 pins in 35
McDonogh 35-Two-year letterman
did not play his senior
outings as a senior on his way to a state crown
won all-state
year
was voted Most Improved Player his junior year
col-
recognition in baseball as a junior and senior, and batted .464 with
lected 31 catches for 425 yards
also lettered in basketball his
15 home runs his junior season
school chess champion and
sophomore and junior seasons.
helped coach a youth volleyball team.
Receiving
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
1990
5
44
8.8
0
15
Husky Fact
Husky Colors-Purple and Gold
Washington's school colors, Purple and Gold, were adopted in 1892 by vote of a student assembly on the original downtown Seattle
campus. One patriotic group favored Red, White and Blue as the University's colors, reasoning that "since the school was named after
the father of our country, our national colors should be the school's colors." The opposing faction argued that national colors should not
be degraded for such everyday use. The debate was ended when a young English instructor, Miss Frazier, stood and read the following
excerpt from Lord Byron's "Destruction of Sennacherib."
"The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold,
And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold;
And the sheen of their spears waslike stars on the sea,
And the blue wave rolls nightly on deep Galilee."
54
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Lawrence Goncalves
Russell Hairston
Cornerback
Cornerback
5-11, 183
9
5-11, 175
RS-Freshman
26
Sophomore
Spokane, Wash.
Bellevue, Wash.
(Ferris)
(Newport)
ersonal-Born April 14, 1971, in Spokane, Wash
has two
Personal-Born November 14, 1971, in Seattle, Wash.
both his
sters
father, Lawrence, is a retired fireman
business major
father, Roland, and mother, June, graduated from Washington, and
likes to lift weights, listen to music and play basketball in his
an older brother, Eugene, is attending Washington
has
two
pare time.
younger sisters, Heather and Ashleigh, and an older sister, Tillie
Vashington-Two-year squad member
listed
as
the
third
right
had a 3.2 high school GPA and was an honor roll student
ornerback going into fall drills
is a hard worker
experienced
interested in majoring in business.
ersonnel ahead of him could keep him from seeing any extended
Washington-Promising young cornerback
lacks real game
laying time in 1991
1990-played in just two games in a
experience but demonstrated some ability in the spring which
eserve capacity against Stanford and WSU
suffered an elbow
moved him into the secondary picture
finished drills listed
njury at Stanford which sidelined him for a month
also played in
second behind Dana Hall at left cornerback
has good football
he JV game against Wenatchee Valley College
was not credited
instincts and jumping ability
could be utilized in the Husky
with a tackle
1989-red-shirt season
participated on the
nickel defense
had an interception in the spring game which he
cout team
twice recognized as a Backup Player of the Week for
returned 15 yards
1990-red-shirted
named Backup Player
his efforts with the scout team prior to the Purdue and Arizona State
of the Week eight times.
games.
Newport-Won three letters and was a starter all three seasons at
Ferris-Missed almost his entire senior season with a ruptured left
Newport High School, the same school that produced teammate
chilles tendon which he suffered in the spring of his junior year
Eugene Harris and former Husky, Martin Harrison, now with San
vhile running track
sat out the regular season before returning
Francisco
played free safety all three years and also played
or three playoff games where he played both wide receiver and
halfback his final two seasons
had six interceptions as a senior
defensive back
had an outstanding junior year, leading the
and rushed for 645 yards
was named to the Seattle P-I's All-State
Greater Spokane League in catches with 35 for 555 yards
team as a senior and was also named to the Seattle Times Star Times
grabbed 14 in one game and had eight receptions for 197 yards in
squad
was a three-time All-KingCo choice
excelled as a punt
another
won all-city honors that year
played for coach Pat
returner with a 14.4 average as a senior and averaged 30.2 on kickoff
Pfeifer
won four track letters and set a number of school records
returns for coach Bill Bloomer
top game was against
as a sprinter and a member of relay teams
has run a 10.6 100m.
Woodinville in 1989 when he had three interceptions, six punt
returns for 86 yards and four carries for 62 yards
one of his punt
returns was for 43 yards and a touchdown
competed on the
Husky Fact
school's track team and set school records in the hurdles where he
It Used to be Home
was one of the top hurdlers in the state
earned some votes in the
Washington football teams have played at nine different sites in and
Best in the West poll and was named to the Western 100 (Tacoma
around Seattle during the 101 years of Husky football before landing
News-Tribune).
permanently in Husky Stadium. Those locations include: 1) 14th and
Jefferson; 2) 18th and Jackson; 3) at the old downtown campus where
the Metropolitan Theater used to be; 4) downtown on Howell Street
where the Manhattan Apartments used to be; 5) in West Seattle; 6) in
Madison Park at the end of the old Madison Street street-car line; 7) at
a YMCA Park that used to be on Jefferson Street; 8) at a former
recreation park in north Seattle; 9) at Denny Field on the UW campus.
When the campus was downtown, the team's practice field was where
the Four Seasons Olympic Hotel now stands.
55
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Dana Hall
right cornerback, including the Freedom Bowl
had played
some nickel situations and with special teams before his play earne
Cornerback
him his first start of the year against Oregon State
had bee
playing as a left cornerback much of the season and was liste
6-3, 202
Senior
5
behind Le-Lo Lang during that time
finished the year with 2
tackles and broke up seven passes, including three in the Orego
State contest
Diamond Bar, Calif.
was second on the club in passes defensed
Eugene Burkhalter (eight)
won two Big Hit Awards from th
(Ganesha)
UW staff for plays against Oregon State
had four tackles again
Oregon and also partially blocked a field goal in the game
one
the top special teams tacklers for the Huskies with eight stops to h
credit, including a pair against Oregon
twice
shared
UW
kickin
team Player of the Week honors (Oregon, California)
1988-
earned first varsity letter playing every game
started at fre
safety against Stanford and Arizona after regular starter Eugen
Personal-Born July 8, 1969, in Bellflower, Calif.
has five
Burkhalter sprained knee against Oregon, but played every othe
sisters and two brothers
graduated from high school with a 3.0
game as Burkhalter's backup
eighth overall in total tackles, an
GPA
Academic All-American as a junior and senior in high
had third highest tackle total for returning players with 48
school
high school honor student who was elected freshman
moved to rover from free safety during spring drills
had 100r
class president
political science major
likes to go bowling,
time of 11.12; ran 200m in 21.63 and qualified for Pac-10 meet in hi
fishing, horseback riding and play video games in his spare time.
specialty, the 110m hurdles with a best time of 14.24
placed
7t
in Pac-10 meet in the 110 hurdles in a time of 14.37
also ran o:
Washington-Three-year letterman who finished the spring atop
400m relay
1987-red-shirted.
the depth chart at right cornerback
one of the finest athletes on
the Washington roster
has 4.35 speed in the 40-yard dash
Ganesha-Four-year letterman cornerback
All-Haciend
missed some of the spring with a sore hamstring but played well
League, All-Pomona Valley, All-San Gabriel Valley and All-CIF hi
after he returned
an intense competitor and a hard worker
senior year
selected to the San Gabriel Valley All-Star team
has ability to be one of the top defensive backs in the Pac-10
named the team's MVP his sophomore season
earned honorable
Conference
a tremendous coverage man with good height and
mention all-league honors and was named the team's Most Valuable
jumping ability to go along with his excellent speed
has also been
Defensive Back his junior year
all-league performer in track as
hurdler
a key special teams player
is a Husky two-sport athlete, compet-
state finalist for three consecutive seasons in 110n
hurdles
ing in track as well as football
has been one of the top sprinters
won the 1987 California state 110-meter hurdle champi-
on the Husky track squad since he arrived at the UW
boasts the
onship with a time of 13.98
also reached state finals in the 300
meter hurdle event as a senior.
second best 110m hurdle time (13.75/wind aided) in school history
and has run the 100m in 10.66
placed fifth in the Pacific-10
Defensive Statistics
Conference 110m hurdles in both 1990 and 1991
qualified for
YEAR
UT
AT
ToT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
the NCAA Championships in that event in 1990
1990-was
1988
27
21
48
0/0
I
0
0/0
0/0
Washington's starting right cornerback in 10 of 11 games and the
1989
9
11
20
0/0
7
0
0/0
0/0
Rose Bowl and won his third varsity letter
the only game he
1990
33
15
48
0/1
6
3
2.5/7.5
0/0
failed to start was the finale at Washington State when William
TOTAL
69
47
116
0/1
14
3
2.5/7.5
0/0
Doctor drew the nod after Hall was slowed with a toe problem
which he suffered against UCLA
still had a strong season and
(Note: Scored TD on blocked punt return VS. Iowa.)
won HM All-Pac-10 plaudits
contributed 48 tackles and broke
up six passes
had three interceptions which were the first of his
Husky Fact
career
his first career theft came against Arizona State and his
others were against Oregon and California
the three intercep-
Homecoming Sweet Homecoming
tions ranked fourth on the team
has also been a standout on
Washington will play host to Arizona State in this year's Homecoming game on
Husky special teams throughout his career
won accolades for his
Saturday, November 2. It is just the second time the Huskies and Sun Devils
kicking team play in games against Colorado, Oregon and Arizona
have met for a UW Homecoming game. The first time was in 1989 and ASU
and blocked an Adam Grand punt against Arizona which resulted in
prevailed, 34-22.
a safety
recorded a career best 10 tackles against Colorado and
The Huskes' all-time Homecoming record is 38-35-4. In the Don James Era
two of those were for losses
had five in four other games and had
(1975-Present). the Huskies are 12-4 in Homecoming games. Last year
Washington defeated California, 46-7.
a strong day against Oregon with five stops and three passes
defensed
his lone fumble recovery came against Purdue
in
The team the Huskies have played most often in the Homecoming game:
California. The two have met 19 times. Runner-up is USC with 12 followed by
Washington's Rose Bowl win, he had four tackles and a fumble
Stanford with 11.
recovery and scored a touchdown when he picked up a blocked punt
by teammate Andy Mason in the second period and raced 27 yards
for the score
1989-played in all 11 games and worked his way
into the starting lineup for the final three games of the season at
56
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Travis Hanson*
Eugene Harris
Kicker
Tailback
6-0, 178
7
5-11, 184
Sophomore
Junior
41
Spokane, Wash.
Bellevue, Wash.
(Mead)
(Newport)
Personal-Born March 6, 1972, in Spokane, Wash.
has one
Personal-Born March 16, 1970 in Seattle, Wash.
father,
lder brother, Jason, who is a senior All-America kicker at Washing-
Eugene, is a counselor with the City of Bellevue
mother, Alma,
on State
is the first kicker ever awarded a full scholarship to UW
works for the Seattle Engineering Department
has one younger
ince Don James has been head coach
was student body presi-
brother, Cortez
father played basketball at Seattle University
lent
had a 3.5 high school GPA
considering majoring in
speech major.
business.
Washington-In his fourth year in the UW program
looking for
Vashington-Won his initial varsity letter as a true freshman
his first extended varsity playing time after two seasons in a reserve
igures to handle the kicking chores for the Huskies again in 1991
role
listed third at tailback behind Beno Bryant and Jay Barry
right-footed, soccer-style kicker
has a strong leg and could
is a former high school track star who possesses exciting foot speed
lso be called upon to punt if needed
will be trying to keep alive,
has shown some flashes of potential but needs to avoid injuries
ind increase, UW's string of 71 consecutive PATs in 1991
and develop consistency to stay competitive in the tailback battle
990-appeared in 10 of 11 regular season games and the Rose
finished spring drills with 24 carries for 64 yards
suffered
a
Bowl
was strictly a kickoff man early in the year and then took
broken right hand in the spring game
1990-worked as the
over the field goal and extra point duties from Mike Dodd for the
team's number four tailback
played in three games and finished
final five games and the Rose Bowl
did not kick off from the
with seven rushes for 31 yards
most extensive duty came against
Stanford game on
finished the year with 30 points on 21-21 extra
Arizona when he ran five times for 28 yards with a long gain of nine
point and three of four field goals
had successful field goals of 42
yards
had a rush for two yards against Cal and a one-yard rush vs.
California), 40 (Arizona) and 42 (WSU) yards and his only miss was
WSU
1989-experienced disappointing season that was marred
45-yarder against UCLA
made kicks from 23 and 38 yards in
by nagging injuries
only appearance of the season came in the
the Rose Bowl
he and his brother scored the only points in the
final regular season game VS. Washington State on special teams
opening period of the UW-WSU game as his brother's 46-yarder
rushed eight times for 82 yards in Husky junior varsity win over
matched his 42-yarder.
Yakima Valley (31-6), but sprained an ankle before halftime
1988-red-shirt season
Mead-Was a two-year letterman at Spokane's Mead High School
traveled with team to Oregon, but did
handled all kicking for the club and also worked some at wide
not play.
receiver as a senior
made 5 of 7 field goals his senior year and all
Newport-Three-year letterman running back
as a senior run-
23 PATs
long kick was a 49-yarder VS. Ferris High School
also
ning back: All-State (Sportswriters Assn., Seattle P-I, Tacoma News-
had kicks from 47, 46 and 45 yards
made one from 50 yards but
Tribune), Western 100 and Best in the Northwest (Tacoma News-
it was negated by a penalty
averaged 37.0 yards per punt as a
Tribune), Super Prep All-Far West, Star Times, All-KingCo and
punter
made just three field goals as a junior
had three
Blue Chip list (Seattle Times)
gained 1,162 yards on 146 carries
catches with one touchdown as a wide receiver his senior season
(7.9 avg) and scored 12 touchdowns as a senior
gained 231 yards
team was 8-3 and made it to the state playoffs
coach was Mike
on 10 carries and scored two touchdowns in a 33-7 win over Mercer
McLaughlin
named second team All-Greater Spokane League
Island
All-Opponent and second-team All-KingCo (Bellevue
as a senior and was also named to that league's all-academic team
Journal-American) as a junior
rushed for more than 750 yards as
was second team All-GSL as a punter as a junior
named a blue
a junior
also lettered in track where he ran 10.64 in the 100m and
chip recruit by Seattle Times
three-year letterman on Mead
21.6 in the 200m as a senior
won the 100m in 10.8 seconds to
soccer team undefeated in GSL play in 90 games and was first-team
help Newport win the Pasco Invitational track and field meet as a
team All-GSL as a junior
was soccer captain two years.
senior.
57
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
named all-state and was the Gatorade Circle of Champions and US
Billy Joe Hobert
Today Player of the Year in the state
second team All-Americ
Quarterback
pick by USA Today
named to virtually every all-star team in th
area
finished his career with 312 completions in 585 attempts fo
6-3, 225
Sophomore
12
5,480 yards (fourth all-time in the state) and set a state mark with 6
touchdowns
completed 128 of 210 passes (60.9%) for 2,13
yards and a state record 31 touchdowns was intercepted jus
Puyallup, Wash.
eight times outstanding athlete who also played defensive baci
(Puyallup)
and handled all the kicking chores all three years while playing fo
coach Mike Huard
averaged 40.2 yards per kick as a punter ano
converted 33 PATs and one field goal as a senior
scored sever
touchdowns
team compiled a 9-1 record and lost in the state
semifinals to Kentwood High School in 1988
won three letters in
football and led the Vikings to the state AAA title and an 11-2 record
his junior season
passed for 374 yards and three touchdowns in
Personal-Born January 8, 1971, in Puyallup, Wash
his father,
leading his club to the title and a 27-21 win over Gonzaga Prep a
the Kingdome
won Co-MVP honors for his effort
threw
fo
Terry, is a mill worker and his mother, Lorraine, is a nursing
1,500 yards and 11 touchdown's in four playoff games
also wor
assistant
has two sisters and two brothers
had a 3.4 GPA in
four letters in basketball and baseball
twice
named
All-Soutl
high school
likes to spend his free time outdoors and also
participating in sports
twice named Student of the Month in
Puget Sound League in baseball and won all-state honors as a senio:
high school and also named to Who's Who Among American High
batted over .400 his final two seasons as a pitcher and outfielder
School Students in 1987-88
one of four UW scholarship players
Passing
from Puyallup
prep teammates were Tom Gallagher, Joe Kralik
YEAR
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
and Damon Huard
married, his wife's name is Heather
pre-
1990
6
4
0
41
.667
0
23
Arts and Sciences major.
Rushing
Washington-Expected to be the Huskies' starting quarterback
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
thrust into that role after starter Mark Brunell suffered a knee
1990
12
109
4
105
8.8
1
35
injury with a little over a week remaining in spring practice
has
the tools to be a fine quarterback and just lacks overall game
experience
the UW coaches felt he had a very good spring and
liked his competitive nature when he was running the offense
an
attacking style football player with very good toughness
is a big
man with a strong arm and a good understanding of the game
a
fine runner with deceptive speed
has big-play potential
running the number one unit in the spring game, he completed 17
of 28 passes for 212 yards with three TDs and two interceptions
appears to have the lock on the punting job replacing Channing
Wyles
averaged 39.8 on 27 punts during the spring, including
44.0 yards on three kicks in the spring game
chosen
as
the
Most
Improved Back and Most Improved Kicker in the spring
1990-appeared in six games and the Rose Bowl but failed to earn
a letter as Mark Brunell's understudy
activity was limited to
reserve duty in those seven Husky victories
completed four of six
passes for 41 yards without a TD or interception
showed some
ability as a runner with 12 carries for 105 yards, including 42 yards
against Arizona State and 41 vs. Washington State
had a career
best 35 yard run vs. the Cougars which eclipsed his previous long
run of 29 yards against ASU
scored his first varsity touchdown
against Arizona when he ran in from five yards out in Washington's
54-10 win
started 17 drives as the Husky quarterback and
Washington scored touchdowns on seven of those (41%)
.saw
duty in the Rose Bowl and was 0-3 with an interception in the
passing department
also rushed once for minus two yards
was the team's emergency punter and kicked off some during the
season
1989-red-shirt season
traveled with the squad as the
number three quarterback and reserve punter.
Puyallup-Considered the top player in the state of Washington as
a senior and one of the top quarterbacks in the country
twice
Billy Joe Hobert
58
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Pioneer-Three-year letterman linebacker and tight end
Dave Hoffmann*
played guard on offense as a junior
as a senior: All-Bay Area (San
Francisco Examiner), All-NorCal, All-Central Coast and All-Santa
Inside Linebacker
Clara County
three-time all-league linebacker
Santa Teresa
6-2, 220
54
Athletic League MVP as a senior
had
209
tackles
and
four
Junior
interceptions as a senior
returned interception 90 yards for
touchdown
recorded 30 tackles against Lynbrook
caught
San Jose, Calif.
four touchdown passes at tight end in '87
was an all-league
(Pioneer)
player and team captain in basketball.
Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1989
25
26
51
0/1
0
0
4/13#
1/6
1990
48
31
79
3/1
4
0
7/43.5#
2.5/15.5
TOTAL
73
57
130
3/2
4
0 11/56.5# 6/21.5
ersonal-Born July 24, 1970, in San Luis Obispo, Calif.
#Tackles for loss includes sacks.
ather, Paul, is a church Pastor, and mother, Jane, is a nurse
both
arents graduated from Valparaiso University in Indiana
has two
lounger brothers, Steve and Matthew
Steve
will
be
a
UW
cholarship freshman this fall
is a sociology major
coached in
Eteka Huckaby
igh school by former Husky linebacker, Dan Lloyd
hobbies
nclude fishing and skiing.
Running Back
Vashington-Two-year letterwinner at inside linebacker
ex-
6-1, 195
ected to be one of the leaders of the Husky defensive unit in 1991
RS-Freshman
24
biggest asset is his toughness
extremely hard worker both on
nd off the field
similar in many ways to James Clifford
a
Sunnyvale, Calif.
very
physical player who is one of the top hitters on the club
espe-
(Homestead)
cially strong against the run
listed as a starter at one of the inside
inebacker spots
1990-led the Husky squad in tackles with 79
vhich were 14 more than Chico Fraley
started
all
11
games
and
he Rose Bowl at inside linebacker
won HM All-Pac-10 acco-
ades and was also chosen as one of ABC/TV and Chevrolet's Players
of the Game in Washington's 52-16 win over Stanford in Palo Alto
had nine tackles in the game and one of those was for a loss
Personal-Born on October 2, 1971, in Sunnyvale, Calif.
has an
credited with the best hit of the year by a UW defensive player in the
older brother, Efa, a younger brother, Etinyin, and two older sisters,
game with a jarring hit on Cardinal WR, Ed McCaffrey
those
Joyce and Sharon
given name is Efiomekpe Dwain Huckaby
nine stops vs. Stanford matched his season high which he set earlier
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
against San Jose State, Purdue and Colorado
caused three
Washington-Red-shirt freshman running back
will enter fall
fumbles during the year and had a recovery against Arizona
also
practice as the fourth tailback
has some ability but will probably
credited with four passes defensed
earned Big Hit Awards from
have to wait his turn with more experienced personnel ahead of him
the UW staff for hits against ASU, Oregon, Stanford and Arizona
1990-spent the year as a red-shirt
worked at tailback
made six stops in the Rose Bowl
1989-started the season as a
named Backup Player of the Week a total of five times.
backup to Chico Fraley before drawing his first varsity start in the
Homestead-A three-year letterman and starter at running back
fifth game against USC
started Trojan contest and then worked
and linebacker
gained 1,332 yards on 160 carries his final season
as a reserve the next two weeks against Oregon and California
and rushed for 24 touchdowns
added 21 catches for 454 yards
took over for Fraley in the opening half against California when
and six scores, and returned one kickoff for a touchdown
team
Fraley suffered broken ribs and stayed in the starting lineup the rest
was 9-3 and advanced to the semifinals in playoff competition
of the season
ended up with five starts in 11 games
his 51
(CCS)
his 31 touchdowns were among the most in the state of
tackles tied for sixth on the club with Eric Briscoe
did a nice job
California
won first-team All-Peninsula honors and was co-MVP
when he took over for Fraley at California, registering nine tackles,
of the Deanza Athletic League
also first-team team All-Santa
including one for loss, and a fumble recovery
chipped in with
Clara County and second-team All-Bay Area
named to the
eight stops the following week against UCLA and had a career-high
Western 100 (Tacoma News-Tribune) and was honorable mention
13 versus Arizona State
totaled three tackles for loss during the
all-state
rushed for 249 yards in his junior year vs. Saratoga High
year and had one sack (vs. Oregon State)
recipient of Big Hit
School and once scored four touchdowns and ran for 226 yards vs.
Awards against Purdue, Arizona and UCLA from the Husky coach-
Monta Vista as a senior
lettered and started three years in
ing staff
1988-red-shirt season
was a two-time Backup
basketball earning All-Deanza League honors as a junior, and let-
Player of the Week (Cal and Stanford) as a member of the Husky
tered once in track when he was the Deanza League champion in
scout squad.
the 100m.
59
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
David Ilsley
Jeff Jackson
Offensive Guard
Tight End
6-5, 274
Junior
77
6-4, 225
RS-Freshman
85
Napa, Calif.
Newport Beach, Calif.
(Vintage)
(Corona del Mar)
Personal-Born September 29, 1969, in Napa, Calif.
father's
Personal-Born January 16, 1972, in Newport Beach, Calif.
name is Edgar and mother's is Sandra
has an older sister, Janice
father, F. Scott, a lawyer, played football and wrestled at the U.S
older brother, Ernie, played football at UC-Davis
graduated
Air Force Academy from 1963-66 and was a football co-captain i
from high school with 3.3 GPA
political science major
enjoys
1965
is an only child
had a 3.0 high school GPA
pre-Art
hunting in his spare time.
and Sciences major.
Washington-Three-year squad member trying to bounce back
Washington-Red-shirt freshman tight end that will go into fal
after missing the entire 1990 season with a broken right leg
practice listed number three behind Bruce Bailey and Shaun Moor
suffered the injury during a spring scrimmage in 1990
made
will be one of several players vying for playing time at one of th
great progress last spring and finished as the team's second team
most unsettled positions on the UW squad
demonstrated some
strongside guard behind Kris Rongen
offers the team versatility
ability in the spring and has good work habits
does everything
in that he can play any of the offensive line positions
1990-sat
asked of him
troubled by a neck injury for a brief period in the
out the entire season while rehabilitating his broken leg
1989-
spring
1990-sat out the year as a red-shirt
named Backup
played guard in the Purdue and Oregon State games, but did not
Player of the Week three times.
letter
moved to center in the spring after working at defensive
end in 1988
1988-red-shirt season
Corona del Mar-Two-year letterman who started for two season
played defensive line-
man on Husky scout team.
at tight end
also played defensive end and linebacker
served
as a punter his senior season
had 28 catches for 300 yards as
Vintage-Four-year letterman defensive end and tight end
had
senior and helped team to a 10-4 record and a repeat as CIP
six votes in Best in the West poll (Long Beach Press-Telegram)
as
Division 6 Southern Section champs
team was 12-0-2 junior yea
a senior: Western 100 (Tacoma News-Tribune), Super Prep All-
and won CIF Division 6 Southern Section title
named All-Se:
America and All-Far West, All-NorCal Defensive Preseason All-
View League two years in succession and was All-CIF Southerr
America and Golden 50 team (Cal-Hi Football)
had 17 sacks on
Section as a senior
played for coach Dave Holland
standout
defense and caught 20 passes for 317 yards and one touchdown on
basketball player, three-year letterman and two-year starter
offense as a senior
caught 28 passes for 517 yards as a junior
named all-league and helped his team to the CIF Southern Section
1986 team finished 13-1 and was league and San Joaquin Section
Finals as a junior
also won All-Orange County honors.
champion
senior year team went 8-3
lettered three years in
basketball and baseball
all-county in baseball as a junior.
Husky Fact
Homecoming Games With Extraordinary Impact
Well, there's the pair that cost them a trip to the Rose Bowl. In
1950, California beat the Huskies 14-7 at Homecoming and
with it won a trip to Pasadena. A Washington victory would have
put the Huskies there instead. A crowd of 55,245 saw the game,
setting an attendance record that stood for nine years. Much
earlier in Husky history, the 1927 Homecoming Game against
Stanford, which the Cardinal won 13-7, sent Stanford to the
Rose Bowl rather than Washington.
And then there's the one that was the Huskies' only loss of the
season. In 1959, the Southern California Trojans beat the
Huskies 22-15 at Homecoming. But the Huskies went on to
win their last six games that season, culminated by a victory over
Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl.
60
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Denton Johnson
Leif Johnson*
Split End
Fullback
5-8, 185
1
5-11, 203
Sophomore
Sophomore
34
Missouri City, Texas
Seattle, Wash.
(Episcopal)
(Kennedy)
ersonal-Born December 11, 1969, in Houston, Texas
is an
Personal-Born August 31, 1970, in Bend, Ore
his father, Leif,
nly child
father's name is Herman and mother's name is Nancy
is self-employed
oldest of six boys
likes to play basketball in
mother is a hairdresser
uncle, Bob Johnson, played basket-
his free time
major is motivational counseling
known as
all for the Huskies, was an assistant coach under Marv Harshman,
Sterling Johnson during his prep career.
nd is the former head coach at Seattle University
pre-Arts and
Washington-Third-year sophomore fullback
lettered as a
ciences major.
red-shirt freshman a year ago and will go into fall practice listed
Vashington-Two-year squad member who has yet to see any
third at fullback behind Darius Turner and Matt Jones
a
power-
arsity game action is an outstanding all-around athlete and has
ful back who adds substantial size and strength to the spot
is
a
noved between the secondary and split end
finds himself at split
good worker and should continue to contribute as a special teams
nd going into fall practice with several experienced people ahead
player and reserve running back
expected to gain more playing
of him, including Mario Bailey and Curtis Gaspard
had one
time with experience
1990-won his initial varsity letter as a
atch for 39 yards in the spring
1990-his only game action was
reserve fullback and special teams player
carried the ball just
gainst Wenatchee Valley College in a junior varsity game
seven times for 24 yards in limited time at fullback where he was
amed a Backup Player of the Week twice
1989-red-shirt
listed third on the depth behind Darius Turner and Matt Jones
eason
played on the scout teams as a cornerback, earning five
carried the ball in five contests with a two-carry, 10-yard effort
Backup Player of the Week awards from the coaching staff
against Stanford his best outing
had four tackles in special teams
earned a sixth Backup Player of the Week award for his play as the
duty
won a Kicking Team Award from the Husky coaches for his
quarterback in the option offense prior to the Colorado game
special teams play against Stanford
1989-red-shirt season
elected honorary scout team captain for the USC game.
named squad Backup Player of the Week six times, based on efforts
on scout team.
Episcopal-Lettered two seasons at Episcopal after two years at
Westbury High School in the Houston area
won all-conference
John F. Kennedy-A three-year letterman for Lancer coach Tom
nonors in football, track and basketball as a junior
duplicated the
Merrill
finished his career as the all-time leading rusher in the
riple all-conference feat as a senior in addition to winning confer-
North Puget Sound League with 3,055 yards, including 1,036 yards
ence honors as a wrestler
played quarterback, wide receiver and
in just eight games during the 1988 season
missed a portion of
defensive back and also punted for the squad
had one of his best
the year with a quadricep injury
named to the all-state team as a
games as a senior when he rallied his team to a 28-27 victory with
senior after earning a similar honor his junior year when he rushed
three fourth quarter touchdown passes against Northwest
aver-
for 1,593 yards and scored 21 touchdowns
was the league MVP
aged 10.0 yards per carry as a senior
accounted for 1,400 all-
his junior year
had several big games in his career, including one
purpose yards and 15 touchdowns in 1988.
in which he rushed 30 times for 250 yards and another in which he
ran 21 times for 196 yards and scored five times.
Husky Fact
Rushing
Home Sweet Home
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Washington has a 359-143-24 (.705) record at home, all-time.
1990
7
25
1
24
3.4
0
7
In Husky Stadium, which the Huskies have called home since
their November 27, 1920 game against Dartmouth, the
Huskies have a 269-123-20 (.677) record.
61
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
zero yards VS. Oregon
Donald Jones*
thanks in part to his pass rushing abilit
the Washington defense registered 15 sacks in the final two gam
Strongside Linebacker
after getting just 13 the first nine games
had just 18 tackles, b
three were for losses and six others were quarterback sacks f
6-1, 226
Senior
48
minus 35 yards
three of those sacks came against Oregon Sta
and three tackles for losses were against California
his sack tot
Gladys, Va.
was second on the club to Martin Harrison, a senior co-capta
drafted by the San Francisco 49ers
shared UW Defensive Play
(Campbell)
of the Week honors following the victory over Oregon State
ha
a big sack in win over Oregon when he dropped Bill Musgrave for
12-yard loss late in the fourth quarter in a 20-14 UW win
WO
Big Hit Awards from coaching staff for plays against Washington S
and Purdue
1988-won his first letter as a reserve fullback
played in all 11 games and finished with just three carries for thre
yards
all of those came in the opener against Purdue when h
Personal-Born March 26, 1969, in Lynchburg, Va
has an older
scored his first college touchdown on a one-yard run
1987-
red-shirt season
brother and younger sister
parents are Ray and Naomi
his
worked his way on to the travel squad midwa
uncle, Robert Cox, is vice principal at Sammamish High School and
through the year and also went to the Independence Bowl.
his aunt, Beatrice Cox, is vice principal at Shorecrest High School
Campbell-Won four letters as a running back/linebacker
likes basketball and going to church in his spare time
political
twice named to the Group AA all-state team as a running back
science major
has an interest in international relations or a
all-area pick and also chosen to the Virginia Top 25 list by th
government job after graduation
an honor roll student five times
Roanoke Times
Seminole District and Lynchburg Daily Ad
in high school
attended same high school as San Francisco 49ers
vance Player of the Year
named to the all-state team each of hi
defensive end Charles Haley.
four seasons
also played basketball and competed in track
Washington-Three-year letterman for the Huskies
a
definite
twice a state shot put champion with a best throw of 59+ feet
ha
post-season honors candidate
should
be
a
candidate
for
a best in the discus of 166 feet and was clocked in the 100m in 11.
the
and the 200m in 22.9.
Butkus Award as the nation's top linebacker
enters fall drills as
the starter at strongside linebacker for the second year in succession
Defensive Statistics
should be one of the top defensive players in the Pac-10
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
capable of being a dominant player
came into the program as a
1989
9
9
18
1/0
0
0
9/51#
6/35
fullback and played both spots in 1989 before a full-time move to
1990
17
16
33
1/0
2
0
10/60.5#
6/56.5
linebacker midway through that season
switch proved to be a
TOTAL
26
25
51
2/0
2
0 19/111.5# 12/91.5
positive one
strong suit is his speed which makes him a fierce
pass rusher from the outside
will again figure prominently in the
#Tackles for loss includes sacks.
Husky defensive plans
1990-named first team All-Pac-10 at
linebacker for the Huskies
had just 33 tackles during the year
and two more in the Rose Bowl but was a factor in almost every
game, many times drawing double team blocking to negate his pass
rushing ability
of his 33 stops, 10 were for losses with six of those
being quarterback sacks totalling 56.5 yards in losses
had two
sacks in the Rose Bowl for minus 18 yards
best tackle efforts
were six vs. Colorado and Stanford
had a big day against Stanford
with three and a half sacks to his credit
won
Metropolitan
Federal Player of the Game honors following the win
earned
mention from the UW coaches six times as member of the starting
defensive unit
credited with Big Hit Awards against ASU and
SUBWELL
Arizona
in his career he has accounted for 51 tackles and 19 have
been for losses
of those 19, he has 12 sacks
1989-appeared
in all 12 games for the Huskies and drew the starting assignment in
three of those games (Oregon State, Washington State and Florida)
when the Huskies went to a different scheme at the start of the game
moved from fullback to linebacker at the start of the fall
backed up Martin Harrison most of the season
won
the
KING-TV award as the Huskies' Most Improved Player
his play
in the latter stages of the season was instrumental in the club's
strong finish as he emerged as a pass rushing specialist
did see
some action on offense when he was called on in UW's three-back,
short yardage set against Colorado and Oregon
had one carry for
Donald Jones
62
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Louis Jones
Matt Jones*
Free Safety
Fullback
6-2, 203
29
6-2, 205
RS-Freshman
Sophomore
22
Los Angeles, Calif.
Portland, Ore.
(Venice)
(Central Catholic)
Personal-Born February 6, 1972 in Los Angeles
has two
Personal-Born November 10, 1970, in Portland, Ore
has an
rothers and one sister
one of his brothers, Morris, played
older and younger brother
the elder, Mark, is a former line-
aseball in the Angels and White Sox organizations
father's
backer for the Huskies and a four-year letterman who signed with
ame is Louis and mother's name is Hazel
enjoys computers and
the BC Lions last spring
his father, Anthony, is a truck driver and
ttending movies in his free time
major is pre-Arts and Sciences.
his mother, Sandra, is a nurse
enjoys swimming, boating, scuba
Vashington-In his second year in the UW program
was red-
diving and camping
communications major.
hirted a year ago
finished spring drills as the number three free
Washington-Listed number two behind Darius Turner at full-
afety behind Shane Pahukoa and Lamar Lyons considered to
back entering the '91 season
appeared ready to make a challenge
have outstanding athletic skills
is a hard hitter and one of the
for the starting spot but suffered a left knee injury the week before
trongest players in the secondary
has shown he has the ability to
the spring game which slowed him
could make a push again
contribute if given the opportunity
could be a Husky star of the
when fall practice begins
a multi-talented back who could also
future in the secondary
1990-red-shirted
named Backup
get a look at tailback
coaches like his intelligence and attitude
Player of the Week for the Stanford and Arizona games
spent
hard runner who is tough to bring down
a solid player and likely
most of the year as the number three free safety.
future leader in the Husky program
1990-made an immediate
Venice-Three-year letterman
a versatile player that played a
impact on the Husky offense as a red-shirt freshman running back
number of positions in his career including, wide receiver, free
did not start a game, but saw action in all 11 and the Rose Bowl
safety, quarterback, strong safety and running back
also punted
and contributed as a runner and special teams player
was
and handled some placekicking duties
gained 924 yards on 122
particularly effective late in the year when he saw extended duty as
carries as a senior and averaged 7.5 yards-per-carry
also threw
Washington's second fullback
showed ability to break tackles
for over 700 yards and averaged 38.4 yards as a punter
longest
and run away from people in the open field
rushed just 19 times
intercepted five passes and had 87 tackles on
but accounted for 158 yards and three touchdowns on the ground
run was 64 yards
defense
and averaged a lofty 8.3 yards per rush
ran
just
three
times
team posted an 11-1 record his final season and ad-
against Stanford but gained 53 yards and scored twice
one
of
vanced to the LA city playoffs
played for coach Al Dellinger
Won All-Western League honors two years in succession and was
those runs was a 39-yarder while the other was from 12 yards out
that league's Player of the Year
Named All-City and was MVP in
came back a week later to gain 32 yards on three attempts vs. Cal
the city
also lettered in baseball, track and basketball
and then finished off his season by running eight times for 41 yards
mem-
ber of the Knights Organization, a service club at his school.
against WSU in Pullman
had a 23-yard TD run against California
also managed four receptions for 27 yards
rushed five times
Husky Fact
for 16 yards in the Rose Bowl and had a reception for three yards
credited with two tackles on special teams
earned a Big Hit
And the Winners Are
Award from the coaches against Oregon
1989-red-shirt season
Since 1984, the Husky Tyee Club has chosen a Football Athlete of the Year
selected as the Brian Stapp Inspirational Non-Letterman by the
along with a Husky Male and Female Athlete of the Year. Below are the
UW coaches
named Backup Player of the Week eight times
previous Football winners.
while working on the scout team
served as honorary scout team
1984-Dan Eernissee
1988-Tony Zackery
1985-Joe Kelly
1989-Bern Brostek
captain three times, during the weeks prior to playing Arizona,
1986-David Rill°
1990-Greg Lewis
Colorado and Oregon State.
1987-David Rill
Central Catholic-Was a record-setting running back
won
°Indicates Male Athlete of the Year
four letters and started some varsity games as a freshman
broke
three school records in his career
ran for 4,103 yards, scored 57
touchdowns and accounted for 5,253 total yards which were all
school records
gained 1,401 yards as a senior and scored 18
touchdowns
all-state as a senior and was the top running back in
the state
was USA Today's Player of the Year in the state
63
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Matt Jones, Continued
attracted some honorable mention All-America mention and twice
won All-Mt. Hood Conference plaudits
best effort in 1988 was
Virgil Jones**
240 yards and three touchdowns in just three quarters against
Strongside Linebacker
Centennial
third-team all-state as a junior when he ran for 1,322
6-1, 220
yards and scored 20 touchdowns
that year he once gained 230
yards on 15 carries in just one half against Parkrose
gained 880
Senior
59
yards with 17 scores as a sophomore
shared starting tailback spot
Tacoma, Wash.
with his brother as a freshman
played for coach Dennis
(Lakes)
Binkowski as a senior
won three letters in basketball and track
competed in long jump (best of 23-5) and 100m (best of 10.78)
and was a two-time participant in the state meet.
Rushing
YEAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
1990
19
158
0
158
8.3
3
39t
Personal-Born April 1, 1969, in Tacoma, Wash.
majoring
il
anthropology
father, Virgil, is a U.S. Customs Inspector
ha
Receiving
three sisters
enjoys playing the bass guitar in his spare time.
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
1990
4
27
Washington-Two-year letterman and a fifth-year senior
6.8
0
8
bounced back from a serious left knee injury to make a contributio:
in 1990
suffered the injury near the end of spring drills in 198
underwent successful surgery and returned to compete for a slo
at strongside linebacker in spring of 1990
coaches like hi
attitude and goes hard on every snap is also capable of playing
weakside linebacker
1990-returned after missing the entir
1989 season (knee injury) to contribute as a special teams and
backup outside linebacker
won his second letter and played in al
12 games
his duty was almost strictly as a special teamer al
though he did see some defensive duty in several games
finished
with just five tackles for the year
had a fumble recovery, the
second of his career against Arizona
won mention from UW staf
for Big Hit against both USC and Stanford
listed third on the
depth at weakside outside linebacker behind Brett Collins and
Jaime Fields at the end of the year
1989-missed the entire
season while rehabilitating his knee
1988-was expected to
serve as a backup player, but earned two starts at weakside line-
backer after injuries struck Greg Travis and Brett Collins
played
in all 11 games
served as a member of the kickoff coverage team
collected 21 tackles (12 solo, nine assists), recovered one fumble
and had two tackles-for-loss totaling seven yards
recorded
a
career-best five tackles vs. Stanford
recovered a fumble and
deflected a pass against San Jose State
contributed to the Husky
defensive cause much sooner than expected
1987-red-shirt
season
worked with the scout team.
Lakes-Three-year letterman defensive lineman and tight end
all-area and All-South Puget Sound League defensive lineman
(Tacoma News-Tribune and Seattle Times)
received two votes in
the Best in the West poll (Long Beach Press-Telegram)
earned
second-team all-league honors his junior season and honorable
mention accolades his sophomore year
competed in track and
field for three seasons
SPSL discus champ in 1987
finished
Matt Jones
sixth in the state meet in 1986.
Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1988
12
9
21
0/1
1
0
3/10#
1/3
1990
2
3
5
0/1
0
0
0/0
0/0
TOTAL
14
12
26
0/2
1
0
3/10#
1/3
#Tackles for loss include sacks.
64
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Pete Kaligis
Lincoln Kennedy**
Offensive Guard
Offensive Tackle
6-2, 255
56
6-7, 315
Junior
75
Sophomore
Bellingham, Wash.
San Diego, Calif.
(Bellingham)
(Morse)
ersonal-Born June 1, 1971, in Bellingham, Wash.
father,
Personal-Born February 12, 1971, in York, Pa.
father, T.F.
ex, is a carpenter and his mother, Betty, is a receptionist
has
Kennedy, Sr., is in the U.S. Navy and served a tour in the Middle
aree sisters
likes to lift weights in his free time
pre-Arts and
East during Operation Desert Storm last winter mother, Hope,
ciences major.
is an accountant
given first name is Tamerlane
has two
Vashington-Two-year squad member
expected
to
be
younger sisters and a younger brother
drama major
interests
was
a
eading candidate to replace Dean Kirkland at strongside guard but
include video games, reading and law.
hjuries slowed his progress in the spring
ankle and knee woes
Washington-Two-year letterman offensive lineman
made
a
ut his practice time and he'll go into fall practice as one of three
full-time move to weakside tackle last spring after a year where he
layers fighting for the starting berth (others are Jim Nevelle and
played both guard and tackle
emerged from spring ball as the
Andrew Peterson)
has exceptional strength and is a good athlete
starter at weakside tackle
has the potential to win post-season
out must remain healthy if he is to be a factor
1990-failed
to
honors and big things are expected from him in 1991
should
be
etter despite appearing in seven games and the Rose Bowl
one of the top linemen in the Pac-10 Conference
already named
vorked behind Dean Kirkland at strongside guard much of the
to the Playboy All-America team for 1991 and was also chosen to the
eason
1989-red-shirt season
one of the premier scout
College and Pro Football Newsweekly 1991 pre-season All-America
quad players
tied linemate Jim Nevelle for the most backup
second team
capable of playing either tackle or guard because of
Offensive Player of the Week accolades from the coaching staff
his mobility
possesses surprising quickness, especially for his
vas recognized as Backup Player of the Week nine of 11 weeks
mammoth size
one of the largest players to ever play for the
during the regular season.
Huskies
has good athletic ability and is a quick learner
has
Bellingham-Won three letters in football while playing for coach
worked hard on his strength and conditioning
dropped about 35
pounds since the 1988 season
1990- was one of the most
ohn Craig
all-state and All-Northwest League as a senior when
he played both offensive tackle and middle linebacker
slowed
pleasant surprises on the entire Husky squad
started a total of
bart of the year with a knee injury
played both OT and DT as a
eight games at two positions and went on to reap second team All-
Pac-10 honors
his squad made it to the state semifinals
his versatility helped maintain Washington's high
sophomore and junior
level of success on the offensive front
claimed first career start at
his junior year
played in the East-West All-Star Game in the
summer of 1989
was also a track standout at the school
weak guard in the third week of the season against USC in part
won
the state title in the shot put as a junior and senior
also won a
because of a shoulder injury suffered by senior Rick Schulberg
state title in the discus after finishing second as a junior
but Kennedy seized the opportunity and had two crucial lead blocks
was
fourth in the javelin senior season
best effort in the shot was 62-
on a long Greg Lewis pass reception and an option play first down
8½ and he has done 168-10 in the discus
competed in the
Kennedy and the entire offensive unit were selected UW Offen-
Keebler Invitational Track and Field Meet during June of '89 in
sive Player of the Game as a result of the 31-0 Husky victory over
Chicago and took fourth place with an effort of 60-0 in the shot put
the Trojans
started four games at weak guard before moving
was also fifth in the shot at the prestigious Golden West Invita-
over as the starter at strong tackle for injured Siupeli Malamala at
Stanford
tional in California with a throw of 59-6.
held that starting job for four games until splitting
playing time with Malamala in the Apple Cup while nursing a sore
left toe
given weekly "Big Hit" award three times, vs. Oregon,
Husky Fact
California and Arizona
physical stature automatically makes him
One for the Record Books
stand out in a crowd and his sophomore performance did much the
same
1989-earned first letter
played as a backup in every
Washington's record for consecutive home games without a
loss is 51, running from November 28, 1907 to November 29,
game except the USC contest
moved to the offensive line in the
1918. The string was broken by a 14-0 loss in the rain to
spring after working on the defensive side last fall
reported to fall
Washington State College (now called Washington State
University).
65
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Lincoln Kennedy, Continued
practice with broken finger that was surgically repaired in August
Joe Kralik*
1988-red-shirt season
worked primarily at middle guard in
Flanker
the Husky defensive scheme.
5-10, 173
Morse-Three-year letterman offensive and defensive lineman
Sophomore
3
earned three votes in the Best in the West Poll (Long Beach Press-
Telegram)
as a senior, named honorable mention All-America
Puyallup, Wash.
(USA Today), all-state (LA Times and Cal High Football), Western
100 (Tacoma News-Tribune), Super Prep All-America and All Far-
(Puyallup)
West
also selected All-San Diego CIF (San Diego Tribune) and
All-Eastern League OL as a senior
recorded 75 primary tackles,
37 assists, seven sacks and recovered two fumbles (including one for
a touchdown) during senior campaign
was selected team MVP
in four games in 87
Morse finished second in the Eastern League
and was the CIF runner-up during senior year
also lettered in
basketball and track.
Personal-Born December 14, 1970, in Chicago, Ill.
father
Dan, is a consultant
mother, Mary, is a mental health profes-
sional
has two younger brothers, K.C. and Gavin
graduated
from high school with a 3.7 GPA
pre-Arts and Sciences major
Dave Killpatrick
one of four scholarship players from Puyallup on the UW roster
(others are quarterback Billy Joe Hobert, offensive tackle Tom
Strong Safety
Gallagher and quarterback Damon Huard)
enjoys water and
6-1, 200
35
snow skiing in his spare time.
RS-Freshman
Washington-One-year letterman
finished spring drills as the
Anchorage, Alaska
team's third flanker behind Orlando McKay and LaMar Mitchell
extremely hard-working player
not afraid to take a hit and
(West)
catches the ball well in traffic
often compared to ex-Husky and
current Seahawk Paul Skansi because of his toughness
has far
better foot speed than Skansi
should continue to make a contri-
bution
will be reunited with former prep teammate Billy Joe
Hobert, who should be the Huskies' starting quarterback
1990-young receiver who earned his first letter contributing as the
third Husky receiver or "H-Back" for much of the season
saw
Personal-Born May 14, 1972, in Anchorage, Alaska
has an
extensive playing time early despite an injured elbow
played
in
older brother, Mike, who played basketball at Alaska-Anchorage
nine games and the Rose Bowl, missing only Colorado and UCLA,
and McNeese State (La.)
has younger sister, Tiffany, and
and recorded his first career catch-a 9-yarder-in the season
younger brother, Brian
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
opener VS. San Jose State
only other reception was a 4-yarder at
Washington-Red-shirted during 1990 season
Arizona State
displayed some
is a possession receiver whose statistical numbers
ability in spring drills and finds himself listed third at strong safety
should grow as he gains experience
1989-red-shirt season.
behind Paxton Tailele and Tommie Smith
impressed coaches
Puyallup-Lettered his freshman, sophomore and senior years in
with his weekly improvement during the spring
inexperience
high school
was All-South Puget Sound League, all-area and all-
could work against him, but he appears to be a player who will be
state his senior year
had 41 receptions for 1,096 yards and 18
heard from in the future
1990-red-shirted
spent the season
touchdown's during senior season
also returned punts and
at rover and was listed fourth on the depth much of the year
kickoffs
hit .564 senior year in baseball
led league in runs (26)
Named a Backup Player of the Week four times.
and stolen bases (26).
West-Lettered two years
led team to a 7-2 record and a state
Receiving
title his final season when he rushed for 854 yards and scored 18
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
touchdowns
team captain
also played defensive back and
1990
2
13
6.5
0
9
served as the team's punter (37.0 per punt)
won All-Conference
honors two years in succession and was a two-way all-state choice
named the Back of the Year in the state and also the Offensive
Husky Fact
Player of the Year
chosen as the Gatorade Player of the Year in
the state
missed his sophomore year with a knee injury
Husky Stadium First
had
20 tackles and two TD's in state title game as a senior against
The first touchdown in Husky Stadium was scored by UW
Bartlett High School which West won
best game of his career
quarterback Bob Abel against Dartmouth in the stadium
was 248 yards rushing and three touchdowns against Soldotna
dedication game on November 27, 1920. Washington lost its
played for coach Travis Cantrell
also lettered in track and soccer,
stadium debut, 28-7.
and was on two state championship teams in soccer.
66
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Washington-Two-year letterman
listed second behind Steve
Scott Leick
Emtman at defensive tackle going into fall practice
had a solid
Offensive Tackle
spring and the UW coaches would like him to continue that devel-
opment into the fall
offers experience in the defensive line
6-4, 275
RS-Freshman
64
capable of playing any one of three spots on the line
will
probably be counted on when team faces short yardage and goal-
Renton, Wash.
line sets
good quickness and intelligence
his experience
should help him continue to see more game action
1990-won
(Hazen)
his second letter
saw action in 10 games and the Rose Bowl,
remaining on the sideline for only the UCLA contest
recorded
four total tackles, including three solos had an 8-yard sack
against California
1989-played in all 12 games in a reserve
capacity
started the year at defensive tackle behind Travis
Richardson before switching to middle guard following the Colo-
rado game
was John Cook's backup the remainder of the year
has an
and contributed 18 tackles
Personal-Born on March 22, 1972, in Renton, Wash.
two of those were for losses totaling
best outing was five tackles VS. Oregon
his
older brother, Jeff, who played football at Wyoming
has a
minus three yards
younger brother, Todd
tackles-for-loss came against Colorado and USC
1988-red-
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
shirt season.
Washington-Young, inexperienced lineman who will go into fall
drills listed third at weakside tackle behind Lincoln Kennedy and
Interlake-Three-year letterman offensive guard and defensive
Tom Gallagher
lack of game experience will probably work
end
had eight votes in Best in the West poll (Long Beach Press-
against him and it appears his playing time will come in the future
Telegram)
as a senior, earned the following awards: first-team
1990-red-shirted
finished the season listed third at
All-USA (USA Today), Parade All-America, Washington Player of
weakside tackle.
the Year (USA Today and Gatorade/Scholastic Coach), The Sport-
ing News Top 100 list, All-KingCo (Seattle Times), 87 Star Times
Hazen-Three-year letterman and starter at offensive tackle
and Blue Chip (Seattle Times), Western 100 and Best in the North-
also started two seasons at defensive tackle
team captain as a
west (Tacoma News-Tribune), Super Prep All-America, All-Far
senior and named first team All-Seamount League offensive tackle
West and preseason All-America
two-time All-State (Sportswrit-
and second-team defensive tackle
made the Seattle Times Star
ers Assn., Seattle P-I)
two-time All-KingCo OL/DL (Bellevue
Times team as a senior and was also a Seattle P-I All-State choice
Journal-American)
Preseason Top-25 Players to Watch (USA
was second team All-NPSL pick as a junior
prep coach was Rick
Today)
Preseason All-America (Don Heinrich's College Foot-
Stubrud
also lettered in track (junior and senior) and wrestling
ball)
Elite Preseason 22 team (Athlon's)
averaged nine solo
(all four years), placing 10th in the state shot put competition as a
tackles, eight assists, three sacks and two pass deflections per game
junior
a league wrestling champion as a junior, he qualified for
while recovering three fumbles as a senior
top game as a senior
state as a senior.
was vs. Issaquah when he recorded 11 solo tackles, six sacks and
blocked three passes
team finished 8-1 senior season
three-
year starter in football, basketball and baseball
two-time All-
KingCo basketball player who averaged 21.3 points per game as a
senior
Mike Lustyk**
named second-team all-state in basketball as a junior and
senior
is Interlake's career scoring leader
led KingCo in
Defensive Tackle
scoring with 19.5 average as a junior
hit .444 as All-KingCo first
baseman as a junior
hit .333 as a senior
only sophomore
6-3, 265
Junior
74
starter on '86 Interlake state championship baseball team.
Defensive Statistics
Bellevue, Wash.
YEAR
UT
AT
TOTAL
FUM/REC
P/DEF INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
(Interlake)
1989
7
11
18
0/0
0
0
2/3
0/0
1990
3
1
4
0/0
0
0
1/8#
1/8
TOTAL
10
12
22
0/0
0
0
3/11#
1/8
#Tackles for loss include sacks.
Personal-Born June 24, 1970, in Seattle, Wash
father, John,
is a computer programmer
mother, Diane, is a teacher
has a
younger brother, Matt
psychology major
enjoys music,
movies and socializing with friends.
67
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Lamar Lyons
Damon Mack
Free Safety
Split End
6-3, 208
RS-Freshman
25
6-0, 182
Junior
6
Los Angeles, Calif.
Gardena, Calif.
(St. Monica)
(Gardena)
Personal-Born on March 25, 1973, in Los Angeles, Calif.
has
Personal-Born January 11, 1970, in Los Angeles, Calif.
father,
one younger brother
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
Lynn Mack, played college football at Central State (Ohio) and now
Washington-Red-shirt freshman free safety
switched from
works as a salesman
mother, Marsha, is a supervisor with Pacific
rover to free safety in the spring
was second on the depth chart
Bell
has an older brother, Troy
a cousin, Bryan Pool, played
behind Shane Pahukoa at the conclusion of spring ball and will start
football at Nevada-Reno
advertising major
enjoys socializing.
fall drills there
lacks experience but has the size and talent to
with friends and all sports.
contribute in the future
has worked hard to improve his speed
Washington-Junior squad member
playing time at Washing-
and has improved it to 4.5 in the 40.
considered a good, young
ton has been limited and has yet to earn a varsity letter
can play
prospect who just lacks game experience
1990-red-shirted
both split end and flanker
finished the spring as the team's third
played rover and worked his way up to number three on the depth
split end behind Mario Bailey and Curtis Gaspard
had three
chart at the close of the season
Named Backup Player of the
receptions during spring scrimmages for 47 yards
has good
Week four times.
combination of size and speed
very deceptive foot speed
has
St. Monica-Three-year letterman at defensive back who spent
fine hands
1990-appeared in three games during the season
some time at tight end and quarterback
had 115 tackles and
played against USC, Arizona and Washington State and did not
three interceptions as a senior
All-Division 8, All-Santa Fe
catch a pass
worked at split end and at times was the third and
League, All-West Side and all-state
was named most valuable
fourth player at that spot
1989-red-shirt freshman who en-
defensive back for team that finished 9-0 in Santa Fe League
tered fall drills as number four flanker
played in five games
Saint Monica advanced to first round of C.I.F. playoffs where it was
saw extensive playing time in last two games of the season
saw
eliminated
during junior season, registered 105 tackles while
extended action in four of last five games
worked on gaining
competing for University High School in Los Angeles
University
consistency during the season
1988-red-shirt season
finished the season 7-2
spent time at tight end as junior
worked on the scout team offense
spent year getting back into
lettered as special teams performer and defensive back for Univer-
the flow after missing the majority of senior season in high school.
sity as sophomore
played baseball as a sophomore and batted
Gardena-Three-year letterman wide receiver and safety
top
.477 as a catcher/centerfielder
ran track, competing in the 100m,
Husky vote-getter with nine votes in the Best in the West Poll (Long
200m and 400m
ran junior high school track with current Husky,
Beach Press-Telegram)
member Western 100 (Tacoma News-
Beno Bryant.
Tribune)
Super Prep All-Far West
Golden 50 team (Cal-Hi
Football)
The Sporting News Top 100 list
played in only four
Husky Fact
games senior year due to separated shoulder
had seven catches
for 96 yards and one touchdown
team
MVP
as
a
junior
caught
First in Appearances
39 passes for 691 yards and three touchdowns as a junior
also
Of the Pacific-10 Conference schools, Washington had the most bowl
intercepted four passes as a junior
AAAA all-city (First Inter-
appearances in the 1980s with nine. The UCLA Bruins, who have eight bowl
state)
all-area (South Bay Daily Breeze)
All-South Bay (Los
appearances, have the most bowl wins in the 1980s with seven, followed by
Angeles Times) as a junior wide receiver
also lettered in track
Washington's six bowl wins. Here are those lists for the league.
and baseball.
Bowl Appearances in the 1980s: 9-Washington; 8-UCLA; 7-Southern
California; 4-Arizona State; 3-Arizona; 2-Washington State; 1-Oregon,
Stanford; 0-California, Oregon State.
Bowl Wins in the 1980s: 7-UCLA; 6-Washington; 3-Arizona State; 2-
Arizona, Southern California; 1-Oregon, Washington State; 0-California,
Oregon State, Stanford.
68
Husky Players
W
1991 Returnees
Siupeli Malamala
Andy Mason*
Offensive Tackle
Defensive End
6-6, 300
70
6-2, 228
Sophomore
13
Senior
Kailua, Hawaii
Longview, Wash.
(Kalaheo)
(Mark Morris)
Personal-Born January 15, 1969, in Tofoa, Tonga
one of four
Personal-Born August 31, 1971, in Portland, Ore,
has two
children
graduated from high school with a 3.45 GPA
younger sisters
his father, Trevol, is an independent truck driver
criminal justice major
given the Principal's Award (recognizing
and his mother, Gail, is a cabinet shipper
enjoys participating in
the top five students in the senior class)
his hobbies are weight
all sports
compiled a 3.2 GPA in high school
pre-Arts and
training, reading and all water sports.
Sciences major
given first name is Antwan
drafted by the
Washington-Three-year letterman
fifth-year senior
one of
Toronto Blue Jays in the 22nd round in the spring of 1989, he was
the most experienced players on the offensive line
enters fall
offered a $65,000 bonus to sign with the American League club.
practice as the team's starter at strongside tackle for the third
Washington-Earned his first varsity letter last year as a red-shirt
straight season
if he stays healthy, he could be in line for post-
freshman coaching staff would like more bulk on his frame, but
season honors
loves to play and has great size for his position
pass-rushing ability makes him a strong candidate to replace Travis
has improved his strength and is one of the most powerful blockers
Richardson at defensive end in 1991
emerged from spring
on the Husky front line
reminds many of former Husky, Curt
practice as the starter
still learning the position and game
Marsh, who played seven years with the Raiders
has done some
experience is lacking, but the UW coaches feel he will improve the
deep snapping
size and experience make him a valuable player
more he plays
appears to have the athletic ability to be a very
1990-starter at strong side tackle who earned honorable mention
good player
has excellent speed and the coaches like his attitude
All-Pac-10 acclaim
started the first six games of the season
his overall athletic ability also makes him a prime candidate for
before straining his right knee early in the Oregon contest
special teams duty
1990-converted linebacker with great
missed three games before he returned for part-time duty in the
speed who earned his first letter
aggressive backup to senior All-
UCLA game
was back in the starting lineup VS. Washington
Pac-10 player Travis Richardson
earned playing time in all 11
State while Lincoln Kennedy nursed a sore toe
also started in the
games and the Rose Bowl
had 20 total tackles, including 13 solos
Rose Bowl
1989-earned second UW letter as a 10-game
earned four tackles for loss, including 2.5 sacks
best day was
starter at strong tackle
sprained an ankle in preseason camp and
at the Rose Bowl when he recorded five tackles and blocked a punt
did not play in season opener against Texas A&M
went on to
following Iowa's first possession which was picked up by cornerback
start and contribute despite nagging ankle injury and torn tendon in
Dana Hall and returned 27 yards for a key touchdown
also
finger suffered at Oregon State one of five offensive line mates to
played well at Stanford where he recorded a personal best five
be selected UW Player of the Week at Oregon State
underwent
tackles with a caused fumble and a sack
given a weekly "Big Hit"
surgery to repair injured finger immediately following regular sea-
award by the Husky coaches following the Washington State game
son and returned to start in the Freedom Bowl
1988-backed
had moved from strongside linebacker to end near the end of
up Mike Zandofsky at right tackle
played in nine games during
spring ball
1989-red-shirt season
worked out as a weakside
the year
the only two he did not see action in were Army and San
linebacker all season
traveled with the Huskies to the Freedom
Jose State
1987-red-shirt season
made trip with Huskies to
Bowl
twice honored as Backup Player of the Week by the
the Independence Bowl.
coaching staff, prior to the Texas A&M and Purdue games
Kalaheo-Two year letterman
a first-team all-state (Honolulu
served as honorary scout team captain against Arizona.
Advertiser and Honolulu Star-Bulletin) selection his senior year
Mark Morris-Played running back and outside linebacker his
honorable mention prep All-American (USA Today)
second-
final two seasons after starting as a cornerback as a sophomore
team All-American (Bigger, Faster, Stronger Magazine)
was
prep coach was John Supinsky
had 105 tackles his senior year
named his team's Outstanding Offensive Player (1987) and the
along with five sacks and two interceptions
added 400 yards
school's Male Athlete of the Year (1987)
also competed in track
rushing and 300 receiving
team captain as a senior and a two-
and field
finished third in the state shot put competition and fifth
time All-St. Helens League pick
team participated in state
in the discus
was named the school's Outstanding Track and
playoffs in 1988
was also one of top track performers in the state
Field Athlete (1987).
in his career
twice finished second in the state meet in the 100-
meters and was second in the 200m as a senior
ran the anchor leg
on his team's 4x100m relay that won the state title as a junior
he
69
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Andy Mason, Continued
was second in shot put as a junior to Bellingham's Pete Kaligis, who
Orlando McKay**
is a Husky teammate
has also participated in American Legion
Flanker
baseball in the summers.
5-11, 178
Defensive Statistics
Senior
4
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
1990
13
7
20
1/0
0
0
4/13.5#
2.5/14.5
Mesa, Ariz.
(Mesa)
(Note: Blocked punt VS. Iowa, 1991.)
#Tackles for loss include sacks.
Shell Mays
Defensive End
Personal-Born October 2, 1969, in Indianapolis, Ind.
father
Evans McKay, is a lawyer and mother, Karen, is a secretary
has
6-0, 230
86
two older brothers, Darrell and Ritchie
father played basketbal
Senior
at New Mexico
Ritchie played basketball at Seattle Pacific
served as a Husky graduate assistant coach in 1988-89, and is
Tacoma, Wash.
currently assistant basketball coach at Bradley
earned his high
(Lincoln)
school's Outstanding Student Award and American Legion Award
graduated with a 3.87 GPA
is a psychology major
hobbies
include all sports and interpreting dreams.
Washington-Two-year letterman at flanker
gives the club an
experienced hand among the receiving corps
goes into fall drills
as the starter at flanker and is expected to be a leader in 1991
coaches enjoy working with him because of his outstanding work
Personal-Born August 26, 1969 in Tacoma, Wash
brother of
ethic
gives 100 percent effort at all times
scored twice in the
former Husky defensive lineman, Stafford Mays, who played nine
spring game when he caught passes of 31 and 29 yards from Billy Joe
years in the NFL with St. Louis and Minnesota
has one other
Hobert
has outstanding foot speed-also runs track-and
brother and two sisters
one, Sharolyn, is a UW grad
mother's
should make some big plays for Washington
one of the top 400-
name is Betty and father is deceased
enjoys fishing
has an
meter runners in the country and is a two-time track All-America
interest in becoming a policeman in the future
has done some
qualified for the 1990 NCAA track championships in the 400 meters
volunteer work with disabled children in the past
sociology
with a school record time of 45.81 and finished 10th in a time of
46.15
major.
also finished ninth at the 1991 NCAA Indoor Champion-
ships
ran a leg on Washington's Pac-10 Championship 1600m
Washington-A fifth-year Husky senior
seeking his first varsity
relay team which qualifed for NCAAs and finished fifth (3.04.73) in
letter
finished spring drills listed third at defensive end behind
1990
was fourth at the Pac-10 meet in the 400 meters
Andy Mason and Danianke Smith
height and weight have
qualified for the 1991 NCAA Outdoor Championships in his spe-
worked against him since joining the Husky program as a walk-on,
cialty but passed up the meet one of the top students on the UW
but has worked hard to earn a spot on the three deep
has made
squad and was named to the first team Pac-10 All-Academic team
himself better through hard work and never fails to give 100 percent
last year
when on the field
1990-finished third on the club in receptions with 19
1990-did not appear in a varsity game
for 337 yards (17.7 avg.) and three touchdowns
had one grab for
only game activity was in a junior varsity contest against Wenatchee
17 yards in the Rose Bowl
after getting shut out in the season-
Valley College
named a Backup Player of the Week for the
opener VS. San Jose State, went on to catch at least one pass in the
Stanford game
1989-made his first and only appearance when
next 10 games
gathered in a season-high four passes for 67 yards
he saw reserve duty in the latter stages of the UW win over Purdue
against UCLA
longest grab of the season-47 yards on a non-
credited with one tackle in the game
also saw action in the JV
scoring play-came VS. the Bruins
also had 67 yards receiving at
game vs. Yakima Valley CC
1988-was a reserve inside line-
Purdue (on three catches)
had a 45-yard touchdown reception at
backer for the club
played in the junior varsity game VS. Spokane
Purdue
possibly his biggest catch of the season was a 45-yard
Falls CC.
score that gave Washington a 21-point lead over Oregon at 31-10
Lincoln-Played both football and baseball
was a defensive end
and effectively broke the will of the Ducks
also had an exciting
in football and played outfield and third base on the baseball squad
diving, layout catch on a play that covered 35 yards and gave
won All-City honors in football.
Washington a 24-0 lead over the Stanford Cardinal
1989-a
starter in all 12 games opposite Andre Riley
finished fourth on
the squad in receiving with 30 catches for 443 yards (14.8) average
70
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Orlando McKay, Continued
1990
was second in receiving yardage and
OPPONENT
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
nd four touchdowns
San Jose
0
0
0.0
0
0
verage to Riley
also equaled Riley's four receiving touchdowns
Purdue
3
67
22.3
1
35t
n '89
one of four players on the squad to catch at least one pass
USC
3
33
11.0
0
14
n every game
the Arizona native had a superlative homecoming
Colorado
1
12
12.0
0
12
erformance against Arizona in Tucson, with a game- and career-
ASU
2
35
17.5
0
18
high seven catches for 120 yards with a 38-yard touchdown against
he Wildcats
was named Texaco Star Performer, Metropolitan
Oregon
1
45
45.0
0
45t
Stanford
2
42
21.0
0
35t
Federal Savings Player of the Game (media vote) and UW Offensive
Cal
1
12
12.0
0
12
Player of the Week for his play vs. Arizona
also selected UW
Arizona
1
10
10.0
0
10
Player of the Game at California with four catches for 79 yards and
1988-one of three freshmen—
UCLA
4
67
16.8
0
47
17-yard touchdown reception
WSU
1
14
14.0
0
14
along with James Clifford and Mario Bailey-to play as a true
17.0
0
17
freshman
made his college debut against San Jose State
did
Iowa
1
17
TOTAL
19
337
17.7
3
47
not catch a pass all season
Washington's thin wide receiver ranks
accelerated his advancement up the depth chart
ran 47.31 in the
°Official NCAA statistics and totals above do not include bowl games.
400m for the UW track team and qualified for Pac-10s.
Mesa-Two-year letterman wide receiver
honorable mention
All-America (USA Today)
first-team AAA all-state and all-
classifications all-state (Arizona Republic)
All-Arizona and Su-
per Prep All-Far West team
selected squad MVP as a senior
caught 27 passes for 650 yards and seven touchdowns during senior
year
also punted and returned kickoffs
top game came vs.
Deer Valley when he caught five passes for 162 yards and three
touchdowns
was a two-time high school track All-American in
the 400m
won four individual state titles as a senior, including
100m (10.70), 200m (21.56), 400m (47.09) and 4x100m Relay
(41.68)
was ranked sixth in the nation in the 400m
also
lettered in basketball where he set a school record of 12 assists in a
game.
Receiving
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
1988
0
0
0.0
0
0
1989
30
443
14.8
4
44
1990
19
337
17.7
3
47
TOTAL
49
780
15.9
7
47
McKay's Career Game-by-Game Receiving
1989
OPPONENT
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Texas A&M
3
28
9.3
0
14
Purdue
1
5
5.0
0
5
Arizona
7
120
17.1
1
38t
Colorado
2
41
20.5
0
33
USC
3
26
8.7
0
10
Oregon
2
47
23.5
1
40t
Cal
4
79
19.8
1
36
UCLA
2
13
6.5
0
8
Orlando McKay
ASU
1
6
6.0
1
6t
OSU
1
11
11.0
0
11
WSU
4
67
16.8
0
44
Florida
5
83
16.6
0
47
TOTAL
30
443
14.8
4
44
71
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
LaMar Mitchell*
Josh Moore
Flanker
Cornerback
6-1, 204
Senior
86
6-1, 190
RS-Freshman
7
Stockton, Calif.
Torrance, Calif.
(Tokay)
(West Torrance)
Personal-Born September 21, 1968, in Stockton, Calif.
has a
Personal-Born on September 29, 1972
has one younger siste
sister
graduated from high school with a 3.0 GPA
psychology
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
major
three-time member of his high school's honor roll
Washington-A red-shirt freshman
really came on durin
hobbies include fishing, playing video games and watching movies.
spring practice and claimed the number three left cornerback spc
Washington-Has won one varsity letter
a good spring moved
behind Dana Hall and Russell Hairston
worked especially har
him into number two slot at flanker behind Orlando McKay
in the off-season on his speed and it showed last spring
battle
named the Most Improved Receiver at the conclusion of spring
Hairston for the number two spot and that competition shoul
drills
was the team's leading receiver in the spring, grabbing 14
continue when fall drills begin
proved to the coaches he can pla
passes for 183 yards and two TDs
very consistent all through
the position and could end up being used in nickel situations for th
spring ball
great competitor
the heaviest of the wide receiv-
Huskies
appears to have a fine future in the program
1990-
ers at 204 pounds
a former track & field hurdler in high school,
sat out the season as a red-shirt
worked at both left and righ
who, like so many Husky players, has fine speed.
should figure
cornerback
twice named a Backup Player of the Week.
in Washington's 1991 plans
1990-reserve wide receiver and
West Torrance-Three-year letterman tailback, cornerback and
special teams player who earned his first letter
finished the year
kick returner
rushed 110 times for 750 yards and 17 touchdown
listed third at flanker behind Mario Bailey and Marc Jones
had
as senior
one catch for 9 yards against California
made his mark on kick
also had eight interceptions, including a 40-yar
touchdown return VS. El Segundo
had 49 solo tackles
re
return and coverage teams
played in 10 games and the Rose
turned one kickoff 93 yards for a touchdown vs. Redondo Beach
Bowl, but did not travel to Colorado
was twice selected Special
named Ocean League MVP, Daily Breeze All-Area, L.A. Times All
Teams Player of the Week, vs. Oregon and Arizona by the UW
Area and All-C.I.F. defensive back
team finished 10-2 and los
coaches
1989-had one catch, a five-yarder against Purdue in
to Temple City (19-13) in C.I.F. quarterfinals
made crucia
the second game of the season
played in seven games during the
interception in waning moments of game vs. Torrance to preserve
season
demonstrated big play ability in 1989 Purple and White
14-8 win lettered as junior for 4-6 club, but missed second hal
intrasquad game
made a diving 40-yard touchdown catch off a
of season with shoulder injury
had two interceptions, including
long pass from Cary Conklin
1988-played in three games, but
one for a touchdown vs. Centennial
rushed 32 times for 288
did not catch a pass
was utilized in a backup role
served as a
yards and returned one kickoff for a touchdown
lettered as
kickoff return man in the Oregon game
also made the traveling
running back/cornerback during sophomore campaign
was
squad to USC and Washington State
caught people's attention in
two-year letterman in basketball and averaged 7.0 ppg as a junior
the '88 spring game with a 58-yard touchdown reception from Eric
and 12.0 ppg as a senior
lettered two years in track with bests of
Alozie
1987-red-shirt season
suffered a cracked tibia in
11.1 in the 100m, 41-feet in the triple jump and 20-2 in the long
second week of fall drills and missed eight weeks of practice
jump.
came back to work briefly with the UW scout team.
Tokay-Four-year letterman
an all-area (Stockton Record), All-
NorCal and all-league receiver
was named team MVP all four
years
broke eight of the school's nine receiving records
named to the state's all-star team
received four votes in Best in
the West Poll (Long Beach Press-Telegram)
also competed in
track
set three school records: 10.6 (100m), 21.8 (200m) and
41.7 (400m Relay).
Receiving
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
1989
1
5
5.0
0
5
1990
1
9
9.0
0
9
TOTAL
2
14
7.0
0
9
72
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
Shaun Moore
Keith Navidi
Tight End
Defensive Tackle
6-3, 220
80
6-6, 266
RS-Freshman
99
Sophomore
Spanaway, Wash.
Yorba Linda, Calif.
(Bethel)
(Esperanza)
ersonal-Born August 21, 1971, in Fort Knox, Ky.
has two
Personal-Born on July 12, 1972, in Fullerton, Calif.
has an
rothers
father, Willie, is an X-ray technician
mother, Joetta
older sister, Vinnie, an older brother, Ken, and a younger brother,
a dietician
pre-Arts and Sciences major
considering a
Adam
enjoys fishing and outdoor recreation was a factor in his
areer in law enforcement
interests include baseball cards and
choosing Washington over UCLA
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
omputers.
Washington-A red-shirt freshman who will begin fall practice
Vashington-Entering his third season in the Husky program
number three on the depth behind Steve Emtman and Mike Lustyk
as not yet earned a letter
finished spring practice number two
at defensive tackle
has excellent size and potential but lacks
n the depth chart behind Bruce Bailey
a former wide receiver
experience
showed some promise in the spring and the coaches
nat has made the transition to tight end
the UW coaches like his
feel he just needs to get on the field to continue that improvement
orth ethic and it is reflected in his performance on the field
1990-red-shirted
was the number four defensive tackle
nade two catches during spring drills for 20 yards
1990-
much of the year
named a Backup Player of the Week a total of
ppeared in four games during the year all in a reserve role
saw
six times.
rief action against USC, ASU, Cal and WSU
moved between
Esperanza-Two-year letterman who missed half of his senior
umber three and four on the depth chart during the year at tight
season with a dislocated elbow
All-Empire League performer
nd
1989-red-shirt season.
who was a pre-season All-America choice by Super Prep and Street
Bethel-Three-year letterman who played safety, running back
and Smith's magazines
team finished 6-5, third in the Empire
nd flanker
All-South Puget Sound League safety as a senior
League and advanced to the CIF playoffs before losing to Villa Park
amed first team All-Area wide receiver by the Tacoma News-
had 11 sacks and three blocked field goals prior to suffering
ribune
named first team All-State wide receiver by the Seattle
injury
had 18 sacks as a junior and caused eight fumbles
Post-Intelligencer and the Tacoma News-Tribune
served as team
played in the state high school all-star game
was starter for
captain as a junior and a senior
recorded 25 receptions for 725
5-4-1 Esperanza club as junior and was named all-league
played
vards his senior season
led the state by averaging 29.0 yards per
for coach Gary Meek
lettered in track and field where he threw
catch
rushed for 347 yards and recorded 13 touchdowns and six
the discus (160-0) and shot put (51-0).
interceptions
top games came at Jefferson and Rogers
against Jefferson, posted six receptions for 157 yards and one touch-
Husky Fact
down
against Rogers, caught six passes for 155 yards and two
touchdowns
also lettered in baseball and track
was SPSL
The Clearasil Squad
champion in the 300m hurdles as a junior.
The last Husky team to go through an entire season, including
any post-season bowl appearance, with an unblemished record
was the 1915 team, coached by Gilmour Dobie. Washington
had a 7-0 record in 1915. Dobie led the Huskies to five other
undefeated seasons prior to 1915, including 7-0 in 1913; 6-0 in
1912, 6-0 in 1911, 6-0 in 1910, and 7-0 in 1909. Dobie is the
only coach to bring a Husky team through a season undefeated
and untied.
73
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Jim Nevelle
Shane Pahukoa*
Offensive Guard
Free Safety
6-2, 265
Sophomore
52
6-3, 196
Junior
21
Palmdale, Calif.
Marysville, Wash.
(Palmdale)
(Marysville-Pilchuck)
Personal-Born January 7, 1971, in Pensacola, Fla.
a 4.0
Personal-Born November 25, 1970, in Vancouver, Wash
h
student in high school and finished number one in his class of 490
one older brother, Jeff, who was a senior All-America and All-Pa
graduates
has one younger brother
his father, Frank, is in
10 offensive tackle for Washington last year and who was drafted la
management for Lockheed and played football at Upper Iowa
spring by the Los Angeles Rams
father, Wayne, is a supervis
University
his mother, Rosemary, is a teacher
an uncle, John
and mother, Donna, works in sales
pre-Arts and Sciences maj
Nevelle, played football at Florida State
was a representative to
enjoys playing basketball and drawing.
Boys' State and was a recipient of a student-athlete award in high
school
served as student body president, Letterman's Club
Washington-Two-year letterman and a third year junior
liste
president and was a member of the Key Club
likes
to
number one at free safety at the close of spring practice
had
read
and
lift weights in his free time
good spring and lends experience in the secondary
coaches lil
major is mechanical engineering.
his attitude
a great competitor who has a real understanding
Washington-Third-year sophomore offensive guard
one of
his position
has gained valuable experience each of the last tw
several untested offensive linemen who will have to play prominent
seasons
has good leaping ability and once won a dunk contest
roles in 1991
one of three players battling for starting job at
high school
named to the Pac-10 All-Academic team last year
strongside guard
missed almost all of spring drills with a sprained
1990-earned his second letter while serving predominantly as tl
right knee which slowed his development
had
been
a
center
his
number two free safety behind Tommie Smith did manage to sta
first two seasons in the program
however, the development of
the season opener against San Jose State and the Apple Cup finale
Frank Garcia allowed the coaching staff to switch him to guard
Washington State
outstanding special teams performer both
quickness, strength and intelligence are his attributes
has the
coverage and return teams
had key block on at least two
ability to be a factor in 1991
named HM on the Pac-10 All-
teammate Beno Bryant's three punt return touchdowns
defei
Academic team in 1990
1990-did not win a letter as Ed
sively, finished with 21 total tackles (14 solos) with four pass de
Cunningham's backup at center
played in eight games and the
fenses and a tackle for loss
added two stops and a pass break u,
Rose Bowl
the only games he failed to get on the field were San
in the Rose Bowl
had one interception, against Stanford, an
Jose State, Purdue and Colorado
1989-red-shirt season
an
returned it 32 yards on the game's final play
also recorded h
outstanding competitor on the scout team
tied linemate Pete
season high of five tackles against the Cardinal
honored wit
Kaligis for the most backup Offensive Player of the Week accolades
entire No. 1 defense for his play against Washington State
earne
from the coaching staff
was recognized as backup Player of the
two "Big Hits," one VS. California and the other against Arizona
Week nine of 11 weeks during the regular season.
1989-one of just three true freshmen to letter
played in seve
Palmdale-Won three varsity letters and was coached his final two
of 11 games and made one start against Arizona State when th
years by John Lowry
played offensive and defensive tackle
Huskies opted to open with a fifth defensive back
missed fou
twice named All-CIF and the Golden League Lineman of the Year
games (Arizona through Oregon) with a bruised thigh
most
C
team was in the playoffs three years running and it reached the
his activity was on special teams where he tied for third in tackle
CIF Division II semifinals his senior year where it lost to an
with eight stops
blocked a PAT against Oregon State
had
Antelope Valley squad led by Husky teammate Tommie Smith
total of 15 tackles while playing defense, including eight vs. Arizon.
team MVP and named to the all-state academic team
State
added three more in the Freedom Bowl
was a
picked off hi
member of the South team in the 1989 North-South Shrine Game at
first collegiate pass against Oregon State and returned it eight yard
the
Rose
Bowl
had 66 tackles and six sacks as a senior
won a Kicking Team Award from the UW coaches for his play
standout on the track team as a discus performer
competed in
against Washington State in the regular season finale.
the state meet as a senior and his best effort is 184-3.
Marysville-Pilchuck-An all-state running back as a senior wher
he rushed for 1,068 yards and scored 19 touchdowns while playing
both ways for coach Scott Stokes
won three letters and also
played quarterback part of his career
twice named All-Wesco
and was that league's Player of the Year as a senior
had a pair of
74
Husky Players
W
91 Returnees
ane Pahukoa, Continued
Aaron Pierce
0-plus yard games as a senior, including 260 VS. Shorecrest when
also scored five times
also played basketball and baseball and
Tight End
lped the Tomahawks to a fifth place finish in the state AAA
6-5, 240
sketball tournament by averaging 11.4 points.
Senior
84
efensive Statistics
Seattle, Wash.
R
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
89
11
4
15
0/0
0
1
0/0
0/0
(Franklin)
90
14
7
21
0/0
4
1
1/4
0/0
TAL
25
11
36
0/0
4
2
1/4
0/0
Andrew Peterson
Offensive Guard
Personal-Born September 6, 1969, in Seattle, Wash.
father,
Samuel, played basketball at Seattle University
business major
6-6, 285
RS-Freshman
60
enjoys biking, going to movies and reading novels in his spare
time.
Port Orchard, Wash.
Washington-Three-year letterman
sat out spring practice
after being suspended for a violation of a team rule.
should
(South Kitsap)
return for fall practice and is expected to be the club's starting tight
end
a proven performer and his return will be critical
is
a
great athlete who realized much of his potential in an effective
junior season
a former national prep athlete in the decathlon
has good hands and speed
he has been prone to injury at times in
his career and must stay healthy
1990-started a total of nine
games including the Rose Bowl
developed into a prime weapon
ersonal-Born June 11, 1972, in Greenock, Scotland
young-
in Washington's productive offensive scheme
played
most
of
the
of seven children, has five older brothers ranging in age from 22
season with a broken navicular bone in his wrist and, despite
30, and one older sister
attended Husky Football Camp in
wearing a cast, was able to make important blocks and catches
988 and 1989
enjoys tennis, golf and skiing
pre-Arts and
suffered the injury in the season-opener vs. San Jose State
ciences major.
earned the Earle T. Glant "Tough Husky" Award after the season as
Vashington-Promising red-shirt freshman offensive guard
a result of gritty effort
named honorable mention All-Pac-10 by
lessed with great size and ability but lacks experience on the
the league's coaches
finished fourth on the UW club in receiving
bllege level
a highly-recruited prospect of whom much is
with 16 catches for 191 yards (11.9 avg) and four touchdowns
xpected
could be a future standout for the Huskies
worked
averaged a touchdown every fourth time he touched the ball
best
ith the first and second units in the spring at strongside guard and
statistical outing came against Arizona when he caught a season best
ill go into fall practice as one of three players fighting for the
four passes for 66 yards and a touchdown
grabbed four passes in
tarting berth at that spot
will challenge for playing time in 1991
the Rose Bowl win for 32 yards
had his longest reception of the
1990-red-shirted
spent the year as the number four
year-39 yards-against Arizona
had two touchdown receptions
trongside guard
suffered a right knee injury during practice for
at Washington State and his other scoring catch came at Colorado
he Rose Bowl but is fully recovered
won Backup Player of the
caught at least one pass in nine of 11 games, getting shutout at
Purdue
and
Arizona
State
Veek honors three times.
1989-played in all 12 games behind
starter Bill Ames
recorded just two receptions for 11 yards and
outh Kitsap-Was rated as one of the top prep linemen in the
one touchdown
scored touchdown on a five-yard catch against
Vest as a senior
helped South Kitsap High School to a 26-7
Purdue
his other catch was against Washington State
ecord during his career at the school
received nine votes in the
1988-began season as number three tight end behind starter
Best in the West Poll run by the Long Beach Press-Telegram which
Mark Kilpack and his backup Mike Matz, but moved to No. 2 spot
vas the best among linemen
twice named to the Seattle P-I All-
for three games (USC, Oregon and Stanford)
dropped back to
State team and was also a two-time All-Narrows League choice
third spot with return of Bill Ames, the projected starter, who had
vas listed among top 50 seniors in the country by Street & Smith's
been out with a knee injury
had six catches for 102 yards
first
was also rated as that magazine's third best lineman in the
Husky reception was against UCLA (33 yards)
missed
spring
country
named to the Western 100 (Tacoma News-Tribune)
drills because of surgery to repair tendon damage in right index
is coach was Ed Fisher.
finger
1987-red-shirt season
was a three-time Backup
Player of the Week.
75
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Aaron Pierce, Continued
Franklin-Three-year letterman defensive end and tight end
Pete Pierson
a
first-team All-Metro selection
led his team to the Metro League
Offensive Tackle
title
earned second-team all-league honors his junior season
also competed in basketball and track
held the nation's second
6-5, 275
best prep decathlon mark in 1987 (6,530)
won the prestigious
Sophomore
71
Golden West Decathlon competition in spring of '87.
Portland, Ore.
Receiving
(David Douglas)
YEAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
1988
6
102
17.0
0
33
1989
2
11
5.5
1
6
1990
16
191
11.9
4
39
TOTAL
24
304
12.7
5
39
Pierce's Career Highs
Personal-Born February 4, 1971, in Portland, Ore.
ha
Receptions vs. Arizona, 11/3/90; Iowa, 1/1/91
younger brother and sister
father, Pete, is as a supervisor and
Yards-66 vs. Arizona, 11/3/90.
mother, Cindy, is a waitress
hobbies include playing golf, bask
ball and fishing
Touchdowns-2 vs. Washington State, 11/17/90.
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
Longest Reception-39 yards vs. Arizona, 11/3/90.
Washington-Two-year squad member who will be seeking
first varsity letter
listed number two at strongside tackle behi
Longest Touchdown Reception-34 yards at WSU, 11/17/90.
Siupeli Malamala
the UW staff felt he had a solid spring and f
100-Yard Games-None.
he has the opportunity to become an outstanding player
versat
player who can fill in at either tackle or guard
1990-saw
limit
action as a red-shirt freshman
made appearances four straig
weeks against Oregon, Stanford, Cal and Arizona all in a reser
capacity
worked with the third unit at strongside tackle much
the year but was also up as high as second team at times
1989
red-shirt season
earned backup Offensive Player of the We
honors three times for his stellar work with the scout squad
recognized for his efforts prior to the UCLA, Oregon State a
Washington State games
singled out as the honorary Offensi
Player of the Game for his outstanding scout team play leading up
the Oregon State game.
David Douglas-Won three letters as a defensive end and offe
sive tackle for coach George Rallis
won all-state honors as
defensive end as a senior after winning second team honors as
junior
twice named to the All-Mt. Hood Conference team ai
was also an honorable mention All-America choice by USA Today
1988
team made it to the state semifinals his sophomore year
starred in basketball and earned first team All-Mt. Hood Confe
ence honors as the school's starting center
also a member of t
track team.
Aaron Pierce
76
Husky Players
W
91 Returnees
Tyson Pollman
Terrance Powe
Linebacker
Middle Guard
6-2, 235
66
6-2, 250
RS-Freshman
Senior
71
Randle, Wash.
Carson, Calif.
(White Pass)
(Banning)
rsonal-Born June 1, 1972, in Chehalis, Wash.
given first
Personal-Born March 25, 1969, in Los Angeles, Calif.
gradu-
ne is Robert, but prefers to go by middle name
has one older
ated from high school with a 3.2 GPA
speech major
earned
er, Andrea
father's name is Bob and mother's name is Pam
Scholar-Athlete awards for three-straight years
lists building
father is in the logging business
an uncle, Dean Pollman,
model cars and weightlifting among his hobbies.
tered in football as a linebacker at Oregon State in 1968
Washington-Fifth-year senior who is seeking his first varsity
ended football camps at Washington as a sophomore and junior
letter this fall has been a reserve defensive lineman the previous
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
three seasons after spending his first year as a redshirt
final
shington-Young, inexperienced inside linebacker who was
spring depth chart shows him third at middle guard behind Tyrone
rd on the depth chart at the close of spring practice
spent the
Rodgers and D'Marco Farr
capable of playing any of the inside
ing working at an inside position, but could be moved to the
positions for the Huskies and has worked at both middle guard and
side when fall drills begin
coaches are still trying to find a spot
tackle
1990-did not get into a varsity game
did see action in
ere he would be most comfortable
has excellent size and
the junior varsity contest against Wenatchee Valley College
ength and is a good athlete
playing time will come but has the
1989-his lone appearance came in a reserve role against Purdue in
sfortune of playing a position where the Huskies are deep and
the second game of the season
1988-did not see any varsity
ented
1990-red-shirted
named a Backup Player of the
action
1987-red-shirted season
made the trip to the Inde-
eek after the WSU game
listed third and fourth on the depth
pendence Bowl.
art much of the season behind Chico Fraley.
Banning-Four-year letterman defensive tackle and linebacker
hite Pass-Four-year letterman running back/linebacker
earned all-city, all-league, All-South Bay and all-state honors
im finished 6-3 (third in West Cowlitz League) as senior
selected to the Blue Chip, Adidas and Parade Magazine All-Ameri-
corded 63 solo tackles and 51 assists with six sacks, five caused
can teams
named to The Sporting News Top 100 Prep Players
nbles, six fumble recoveries and one blocked punt
on offense,
list
received six votes in Best in the West Poll (Long Beach Press-
shed 133 times for 948 yards (7.1 avg.) and scored 15 touchdowns
Telegram)
one of only two defensive linemen in the poll
was
named West Cowlitz Co-MVP and was a two-time all-league
named his team's captain and Most Outstanding Defensive Line-
ebacker
team finished 2-7 junior year, 5-4 as a sophomore
man
listed among seniors to watch in Street and Smith's
d 6-3 as a freshman in state A classification
prep coach was
ranked 17th among Super Prep's Top 100 national list
named
ike Elliott
lettered three years in basketball
averaged 9.0
National High School Scholastic All-American
selected to play
g as a forward on 14-6 club and averaged 10.0 rebounds
club
in Shriners (North VS. South) All-Star Classic, Lions (East vs. West)
ished fourth in the state during his junior season
also lettered
All-Star Classic and San Diego vs. Los Angeles All-Star Game
track
finished second in class A state championships in the
named to the "Super 11" (second-team)
also competed in track
ot put (51-0) and threw the discus in the 150s.
and field.
77
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
of the defensive line
David Reiner
joined the Husky program in the fall of 19
from Oklahoma
appears to have fully recovered from left kri
Center
surgery which took place in the spring of 1990
suffered
injury in a full contact practice session in early April
1990
6-6, 280
Sophomore
63
overcame physical odds to earn his first Husky letter and contribu
to the strong UW defensive cause
suffered a knee injury in
North Hollywood, Calif.
spring that required surgery and his return to action in the fall W
questionable
played sparingly early in the season, but gradua
(Harvard School)
increased his playing time and contribution
played in the back
role to senior John Cook, but still earned time in all 11 games a:
the Rose Bowl
finished with 21 total tackles (11 solos), recover
two fumbles and recorded four tackles for losses, totaling 23.5 yar
included in that total were three sacks for 20.5 yards
honor
five times during the season as a member of the Husky defense
the unit's performance against USC, Arizona State, Orego
Personal-Born April 14, 1969 in Los Angeles
has one sister
Stanford, Arizona and Washington State
his fumble recove
father's name is Richard and mother's name is Sandra
late in the Colorado game gave Washington an opportunity to dri
majoring
in psychology.
the length of the field and go for the win-although the Huski
came up on the short end of a 20-14 score
his other recove
Washington-Walk-on player that has moved to the number three
came against Oregon, following a sack of, and fumble by, Du
spot at center behind Ed Cunningham and Frank Garcia
offers
quarterback Bill Musgrave with Washington holding a slim 14-1
versatility in the offensive line
can also play guard and tackle and
third-quarter lead
the Huskies took over on the Oregon 37, ar
could well end up at one of those other spots before his UW career
scored a touchdown three plays later to extend the lead to 21-10.
is over
experience is lacking, but has great size and showed
had a season high four tackles against UCLA
1989-practice
marked improvement in his play during spring drills
has also
with team but ineligible for games following transfer fro
worked as a long snapper
1990-made appearances in three
Oklahoma.
games all in a reserve role
played against Stanford, Arizona and
WSU
spent most of the year at strongside tackle before shifting
Oklahoma-One-year letterman
1988-played in a reserv
to strongside guard in the latter stages of the year
named
role for the Sooners and appeared in 12 games, including the
a
Citrus Bowl loss to Clemson
Backup Player of the Week four times
1989-red-shirted.
credited with eight tackles durin
the regular season and added six more in the Citrus Bowl
ha
Harvard School-Lettered in football, basketball and track.
one sack and one tackle for loss
played defensive tackle
1987-red-shirt season
made the trip with the Sooners to th
Orange Bowl where they had an unbeaten season spoiled by Mian
of Florida, 20-14.
Tyrone Rodgers*
Banning-Three-year starter for coach Chris Ferragamo
W:
one of the most highly sought after players in the country while H
Middle Guard
was at Banning High School in Wilmington, Calif
played midd
6-3, 265
57
linebacker his first two seasons before playing defensive tackle h
final season
team was 32-4 in his three seasons
Senior
team wa
annually rated among top teams in the U.S. and he was named
Carson, Calif.
virtually every post-season all-star club following his senior year
(Banning)
Parade All-America and Coaches' All-America
also lettered
track three times as a hurdler
nearly 20 former Banning player
are currently playing in the Division I ranks
visited Arizon
State, Oklahoma, Nebraska, LSU and Washington before choosin
Oklahoma.
Defensive Statistics
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
TFL
SACKS
Personal-Born April 27, 1969, in Longview, Texas
psychology
1990
11
10
21
0/2
0
0
4/23.5#
3/20.5
major
has a variety of interests, including photography, working
with children, landscaping and cooking
his mother, Brenda, is a
#Tackles for loss includes sacks.
mail clerk and his father, Roosevelt, is a truck driver
prep
teammate of Husky middle guard Terrance Powe.
Washington-Expected to be the Huskies' starting middle guard
earned his initial varsity letter as a backup to John Cook a year
ago and took over the starting spot in the spring
continued
making progress in the spring and should play a key role in the play
78
Husky Players
W
91 Returnees
Kris Rongen
Donovan Schmidt
Offensive Guard
Linebacker
6-5, 280
72
6-3, 230
Senior
RS-Freshman
52
Federal Way, Wash.
Palm Springs, Calif.
(Thomas Jefferson)
(Palm Springs)
rsonal-Born August 20, 1969, in Tacoma, Wash.
has a
Personal-Born on January 16, 1972, in Tucson, Ariz.
has a
other and a sister
major is law enforcement.
younger brother
played for former Husky assistant coach Jerry
ashington-Senior squad member that should finally get an
Cheek, who served as offensive coordinator under Jim Owens
portunity for extended playing time in 1991
showed great
during the Sonny Sixkiller years
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
provement in the spring and won the starting spot at weakside
Washington-Red-shirt freshman whose status in the fall is uncer-
ard
was voted the Most Improved Offensive Lineman at the
tain after he missed all of spring practice following an off-field
nclusion of spring practice
coaches felt it was his best spring
accident
has the size and toughness to make an impact but lack
ctice since he came to UW and that he is ready to contribute this
of experience will hurt him at one of the most talented positions on
made great strides in the areas of strength and speed
has
the UW squad
made a good impression in the fall
1990-
yed a number of other spots on the offensive line
made
red-shirted
spent the year as a backup at the inside spot held by
evious stops at tackle and center
1990-played in a total of
Dave Hoffmann
named a Backup Player of the Week five times.
e games all as a reserve
made appearances against USC, ASU,
Palm Springs-Three-year letterman center/linebacker
team
1, Arizona and WSU
played tackle and guard during the year
finished 9-2 and advanced to the CIF playoffs before losing to
d worked with the second and third units at those spots
Nogales
named All-Ivy League, all-county, All-CIF and All-
89-saw his first varsity game action playing against Oregon
Inland Empire
voted outstanding defensive player on his team
ate
twice earned Backup Player of the Week acclaim for his
as a junior, team also went 9-2, advancing to CIF playoffs before
y on the scout squad prior to the Texas A&M and Purdue games
losing to Workman
played defensive tackle and was named all-
1988-did not play in a varsity game
his only game action
league
started at defensive end as sophomore for 4-6 club
me in a junior varsity game against Spokane Falls Community
also lettered twice for high school swim team, swimming the sprint
llege
began the year at tackle before shifting to center early in
freestyle events as a freshman and sophomore.
campaign where he remained until the conclusion of the year
1987-red-shirt season
worked at offensive tackle
wed part of the year when he suffered a severe laceration to his
Husky Fact
nd in an off-field accident.
Husky Coaching Great
fferson-Four-year letterman offensive and defensive lineman
James Phelan
Player of the Year in the state of Washington (Gatorade/Scholas-
1930-1941
Coach)
all-state offensive lineman (Sportswriter's Associa-
A former Notre Dame quarterback who coached at Missouri
n/Seattle P-I)
all-area (Tacoma News Tribune)
second
and Purdue before coming to Washington, James Phelan
am All-South Puget Sound League (Tacoma News-Tribune)
recorded a fine 65-37-8 win-loss mark in 12 years at the Husky
pp Five Players list (Seattle Times)
honorable mention Prep
helm. His 1936 club won the Pacific Coast Conference title and
I-America (USA Today)
received five votes in the Best in the
garnered a Rose Bowl berth in the process. The following year,
est Poll (Long Beach Press-Telegram)
named to the Star-
1937, the Huskies accepted a postseason bid to play in Hawaii.
mes Team (Seattle Times)
second-team All-SPSL as a junior
also competed in track and basketball.
79
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Danianke Smith*
Tommie Smith*
Defensive End
Strong Safety
6-2, 226
55
6-2, 212
Junior
Junior
15
Long Beach, Calif.
Lancaster, Calif.
(Poly)
(Antelope Valley)
Personal-Born April 6, 1970, in Long Beach, Calif.
first name
Personal-Born August 7, 1971, in Lancaster, Calif.
has
is pronounced 'Duh-KNOCK-un'
father, Robert, is a profes-
older sister and two brothers
father's name is Robert ar
sional painter
mother, Jerline, is a senior secretary
has an
mother's is Earline
his mother is a data processor
enjo
older brother and two older sisters
a relative, Reggie Ward,
listening to music and reading
pre-Arts and Sciences major.
played football at Notre Dame
was Poly's Student of the Week in
Washington-Two-year letterman who missed spring practice
May of his senior year
pre-Arts and Sciences major
enjoys
was not enrolled in school in spring quarter
is expected to retur
bowling, fishing, shopping at malls and drawing
will be joined on
in the fall and will play either strong safety or free safety
dept
the UW squad this fall by another Poly product, Richard Washing-
chart lists him third at strong safety behind Paxton Tailele an
ton.
David Killpatrick based on the fact he missed spring drills
Washington-Junior letterman
may have found a home at
outstanding athletic ability and experience will make it hard to kee
defensive end after a previous stint at strongside linebacker
him out of the lineup, however
probably the most instinctiv
completed spring drills listed number two behind Andy Mason
player in the secondary
possesses all the qualities necessary to b
made a strong push for the starting berth in the spring and the
an outstanding defensive back, including tremendous competitiv
coaches feel the potential is there for him to mount a serious
nature and ability to make the big hit
has the potential to be or
challenge for the starting spot his work in the summer should
of the best secondary players in the conference
1990-starte
play a role in the battle in the fall
has very good size for the
nine games plus the Rose Bowl at free safety
a big-play artist wh
position and his speed gives him excellent range
loves to play
recorded four interceptions, second on the squad to rover Er
1990-appeared in 10 games and the Rose Bowl
only game he
Briscoe's
six
finished third on the team in total tackles-top
did not see action in was against San Jose State
started the year
among all defensive backs-with 61 stops (40 solos)
led
at strongside linebacker before switching to defensive end early in
Husky tacklers in the Rose Bowl with seven stops
also inte
the year
listed number three at that spot in final depth
had
just
cepted a pass and caused a fumble in the game and he also broke u
one tackle against Oregon
forced a fumble against WSU
a pass
caused two fumbles, defensed three passes and recorde
1989-played in five games mostly in a special teams role before
4.5 tackles for losses totaling 17 yards during the year
has
grea
being dismissed from the squad
made appearances against
running ability evidenced by his total of 89 yards in returns followin
Texas A&M, Purdue, UCLA, Arizona State and Oregon State
interceptions (22.3 yard average)
had a career best 14 tackle
had a total of six tackles
1988-red-shirt season
toiled on
(nine solos) with 1.5 tackles for loss at Colorado
caused fumble
scout team.
against Purdue and Oregon
interceptions came vs. San Jos
Poly-Three-year letterman defensive end linebacker
Golden
State, USC, Stanford and UCLA
thwarted a dangerous San Jos
50 team (Cal-Hi Football) and preseason All-America candidate
State drive to the Washington 2-yard line, when he intercepte
missed much of senior season with broken leg
as a junior, was
Sheldon Canley's halfback pass in the end zone
his interceptio
All-Moore League, All-City and All-South Coast
had 58 tackles,
of USC's Todd Marinovich set Washington up at the Trojan 22 wit
30 assists and three pass deflections after junior season
lettered
2:40 to play in the half
the Huskies scored three plays later t
in basketball as a sophomore and junior
also was a three-year
build a 24-0 halftime advantage
Stanford drove deep int
letterman in track.
Washington territory at the 17 late in the first half before Smit
intercepted quarterback Jason Palumbis' pass and returned it 5
Defensive Statistics
yards
his final interception of the year came on the first posses
YEAR
UT
AT
ToT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
sion of the game against UCLA
also returned nine kickoffs fo
1989
5
1
6
0/0
0
0
0/0
0/0
156 yards (17.3 avg.) with a long return of 35 yards against Colorado
1990
0
1
1
1/0
0
0
0/0
0/0
had three KO returns for 43 yards in the Rose Bowl
misse
TOTAL
5
2
7
1/0
0
0
0/0
0/0
the Washington State contest when he was suspended by the UV
staff due to an academic problem
won the club's Most Improved
Defensive Back award in the spring
1989-was one of thre
true freshmen to letter
slowed early in the year after suffering
80
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
ommie Smith, Continued
ee injury at the start of two-a-days which required arthroscopic
Steve Springstead*
rgery and kept him sidelined for the first few weeks
made his
Inside Linebacker
st varsity appearance in the fifth game at USC and it was a
6-1, 215
emorable one
broke through to block a Ron Dale punt in the
cond period which he recovered and returned for his first colle-
Sophomore
49
ate touchdown from 32 yards away
in all, he played in six games
Lacey, Wash.
most exclusively as a special teams performer
had
a
total
of
had
(Timberline)
ven stops overall with a high of four against Oregon State
tackles on special teams, including three VS. Oregon State
on a Kicking Team Award for his effort against USC and also won
Big Hit Award for his play against Oregon State
had an
terception in win over Florida in the Freedom Bowl.
ntelope Valley-One of the top high school players in the coun-
in 1988
selected by USA Today as the California Player of the
ear after leading his club to the CIF Southern Division II title
Personal-Born August 18, 1970, at Fort Bragg, N.C
two older
ined 218 yards and scored four times in the title game vs. Canyon
sisters, Somjai and Mary
father, Lawrence, is a computer pro-
ligh School
won all-state and All-CIF honors as a senior
grammer
mother's name is Sue
pre-Arts and Sciences major
amed to several All-America teams
played running back, de-
hails from the same high school as former Husky, Travis
hobbies
ensive back and also punted for the squad
ran for 2,018 yards
Richardson
married, his wife's name is Karan
nd scored 23 rushing touchdowns as a senior
also caught 13
include movies, music, fishing and camping.
asses for 185 yards and three touchdowns while scoring 182 points
Washington-Won his initial varsity letter based primarily on his
uring the year to rank third in the state
averaged
a
remarkable
play with the UW special teams
will go into fall practice listed
3.4 yards on 13 kickoffs with three more scores
intercepted
number four at inside linebacker behind Dave Hoffmann, James
even passes and also returned a fumble for a touchdown
had a
Clifford and Mike Derrow
is a natural inside linebacker
8.6 punting average
played for coach Brent Newcomb
was
should again be a factor on special teams
will need a good off-
ist one of four players to receive a perfect score of 10 votes in the
season to be a factor in the depth in a talented linebacker corps
est in the West poll by the Long Beach Press-Telegram
was
has one of the best vertical leaps among the inside linebackers
amed MVP in the prestigious North-South Shrine Game in the
1990-appeared in all 11 regular-season games and the Rose Bowl
ummer of 1989 at the Rose Bowl and was joined by Husky team-
contributed seven tackles with highs of two against Stanford and
hate Jim Nevelle who played against him in high school
a
California
had a fumble recovery against Arizona and shared a
nember of the track team.
tackle for loss against the Wildcats and Cal
backed up Dave
Hoffmann most of the season and also was a regular on the kickoff
Defensive Statistics
return unit
1989-red-shirt season
selected as Backup
EAR
UT
AT
ToT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
Player of the Week three times and served as honorary scout team
989
5
2
7
0/0
0
0
0/0
0/0
captain against Southern California.
990
40
21
61
2/0
3
4
4.5/17#
0.5/3.5
OTAL
45
23
68
2/0
3
4
4.5/17#
0.5/3.5
Timberline-Three-year letterman for coach John Jordon at Tim-
Tackles for loss includes sacks.
berline
played both linebacker and running back during high
school career
averaged 12.8 tackles and 9.3 assists a game senior
Punt Returns
year of high school
was selected as first team All-Black Hills
EAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
League linebacker junior year
All-Black Hills running back
989
1
32
32.0
1
32
senior season
also recruited by Washington State, Hawaii and
Kickoff Returns
Oregon State.
EAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Defensive Statistics
990
9
156
17.3
0
35
YEAR
UT
AT
ToT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
Note: Intercepted a pass vs. Iowa in Rose Bowl.)
1990
1
6
7
0/1
1
0
1/1.5#
0/0
#Tackles for loss includes sacks.
81
W
Husky Players
1991 Returnees
Paxton Tailele
Darius Turner**
Strong Safety
Fullback
6-2, 212
Senior
8
6-0, 224
Junior
31
Laie, Hawaii
Gardena, Calif.
(Kahuku/College of the
(Warren)
Desert)
Personal-Born October 17, 1966, in Laie, Hawaii
one of seven
Personal-Born January 3, 1970, in Greenville, Miss.
fathe
children, he has three brothers and three sisters
father's name is
Peter, is a policeman
mother's name is Thelma
has fiv
Paulo
mother, Valu, is a reservationist
graduated from
brothers and sisters
social science major
an uncle, Georg
Kahuku High School in Hawaii, but did not play football
last
Scott, played professional baseball with the Boston Red Sox
name is pronounced Tuh-LAY-LAY
major is business adminis-
enjoys socializing with friends in spare time.
tration.
Washington-Fourth-year junior fullback who became the starte
Washington-Second-year player and letterman who transferred
on a full-time basis in 1990
has won two letters
emerged fro
from College of the Desert in Palm Desert, Calif., in the spring of
spring practice as the starter once again
figures to have
1990
did not play high school football
took advantage of
challenge when fall drills begin from Matt Jones
a powerfi
Tommie Smith's absence in the spring to grab the number one
runner with size and good speed
especially effective in sho
strong safety position
expected to be in a battle with Smith for
yardage situations
is a good blocker and improving receiver
the starting berth when fall drills begin
a willing worker whose
with departure of Greg Lewis as the Husky workhorse, he shoul
improvement has continued as he learns the UW system
was
see the ball more often
is talented and will certainly play a role
considered the nation's top JC prospect at the safety position when
the success of the UW running game in 1991
1990-powerfu
he came to Washington
ferocious hitter
1990-earned first
durable fullback who earned his second Husky letter and started a
letter as a special teams performer and backup to starting rover Eric
11 games and the Rose Bowl
deserved considerable credit as
Briscoe
saw action in eight games
recorded five tackles, but
blocker for All-American Greg Lewis, but was a strong offensiv
four of those were solos
intercepted his first career pass off
weapon in his own right
finished fourth on the club in rushin
Washington State quarterback Drew Bledsoe late in the Apple Cup
with 173 yards on 45 carries (3.8 avg) and two touchdowns
ha
game
aggressive player who earned two "Big Hit" awards, one
one rush for four yards in the Rose Bowl
had
his
highest
rushin
against Arizona State and the other at Washington State
output at Stanford when he gained 32 yards on three carries with
College of the Desert-One-year letterman free safety
starter
season long run of 19 yards
scored on a pair of 1-yard touchdow
for 9-2 team that advanced to the Southern California Bowl and
plunges in Washington's 31-0 win over USC in the school's centen
defeated Los Angeles Southwest for the state JC title
collected
nial celebration game
also had three receptions for 23 yard
103 tackles and intercepted seven passes
selected
to
the
JC
during the season
added three catches for 36 yards in the Ros
Grid-Wire All-America team
named All-Foothill Conference
Bowl victory, including a career best 32-yarder
played on specia
voted the Defensive Most Valuable Player of team and earned
teams and was singled out as the Special Teams Player of the Weel
academic All-America acclaim.
against Stanford and California
honored five times with the
number one offense for outstanding performances against USC
Defensive Statistics
Stanford, California, Arizona and Washington State
earned
YEAR
UT
AT
TOT
FUM/REC
P/DEF
INT
T/LOSS
SACKS
team's "Big Hit" award for efforts against Purdue and Colorado
1990
4
1
5
0/0
0
I
0/0
0/0
1989-started two games at fullback in place of injured Jame:
Compton
starts came against California and Washington State
also started the Freedom Bowl game when Compton was ou
with a knee injury
distinguished himself as an outstanding
special teams performer
finished fourth on the squad in rushing
with 93 yards on 22 carries and two rushing touchdowns
long run
of the season was 21 yards against Purdue
rushed
nine
times
foi
34 yards and two touchdowns in the Huskies' 51-14 win over
Oregon State
also caught four passes for 23 yards
rushed
seven times for 38 yards against Florida in Freedom Bowl
was
named UW Special Teams Player of the Week against Purdue and
Southern California
earned the squad's Chuck Niemi Big Hit
82
Husky Players
W
991 Returnees
arius Turner, Continued
Turner's Career Highs
ward for accumulating the most big hits (six, including two vs.
Rushing Attempts-9 at Oregon State, 11/11/89.
regon) during the season
1988-red-shirt season.
Rushing Yards-38 VS. Florida, 12/30/89.
Varren-Four-year letterman running back and linebacker
Longest Run, No Score-21 yards VS. Purdue, 9/16/89.
layed quarterback his freshman season
garnered seven votes in
he Best in the West Poll (Long Beach Press Telegram)
Longest TD Run-6 yards at Oregon State, 11/11/89.
as a
enior running back: All Southeast and Southeast Player of the Year
Most Rushing TDs-2 (twice).
LA Times), All-Southern Conference (First Interstate)
as a
Receptions-2 at Colorado, 9/29/90.
enior linebacker: All-Southeast, Western 100 (Tacoma News-Tri-
Receiving Yards-36 VS. Iowa, 1/1/91.
une), Super Prep All-America and All-Far West
rushed 140
Longest Reception-32 yards vs. Iowa, 1/1/91.
mes for 1,227 (8.8 avg.) and scored 18 touchdowns as a senior
aught 18 passes for 360 yards and threw eight passes for 120 yards
recorded 97 tackles on defense
biggest day came vs. Ganesha
hen he rushed 16 times for 285 yards (17.8 per carry,) and three
buchdowns
team finished 7-3 his senior year
also lettered in
rack where he won the league title in the 200m as a senior
owns
me of 10.9 in the 100m.
Rushing
EAR
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
989
22
93
0
93
4.2
2
21
990
45
180
7
173
3.8
2
19
OTAL
67
273
7
266
3.9
4
21
Receiving
EAR
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
989
4
23
5.8
0
9
990
3
23
7.7
0
9
OTAL
7
46
6.6
0
9
Turner's Career Game-by-Game Rushing
1989
OPPONENT
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Purdue
1
21
0
21
21.0
0
21
Dregon
2
3
0
3
1.5
0
2
Cal
2
5
0
5
2.5
0
4
DSU
9
34
0
34
3.8
2
9
WSU
8
30
0
30
3.8
0
8
Florida
7
38
0
38
5.4
0
14
TOTAL
22
93
0
93
4.2
2
21
1990
OPPONENT
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG.
TD
LG
Darius Turner
San Jose St.
7
19
4
15
2.1
0
8
Purdue
7
22
2
20
2.9
0
7
USC
6
12
0
12
2.0
2
8
Colorado
2
8
0
8
4.0
0
6
ASU
6
22
0
22
3.7
0
7
Oregon
3
11
1
10
3.3
0
7
Stanford
3
32
0
32
10.7
0
19
Cal
1
7
0
7
7.0
0
7
Arizona
2
7
0
7
3.5
0
5
UCLA
3
20
0
20
6.7
0
10
WSU
5
20
0
20
4.0
0
8
Iowa
1
4
0
4
4.0
0
4
TOTAL
45
180
1
173
3.8
2
19
°Official NCAA statistics and totals above do not include bowl games.
83
W
Husky Players
1991 Newcomers
Douglas Barnes
Jeff Bockert
Linebacker
Linebacker
6-6, 215
Freshman
83
6-4, 230
Freshman
56
Carson, Calif.
Vancouver, Wash.
(Verbum Dei)
(Prairie)
Personal-Born April 21, 1973 in Los Angeles
has one older
Personal-Born October 29, 1972
an outstanding student wit
sister
father's name is Charles and mother's name is Margaret
a 3.4 grade point average
member of the Honor Roll
has on
given first name is Charles, but prefers to go by his middle name
younger sister
father's name is Bob and mother's is Doreen
full name is Charles Douglas Barnes II
enjoys lifting weights
an Honor Roll student for three years in high school and had a
Prairie-Rated as one of the top linebackers in the West in 199
Compiled 179 total tackles and had 14 sacks as a senior
Als
3.0 grade point average.
caught 20 passes for 354 yards as a tight end
played for coac.
Verbum Dei-Won first team All-Camino Real League honors as
Butch Hill his final two years
registered 210 tackles as a junio
a senior
worked at tight end and linebacker for the Eagles
named All-State in both 1989 and 1990 along with All-Greate
was also chosen first team All-City
won All-League mention his
St. Helens League two years in succession
also earned som
junior year as a outside linebacker
played for coach Pete Marado
prep All-America mention
had a big game his senior year agains
won three letters as a member of the basketball team and
Columbia River when he compiled 20 tackles, two sacks, two force
averaged 17 ppg and 13 rebounds as a senior which helped the club
fumbles, a fumble recovery and 98 yards in pass receptions, includ
into the playoffs.
ing a 71-yard TD
once had 24 stops in one game as a junio
Recruiting Competition-Drew recruiting interest from Or-
against O'Dea High School
earned 8 votes out of a possible 10i
egon, California, Washington State and Cal State-Fullerton before
the Best in the West poll
also played basketball and won thre
choosing UW.
letters and competed in track.
Recruiting Competition-Visited Illinois, UCLA and Stanford
before selecting the Huskies.
Eric Battle
Mark Bruener
Offensive Lineman
Tight End
6-2, 265
Freshman
67
6-5, 230
Freshman
81
Carson, Calif.
Aberdeen, Wash.
(Banning)
(Weatherwax)
Personal-Born April 14, 1973 in Los Angeles
has one older
Personal-Born September 16, 1972 in Olympia
has two sisters
sister
father's name is Sam and his mother is Gloria
one of
and one brother
father's name is Fred and mother's name is
three Banning products on the UW roster (others are Tyrone
Arlene
finished school with a 3.7 grade point average
Rodgers and Terrance Powe)
has an interest in majoring in
business.
Weatherwax-A two-way performer who is expected to play tight
end for the Huskies
rated as one of the top tight end prospects
Banning-A two-time All-Pacific League choice at Banning High
on the West Coast
has 4.7 speed and is an impressive receiver
School
played offensive guard and tackle for the Pilots
grabbed 24 passes as a senior for the Bobcats for 424 yards with six
member of a Banning squad that posted a 9-4 record in 1990 and
touchdowns
also played linebacker and contributed 75 tackles
advanced to the L.A. city finals where it lost to Carson High School
which included 10 sacks
also starred on special teams, blocking
club was 10-3 his sophomore year
played for coach Joe
five kicks
player of the Year in the Black Hills League and an All-
Dominguez
also competed on the track team as a weight man.
State choice
prep coach was Rob Lonborg
received six votes
Recruiting Competition-Was also recruited by Arizona St.,
of a possible 10 in the Best in the West poll.
Colorado, UTEP, Kansas and San Diego State among others.
Recruiting Competition-Recruiting interest came from such
schools as Stanford, Notre Dame and USC among others.
84
Husky Players
W
991 Newcomers
Brandon Bunch
Demetrius Devers
Vide Receiver
Linebacker
-11, 170
27
6-0, 220
reshman
Freshman
36
Federal Way, Wash.
Seattle, Wash.
Decatur)
(Garfield)
Personal-Born February 21, 1973 in Rochester, New York
has
Personal-Born August 30 1973 in Seattle
has two sisters and
ne younger brother
father's name is Chester and his mother's is
one brother
father, Bernard, is a minister in Seattle
mother's
Brenda
enjoys basketball and art.
name is Deleria
related to former Detroit Lions' running back,
Decatur-The speedy receiver (4.4) caught 39 passes for 655 yards
Billy Sims.
n 1990 on his way to earning All-State mention
was also All-
Garfield-Standout three-year starter at linebacker for the Bull-
League and All-Area
scored eight TDs which led the state for
dogs
missed a portion of the 1990 season with a knee injury
egular-season play
led the South Puget Sound League in
also played quarterback last fall and also saw action at fullback
eceiving following in the footsteps of former teammate, Lake
despite missing part of his senior year, he still averaged 12 tackles a
Dawson (now at Notre Dame), who did so in 1989
best
game
was
game
had a solid junior campaign when he was the Metro
1 receptions in one outing for 157 yards and two scores
team
League Defensive Player of the Year and accumulated 125 tackles
captain as a senior and team MVP
played for coach Gregg Flynn
also caused nine fumbles and recovered a dozen more
had
a
big day as a senior against Lincoln High School of Tacoma with 18
tackles, three sacks, two caused fumbles and one rushing TD
Ernie Conwell
prep coach was John Creighton
weight man on the track team
with a best in the shot put of 53 feet
won the Metro League shot
Tight End
put title as a junior.
6-3, 225
Freshman
82
Recruiting Competition-Chose UW over Washington State and
Oregon State.
Kent, Washington
(Kentwood)
Personal-Born August 17, 1972 in Renton, Washington
comes from a large family
has five older brothers and three older
sisters
one of his brothers, Roy, played football at UPS and
another, Vince, played at Central Washington
one of his sisters,
Pauline, was a track standout and competed in the Olympic Trials in
1972 in the shot put
father's name is Ernie and his mother's
name is Alma
prep teammate of fellow Husky freshman, Rich-
ard Thomas.
Kentwood-Slowed the first four games of the 1990 season with a
foot injury, he returned in his team's fifth game to help them to the
state semifinals
comes from a winning program at Kentwood
Husky Fact
High School where he was on teams that recorded an impressive
Husky Coaching Great
33-6 record during his three years on the varsity member of two
Jim Owens
Kingbowl teams
played for coaches Tom Ingles and Dave Lutes
1957-1974
in his career
won All-South Puget Sound League honors as both
a tight end and defensive end
an outstanding athlete, who also
Jim Owens has been credited, and rightfully so, with
lettered in track and basketball and won the state Class AAA shot
orchestrating a football renaissance early in his head coaching
has thrown the discus 175 feet
career at Washington. His 1959 and 1960 Huskies, also known
put title as a junior and as a senior
has run the 100 meters in 11.4 and served
as the "Purple Gang," won back-to-back Rose Bowls. His 18
and the shotput 58 feet
years as head coach make him the longest tenured football
as track team captain
also lettered in wrestling.
coach in UW history, and prior to the Don James era, won more
Recruiting Competition-Visited Oregon and Arizona before
games than any other coach in Husky history.
choosing Washington.
85
W
Husky Players
1991 Newcomers
John Disante
Steve Hoffmann
Offensive Line
Defensive Line
6-3, 275
Freshman
76
6-6, 245
Freshman
91
North Hollywood, Calif.
San Jose, Calif.
(Notre Dame)
(Pioneer)
Personal-Born April 15, 1973 in Hollywood, California
has
Personal-Born January 16, 1973 in Bethesda, Maryland
olde
one older sister
mother's name is Donna
enjoys
music
and
brother, Dave, is a UW linebacker
has one younger brother
cars
had a fine 3.4 grade point average in high school
was
father, Paul, is a minister
mother's name is Jane
parents ar
honored as a National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame
both graduates of Valparaiso University in Indiana
had a 3.6
Scholar-Athlete
interested in pursuing a career in international
grade point average in high school and won honors in geometry and
business.
history as well as being on the Honor Roll
interested in entering
Notre Dame-Was a two-way standout at Notre Dame High
the teaching field.
School in Sherman Oaks
won three letters and earned All-
Pioneer-A three-year standout at defensive end and tight end
Mission League honors as a junior and senior along with All-San
where he earned All-America honors while playing for forme:
Fernando Valley and All-CIF last year
garnered six votes in the
Husky, Dan Lloyd
won first team All-Santa Teresa League
Best in the West poll
also earned some All-State mention
his
honors and All-County honors three years running and was twice his
team posted a 25-9-1 record in his three seasons
also won one
team's MVP
in addition to playing the defensive line, he also
letter in basketball and three in track
prep coach was Kevin
played linebacker, tight end and fullback as a senior for the Mus
Rooney.
tangs
had 127 tackles and 13 sacks as a senior
four-year
Recruiting Competition-Was recruited by Colorado, Stanford,
basketball letterman and won All-League mention in that sport
UCLA, USC and Michigan among others.
rated one of the top defensive linemen in the country
as a senior
he was chosen All-State
earned eight Best in the West votes in
poll run by the Long Beach Press Telegram.
Trevor Highfield
Recruiting Competition-Visited Notre Dame, Colorado
UCLA and Washington before deciding to sign with UW.
Defensive Line
6-4, 280
Freshman
79
West Linn, Ore.
(West Linn)
Personal-Born December 7, 1972 in Portland, Oregon
has an
older brother who graduated from the University of South Carolina
Law School and a younger sister
father's
name
is
Jock
and
mother's is Barbara hobbies include weightlifting interested
in majoring in communications and-pursuing a career in the sports
media.
West Linn-won three letters as a two-way lineman
named All-
Husky Fact
State on both offense and defense as a senior
twice
named
All-
Three Rivers League
recorded 19½ sacks as a senior
prep
Husky Coaching Great
coaches were Bob Hiner and George Croke also competed in
John Cherberg
wrestling and track and also played basketball and baseball his
1953-1955
sophomore season.
John Cherberg was a record-breaking player at Washington
Recruiting Competition-Drew attention from several schools,
under James Phelan (1930-32) when he was a versatile
including Oregon and Arizona before choosing Washington.
offensive back. He joined the Husky coaching staff in 1946, and
his frosh teams won 22-of-23 games from 1948 to 1952. He was
elevated to the head job in 1953 and compiled a 10-18-2 record
in three seasons. He entered Washington state politics in 1957.
86
Husky Players
W
991 Newcomers
Damon Huard
Napoleon Kaufman
uarterback
Running Back
-4, 210
18
5-9, 170
reshman
Freshman
8
uyallup, Wash.
Lompoc, Calif.
Puyallup)
(Lompoc)
ersonal-Born July 9, 1973 in Yakima, Washington
has two
Personal-Born June 7, 1973 in Kansas City, Missouri
is an
bunger brothers
Father, Mike, was his prep coach
mother's
only child
mother's name is Lojuana and father's is Napoleon.
ame is Peggy
enjoys fishing, and basketball
one of four
Lompoc-Considered one of the top prep running backs in the
uyallup products on the UW squad, joining former prep team-
nation in 1990
named first team All-America by USA Today and
hates Billy Joe Hobert, Joe Kralik and Tom Gallagher
was an
Parade
one of just three players to earn a perfect 10 votes in the
utstanding student with a 3.9 grade point average
chosen as a
Best in the West poll
Player of the Year in California in 1990 and
ational Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete.
helped Lompoc to a 13-1 record, tops among Class AAA schools in
tuyallup-Rated as one of the top quarterbacks in the country in
the state
named to virtually every "All" team in 1990
Lompoc
990
named to a number of All-America teams
completed
won the CIF Southern Section VII title thanks in part to Kaufman's
21 of 221 passes for 1,850 yards with 24 TDs and 11 interceptions
1,960 yards rushing on 207 carries
averaged a lofty 9.5 yards per
a senior
also rushed for four touchdowns
won three letters
carry and scored 28 touchdowns
he also scored three times on
nd played on teams that compiled a 23-5 mark
was a tight end
punt returns, twice on pass receptions and once on a kickoff return
a sophomore before moving to quarterback as a junior
caught
for a total of 34 TDs in 1990
finished his career with 5,151 yards
0 passes for 500 yards and eight TDs as a sophomore when the
and 86 touchdowns
those 86 touchdowns were second best in
uarterback was Billy Joe Hobert
completed 123 of 216 passes
state history behind Cal's Russell White (94 touchdowns at Crespi
or a record 2,275 yards as a junior
tossed five touchdown passes
of Encino from 1986-88)
averaged 34 yards on his 86 career
gainst Eisenhower in 1989 and five scoring passes vs. Kentridge in
scores and had eight touchdowns of 80 or more yards
gained
990
career totals were 244 completions in 437 attempts for
2,000 yards as a junior and scored 39 TDs
played for coach Dick
125 yards with 44 touchdowns
was intercepted 23 times and he
Barrett
won the state 100- meter title (10.57) and 200-meter
ushed for 12 TDs
twice
named All-South Puget Sound League
(21.13) titles as a junior
hails from same high school and
nd was that league's MVP twice
All-State pick as a senior and
neighborhood as former San Jose State standout, Sheldon Canley.
vas the Gatorade State Player of the Year
received eight votes in
Recruiting Competition-One of the most heavily recruited
he Best in the West poll
best game as a junior came against Kent
players in the UW freshman class
considered USC, UCLA,
Meridian when he was 18 of 25 for 385 yards with four TDs
also
Notre Dame and Nebraska before selecting Washington.
tarred in basketball and led the state in scoring as a junior with a
24.6 average
hit for over 40 points on three occasions and set a
chool mark with 43 points vs. Kentridge
All-State in basketball
and was one of the top scorers in the state tournament as a senior
von the Dick Hannula Award by the Tacoma Athletic Commission
is Pierce County Amateur Athlete of the Year.
Recruiting Competition-Heavily recruited by a number of
schools, including Miami of Florida, USC, Tennessee and Notre
Dame.
87
W
Husky Players
1991 Newcomers
Patrick Kesi
yards vs. Downey High School on just seven carries with three TI
prep coach was Ken Sutch
has also competed in baseball ai
Offensive Line
basketball.
6-3, 285
Freshman
69
Recruiting Competition-Before choosing Washington, amor
the other schools considered were Minnesota and Pittsburgh.
Honolulu, Hawaii
(Farrington)
Reggie Reser
Defensive Back
Personal: Born September 10, 1973 in America Samoa
has two
5-10, 170
brothers and two sisters
father's name is Sinuka and mother's
Freshman
4
name is Florida.
Pasadena, Calif.
Farrington-Chosen first team All-America by USA Today follow-
ing the 1990 season
started four years at Farrington High School
(John Muir)
where he played for coach Edward "Skippy" Diaz
All-State and
All-OIA choice two years in succession for the Governors and
considered one of the premier linemen in the nation last season
Personal-Born January 17, 1973 in Pasadena
also competed in track where he threw the shot put and discus.
is an only chil
father's name is Larry and mother's name is Brenda.
Recruiting Competition-Among the schools considered were
John Muir-Rated one of the top defensive backs on the Wes
Arizona, Hawaii and Utah.
Coast in 1990
earned nine votes in the Best in the West poll, top
among defensive backs
won first team All-State honors last fa
among other honors
twice named All-Pacific League
finishe
Leon Neal
his career with 12 interceptions, including eight in 1990 and was als
a dangerous return man
scored six times on punt returns an
Running Back
twice on kickoff returns for the Mustangs
had eight punt return
5-9, 175
for TDs and four KO returns for TDs in his career
20
set a schoo
mark with 250 career tackles
Freshman
was a standout on the track team
competing in the hurdles and sprints
member of relay teams tha
Long Beach, Calif.
won league titles in the 400 and mile relays
John Muir Hig
(Paramount)
School is also the alma mater of former baseball great, Jackie
Robinson
other John Muir products include San Diego Charg
ers' receiver Anthony Miller, former USC tailback, Ricky Ervin
and former UNLV basketball star, Stacey Augmon.
Personal-Born September 11, 1972 in St. Paul, Minnesota
has
one older sister
mother's name is Valli and father's is Roger
Recruiting Competition-Drew strong interest from a numbe
has an interest in majoring in communications
had a grade point
of schools, including Colorado, Houston, Michigan State and Soutl
Carolina.
average of 3.6
selected as a National Football Foundation and
Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete as a senior and was also honored as a
scholar-athlete at his school and was a member of the state All-
Academic football squad.
Paramount-Won All-State honors in 1990 while rushing for 1,533
yards and scoring 11 touchdowns
named the Division II Co-
Player of the Year in the CIF Southern Section
Husky Fact
helped team to
a pair of CIF Southern Section Division III titles as a sophomore
Husky Coaching Great
and junior
team was 13-1 in 1990 and lost in the CIF finals in the
Enoch Bagshaw
last 16 seconds to Capistrano Valley High School
in his three
1921-1929
varsity seasons, Paramount had an outstanding 38-3 record
earned five Best in the West votes
honors in 1990 included All-
Enoch Bagshaw is one of only two former Washington football
San Gabriel Valley League, All-South Coast and All-CIF
players to earn five varsity letters (1903-07), but he is even
gained
1,747 yards as junior and averaged 10.6 yards per carry when he also
better remembered for later coaching the Huskies to a
won All-League and All-CIF honors
cumulative 63-22-6 record in nine years as head man.
rushed for 3,811 yards in his
career and scored 36 TDs, including two on punt returns
Washington made two memorable Rose Bowl appearances
averaged 9.0 yards per carry for his career with 25 rushing TDs
under Bagshaw, and he coached All-America running backs
had best game of his career against Rio Mesa High School in the
George Wilson, Chuck Carroll and Merle Hufford during his
tenure.
CIF playoffs as a senior when he ran for 202 yards
also had 201
88
#24081 - 7/15/91
Husky Players
W
991 Newcomers
oel Rosborough
Michael Steward
Vide Receiver
Defensive Back
3, 185
19
6-0, 175
reshman
Freshman
6
ong Beach, Calif.
Long Beach, Calif.
ordan)
(Wilson)
ersonal-Born April 14, 1973 in Plainview, Texas
has one
Personal-Born December 8, 1972 in Carson, California
Has
bunger brother
mother's name is Catherine and his father's
one older sister
mother's name is Dolores
related to former
ame is Grady.
Philadelphia Phillies outfielder, Garry Maddox
enjoys dancing
ordan-Starred in both football and basketball at Long Beach
and reading in his free time.
ordan High School, the same school which sent current San Fran-
Wilson-Played corner and safety on defense and running back
SCO Forty Niner, Dennis Brown, to the Huskies
grabbed 39
and receiver on defense
was also used as a return man
won
asses for 923 yards last fall for 12 TDs, six of which were over 60
three varsity letters and played on teams that compiled an impres-
ards
averaged 23.7 yards-per-catch as a senior
twice All-
sive 23-12 mark in his three seasons
team
played
in
the
playoffs
loore League and twice named All-South Coast for the Panthers
twice, reaching the semifinals his junior season
rushed for 2,236
was his team's MVP as a senior and club's top offensive player as
career yards which is the second best total in school history
one
junior
once caught three passes for 175 yards as a junior against
of his best games came as a senior when he rushed for 267 yards
Damien High School
played for coach Mike Ono
was team
against Servite and also intercepted a pass in the same game
MVP in basketball as a senior and led the squad to the CIF Southern
twice named All-City and All-Moore League and was also selected
ection title and a berth in the state playoffs.
All-South Coast
team captain for the Bears
also lettered in
basketball.
Recruiting Competition-Recruited by UW, Oregon, Oregon
tate and Arizona in football and by San Jose State and Nevada,
ieno in basketball.
Travis Spring
Wide Receiver
5-11, 175
Freshman
15
Seattle, Wash.
Franklin)
Personal-Born December 1, 1972 in South Vietnam
has one
ister and three brothers
mother's name is Sheryl and father's
name is Terry
mother attended UW
joins two other Franklin
broducts on the UW varsity-Mario Bailey and Aaron Pierce.
Franklin-Chosen All-State as a defensive back last fall while
playing at Franklin High School
intercepted 10 passes in 1990
after grabbing 12 in 1989 for the Quakers
finished with 25 career
interceptions
twice named All-Metro League and helped his
club to a 10-1 record and a berth in the state semifinals
in
addition to his interceptions, he also caught 29 passes and was used
as a return man
team captain
also starred in baseball and was
All-Metro as a junior and led the league in stolen bases.
Recruiting Competition-Drew interest from WSU, Oregon and
Oregon St. among others.
#24081 - 7/15/91
89
W
Husky Players
1991 Newcomers
Justin Thomas
Richard Washington
Defensive Line
Defensive Back
6-5, 245
Freshman
93
5-11, 190
Freshman
28
Spokane, Wash.
Long Beach, Calif.
(Ferris)
(Poly)
Personal-Born June 26, 1973 in Pullman, Washington
has one
Personal-Born May 28, 1973 in Los Angeles
has one broth
younger brother
father, Lionel, played football at Washington
father's name is Richard and mother's name is Dane
inte
State and was All-Pac-8 in 1969 and All-Coast in 1969-70
ested in majoring in communications
hails from same hig
mother's name is Carol
prep teammate of current Husky defen-
school as Husky teammate, Danianke Smith, and former Husk
sive back, Lawrence Goncalves
enjoys basketball and computers
Eugene Burkhalter
Long Beach Poly has produced 29 curre)
had a fine 3.6 grade point average
plans to pursue an
and former NFL players, including Mark Carrier of the Chicag
engineering curriculum.
Bears.
Ferris-Was a two-way standout, playing both offensive tackle and
Poly-A first team All-State choice as a senior
earned four vote
tight end and outside linebacker for the Saxons
twice named All-
in the Best in the West poll
played a number of positions in h
City, he was also named the most improved junior on the squad
career-wide receiver, running back, safety and cornerback
h
chosen All-State in 1990 and also earned some All-America mention
also kicked
slowed part of his senior year with a shoulder injur]
had an interception return of 78 yards for a score as a senior
but still managed to pick off five passes and register 81 tackles fd
compiled 25 tackles in one game against East Valley in 1990 which
the Jackrabbits
also chosen All-City and All-CIF
named th
also included four sacks
won three letters
compiled 267
Most Improved Player on his club in 1989
also participated il
career tackles
played for coach Pat Pfeifer
team finished
track and basketball.
third in the state his sophomore year and fifth as a senior
was also
a star on the track team.
Recruiting Competition-Attracted attention from Colorado
Oregon and Oklahoma before choosing Washington.
Recruiting Competition-Recruited by Illinois, Stanford, UCLA
and Colorado among others.
Donald Willis
Richard Thomas
Offensive Line
Running Back
6-2, 305
5-9, 200
30
Freshman
78
Freshman
Lompoc, Calif.
Kent, Wash.
(Cabrillo)
(Kentwood)
Personal-Born July 15, 1973 in Goleta, California
is an only
Personal-Born March 16, 1972 in Seattle
has one younger
child
mother's name is Deborah
enjoys weightlifting and
sister
father's name is Richard and mother's name is Marilyn
reading in his free time
Honor Roll member and had a 3.1 grade
full name is Richard Lee Thomas III
joins former prep team-
point average.
mate Ernie Conwell as a member of the UW freshman class
an
Cabrillo-Named first team All-State in 1990 along with All-Santa
Honor Roll student.
Barbara County (two years running) and All-CIF
was a three
Kentwood-Considered one of the top running backs in the West
year letterman and won All-Los Padres honors three years in suc-
as a senior
Gained 1,397 yards as a senior on 225 carries and
cession for the Conquistadores
played both offensive and defen-
scored 21 touchdowns
scored a total of 60 career TDs
rushed
sive tackle
also punted for two seasons, averaging 36.7 as a junior
for 1,130 yards as a sophomore and 1,325 yards as a junior when he
and 37.2 as a senior
team was 10-3 his senior season and reached
scored 28 TDs
totalled 3,853 yards in his prep career
All-
the CIF semifinals after reaching the quarterfinals the previous
State choice at running back in 1990 for the Conquerors after
season
prep coach was Steve Haskins
was
also
a
track
winning similar honors as a defensive back as a junior
his
play
standout with bests of over 170 feet in the discus and better than 59
helped Kentwood reach the state finals (Kingbowl) in both 1988 and
feet in the shot put
one of the top weight men in the state
1989 and the semifinals as a senior
the school had a 33-6 record
won a CIF Class IA shot title as a junior and senior and also won a
in his three seasons
All-South Puget Sound League in 1989 and
state discus title as a junior
finished 5th in the state meet in the
1990 (both ways) and an All-Area pick
honorable mention All-
shot put and 6th in the discus as a senior
has also competed in the
America pick by USA Today in 1990.
Junior Olympics in that sport.
Recruiting Competition-Committed early to Washington and
Recruiting Competition-In addition to UW, he also considered
took no other visits.
California, Arizona and Washington State.
90
OPPONENTS
W
Opponents
Game 1-Stanford
September 7, 1991
12:30 p.m. PDT
Stanford Stadium
Stanford, Cali
Location-Stanford, Calif. 94305
1990 Record-5-6
Enrollment-6,556
Pacific-10 Record-4-4 (tie sixth)
Conference-Pacific-10
President-Dr. Donald Kennedy
Offense-Multiple
Athletic Director-Dr. Ted Leland
Defense-3-4
Nickname-Cardinal
Lettermen Returning-45
Colors-Cardinal and White
Lettermen Lost-23
Stadium-Stanford Stadium
Capacity, Turf-86,019, grass
Offensive Starters Returning-9
Defensive Starters Returning-8
SID-Gary Migdol
Kickers Returning-1
(O) (415) 723-4418
(H) (408) 736-1228
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
SID-Steve Raczynski
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LC
(H) (415) 369-8503
Glyn Milburn, hb
152
773
44
729
4.8
2
5:
SID-Bob Vazquez
Tommy Vardell, fb
120
457
16
441
3.7
14
11
(H) (415) 771-0441
Passing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
SID Mailing Address-Campus Drive and Galvez St.,
Jason Palumbis, qb
341
234
9
2579
68.6
11
69
Stanford, CA 94305
Steve Lynch, qb
25
10
2
184
40.0
0
52
SID FAX-(415) 725-2957
Press Box Phone-(415) 723-4418
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Glyn Milburn, hb
64
632
9.9
2
69
Chris Walsh, wr
29
386
13.3
0
32
Tommy Vardell, rb
24
97
4.0
0
13
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
Paul Stonehouse, P
55
2136
33.8
0
64
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS FR
Seyon Albert, fs
47
32
79
1-7
10
Dave Garnett, db
36
29
65
12-51
12
Top Newcomers-CB Billy Wittman (Jr.); WR Mike Cook
(Jr.); OL Jeff Bailey (Jr.); TE Ryan Wetnight (Jr.).
Honor Candidates-HB Glyn Milburn (Jr.); OT Bob Whitfield
(Jr.); OLB Ron George (Jr.); OLB Dave Garnett (Jr.);
QB Jason Palumbis (Sr.); FB Tommy Vardell (Sr.).
Glyn Milburn
Dennis Green
Anticipated Strengths-Quarterback and offensive line.
Head Coach-Denny Green (Iowa, 1971)
Stanford: 8-14, .364 (3rd year)
Areas of Concern-Defensive depth and secondary.
Career: 18-59, .233 (8th year)
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (5-6)
Football Office Phone-(415) 723-4511
Sept. 7
Washington
SU
OPP
Best Time to Call Coach-Weekdays, 9:00-11:00 a.m.
Sept. 14
at Arizona
17
at Colorado
21
Sept. 28
Colorado
31
at UCLA
32
Assistant Coaches-Brian Billick (Brigham Young 1977), receiv-
Oct. 5
Notre Dame
37
Oregon State
3
ers and tight ends; Chris Foerster (Colorado State 1983),
Oct. 12
Cornell
23
San Jose State
29
assistant offensive line; Rob Laturnis (Colorado State
Oct. 19
at Southern California
36
at Notre Dame
31
Oct. 26
Oregon State
22
Southern California
1983) defensive assistant; Mike Nelson (Dayton 1969),
37
Nov. 2
at Oregon
16
Washington
52
defensive line; Scott Schuhmann (Tulsa 1966), offensive
Nov. 9
UCLA
0
at Oregon
31
line; Willie Shaw (San Diego State 1971), defensive coor-
Nov. 16
at Washington State
31
at Washington State
13
dinator, secondary; Dave Tipton (Stanford 1971), outside
Nov. 23
California
23
at Arizona
10
0
linebackers; Mike Tolleson (Delta State 1969), inside
Pacific-10 Conference Game
27
at California
25
linebackers; Ron Turner (Pacific 1977), offensive coordi-
nator and quarterbacks; Tyrone Willingham (Michigan
State 1977), running backs.
92
Opponents
W
Game 2-Nebraska
eptember 21, 1991
5:00 p.m. PDT
Memorial Stadium
Lincoln, Neb.
Idress-Lincoln, Neb. 68588
1990 Record-9-3
arollment-24,000
Conference Record-5-2 (2nd, tie)
onference-Big Eight
Offense-I
nancellor-Dr. Jack Goebel (Interim)
hletic Director-Bob Devaney
Defense-5-2
ickname-Cornhuskers
Lettermen Returning-57
olors-Scarlet and Cream
Lettermen Lost-32
adium-Memorial
apacity, Turf-73,650, All-Pro Turf
Offensive Starters Returning-8
Defensive Starters Returning-5
SID-Don Bryant
Kickers Returning-1
O (402) 472-5959
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
H (402) 423-6563
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Asst. SID-Tom Simons
Scott Baldwin, rb
92
592
13
579
6.3
5
67
O (402) 472-2263
SID Mailing Address-116 S. Stadium, Lincoln, Neb. 68588
Passing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
SID FAX-(402) 472-2005
Mickey Joseph, qb
78
34
6
624
43.6
11
46
Press Box Phone-(402) 472-2279
Mike Grant, qb
69
32
4
484
46.4
4
45
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Jon Bostick
19
375
19.7
4
45
Johnny Mitchell
11
282
25.6
7
46
Tyrone Hughes
10
113
11.3
1
24
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
Mike Stigge
40
1655
41.4
1
54
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS FR
Mike Petko, ilb
15
47
62
3-7
0
Travis Hill, olb
21
28
49
10-43
3
Pat Engelbert, mg
22
26
48
10-32
2
Top Newcomers-OT Rob Zatechka; OT Zach Wiegert; WB
Vince Hawkins; SS Ernie Beler.
on Bostick
Tom Osborne
Honor Candidates-OLB Travis Hill (Jr.); CB Tyrone Legette
(Sr.); SE Jon Bostick (Sr.); NG Pat Engelbert (Sr.);
Head Coach-Tom Osborne (Hastings, 1959)
SE/KR Tyrone Hughes (Jr.).
Nebraska: 177-41-2 (19th year)
Career: Same
Anticipated Strengths-Skill positions on offense.
Football Office Phone-(402) 472-3116
Areas of Concern-Depth on defensive line.
Best Time to Call Coach-Tuesday, noon central time; telecon-
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (9-3)
ference. Set up through SID.
Sept. 7
Utah State
UN
OPP
Sept. 14
Colorado State
13
Baylor
0
Assistant Coaches-Charlie McBride (Colorado 1962), defen-
Sept. 21
Washington
60
N. Illinois
14
sive coordinator/line; Ron Brown (Brown 1979), receivers;
Sept. 28
at Arizona State
56
Minnesota
0
George Darlington (Rutgers 1961), defensive backs; Tony
Oct. 12
Oklahoma State
31
Oregon State
7
Samuel (Nebraska 1979), outside linebackers; Frank Solich
Oct. 19
Kansas State
45
at Kansas State
8
Oct. 26
Missouri
69
Missouri
21
(Nebraska 1966), running backs; Kevin Steele (Tennessee
Nov. 2
at Colorado
31
Oklahoma State
3
1981), inside linebackers; Milt Tenopir (Sterling 1961),
Nov. 9
at Kansas
45
at Iowa State
13
offensive line; Dan Young (Kearney State 1961), offensive
Nov. 16
Iowa State
12
Colorado
27
line/kickers.
Nov. 29
Oklahoma
41
at Kansas
9
10
at Oklahoma
45
Big Eight Conference Game
21
Georgia Tech
45
(Citrus Bowl)
93
W
Opponents
Game 3-Kansas State
September 28, 1991
12:30 p.m. PDT
Husky Stadium
Seattle, Wash
Location-Manhattan, Kansas, 66502
1990 Record-5-6
Enrollment-21,137
Conference-Big Eight
Conference Record-2-5 (sixth)
President-Dr. Jon Wefald
Offense-Multiple
Athletic Director-Jim Epps (Interim)
Defense-52
Nickname-Wildcats
Colors-Purple and White
Lettermen Returning-50
Stadium-KSU Stadium
Lettermen Lost-13
Capacity, Turf-42,000, Astroturf
Offensive Starters Returning-9
Defensive Starters Returning-10
SID-Ben Boyle
Kickers Returning-2
(O) (913) 532-6735
(H) (913) 539-8817
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
Asst. SID-Dan Ballou
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
(H) (913) 776-9678
Rod Schiller
58
195
11
184
3.2
1
16
Asst. SID-To be announced
Curtis Madden
22
90
0
90
4.1
2
23
SID Mailing Address-1800 College Ave., Bramlage 144
Passing
PA
PC
HI
SID FAX-(913) 532-6093
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
Paul Watson
53
27
Press Box Phone-(913) 539-3423
1
328
.509
1
54
Jason Smargiasso
7
0
0
0
.000
0
0
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Michael Smith
46
796
17.3
2
54t
Frank Hernandez
41
577
14.1
4
53
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
None
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS FR
Brooks Barta
36
69
105
6-12
2
Chris Patterson
37
47
84
Top Newcomers-WR Gerald Benton (Jr.); RB Bryant Brooks
(Fr.); DB Steve Hanks (Fr.); LB Jesse Lantz (Fr.).
Honor Candidates-LB Brooks Barta (Jr.); TE Russ
Michael Smith
Bill Snyder
Campbell (Sr.); CB Rogerick Green (Sr.); FS Jaime
Mendez (So.); WR Michael Smith (Sr.).
Head Coach-Bill Snyder (William Jewell, 1963)
Anticipated Strengths-Secondary, wide receivers, offensive,
Kansas State: 6-16-0 (third year)
defensive lines.
Career: Same
Football Office Phone-(913) 532-5876
Areas of Concern-Running game, running defense, overall
depth.
Best Time to Call Coach-Monday & Thursday 12:00-12:30 p.m.
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (5-6)
Assistant Coaches-Dana Dimel (Kansas State 1986), offensive
Sept. 8
Indiana State
KS
OPP
line; Ben Griffith (Tennessee Tech 1972), Outside line-
Sept. 14
Idaho State
27
W. Illinois
6
backers; Tom Grogan (Iowa 1984), running backs/
Sept. 21
N. Illinois
52
New Mexico St.
7
Sept. 28
at Washington
35
N. Illinois
42
recruiting coordinator; John Hendrick (Pittsburgh 1981),
Oct. 12
Kansas
38
New Mexico
6
defensive line; John Latina (Virginia Tech 1979), offen-
Oct. 19
at Nebreska
8
Nebreska
45
sive line/running game coordinator; Jim Leavitt (Missouri
Oct. 26
Colorado
23
Oklahoma State
17
1978), co-defensive coordinator/inside linebacker; Del
Nov. 2
at Oklahoma
10
Missouri
31
Nov. 9
at Iowa State
Miller(Central Iowa 1972), assistant head coach/offensive
24
Kansas
27
Nov. 16
Missouri
28
Iowa State
14
coordinator/quarterbacks; Nick Quataro (Iowa 1977), as-
Nov. 23
Oklahoma State
7
Oklahoma
34
sociate head coach/tights ends/special teams; Bobby
3
Colorado
64
Big Eight Conference Game
Stoops (Iowa 1983), co-defensive coordinator/secondary.
94
Opponents
W
Game 4-Arizona
ctober 5, 1991
12:30 p.m. PST
Husky Stadium
Seattle, Wash.
beation-Tucson, Ariz. 85721
1990 Record-7-5
nrollment-34,000
Pacific-10 Record-5-4 (fifth)
onference-Pacific-10
resident-Dr. Manuel Pacheco
ARIZONA
Offense-I-Option
thletic Director-Dr. Cedric Dempsey
Defense-50
ickname-Wildcats
Lettermen Returning-33
blors-Cardinal and Navy
Lettermen Lost-25
adium-Arizona Stadium
apacity, Turf-56, 167, Bermuda
Offensive Starters Returning-6
Defensive Starters Returning-5
SID-Butch Henry
Kickers Returning-2
(O) (602) 621-4163
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
(H) (602) 885-1452
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Asst. SID-Tom Duddleston Jr.
Mario Hampton, fb
57
304
3
301
5.3
1
19
(H) (602) 881-1203
Lamont Lovett, rb
62
262
31
231
3.7
3
21
Information Specialist-Tracy Ballin
(H) (602) 577-8214
Passing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
Information Specialist-Dave Hirsch
George Malauulu, qb
101
46
5
726
.455
1
48
(H) (602) 577-9869
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
SID Mailing Address-229 McKale Center,
Terry Vaughn, rb
22
431
19.6
2
45
Tucson, AZ 85721
Richard Griffith, te
10
138
13.8
0
33
SID FAX-(602) 621-2681
Press Box Phone-(602) 621-2801/2803
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
Adam Grand, P
18
648
36.0
2
55
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS
FR
Marcel Wade, ilb
32
20
52
0-0
0
Richard Holt, SS
29
11
40
2-7
1
Top Newcomers-CB Keshon Johnson (Jr.); CB Darryl
Morrison (Jr.).
Honor Candidates-OT John Fina (Sr.); WR Terry Vaughn
(So.); OLB Richard Maddox (Sr.); SS Bobby Roland
(Sr.); DT Jimmie Hopkins (So.); TE Richard Griffith
(Jr.).
Anticipated Strengths-Team speed.
Areas of Concern-Lack of experience.
George Malauulu
Dick Tomey
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (7-5)
Head Coach-Dick Tomey (DePauw, 1963)
Sept. 7
at Ohio State
UA
OPP
Arizona: 26-17-3, .598 (5th year)
Sept. 14
Stanford
28
Illinois
16
Career: 89-63-6, .582 (15th year)
Sept. 21
California
25
New Mexico
10
Sept. 28
Long Beach State
22
Oregon
17
Football Office Phone-(602) 621-4917
Oct. 5
at Washington
25
California
30
Oct. 12
at UCLA
28
UCLA
21
Best Time to Call Coach-Weekdays, 2:00-3:00 p.m.
Oct. 26
Miami (Fla.)
21
Oregon State
35
Nov. 2
Oregon State
35
Southern Cal
26
Assistant Coaches-Duane Akina (Washington 1979), second-
Nov. 9
at Washington State
42
Washington State
34
ary; John Baxter (Loras 1986), kicking; Clarence Brooks
Nov. 16
Southern Cal
10
Washington
54
(Massachusetts 1973), defensive line; Gerald Carr (South-
Nov. 23
at Arizona State
10
Stanford
23
21
Arizona State
17
ern Illinois 1981) quarterbacks; Mike Flores (UCLA 1972),
"Pacific-10 Conference Game
0
Syracuse (Aloha Bowl) 28
wide receivers; Pat Hill (Cal-Riverside 1974), offensive
line; Marc Lunsford (Arizona 1980), running backs;
Johnnie Lynn (UCLA 1979), outside linebackers; Larry
Mac Duff (Oklahoma, 1970), defensive coordinator and
inside linebackers.
95
W
Opponents
Game 5-Toledo
October 12, 1991
12:30 p.m. PDT
Husky Stadium
Seattle, Wash
Location-Toledo, Ohio 43606
1990 Record-9-2
Enrollment-24,781
Conference Record-7-1 (tie first)
Conference-Mid-American
President-Dr. Frank Horton
POCKETS
Offense-Multiple
Athletic Director-Dr. Allen Bohl
Defense-Stunt 4-3
Nickname-Rockets
Lettermen Returning-28
Colors-Midnight Blue and Gold
Lettermen Lost-20
Stadium-Glass Bowl
Capacity, Turf-26,248, Astroturf
Offensive Starters Returning-5
Defensive Starters Returning-5
SID-John McNamara
Kickers Returning-2
O (419) 537-3790
H (419) 867-1684
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
Assoc. SID-Michael Lamb
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
H (419) 536-8290
Kevin Meger, qb
106
502
176
326
3.1
6
26
Asst. SID-Jeff Huffman
Passing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
H (419) 478-5420
Kevin Meger, qb
257
139
11
1861
.541
6
67
SID Mailing Address-2801 W. Bancroft St.
SID FAX-(419) 537-3795
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Press Box Phone-(419) 537-2027
Marcus Goodwin, fl
7
119
17.0
1
28
Damon Nelson, tb
2
46
23.0
0
32
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
Brian Borders
55
2245
40.8
0
77
Tacklers
UT
AT
ToT
TL-YDS
FR
Matt Eberflus, olb
44
45
89
4-8
0
Dan Williams, de
32
42
74
7-17
1
Top Newcomers-WR Scott Brunswick (Fr.); OL Jeff Green
(Fr.); QB Tim Kubiak (Fr.); DL Adriel McCullough
(Fr.); DB Alonzo Vance (Fr.).
Honor Candidate-OLB Matt Eberflus (Sr.).
Anticipated Strengths-Quarterback, Defense.
Matt Eberflus
Gary Pinkel
Areas of Concern-Receiving corps.
Head Coach-Gary Pinkel (Kent State, 1974)
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (9-2)
Toledo: First year
Sept. 7
Kansas
UT
OPP
Career: First year
Sept. 21
at Western Michigan
20
Miami (Ohio)
14,
Sept. 28
Central Michigan
23
N. Illinois
14
Football Office Phone-(419) 537-3612
Oct. 5
Ohio
28
Ball State
16
Best Time to Call Coach-Tuesday-Thursday, 11:00-11:30 a.m.
Oct. 12
at Washington
27
Ohio
20
Oct. 19
at Bowling Green
37
Eastern Michigan
23
Assistant Coaches-Tom Amstutz (Toledo 1976) outside line-
Oct. 26
Miami
19
Bowling Green
13
backer; Ron Curtis (Ohio Univ. 1966) wide receivers; Kirk
Nov. 2
at Kent State
12
Central Michigan
13
Heidelberg (Moorehead State 1983) tight ends, special
Nov. 9
Ball State
28
Kent
14
Nov. 16
teams; Ken Mannie (Akron 1971) strength and condition-
at Eastern Michigan
37
Western Michigan
9
Nov. 23
Northern Illinois
10
Navy
14
ing; Greg Meyer (Northern Colorado 1974) offensive
43
Arkansas State
28
coordinator; Phil Parker (Michigan State 1984) defensive
Mid-American Conference Game
backs; Dean Pees (Bowling Green 1972) defensive coordi-
nator; Pat Perles (Michigan State 1987) defensive line;
Ellis Rainsberger (Kansas State 1957) offensive line;
Shawn Simms (Bowling Green 1986) running backs.
96
Opponents
W
Fame 6-California
ctober 19, 1991
1:00 p.m. PDT
Memorial Stadium
Berkeley, Calif.
cation-Berkeley, Calif. 94720
OF
1990 Record-7-41
hrollment-31,000
onference-Pacific-10
DEPARTMENT
ALIFORNIA
Pacific-10 Record-4-3-1 (4th)
Offense-I, Multiple
nancellor-Chang-Lin Tien
hletic Director-TBA
Defense-Multiple
ckname-Golden Bears
Lettermen Returning-42
olors-Blue and Gold
Lettermen Lost-13
adium-Memorial Stadium
apacity, Turf-75,662, artificial
Offensive Starters Returning-8
Defensive Starters Returning-4
SID-Kevin Reneau
Kickers Returning-0
(O) (415) 642-5363
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
(H) (415) 531-BEAR
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Asst. SID-Ron Juanso
Russell White, tb
180
1028
28
1000
5.6
11
45
(H) (415) 465-3710
Greg Zomalt, tb
46
237
1
236
4.1
0
45
Asst. SID-Scott Ball
(H) (415) 420-1142
Passing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
SID Mailing Address-Room 210, Memorial Stadium,
Mike Pawlawski, qb
299
179
13
2069
59.9
17
58
Berkeley, CA 94720
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
SID FAX-(415) 643-7778
Brian Treggs, wr
45
564
12.5
6
49
Press Box Phone-(415) 642-3098
Greg Zomalt, tb
30
318
10.6
0
54
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
None
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS FR
David Wilson, S
52
20
72
2/na
2
Cornell Collier, olb
36
15
51
6/na
3
Top Newcomers-DB Wolf Barber (Jr.); DT Layne Hall (Jr.);
DT Stafford Evans (Jr.); TB Tyrone Edwards (Fr.);
TB Reynard Rutherford (Fr.); DB Jerod Cherry (Fr.).
Honor Candidates-TB Russell White (Jr.); OT Troy Auzenne
(Sr.); C Steve Gordon (Sr.).
Anticipated Strengths-Offense.
Russell White
Bruce Snyder
Areas of Concern-Linebackers, Kicking
Head Coach-Bruce Snyder (Oregon, 1963)
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (4-7)
California: 19-22-3, .432 (5th year)
Sept. 7
Pacific
UC
OPP
Career: 58-59-4, .479 (12th year)
Sept. 14
Purdue
28
at Wisconson
12
Sept. 21
at Arizona
24
Miami
52
Football Office Phone-(415) 642-3851
Oct. 5
at UCLA
31
at Washington State
41
30
at Arizona
25
Best Time to Call Coach-Tuesday - Friday, 11:00 a.m.-Noon.
Oct. 12
Oregon
Oct. 19
Washington
35
San Jose State
34
Assistant Coaches-Dick Arbuckle (Oregon 1961) wide receiv-
Oct. 26
San Jose State
31
at Arizona State
24
ers/special teams; Kent Baer (Utah State 1973), defensive
Nov. 2
Southern California
38
UCLA
31
Nov. 9
at Oregon State
7
at Washington
46
coordinator, inside linebackers; Bill Cockerham (Cal Poly-
Nov. 16
Arizona State
31
at USC
31
SLO 1978), running backs; (Dan Cozzetto (Idaho 1979),
Nov. 23
at Stanford
28
Oregon
3
offensive line; Donnie Henderson (Utah State 1975),
25
Stanford
27
outside linebackers; Tom Keele (Oregon 1959), tight ends
*Pacific-10 Conference Game
17
Wyoming (Copper Bowl) 15
and offensive line; Rod Marinelli (California Lutheran
1972), assistant head coach, defensive line; Steve Mariucci
(Northern Michigan 1977), offensive coordinator and
quarterbacks; Phil Snow (Cal State-Hayward 1978),
secondary.
97
W
Opponents
Game 7-Oregon
October 26, 1991
12:30 p.m. PDT
Husky Stadium
Seattle, Wash
Location-Eugene, Ore. 97403
1990 Record-8-4
Enrollment-17,600
Pacific-10 Record-4-3 (3rd)
Conference-Pacific-10
President-Myles Brand
Offense-Multiple
Athletic Director-Bill Byrne
Defense-50
Nickname-Ducks
Lettermen Returning-40
Colors-Emerald Green and Lemon Yellow
Lettermen Lost-25
Stadium-Autzen Stadium
Capacity, Turf-41,698, Omniturf
Offensive Starters Returning-4
Defensive Starters Returning-8
SID-Steve Hellyer
Kickers Returning-2
(O) (503) 346-5488
(H) (503) 683-3825
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
Asst. SID-David Williford
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LC
(H) (503) 345-0145
Sean Burwell, tb
223
1022
53
969
4.3
9
7.
Asst. SID-Jamie Klund
Juan Shedrick fb
45
193
5
188
4.2
1
25
(H) (503) 484-5825
Passing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LC
SID Mailing Address-2727 Leo Harris Parkway,
None
Eugene, OR 97401
SID FAX-(503) 346-5449
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Press Box Phone-(503) 346-4497
Sean Burwell, tb
35
340
9.7
2
49
Jeff Thomason, se
30
396
13.2
6
37
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
Tommy Thompson
62
2515
40.6
0
65
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS FR
Joe Farwell
64
48
112
4-7
1
Eric Castle
62
43
105
1-2
0
Top Newcomers-OT Matt Martin (Jr.); SS Kenny Phillips
(Jr.); OG Heath Howington (Fr.); OG Steve Hardin
(Fr.); QB Brett Salisbury (Jr.); QB Doug Musgrave
(So.); SE Derrick Deadwiler (Jr.).
Honor Candidates-TE Jeff Thomason (Sr.); OLB Andy
Connor (Sr.); PK Gregg McCallum (Sr.).
Gregg McCallum
Rich Brooks
Anticipated Strengths-Defense, Running backs.
Head Coach-Rich Brooks (Oregon State 1963)
Areas of Concern-Offensive line, Quarterbacks, Receivers.
Oregon: 68-85-4, .446 (15th year)
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (8-4)
Career: 68-85-4, .446 (15th year)
Sept. 7
Washington State
UO
OPP
Football Office Phone-(503) 346-5477
Sept. 14
at Texas Tech
42
San Diego State
21
Sept. 21
at Utah
55
Idaho
23
Best Time to Call Coach-10:30 a.m. Wednesday
Sept. 28
Southern California
17
Arizona
22
Assistant Coaches-Nick Aliotti (California-Davis 1976), outside
Oct. 5
New Mexico State
32
Brigham Young
16
linebackers; Mike Bellotti (California-Davis 1973), offen-
Oct. 12
at California
52
Utah State
7
Oct. 26
at Washington
17
Washington
38
sive coordinator, quarterbacks; Gary Campbell (UCLA
Nov. 2
at Stanford
27
Arizona State
7
1973), running backs; Steve Greatwood (Oregon 1980),
Nov. 9
at Arizona State
31
Stanford
0
offensive tackles, tight ends; John Ramsdell (Springfield
Nov. 16
UCLA
28
UCLA
24
1975), wide receivers; Joe Schaffeld (Oregon 1959), de-
Nov. 23
Oregon State
3
California
28
6
fensive line; Denny Schuler (Oregon 1969), defensive
Pacific-10 Conference Game
Oregon State
3
31
Colorado State
32
coordinator, secondary; Bill Tarrow (Oregon 1958), inside
(Freedom Bowl)
linebackers; Neal Zoumboukos (California-Davis 1968),
assistant head coach, offensive guards, centers.
98
Opponents
W
Game 8-Arizona State
ovember 2, 1991
12:30 p.m. PDT
Husky Stadium
Seattle, Wash.
bcation-Tempe, Ariz. 85287
1990 Record-4-7
nrollment-42,952
Pacific-10 Record-2-5 (8th)
onference-Pacific-10
Offense-I and Split Back
resident-Dr. Lattie F. Coor
thletic Director-Charles S. Harris
Defense-Multiple
ickname-Sun Devils
Lettermen Returning-41
blors-Maroon and Gold
Lettermen Lost-15
adium-Sun Devil Stadium
apacity, Turf-74,865, grass
Offensive Starters Returning-6
Defensive Starters Returning-9
SID-Mark Brand
Kickers Returning-2
(O) (602) 965-6592
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
(H) (602) 759-9514
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Asst. SID-Scott Dupree
Kelvin Fisher, fb
119
633
19
614
5.2
5
40
(H) (602) 664-1793
George Montgomery, tb
26
134
4
130
5.0
3
14
Asst. SID-Frank Reed
SID Mailing Address-Intercollegiate Athletics Complex,
Rassing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
Tempe, AZ 85287
Bret Powers, qb
49
23
4
277
46.9
0
43
SID FAX-(602) 965-5408
Kurt Lasher, qb
50
19
5
251
38.0
1
63
Press Box Phone-(602) 965-6207
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Eric Guliford, se
36
605
16.8
4
57
Kevin Snyder, fl
18
236
13.1
1
63
Kelvin Fisher, fb
14
165
11.8
1
31
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
None
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS FR
Brett Wallerstedt, ilb
80
29
109
4-10
0
Darren Woodson, olb
49
24
73
8-52
0
Top Newcomers-ILB Justin Dragoo (Fr.); OL Jeff Kysar
(Fr.); ILB Raythan Smith (Fr.); TB Jerone Davison
(Jr.); DB Jean Boyd (Jr.); OL Craig Ritter (Jr.).
Honor Candidates-CB Phillippi Sparks (Sr.); DT Shane
hillippi Sparks
Larry Marmie
Collins (Jr.); SE Eric Guliford (Jr.); LB Darren
Woodson (Sr.); FB Kelvin Fisher (Sr.).
Head Coach-Larry Marmie (Eastern Kentucky 1965)
Arizona State: 16-16-1, .500 (4th year)
Anticipated Strengths-Defensive depth, secondary, running
Career: 16-16-1, .500 (4th year)
game
Football Office Phone-(602) 965-5053
Areas of Concern-Quarterback, receiver depth.
Best Time to Call Coach-Mon-Wed, 9:00-11:00 a.m.
Assistant Coaches-Mike Ackerley (Colorado State 1969), de-
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (4-7)
fensive line; Don Bocchi (Duquesne 1968), wide receiv-
Sept. 14
at Oklahoma State
ASU
OPP
ers; Frank Falks (Parsons College 1967), assistant head
Sept. 21
at Southern California
34
Baylor
14
coach and running backs; Mel Foels (Bowling Green
Sept. 28
Nebraska
31
Colorado State
20
Oct. 5
Utah
9
Missouri
30
1965), defensive coordinator; Tom Freeman (San Diego
Oct. 12
at Oregon State
14
Washington
42
State 1969) centers/guards; Jake Hallum (Newberry Col-
Oct. 19
Washington State
24
California
31
lege 1960), tight ends and offensive tackles; Mike Martz
Oct. 26
UCLA
7
Oregon
27
(Fresno State 1973), offensive coordinator and quarter-
Nov. 2
at Washington
6
Southern California
13
backs; Tom McMahon (Montana 1971), secondary; Lovie
Nov. 9
Oregon
34
Oregon State
9
Nov. 16
at California
51
Washington State
26
Smith (Tulsa 1980), outside linebackers.
Nov. 23
Arizona
17
Arizona
21
45
Houston
62
°Pacific-10 Conference Game
99
W
Opponents
Game 9-Southern California
November 9, 1991
12:30 p.m. PDT
Los Angeles Coliseum Los Angeles, Cal
Location-Los Angeles, Calif. 90089
TROJANS
1990 Record-8-4-1
Enrollment-28,895
Pacific-10 Record-5-2-1 (2nd)
Conference-Pacific-10
President-Dr. Steven Sample
Offense-Multiple, I
Athletic Director-Dr. Mike McGee
Defense-3-4
Nickname-Trojans
Lettermen Returning-49
Colors-Cardinal and Gold
Lettermen Lost-31
Stadium-Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
Capacity, Turf-92,516, grass
Offensive Starters Returning-6
Defensive Starters Returning-5
SID-Tim Tessalone
Kickers Returning-1
(O) (213) 740-8480
(H) (213) 540-7052
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
Assoc. SID-Nancy Mazmanian (H) (213) 371-2277
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LC
Asst. SID-Gary Pine (H) (213) 947-2779
Mazio Royster, tb
235
1222
54
1168
5.0
8
50
Asst. SID-Linda Dodge (H) (213) 318-1057
Scott Lockwood, fb-tb
118
548
14
534
4.5
3
60
Publications-Steven Vanderpool (H) (213) 838-4525
Passing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
SID Mailing Address-Heritage Hall 103,
None
Los Angeles, CA 90089
SID FAX-(213) 740-7584
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Press Box Phone-(213) 741-1341; 747-7111
Mazio Royster, tb
25
199
8.0
1
23
Scott Lockwood, fb-tb
22
186
8.5
1
16
Larry Wallace, se
20
274
13.7
0
27
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
Ron Dale, P
59
2413
40.9
0
55
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS FR
Kurt Barber, olb
66
18
84
11-44
1
Stephen Pace, S
52
24
76
1-1
I
Top Newcomers-TB Estrus Crayton (Jr.); PK Cole Ford
(Fr.); QB Rob Johnson (Fr.); OG Robert Loya (Fr.);
TB Dwight McFadden (Fr.).
Honor Candidates-TB Mazio Royster (So.); OG Derrick
Deese (Sr.); OT Michael Moody (Sr.); OLB Kurt
Barber.
Mazio Royster
Larry Smith
Anticipated Strengths-Running back, Linebackers.
Head Coach-Larry Smith (Bowling Green 1962)
USC: 35-12-2, 735 (5th year)
Areas of Concern-Lack of experience, QB, offensive line.
Career: 101-67-5, .598 (16th year)
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (9-2-1)
Football Office Phone-(213) 740-4204
Sept. 2
Memphis State
USC
OPP
Best Time to Call Coach-Late morning, early afternoon.
Sept. 14
Penn State
34
Syracuse
16
Sept. 21
Arizona State
19
Penn State
14
Assistant Coaches-Chris Allen (Central Michigan 1964), associ-
Sept. 28
at Oregon
0
Washington
31
ate head coach, defensive coordinator and outside lineback-
Oct. 12
at Washington State
35
Ohio State
26
ers; Gary Bernardi (Cal State-Northridge 1976), tight
Oct. 19
Stanford
30
Washington State
17
ends and offensive line; Bob Cope (Carson-Newman 1961)
Oct. 26
at Notre Dame
37
Stanford
22
Nov. 2
at California
26
Arizona
Secondary; Ray Dorr (West Virginia Wesleyan 1965),
35
Nov. 9
Washington
13
Arizona State
6
passing coordinator and quarterbacks; John Matsko (Kent
Nov. 16
at Arizona
31
California
31
State 1973), offensive coordinator and offensive line; Wayne
Nov. 23
UCLA
56
Oregon State
7
Nunnely (Nevada-Las Vegas 1975) running backs; Tom
45
UCLA
42
"Pacific-10 Conference Game
Roggeman (Purdue 1953), inside linebackers; Mike
6
Notre Dame
10
16
Michigan State
17
Sanford (USC 1978), wide receivers; Kevin Wolthausen
(Hancock Bowl)
(Humboldt State 1981), defensive line.
100
Opponents
W
Game 10-Oregon State
ovember 16, 1991
1:00 p.m. PST
Parker Stadium
Corvallis, Ore.
bcation-Corvallis, Ore. 97331
1990 Record-1-10
nrollment-16,500
USU
Pacific-10 Record-1-6 (10th)
onference-Pacific-10
resident-John Byrne
Offense-Spread Option
thletic Director-Dutch Baughman
Defense-4-3, multiple
ickname-Beavers
Lettermen Returning-37
olors-Orange and Black
Lettermen Lost-22
tadium-Parker Stadium
apacity, Turf-35,362, All-Pro Turf
Offensive Starters Returning-7
Defensive Starters Returning-6
SID-Hal Cowan
Kickers Returning-2
(O) (503) 737-3720
(H) (503) 757-4455
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
Asst. SID-Steve Fenk
Dwayne Owens, hb
87
398
34
364
4.2
1
29
(H) (503) 754-9489
James Jones, fb
104
386
22
364
3.5
6
17
Asst. SID-Becky Yahn
(H) (503) 757-0666
Passing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
SID Mailing Address-Gill Coliseum, 103,
Ed Browning, qb
52
20
3
236
38.5
2
27
Corvallis, OR 97331
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
SID FAX-(503) 737-3072
Maurice Wilson, se
41
425
10.4
2
35
Press Box Phone-(503) 737-2410
Kevin Strasser, se
14
196
14.0
2
27
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
Tim Kollas
65
2407
37.0
5
57
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS FR
Todd Sahlfeld, mlb
39
36
75
4-x
X
Brent Huff, fs
51
24
75
0-0
X
Top Newcomers-FB, Cory Huot, (Fr.); CB Michael Hale
(Fr.); LB Eric Hale (Fr.); DT Jason Walling (Fr.); LB
Rico Petrini (Fr.); SE Herschel Currie (Jr.); CB Randy
Horton (Jr.); FB Chris Morton (Fr.).
Honor Candidates-FS Brent Huff (Sr.); MLB Todd Sahlfeld
(Sr.); OG Fletcher Keister (Jr.).
rent Huff
Jerry Pettibone
Anticipated Strengths-Fullback, Offensive line, Defensive
line.
Head Coach-Jerry Pettibone (Oklahoma, 1963)
Areas of Concern-Overall depth, Lack of experience at QB.
Oregon State, 0-0 (1st year)
Career: 33-32-1, .508 (7th year)
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (1-10)
Football Office Phone-(503) 737-2614
Sept. 7
Utah
OSU
OPP
Best Time to Call Coach-10:00-11:30 a.m. weekdays.
Sept. 14
at UNLV
15
Montana
22
Sept. 21
Fresno State
12
at Kansas
38
Assistant Coaches-Dan Ferrigno (San Francisco State 1975),
Oct. 5
at Washington State
20
UNLV
45
secondary; Brady Hoke (Ball State 1981), linebackers;
Oct. 12
Arizona State
3
at Stanford
37
Oct. 19
UCLA
7
Nebraska
31
Robert Jackson (Northern Illinois 1974), wide receivers/
Oct. 26
at Stanford
35
Arizona
21
special teams; Osia Lewis (Oregon State 1986), lineback-
Nov. 2
at Arizona
24
Washington State
55
ers; Rocky Long (New Mexico 1972), defensive coordina-
Nov. 9
California
17
at UCLA
26
tor; Jay Schaake (Wyoming 1979), quarterbacks/fullbacks;
Nov. 16
Washington
9
at Arizona State
34
Todd Spencer (Pacific Lutheran 1979), offensive line;
Nov. 23
at Oregon
7
Southern California
56
3
Oregon
6
Mike Waufle (Utah State 1979), defensive line; Mike
Pacific-10 Conference Game
Summers (Georgetown (Ky) 1978), offensive coordinator/
Asst. head coach/halfbacks.
101
W
Opponents
Game 11-Washington State
November 23, 1991
12:30 p.m. PST
Husky Stadium
Seattle, Wash
Location-Pullman, Wash. 99164
1990 Record-3-8
Enrollment-17,500
Pacific-10 Record-2-6 (9th)
Conference-Pacific-10
President-Samuel H. Smith
Offense-Multiple
Athletic Director-Jim Livengood
Defense-4-3
Nickname-Cougars
Lettermen Returning-43
Colors-Crimson and Gray
Lettermen Lost-18
Stadium-Martin Stadium
Capacity, Turf-40,000, Omni-Turf
Offensive Starters Returning-6
Defensive Starters Returning-5
Co-SID-Rod Commons
Kickers Returning-1
(O) (509) 335-0270
(H) (509) 332-8309
Top Returnees (1990 Stats)
Co-SID-Donna Murphy
Rushing
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
(H) (509) 334-1763
Shaumbe Wright-Fair, rb
162
767
28
739
4.6
4
42
SID Mailing Address-Bohler M-8,
Phillip Bobo, wr
4
28
2
26
6.5
0
20
Pullman, WA 99164-1602
Passing
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
SID FAX-(509) 335-0267
Drew Bledsoe, qb
189
92
4
1386
.487
9
63
Press Box Phone-(509) 335-0270, 335-COUG
Aaron Garcia, qb
41
17
5
236
.415
1
70
Receiving
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Phillip Bobo, wr
51
758
14.9
6
63
Clarence Williams, te
43
627
14.6
3
55
Punting
NO
YDS
AVG
BLK
LG
Jason Hanson
59
2679
45.4
1
76
Tacklers
UT
AT
TOT
TL-YDS
FR
Rod Plummer, lb
63
27
90
5-12
0
Michael Wright, cb
42
9
51
1-3
0
Top Newcomers-RB Ron Childs (Fr.); DB Darryl Hamilton
(Jr.); DL Chad Eaton (Fr.); WR Singor Mobley (Fr.);
LB Noah Utu Pua (Fr.).
Honor Candidates-PK Jason Hanson (Sr.); OT Bob Garman
Jason Hanson
Mike Price
(Sr.); TE Clarence Williams (Jr.).
Head Coach-Mike Price (Puget Sound, 1969)
Anticipated Strengths-Kicking, Quarterbacks, Receivers.
Washington State: 9-13, .409 (3rd year)
Career: 55-57, .491 (11th year)
Areas of Concern-Lack of experience on defensive line.
Football Office Phone-(509) 335-0250
1991 Schedule
1990 Results (3-8)
Best Time to Call Coach-Monday-Thursday, 11:00 a.m.-noon.
Sept. 7
at Oregon
WSU
OPP
Sept. 14,
Fresno State
21
Texas Christian
3
Assistant Coaches-Bill Doba (Ball State 1962), asst. head coach/
Sept. 21
at Ohio State
13
Wyoming
34
linebackers; Tim Lappano (Idaho 1984), offensive coordi-
Sept. 28
at UNLV
36
Brigham Young
50
nator/wide receivers; Larry Lewis (Boise State 1981)
Oct. 5
Oregon State
41
California
31
defensive ends; Del Wight (Wyoming 1962), defensive
Oct. 12
Southern California
20
UCLA
30
Oct. 19
at Arizona State
17
Southern California
30
line; Ted Williams (Cal Poly-Pomona 1966), running
Nov. 2
at UCLA
55
Oregon State
24
backs; Jim Zeches (Cal State-Northridge 1973), defensive
Nov. 9
Arizona
34
Arizona
42
tackles; George Yarno (Washington State 1978), offensive
Nov. 16
Stanford
13
Stanford
31
line/centers; Mike Zimmer (Illinois State 1979), defensive
Nov. 23
at Washington
26
Arizona State
51
10
coordinator, secondary.
Washington
55
°Pacific-10 Conference Game
102
Opponents
W
The Pacific-10 Series
Washington versus Arizona
Washington versus Arizona State
Series Record-UW leads 6-2-1
Series Record-UW leads 7-5
Record at Seattle-UW leads 4-1
Record at Seattle-UW leads 3-2
Record at Husky Stadium-UW leads 4-1
Record at Husky Stadium-UW leads 3-2
Record at Tucson-UW leads 2-1-1
Record at Tempe-UW leads 4-3
Record at Arizona Stadium-UW leads 2-1-1
Record at Sun Devil Stadium-UW leads 4-3
Record at Neutral Site-None
Record at Neutral Site-None
Don James vs. UA-6-2-1
Don James vs. ASU-7-5
Dick Tomey vs. UW-2-1-1
Larry Marmie vs. UW-1-2
Don James vs. Dick Tomey-1-2-1
Don James vs. Larry Marmie-2-1
Current Win Streak-UW has a one-game win streak.
Current Win Streak-UW has a one-game win streak.
Longest UW Win Streak-5 games (1978-84)
Longest UW Win Streak-3 games (1978-80)
Longest UA Win Streak-2 games (1988-89)
Longest ASU Win Streak-2 games (1985-86)
Biggest UW Win-44 points (54-10, 1990)
Biggest UW Win-34 points (41-7, 1978)
Biggest UA Win-3 points (20-17, 1989; 16-13, 1988)
Biggest ASU Win-29 points (36-7, 1985)
UW's Last Win in Seattle-Nov. 3, 1990 (54-10)
UW's Last Win in Seattle-Oct. 10, 1987 (27-14)
UA's Last Win in Seattle-Nov. 5, 1988 (16-13)
ASU's Last Win in Seattle-Nov. 4, 1989 (34-32)
UW's Last Win in Tucson-Nov. 12, 1983 (23-22)
UW's Last Win in Tempe-Oct. 6, 1990 (42-14)
UA's Last Win in Tucson-Sept. 23, 1989 (20-17)
ASU's Last win in Tempe-Nov. 1, 1986 (34-21)
Top Five Crowds in Seattle VS. UA
Top Five Crowds in Seattle vs. ASU
Oct. 10, 1987-73,883
Nov. 3, 1990-70,111
Nov. 4, 1989-64,695
Nov. 5, 1988-65,604
Oct. 28, 1978-54,866
Oct. 27, 1984-59,876
Oct. 3, 1981-50,410
Nov. 8, 1980-49,341
Nov. 1, 1980-48,691
Nov. 4, 1978-47,587
Top Four Crowds in Tucson vs. UW
Top Five Crowds in Tempe vs. UW
Nov. 13, 1982-72,021
Sept. 23, 1989-50,935
Nov. 1, 1986-71,589
Nov. 7, 1987-50,021
Oct. 8, 1988-70,934
Sept. 18, 1982-48,984
Oct. 13, 1979-70,912
Nov. 5, 1983-48,808
Nov. 9, 1985-67,474
The Scores
The Scores
1990-UW 54, UA 10 (H)
1989-UA 20, UW 17 (A)
1990-UW 42, ASU 14 (A)
1988-UA 16, UW 13 (H)
1989-ASU 34, UW 32 (H)
1987-UW 21, UA 21 (A)
1988-UW 10, ASU 0 (A)
1984-UW 28, UA 12 (H)
1987-UW 27, ASU 14 (H)
1983-UW 23, UA 22 (A)
1986-ASU 34, UW 21 (A)
1982-UW 23, UA 13 (A)
1985-ASU 36, UW 7 (A)
1980-UW 45, UA 22 (H)
1982-UW 17, ASU 13 (A)
1978-UW 31, UA 21 (H)
1981-ASU 26, UW 7 (H)
1980-UW 25, ASU 0 (H)
Bold-UW Win
1979-UW 7, ASU 12 + (A)
1978-UW 41, ASU 7 (H)
1975-ASU 35, UW 12 (A)
Bold-UW Win
+Forfeit to Washington
103
W
Opponents
The Pacific-10 Series
Washington versus California
Washington versus Oregon
Series Record-UW leads 36-32-4
Series Record-UW leads 51-28-5
Record at Seattle-UW leads 18-14-3
Record at Seattle-UW leads 27-15-4
Record at Husky Stadium-UW leads 16-14-3
Record at Husky Stadium-UW leads 23-10-2
Record at Berkeley-Series tied 18-18-1
Record at Eugene-Series tied 8-8
Record at Memorial Stadium-UW leads 5-1
Record at Autzen Stadium-UW leads 7-5
Record at Neutral Site-None
Record at Portland-UW leads 16-5-1
Record at Neutral Site-None
Don James vs. UC-10-2
Bruce Snyder vs. UW-0-3
Don James vs. UO-13-3
Don James vs. Bruce Snyder-3-0
Rich Brooks vs. UW-3-11
Don James vs. Rich Brooks-11-3
Current Win Streak-UW has a ten-game win streak.
Longest UW Win Streak-10 games (1977-Present)
Current Win Streak-UW has a two-game win streak.
Longest UC Win Streak-5 games (1947-51)
Longest UW Win Streak-6 games (three times)
Biggest UW Win-72 points (72-0, 1915)
Longest UO Win Streak-4 games (1928-31)
Biggest UC Win-69 points (72-3, 1921)
Biggest UW Win-66 points (66-0, 1974)
UW's Last Win in Seattle-Oct. 27, 1990 (46-7)
Biggest UO Win-58 points (58-0, 1973)
UC's Last Win in Seattle-Nov. 6, 1976 (7-0)
UW's Last Win in Seattle-Oct. 13, 1990 (38-17)
UW's Last Win in Berkeley-Oct. 21, 1989 (29-16)
UO's Last Win in Seattle-Sept. 27, 1980 (34-10)
UC's Last win in Berkeley-Nov. 8, 1975 (27-24)
UW's Last Win in Eugene-Oct. 5, 1985 (19-13)
Top Five Crowds in Seattle vs. UC
Top Five Crowds in Berkeley vs. UW
UO's Last win in Eugene-Oct. 22, 1988 (17-14)
Oct. 27, 1990-71,427
Nov. 8, 1947-50,000
Top Five Crowds in Seattle vs. UO
Nov. 3, 1984-59,462
Top Five Crowds in Eugene vs. UW
Oct. 12, 1985-49,000
Oct. 13, 1990-73,498
Oct. 22, 1988-45,978
Oct. 4, 1986-58,911
Nov. 17, 1951-46,000
Oct. 14, 1989-70,442
Oct. 3, 1987-44,421
Nov. 12, 1988-58,823
Nov. 8, 1975-43,270
Oct. 7, 1972-61,000
Oct. 5, 1985-44, 383
Oct. 9, 1982-56,911
Oct. 14, 1961-43,000 (est.)
Oct. 31, 1970-58,580
Oct. 15, 1983-44, 303
The Scores
Oct. 25, 1986-58,466
Oct. 16, 1971-44, 200
1990-UW 46, UC 7 (H)
1941-UW 13, UC 6 (A)
The Scores
1989-UW 29, UC 16 (A)
1940-UW 7, UC 6 (H)
1988-UW 28, UC 27 (H)
1990-UW 37, UO 17 (H)
1939-UW 13, UC 6 (A)
1947-UO 6, UW 0 (P)
1986-UW 50, UC 18 (H)
1989-UW 20, UO 14 (H)
1938-UC 14, UW 7 (H)
1946-UW 16, UO 0 (H)
1985-UW 28, UC 12 (A)
1988-UO 17, UW 14 (A)
1937-UW 0 UC 0 (A)
1945-UW 7, UO 0 (P)
1984-UW 44, UC 14 (H)
1987-UO 29, UW 22 (A)
1936-UW 13, UC 0 (H)
1945-UW 20, UO 6 (H)
1982-UW 50, UC 7 (H)
1986-UW 38, UO 3 (H)
1935-UC 14, UW 0 (A)
1942-UW 15, UO 7 (P)
1981-UW 27, UC 26 (A)
1985-UW 19, UO 13 (A)
1934-UW 13, UC 7 (H)
1941-UO 19, UW 16 (H)
1979-UW 28, UC 24 (A)
1984-UW 17, UO 10 (H)
1933-UC 33, UW 0 (A)
1940-UW 10, UO 0 (P)
1977-UW 50, UC 31 (A)
1983-UW 32, UO 3 (A)
1932-UC 7, UW 6 (H)
1939-UW 20, UO 13 (H)
1976-UC 7, UW 0 (H)
1982-UW 37, UO 21 (H)
1931-UC 13, UW 0 (A)
1938-UO 3, UW 0 (P)
1975-UC 27, UW 24 (A)
1981-UW 17, UO 3 (A)
1930-UW 13, UC 0 (H)
1937-UW 14, UO 0 (H)
1974-UC 52, UW 26 (H)
1980-UO 34, UW 10 (H)
1929-UC 7, UW 0 (A)
1936-UW 7, UO 0 (P)
1973-UC 54, UW 49 (A)
1979-UW 21, UO 17 (A)
1928-UC 6, UW 0 (H)
1935-UO 7, UW 6 (H)
1972-UW 35, UC 21 (H)
1978-UW 20, UO 14 (H)
1927-UW 6, UC 0 (A)
1934-UW 16, UO 6 (P)
1971-UW 30, UC 7 (A)
1977-UW 54, UO 0 (A)
1926-UW 13, UC 7 (H)
1933-UO 6, UW 0 (H)
1970-UC 31, UW 28 (H)
1976-UW 14, UO 7 (H)
1925-UW 7, UC 0 (A)
1932-UW 0 UO 0 (P)
1969-UC 44, UW 13 (A)
1975-UW 27, UO 17 (A)
1924-UW 7, UC 7 (H)
1931-UO 13, UW 0 (H)
1968-UW 7, UC 7 (H)
1974-UW 66, UO 0 (H)
1923-UC 9, UW 0 (A)
1930-UO 7, UW 0 (P)
1967-UW 23, UC 6 (A)
1973-UO 58, UW 0 (A)
1922-UC 45, UW 7 (H)
1929-UO 14, UW 0 (H)
1966-UC 24, UW 20 (H)
1972-UW 23, UO 17 (H)
1921-UC 72, UW 3 (A)
1928-UO 27, UW 0 (P)
1965-UC 16, UW 12 (A)
1971-UO 23, UW 21 (A)
1919-UW 7, UC 0 (H)
1927-UW 7, UO 0 (H)
1964-UW 21, UC 16 (H)
1970-UW 25, UO 23 (H)
1917-UC 27, UW 0 (A)
1926-UW 23, UO 9 (P)
1963-UW 39, UC 26 (A)
1969-UO 22, UW 7 (A)
1916-UW 14, UC 7 (H)
1925-UW 15, UO 14 (H)
1962-UW 27, UC 0 (H)
1968-UO 3, UW 0 (H)
1916-UW 13, UC 3 (A)
1924-UO 7, UW 3 (A)
1961-UC 21, UW 14 (A)
1967-UW 26, UO 0 (A)
1915-UW 13, UC 7 (H)
1923-UW 26, UO 7 (H)
1960-UW 27, UC 7 (H)
1966-UW 10, UO 7 (H)
1915-UW 72, UC 0 (A)
1922-UW 3, UO 3 (H)
1959-UW 20, UC 0 (A)
1965-UW 24, UO 20 (P)
1904-UW 6, UC 6 (H)
1920-UO 17, UW 0 (A)
1964-UO 7, UW 0 (H)
1958-UC 12, UW 7 (H)
1919-UO 34, UW 13 (H)
1957-UW 35, UC 27 (A)
Bold-UW Win
1963-UW 26, UO 19 (P)
1918-UO 7, UW 0 (H)
1956-UC 16, UW 7 (H)
1962-UW 21, UO 21 (H)
1916-UW 0 UO 0 (A)
1955-UC 20, UW 6 (A)
1961-UO 7, UW 6 (P)
1914-UW 10, UO 0 (H)
1960-UW 7, UO 6 (H)
1954-UC 27, UW 6 (H)
1913-UW 10, UO 7 (P)
1953-UC 53, UW 25 (A)
1959-UW 13, UO 12 (P)
1912-UW 30, UO 14 (H)
1958-UW 6, UO 0 (H)
1952-UW 22, UC 7 (H)
1911-UW 29, UO 3 (P)
1951-UC 37, UW 28 (A)
1957-UW 13, UO 6 (P)
1909-UW 20, UO 6 (H)
1950-UC 14, UW 7 (H)
1956-UW 20, UO 7 (H)
1908-UW 15, UO 0 (A)
1949-UC 21, UW 7 (A)
1955-UW 19, UO 7 (P)
1907-UO 6, UW 0 (H)
1954-UO 26, UW 7 (H)
1948-UC 21, UW 0 (H)
1906-UO 16, UW 6 (A)
1953-UW 14, UO 6 (P)
1947-UC 13, UW 7 (A)
1905-UW 12, UO 12 (A)
1946-UW 20, UC 6 (H)
1952-UW 49, UO 0 (H)
1904-UO 18, UW 0 (A)
1951-UW 63, UO 6 (P)
1945-UC 27, UW 14 (A)
1903-UW 6, UO 5 (H)
1950-UW 27, UO 12 (H)
1944-UW 33, UC 7 (A)
1900-UO 43, UW 0 (A)
1949-UW 28, UO 27 (P)
1942-UC 19, UW 6 (H)
1948-UO 13, UW 7 (H)
Bold-UW Win
P-Portland
104
Opponents
W
he Pacific-10 Series
Vashington versus Oregon State
Washington versus Southern Cal.
ries Record-UW leads 44-26-4
Series Record-USC leads 39-21-3
cord at Seattle-UW leads 25-15-2
Record at Seattle-USC leads 14-13-3
cord at Husky Stadium-18-13-0
Record at Husky Stadium-USC leads 14-13-3
cord at Corvallis-13-6-0
Record at Los Angeles-USC leads 24-8
cord at Neutral Sites-6-5-2
Record at LA Memorial Coliseum-USC leads 24-8
Record at Neutral Site-USC leads 1-0
on James vs. OSU-13-1
rry Pettibone vs. UW-First Meeting
Don James vs. USC-7-8
on James vs. Jerry Pettibone-First Meeting
Larry Smith vs. UW-3-5
Don James vs. Larry Smith-5-3
arrent UW Win Streak-UW has three-game win streak.
ongest UW Win Streak-11 Games (1906-1918)
Current Win Streak-UW has a one-game win streak.
ongest OSU Win Streak-3 Games (1937-39)
Longest UW Win Streak-5 games (1934-38)
Longest USC Win Streak-10 games (1965-75)
ggest UW Win-47 points (47-0, 1913)
ggest OSU Win-29 points (29-0, 1928)
Biggest UW Win-34 points (34-0, 1960)
Biggest USC Win-48 points (48-0, 1929)
W's Last Win in Seattle-Oct. 31, 1987 (28-12)
SU's Last Win in Seattle-Oct. 19, 1985 (21-20)
UW's Last Win in Seattle-Sept. 22, 1990 (31-0)
USC's Last Win in Seattle-Oct. 17, 1987 (37-23)
W's Last Win in Corvallis-November 11, 1989 (51-14)
SU's Last Win in Corvallis-October 12, 1974 (23-9)
UW's Last Win in Los Angeles-Nov. 15, 1980 (20-10)
USC's Last Win in Los Angeles-Oct. 7, 1989 (24-16)
op Five Crowds in Seattle vs. OSU
Top Five Crowds in Corvallis/Portland vs. OSU
ct. 31, 1987-66,392
Oct. 6, 1984-40,000
Top Five Crowds in Seattle vs. USC
ct. 23, 1971-60,404
Oct. 16, 1982-38,000
Sept. 22, 1990-72,216
ct. 22, 1983-60,354
Oct. 29, 1960-36,833 (P)
Oct. 17, 1987-71,678
ct. 19, 1985-58,771
Oct. 10, 1964-33,853
Nov. 12, 1983-60,690
ct. 7, 1967-56,033
Oct. 11, 1980-33,000
Nov. 10, 1979-60,527
Nov. 13, 1971-59,982
he Scores
Top Five Crowds in Los Angeles vs. UW
989-UW 51, OSU 14 (A)
1941-OSU 9, UW 6 (A) 00
Nov. 10, 1984-71,838
987-UW 28, OSU 12 (H)
1940-UW 19, OSU 0 (H)
Oct. 15, 1988-62,974
986-UW 28, OSU 12 (A)
1939-OSU 13, UW 7 (H)
Oct. 19, 1968-60,990
85-OSU 21, UW 20 (H)
1938-OSU 13, UW 6 (H)
Oct. 21, 1972-59,151
984-UW 19, OSU 7 (A)
1937-OSU 6, UW 3 (H)
Oct. 7, 1989-58,410
983-UW 34, OSU 7 (H)
1936-UW 19, OSU 7 (H)
982-UW 34, OSU 17 (A)
1934-UW 14, OSU 7 (H)
The Scores
981-UW 56, OSU 17 (A)
1928-OSU 29, UW 0 (H)
1990-UW 31, USC 0 (H)
1952-USC 33, UW 0 (A)
980-UW 41, OSU 6 (A)
1924-UW 6, OSU 3 (H)
1989-USC 24, UW 16 (A)
1951-USC 20, UW 13 (H)
979-UW 41, OSU 0 (H)
1923-UW 14, OSU 0 (A)
1988-USC 28, UW 27 (A)
1950-UW 28, USC 13 (A)
978-UW 34, OSU 0 (A)
1922-UW 14, OSU 3 (H)
1987-USC 37, UW 23 (H)
1949-USC 40, UW 28 (H)
977-UW 14, OSU 6 (H)
1921-OSU 24, UW 0 (A)
1986-USC 20, UW 10 (A)
1948-USC 32, UW 7 (A)
976-UW 24, OSU 12 (A)
1920-OSU 3, UW 0 (H)
1985-UW 20, USC 17 (H)
1947-USC 19, UW 0 (H)
975-UW 35, OSU 7 (H)
1918-UW 6, OSU 0 (H)
1984-USC 16, UW 7 (A)
1946-USC 28, UW 0 (A)
974-OSU 23, UW 9 (A)
1917-UW 0, OSU 0 (H)
1983-UW 24, USC 0 (H)
1945-UW 13, USC 7 (H)
973-OSU 31, UW 7 (H)
1916-UW 35, OSU 0 (H)
1981-UW 13, USC 3 (H)
1944-USC 38, UW 7 (A)
972-UW 23, OSU 16 (A)
1914-UW 0, OSU 0 (A) &&
1980-UW 20, USC 10 (A)
1943-USC 29, UW 0 (N)
971-UW 38, OSU 14 (H)
1913-UW 47, OSU 0 (H)
1979-USC 24, UW 17 (H)
1942-UW 0, USC 0 (H)
970-UW 29, OSU 20 (A)
1912-UW 9, OSU 3 (A)
1978-USC 28, UW 10 (H)
1941-UW 14, USC 13 (A)
969-OSU 10, UW 6 (H)
1911-UW 34, OSU 0 (H)
1977-UW 28, USC 10 (H)
1940-UW 14, USC 0 (H)
968-OSU 35, UW 21 (A)
1910-UW 22, OSU 0 (H)
1976-USC 20, UW 3 (A)
1939-USC 9, UW 7 (A)
967-UW 13, OSU 6 (H)
1909-UW 21, OSU 0 (A)
1975-UW 8, USC 7 (H)
1938-UW 7, USC 6 (H)
966-OSU 24, UW 13 (A)
1908-UW 32, OSU 0 (H)
1974-USC 42, UW 11 (A)
1937-UW 7, USC 0 (A)
965-UW 28, OSU 21 (H)
1906-UW 0, OSU 0 (H)
1973-USC 42, UW 19 (H)
1936-UW 12, USC 0 (H)
964-OSU 9, UW 7 (A) 00
1905-OSU 16, UW 0 (A)
1972-USC 34, UW 7 (A)
1935-UW 6, USC 2 (A)
963-UW 34, OSU 7 (H)
1904-OSU 25, UW 6 (H)
1971-USC 13, UW 12 (H)
1934-UW 14, USC 7 (A)
962-UW 14, OSU 13 (A) 00
1903-UW 5, OSU 0 (A)
1970-USC 28, UW 25 (A)
1933-USC 13, UW 7 (A)
961-OSU 3, UW 0 (H)
1902-UW 16, OSU 5 (H)
1969-USC 16, UW 7 (H)
1932-USC 9, UW 6 (H)
960-UW 30, OSU 29 (A) 00
1897-OSU 16, UW 0 (A)
1968-USC 14, UW 7 (A)
1931-USC 44, UW 7 (A)
959-UW 13, OSU 6 (H)
1967-USC 23, UW 6 (H)
1930-USC 32, UW 0 (A)
958-OSU 14, UW 12 (A) 00
Bold-UW Win
1966-USC 17, UW 14 (A)
1929-USC 48, UW 0 (H)
957-UW 19, OSU 6 (H)
Portland
1965-USC 34, UW 0 (H)
1927-USC 33, UW 13 (A)
956-OSU 28, UW 20 (A) 00
&& Albany
1964-UW 14, USC 13 (A)
1923-UW 22, USC 0 (H)
955-OSU 13, UW 7 (H)
1963-UW 22, USC 7 (H)
954-UW 17, OSU 7 (A) 00
1962-USC 14, UW 0 (A)
Bold-UW Win
953-UW 28, OSU 0 (H)
1961-UW 0, USC 0 (H)
N-Rose Bowl Game
952-UW 38, OSU 13 (A) 00
1960-UW 34, USC 0 (A)
1951-OSU 40, UW 14 (H)
1959-USC 22, UW 15 (H)
1950-UW 35, OSU 6 (A) 00
1958-USC 21, UW 6 (A)
1949-OSU 7, UW 3 (H)
1957-USC 19, UW 12 (H)
1948-UW 14, OSU 14 (A) 00
1956-USC 35, UW 7 (A)
1947-OSU 14, UW 7 (H)
1955-UW 7, USC 0 (H)
1946-OSU 21, UW 12 (A) 00
1954-USC 41, UW 0 (A)
1945-OSU 7, UW 6 (H)
1953-UW 13, USC 13 (H)
1942-UW 13, OSU 0 (H)
105
W
Opponents
The Pacific-10 Series
Washington versus Stanford
Washington versus Washington State
Series Record-SU leads 31-30-4
Series Record-UW leads 53-24-6
Record at Seattle-SU leads 16-13-3
Record at Seattle-UW leads 30-13-5
Record at Husky Stadium-SU leads 14-13-3
Record at Husky Stadium-UW leads 23-10-3
Record at Stanford-UW leads 17-15-1
Record at Pullman-UW leads 11-8-1
Record at Stanford Stadium-UW leads 17-15-1
Record at Martin Stadium-UW leads 10-8-1
Record at Neutral Site-None
Record at Spokane-UW leads 12-3
Record at Neutral Site-None
Don James vs. SU-11-3
Dennis Green VS. UW-0-3
Don James vs. WSU-12-4
Don James vs. Dennis Green-3-0
Mike Price vs. UW-0-2
Don James vs. Mike Price-2-0
Current Win Streak-UW has a seven-game win streak.
Longest UW Win Streak-8 games (1959-66)
Current Win Streak-UW has a two-game win streak.
Longest SU Win Streak-10 games (1967-76)
Longest UW Win Streak-8 games (1959-66, 1974-81)
Longest WSU Win Streak-2 games (six times)
Biggest UW Win-36 points (52-16, 1990)
Biggest SU Win-40 points (40-0, 1893, 1949)
Biggest UW Win-45 points (45-0, 1914); (55-10, 1990)
Biggest WSU Win-26 points (52-26, 1973)
UW's Last Win in Seattle-Oct. 20, 1990 (52-16)
SU's Last Win in Seattle-Oct. 18, 1975 (24-21)
UW's Last Win in Seattle-Nov. 18, 1989 (20-9)
WSU's Last Win in Seattle-Nov. 23, 1985 (21-20)
UW's Last Win in Stanford-Oct. 20, 1990 (52-16)
SU's Last win in Stanford-Oct. 30, 1982 (43-31)
UW's Last Win in Pullman-Nov. 17, 1990 (55-10)
WSU's Last Win in Pullman-Nov. 19, 1988 (32-31)
Top Five Crowds in Seattle VS. SU
Sept. 5, 1987-73,676
Top Five Crowds in Seattle vs. WSU
Top Five Crowds in Pullman
Oct. 29, 1988-68,272
Nov. 21, 1987-74,038
or Spokane vs. UW
Oct. 9, 1971-60,777
Nov. 18, 1989-73,527
Nov. 19, 1988-40,000 (P)
Oct. 15, 1983-60,270
Nov. 19, 1977-60,964
Nov. 22, 1986-40,000 (P)
Nov. 2, 1985-58,625
Nov. 20, 1971-60,497
Nov. 17, 1984-40,000 (P)
Nov. 21, 1981-60,052
Nov. 17, 1990-37,600 (P)
Top Five Crowds in Stanford VS. UW
Nov. 20, 1982-36,571 (P)
Oct. 13, 1980-60,066
Nov. 7, 1970-59,066
The Scores
Oct. 14, 1978-58,079
1990-UW 55, WSU 10 (A)
1948-WSU 10, UW 0 (A)
Oct. 14, 1972-56,000
1989-UW 20, WSU 9 (H)
1947-UW 20, WSU 0 (H)
Oct. 30, 1982-53,871
1988-WSU 32, UW 31 (A)
1946-UW 21, WSU 7 (A)
The Scores
1987-UW 34, WSU 19 (H)
1945WSU 7, UW 0 (H)
1986-UW 44, WSU 23 (A)
1990-UW 52, SU 16 (A)
1945-UW 6, WSU 0 (H)
1951-SU 14, UW 7 (H)
1985-WSU 21, UW 20 (H)
1988-UW 28, SU 25 (H)
1942-UW 0 WSU 0 (H)
1950-UW 21, SU 7 (A)
1984-UW 38, WSU 29 (A)
1987-UW 31, SU 21 (H)
1941-UW 23, WSU 13 (A)
1949-SU 40, UW 0 (H)
1983-WSU 17, UW 6 (H)
1986-UW 24, SU 14 (A)
1940-UW 33, WSU 9 (H)
1948-SU 20, UW 0 (A)
1982-WSU 24, UW 20 (A)
1985-UW 34, SU 0 (H)
1939-WSU 6, UW 0 (A)
1947-UW 25, SU 0 (H)
1981-UW 23, WSU 10 (H)
1938-UW 26, WSU 0 (H)
1984-UW 37, SU 15 (A)
1946-UW 21, SU 15 (A)
1980-UW 30, WSU 23 (S)
1937-UW 7, WSU 7 (A)
1983-UW 32, SU 15 (H)
1942-SU 20, UW 7 (A)
1979-UW 17, WSU 7 (H)
1936-UW 40, WSU 0 (H)
1982-SU 43, UW 31 (A)
1941-SU 13, UW 7 (H)
1978-UW 38, WSU 8 (S)
1981-UW 42, SU 31 (H)
1935-UW 21, WSU 0 (A)
1940-SU 20, UW 10 (A)
1977-UW 35, WSU 15 (H)
1934-UW 0 WSU 0 (H)
1980-UW 27, SU 24 (A)
1939-UW 8, SU 5 (H)
1976-UW 51, WSU 32 (S)
1933-WSU 17, UW 6 (A)
1978-UW 34, SU 31 (A)
1938-UW 10, SU 7 (A)
1975-UW 28, WSU 27 (H)
1932-UW 0 WSU 0 (H)
1977-UW 45, SU 21 (H)
1937-SU 13, UW 7 (H)
1974-UW 24, WSU 17 (S)
1931-UW 12, WSU 0 (H)
1976-SU 34, UW 28 (A)
1936-SU 14, UW 14 (A)
1973WSU 52, UW 26 (H)
1930-WSU 3, UW 0 (H)
1975-SU 24, UW 21 (H)
1935-SU 6, UW 0 (H)
1972-WSU 27, UW 10 (S)
1929-WSU 20, UW 13 (A)
1974-SU 34, UW 17 (A)
1934-SU 24, UW 0 (A)
1971-UW 28, WSU 20 (H)
1928-UW 6, WSU 0 (H)
1973-SU 23, UW 14 (H)
1933-UW 6, SU 0 (H)
1970-UW 43, WSU 25 (S)
1927-UW 14, WSU 0 (H)
1972-SU 24, UW 0 (A)
1932-UW 18, SU 13 (A)
1969-UW 30, WSU 21 (H)
1926-WSU 9, UW 6 (H)
1971-SU 17, UW 6 (H)
1931-UW 0 SU 0 (H)
1968-WSU 24, UW 0 (S)
1925-UW 23, WSU 0 (A)
1970-SU 29, UW 22 (A)
1930-SU 25, UW 7 (A)
1967-WSU 9, UW 7 (H)
1924-UW 14, WSU 0 (H)
1969-SU 21, UW 7 (H)
1929-SU 6, UW 0 (H)
1966-UW 19, WSU 7 (S)
1923-UW 24, WSU 7 (H)
1968-SU 35, UW 20 (A)
1928-SU 12, UW 0 (A)
1965-UW 27, WSU 9 (H)
1922-UW 16, WSU 13 (A)
1967-SU 14, UW 7 (H)
1927-SU 13, UW 7 (H)
1964-UW 14, WSU 0 (S)
1921-WSU 14, UW 0 (H)
1966-UW 22, SU 20 (A)
1926-SU 29, UW 10 (A)
1963-UW 16, WSU 0 (H)
1919-UW 13, WSU 7 (A)
1965-UW 41, SU 8 (H)
1925-UW 13, SU 0 (H)
1962-UW 26, WSU 21 (S)
1917-WSU 14, UW 0 (H)
1964-UW 6, SU 0 (A)
1922-UW 12, SU 8 (A)
1961-UW 21, WSU 17 (H)
1914-UW 45, WSU 0 (H)
1963-UW 19, SU 11 (H)
1921-UW 0, SU 0 (H)
1960-UW 8 WSU 6 (S)
1913-UW 20, WSU 0 (H)
1962-UW 14, SU 0 (A)
1920-SU 3, UW 0 (H)
1959-UW 20, WSU 0 (H)
1912-UW 19, WSU 0 (H)
1961-UW 13, SU 0 (H)
1893-SU 40, UW 0 (H)
1958-WSU 18, UW 14 (S)
1911-UW 30, WSU 6 (H)
1960-UW 29, SU 10 (A)
1957-WSU 26, UW 7 (H)
1910-UW 16, WSU 0 (A)
1959-UW 10, SU 0 (H)
Bold-UW Win
1956-UW 40, WSU 26 (S)
S-Spokane
1908-UW 6, WSU 6 (H)
1958-SU 22, UW 12 (A)
1955-UW 27, WSU 7 (H)
1907-WSU 11, UW 5 (H)
1957-SU 21, UW 14 (H)
1954-WSU 26, UW 7 (A)
1904-UW 12, WSU 6 (H)
1956-UW 34, SU 13 (A)
1953-WSU 25, UW 20 (H)
1903-UW 10, WSU 0 (A)
1955-UW 7, SU 7 (H)
1952-UW 33, WSU 27 (S)
1902-UW 16, WSU 0 (H)
1954-SU 13, UW 7 (A)
1951-WSU 26, UW 25 (H)
1901-WSU 10, UW 0 (A)
1953-SU 13, UW 7 (H)
1950-UW 52, WSU 21 (S)
1900-UW 5, WSU 5 (H)
1952-UW 27, SU 14 (A)
1949-UW 34, WSU 21 (H)
Bold-UW Win
106
Opponents
W
The Non-League Series
Vashington versus Nebraska
Washington versus Kansas State
ries Record-Series Tied 1-1-1
Series Record-UW Leads 3-0
cord at Seattle-Series Tied 1-1
Record at Seattle-UW leads 3-0
cord at Husky Stadium-Series Tied 1-1
Record at Husky Stadium-UW leads 3-0
cord at Lincoln-Series Tied at 0-0-1
Record at Manhattan-None
cord at Memorial Stadium-Series Tied at 0-0-1
Record at KSU Stadium-None
cord at Neutral Site-None
Record at Neutral Site-None
on James vs. NU-None
Don James vs. KSU-1-0
m Osborne vs. UW-First Meeting
Bill Snyder vs. UW-First Meeting
on James vs. Tom Osborne-First Meeting
Don James vs. Bill Snyder-First Meeting
urrent Win Streak-NU has one-game win streak
Current Win Streak-UW has three-game win streak
ongest UW Win Streak-one game (1926)
Longest UW Win Streak-3 games (1950-Present)
ongest NU Win Streak-one game (1967)
Longest KSU Win Streak-None
lggest UW Win-Four Point (10-6, 1926)
Biggest UW Win-41 points (41-0, 1962)
iggest NU Win-10 Points (17-7, 1967)
Biggest KSU Win-None
W's Last Win in Seattle-Nov. 25, 1926 (10-6)
UW's Last Win in Seattle-Sept. 19, 1981 (20-3)
U Last Win in Seattle-Sept. 16, 1967 (17-7)
KSU's Last Win in Seattle-None
W's Last Win in Lincoln-None (Tied, 6-6, Oct. 17, 1925)
UW's Last Win in Manhattan-None
U's Last Win in Lincoln-None (Tied, 6-6, Oct. 17, 1925)
KSU's Last Win in Manhattan-None
op Crowds in Seattle vs. NU
Top Five Crowds in Seattle vs. KSU
ept. 16, 1967-57,481
Sept. 19, 1981-52,343
OV. 25, 1926-20,469
Oct. 6, 1962-50,841
Sept. 23, 1950-30,245
op Crowds in Lincoln vs. NU
ct. 17, 1925-17,000
The Scores
1981-UW 20, KSU 3 (S)
he Scores
1962-UW 41, KSU 0 (S)
967-NU 17, UW 7 (S)
1950-UW 33, KSU 7 (S)
926-UW 10, NU 6 (S)
925-UW 6, NU 6 (L)
Washington versus Toledo
old-UW Win
First Meeting
Husky Fact
The Team They Didn't Play-Since becoming the Pacific-
10 Conference in 1978, league opponents have not played
each other every year. Here is a list of the teams missed by
Washington since the Pac-8 expanded to the Pac-10.
YEAR OPPONENT (OPPONENT RECORD)
1978 California (6-5)
1979 Stanford (5-5-1), Arizona (6-5-1)
1980 California (3-8), UCLA (9-2)
1981 Arizona (6-5)
1982 Southern California (8-3)
1983 Arizona State (6-4-1), California (5-5-1)
1984 Arizona State (5-6), UCLA (9-3)
1985 Arizona (8-3-1)
1986 Arizona (9-3)
1987 California (3-6-2)
1988 Oregon State (4-6-1)
1989 Stanford (3-8)
1990 Oregon State (1-10)
107
W
Opponents
1991 Pacific-10 Conference Schedule
September 2
October 12
November 9
Memphis State at USC
Toledo at Washington
Washington at USC
Arizona at UCLA
September 7
Arizona at Washington State
Arizona State at Oregon State
Washington at Stanford
Oregon at Arizona State
Oregon at California
Washington State at Oregon
California at Oregon State
Pacific at California
USC at Washington State
UCLA at Stanford
Cornell at Stanford
Utah at Oregon State
November 16
BYU at UCLA
October 19
Washington at Oregon State
Arizona State at Ohio State
Washington at California
USC at Arizona
September 14
Washington State at Arizona State
Arizona State at California
Stanford at Arizona
UCLA at Oregon State
Oregon at UCLA
Stanford at USC
Purdue at California
Stanford at Washington State
Penn State at USC
October 26
November 23
Fresno State at Washington State
Oregon at Washington
Washington State at Washington
Arizona State at Oklahoma State
UCLA at Arizona State
Arizona at Arizona State
Oregon at Texas Tech
Oregon State at Stanford
California at Stanford
Oregon State at UNLV
Miami (Fla.) at Arizona
Oregon State at Oregon
UCLA at Tennessee
San Jose State at California
UCLA at USC
September 21
USC at Notre Dame
January 1
Washington at Nebraska
November 2
ROSE BOWL, Pasadena, Calif.
California at Arizona
Arizona State at Washington
Arizona State at USC
Oregon State at Arizona
Bold-Washington's Game
Fresno State at Oregon State
USC at California
Oregon at Utah
Stanford at Oregon
Washington State at Ohio State
Washington State at UCLA
September 26
UCLA at San Diego State
September 28
Kansas State at Washington
USC at Oregon
Long Beach State at Arizona
Nebraska at Arizona State
Colorado at Stanford
Washington State at UNLV
October 5
Who They Don't Play in the Next Four Seasons!
Arizona at Washington
California at UCLA
While the Pacific-10 Conference is adopting a uniform eight-game schedule in
Oregon State at Washington State
1991, here are the list of conference "misses" for this coming season and for 1992.
Utah at Arizona State
Under the new format, teams will miss the opponent two years in succession. Those
New Mexico State at Oregon
in parentheses are the ones that will be missed in the next two-year (1993-94) span.
Notre Dame at Stanford
Arizona-Oregon (Washington)
Arizona State-Stanford (USC)
California-Washington State (OSU)
Oregon-Arizona (UCLA)
Oregon State-USC (California)
Stanford-Arizona State (WSU)
UCLA-Washington (Oregon)
USC-Oregon State (ASU)
Washington-UCLA (Arizona)
Washington State-California (Stanford)
108
1990 REVIEW
"
W
1990 Review
Game 1
San Jose State
Washington Huskies 20, San Jose State Spartans 17
September 8, 1990-Husky Stadium-(66,337)
Husky sophomore Beno Bryant fielded a
7-3 lead. San Jose State had a golden 0
punt and scampered 52 yards for the win-
portunity go awry early in the second qua
ning touchdown with 5:51 remaining in the
ter when the Spartans, on second-and-go
game as 20th-ranked (AP) Washington
at the Washington 3, attempted a half-bad
squeaked past San Jose State in the 1990
pass. Canley directed a pass for Mace
season-opener. The heavily-favored Hus-
Barbosa, but UW sophomore free safe
kies, whose passing game was all but shut
Tommie Smith stepped in front to make
down against the blitzing Spartan defense,
one-handed interception, ending the Spa
instead relied on the running of senior
tan threat. With 1:13 remaining in the se
tailback Greg Lewis, who gained 157 yards
ond quarter, Brunell directed the Huski
on 23 carries. Lewis' rushing output was the
on a well-executed two-minute drill, takin
second-highest total of his career and the
the offense 50 yards in 59 seconds. Wasl
effort was also his sixth career 100-yard
ington took the lead with 14 seconds re
game. The Husky defense was effective
maining in the half on a Brunell to Mari
against the run, holding San Jose State se-
Bailey, 16-yard touchdown pass that wa
nior Sheldon Canley, the nation's top re-
tipped by a Spartan defender. The Huskie
turning all-purpose runner, to just 61 yards
led 10-7 at half. San Jose State tied th
on 24 rushing attempts. The Spartan pass-
game at 10-10 in the third quarter with
ing game exploited the UW's defense to the
42-yard Raul De la Flor field goal. Th
tune of 301 yards. SJSU senior quarterback
Spartans threatened to take the lead early
touchdou
Ralph Martini did most of the damage by
the fourth quarter, when they drove to th
completing 21-of-37 passes for 223 yards
Washington 29. But the Huskies pushe
with no interceptions. Meanwhile, Husky
San Jose State back with tackles for losse
sophomore quarterback Mark Brunell,
totaling 30 yards on three successive play
pressured by the Spartans' defense, com-
as Chico Fraley, Steve Emtman an
pleted just 7-of-27 passes for 66 yards with
Jaime Fields each broke through for tack
an interception and a touchdown in his
les. Dodd gave Washington the lead, 13-10
starting debut. Brunell exhibited his dan-
with a 26-yard field goal midway throug
gerous running ability on Washington's sec-
the quarter. Following the next Sparta
ond play from scrimmage when he
possession, Bryant fielded an Eric Negre
scrambled 47 yards to the SJSU 22. Four
punt and ran it all the way back as the UV
plays later, sophomore Mike Dodd booted
built its lead to 20-10 with 5:51 to play. The
his first career field goal from 35 yards to
Spartans didn't fold, and came back as quar
give the UW a 3-0 lead. The Spartans came
terback Mike Jordan hit Bobby Black
Washington National Rankings
right back with an impressive nine-play, 72-
mon for a 19-yard scoring strike with 1:4'
yard drive on the next series, highlighted by
to play.
16th (UPI), 20th (AP), 20th (USA Today/CNN), 21st
Canley's 3-yard touchdown run to take a
(The Sporting News).
Scoring
Score by Quarters
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORE
San Jose State
7
0
3
7
-
17
1 UW-Dodd, 35-yard FG, 12:51
6-55
3-0
Washington
3
7
0
10
-
20
1 SJ-Canley, 3-yard run, 9:10 (De la Flor kick)
9-72
3-7
2 UW-M. Bailey, 16-yard pass from Brunell, :59 (Dodd kick)
7-50
10-7
Team Statistics
3 SJ-De la Flor, 42-yard FG, 3:30
7-50
10-10
4 UW-Dodd, 26-yard FG, 7:09
11-76
13-10
SJSU
UW
4 UW-Bryant, 52-yard punt return, 5:51 (Dodd kick)
|
20-10
20
First Downs
15
4 SJ-Blackmon, 19-yard pass from Jordan (De la Flor kick)
10-64
20-17
42
Net Yards Rushing
235
301
Net Yards Passing
66
Individual Leaders
343
Total Offense
301
47-26-1
Passing (A-C-I)
27-7-1
Rushing:
Lewis (UW) 23-157; Brunell (UW) 10-64; Canley (SJ) 24-61; Barbosa (SJ) 6-21; Turner (UW)
11-38.6
Punting
10-43.2
7-15; Bryant (UW) 2-(-1); Jordan (SJ) 1-(-9); Martini (SJ) 5-(-31).
1-0
Fumbles-Lost
2-0
Passing:
Martini (SJ) 21-37-0-223-0, 0 TD; Jordan (SJ) 5-9-0-78, 1 TD; Canley (SJ) 0-1-1-0, 0 TD;
Brunell (UW) 7-27-0-66, 1 TD.
6-45
Penalties-Yards
4-30
32:53
Time of Possession
27:07
Receiving: Blakes (SJ) 6-58; Blackmon (SJ) 5-33; Charlton (SJ) 4-50; Canley (SJ) 4-12; Barbosa (SJ) 4-40;
Burnett (SJ) 2-40; Brooks (SJ) 2-68; M. Bailey (UW) 2-26; Lewis (UW) 2-4; Gaspard (UW)
Weather: Overcast, 66 degrees.
1-15; Pierce (UW) 1-12; Kralik (UW) 1-9.
110
1990 Review
W
Game 2
Purdue
Washington Huskies 20, Purdue Boilermakers 14
September 15, 1990-Ross-Ade Stadium-(33,113)
Washington's defense was riddled early in
150 yards with a touchdown and intercep-
the game by Purdue's brand new run and
tion. Purdue's Jimmy Young returned the
shoot offense, giving up 14 first quarter
ensuing kickoff 41 yards and on first down,
FOOTBALL
points. But the Huskies shutout the Boiler-
Hunter connected on a 54-yard touchdown
makers the rest of the way and rallied for
strike to Rodney Dennis as the Boiler-
their second victory of the young season
makers built a 14-7 lead with 26 seconds
against no defeats. The Husky defense al-
left in the opening quarter. UW sophomore
lowed Purdue zero net rushing yards for the
kicker Mike Dodd's 28-yard field goal with
afternoon. Husky senior tailback Greg
one second remaining in the half, capped a
Lewis broke the 100-yard rushing barrier
10-play, 63-yard Husky drive that brought
for the second consecutive week with 101
the Huskies back with four points (14-10).
yards on 28 carries. It was Lewis' seventh
Dodd also converted a 20-yard field goal
career 100-yard game. Senior defensive
with 3:54 to go in the third quarter as Wash-
end Travis Richardson sacked Boiler-
ington drew within a point at 14-13. On the
maker sophomore quarterback Eric
Huskies' first drive of the fourth quarter,
Hunter three times for 18 yards in losses to
Brunell threw a 35-yard touchdown pass to
lead the defensive charge. Purdue scored
Orlando McKay to give Washington its
on its opening drive of the game when
first lead of the day, and the eventual vic-
Hunter flipped a shovel pass to running
tory. Purdue's talented Hunter completed
back Tony Vinson for an 11-yard touch-
16 of 35 passes for 237 yards with two
PURDUI WASHINGTON
down with 12:10 to play in the first period.
touchdowns, but was sacked six times. The
Husky sophomore quarterback Mark
matchup ended a four-year, home-and-
Brunell tallied the equalizing touchdown
home series between Washington and
when he ran 47 yards for a score with 41
Purdue and the Huskies were 4-0 over the
seconds left in the first quarter. Brunell
Boilermakers. Washington also claimed its
finished the day with 76 rushing yards on 16
10th straight victory over Big Ten oppo-
carries and completed 11-of-24 passes for
nents with the win.
Scoring
Washington National Rankings
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORE
1 PU-Vinson, 11-yard pass from Hunter, 12:10 (Sullivan Kick)
5-61
0-7
Oth (UPI), 22nd (AP), 20th (USA Today/CNN),
7-7
6th (The Sporting News).
1 UW-Brunell, 47-yard run, :41 (Dodd Kick)
3-49
1 PU-Dennis, 54-yard pass from Hunter, :26 (Sullivan Kick)
I-54
7-14
2 UW-Dodd, 28-yard FG, :01
10-63
10-14
Score by Quarters
3 UW-Dodd, 20-yard FG, 3:54
14-72
13-14
Washington
7
3
3
7
-
20
4 UW-McKay, 35-yard pass from Brunell, 10:02 (Dodd Kick)
3-66
20-14
Purdue
14
0
0
0
-
14
Team Statistics
Individual Leaders
UW
PU
Rushing: Lewis (UW) 28-101; Brunell (UW) 16-76; Vinson (PU) 11-23; Turner (UW) 7-20; Morrow
(PU) 1-2; Yetts (PU) 1-(-5); Hunter (PU) 11-(-22).
17
First Downs
14
197
Net Yards Rushing
0
Passing:
Hunter (PU) 16-35-0-237, 2 TD; Brunell (UW) 11-24-1-150, 1 TD.
150
Net Yards Passing
237
Receiving: Vinson (PU) 6-41; Bailey (UW) 4-56; Dennis (PU) 3-101; McKay (UW) 3-67; McManus (PU)
347
Total Offense
237
3-31; Gaspard (UW) 3-23; Yetts (PU) 1-16; Hill (PU) 1-16; Lewis (UW) 1-4.
24-11-1
Passing (A-C-I)
35-16-0
9-40.1
Punting
9-41.4
2-1
Fumbles-Lost
6-3
8-71
Penalties-Yards
5-64
36:33
Time of Possession
23:27
Weather: Partly sunny, 71 degrees.
111
W
1990 Review
Game 3
USC
Washington Huskies 31, USC Trojans o
September 22, 1990-Husky Stadium-(72,617)
Washington celebrated a victory for the
career. Lewis rushed 26 times for 126 yar
VS usc
September 22,1990
ages and enjoyed its football centennial in
with a one-yard touchdown run and al
whise
festive fashion by upsetting fifth-ranked
caught three passes for 99 yards to accou
USC. UW head coach Don James earned
for 225 yards of total offense in the gam
his 150th career win as his Huskies ran their
Lewis was named Pac-10 Offensive Play
record to 3-0 overall and 1-0 in Pac-10
of the Week for his efforts. Lewis score
play. The Husky defense handed USC its
Washington's first touchdown of the day
first shutout since 1985 and allowed USC
highlight a 10-play, 66-yard scoring drive
just 135 total yards, including 28 rushing
give the Huskies a 7-0 advantage with 7:3
yards-Troy's lowest ground output since
to play in the opening period. Fullbac
1982. USC suffered just its third shutout in
Darius Turner found the end zone twic
28 years and two of those have been cour-
for 1-yard touchdown runs on 80-yar
tesy of Washington. With temperatures
touchdown drives engineered by quarte
reaching a record-setting 92 degrees during
back Mark Brunell. The left-hande
the late-afternoon game, the Huskies pro-
Brunell completed 12 of 23 passes for 19
vided their own heat in front of the fifth-
yards with one touchdown-a 12-yar
largest crowd in Husky Stadium history-
strike to Mario Bailey in the second qua
72,617. USC quarterback Todd Marin-
ter. Brunell had a long pass of 67 yards
ovich, a strong Heisman Trophy candidate,
Lewis and also rushed for 38 yards on eigl
saw purple all afternoon, succumbing to
carries. Meanwhile, USC's left-hande
three UW sacks. In all, Husky defenders
touchdown
Marinovich finished the day by completin
$10.00
had seven tackles-for-loss to contribute to
7-of-16 passes for 80 yards-all caree
USC's subpar day. Husky defensive end
lows-and was intercepted twice by th
Travis Richardson recorded seven tack-
Husky secondary. UW rover Eric Brisco
les, sacking Marinovich twice. Washington
recorded two interceptions and free safet
senior taiback Greg Lewis again surpassed
Tommie Smith also picked off a Marino
the 100-yard rushing mark for the third
vich pass late in the second quarter to set u
consecutive game in 1990 and for the fourth
Bailey's touchdown reception. Washingto:
straight regular season game, dating back to
placekicker Mike Dodd converted a 21
last season's Washington State game. It was
yard field goal in the first quarter to accoun
the eighth 100-yard rushing game in Lewis'
for another three points in the victory.
Scoring
Washington National Rankings
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORE
16th (UPI), 21st (AP), 19th (USA Today/CNN), 31st
1 UW-Lewis, 1-yard run, 7:34 (Dodd Kick)
10-66
7-0
(The Sporting News).
1 UW-Dodd, 21-yard FG, 1:15
11-41
10-0
2 UW-Turner, 1-yard run, 2:54 (Dodd Kick)
13-80
17-0
Score by Quarters
2 UW-Bailey, 12-yard pass from Brunell, 1:32 (Dodd Kick)
3-22
24-0
USC
0
0
0
0
3 UW-Turner, 1-yard run, 1:06 (Dodd Kick)
I
0
10-80
31-0
Washington
10
14
7
0
-
31
Individual Leaders
Team Statistics
Rushing: Lewis (UW) 26-126; Brunell (UW) 8-38; Foley (USC) 5-35; Bryant (UW) 8-26; Turner
USC
UW
(UW) 6-12; Mt. Jones (UW) 1-11; Spears (USC) 1-6; Lockwood (USC) 3-6; Ervins (USC) 9-5;
7
First Downs
23
Hobert (UW) 1-0; Royster (USC) 1-(-2); Marinovich 6-(-22).
28
Net Yards Rushing
213
Passing:
Brunell (UW) 12-23-1-197, 1 TD; Marinovich (USC) 7-16-2-80, 0 TD; Foley (USC) 4-9-1-
135
55, 0 TD.
Net Yards Passing
197
163
Total Offense
410
Receiving: Bailey (UW) 4-60; Lewis (UW) 3-99; Griffin (USC) 3-50; McKay (UW) 3-33; Wellman (USC)
25-11-3
Passing (A-C-I)
23-12-1
1-30; Hannah (USC) 1-9; Lockwood (USC) 1-9; Mt. Jones (UW) 1-7; Wallace (USC) 1-7;
Spears (USC) 1-6; Scott (USC) 1-5; Pierce (UW) 1-(-2).
7-44.9
Punting
3-44.3
2-0
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
13-111
Penalties-Yards
5-45
24:24
Time of Possession
35:36
Weather: Sunny, 85-92 degrees.
112
1990 Review
W
Game 4
Colorado
Colorado Buffaloes 20, Washington Huskies 14
September 29, 1990-Folsom Field-(52,868)
A mere seven yards stood in the way of a
field goal attempt struck the right goalpost
Official Program
road victory at hostile Folsom Field as
upright. CU closed the gap to 7-3 when Jim
Washington suffered its first defeat of the
Harper connected on a 47-yard field goal
season, dropping its record to 3-1. UW
on the last play of the half. The Buffs
quarterback Mark Brunell's fourth-down
opened the second half with an eight-play,
VS.
WASHINGTON
pass attempt from the seven yardline, in-
80-yard scoring drive that ended with a 15-
September 29. 1990
tended for split end Mario Bailey, was
yard scoring run by Hagan, giving CU its
Folsom Field ''' Boulder, Colorado
intercepted by Colorado defensive back
first lead of the game at 10-7 with 12:47 left
Deon Figures in the endzone with 1:04 to
in the third quarter. Washington regained
play, preserving the Buffaloes' hard-fought
the lead at 14-10 when Brunell hit tight end
victory. Colorado improved its record to 3-
Aaron Pierce for a three-yard touchdown
COLORADO
1-1 while winning its 10th straight home
completion with 7:22 to play in the third
COLORADO
game. Washington entered the game as the
quarter. CU answered the scoring on its
nation's top rush defense, allowing 23.3
next possession by marching 80 yards in six
yards per game, but the Buffaloes tallied
plays with Hagan again rushing for a touch-
183 yards on the ground with running back
down, this time from three yards away for a
Eric Bieniemy earning 143 yards on 29
17-14 lead with 4:52 left in the third period.
carries. Husky tailback Greg Lewis bet-
Colorado extended its lead to 20-14 on a
tered the 100-yard rushing mark for the
series that included a fake punt and a sec-
fourth straight time in 1990 (ninth time in
ond chance after a turnover. CU punter
Colorado's
Husky career) with 101 yards on 20 at-
Tom Rouen, lined up in punt formation at
David
tempts. The game marked the first time
his own 23-yardline with one minute to play
that Washington had failed to win a game
in the third quarter, and passed to Paul
when Lewis rushed for 100 yards or more.
Rose on fourth down for a 24-yard gain,
The UW's Bailey had the best statistical day
keeping the drive alive. On the next play,
of his career, catching eight passes for 141
UW rover Eric Briscoe intercepted a
yards. Colorado quarterback Darian
Hagan pass, but fumbled the ball back to
Hagan rushed for two touchdowns, but
Colorado during the runback. Six plays
was forced to leave the contest in the fourth
later, CU's Harper booted a 32-yard field
quarter with a shoulder injury. Washington
goal with 13:05 to play. A Colorado fumble
opened the game's scoring with a 15-play,
with 4:24 to play allowed the Huskies to
80-yard game-opening drive capped by a
drive to the Buffalo seven-yardline with a
one-yard Brunell touchdown plunge with
first-and-goal opportunity. But three
6:25 remaining in the first quarter. The UW
Brunell passes fell incomplete and the final
missed an opportunity to score with 4:10 to
game-winning pass attempt was inter-
Vashington National Rankings
play in the half when Mike Dodd's 24-yard
cepted.
1th (UPI), 12th (AP), 12th (USA Today/CNN), 16th
The Sporting News).
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORE
core by Quarters
1 UW-Brunell, 1-yard run, 6:25 (Dodd Kick)
15-80
0-7
Vashington
7
0
7
0
-
14
2 CU-Harper, 47-yard FG, :00
7-57
3-7
Colorado
0
3
14
3
-
20
3 CU-Hagan, 15-yard run, 12:47 (Harper Kick)
8-80
10-7
3 UW-Pierce, 3-yard pass from Brunell, 7:22 (Dodd Kick)
10-65
10-14
Team Statistics
3 CU-Hagan, 3-yard run, 4:52 (Harper Kick)
6-80
17-14
4 CU-Harper, 32-yard FG, 13:05
6-17
20-14
UW
CU
17
First Downs
22
122
Net Yards Rushing
183
Individual Leaders
190
Net Yards Passing
179
312
Total Offense
362
Rushing:
Bieniemy (CU) 19-143; Lewis (UW) 20-101; Hemingway (CU) 9-23; Johnson (CU) 6-16;
McKay (UW) 1-9; Turner (UW) 2-8; Brunell (UW) 9-4; Hagan (CU) 11-1; Pritchard (CU)
34-16-3
Passing (A-C-I)
15-8-1
1-0.
4-51.8
Punting
4-38.5
Passing:
Brunell (UW) 16-34-3-190, 1 TD; Hagan (CU) 6-13-1-142, 0 TD; Johnson (CU) 1-1-0-13, 0
1-1
Fumbles-Lost
2-2
TD; Rouen (CU) 1-1-0-24, 0 TD.
2-11
Penalties-Yards
2-15
Receiving: Bailey (UW) 8-141; Pritchard (CU) 4-85; Lewis (UW) 3-19; Turner (UW) 2-18; Hemingway
29:10
Time of Possession
30:50
(CU) 1-24; Rose (CU) 1-24; McKay (UW) 1-12; Bieniemy (CU) 1-6; Pierce (UW) 1-3; Bryant
Weather: Cloudy skies, 55 degrees.
(UW) 1-(-3).
113
W
1990 Review
Game 5
Arizona State
Washington Huskies 42, Arizona State Sun Devils 14
October 6, 1990-Sun Devil Stadium-(62,738)
Washington overcame a shaky start, un-
passes for 163 yards and, for the first time
HALL OF FAME DAY
leashing an attack defense and a powerful
1990, did not throw an interception. Af
running game in the Arizona desert, to snap
the UW fell behind 7-0, Brunell led t
its one-game losing streak. ASU cornerback
Huskies on two extended scoring drives
Kevin Preston-Curvey, a Seattle native,
the first quarter, both capped by Lev
gave the Sun Devils a big lift when he
touchdown runs, to take a 14-7 lead. Was
blocked UW punter Channing Wyles' first
ington sophomore Beno Bryant increas
attempt of the game (Preston-Curvey
Washington's lead to 21-7 with an 82-ya
would block another Wyles attempt in the
punt return for a touchdown with 14:33 le
fourth quarter) on the opening drive, allow-
in the half. Bryant's return was the fift
ing teammate Dereck Moore to scoop the
longest in school history and the longe
loose ball up for a touchdown. That was one
since 1963. Brunell then marched the Hu
of the few highlights for short-handed ASU
kies 80 yards in eight plays on the ne
(six injured starters out of the game), how-
possession, scoring a touchdown on a
ever, as Washington controlled both the
yard scramble, giving the UW a 28-7 lea
offensive and defensive lines of scrimmage.
The Husky defense was caught flat-foote
Washington generated 495 yards of total
by the ASU passing attack with 7:29 to go
offense-329 yards on the ground-to the
the half when Lasher completed a 63-yar
Devils' 172 total yards. Husky senior
flea-flicker pass to flanker Kevin Snyder
tailback Greg Lewis extended his 100-yard
close the gap to 28-14. Washingto
rushing streak to five straight games in 1990
punched in two short rushing toucl
with 159 yards on 27 carries, including
downs-one by Lewis and one by Bryant-
three rushing touchdowns. Lewis also
in the fourth quarter to build the final 42
caught four passes for 63 yards, including a
14 advantage. Senior rover Eric Brisco
51-yarder in the second period. The Hus-
collected his team-leading fourth intercep
kies, No. 1 in the Pac-10 and second nation-
tion of the year, while junior cornerbac
ally in defending the run, allowed the Sun
Dana Hall intercepted his first career pass
Devils a paltry 25 net rushing yards. ASU
Backup sophomore cornerback Walte
sophomore quarterback Kurt Lasher
Bailey also earned his first two career theft
threw four interceptions and was sacked
by intercepting Lasher twice in the fourt
twice. Meanwhile, Husky sophomore quar-
quarter.
terback Mark Brunell completed 13 of 19
Scoring
Washington National Rankings
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORE
14th (UPI), 17th (AP), 17th (USA Today/CNN), 21st
1 AS-Moore, 1-yard return of blocked punt, 12:56 (Richey kick)
|
(The Sporting News).
0-7
1 UW-Lewis, 2-yard run, 6:32 (Dodd kick)
8-51
7-7
1 UW-Lewis, 1-yard run, 2:10 (Dodd kick)
8-46
14-7
Score by Quarters
2 UW-Bryant, 82-yard punt return, 14:33 (Dodd kick)
-
21-7
Washington
14
14
0
14
2 UW-Brunell, 2-yard run, 8:28 (Dodd kick)
42
8-80
-
28-7
Arizona State
7
7
0
0
-
14
2 AS-Snyder, 63-yard pass from Lasher, 7:29 (Richey kick)
2-67
28-14
4 UW-Lewis, 2-yard run, 11:19 (Dodd kick)
13-84
35-14
4 UW-Bryant, 4-yard run, 6:51 (Dodd kick)
Team Statistics
8-73
42-14
UW
ASU
29
First Downs
8
Individual Leaders
329
Net Yards Rushing
25
Rushing:
Lewis (UW) 27-159; Brunell (UW) 12-45; Hobert (UW) 3-42; J. Barry (UW) 4-32; Turner
166
Net Yards Passing
147
(UW) 6-22; Bryant (UW) 6-18; Simoneau (ASU) 3-17; Fisher (ASU) 6-10; Johnson (UW) 1-7;
495
Total Offense
172
Mc. Jones (UW) 1-4; Russell (ASU) 8-3; Williams (ASU) 1-3; Lasher (ASU) 4-(-8).
22-14-0
Passing (A-C-I)
25-9-4
Passing:
Brunell (UW) 13-19-0-163, 0 TD; Hobert (UW) I-3-0-3, 0 TD; Lasher (ASU) 9-25-4-147,
5-42.2
1TD.
Punting
7-47.8
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
Receiving: Snyder (ASU) 4-93; Lewis (UW) 4-63; Kilpack (UW) 3-33; McKay (UW) 2-35; McReynolds
6-60
Penalties-Yards
10-67
(ASU) 2-32; Bailey (UW) 2-17; Moss (ASU) 2-16; Bryant (UW) 2-14; Russell (ASU) 1-6;
Kralik (UW) 1-4.
38:58
Time of Possession
21:02
Weather: Partly cloudy, 94 degrees.
114
1990 Review
W
Fame 6
Oregon
Washington Huskies 38, Oregon Ducks 17
October 13, 1990-Husky Stadium -(73,498)
Washington solidified its hold on the Pac-
yard touchdown-his first of two for the
15,1990
10 Conference lead with a strong running
day-to give the UW a 14-7 lead with 3:54
game and an impressive show of defensive
left in the half. Brunell finished the day with
force in defeating 19th-ranked (AP) Or-
56 rushing yards and completed 11 of 22
egon. The Huskies improved to 5-1 overall
passes for 193 yards and no interceptions.
and remained the only undefeated team in
Oregon kicker Gregg McCallum cut
conference play at 3-0. UW senior tailback
Washington's lead to 14-10 entering the
Greg Lewis, an emerging Heisman Tro-
half with a 46-yard field goal. The Huskies
phy Candidate, gained a career-high 169
scored 17 unanswered points in the second
yards on 23 carries. Lewis continued his
half. Brunell's second rushing touchdown,
streak of rushing for over 100 yards in every
from 11 yards away midway through the
game in 1990 and extended his regular sea-
third period, followed a Musgrave fumble,
son streak to seven straight games. Lewis
caused by senior linebacker Mark Jones.
earned his 11th career 100-yard rushing
Washington led 21-10. The Huskies tacked
day, one shy of Hugh McElhenny's school
on a 27-yard Mike Dodd field goal before
record 12. The Ducks felt Lewis' presence
Brunell found a streaking Orlando McKay
early, when the UW back broke loose for a
down the right sideline for a 45-yard touch-
53-yard touchdown run-the longest of his
down completion and a 31-10 lead with
career-to give the UW a 7-0 lead with
9:32 to play. Oregon's Sean Burwell
9:00 left in the first quarter. Oregon an-
rushed for a 9-yard touchdown and Husky
swered with a 1-yard keeper by Heisman
sophomore Beno Bryant closed out the
candidate quarterback Bill Musgrave to
day's scoring with a 29-yard touchdown
knot the score at 7-7. The Huskies, who had
burst with 5:12 to play. Although Musgrave
two touchdowns in the game set up by
threw for 302 yards in the game, Washing-
Duck turnovers, took advantage of Eric
ton (No. 1 nationally vs. the run) held the
Briscoe's fifth interception of the season to
Ducks to seven net yards on the ground and
increase their lead. Husky sophomore
caused three turnovers.
quarterback Mark Brunell rushed for a 5-
Vashington National Rankings
Scoring
$th (UPI), 17th (AP), 17th (USA Today/CNN), 17th
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORE
The Sporting News).
1 UW-Lewis, 53-yard run, 9:00 (Dodd Kick)
3-70
7-0
2 UO-Musgrave, 1-yard run, 7:37 (McCallum kick)
13-59
7-7
2 UW-Brunell, 5-yard run, 3:54 (Dodd kick)
3-27
14-7
core by Quarters
2 UO-McCallum, 46-yard FG, :32
7-37
14-10
regon
0
10
0
7
-
17
3 UW-Brunell, 11-yard run, 5:58 (Dodd Kick)
3-37
21-10
ashington
7
7
7
17
-
38
4 UW-Dodd, 27-yard FG, 13:30
11-69
24-10
4 UW-McKay, 45-yard pass from Brunell, 9:32 (Dodd kick)
6-80
31-10
Team Statistics
4 UO-Burwell, 9-yard run, 8:50 (McCallum kick)
3-58
31-17
UO
UW
4 UW-Bryant, 29-yard run, 5:12 (Hanson kick)
8-80
38-17
19
First Downs
20
7
Net Yards Rushing
278
Individual Leaders
302
Net Yards Passing
193
309
Total Offense
471
Rushing:
Lewis (UW) 23-169; Brunell (UW) 13-56; Bryant (UW) 6-43; Burwell (UO) 14-29; Kelemeni
45-22-2
Passing (A-C-I)
22-11-0
(UO) 12-25; Turner (UW) 3-10; Shedrick (UO) 2-(-1); Musgrave (UO) 7-(-46).
8-41.6
Punting
8-39.0
Passing:
Musgrave (UO) 22-45-2-302, 0 TD; Brunell (UW) 11-22-0-193, 1 TD.
4-1
Fumbles-Lost
1-1
Receiving: Bailey (UW) 7-111; Jones (UO) 6-49; Reitzug (UO) 5-100; McClellan (UO) 5-88; Lewis (UW)
2-25; Burwell (UO) 2-15; McKay (UW) 1-45; Ferry (UO) 1-20; Harris (UO) 1-14; Pierce (UW)
6-34
Penalties-Yards
6-30
1-12; Kelemeni (UO) 1-8; Thomason (UO) 1-8.
29:14
Time of Possession
30:46
Veather: Partly cloudy, 53 degrees.
115
W
1990 Review
Game 7
Stanford
Washington Huskies 52, Stanford Cardinal 16
October 20, 1990-Stanford Stadium-(36,500)
Washington used nine quarterback sacks
turn to midfield into points on the openi
and made the most of advantageous field
STANFORD
drive. Sophomore quarterback Ma
position to rout Stanford in Palo Alto. The
Brunell capped a five-play, 50-yard scon
Huskies claimed their third straight victory
drive by connecting with Mario Bailey
VS.
and improved their Pac-10-leading record
15-yard touchdown completion. After a2
WASHINGTON
to 4-0 and 6-1 overall. A regional ABC-TV
yard Mike Dodd field goal, and Brisco
audience saw the UW jump out to a 31-0
fumble return gave the UW a 17-0 fi
halftime lead and never look back as Husky
quarter lead, Brunell figured in two mc
senior Greg Lewis rushed for 108 yards on
scores. Junior flanker Orlando McK
19 carries with one touchdown. Lewis, in
made a diving end zone catch after Brun
the process, extended his 100-yard rushing
found him from 35 yards away. Brun
streak to eight regular season games and
then gave the UW a 31-0 advantage
kept alive his hopes to equal USC back
diving in for a three-yard rushing touc
Marcus Allen's Pac-10 mark of having
down late in the half. Sophomore safe
rushed for at least 100 yards in every game
Tommie Smith preserved the first-ha
during a single season (12 in 1981). Lewis
shutout by intercepting a Jason Palumb
also moved up to No. 5 in UW career rush-
pass deep in Husky territory and returnif
October 20, 1990
ing, passing Jacque Robinson and in-
it 51 yards. Stanford burned the Huski
$3
creased his season rushing total to 921
with a 57-yard punt return score by Gly
yards, leaving him 79 yards away from be-
Milburn after the UW's first possession
touchdown
coming the first Husky running back to rush
the second half. Husky red-shirt freshma
for 1,000 yards in consecutive seasons. Jun-
fullback Matt Jones scored the first tw
ior linebacker Donald Jones recorded 3.5
touchdowns of his career, by galloping 3
sacks for losses totaling 27 yards and senior
yards in the third quarter and again pov
rover Eric Briscoe returned a fumble 17
ered in from 12 yards out in the fourt
yards for a touchdown to highlight
period to take Washington over the 50
Washington's defensive efforts. The Hus-
point plateau. For the second consecutiv
kies held the Cardinal to 78 rushing yards
week, the Huskies did not commit a turi
and 339 total yards, while rolling up 439
over, while Stanford suffered five turn
total yards themselves. Washington par-
overs.
layed a 35-yard Beno Bryant kickoff re-
Washington National Rankings
Scoring
12th (UPI), 13th (AP), 13th (USA Today/CNN), 16th
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORI
(The Sporting News).
1 UW-Bailey, 15-yard pass from Brunell, 12:14 (Dodd kick)
5-50
7-0
1 UW-Dodd, 25-yard FG, 7:58
5-28
10-0
Score by Quarters
1 UW-Briscoe, 17-yard fumble return, :19 (Dodd kick)
-
17-0
Washington
17
14
14
7
-
52
2 UW-McKay, 35-yard pass from Brunell, 14:07 (Dodd kick)
1-35
24-0
Stanford
0
0
8
8
16
2 UW-Brunell, 3-yard run, 2:22 (Dodd kick)
-
6-68
31-0
3 SU-Milburn, 57-yard punt return, 10:13 (Bowden, pass from Palumbis)
-
31-8
3 UW-Mt. Jones, 39-yard run, 9:02 (Dodd kick)
3-76
38-8
Team Statistics
3 UW-Lewis, 7-yard run, 5:33 (Dodd kick)
3-16
45-8
UW
SU
4 UW-Mt. Jones, 12-yard run, 12:47 (Dodd kick)
5-40
52-8
21
First Downs
21
4 SU-Vardell, 1-yard run, 7:46 (Milburn, pass from Lynch)
11-87
52-16
262
Net Yards Rushing
78
177
Net Yards Passing
261
439
Total Offense
339
Individual Leaders
18-11-0
Passing (A-C-I)
36-21-2
Rushing:
Lewis (UW) 19-108; Mt. Jones (UW) 3-53; Vardell (SU) 14-40; Bryant (UW) 9-34; Turner
3-43.0
Punting
5-31.6
(UW) 3-32; Milburn (SU) 9-27; Volpe (SU) 7-23; Lynch (SU) 7-17; Brunell (UW) 3-14;
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
4-3
Hobert (UW) 1-11; Johnson (UW) 2-10; Palumbis (SU) 8-(-29).
5-39
Penalties-Yards
11-75
Passing:
Palumbis (SU) 17-28-1-177, 0 TD; Brunell (UW) 9-16-0-148, 2 TD; Lynch (SU) 4-8-1-84, o
25:34
Time of Possession
TD; Hobert (UW) 2-2-0-29, 0 TD.
34:26
Weather: Clear, 70 degrees.
Receiving: Milburn (SU) 7-103; Walsh (SU) 3-35; Vardell (SU) 3-13; McKay (UW) 2-42; Lewis (UW) 2-
39; Bailey (UW) 2-34; Pierce (UW) 2-30; B. Bryant (UW) 2-26; Bryant (SU) 2-21; McCaffrey
(SU) 2-13; Volpe (SU) 2-13; Pinckney (SU) 1-44; Booker (SU) 1-19; Gaspard (UW) 1-6.
116
1990 Review
W
Game 8
California
Washington Huskies 46, California Golden Bears 7
October 27, 1990-Husky Stadium-(71,427)
Senior running back Greg Lewis helped
For the second consecutive week, Wash-
vs.CALIFORNIA
October,27,1990
the Huskies solidify their position as Pac-10
ington jumped out to a big lead (24 points)
frontrunners with a record-setting perfor-
by halftime. Freshman Travis Hanson got
mance on Homecoming weekend. Lewis
the Huskies an early 3-0 lead with his first
rushed for 205 yards-the fourth-highest
career field goal, a 42-yard effort. The
total in school history-and scored two
Husky ground assault then got rolling as
touchdowns as he surpassed Joe Steele's
Lewis (11 yards), Brunell (32 yards) and
UW single season rushing record of 1,111
RS-freshman Matt Jones (23 yards) all
yards. Lewis finished the contest with 126
rushed for first-half touchdowns. The Hus-
yards in 1990 with three games to play.
kies extended the lead to 31-0 in the third
Washington won its fourth straight game to
quarter with a measure of trickery as sopho-
build a two-game lead in the Pac-10 race
more running back Beno Bryant took a
with a 5-0 Pac-10 mark and a 7-1 overall
pitch out on an apparent run, stopped and
record. Lewis recorded his 13th career 100-
threw back across the field to a streaking
yard rushing day, breaking Hugh
Brunell for an 11-yard touchdown comple-
McElhenny's school record of 12 and
tion. Cal averted a shutout when quarter-
Lewis also passed McElhenny to move into
back Mike Pawlawski scored on a two-
third place in UW career rushing with 2,525
yard keeper late in the third period to make
yards. Lewis also kept his nine game regular
the score 31-7. Lewis showcased his abili-
season streak of 100-yard rushing games
ties on the next possession when he took a
alive. Sophomore quarterback Mark
short Brunell pass and burst 56 yards for a
Brunell bolstered Lewis' effort with a rare
score. A botched PAT attempt typified
touchdown trifecta as he found the endzone
Washington's day as Brunell connected
as a passer, runner and receiver. Despite a
with sophomore fullback Darius Turner
121-yard rushing performance by Califor-
for a two-point conversion, making the
nia back Russell White, the Huskies
score 39-7. Bryant, who earlier in the game
outgained the Bears in total offense by a
surpassed Bill Cahill's season punt return
597 to 306 yard count. Washington senior
record of 421 yards with his total of 446
rover Eric Briscoe collected one of three
yards, wrapped up Washington's scoring
Husky pass interceptions, giving him six for
with 6-yard touchdown run with 6:35 to
the season, the most by a Husky since 1972.
play.
Vashington National Rankings
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORE
th (UPI), 7th (AP), 7th (USA Today/CNN), 10th
The Sporting News).
1 UW-Hanson, 42-yard FG, 12:17
8-59
3-0
1 UW-Lewis, 11-yard run, 4:07 (Hanson kick)
8-68
10-0
2 UW-Brunell, 32-yard run, 8:35 (Hanson kick)
10-94
17-0
Score by Quarters
2 UW-Mt. Jones, 23-yard run, 1:35 (Hanson kick)
4-44
24-0
California
0
0
7
0
-
7
3 UW-Brunell, 11-yard pass from Bryant, 4:28 (Hanson kick)
8-80
31-0
Vashington
10
14
15
7
-
46
3 UC-Pawlawski, 2-yard run, 1:48 (Keen kick)
4-74
31-7
3 UW-Lewis, 56-yard pass from Brunell, :37 (Turner pass from Brunell)
3-70
39-7
Team Statistics
4 UW-Bryant, 6-yard run, 6:35 (Hanson kick)
8-69
46-7
UC
UW
12
First Downs
26
Individual Leaders
134
Net Yards Rushing
396
172
Net Yards Passing
201
Rushing:
Lewis (UW) 29-207; White (UC) 19-121; Brunell (UW) 7-87; Bryant (UW) 6-43; Mt. Jones
306
Total Offense
597
(UW) 3-32; Barry (UW) 4-16; Wallace (UC) 6-16; Zomalt (UC) 3-8; Turner (UW) 1-7;
Dawkins (UC) 1-5; Hobert (UW) 2-3; Harris (UW) 1-2; Johnson (UW) 1-1; Pawlawski (UC)
27-11-3
Passing (A-C-I)
23-12-0
7-(-8); Klein (UC) 2-(-8).
9-39.4
Punting
5-38.5
Passing:
Brunell (UW) 10-21-0-181, 1 TD; Pawlawski (UC) 10-24-3-166, 0 TD; Bryant (UW) 1-1-0-
1-0
Fumbles-Lost
4-2
11, 1 TD; Hobert (UW) 1-1-0-9, 0 TD; Klein (UC) 1-3-0-6, TD.
9-61
Penalties-Yards
7-60
Receiving: Bailey (UW) 4-48; Lewis (UW) 2-90; Treggs (UC) 2-63; Wallace (UC) 2-11; White (UC) 2-5;
27:29
Time of Possession
32:31
Dawkins (UC) 1-37; Woodall (UC) 1-22; Zomalt (UC) 1-18; Bryant (UW) I-17; McKay (UW)
Weather: Cloudy, 58 degrees.
1-12; Brunell (UW) 1-11; Caldwell (UC) 1-10; Pierce (UW) 1-9; Mitchell (UW) 1-9; Jones
(UC) 1-6; Kilpack (UW) I-5.
117
W
1990 Review
Game 9
Arizona
Washington Huskies 54, Arizona Wildcats 10
November 3, 1990-Husky Stadium -(70,111)
The smell of roses was back in the air of
and an ABC-TV regional audience with tv
VSARIZONA
November:3,1990
Husky Stadium for the first time since the
long-range touchdowns. After Lewis gat
1981 season as Washington clinched its
the Huskies an early 7-0 lead, Bryant tallic
fourth Rose Bowl appearance of the 16-
his team's second score on a 70-yard pu
year Don James era. The Huskies (6-0, 8-
return with 2:49 to go in the first perio
1) humbled second-place Arizona (4-3, 6-
Bryant also broke loose for a 73-yard touc
3) with a 54-10 victory and wrapped up the
down late in the game on a play that show
Pac-10 title at the earliest date since the
cased his substantial speed. UW soph
1970 Stanford squad also settled the issue
more quarterback Mark Brunell got in
with two games to play. Oregon helped the
the act in the second period, throwir
UW's cause by defeating UCLA-the only
touchdown passes of 12 yards to junior tig
remaining team with a chance at the Rose
end Aaron Pierce and 47 yards to juni
Bowl-by a 28-24 margin in Eugene. A
split end Mario Bailey as Washington bu
dominating performance in all three phases
a 28-3 halftime lead. Brunell, who did n
of the game-offense, defense and special
throw an interception for the fifth straig
teams-helped the Huskies win their fifth-
game, also rushed for a 2-yard, third-qua
straight overall game and ninth straight in
ter touchdown. The Husky defense, led 1
conference play. The Dawgs mushed to a
junior inside linebacker Chico Frale
47-3 lead and never looked back as Arizona
held the Pac-10's No. 2 rushing offens
saw why the UW was defeating Pac-10 op-
(221.8 yards per game) to just 94 total rus]
ponents by an average margin of 33 points.
ing yards and caused three fumbles. Frale
Senior Heisman Trophy candidate Greg
recorded a game-high 12 tackles, includir
Lewis increased his 100-yard rushing
three for loss and was named ABC Player
string to 10 straight regular season games
the Game. The UW blocked two punts
with 103 yards and a touchdown. But Lewis'
the contest, the first by sophomore Ja
backup, sophomore Beno Bryant, did his
Barry and the second, resulting in a safet
part to excite a near-capacity stadium crowd
by junior Dana Hall.
Washington National Rankings
Scoring
5th (UPI), 7th (AP), 5th (USA Today/CNN), 10th
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCOR
(The Sporting News).
1 UW-Lewis, 5-yard run, 7:07 (Hanson kick)
8-44
7-0
1 UW-Bryant, 70-yard punt return, 2:49 (Hanson kick)
-
14-0
Score by Quarters
2 UA-Coston, 43-yard FG, 7:05
7-14
14-3
2 UW-Pierce, 12-yard pass from Brunell, 2:38 (Hanson kick)
5-27
21-3
Arizona
0
3
0
7
-
10
14
-
54
2 UW-Bailey, 47-yard pass from Brunell, 1:08 (Hanson kick)
2-55
28-3
Washington
14
10
16
3 UW-Hanson, 40-yard FG, 7:01
6-11
31-3
3 UW-Brunell, 2-yard run, 4:32 (Hanson kick)
4-64
38-3
Team Statistics
4 UW-Safety, Hall punt block, 11:19
-
40-3
UA
UW
4 UW-Hobert, 3-yard run, 8:16 (Hanson kick)
6-34
47-3
15
First Downs
22
4 UA-Lovett, 19-yard run, 5:32 (Coston kick)
7-62
47-10
94
Net Yards Rushing
260
4 UW-Bryant, 73-yard run, 5:20 (Hanson kick)
I-73
54-10
178
Net Yards Passing
169
272
Total Offense
429
20-10-0
Passing (A-C-I)
18-11-0
Individual Leaders
9-28.9
Punting
6-32.5
Rushing:
Lewis (UW) 22-103; Bryant (UW) 1-73; Malauulu (UA) 7-35; Harris (UW) 5-28; J. Barry
3-3
Fumbles-Lost
3-0
(UW) 4-27; McGill (UA) 7-26; Lovett (UA) 11-21; Striednig (UA) 9-15; Hobert (UW) 2-8;
4-37
Penalties-Yards
Turner (UW) 2-7; Brunell (UW) 8-6; Vaughn (UA) 2-5; Mt. Jones (UW) 1-4; Johnson (UW)
6-70
1-4; Veal (UA) 9-2; Greathouse (UA) 2-1; Bates (UA) 1-(-11).
30:18
Time of Possession
29:42
Passing:
Brunell (UW) 11-18-0-169, 2 TD; Malauulu (UA) 7-15-0-142, 0 TD; Veal (UA) 3-5-0-36, 0
Weather: Cloudy, 52 degrees.
TD.
Receiving: Vaughn (UA) 5-104; Pierce (UW) 4-66; Bailey (UW) 3-64; McGill (UA) 2-51; Jan (UA) 2-17;
Bryant (UW) 1-16; McKay (UW) 1-10; Mt. Jones (UW) 1-8; Julian (UA) 1-6; Turner (UW)
1-5.
118
1990 Review
W
Game 10
UCLA
UCLA Bruins 25, Washington Huskies 22
November 10, 1990-Husky Stadium-(71,925)
Rose Bowl-bound Washington's national
Beno Bryant, filling in for an injured
VS
championship hopes were dashed by 21-
Lewis, gave his team the lead at 14-13 with
point underdog UCLA. A 43-yard field goal
just 12 seconds left in the third period.
with 10 seconds remaining in the game by
Bryant scored on a three-yard toss sweep to
UCLA's Brad Daluiso gave the Bruins the
cap a 61-yard drive that was highlighted by
victory and shouldered Washington with its
a 47-yard completion from Brunell to Or-
first Pac-10 loss. The Huskies saw their
lando McKay. UCLA regained the lead on
record dip to 8-2 overall and 6-1 in Pac-10
its next possession when Maddox lobbed a
play. The loss broke a five-game UW overall
30-yard pass into the end zone which was
win streak and snapped Washington's
caught simultaneously by Bruin receiver
eight-game conference victory string. UW
Scott Miller and UW cornerback Charles
Heisman Trophy candidate Greg Lewis
Mincy. But Miller wrestled the ball away as
hyperextended his left knee in the second
the pair hit the ground for a UCLA score.
period and saw his string of 100-yard rush-
Another PAT attempt went awry and the
ing days end at 10 with 50 yards on 12
Bruins led 19-14. On the next drive,
carries in a reduced role. Bruin running
Brunell fumbled while scrambling at his
back Brian Brown burned the Huskies
own 14-yardline and Bruin linebacker Matt
early in the game as he broke loose for an
Darby recovered. That turnover led to a
88-yard touchdown run-the longest run
22-yard Daluiso field goal and a 22-14
against the UW in the 16-year Don James
UCLA lead with 9:39 to play. Later, Brunell
era-to give UCLA a 7-0 lead. The Huskies
threw a desperation pass to Mario Bailey,
answered with an impressive 18-play, 95-
which he gathered in over a Bruin defender
yard, eight-minute drive in the second pe-
and fell into the end zone to draw the UW
riod, culminated in a 1-yard run by quarter-
within two points at 22-19 with 2:36 re-
back Mark Brunell to tie the score at 7-7.
maining. Brunell tied the game with a two-
UCLA responded with an extended touch-
point conversion run to his left. The Hus-
down drive of its own, marching 70 yard to
kies looked to be in good shape after
the Husky 1 with seven seconds remaining
holding UCLA on the next possession with
in the half. UCLA shunned a field goal
a first down on its own 30 and 2:03 left to
attempt as Tommy Maddox used a play-
play. But Brunell's second-down pass, in-
action fake to freeze the Husky defense and
tended for McKay, was intercepted by
pass to wide open tight end Corwin An-
UCLA's Eric Turner at midfield. UCLA
thony for the touchdown as time expired. A
then moved the ball 24 yards to set up
fumbled snap on the PAT kept the margin
Daluiso's game-winner.
at 13-7 going into the half. Husky tailback
Washington National Rankings
nd (UPI), 2nd (AP), 2nd (USA Today/CNN), 4th
Scoring
The Sporting News).
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORE
1 UCLA-Brown, 88-yard run, 10:34 (Daluiso kick)
3-97
7-0
Score by Quarters
2 UW-Brunell, 1-yard run, 4:19 (Hanson kick)
18-95
7-7
UCLA
7
6
0
12
-
25
2 UCLA-Anthony, 1-yard pass from Maddox, :02 (pass failed)
13-80
13-7
Washington
0
7
7
8
-
22
3 UW-Bryant, 3-yard run, :12 (Hanson kick)
6-61
13-14
4 UCLA-Miller, 30-yard pass from Maddox, 12:32 (kick failed)
7-80
19-14
4 UCLA-Daluiso, 22-yard FG, 9:39
5-10
22-14
Team Statistics
4 UW-Bailey, 32-yard pass from Brunell, 2:36 (Brunell run)
4-37
22-22
UCLA
UW
25-22
19
First Downs
13
4 UCLA-Daluiso, 43-yard FG, :10
5-24
155
Net Yards Rushing
146
239
Net Yards Passing
137
Individual Leaders
394
Total Offense
283
Rushing:
Brown (UCLA) 12-113; Lewis (UW) 12-50; Bryant (UW) 12-38; Smith (UCLA) 5-29; Brunell
41-23-1
Passing (A-C-I)
34-10-2
(UW) 9-25; Turner (UW) 3-20; Mt. Jones (UW) 2-13; Maddox (UCLA) 13-10; Wills (UCLA)
9-37.1
Punting
9-36.1
4-3.
3-1
Fumbles-Lost
5-1
Passing:
Maddox (UCLA) 23-41-1-239, 2 TD; Brunell (UW) 10-34-2-137, 1 TD.
4-37
Penalties-Yards
5-44
Receiving: Miller (UCLA) 7-92; Wills (UCLA) 5-42; McKay (UW) 4-67; LaChapelle (UCLA) 4-47; Bailey
31:19
Time of Possession
28:41
(UW) 2-37; Moore (UCLA) 2-30; Pierce (UW) 2-21; Mt. Jones (UW) 2-12; Brown (UCLA) 2-
Weather: Drizzling rain, 60 degrees, 15 mph winds.
11; Richardson (UCLA) 1-11; Smith (UCLA) 1-5; Anthony (UCLA) 1-1.
119
W
1990 Review
Game 11
Washington State
Washington Huskies 55, Washington State Cougars 1
November 17, 1990-Martin Stadium-(37,600)
Washington set an Apple Cup record for
downs. Sophomore quarterback Ma
points scored with a 55-10 win over Palouse
Brunell ran for one score and threw a (
rival Washington State in its final tuneup for
reer-high three touchdown passes, inclu
the Rose Bowl. And the Huskies, who re-
ing two to tight end Aaron Pierce and a 3
corded their first nine-win season (9-2)
yard bomb to Mario Bailey. Brunel
since 1984, accomplished it all without
three TD tosses were the most since Ca
leading rusher, Greg Lewis, who re-
Conklin pitched three against Arizor
mained home with a knee injury. The Cou-
State during the previous season. Pierce
gars ended their season at 3-8 and 2-6 in
two scores gave him the distinction of bein
Pac-10 play, while the UW closed out its
the only Husky receiver to have more tha
fourth conference championship season in
one touchdown catch in a single game
the 16-year tenure of coach Don James,
1990. Washington State freshman quarte
with a 7-1 Pac-10 mark. Washington re-
back Drew Bledsoe completed 19 of
claimed its top national ranking against the
passes for 295 yards with three interce
rush after holding the Cougars to -11 net
tions in the game. Bledsoe had succe
rushing yards. The Huskies forced seven
finding his favorite receiver, freshma
WSU turnovers, while committing. none
Phillip Bobo who had a game-high seve
themselves and those turnovers led directly
catches for 136 yards. But the Huskie
to 21 UW points. Washington broke a 3-3
outgained WSU in total offense 415 to 28
first quarter tie, reeling off 52 unanswered
yards and surpassed several Husky sing
points, including 24 in the second quarter
season records during the game, including
en route to a 45-point triumph, equaling the
most points, 394 (old mark 372 in 1986
largest margin of victory in the 1983 Apple
average points per game, 35.8 (old mar
Cup. The Huskies started an all-sophomore
33.8 in 1986); most touchdowns, 51 (ol
offensive backfield against the Cougars.
mark 49 in 1971); most PATs, 48 (old mar
Despite Lewis' absence, the Huskies had a
43 in 1986); rushing yards, 2,715 (old mar
100-yard rusher for the 10th time in 11
2,688 in 1956); total offense yards, 4,49
regular season games. This time it was
(old mark 4,365 in 1983); yards per game
sophomore Beno Bryant, who amassed
409.0 (old mark 396.8 in 1983). Washingto:
112 yards on 23 carries. Sophomore
also shattered UCLA's 1987 Pac-10 recor
tailback Jay Barry had only eight carries,
for most points in Pac-10 games (309) wit
but parlayed three of them into touch-
340 points against league opponents.
Washington National Rankings
Scoring
8th (UPI), 10th (AP), 10th (USA Today/CNN), 14th
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
DRIVE
SCORE
(The Sporting News).
1 UW-Hanson, 42-yard FG, 5:32
6-10
3-0
1 WSU-Hanson, 46-yard FG, 1:25
10-50
3-3
Score by Quarters
2 UW-Pierce, 24-yard pass from Brunell, 13:04 (Hanson kick)
7-66
10-3
Washington
3
24
7
21
2 UW-Safety, center snap out of end zone, 9:21
I
55
-
12-3
Washington St.
3
0
0
7
10
2 UW-Barry, 1-yard run, 3:31 (Hanson kick)
-
13-65
19-3
2 UW-Bailey, 37-yard pass from Brunell, 1:14 (Brunell run)
1-37
27-3
3 UW-Brunell, 5-yard run, 3:36 (Hanson kick)
10-53
34-3
Team Statistics
4 UW-Pierce, 3-yard pass from Brunell, 8:40 (Hanson kick)
13-93
41-3
UW
WSU
4 UW-Barry, 1-yard run, 6:13 (Hanson kick)
3-7
48-3
20
First Downs
23
4 UW-Barry, 2-yard run, 3:54 (Hanson kick)
5-61
55-3
277
Net Yards Rushing
-11
4 WSU-Swinton, 24-yard run, 2:21 (Hanson kick)
5-65
55-10
138
Net Yards Passing
295
415
Total Offense
284
15-8-0
Passing (A-C-I)
45-19-3
Individual Leaders
5-49.8
Punting
4-44.8
Rushing:
Bryant (UW) 23-112; Swinton (WSU) 16-70; Mt. Jones (UW) 8-41; Hobert (UW) 3-41;
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
4-4
Brunell (UW) 10-29; Barry (UW) 8-27; Turner (UW) 5-20; DeGross (UW) 1-4; Carr (WSU)
8-77
Penalties-Yards
11-72
1-1; Harris (UW) 1-1; Bledsoe (WSU) 9-(-61).
34:25
Time of Possession
25:35
Passing:
Bledsoe (WSU) 19-45-3-295, 0 TD; Brunell (UW) 8-15-0-138, 3 TD.
Weather: Overcast, light rain, 39 degrees.
Receiving: Bobo (WSU) 7-136; Griggs (WSU) 4-57; Williams (WSU) 4-77; Bailey (UW) 3-75; Pierce (UW)
3-40; McKay (UW) 1-14; Young (WSU) 1-13; Kilpack (UW) I-9; Swinton (WSU) 1-8; Carolan
(WSU) 1-6; Carr (WSU) 1-(-2).
120
1990 Review
W
77th
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1991
ROSE BOWL
Washington 46, Iowa 34
GAME
Husky sophomore quarterback Mark Brunell
than 40 points to the high-scoring Huskies.
JANUARY 1. 1991 PASADENA. CALIFORNIA
WASHINGTON VS IOWA
passed for a pair of touchdowns and ran for
two more to lead Pac-10 champion Wash-
The strong tradition of Don James special
teams surfaced early in this game when red-
ington to a convincing 46-34 win over Iowa.
shirt freshman Andy Mason blocked an Iowa
Washington and Iowa combined for 80
points, making the 77th Rose Bowl the high-
punt that was scooped up by junior
cornerback Dana Hall, who sprinted in for a
est scoring in history. The opportunistic
touchdown. With less than five minutes
Huskies built a 33-7 halftime lead, with two
first-half touchdowns coming courtesy of
elapsed, Washington led 10-0. After Iowa
closed to 10-7 with 12:39 left in the half,
the UW defense.
Washington erupted for 23 consecutive
The Pasadena victory left Washington 10-2
points.
for the season, while Iowa dropped to 8-4.
A 38-yard Travis Hanson field goal, and a
ROSE
The game marked Washington's 12th bowl
37-yard interception return by senior
appearance in the 16-year coaching reign of
cornerback Charles Mindy gave Washing-
Don James, who improved his bowl record
ton momentum. Two touchdowns gener-
to 9-3, including 3-1 in the Rose Bowl.
ated by Brunell, on a 5-yard run and a 22-
$5.00
Left-handed Brunell's running and passing
yard pass to Mario Bailey, gave the Huskies
skills earned him Rose Bowl MVP honors as
their nearly insurmountable 33-7 lead at
he completed 14 of 22 passes for 163 yards.
intermission.
01,273 at the Rose Bowl
Washington faithful also rejoiced in the re-
Iowa threw a scare into the Huskies as
turn of senior All-America running back
Hawkeye quarterback Matt Rodgers rallied
Greg Lewis, who spent the month prior to
his team for 27 second-half points. Iowa
the Rose Bowl rehabilitating an injured knee.
fullback Nick Bell's 20-yard touchdown run
Lewis hadn't lost a step, however, as he rushed
with 5:07 to play pulled the Hawkeyes within
for a game-high 128 yards on 19 carries.
13 at 39-26. But Washington's Brunell put
Washington's defense, ranked first in the
out the fire on the next possession with a 31-
nation in stopping the run, allowed Iowa just
yard scoring completion to Bailey. A late
139 net yards on the ground, recorded five
Iowa score made the score 45-34 as Wash-
sacks and forced five turnovers (four inter-
ington held on to claim the Pac-10's second
ceptions) in the game. Iowa also became the
consecutive Rose Bowl win and eighth in the
sixth team in 1990-91 to surrender more
past 10 years.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
1 UW-Hanson, 23-yard FG, 9:14
1 UW-Hall, 27-yard return of blocked punt, 7:15 (Hanson Kick)
2 UI-Bell, 15-yard run, 12:39 (Skillett Kick)
Final Rankings
2 UW-Hanson, 38-yard FG, 9:57
P
5th
2 UW-Mincy, 37-yard interception return, 8:22 (Pass Failed)
JPI
5th
2 UW-Brunell, 5-yard run, 2:44 (Hanson Kick)
USA Today/CNN 5th
2 UW-M. Bailey, 22-yard pass from Brunell, :58 (Hanson Kick)
3 UI-Rodgers, 7-yard run, 12:53 (Skillett Kick)
Score by Quarters
3 UW-Brunell, 20-yard run, 3:27 (Run Failed)
JI
0
7
7
20
-
34
4 UI-Rodgers, 9-yard run, 6:27 (Run Failed)
UW
10
23
6
7
-
46
4 UI-Bell, 20-yard run, 5:07 (Pass Failed)
4 UW-M. Bailey, 31-yard pass from Brunell, 4:43 (Hanson Kick)
Team Statistics
4 UI-Saunders, 12-yard pass from Rodgers, 2:23 (Velicer, pass from Rodgers)
UW
UI
Individual Leaders
19
First Downs
19
222
Net Yards Rushing
139
Rushing-Lewis (UW) 19-128; Bell (UI) 11-64; Bryant (UW) 3-47; Brunell (UW) 10-28; Montgomery (UI)
163
Net Yards Passing
315
4-26; Stewart (UI) 7-21; Kujawa (UI) 2-16; Mt. Jones (UW) 5-16; Rodgers (UI) 15-12; Turner (UW) 1-4;
Barry (UW) 1-1; Hobert (UW) 1-(-2).
385
Total Offense
454
Passing-Rodgers (UI) 34-15-3-196; Brunell (UW) 22-14-1-163; Hobert (UW) 3-0-1-0; Hughes (UI) 1-1-
25-14-2
Passing
37-17-4
0-66; Titley (UI) 1-1-0-53; Skillett (UI) 1-0-1-0.
4-41.8
Punting
6-33.3
Receiving-Saunders (UI) 5-99; Pierce (UW) 4-32; Bell (UI) 3-85; M. Bailey (UW) 2-53; Stewart (UI) 2-40;
3-1
Fumbles-Lost
4-1
Kilpack (UW) 2-22; Montgomery (UI) 2-6; Filloon (UI) 1-53; McKay (UW) 1-17; Hughes (UI) 1-12; Cross
5-45
Penalties-Yards
8-55
(UI) 1-9; Whitaker (UI) 1-9; Mt. Jones (UW) 1-3; Titley (UI) 1-2; Lewis (UW) 1-0.
121
W
1990 Review
Final 1990 Washington Football Statistics
10-2 Overall including Rose Bowl win, 7-1 Pacific-10 Conference
Team Statistics
Team Statistics
UW
OPP
UW
OPF
Total First Downs
223
180
Punts/Average
69/39.8
82/39
Rushing
129
60
Punt Returns/Average
39/14.9
38/9.
Passing
77
106
Interception Return/Average
20/10.8
8/5.6
Penalty
17
14
Kick Returns/Average
24/17.3
53/19
Total Net Yards
4499
3181
Penalties/Yards
62/537
81/61
Total Plays
779
753
Fumbles/No. Lost
19/6
30/1
Play Average
5.78
4.22
Touchdowns
51
18
Game Average
409.0
289.2
Rush
32
10
Net Yards Rushing
2715
735
Pass
15
6
Total Carries
519
392
Returns
4
2
Play Average
5.23
1.88
PATs/Attempts
48/48
14/16
Game Average
246.8
66.8
2-point Conversion Attempts
3/3
2/2
Net Yards Passing
1784
2446
Field Goal Attempts
10/16
8/14
Attempts
260
361
Safeties
2
0
Completions
123
176
Total Points
394
150
Interceptions
8
20
Game Average
35.8
13.6
Gain Per Attempt
6.86
6.78
Time of Possession
349:03
310:5
Game Average
31:44
28:16
Total Offense (Leaders Only)
PLAYER
G
PLAYS
RUSH
PASS
TOTAL
GM/AVG
PL/AVG
HI GM
M. Brunell, qb
11
358
444
1732
2176
197.8
6.1
268
G. Lewis, tb
10
229
1279
0
1279
127.9
5.6
205
WASHINGTON
11
779
2715
1784
4499
409.0
5.8
597
OPPONENTS
11
753
735
2446
3181
289.2
4.2
394
All-Purpose Running
PLAYER
G
RUSH
P/REC
P/RET
K/RET
I/RET
FG/R
TOTAL
GAME AVG
HI GN
G. Lewis, tb
10
1279
345
0
0
0
0
1624
162.4
295
B. Bryant, tb
11
386
70
560
212
0
0
1228
111.6
194
WASHINGTON
11
2715
1784
583
415
216
0
5713
519.4
688
OPPONENTS
11
735
2446
345
1050
45
0
4621
420.1
528
Passing
PLAYER
G
PA
PC
HI
YDS
PCT
TD
LG
YDS/G
YDS/ATT
CMP/G
HI GM
M. Brunell, qb
11
253
118
8
1732
.466
14
67
157.5
6.8
10.7
197
B. Hobert, qb/p
7
6
4
0
41
.667
0
23
5.9
6.8
0.6
29
B. Bryant, tb
11
1
1
0
11
1.000
1
11t
1.0
11.0
0.1
11
WASHINGTON
11
260
123
8
1784
.473
15
67
162.2
6.9
11.2
201
OPPONENTS
11
361
176
20
2446
.488
6
63t
222.4
6.8
16.0
302
Rushing
Receiving
PLAYER
TC
YG
YL
NYG
AVG
TD
LG
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
G. Lewis, tb
229
1305
26
1279
5.6
8
53t
M. Bailey, se
40
667
16.7
6
47t
M. Brunell, qb
105
547
103
444
4.2
10
47t
G. Lewis, tb
20
345
17.3
1
67
B. Bryant, tb
73
402
16
386
5.3
5
73t
O. McKay, fl
19
337
17.7
3
47
D. Turner, fb
45
180
7
173
3.8
2
19
A. Pierce, te
16
191
11.9
4
39
Mt. Jones, fb
19
158
0
158
8.3
3
39t
B. Bryant, tb
7
70
10.0
0
23
B. Hobert, qb/p
12
109
4
105
8.8
1
35
M. Kilpack, te
5
47
9.4
0
14
J. Barry, tb
20
102
0
102
5.1
3
16
C. Gaspard, se
5
44
8.8
0
15
E. Harris, tb
7
31
0
31
4.4
0
9
Mt. Jones, fb
4
27
6.8
0
8
L. Johnson, fb
7
25
1
24
3.4
0
7
D. Turner, fb
3
23
7.7
0
9
O. McKay, fl
1
9
0
9
9.0
0
9
J. Kralik, se
2
13
6.5
0
9
M. DeGross, fb
1
4
0
4
4.0
0
4
M. Brunell, qb
1
11
11.0
1
1lt
WASHINGTON
519
2872
157
2715
5.2
32
73t
L. Mitchell, fl
1
9
9.0
0
9
OPPONENTS
392
1341
606
735
1.9
10
88t
WASHINGTON
123
1784
14.5
15
67
OPPONENTS
176
2446
13.9
6
63t
122
1990 Review
W
inal 1990 Washington Football Statistics
unt Returns
Kickoff Return
AYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
Bryant, tb
36
560
15.6
3
82t
B. Bryant, tb
10
212
21.2
0
35
Barry, tb
1
11
11.0
0
11
T. Smith, fs
9
156
17.3
0
35
Mincy, cb
1
10
10.0
0
10
A. Mason, de
1
13
13.0
0
13
Hall, cb
1
2
2.0
0
2
W. Bailey, cb
1
12
12.0
0
12
82t
D. Turner, fb
1
9
9.0
0
9
ASHINGTON
39
583
14.9
3
PPONENTS
38
345
9.1
2
57t
P.A. Emerson, te
1
9
9.0
0
9
Team
1
4
4.0
0
4
unting
WASHINGTON
24
415
17.3
0
35
OPPONENTS
53
1050
19.8
0
46
LAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
BL
LG
Wyles, P
66
2707
41.0
2
65
Field Goals
Hobert, qb/p
1
41
41.0
0
41
eam
2
0
0.0
0
0
PLAYER
0-19
20-29
30-39
40-49
50+
M. Dodd, pk
6-7
1-3
0-1
0-1
ASHINGTON
69
2748
39.8
2
65
0-0
PPONENTS
82
3220
39.3
2
63
T. Hanson, pk
0-0
0-0
0-0
3-4
0-0
WASHINGTON
0-0
6-7
1-3
3-5
0-1
Defensive Statistics
OPPONENTS
0-0
1-1
1-1
6-10
0-2
FUM
PASS
TACK
QB
Third Down Conversions
LAYER
UT
AT
TOT
C/R
DEF
LOSS
SACKS
offmann, ilb
48
31
79
3/1
4
7.0/43.5
2.5/15.5
PLAYER
CONV
ATT
PCT
PEN
4TH
raley, ilb
25
65
/3
11
12.0/45.0
4.5/25.5
M. Brunell, qb
59
150
.393
3
6-10
40
Smith, fs
40
21
61
2/
3
4.5/17.0
0.5/3.5
B. Hobert, qb/p
6
14
.429
0
2-3
mtman, dt
29
26
55
1/1
I
16.0/85.0
7.5/63.0
riscoe, rov
36
16
52
1/1
1
7.5/27.5
3.5/17.0
Score By Quarters
Collins, wlb
29
23
52
1/
2
12.0/63.0
5.0/31.0
1
2
3
4
TP
Iall, cb
33
15
48
/1
6
2.5/7.5
WASHINGTON
92
118
77
107
-
394
tichardson, de
26
19
45
1/1
2
16.5/86.5
8.5/57.0
OPPONENTS
38
29
32
51
-
150
Mincy, cb
24
13
37
1/
3
Cook, mg
18
17
35
/1
2
4.0/13.5
1.5/7.0
D. Jones, slb
17
16
33
1/
2
10.0/60.5
6.0/56.5
Scoring
Mk Jones, slb
19
9
28
1/2
1.0/24.0
1.0/24.0
PLAYER
TD
PAT
2XP
FG
SA
TP
I. Butler, ilb
17
5
22
/1
1
M. Brunell, qb
11
2-3
70
Pahukoa, fs
14
7
21
4
1.0/4.0
G. Lewis, tb
9
54
Rodgers, mg
11
10
21
/2
4.0/23.5
3.0/20.5
B. Bryant, tb
8
48
Mason, de
13
7
20
1/
4.0/16.0
2.5/14.5
M. Dodd, pk
27-27
7-12
48
Fields, wlb
12
8
20
1/
1
8.5/52.0
3.0/36.0
M. Bailey, se
6
36
Doctor, cb
13
5
18
3
1.0/2.0
T. Hanson, pk
21-21
3-4
30
DeGross, fb
9
3
12
A. Pierce, te
4
24
Springstead, ilb
1
6
7
/1
1
1.0/1.5
O. McKay, fl
3
18
Barry, tb
3
3
6
/1
Mt. Jones, fb
3
18
W. Bailey, cb
5
0
5
3
J. Barry, tb
3
18
Tailele, rov
4
1
5
D. Turner, fb
2
1-0
14
V. Jones, wlb
2
3
5
/1
E. Briscoe
1
6
Lustyk, de
3
1
4
1.0/8.0
1.0/8.0
B. Hobert, qb/p
1
6
Johnson, fb
3
1
4
Team
2
4
Farr, dt
2
2
4
3.0/15.0
1.5/12.0
WASHINGTON
51
48-48
3-3
10-16
2
394
Fountaine, slb
1
3
4
0.5/7.0
0.5/7.0
OPPONENTS
18
14-16
2-2
8-14
150
Mitchell, fl
3
0
3
Kilpack, te
2
1
3
Turner, fb
2
0
2
Mt. Jones, fb
2
0
2
Fifteen others
7
2
9
1/11
Interceptions
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
LG
E. Briscoe, rov
6
5
0.8
0
5
T. Smith, fs
4
89
22.3
0
51
D. Hall, cb
3
22
7.3
0
18
W. Bailey, cb
2
42
21.0
0
42
W. Doctor, cb
2
10
5.0
0
10
S. Pahukoa, fs
1
32
32.0
0
32
C. Mincy, cb
1
14
14.0
0
14
P. Tailele, rov
1
2
2.0
0
2
WASHINGTON
20
216
10.8
0
51
OPPONENTS
8
45
5.6
0
22
123
W
1990 Review
1990 Washington Miscellaneous Single-Game Statistics
Individual
Team
Most Rushing Attempts:
29, Greg Lewis VS. California
Most First Downs:
29 vs. Arizona State
Most Yards Rushing:
205, Greg Lewis VS. California
Rushing:
21 vs. Arizona State
Longest TD Run:
73 yards, Beno Bryant VS. Arizona
Passing:
10 vs. Oregon
Longest Run, No Score:
48 yards, Greg Lewis vs. USC
Penalty:
4 vs. Purdue
Most Pass Receptions:
8, Mario Bailey vs. Colorado
Most Yards Rushing:
396 VS. California
Most Yards Receiving:
141, Mario Bailey vs. Colorado
Most Yards Passing:
201 vs. USC
Most Yards Total Offense:
597 vs. Arizona State
Most Passes Attempted:
34, Mark Brunell vs. Colorado & UCLA
Most Fumbles:
5 vs. UCLA
Most Passes Completed:
16, Mark Brunell VS. Colorado
Lost:
2, VS. California
Most Yards Passing:
197 yards, Mark Brunell VS. USC
Most Interceptions:
4 VS. Arizona State & Iowa
Most TD Passes:
3, Mark Brunell VS. Washington State
Most Penalties:
8 vs. Purdue & Washington State
Most Passes Intercepted:
3, Mark Brunell vs. Colorado
Yards:
77 VS. Washington State
Longest TD Pass:
56 yards, Mark Brunell to Greg Lewis VS.
Most Punts:
10 VS. San Jose State
California
Best Punt Average:
51.8 yards VS. Colorado
Longest Pass, No TD:
67 yards, Mark Brunell to Greg Lewis VS.
Most Kickoff Returns:
USC
3 vs. San Jose State, Oregon, Stanford,
Arizona, UCLA & Iowa
Most Total Offense Att.:
43, Mark Brunell VS. Colorado & UCLA
Yards:
86 vs. Stanford
Most Yards Total Offense:
268, Mark Brunell VS. California
Most Punt Returns:
5 VS. San Jose State, Purdue, USC,
Arizona State & Arizona
Most TDs:
3, Greg Lewis vs. Arizona State; Jay Barry
Yards:
131 vs. Arizona State
vs. Washington State
Most Rushing TDs:
3, Greg Lewis VS. Arizona State; Jay Barry
VS. Washington State
Most TD Receptions:
2, Aaron Pierce VS. Washington State &
Mario Bailey vs. Iowa
Most Punt Returns:
5, Beno Bryant vs. San Jose State,
Purdue, USC & Arizona State
Most Punt Return Yards:
131, Beno Bryant VS. Arizona State
Longest TD Punt Return:
82 yards, Beno Bryant vs. Arizona State
Longest Return, No Score:
39 yards, Beno Bryant vs. Oregon
Most Kickoff Returns:
3, Tommie Smith vs. Iowa
Most Kickoff Return Yards:
51, Tommie Smith VS. Stanford
Longest TD Kickoff Return:
None
Longest Return, No Score:
35 yards, Beno Bryant VS. Stanford
Most Interceptions:
2, Eric Briscoe vs. USC; Walter Bailey vs.
ASU; Charles Mincy VS. Iowa
Most Interception Return Yards:
51, Tommie Smith VS. Stanford
Longest TD Interception Return:
37, Charles Mincy VS. Iowa
Longest Int. Return, No. Score:
51 yards, Tommie Smith VS. Stanford
Most Punts:
10, Channing Wyles VS. San Jose State
Most Yards Punting:
432, Channing Wyles VS. San Jose State
Longest Punt:
65 yards, Channing Wyles VS. Washington
State
Most Field Goals Att.:
3, Mike Dodd vs. Purdue
Most Field Goals Made:
2, Mike Dodd vs. San Jose State &
Purdue; Travis Hanson VS. Iowa
Most Consecutive FGs Made:
2, Mike Dodd VS. San Jose State &
Purdue; Travis Hanson vs. Iowa
Longest Field Goal:
42 yards, Travis Hanson VS. California &
Washington State
Mark Brunell
124
1990 Review
W
990 Opponent Miscellaneous Single-Game Statistics
dividual
Team
bst Rushing Attempts:
29, Eric Bieniemy (Colorado)
Most First Downs:
23, Washington State
ost Yards Rushing:
143, Eric Bieniemy (Colorado)
Rushing:
14, Colorado
ngest TD Run:
88 yards, Brian Brown (UCLA)
Passing:
15 vs. San Jose State
ongest Run, No Score:
40 yards, Russell White (California)
Penalty:
5, Washington State
Most Yards Rushing:
183, Colorado
ost Pass Receptions:
7, Glyn Milburn (Stanford), Scott Miller
(UCLA) & Phillip Bobo (Wash. St.)
Most Yards Passing:
315, Iowa
ost Yards Receiving:
136, Phillip Bobo (Washington State)
Most Yards Total Offense:
454, Iowa
Most Fumbles:
6, Purdue
lost Passes Attempted:
45, Bill Musgrave (Oregon) & Drew
Lost:
Bledsoe (Washington State)
4, Washington State
23, Tommy Maddox (UCLA)
Most Interceptions:
3, Colorado
ost Passes Completed:
Most Penalties:
13, USC
ost Yards Passing:
302, Bill Musgrave (Oregon)
Yards:
111, USC
lost TD Passes:
2, Eric Hunter (Purdue) & Tommy
Maddox (UCLA)
Most Punts:
11, San Jose State
ost Passes Intercepted:
4, Kurt Lasher (Arizona State)
Best Punt Average:
47.8, Arizona State
Most Kickoff Returns:
7, Stanford, California, Washington
ongest TD Pass:
63 yards, Kurt Lasher to Kevin Snyder
State & Iowa
(Arizona State)
Yards:
158, Oregon & Stanford
ongest Pass, No TD:
66 yards, Danan Hughes to Nick Bell
Most Punt Returns:
8, San Jose State
(Iowa)
Yards:
57, Stanford
lost Total Offense Att.:
54, Tommy Maddox (UCLA) & Drew
Bledsoe (Washington St.)
lost Yards Total Offense:
256, Bill Musgrave (Oregon)
lost TDs:
2, S. Canley (SJS), Darian Hagan (CU),
Nick Bell & Matt Rodgers (Iowa)
lost Rushing TDs:
2, S. Canley (SJS), Darian Hagan (CU),
Nick Bell & Matt Rodgers (Iowa)
lost TD Receptions:
1, by seven individuals
lost Punt Returns:
8, Eddie Thomas (San Jose State)
fost Punt Return Yards:
57, Glyn Milburn (Stanford)
ongest TD Punt Return:
57, Glyn Milburn (Stanford)
ongest Return, No Score:
22, Scott Lockwood (USC)
fost Kickoff Returns:
5, Phillippi Sparks (ASU), Glyn Milburn
(Stan.) & Michael Bates (Ariz.)
Most Kickoff Return Yards:
132 (4 returns), Sean Burwell (Oregon)
longest TD Kickoff Return:
None
longest Return, No Score:
41, Jimmy Young (Purdue)
Most Interceptions:
2, Deon Figures (Colorado)
Most Interception Return Yards:
22, Freddie Smith (San Jose State)
longest TD Interception Return:
None
longest Int. Return, No. Score:
22, Freddie Smith (San Jose State)
Most Punts:
11, Eric Negrey (San Jose State)
Most Yards Punting:
425, Eric Negrey (San Jose State)
Longest Punt:
63, Brad Williams (Arizona State)
Most Field Goals Att.:
2, By five individuals (Purdue,
Colorado, Oregon, UCLA, Washington
St.)
Most Field Goals Made:
2, Jim Harper (Colorado) & Brad
Daluiso (UCLA)
Most Consecutive FGs Made:
2, Jim Harper (Colorado) & Brad
Daluiso (UCLA)
Longest Field Goal:
46 yards, Greg McCallum (Oregon) &
Jason Hanson (Washington State)
Russell White
125
W
1990 Review
1990 Washington Offensive Starters
SPLIT
WEAK
WEAK
STRONG
STRONG
TIGHT
END
TACKLE
GUARD
CENTER
GUARD
TACKLE
END
San Jose St.
Bailey
Cooney (1)
Schulberg
Cunningham
Kirkland
Malamala
Pierce
Purdue
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Schulberg
Cunningham
Kirkland
Malamala
Kilpack
USC
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Kennedy
Cunningham
Kirkland
Malamala
Kilpack
Colorado
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Kennedy
Cunningham
Kirkland
Malamala
Pierce
ASU
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Kennedy
Cunningham
Kirkland
Malamala
Kilpack (3)
Oregon
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Kennedy (4)
Cunningham
Kirkland
Malamala
Pierce
Stanford
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Schulberg
Cunningham
Kirkland
Kennedy
Pierce
Cal
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Schulberg
Cunningham
Kirkland
Kennedy
Pierce
Arizona
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Schulberg
Cunningham
Kirkland
Kennedy
Pierce
UCLA
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Schulberg
Cunningham
Kirkland
Kennedy (4)
Pierce
WSU
Bailey
Pahukoa, J.
Schulberg
Cunningham
Kirkland
Malamala
Pierce
Iowa
Bailey (12)
Pahukoa, J. (11)
Schulberg (8)
Cunningham (12)
Kirkland (12)
Malamala (8)
Pierce (9)
QUARTERBACK
FULLBACK
TAILBACK
FLANKER
Punter
Placekicker
San Jose St.
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Dodd
Purdue
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Dodd
USC
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Dodd
Colorado
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Dodd
ASU
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Dodd
Oregon
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Dodd
Stanford
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Dodd (7)
Cal
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Hanson
Arizona
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Hanson
UCLA
Brunell
Turner
Lewis
McKay
Wyles
Hanson
WSU
Brunell
Turner
Bryant (1)
McKay
Wyles
Hanson
Iowa
Brunell (12)
Turner (12)
Lewis (11)
McKay (12)
Wyles (12)
Hanson (5)
The Huskies opened the Rose Bowl in a two tight end alignment with Mark Kilpack in the game.
(Number of starts in parentheses)
Returnees in bold
1990 Washington Defensive Starters
MIDDLE
STRONG
LEFT
D. TACKLE
GUARD
D. END
OLB
ILB
RIGHT ILB
WEAK OLB
San Jose St.
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Fields
Purdue
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Fields (2)
USC
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
Colorado
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
ASU
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
Oregon
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
Stanford
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
Cal
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
Arizona
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
UCLA
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
WSU
Emtman
Cook
Richardson
Jones
Hoffmann
Fraley
Collins
Iowa
Emtman (12)
Cook (12)
Richardson (12)
Jones (12)
Hoffmann (12)
Fraley (12)
Collins (10)
FREE
LEFT CB
RIGHT CB
ROVER
SAFETY
San Jose State
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Pahukoa
Purdue
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Smith
USC
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Smith
Colorado
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Smith
ASU
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Smith
Oregon
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Smith
Stanford
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Smith
Cal
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Smith
Arizona
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Smith
UCLA
Mincy
Hall
Briscoe
Smith
WSU
Mincy
Doctor (1)
Briscoe
Pahukoa (2)
Iowa
Mincy (12)
Hall (11)
Briscoe (12)
Smith (10)
126
1990 Review
W
990 Player Awards
FF ASELIN, Freshman, Guard
LINCOLN KENNEDY, Sophomore, Guard
Brian Stapp Most Inspirational Non-Letterman
Second Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
ARIO BAILEY, Junior, Split End
DEAN KIRKLAND, Junior, Guard
Honorable Mention All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
First Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
Metropolitan Federal Savings Player of the Game (Colorado)
Team Co-Captain
Texaco Star Performer (Colorado)
Hula Bowl
RIC BRISCOE, Senior, Rover
UPI All-American Team (Honorable Mention)
Second Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
GREG LEWIS, Senior, Tailback
Pac-10 Player of the Week (Oregon)
First Team All-America (Walter Camp Football Foundation, The
Team Co-Captain
Sporting News)
ABC/Chevrolet Player of the Game (UCLA)
Doak Walker Award (The National Running Back Award)
Texaco Star Performer (UCLA)
Second Team All-America (AP, UPI, Football News)
UPI All-American Team (Honorable Mention)
Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year (Coaches)
ARK BRUNELL, Sophomore, Quarterback
First Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
Second Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
1990 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Star of the Year
1991 Rose Bowl Outstanding Player
Columbus (Ohio) Touchdown Club Player of the Year
Metropolitan Federal Savings Player of the Game (USC, Oregon)
Pop Warner Award (West Coast MVP)
KIRO Player of the Year (media vote)
ENO BRYANT, Sophomore, Tailback/Return Specialist
Husky/Tyee Club Player of the Year
First Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
KOMO Back/Receiver of the Year (media vote)
Metropolitan Federal Savings Player of the Game (ASU, UCLA)
Guy Flaherty Award-Most Inspirational (team vote)
Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week (Arizona, ASU)
Team Co-Captain
RETT COLLINS, Junior, Linebacker
Pac-10 Player of the Week (Southern Cal, California)
Second Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
Metropolitan Federal Savings Player of the Game (San Jose St., ASU,
DHN COOK, Senior, Middle Guard
California)
Honorable Mention All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
Hula Bowl, Japan Bowl
John P. Angel Award-Top Defensive Lineman
SIUPELI MALAMALA, Junior, Tackle
Japan Bowl
Honorable Mention All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
D CUNNINGHAM, Junior, Center
ORLANDO McKAY, Junior, Flanker
Honorable Mention All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
First Team Pac-10 All-Academic Team
Honda National Scholar-Athlete of the Week (Purdue Week)
CHARLES MINCY, Senior, Cornerback
CoSIDA/GTE All-District VIII & 2nd Team Academic All-America
First Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
First Team Pac-10 All-Academic Team
ABC/Chevrolet Player of the Game (Rose Bowl)
ARK DeGROSS, Senior, Fullback
KING-TV Most Improved Player (media vote)
101 Club Scholarship
East-West Shrine game
Pac-10 All-Academic honorable mention
JIM NEVELLE, Freshman, Center
TEVE EMTMAN, Sophomore, Defensive Tackle
Pac-10 All-Academic Team honorable mention
Second Team All-America (AP, The Sporting News)
JEFF PAHUKOA, Senior, Tackle
Morris Trophy Winner (Pac-10 Defensive Lineman of the Year)
Third Team All-America (Associated Press)
Pac-10 co-Defensive Player of the Year (Coaches)
First Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
First Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
John P. Angel Award-Top Offensive Lineman
L. Wait Rising-Husky Lineman of the Year
East-West Shrine Game, Japan Bowl, Hula Bowl
Texaco Star Performer (Arizona)
UPI All-American Team (Honorable Mention)
UPI All-American Team (Honorable Mention)
AARON PIERCE, Junior, Tight End
CHICO FRALEY, Junior, Inside Linebacker
Honorable Mention All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
Second Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
Earle T. Glant "Tough Husky" Award
Pac-10 Player of the Week (Arizona)
Metropolitan Federal Savings Player of the Game (Arizona)
DAVID REINER, Sophomore, Center
Pac-10 All-Academic Team honorable mention
ABC/Chevrolet Player of the Game (Arizona)
TRAVIS RICHARDSON, Senior, Defensive End
FRANK GARCIA, Freshman, Center
First Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
Mark Drennan Most Inspirational JV Player
Team Co-Captain
DANA HALL, Junior, Cornerback
Metropolitan Federal Savings Player of the Game (Purdue, WSU)
Honorable Mention All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
Texaco Star Performer (WSU)
DAVE HOFFMANN, Sophomore, Inside Linebacker
Hula Bowl
Honorable Mention All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
JAY WELLS, Freshman, Fullback
ABC/Chevrolet Player of the Game (Stanford)
Bob Jarvis Inspirational Walk-On
Chuck Niemi "Big Hit" Award
STEPHEN WITSOE, Freshman, Tailback
DONALD JONES, Junior, Outside Linebacker
Pac-10 All-Academic Team honorable mention
First Team All-Pac-10 (Coaches)
Metropolitan Federal Savings Player of the Game (Stanford)
127
W
1990 Review
1990 Pacific-10 Conference Report
Final 1990 Pacific-10 Conference Standings
Conference
OVERALL
TEAM
WON
LOST
TIES
PCT
PTS
OPP
WON
LOST
TIES
PCT
PTS
OPP.
WASHINGTON
7
1
0
.875
340
99
10
2
0
.833
440
184
USC
5
2
1
.638
238
191
8
4
1
.654
348
274
Oregon
4
3
0
.571
129
122
8
4
0
.667
341
221
California
4
3
1
.563
221
228
7
4
1
.625
325
341
Arizona
5
4
0
.556
214
257
7
5
0
.583
267
311
UCLA
4
4
0
.500
231
229
5
6
0
.455
305
332
Stanford
4
4
0
.500
187
203
5
6
0
.455
263
284
Arizona State
2
5
0
.286
153
169
4
7
0
.364
272
295
Washington State
2
6
0
.250
216
294
3
8
0
.273
286
381
Oregon State
1
6
0
.143
98
235
1
10
0
.091
152
371
1990 Pacific-10 Conference Individual Statistics
Husky Players in bold.
Total Offense
NAME, SCHOOL
G
CAR
YDS
ATT
YDS
PLAYS
YDS
Y/PLAY
TDR°
YDS/G
1. Tommy Maddox, UCLA
11
90
148
327
2682
417
2830
68
19
257.3
2. Jason Palumois, STAN
11
65
-136
341
2579
406
2443
60
14
222.1
3. Bill Musgrave, ORE
10
36
-74
301
2219
337
2145
64
17
214.5
4. Paul Justin, ASU
9
30
-71
253
1876
283
1805
64
12
200.6
5. Mark Brunell, WASH
11
105
444
253
1732
358
2176
61
24
197.8
6. Todd Marinovich, USC
11
55
-193
292
2249
347
2056
59
15
186.9
7. Mike Pawlawski, CAL
11
54
-68
299
2069
353
2001
57
20
181.9
8. Greg Lewis, WASH
10
229
1279
0
-0
229
1279
56
8
127.9
9. Mazio Royster, USC
10
203
1043
0
0
203
1043
51
8
104.3
10. Russell White, CAL
11
180
1000
2
14
182
1014
56
13
92.2
"Touchdowns scored by rushing and passing only
Passing
(min. 5 attempts per game)
NAME, SCHOOL
G
PA
PC
HI
PCT
YDS
YDS/ATT
TD
YDS/G
RATING
1. Jason Palumbis, STAN
11
341
234
9
68.6
2579
7.6
11
234.5
137.5
2. Tommy Maddox, UCLA
11
327
182
14
55.7
2682
8.2
17
243.8
133.1
3. Todd Marinovich, USC
11
292
178
9
61.0
2249
7.7
12
204.5
133.1
4. Mike Pawlawski, CAL
11
299
179
13
59.9
2069
6.9
17
188.1
128.1
5. Bill Musgrave, ORE
10
301
173
12
-57.5
2219
7.4
14
221.9
126.8
6. Ronald Veal, ARIZ
11
66
36
1
54.5
442
6.7
3
40.2
122.8
7. Paul Justin, ASU
9
253
131
10
51.8
1876
7.4
10
208.4
119.2
8. Mark Brunell, WASH
11
253
118
8
46.6
1732
6.8
14
157.5
116.1
9. George Malauulu, ARIZ
11
101
46
5
45.5
726
7.2
1
66.0
99.3
10. Fred Schweer, OSU
9
73
28
3
38 4
448
6.1
2
498
90.7
Rushing
NAME, SCHOOL
G
CAR
YDS
AVG
TD
YDS/G
1. Greg Lewis, WASH
10
229
1279
5.6
8
127.9
2. Mazio Royster, USC
10
203
1043
5.1
8
104.3
3. Anthony Wallace, CAL
11
220
1002
4.6
5
91.1
4. Russell White, CAL
11
180
1000
5.6
11
90.9
5. Sean Burwell, ORE
11
211
949
4.5
8
86.3
6. Leonard Russell, ASU
11
174
810
4.7
9
73.6
7. Brian Brown, UCLA
11
154
798
5.2
8
72.5
8. S. Wright-Fair, WSU
11
162
739
4.6
4
67.2
9. Glyn Milburn, STAN
11
152
729
4.8
2
66.3
10. Kelvin Fisher, ASU
11
134
677
5.1
6
61.5
128
1990 Review
W
990 Pacific-10 Conference Report
Purpose Running
NAME, SCHOOL
G
RUSH
REC
PR
KOR
YDS
YDS/G
Glyn Milburn, STAN
11
729
632
267
594
2222
202.0
Greg Lewis, WASH
10
1279
345
0
0
1624
162.4
Russell White, CAL
11
1000
127
0
629
1756
159.6
Dwayne Owens, OSU
9
364
49
0
1014
1427
158.6
Sean Burwell, ORE
11
949
286
0
304
1539
139.9
Brian Brown, UCLA
11
798
104
0
456
1358
123.5
Mazio Royster, USC
10
1043
183
0
0
1226
122.6
Beno Bryant, WASH
11
386
70
525
192
1173
106.6
Anthony Wallace, CAL
11
1002
64
0
69
1135
103.2
S. Wright-Fair, WSU
11
739
349
0
0
1088
98.9
eceiving
NAME, SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
CT/G
Ed McCaffrey, STAN
10
61
917
15.0
8
6.1
2. Glyn Milburn, STAN
11
64
632
9.9
2
5.8
3. Gary Wellman, USC
12
63
996
15.8
4
5.3
4. Phillip Bobo, WSU
11
51
758
14.9
6
4.6
5. Eric Guliford, ASU
11
48
837
17.4
4
4.4
6. Brian Treggs, CAL
11
45
564
12.5
6
4.1
7. Clarence Williams, WSU
11
43
627
14.6
3
3.9
S. Maurice Wilson, OSU
11
41
425
10.4
2
3.7
9. Reggie Moore, UCLA
11
40
643
16.1
3
3.6
0. Sean LaChapelle, UCLA
11
39
607
15.6
2
3.5
coring
NAME, SCHOOL
G
TD
XP
2XP
FG
PTS
PTS/G
1. Quin Rodriguez, USC
11
0
36
0
16
84
7.6
1. Tommy Vardell, STAN
11
14
0
0
0
84
7.6
1. Russell White, CAL
11
14
0
0
0
84
7.6
4. Jason Hanson, WSU
11
0
29
0
17
80
7.3
5. Gregg McCallum, ORE
11
0
34
0
14
76
6.9
6. Brad Daluiso, UCLA
11
0
32
0
13
71
6.5
7. Mark Brunell, WASH
11
11
0
2
0
70
6.4
8. John Hopkins, STAN
11
0
23
0
14
65
5.9
9. Robbie Keen, CAL
11
0
38
0
8
62
5.6
0. Ed McCaffrey, STAN
10
9
0
1
0
56
5.6
Field Goals
NAME, SCHOOL
G
FGA
FGM
PCT
FG/G
1. Jason Hanson, WSU
11
26
17
0.654
1.55
2. Quin Rodriguez, USC
11
20
16
0.800
1.50
3. Greg McCallum, ORE
11
17
14
0.824
1.27
3. John Hopkins, STAN
11
22
14
0.636
1.27
5. Brad Daluiso, UCLA
11
19
13
0.684
1.18
6. Mike Richey, ASU
11
14
11
0.786
1.00
7. Gary Coston, ARIZ
10
13
9
0.692
0.90
8. Robbie Keen, CAL
11
15
8
0.533
0.73
9. Mike Dodd, WASH
11
11
7
0.636
0.64
10. Jamie Burke, OSU
11
7
6
0.857
0.55
129
W
1990 Review
1990 Pacific-10 Conference Report
Punt Returns
Kickoff Returns
(min 1.2 returns per game)
(min 1.2 returns per game)
NAME, SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
TD
AVG
NAME, SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
TD
A
1. Beno Bryant, WASH
11
36
560
3
15.6
1. Russell White, CAL
11
24
629
1
2
2. Brian Brown, ORE
11
27
355
1
13.1
2. Glyn Milburn, STAN
11
24
594
0
2
3. Glyn Milburn, STAN
11
24
267
1
11.1
3. Dwayne Owens, OSU
9
41
1014
1
2
4. Darryl Lewis, ARIZ
11
22
220
0
10.0
4. Michael Bates, ARIZ
11
31
729
I
2
5. Michael McClellan, ORE
9
12
109
0
9.1
5. Shawn Wills, UCLA
11
14
310
0
2.
6. Phillip Bobo, WSU
11
18
136
0
7.6
6. Phillippi Sparks, ASU
11
22
472
0
2
7. Brian Treggs, CAL
11
22
111
0
5.0
7. Curtis Conway, USC
12
26
555
0
2
8. Anthony Prior, WSU
11
20
424
1
2
Receiving Yardage
9. Tony Salter, WSU
11
20
416
0
20
NAME, SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
YDS/G
10. Brian Brown, UCLA
11
22
456
0
20
1. Ed McCaffrey, STAN
10
61
917
15.0
8
91.7
2. Gary Wellman, USC
12
63
996
15.8
4
83.0
Tackles
3. Eric Guliford, ASU
11
48
837
17.4
4
76.1
NAME, SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
TD
A
4. Phillip Bobo, WSU
11
51
758
14.9
6
68.9
1. Nathan LaDuke, ASU
11
69
56
125
11
5. Reggie Moore, UCLA
11
40
643
16.1
3
58.5
2. Curt Newton, WSU
11
80
35
115
10
6. Glyn Milburn, STAN:
11
64
632
9.9
2
57.5
3. Brett Wallerstedt, ASU
11
80
29
109
9
7. Clarence Williams, WSU
11
43
627
14.6
3
57.0
4. Eric Castle, ORE
11
58
43
101
9
8. Mario Bailey, WASH
11
37
613
16.6
6
55.7
5. Joe Farwell, ORE
11
52
45
97
9. Sean LaChapelle, UCLA
11
39
607
15.6
2
55.2
6. Eric Turner, UCLA
11
62
31
93
8
10. Brian Treggs, CAL
11
45
564
12.5
6
51.3
7. Brent Huff, OSU
9
51
24
75
8
8. Castle Redmond, CAL
11
56
35
91
8
Interceptions
9. Rod Plummer, WSU
11
63
27
90
8
NAME, SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
TD
AVG
10. John Diggs, WSU
11
59
30
89
8
1. Darryl Lewis, ARIZ
11
7
192
2
0.64
2. Daryle Smith, ORE
11
6
13
0
0.55
Tackles for Loss
2. Eric Briscoe, WASH
11
6
5
0
0.55
(including QB sacks)
4. Eric Turner, UCLA
11
5
59
0
0.45
NAME, SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
5. Tommie Smith, WASH
10
4
89
0
0.40
1. Ron George, STAN
11
28
144
6. Nathan LaDuke, ASU
11
4
255
2
0.36
2. Marcus Woods, ORE
11
17
64
6. Chris Cannon, CAL
11
4
23
0
0.36
2. Travis Richardson, WASH
11
17
6. Todd Burden, ARIZ
11
4
15
0
0.36
4. Steve Emtman, WASH
11
16.5
9. Mike Salmon, USC
12
4
27
0
0.33
5. Dave Garnett, STAN
11
16
95
9. Roman Phifer, UCLA
9
3
13
0
0.33
5. Matt LaBounty, ORE
11
15
83
7. Rhett Hall, CAL
11
14.5
Punting
8. Reggie Johnson, ARIZ
11
14
91
(min. 3.6 punts per game)
9. Brett Collins, WASH
10
12
NAME, SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
AVG
10. Shante Carver, ASU
11
11
66
1. Jason Hanson, WSU
11
59
2679
45.41
2. Brad Williams, ASU
11
56
2422
43.25
Quarterback Sacks
3. Channing Wyles, WASH
11
66
2707
41.02
NAME, SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
4. Ron Dale, USC
12
58
2363
40.74
1. Reggie Johnson, ARIZ
11
11
85
5. Tommy Thompson, ORE
11
59
2400
40.68
2. Ron George, STAN
11
10
64
6. Robbie Keen, CAL
11
59
2366
40.10
2. Shante Carver, ASU
11
10
61
7. Courtney Keyler, UCLA
11
51
2044
40.08
2. Matt LaBounty, ORE
11
10
8. Paul Stonehouse, STAN
11
55
2136
38.84
5. Travis Richardson, WASH-
11
9
9. Tim Kollas, OSU
11
65
2407
37.03
6. Steve Emtman, WASH
11
8
6. Marcus Woods, ORE
11
8
8. Richard Maddox, ARIZ
11
7.5
54
9. Craig Hartsuyker, USC
12
7
53
10. Rhett Hall, CAL
11
7
130
1990 Review
W
90 Pacific-10 Conference Report
990 Pacific-10 Conference Team Statistics
tal Offense
Passing Offense
SCHOOL
G
PLAYS
YDS
AVG
TD°
Y/GAME
SCHOOL
G
PA
PC
HI
PCT
YDS
TD YDS/G
Washington
11
779
4499
5.8
47
409.0
1. UCLA
11
349
192
16
55.0
2766
17
251.5
California
11
844
4363
5.2
38
396.6
2. Stanford
11
366
244
11
66.7
2763
11
251.2
Southern California
12
879
4736
5.4
35
394.7
3. Washington State
11
390
205
12
52.6
2750
16
250.0
UCLA
11
763
4332
5.7
38
393.8
4. Oregon
11
374
207
17
55.3
2522
15
229.3
Stanford
11
817
4219
5.2
31
383.5
5. Arizona State
11
354
174
19
49.2
2412
11
219.3
Oregon
11
848
4189
4.9
34
380.8
6. Southern California
12
333
207
10
62.2
2582
15
215.2
Arizona State
11
773
3991
5.2
31
362.8
7. California
11
315
185
13
58.7
2128
18
193.5
Washington State
11
743
3744
5.0
30
340.4
8. Washington
11
260
123
8
47.3
1784
15
162.2
Arizona
11
741
3345
4.5
30
304.1
9. Oregon State
11
312
150
15
48.1
1584
7
144.0
Oregon State
11
742
2742
3.7
19
249.3
10. Arizona
11
168
82
6
48.8
1168
4.
106.2
buchdowns scored by rushing and passing only
Passing Defense
otal Defense
SCHOOL
G
PA
PC
HI
PCT
YDS
TD YDS/G
SCHOOL
G
PLAYS
YDS
AVG
TD°
Y/GAME
1. Washington
11
361
176
20
48.8
2446
6
100.1
Washington
11
753
3181
4.2
16
289.2
2. UCLA
11
277
141
14
50.9
1852
10
108.9
Southern California
12
793
3962
5.0
32
330.2
3. Oregon
11
367
193
19
52.6
2483
13
110.8
Oregon
11
746
3651
4.9
23
331.9
4. Arizona
11
359
184
18
51.3
2525
16
115.0
Stanford
11
732
4020
5.5
33
365.5
5. Southern California
12
371
188
17
0.7
2617
17
115.9
UCLA
11
807
4026
5.0
37
366.0
6. Arizona State
11
349
206
12
59.0
2479
15
126.0
Arizona
11
783
4069
5.2
33
369.9
7. California
11
355
198
9
55.8
2587
16
126.8
Oregon State
11
786
4309
5.5
43
391.7
8. Oregon State
11
222
120
6
54.1
1614
16
133.5
8. Arizona State
11
849
4461
5.3
33
405.5
9. Stanford
11
290
159
9
54.8
2295
17
134.4
9. California
11
817
4713
5.8
39
428.5
10. Washington State
11
319
189
7
59.2
2651
20
145.4
D. Washington State
11
868
4856
5.6
49
441.5
'ouchdowns scored by rushing and passing only
Scoring Offense
SCHOOL
G
PTS
AVG
ushing Offense
1. Washington
11
394
35.8
SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
YDS/G
2. Oregon
11
310
28.2
Washington
11
519
2715
5.2
32
246.8
3. California
11
308
28.0
2. California
11
529
2235
4.2
20
203.2
4. UCLA
11
305
27.7
3. Arizona
11
573
2177
3.8
26
197.9
5. Southern California
12
332
27.7
4. Southern California
12
546
2154
3.9
20
179.5
6. Washington State
11
286
26.0
5. Oregon
11
474
1667
3.5
19
151.5
7. Arizona State
11
272
24.7
6. Arizona State
11
419
1579
3.8
20
143.5
8. Arizona
11
267
24.3
7. UCLA
11
414
1566
3.8
21
142.4
9. Stanford
11
263
23.9
8. Stanford
11
451
1456
3.2
20
132.4
10. Oregon State
11
152
13.8
9. Oregon State
11
430
1158
2.7
12
105.3
0. Washington State
11
353
994
2.8
14
90.4
Scoring Defense
SCHOOL
G
PTS
AVG
Rushing Defense
1. Washington
11
150
13.6
SCHOOL
G
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
YDS/G
2. Oregon
11
189
17.2
1. Washington
11
392
735
1.9
10
66.8
3. Southern California
12
257
21.4
2. Oregon
11
379
1168
3.1
10
106.2
4. Arizona
11
283
25.7
3. Southern California
12
422
1345
3.2
15
112.1
5. Stanford
11
284
25.8
4. Arizona
11
424
1544
3.6
17
140.4
6. Arizona State
11
294
26.7
5. Stanford
11
442
1725
3.9
16
156.8
7. California
11
326
29.6
6. Arizona State
11
500
1982
4.0
18
180.2
8. UCLA
11
332
30.2
7. California
11
462
2126
4.6
23
193.3
9. Oregon State
11
371
33.7
8. UCLA
11
530
2174
4.1
27
197.6
10. Washington State
11
381
34.6
9. Washington State
11
549
2205
4.0
29
200.5
0. Oregon State
11
564
2695
4.8
27
245.0
131
W
1990 Review
1990 Pacific-10 Conference Report
First Downs
Net Punting
SCHOOL
RUSH
PASS
PEN
TOTAL
PT
RET
N
1. UCLA
92
132
13
237
SCHOOL
NO
AVG
YDS
A
1. Arizona State
105
118
14
237
1. Washington State
60
44.8
344
3
3. Southern California
115
124
19
258
2. Oregon
60
40.5
165
3
4. California
118
97
15
230
3. California
59
40.1
163
3
5. Oregon
96
112
21
229
4. UCLA
52
39.5
146
3
6. Stanford
98
118
9
225
5. Southern California
52
40.5
236
3
7. Washington
129
77
17
223
6. Washington
69
39.8
345
3.
8. Washington State
69
112
16
197
7. Arizona State
46
42.8
371
3
9. Oregon State
92
73
13
178
8. Stanford
56
38.1
247
3,
10. Arizona
120
49
7
176
9. Arizona
55
35.3
143
39
10. Oregon State
74
35.0
296
31
Turnover Margin
FUM
FUM
HAD
Third Down Efficiency
SCHOOL
REC
INT
LST
INT
DIFF
SCHOOL
MADE
1. Washington
ATT
17
20
PCT
6
8
+23
1. Southern California
83
2. Arizona
177
10
46.9
18
11
6
+11
2. Stanford
75
3. Southern California
169
12
44.4
17
8
10
+11
3. California
74
171
4. Oregon
6
43.3
19
10
16
-1
4. Arizona
66
5. UCLA
163
8
40.5
14
9
16
-3
6. Washington State
5. Oregon
69
173
10
39.9
7
9
12
-4
7. Stanford
6. Washington
65
164
15
39.6
9
18
11
-5
7. UCLA
8. California
59
149
12
39.6
9
16
13
-8
8. Arizona State
57
9. Arizona State
151
8
37.7
12
11
19
-10
9. Oregon State
62
10. Oregon State
167
10
6
37.1
13
15
-12
10. Washington State
52
158
32.9
Kickoff Returns
Team Sacks
SCHOOL
NO
YDS
TD
AVG
1. Oregon State
58
1442
1
24.9
ALLOWED
SCHOOL
NO
YDS
NO
2. Oregon
YD
35
834
1
23.8
1. Washington
52
398
15
3. Arizona
42
939
1
22.4
2. Oregon
39
294
4. Stanford
25
18
41
878
0
21.4
3. Arizona
33
240
29
5. California
19
49
1030
I
21.0
4. Southern California
35
212
32
6. Arizona State
24
35
716
0
20.5
5. Stanford
31
210
40
7. Washington State
23
46
905
1
19.7
6. Washington State
30
194
47
8. Southern California
35
43
846
0
19.7
6. California
30
0
19
9. UCLA
45
871
0
19.4
8. Arizona State
24
157
26
20
10. Washington
24
415
0
17.3
9. UCLA
21
33
Punt Returns
10. Oregon State
13
100
47
35
SCHOOL
NO
YDS
TD
AVG
Penalties
1. Washington
39
583
3
14.9
SCHOOL
PEN
YDS
2. Southern California
AVG
25
333
2
13.3
1. Oregon
39
337
30.6
3. Oregon
39
464
1
11.9
2. UCLA
427
38.8
4. Stanford
24
267
1
11.1
3. Stanford
60
522
47.5
5. Arizona
24
250
0
10.4
4. Washington
62
537
48.8
6. Arizona State
20
201
1
10.1
5. Arizona
70
567
51.5
7. Washington State
19
156
0
8.2
6. Arizona State
74
651
59.2
8. Oregon State
14
97
0
6.9
7. California
84
709
64.5
9. UCLA
18
110
0
6.1
8. Southern California
87
798
66.5
10. California
24
133
0
5.5
9. Washington State
80
735
66.8
10. Oregon State
80
746
67.8
132
1990 Review
W
90 Pacific-10 Conference Report
990 Pacific-10 All-Conference Football Team
rst Team Offense
Second Team Offense
Honorable Mention
Bill Musgrave, Sr., Oregon
QB Mark Brunell, So., Washington
Arizona-Zeno Alexander, OLB, Sr.; Michael Bates,
Greg Lewis, Sr., Washington
RB Anthony Wallace, Sr., California
RS, So.; Todd Burden, CB, Sr.; Darren Case, ILB,
Glyn Milburn, So., Stanford
RB Leonard Russell, Jr., Arizona State
Sr.; Jeff Hammerschmidt, FS, Sr.; Ronald Veal, QB,
Russell White, So., California
Sr.
Ed McCaffrey, Sr., Stanford
WR Brian Treggs, Jr., California
Arizona State-Eric Guliford, SE, So.; Paul Justin,
Gary Wellman, Sr., USC
FL Scott Miller, Sr., UCLA
QB, Sr., Ryan McReynolds, TE, Sr.; Mike Richey,
Clarence "Butch" Williams, So., Wash. St.
TE Jeff Thomason, Jr., Oregon
PK, So.; Brad Williams, P, Sr.; Darren Woodson,
Mark Tucker, Sr., USC
OL Lincoln Kennedy, So., Washington
OLB, Jr.
Pat Harlow, Sr., USC
OL James Richards, Sr., California
Bob Whitfield, So., Stanford
OL Ernie Rogers, Sr., California
California-Joel Dickson, DT, Sr.; Steve Gordon,
Jeff Pahukoa, Sr., Washington
OL Rick Warren, Jr., Arizona
C, Jr.; John Hardy, CB, Sr.; DeWayne Odom, OLB,
Dean Kirkland, Sr., Washington
OL Troy Auzenne, Jr., California
Sr.; Mike Pawlawski, QB, Jr.; Castle Redmond, ILB,
OL Mark Hayes, Sr., Arizona State
Sr.
Jason Hanson, Jr., Washington State
PK Gregg McCallum, Jr., Oregon
Oregon-Scot Boatwright, C, Sr.; Sean Burwell,
TB, Fr.; Joe Farwell, ILB, So.; Todd Kaanapu, OT,
irst Team Defense
Second Team Defense
Sr.; Joe Reitzug, SE, Sr.; Daryle Smith, CB, Jr.
L Steve Emtman, So., Washington
DL Matt LaBounty, Jr., Oregon
Oregon State-Dwayne Owens, TB/RS, Jr.; Todd
Don Gibson, Sr., USC
DL Reggie Johnson, Sr., Arizona
Sahfeld, MLB, Jr.; Maurice Wilson, WR, So.
Esera Tuaolo, Sr., Oregon State
DL Rhett Hall, Sr., California
L Travis Richardson, Sr., Washington
DL Marcus Woods, Jr., Oregon
Stanford-Dave Garnett, ILB, So.; Ron George,
Scott Ross, Sr., USC
LB Brett Collins, Jr., Washington
OLB, So.; John Hopkins, PK, Sr.; Jason Palumbis,
3 Roman Phifer, Sr., UCLA
LB Chico Fraley, Jr., Washington
QB, Jr.; Tommy Vardell, FB, Jr.
B Peter Brantley, Sr., Oregon
LB Jono Tunney, Sr., Stanford
UCLA-Arnold Ale, ILB, So.; Brian Brown, TB, Sr.;
B Donald Jones, Jr., Washington
LB Kurt Barber, Jr., USC
Rocen Keeton, OLB, Sr.; Sean LaChapelle, SE, So.;
B Darryl Lewis, Sr., Arizona
CB Brent Huff, Jr., Oregon State
Dion Lambert, CB, Jr.; Tommy Maddox, QB, Fr.;
B Charles Mincy, Sr., Washington
CB Phillippi Sparks, Jr., Arizona State
Craig Novitsky, OT, Fr.
B Kevin Scott, Sr., Stanford
Eric Turner, Sr., UCLA
S
Eric Briscoe, Sr., Washington
Southern California-Ron Dale, P, Jr.; Derrick
Nathan LaDuke, Sr., Arizona State
S
Eric Castle, So., Oregon
Deese, OG, Jr.; Scott Lockwood, FB, Jr.; Michael
Tommy Thompson, Fr., Oregon
Moody, OT, Jr.; Stephon Pace, CB, So.; Quin
Jason Hanson, Jr., Washington State
P
S Beno Bryant, So., Washington
RS Glyn Milburn, So., Stanford
Rodriguez, PK, Sr.; Mazio Royster, TB, So.
Washington-Mario Bailey, SE, Jr.; John Cook,
FFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Greg Lewis, TB, Sr., Washington
MG, Sr.; Ed Cunningham, C, Jr.; Dana Hall,
CB, Jr.; Dave Hoffman, OLB, So.; Siupeli
O-DEFENSIVE PLAYERS OF THE YEAR: Steve Emtman, DT, So., Washington
Malamala, OT, Jr.; Aaron Pierce, TE, Jr.
Darryl Lewis, CB, Sr., Arizona
Washington State-Phillip Bobo, WR, Fr.; Bob
AC-10 CO-COACHES OF THE YEAR: Don James, Washington
Garman, OT, Jr.; Curt Newton, MLB, Sr.; Mike
Bruce Snyder, California
Smith, OG, Sr.; Kirk Westerfield, DE, Jr.
1990 Pacific-10 Conference Players of the Week
Offense
Defense
Special Teams
Sept. 8
Bill Musgrave, QB, ORE
Sept. 8
Richard Maddox, DT, ARIZ
Sept. 8
Robbie Keen, P, CAL
Sept. 15
Tommy Maddox, QB, UCLA
Sept. 15
Nathan LaDuke, FS, ASU
Sept. 15
Michael McClellan, KR, ORE
Sept. 22
Greg Lewis, TB, WASH
Sept. 22
Darryl Lewis, CB, ARIZ
Sept. 22
Jason Hanson, PK/P, WSU
Sept. 29
Ricky Ervins, TB, USC
Sept. 29
Daryle Smith, CB, ORE
Sept. 29
Willie McGinest, OLB, USC
Oct. 6
Tommy Vardell, FB, STAN
Oct. 6
Darryl Lewis, CB, ARIZ
Scott Miller, PR/WR, UCLA
Oct. 13
Todd Marinovich, QB, USC
Oct. 13
Eric Briscoe, SS, WASH
Oct. 6
Beno Bryant, PR, WASH
Oct. 20
Anthony Wallace, TB, CAL
Oct. 20
Darryl Lewis, CB, ARIZ
Oct. 13
Dwayne Owens, KR, OSU
Oct. 27
Greg Lewis, TB, WASH
Oct. 27
Eric Castle, FS, ORE
Oct. 20
Brian Brown, PR, ORE
Nov. 3
Mike Pawlawski, QB, CAL
Nov. 3
Chico Fraley, WASH
Oct. 27
Michael Bates, KR, ARIZ
Nov. 10
Paul Justin, QB, ASU
Nov. 10
Ron George, OLB, STAN
Nov. 3
Beno Bryant, PR, WASH
Nov. 17
Glyn Milburn, HB, STAN
Nov. 17
Stephon Pace, FS, USC
Nov. 10
Brad Daluiso, PK, UCLA
Nov. 17
John Hopkins, PK, STAN
133
W
1990 Review
1990 Pacific-10 Conference Report
1990 Pacific-10 All-Academic Football Team
Offense
Honorable Mention
POS PLAYER, SCHOOL
YR
GPA
MAJOR
Arizona-David Lockhart, WR, Jr.; Howard
QB Bill Musgrave, Oregon
Sr.
3.46
Finance
Powers, OLB, Sr.
FB James Jones, Oregon State
So.
3.90
English
HB Glyn Milburn, Stanford
Arizona State-Kurt Lasher, QB, So.; Larry
So.
3.00
Industrial Engineering
Marmie, DB, Jr., So.; Ryan McReynolds, TE, Sr.;
FL Orlando McKay, Washington
Jr.
3.01
Psychology
Bret Powers, QB, Fr.
SE Ed McCaffrey, Stanford
Sr.
3.40
Economics/Sociology
TE Brent Woodall, California
Jr.
3.14
Business Administration
Oregon-Doug Douglass, OLB, So.; Mike Keeter
C Ed Cunningham, Washington
Jr.
3.40
Business Administration
OG, Jr.
OG Bud Bowie, Oregon
Jr.
3.57
Biology
Oregon State-Dan Blus, OG, Jr.; Ed Browning,
OG Chuck Gillingham, Stanford
Sr.
3.00
Political Science
QB, Jr.; David Miller, C, Sr.
OT Darran Baird, Stanford
Sr.
3.30
Economics
OT John Fina, Arizona
Stanford-Cory Booker, TE, Jr.; Kevin Puk, ILB,
Jr.
3.23
Psychology
PK Jason Hanson, Washington State
So.; Tommy Vardell, FB, Jr.; Jon Volpe, RB, Sr.;
Jr.
3.68
Pre-Medicine
Tom Williams, ILB, So.
Defense
UCLA-Rick Daly, TE, So.; Derek Stevens, OT, F
USC-Shane Foley, QB, Sr.
POS PLAYER, SCHOOL
YR
GPA
MAJOR
Washington-Mark DeGross, FB, Sr.; Kevin
DE Russell Miller, Washington State
Sr.
3.66
English
Kearney, QB, So.; Jim Neville, C, Fr.; Kory O'Brier
DE Lee Tilleman, Washington State
Jr.
3.55
Business Administration
SE, Fr.; David Reiner, C, So.; Stephen Witsoe, TB
DT Brian Kelly, UCLA
Jr.
3.14
Economics
Fr.
DT Scott Palmbush, Stanford
Sr.
3.30
Economics
OLB Andy Connor, Oregon
Jr.
3.55
Washington State-Chad Cushing, TE, Jr.
Spanish
OLB Dave Garnett, Stanford
So.
3.10
Undeclared
ILB Drew Metcalf, Arizona State
So.
3.40
Finance
ILB Jono Tunney, Stanford
Sr.
3.00
Economics/Political Science
DB Adam Brass, Arizona State
So.
3.40
Finance
DB Carlton Gray, UCLA
So.
3.30
Communications Studies
DB Ron Hawkins, Washington State
Jr.
3.89
Accounting & Finance
DB Shane Pahukoa, Washington
Fr.
3.04
Pre-Arts & Sciences
P Paul Stonehouse, Stanford
So.
3.00
Political Science
79
Ed Cunningham
Shane Pahukoa
Orlando McKay
134
HUSKIES AND THE BOWLS
W
W
Huskies and the Bowls
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1924
ROSES
Washington 14, Navy 14
VERIS MEN
STAR-NEWS
Washington missed a field goal "by a scant
Washington 7-yard line. Three line plung
three feet" as time expired and the Huskies
netted no gain, but on fourth down t]
PASADENA
settled for a 14-14 tie with the heavily fa-
Middies used the basketball toss fro
vored Midshipmen of the Naval Academy
McKee to Cullen around right end for t]
in the 1924 Rose Bowl, played before
touchdown. The extra point made it 14-7
40,000 fans.
the half.
The Huskies, coached to a 10-1 record
The game settled into a defensive strugg
coming into the game by third-year coach
in the third quarter. Washington was un
40,000 at the Rose Bowl
Enoch Bagshaw, had to fight back twice,
able to advance the ball against Navy an
falling behind 7-0 early and later trailing
the Middies marched the field but cou
14-7 to the well-drilled Middies of Annapo-
not score, thwarted by Husky cente
lis. The Naval Academy (5-1-1) used a so-
Chalmers Walter's interception of an errar
phisticated passing attack, a style not seen
McKee pass inside the Husky 20-yard lin
before on the West Coast, to confuse the
early in the quarter. Navy also missed a fiel
Husky defense in the first half. Navy com-
goal as time expired in the period.
pleted all 11 passes it attempted in the first
half, and hit 14 in a row before the Huskies
Midway through the fourth period the Hus
managed to stop one. Navy completed 16-
kies got a break. Trapped deep in its OW
of-20 for the day.
end, Navy mis-snapped the ball in pur
formation, with the Huskies recovering th
Navy opened the scoring at the start of the
loose ball on the Navy 10-yard line.
second period on a 20-yard pass from quar-
terback Ira McKee to halfback Carl Cullen.
Two line plays netted the Huskies a loss
Navy dominated the first period with its
two yards and a third-down pass attemp
unorthodox passing offense, completing six
also failed, leaving the Dawgs with a fourth
tosses, but was unable to score before time
and-12 situation. Washington lined up
expired in the period. The Midshipmen
then had fullback Elmer Tesreau jump un
used a short, two-handed, basketball toss
to the line, and the end dropped back, leav
for the bulk of their passing attack.
ing the left guard Jimmy Bryan eligible to
catch a pass. Bryan delayed, then released
Washington answered on its next drive.
and gathered in Abel's pass, stumblin
Husky guard Jim Bryan trapped the Navy
across the goal line for the touchdown. The
kick at midfield. The Huskies tried the line
Sherman-booted extra point made it 14-14
for no gain, and then Husky quarterback
Fred Abel threw a 30-yard pass out of punt
Washington had one last chance to win, a.
formation to Kinsley Dubois on the right
the Huskies drove to the 25-yard line with
wing. Left halfback George Wilson took the
less than five minutes to play on a long pas:
next play off-tackle 14 yards for the Hus-
from Abel to Wilson. Washington's field
kies' first touchdown. The extra point by
goal attempt by Leonard Zeil from 24 yards
Lester Sherman made it 7-7.
out had the distance but curved left. Navy
took over on downs at the 20, and advanced
Final Rankings
After an exchange of punts, Navy com-
as far as midfield when the game ended.
pleted a 45-yard pass over center to the
None.
Score by Quarters
Scoring
NAVY
0
14
0
0
-
14
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
UW
0
7
0
7
I
14
2 NAVY-Cullen, 20-yard pass from McKee, (McKee Kick)
2 UW-Wilson, 14-yard run, (Sherman Kick)
Team Statistics
2 NAVY-Cullen, 7-yard pass from McKee, (McKee Kick)
UW
NAVY
4 UW-Bryan, 12-yard pass from Abel, (Sherman Kick)
9
First Downs
15
137
Net Yards Rushing
187
65
Net Yards Passing
175
202
Total Offense
362
3-8-2
Passing
16-20-2
9-33.0
Punting
5-33.8
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
4-20
Penalties
2-10
136
Huskies and the Bowls
W
TOURNAMENT of ROSES
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1926
Alabama 20, Washington 19
Coach Enoch Bagshaw's Huskies, 10-0-1
John Cole. The Huskies missed both PAT
PASADENA
CALIFORNIA
entering the Rose Bowl game, built a 12-0
kicks in the first half-something that
1926
lead, dominating the first half, only to lose
would have its greatest impact at game's
the lead and the game in 12 frantic minutes
end.
of the third quarter as Alabama, 9-0, scored
Trailing by 12 points after the half, "Pooley"
20 unanswered points. Husky All-American
Hubert took it upon himself to bring Ala-
halfback George Wilson, named the bowl's
bama back. From the Washington 42-yard
Most Valuable Player, was out of the game
line, he called his own number five con-
with an injury during the scoring binge as
5,000 at the Rose Bowl
secutive times, carrying the ball a total of 58
"Bama took a lead Washington could not
overcome in front of 45,000 fans at the Rose
yards for the Crimson Tide score. On its
next possession, Alabama returned the
Bowl.
kickoff to its own 21-yard line. Five line
The game is remembered as Wilson's great-
plunges carried the ball to the 39. Alabama
est, and is one that is rated a classic in Rose
then struck on a 61-yard bomb from Hubert
Bowl history.
to Johnny Mack Brown to give Alabama its
Damon Runyon covered the contest for the
first lead in the game, 14-12.
Universal Service and put it succinctly: "As
Alabama continued its attack after recover-
George Wilson went, so went Washington.
ing a Washington fumble at midfield. An-
If there ever was a one-man football team,
other long pass to Brown, this one from
George was it. When Wilson was on the
Grant Gillis for 40 yards, placed the Tide on
field it was a ball game."
the Washington 5-yard line. Brown carried
Wilson played 38 minutes and was out with
the ball the final 5 yards for a 20-12 Crim-
son Tide lead.
injury for 22. During the 38 he played,
Washington scored three touchdowns and
Wilson returned to lead the frantic Husky
gained 300 yards. Alabama threatened, but
comeback attempt in the final period. Ala-
failed to score. During the 22 minutes
bama was on the Husky 15-yard line, threat-
Wilson was on the sideline, Washington
ening to seal its victory, but the Tide could
gained a total of 14 yards and failed to score.
not convert a fourth-and-one situation.
Alabama, under coach Wallace Wade,
Washington took over on its own 12-yard
notched the three touchdowns and two
line.
conversions which won the game during
Wilson gained 17 yards on first down and
Wilson's defensive absence.
three plays later Paton advanced to the
Wilson took a lateral to the "Bama 1-yard
"Bama 43 around left end. After a short
line in the first quarter, and provided the
Wilson pass for a first down, the Husky left
blocking for right halfback Harold Paton's
halfback threw to quarterback George
1-yard plunge that gave the Huskies a 6-0
Guttormsen for a 27-yard touchdown.
lead.
The extra point by Gene Cook put Wash-
In the second quarter, a 36-yard Wilson run
ington within one, 20-19. Washington's
Final Rankings
paved the way for Washington's second
final threat ended with an interception at
Jone.
touchdown, a pass from Wilson to left end
midfield just before time expired.
core by Quarters
Scoring
JA
0
0
20
0
-
20
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
JW
6
6
0
7
-
19
1 UW-Paton, 1-yard run, (Kick Failed)
2 UW-Cole, 20-yard pass from Wilson, (Kick Failed)
Team Statistics
3 UA-Hubert, 8-yard run, (Buckler Kick)
UW
UA
3 UA-Brown, 61-yard pass from Hubert, (Buckler Kick)
13
First Downs
15
3 UA-Brown, 5-yard run, (Kick Failed)
220
Net Yards Rushing
220
4 UW-Guttormsen, 27-yard pass from Wilson, (Cook Kick)
94
Net Yards Passing
141
314
Total Offense
361
Individual Leaders
-16-2
Passing
4-14-3
Rushing-Wilson (UW) 15-139; Hubert (UA) 15-97; Brown (UA) 12-76; Paton (UW) 11-43.
6-37.5
Punting
5-40.8
1-1
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
1-15
Penalties
0-0
137
W
Huskies and the Bowls
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1937
Pittsburgh 21, Washington 0
The University of Pittsburgh, 7-1-1 under
20. The Pitt pass defense stiffened with t
coach John "Jock" Sutherland, dominated
return of the Golden Panther starters a
both sides of the ball, handing coach James
the Huskies ended up turning the ball ov
Phelan's 7-1-1 Huskies a 21-0 defeat in
on downs after a fourth-down pass fell
front of 87,196 fans at the Rose Bowl-then
complete.
NEW
YEARS
the largest crowd at a Rose Bowl game. Pitt
DAY
notched three touchdowns, one on a 71-
The half ended with Pittsburgh still holdi
a 7-0 lead.
yard interception return, and held the
Huskies to only 153 yards of total offense
The Huskies kicked off to open the secor
S
E
while racking up 300 yards themselves.
half, and the Panthers took over on the
W
After an exchange of punts in the first pe-
own 27. Washington got the break it ha
PASADENA
riod, Pitt took over on its own 45. On second
been looking for when Pitt fumbled
second down, with right end Frank Pete
D. 1937.
down, left halfback Marshall Goldberg took
a reverse to the Husky 35 and then halfback
recovering for the Dawgs. The Huski
Bob LaRue took the same play to the
squandered the opportunity, however,
25°
Washington 10. Fullback Frank Patrick
Haines threw a first-down interception.
scored on a 1-yard plunge three plays later
On the ensuing drive, Pitt drove 75 yar
for an early 7-0 Golden Panther lead.
for a touchdown. LaRue raced to the Hus
Pitt held the Huskies to end the first quarter
30 on a man-in-motion play through tl
87,196 at the Rose Bowl
leading 7-0, and Washington put together
middle of the line. From there the Panthe
one of its only sustained drives of the day to
simply stuck it to Washington, using fiv
begin the second period of play, against 10
plays into the center of the line, with tl
Pitt second-teamers. All-America left end
fullback, Patrick, plunging over from the
Bill Daddio was the only starter playing for
for his second touchdown.
the Panthers at the time.
Washington's final comeback attempt Wa
The Huskies drove as far as the Pitt 40 but
snuffed when Daddio intercepted a lef
the passing offense bogged down, forcing a
handed lateral attempt on the Husky 35 an
punt on fourth-and-four. Pitt promptly
returned it 71 yards for the clinchin
drove to the Husky 35, almost strictly on
touchdown. Pitt eventually ran out th
blasts through the middle of the line. On
clock on the Husky 4-yard line.
first down the Panthers tried to cross up the
Pittsburgh claimed the Rose Bowl title wit
Dawgs with a pass, but reserve halfback
a display of power football. The Panther
Frank Waskowitz intercepted the pass. On
attempted only four passes and used the
first down, Waskowitz passed to Byron
speediest back, Goldberg, largely in a deco
Haines who carried to the Pitt 36, followed
role with Patrick and LaRue running pla
by another Waskowitz to Haines pass to the
after play through the middle of the line.
Final Rankings
Scoring
AP
5th
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
1 UP-Patrick, 1-yard run, (Daddio Kick)
Score by Quarters
3 UP-Patrick, 5-yard run, (Daddio Kick)
UP
7
0
7
7
|
21
4 UP-Daddio, 71-yard interception return, (Daddio Kick)
UW
0
0
0
0
-
0
Individual Leaders
Team Statistics
Rushing-LaRue (UP) 15-109; Goldberg (UP) 10-36; Patrick (UP) 11-42; Haines (UW) 8-26.
UW
UP
8
First Downs
11
57
Net Yards Rushing
254
96
Net Yards Passing
46
153
Total Offense
300
7-18-4
Passing
2-4-2
6-29.7
Punting
5-39.6
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
1-0
0-0
Penalties
2-20
138
Huskies and the Bowls
W
Pineapple Bowl-January 1, 1938
Washington 53, Hawaii 13
Washington, 5-2-2 in coach James Phelan's
The second quarter saw a continuation of
eighth season, crushed the host University
the Husky onslaught. Despite having pulled
of Hawaii, rolling to a 53-0 lead before the
most of its starting players, Washington
Husky reserves allowed the Islanders two
continued to man-handle the smaller Ha-
meaningless touchdowns late in the final
waiian line. Everett Austin, a Husky half-
period, in front of 13,500 spectators at the
back, rambled 41 yards for a touchdown.
Pineapple Bowl.
Washington kicked off, and held the Island-
Washington scored four times in the open-
ers, forcing a punt. Washington halfback
ing quarter, ignited by the open-field
Joe Dubsky took the punt on the fly and
running of left halfback Jimmy Johnston.
returned it 39 yards before lateralling it to
The Huskies' first score featured Johnston
tackle Rich Worthington, who carried it the
running 15 yards before lateralling to
final 11 yards for a touchdown. Dubsky's
center Bud Ericksen, who carried 32 yards
conversion gave the Huskies a 39-0 lead
for a touchdown. Tackle Vic Markov kicked
which they took into the half.
the extra point. After stopping Hawaii,
The Huskies scored single touchdowns in
Johnston threw a 35-yard pass to end Merle
the third and fourth quarters. In the third,
Miller for the second Husky score in as
Lloyd Phelps broke loose for a 53-yard
many possessions.
touchdown run. The final Husky points
Minutes later, Johnston returned a Hawaii
were tallied by Jones on a 20-yard run in the
3,500 at Honolulu Stadium
punt 70 yards to the Islander two, and
fourth quarter.
Miller went through the center of the line
The Islanders scored on two short plunges
for the third Dawg touchdown. Johnston
by fullback Vernon Akee Choy and added
rambled for another 30-yard gain, stopped
one Joe Kaulukukui PAT kick to avoid the
this time on the 1-yard line. Reserve
shutout. For the day, Washington
fullback Don Jones notched the score on a
outgained Hawaii 370 yards to 95. The
plunge through the line. Dick Johnson's
Huskies were 3-of-7 passing for 60 yards.
kick gave Washington a 26-0 lead at the end
Hawaii was 10-of-28 for 160 yards.
of the first quarter while Hawaii had yet to
manage a first down.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
1 UW-Ericksen, 32-yard run (following Johnston 15-yard run and lateral), (Markov Kick)
1 UW-Miller, 35-yard pass from Johnston, (Kick Failed)
1 UW-Miller, 2-yard run, (Kick Failed)
I UW-Jones, 1-yard run, (Johnson Kick)
2 UW-Austin, 41-yard run, (Kick Failed)
2 UW-Worthington, 11-yard punt return (following Dubsky 39-yard return and lateral), (Dubsky Kick)
3 UW-Phelps, 53-yard run, (Dubsky Kick)
4 UW-Jones, 20-yard run, (Dubsky Kick)
4 UH-Akee Choy, 1-yard run, (Kick Failed)
4 UH-Akee Choy, 2-yard run, (Kaulukukui Kick)
Final Rankings
None.
Score By Quarters
UH
0
0
0
13
-
13
UW
26
13
7
7
-
53
Team Statistics
Not available in Washington files.
139
W
Huskies and the Bowls
PIGSKIN REVIEW
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1944
Southern California 29, Washington o
A regular Pacific Coast Conference season
kick and the Trojans had a 7-0 lead at t]
was not played in 1943 because of wartime
half.
travel restrictions, SO the Northern Division
champion, Washington, faced the Southern
Southern California converted on a simil
Division champion, Southern California, in
play midway through the third period whe
the Rose Bowl. The Rose Bowl winner
Callahan pulled in another pass fro
would reign as champion of the Pacific
Hardy-this time in a crowd of Hus
Coast Conference.
defenders-for a score, and with the se
ond Jamison PAT, USC had a 14-0 lead.
The Trojans (7-2) ended Washington's
perfect season (4-0) by upsetting the
Trojan left end Gordon Gray also caug
heavily favored Huskies, 29-0, with four
two touchdown passes, one late in the thir
touchdown passes to uncovered receivers
period from Hardy and the final one in th
in front of 68,000 at the Rose Bowl. Earlier
fourth quarter from left-handed quarte
in the season the Southern California team
back Ainslie Bell. Bell had started the gam
lost to the 4th Air Force Flyers, 35-0, while
but gave way to Hardy in a scheme planne
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Washington defeated this same club handi-
to settle down Hardy, the Trojans' usu
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
ly, 27-7. Because of a lack of opponents
starter. USC coach Jeff Cravath felt Hard
during wartime, the Rose Bowl game was
had played better in a reserve role the yea
the first activity in two months for coach
before.
68,000 at the Rose Bowl
Pest Welch's Washington Huskies.
Southern California added points on
Washington controlled the first period,
blocked punt early in the fourth quarte
twice driving deep into Trojan territory, but
when Husky quarterback Everett Austin
was unable to convert the drives into points.
handling the punting duties, could not get
Washington could not run against the USC
punt away out of his own end zone. Th
line inside the 40 and was unable to mount
blocked punt, compliments of Trojan tackl
a passing attack the entire day, completing
Harry Plank, was covered by Washingto
only five tosses for 51 yards with three
fullback Wally Kramer in the end zone fo
interceptions. The second period was simi-
the automatic safety.
lar, as the Trojans continued to attempt to
Washington led in net rushing yardage
run against Washington's larger defensive
134-117, but was dominated in passin
line with little success.
yards 113-51. The Huskies also fumble
Late in the period the Trojans turned to the
twice, and although they recovered botl
air, negating Washington's size advantage
times, the drops helped stop drives. USC
with quick passes to their fleet ends. USC
which entered the game with a reputation
had a fourth down on the Washington 11
as fumbling champions of the country (the
with only 40 seconds remaining in the half
Trojans lost 29-of-50 fumbles on the year
when Trojan quarterback Jim Hardy tossed
did not lose either of its two fumbles.
to halfback George Callahan, who made a
The loss was Washington's third consecu
final move at the goal line for the touch-
Final Rankings
tive in Rose Bowl play and provided the
down. Dick Jamison added the point-after
Trojans their seventh consecutive Rose
AP
12th
Bowl win.
Score by Quarters
Scoring
USC
0
7
13
9
-
29
UW
0
0
0
0
-
0
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
2 USC-Callahan, 11-yard pass from Hardy, (Jamison Kick)
Team Statistics
3 USC-Callahan, 10-yard pass from Hardy, (Jamison Kick)
UW
USC
3 USC-Gray, 21-yard pass from Hardy, (Kick Failed)
7
First Downs
8
4 USC-Safety, Austin punt blocked in the end zone
134
Net Yards Rushing
117
4 USC-Gray, 15-yard pass from Bell, (Jamison Kick)
51
Net Yards Passing
113
Individual Leaders
185
Total Offense
230
5-22-3
Passing
9-16-0
Rushing-George Callahan (USC) 6-46; Al Akins (UW) 9-41; Sam Robinson (UW) 9-35; Edwin Saenz (USC) 10-
26; Milford Dreblow (USC) 4-24;
7-35.9
Punting
10-37.5
2-0
Fumbles-Lost
2-0
1-10
Penalties
3-25
140
Huskies and the Bowls
W
46TH ANNUAL GAME
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1960
Washington 44, Wisconsin 8
A capacity crowd watched the underdog
Schoonover, to slice the lead to nine points,
Washington Huskies score more Rose Bowl
17-8.
points than any other West Coast team in
Washington responded quickly to quell any
history, rolling to six touchdowns and a field
idea of a Badger comeback. Fleming had
goal over the slower Badgers of Wisconsin.
Wisconsin, 8-1 coming into the game un-
another long punt return, this one for 55
yards, and Schloredt followed the return
OFFICIA
der fourth-year coach Milt Bruhn, was fa-
PROGRA
50
vored by 6-1/2 points over a Husky squad
with a 23-yard pass to end Lee Folkins.
Folkins made an outstanding leaping snag
that featured no seniors among its starters.
in the end zone to extend the Dawgs' lead to
Washington, coached by Jim Owens to a
24-8.
9-1 record before the bowl game, gambled
Washington continued to keep Wisconsin
early and late, attempting fourth-down
plays in the first as well as the fourth quar-
off balance in the third quarter. Fullback
ter. On the Huskies' second drive of the
Ray Jackson pounded away on five plays for
46 yards of the 66-yard touchdown drive.
WISCONSIN vs.
game, with the score still tied at zero, Wash-
He scored on a 2-yard dive.
WASHINGTON
ington quarterback Bob Schloredt audibled
JANUARY 1. 1960
PASADENA, CALL ORNIA
twice on fourth down, leading to halfback
The Huskies hammered the final nail into
Don McKeta's 6-yard touchdown run. Soon
the Badger coffin by stopping the Big Ten
after, Washington recovered the first of
representatives on four consecutive plays
four Wisconsin fumbles and Husky half-
inside the 10-yard line. Taking over on its
00,809 at the Rose Bowl
back George Fleming booted a 36-yard
own 7, Washington marched 93 yards in 10
field goal for a 10-0 lead.
plays to score again. The drive included
another Schloredt fourth-down conversion,
Fleming provided a dramatic example of
this one from his own 16-yard line.
the Huskies' superior speed, returning a
Schloredt scored on a 3-yard keeper to up
punt 53 yards for a touchdown and adding,
the lead to an insurmountable 38-8.
his own extra point for a 17-0 lead. Wiscon-
Schloredt and Fleming were named Co-
sin put together its only scoring drive of the
Most Valuable Players by the Rose Bowl
game on the strength of three completed
committee.
passes. Tom Wiesner gained the final 4
yards to score. The Badgers converted a
The Husky reserves notched Washington's
two-point conversion, a pass from quarter-
final score as backup quarterback Bob
back Dale Hackbart to left end Allan
Hivner lobbed a 3-yard pass to halfback
Don Millich.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY (CONVERSION)
1 UW-McKeta, 6-yard run, (Fleming Kick)
1 UW-Fleming, 36-yard FG
Final Rankings
1 UW-Fleming, 53-yard punt return, (Fleming Kick)
AP
8th
2 WISC-Wiesner, 4-yard run, (Schoonover pass from Hackbart)
UPI
7th
2 UW-Folkins, 23-yard pass from Schloredt, (Fleming Kick)
3 UW-Jackson, 2-yard run, (Fleming Kick)
Score by Quarters
4 UW-Schloredt, 3-yard run, (Fleming Kick)
WISC
0
8
0
0
I
8
.4 UW-Millich, 1-yard pass from Hivner, (Pass Failed)
UW
17
7
7
13
-
44
Individual Leaders
Team Statistics
Rushing-Schloredt (UW) 21-81; Jackson (UW) 12-61; Hobbs (WISC) 7-32.
UW
WISC
Passing-Hackbart (WISC) 11-25-0-145; Schloredt (UW) 4-7-0-102.
16
First Downs
13
Receiving-Fleming (UW) 1-65; Schoonover (WISC) 3-57.
215
Net Yards-Rushing
123
137
Net Yards Passing
153
352
Total Offense
276
7-13-0
Passing
14-32-0
6-36.0
Punting
6-36.8
2-0
Fumbles-Lost
4-4
7-85
Penalties
3-18
141
W
Huskies and the Bowls
ROSE BOWL
Rose Bowl-January 2, 1961
47th Annual Game
Washington 17, Minnesota 7
MINNESOTA vs
WASHINGTON
Washington, 9-1 under fourth-year coach
Still unable to move against the fast-read
JANUARY 2, 1961
Jim Owens, entered the 1961 Rose Bowl as
Pasadena, California
ing Washington line, Minnesota punted.
defending champions but decided under-
clipping penalty on the return left t]
dogs. The Minnesota Gophers, 8-1 and
Huskies on their own 13, and they lost
coached by Murray Warmath, entered the
yards on their first play. Schloredt punte
game atop the national polls. They left with
from the 7-yard line to the Husky 47. Mi
a 17-7 setback courtesy of an explosive
nesota took over with its first good scorir
Husky start and the determined second-
chance but the Gophers could not conver
half defense of Owens' players.
The Gophers drove to the 32 and the
Washington used its superior quickness to
turned the ball over on downs.
offset Minnesota's size advantage in the
Washington quickly marched down th
early going.
field. Jackson carried for 10 yards and the
The Huskies scored their first points in a
Fleming took a pitch to the 48. Faced with
fourth-down-and-three situation on Min-
second-and-two, Schloredt called his OW
nesota's 27-yard line. Halfback George
number on the quarterback sneak. Minne
Fleming kicked a 44-yard field goal, putting
sota was expecting an outside play
Washington on the scoreboard first and
Schloredt slid through the middle, brok
Fleming into the Rose Bowl record book
loose to the right, picked up an importar
with the longest field goal kick in its history.
block from end Folkins, and didn't ge
97,314 at the Rose Bowl
caught until he was dragged down on th
Quarterback Bob Schloredt, who missed
18, a 31-yard gain. Jackson gained 3 up th
the second half of the season with an injury,
middle, then Schloredt rolled out and car
entered the game in the first quarter replac-
ried the ball to the 7-yard line. Jackso
ing starter Bob Hivner. Schloredt promptly
carried it to the 1-foot line and Schlored
fired a 12-yard pass to fullback Ray Jackson.
scored the touchdown on a sneak. Wit
Jackson followed the reception with a 30-
Fleming's PAT, Washington had 1
yard run to the Gopher 30. Three line
points-all that the Huskies would score-
plunges later, the ball rested on the Gopher
and a 17-0 lead at the half.
18 as the first quarter ended. The Huskies
were using mostly outside tosses to advance
Minnesota scored its only points of the
the ball, a pattern the Gophers did not ad-
game in the third quarter, taking advantag
just to defensively until the second half.
of one of Washington's three fumbles to se
to work on the Husky 32. The Gopher
Charlie Mitchell, a Husky halfback, took a
drove 32 yards, scoring on an 18-yard op
toss around the right side for another 10
tion play. Right halfback Bill Munsey tool
yards to the Gopher 8 to open the second
the pitch from Gopher quarterback Sand
quarter. Schloredt advanced to the 3-yard
Stephens, scoring on his third carry of the
line, losing the opportunity to score when
day. James Rogers added the PAT.
he slipped. After an incomplete pass,
Schloredt hit halfback Brent Wooten with a
Schloredt was named Most Valuable
Final Rankings
3-yard toss for the first touchdown in the
Player, the second time in as many years he
AP
6th
UPI
None.
47th annual Rose Bowl game. Fleming's
was accorded the honor.
extra point put the Dawgs up 10-0.
Score by Quarters
UM
0
0
7
0
I
7
Scoring
UW
3
14
0
0
I
17
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
Team Statistics
1 UW-Fleming, 44 yard FG, 6:30
2 UW-Wooten, 3-yard pass from Schloredt, 1:25 (Fleming Kick)
UW
UM
2 UW-Schloredt, 1-yard run, 10:46 (Fleming Kick)
11
First Downs
14
3 UM-Munsey, 18-yard run, 5:35 (Rogers Kick)
177
Net Yards Rushing
202
16
Net Yards Passing
51
Individual Leaders
193
Total Offense
253
Rushing-Schloredt (UW) 5-68; Jackson (UW) 13-60; Stephens (UM) 10-51.
2-5-0
Passing
5-18-3
Passing-Johnson (UM) 3-8-0-30; Stephens (UM) 2-10-3-21; Schloredt 2-4-0-16.
8-41.3
Punting
6-43.3
Receiving-Hagberg (UM) 1-18; Hall (UM) 1-15; Jackson (UW) 1-12.
3-2
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
6-50
Penalties
8-35
142
Huskies and the Bowls
W
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1964
Golden Anniversary
Illinois 17, Washington 7
The Huskies entered their third Rose Bowl
After an exchange of punts to open the
in five years in a familiar position-as an
second quarter, Illinois fumbled on its own
underdog. Coach Pete Elliott's Illinois
27-yard line on a first-down play. Washing-
team had a 7-1-1 regular-season record
ton took over and quickly scored. Siler car-
and was ranked third in the country, while
ried for 3 yards on first down, and on second
the Huskies had overcome an 0-3 start to
down he threw 18 yards to right end Joe
finish the year 6-4 under seven-year head
Mancuso, who was downed on the 6. Wash-
coach Jim Owens, with only a loss to UCLA
ington scored on an option play, with Siler
in Los Angeles blemishing their seven-
pitching to right halfback Kopay for the 6-
game run to the roses.
yard touchdown. Medved added the PAT
kick.
Washington featured a hard-driving ground
Rose Вонь
game anchored by quarterback Bill Dou-
Washington kicked off and Illinois drove
glas, fullback Junior Coffey, and future pro
down the field, keeping the ball for almost
halfbacks Ron Medved and Dave Kopay.
eight minutes. Faced with a fourth-and-
LLINOIS vs. WASHINGTON
The defense earned its reputation as a hard-
four on the Washington eight, Illini quar-
hitting group which was almost impossible
terback Fred Custardo dropped back to
ANNUAL
GAME
JANUARY
1964
PASADENA CALIFORNIA
OFFICIAL
PROGRAM
(incl.
tax)
to run against, anchored by a future Husky
pass and was sacked for a 4-yard loss by
assistant coach, end Jim Lambright. The
Mancuso. Washington took over on its own
Illini featured perhaps the most famous
12, but Siler fumbled on second down with
alumnus of the 1964 Rose Bowl, linebacker
center Bruce Capel recovering for Illinois
6,957 at the Rose Bowl
Dick Butkus.
on the 15, allowing UI's Jim Plankenhorn to
The Huskies started play as though they
kick a 32-yard field goal as time expired in
the first half.
were anything but underdogs. Steve
Bramwell, now the Husky team doctor,
Illinois converted another Washington
took the opening kickoff out to Washing-
turnover into points early in the second
ton's 22-yard line. Kopay took the first play
half. Siler was intercepted at midfield. The
around right end for 9 yards and the Hus-
ball was returned to the Washington 32
kies were off and running.
where Illinois started its second scoring
The opening drive marched down field,
drive. The Illini scored in six plays for a 10-
slowed only by three penalties (two offsides
7 lead, helped by a Washington piling-on
and a backfield-in-motion call). On a first-
penalty.
and-10 play from the Illinois 26, quarter-
Washington had a chance to go ahead at the
back Bill Douglas used a quarterback
end of the third quarter, but on a third-and-
keeper through the middle of the line for a
seven, Siler's pass was picked off on the
gain of 12. It proved to be a costly first
Illinois 4-yard line. Illinois responded with
down. Douglas was injured on the play and
the only full drive of the day, moving from
left the field on a stretcher, out for the day.
the Husky 15-yard line, 85 yards for the
touchdown. Almost as important as the
Final Rankings
Backup quarterback Bill Siler entered the
game and completed the first pass he at-
points was the fact that Illinois ate up eight
JPI
15th
tempted, but left end Al Libke fumbled on
minutes of the final quarter on the drive.
P
None.
the Illini 6-yard line.
Score by Quarters
JI
0
3
7
7
-
17
Scoring
JW
0
7
0
0
-
7
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
2 UW-Kopay, 7-yard run, 8:26 (Medved Kick)
Team Statistics
2 UI-Plankenhorn, 32-yard FG, 14:59
UW
UI
3 UI-Warren, 2-yard run, 8:03 (Plankenhorn Kick)
12
First Downs
22
4 UI-Grabowski, 10-yard run, 6:59 (Plankenhorn Kick)
114
Net Yards Rushing
291
69
Net Yards Passing
59
Individual Leaders
183
Total Offense
350
Rushing-Grabowski (UI) 23-125; Wheatland (UI) 10-55; Kopay (UW) 4-29
$-19-3
Passing
6-15-0
Passing-Custardo (UI) 4-7-0-43; Siler (UW) 6-17-3-46.
3-43.0
Punting
4-39.0
Receiving-Fearn (UI) 3-24; Libke (UW) 3-19.
5-3
Fumbles-Lost
5-3
5-25
Penalties
6-64
143
W
Huskies and the Bowls
Rose Bowl-January 2, 1978
JANUARY2/PASADENA,CALIFORNIA
Washington 27, Michigan 20
Washington, 9-2 in the regular season after
That lead was short-lived, however, as t
two forfeit wins were awarded by the
Wolverines struck back in just two pla
NCAA, capped its 1977 Cinderella season
Left-handed Michigan quarterback Ri
in the 64th annual Rose Bowl with a thrill-
Leach gunned a 76-yard bomb to C1
ing 27-20 upset victory over heavily favored
Stephenson to put the Wolverines on t
Michigan before 105,312 fans. Don James
board, just 50 seconds after Washingt
directed his team from a 1-3 early-season
constructed its largest lead.
record to a 7-4 mark, winning seven of its
last eight games en route to Washington's
Washington lit up the scoreboard for t.
first bowl victory in 17 years.
final time when Steve Robbins hit a 28-ya
three-pointer. The field goal widened t
The Huskies were led from the outset by
Pac-8 champions' lead to 27-7 with ju
Pac-8 Co-Player of the Year and eventual
0:50 remaining in the third period.
Rose Bowl MVP, quarterback Warren
Moon. On Washington's first possession,
Michigan wasn't about to be embarrass
Moon led the Huskies 49 yards in 10 plays
as the Wolverines marched 78 yards on
and scored the touchdown himself on a 2-
plays to open the fourth quarter, culmina
RINGTON
yard jaunt to open the scoring, 7-0.
ing the drive with a 2-yard Russell Dav
dive for six points. Gregg Willner added tl
James' squad parlayed a 62-yard Moon to
PAT and Michigan was back in busines
Spider Gaines pass into a 30-yard field goal
closing the gap to 27-14. As Washingtor
105,312 at the Rose Bowl
to extend the lead to 10-0 early in the sec-
game turned conservative, Michigan aga
ond quarter. Washington came right back
scored on a Leach pass to Stanley Edward
on its next possession to finish the first-half
However, the momentum swung bac
scoring with a 60-yard drive and another
Washington's way on the next. play
Moon touchdown run-this time from 1-
Willner missed the conversion on a ba
yard out.
snap and the Washington lead remaine
Washington outgained the Wolverines by a
seven points at 27-20.
wide margin of 246 total yards to 111 as the
The game turned into a defensive battle
first-half gun went off. The Huskies con-
the final minutes as Washington inte
veyed thoughts of a rout when Moon threw
cepted two Leach passes, including
a 28-yard touchdown strike early in the
Michael Jackson pickoff at Washington
third quarter to his favorite target, Gaines.
own 3-yard line with just over a minut
The 24-0 bulge seemed insurmountable
remaining. Cornerback Nesby Glasgo
with just 5:21 remaining in the third
ended the Pasadena Classic with anothe
quarter.
interception as time ran out on Michigan.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
Final Rankings
1 UW-Moon, 2-yard run, 8:23 (Robbins Kick)
AP
10th
2 UW-Robbins, 30-yard FG, 4:27
UPI
9th
2 UW-Moon, 1-yard run, 11:34 (Robbins Kick)
3 UW-Gaines, 28-yard pass from Moon, 9:39 (Robbins Kick)
Score by Quarters
3 UM-Stephenson, 76-yard pass from Leach, 10:29 (Willner Kick)
UM
0
0
7
13
-
20
3 UW-Robbins, 28-yard FG, 3:39
UW
7
10
10
0
-
27
4 UM-Davis, 2-yard run, 3:39 (Willner Kick)
4 UM-Edwards, 32-yard pass from Leach, 11:16 (Kick Failed)
Team Statistics
UW
UM
Individual Leaders
17
First Downs
22
Rushing-R. Davis (UM) 18-79; Steele (UW) 13-77; Edwards (UM) 15-74; Gipson (UW) 15-48.
164
Net Yards Rushing
149
Passing-Leach (UM) 14-27-2-239; Moon (UW) 12-23-2-188.
234
Net Yards Passing
239
Receiving-Clapton (UM) 5-84; Gaines (UW) 4-122; Greenwood (UW) 3-28; R. Davis (UM) 3-26.
398
Total Offense
388
13-24-2
Passing
14-27-2
5-39.0
Punting
4-42.5
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
2-1
6-47
Penalties-Yards
3-11
144
Huskies and the Bowls
W
Sun Bowl-December 22, 1979
Washington 14, Texas 7
SUN
CARNIVAL
Sixth-ranked Texas and 13th-ranked Wash-
Washington was back in business two plays
ington, 9-2 going into the bowl, squared off
later when Mark Lee disrupted an option
in the 45th annual Sun Bowl with the
pitch and Grimes recovered the loose ball
Longhorns tabbed as seven-point favorites,
on the Texas 23. Husky freshman tailback
but the Huskies picked up their second
Willis Ray Mackey, making a homecoming
bowl victory in three years thanks to an
to the state where he played his prep foot-
opportunistic offense and a hard-hitting
ball, carried four times and got the game-
defense that continually made the big play.
winner with a 4-yard slash up the middle.
The turning point of the game may have
Texas, too, capitalized on a big defensive
come as early as the first quarter when
play to score its only points. Flick was hit
Texas drove the length of the field on its first
while trying to pass and the Longhorns re-
possession to set up a first-and-goal at the
covered on the Husky 44. Eleven plays
Husky 9. Three running plays made it
later, Little found running back Brad Beck
fourth-and-goal at the 1-yard line, and then
in the end zone for the score.
Texas quarterback Donnie Little ran an op-
The second half was a bitter defensive
tion right only to have Husky strong safety
struggle and the game finally came down to
Greg Grimes drop him for a 1-yard loss.
Texas' final possession at the Husky 44 with
The Husky defense made another big play
3:01 left. The Longhorns managed one first
eight downs later when Jim Pence forced a
down to the UW 32 before feeling the fury
412 at the Sun Bowl
Texas fumble and Stafford Mays recovered
of the Washington pass rush on four straight
on the Longhorn 42. Moments, later, on
downs. When the final blitz was over, Texas
third-and-11 from the Texas 18, Tom Flick
had been shoved all the way back to its own
found Paul Skansi in the right corner of the
48 and the Huskies celebrated their Sun
end zone for a 7-0 lead.
Bowl title.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
2 UW-Skansi, 18-yard pass from Flick, 14:50 (Lansford Kick)
2 UW-Mackey, 4-yard run, 10:45 (Lansford Kick)
2 UT-Beck, 5-yard pass from Little, 3:10 (Goodson Kick)
Individual Leaders
Rushing-Beck (UT) 16-98; Tyler (UW) 19-70; Clark (UT) 19-61.
Passing-Flick (UW) 6-14-1-57; McIvor (UT) 3-11-1-32.
Receiving-Skansi (UW) 5-52; Koenning (UT) 2-18.
nal Rankings
11th
PI
11th
core by Quarters
N
0
14
0
0
-
14
0
7
0
0
-
7
eam Statistics
JW
UT
11
First Downs
16
98
Net Yards Rushing
199
67
Net Yards Passing
37
.65
Total Offense
236
15-1
Passing
4-15-1
39.1
Punting
4-39.0
1-1
Fumbles-Lost
3-3
-30
Penalties-Yards
4-38
145
W
Huskies and the Bowls
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1981
Michigan 23, Washington 6
Washington, finishing the regular season
On Washington's second possession, F
with a 9-2 record and ranked 16th nation-
marched the club 63 yards to just inside
ally in both polls, met Big Ten champion
Wolverine 1-yard line. But on fourth-a
Michigan, the 5th-ranked team in the coun-
one from point-blank range, Touss:
try, in the Rose Bowl under circumstances
Tyler was stopped for no gain. Altho
reminiscent of their 1978 meeting at the
one official prematurely signalled a tou
same venue. The Huskies again entered the
down, he was overruled by the linesmar
Pasadena Classic as decided underdogs, but
this time could not pull off the upset.
The Huskies again appeared to have SCO
a touchdown when center Mike Re
Rather than the drama of the 27-20 victory
over Michigan just three years earlier,
snared Kyle Stevens' mid-air fumble m
Washington suffered a disappointing 23-6
way through the second period, and ra
THE 1981
defeat despite outplaying the winners for
into the end zone, but the play was ru
ROSE BOWL
the first half.
dead.
The Huskies came out impressive, but
While Washington was outplaying
GTON VS MICHIGAN
there was a sense that nothing would go
rival-the Huskies led in total offet
their way. On the third play of the game,
269-133-Michigan led 7-6 going into
Tom Flick found Aaron Williams over the
locker room at half. The second half wa
middle, but only after the ball was tipped
different story, i.e., all Michigan. The H
104,863 at the Rose Bowl
into his hands. The play went for 52 yards,
kies were held to just 10 third-quarter pl
but was called back due to offensive pass
while Michigan scored 16 second-h
interference.
points.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
2 UW-Nelson, 35-yard FG, 7:10
2 UM-Woolfolk, 6-yard run, 3:39 (Haji-Sheikh Kick)
2 UW-Nelson, 26-yard FG, 0:00
3 UM-Haji-Sheikh, 25-yard FG, 8:48
3 UM-Carter, 7-yard pass from Wangler, 2:11 (Haji-Sheikh Kick)
4 UM-Edwards, 1-yard run, 4:02 (Kick Failed)
Individual Leaders
Rushing-Woolfolk (UM) 26-182; Edwards (UM) 19-68; Stevens (UW) 17-59.
Passing-Flick (UW) 23-39-2-282; Wangler (UM) 12-20-0-145.
Receiving-Allen (UW) 6-101; Bayle (UW) 6-45; Carter (UM) 5-68.
Final Rankings
AP
17th
UPI
16th
Score by Quarters
UM
0
7
10
6
I
23
UW
0
6
0
0
-
6
Team Statistics
UW
UM
20
First Downs
23
92
Net Yards Rushing
292
282
Net Yards Passing
145
374
Total Offense
437
23-39-2
Passing
12-20-0
5-39.2
Punting
6-47.3
2-1
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
5-32
Penalties-Yards
3-37
146
Huskies and the Bowls
W
THE 1982
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1982
ROSE BOWL
Washington 28, Iowa 0
Washington, 9-2 in regular-season play,
before the half when fullback Vince Coby
entered the 1982 Rose Bowl in a familiar
smashed over from a yard out to climax a
position-as underdogs. For the fourth
60-yard march.
time in four postseason appearances, the
Iowa made its deepest penetration in the
Huskies' bowl opponent was rated the fa-
third period-to the Husky 29-but was
vorite and for the third time, Don James'
stymied by a Ken Driscoll interception.
club ignored the odds. Washington re-
corded the first Rose Bowl shutout in 28
Robinson took over again in the final stanza,
gaining 66 yards on three carries, including
years, a 28-0 whitewash of Big Ten cham-
the final 34 yards on a nifty run up the right
pion Iowa.
side, to cap a 69-yard drive that put the
The two clubs battled to a scoreless tie after
Huskies ahead 21-0. The UW onslaught
one quarter, although Washington did get
ended with quarterback Tim Cowan's
inside the Hawkeye 30-yard line twice
3-yard reverse with 7:13 to go.
thanks to the Husky kicking game. First
Washington took advantage of two Iowa
cornerback Ray Horton returned an Iowa
fumbles and picked off three Hawkeye
punt 48 yards to the Iowa 29, then punter
SHINGTON VS. IOWA
Jeff Partridge was roughed in the act to
passes to turn the tide in its favor. Robinson
gained 142 net yards on just 20 carries to
keep another drive going until it stalled at
pace the ground game, and quarterback
the Hawkeye 28.
Steve Pelluer completed 15-of-29 passes
05,611 at the Rose Bowl
Eventual Rose Bowl MVP Jacque Robin-
for another 142 yards.
son broke the scoring ice early in the second
Inside linebackers Mark Jerue (13) and Ken
period, bulling over from 1-yard out to cap a
Driscoll (11) led the stop troops. Driscoll
65-yard drive. Robinson romped for 34
and defensive backs Vince Newsome and
yards on seven carries during the drive.
Derek Harvey each grabbed an enemy pass.
Washington upped its lead to 13-0 just 0:19
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
UW-Robinson, 1-yard run, 10:09 (Nelson Kick)
2 UW-Coby, 1-yard run, 0:19 (Pass Failed)
4 UW-Robinson, 34-yard run, 9:47 (Skansi, Pass from Pelluer)
4 UW-Cowan, 3-yard run, 7:13 (Nelson Kick)
Individual Leaders
Rushing-Robinson (UW) 20-142; Granger (UI) 13-80; Bohannon (UI) 10-44; Jackson (UW) 8-24.
Passing-Pelluer (UW) 15-29-1-142; Bohannon (UI) 6-14-2-33; Gales (UI) 4-7-1-51.
Receiving-Brown (UI) 6-52; Allen (UW) 5-68; Skansi (UW) 4-69; Rosborough (UW) 2-10.
inal Rankings
10th
PI
7th
core by Quarters
W
0
13
0
15
I
28
I
0
0
0
0
-
0
eam Statistics
UW
UI
22
First Downs
14
186
Net Yards Rushing
180
142
Net Yards Passing
84
328
Total Offense
264
5-29-1
Passing
10-21-3
-35.6
Punting
5-47.0
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
2-2
3-28
Penalties-Yards
6-73
147
W
Huskies and the Bowls
WASHINGTON VS. MARYLAND
Aloha Bowl-December 25, 1982
Washington 21, Maryland 20
Tim Cowan's brilliant passing performance
pins a 20-14 lead with nearly 11 minu
Aloha Bowl
(33-53-0-350) brought Washington back
left.
from a 20-14 deficit for a 21-20 victory over
Maryland in the inaugural Aloha Bowl on
The Terps had a great chance to put
Christmas Day in Honolulu. The victory
game away after a Husky pass on fou
INAUGURAL
enabled Washington to finish 10-2 and be
down went awry and Maryland took over
Official Souvenir Program
ranked No. 7 in both wire service polls.
the Husky 19. A Terp field goal of 32 ya
Aloha Stadium . Honolulu, Hawaii
December 25
didn't find the mark, however, and Wa
1982
Washington went 80 yards in 12 plays after
ington took over at the 20 with 3:49 left. T
the opening kickoff and took a 7-0 lead on
final drive was all Cowan as the senior qu
Cowan's 27-yard pass to Anthony Allen.
terback either ran or passed the ball on
Cowan accounted for 66 of those yards on
of-16 plays in marching the Huskies do
six completions in seven attempts. Mary-
the field.
land came right back to narrow the margin
Twice Cowan ran for first downs on four
to 7-6 going just 19 yards after recovering a
down situations and found Allen for a fi
Sterling Hinds' fumble. The conversion
failed. The Huskies struck with a bang just
down on yet another fourth-down call. W
6:00 before halftime when Cowan hit Allen
third down on the Maryland 11 with 0:
all alone on the left sideline and Allen
left, Cowan looked into the left corner
the end zone and found Allen free for t
sprinted 71 yards for the score.
tying touchdown. Nelson's extra point ga
30,055 at Aloha Stadium
Maryland came back to score after the sec-
Washington the 21-20 victory. Cowan's
ond-half kickoff as it moved 77 yards on six
completions and 363 yards in total offer
plays with the score coming on a 36-yard
were both UW historical bests (bowl gam
pass from Boomer Esiason to tight end John
not officially included in Husky record
Tice. The conversion run failed and Wash-
and his 350-yard passing performance h
ington held on to a 14-12 lead. Maryland
been bettered only three times. Allen al
put together a time-consuming (8:46) drive
had an exceptional game with eight catch
that spanned the third and fourth quarters
for 152 yards.
to go ahead on a short run coming on the
Cowan was voted offensive MVP wh
16th play of the drive. Esiason found Tice
for the two-point conversion and the Terra-
Husky linebacker Tony Caldwell W
named defensive MVP.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
1 UW-Allen, 27-yard pass from Cowan, 10: 14 (Nelson Kick)
2 UM-D'Addio, 6-yard pass from Esiason, 14:52 (Kick Failed)
2 UW-Allen, 71-yard pass from Cowan, 5:21 (Nelson Kick)
3 UM-Tice, 36-yard pass from Esiason, 12:18 (Run Failed)
Final Rankings
4 UM-Nash, 2-yard run, 10:44 (Tice, Pass from Esiason)
AP
7th
4 UW-Allen, 11-yard pass from Cowan, 0:06 (Nelson Kick)
UPI
7th
Individual Leaders
USA Today/CNN 10th
Rushing-Robinson (UW) 16-50; Nash (UM) 11-41.
Score by Quarters
Passing-Cowan (UW) 33-53-0-350; Esiason (UM) 19-32-1-251.
UW
7
7
0
7
-
21
Receiving-Skansi (UW) 10-87; Allen (UW) 8-152; Lutu (UW) 7-57; Tice (UM) 6-85; Williams (UW) 4-3
UM
0
6
6
8
-
20
D'Addio (UM) 4-30
Team Statistics
UW
UM
20
First Downs
17
63
Net Yards Rushing
68
369
Net Yards Passing
251
432
Total Offense
319
35-56-0
Passing
19-32-1
5-45.4
Punting
7-38.4
4-4
Fumbles-Lost
2-1
7-50
Penalties-Yards
8-55
148
Huskies and the Bowls
W
B3
$2.5
Aloha Bowl-December 26, 1983
Noha
Bowl
Penn State 13, Washington 10
Washington, 8-3 going into the postseason
10-play, 65-yard drive culminated in a
"Bowl
bowl, failed to make a 10-3 lead hold up as
39-yard Jeff Jaeger field goal.
AWAIL*
the Huskies gave up 10 points in the fourth
The Lions began their comeback late in the
quarter to lose 13-10 to Penn State in the
third quarter when they took advantage of a
second annual Aloha Bowl.
19-yard Husky punt to begin operations on
Penn State hit the scoreboard first when it
the Husky 48. A key sack by Fred Small
moved 49 yards on its first possession to the
forced Penn State to try a field goal, which it
Husky seven. The Huskies held PSU with-
converted from 49 yards, and the Lions cut
AlahaBock
out a yard on three straight plays and the
the margin to 10-6. Penn State made an-
Nittany Lions settled for a 23-yard field goal
other big play in the kicking game to set up
and a 3-0 lead.
its game-winning score. After pushing
Penn State
Washington took the lead early in the sec-
Washington back to its own 6-yard line with
16
VS.
ond quarter when the Husky defense had
a punt of its own, Penn State forced the
Washington
Penn State backed up with a fourth-and-11
Huskies to punt. The Lions ran a reverse on
on their own 19. The Lions punted to
the return to set up shop at their own 49-
December 26, 1983
Danny Greene who took the ball on the
yard line. The Lions went 51 yards in nine
Aloha Stadium
Honolulu, Hawali
Husky 43 and went 57 yards for a touch-
plays, including two big third-down plays by
down. The Huskies increased their lead to
quarterback Doug Strang, to score on a
10-3 late in the second panel when a
2-yard run with three minutes left.
7,212 at Aloha Stadium
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
1 PSU-Gancitano, 23-yard FG, 7:27
2 UW-Greene, 57-punt return, 8:51 (Jaeger Kick)
2 UW-Jaeger, 39-yard FG, 0:36
4 PSU-Gancitano, 49-yard FG, 12:21
4 PSU-Dozier, 2-yard run, 3:00 (Gancitano Kick)
Individual Leaders
Rushing-Williams (PSU) 12-48; Dozier (PSU) 15-37; Jackson (UW) 7-34.
Passing-Pelluer (UW) 19-40-0-153; Strang (PSU) 14-34-1-118.
Receiving-Pattison (UW) 6-55; DiMidio (PSU) 4-35; Wroten (UW) 4-25.
final Rankings
P
None.
PI
None.
SA Today/CNN None.
core by Quarters
W
0
10
0
0
-
10
SU
3
0
0
10
-
13
Team Statistics
DW
PSU
8
First Downs
15
26
Net Yards Rushing
95
53
Net Yards Passing
118
79
Total Offense
213
9-40-0
Passing
14-34-1
-39.6
Punting
8-46.8
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
6-50
Penalties-Yards
7-60
149
W
Huskies and the Bowls
Orange Bowl
Orange Bowl-January 1, 1985
Classic
Washington 28, Oklahoma 17
Fourth-ranked, Washington, 10-1 before
carries) in the drive, which culminated W.
the bowl, staked a claim to the national
his 1-yard scoring run.
championship with a 28-17 come-from-be-
hind victory over No. 2 Oklahoma. The
The Sooners rallied in the second stan
Huskies made their sixth straight bowl ap-
following a Husky turnover. Oklahoma ti
pearance a monumental one, becoming the
the contest on the final play of the half WI
first Pac-10 team to compete in, and win,
a lightning-quick scoring strike from qua
the Orange Bowl on a record-setting day in
terback Danny Bradley to split end Derri
which three Pac-10 teams captured bowl
Shepard covering 61 yards.
victories (UCLA, Fiesta; USC, Rose).
The Sooners took their first lead of t
A Miami throng of 56,294 witnessed Husky
contest on a 35-yard Tim Lasher field go
quarterback Hugh Millen come off the
with 8:45 left at 17-14.
bench in relief of Paul Sicuro to lead Wash-
On the next possession, Millen lobbed
ington to a pair of touchdowns in a 1:04
critical third-and-nine completion to Gree
span late in the ball game to secure the win.
from his own 27, which covered 29 yard
AHOMA VS. WASHINGTON,
The Huskies jumped to a quick 7-0 advan-
Four downs later, Millen lofted a touch pa
tage in the first quarter when Sicuro found
to senior split end Mark Pattison on tl
Danny Greene wide open in the end zone
extreme left edge of the end zone, makir
for a 29-yard score.
the tally 21-17 in favor of the Huskies wit
56,294 at the Orange Bowl
5:42 left.
Senior tailback Jacque Robinson, named
the game's Most Valuable Back (the only
A Joe Kelly interception led to a Rick Fer
player in history named MVP of both the
ney 6-yard touchdown, sealing the win fd
Orange and Rose Bowls), produced Wash-
Don James and his Huskies. The Ne
ington's second score. Robinson rushed six
Year's Day victory improved Washington
times for 26 of his game-high 135 yards (28
all-time bowl record to 8-6-1.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
1 UW-Greene, 29-yard pass from Sicuro, 11:52 (Jaeger Kick)
1 UW-Robinson, 1-yard run, 4:24 (Jaeger Kick)
2 UO-Bradley, 1-yard run, 9:47 (Lashar Kick)
2 UO- Shepard, 61-yard pass from Bradley, 0:00 (Lashar Kick)
4 UO-Lashar, 35-yard FG, 8:45
4 UW-Pattison, 12-yard pass from Millen, 5:42 (Jaeger Kick)
4 UW-Fenney, 6 run, 4:48 (Jaeger Kick)
Individual Leaders
Final Rankings
AP
2nd
Rushing-Robinson (UW) 28-135; Fenney (UW) 9-66; Carr (UO) 9-59; Sewell (UO) 13-46.
UPI
2nd
Passing-Bradley (UO) 6-21-1-124; Sicuro (UW) 7-17-3-78; Millen (UW) 2-4-0-41.
USA Today/CNN 2nd
Receiving-Greene (UW) 4-97; Shepard (UO) 3-87; Sewell (UO) 2-34; Fenney (UW) 2-14; Pattison (UW) 1-12
Score by Quarters
UW
14
0
0
14
-
28
UO
0
14
0
3
I
17
Team Statistics
UW
UO
17
First Downs
17
192
Net Yards Rushing
162
119
Net Yards Passing
124
311
Total Offense
286
9-21-3
Passing
6-21-1
6-37.7
Punting
7-34.6
3-1
Fumbles-Lost
6-2
5-25
Penalties-Yards
8-60
150
Huskies and the Bowls
W
Freedom Bowl-December 30, 1985
Washington 20, Colorado 17
Sophomore quarterback Chris Chandler
A Colorado field goal early in the third
FREEDOM
passed for 141 yards and ran for 72 more in
quarter tied the game at 10-10, but again
leading Washington to a 20-17 victory over
Washington responded to regain the lead. A
Colorado in the second annual Freedom
36-yard kickoff return by David Trimble
Bowl in Anaheim. The win boosted Wash-
gave the Huskies excellent field position on
ington's overall bowl record to 9-6-1, and a
their own 47. Chandler's 15-yard option
6-2 record in bowls under Don James. The
keeper followed by a 14-yard pitch to Rod
Freedom Bowl was Washington's seventh
Jones were key plays in the drive. Weath-
straight postseason bowl appearance, and
ersby got 12 yards on a draw play to the
eighth in nine years.
Colorado 5, and then Tony Covington ran
The Huskies, 6-5 heading into the game,
twice and got the score on a 1-yard dive.
jumped off to a 3-0 lead late in the first
Washington led 17-10.
quarter when placekicker Jeff Jaeger
Washington increased its lead to 20-10 on
capped a 57-yard drive with a 30-yard field
its next possession as the Huskies moved 67
goal. Vince Weathersby had runs of 10 and
yards on 11 plays. Chandler passes to Lon-
18 yards in the drive, and also took a shovel
zell Hill, Covington and Toy accounted for
WASHINGTON
COLORADO
pass from Chandler for 17 more. Chandler
36 yards and Chandler added 19 more on
Anoheim
Collfornia
Program
ran 22 yards on an option play to get the ball
another option run. With fourth-and-one at
in scoring territory.
the Colorado 1-yard line, Washington opt-
0,961 at Anaheim Stadium
Colorado used a 28-yard punt return mid-
ed for a sure three points on Jaeger's second
field goal.
way through the second quarter to set up its
first score. It took the Buffs nine plays to
Colorado made things interesting midway
travel 26 yards. Anthony Weatherspoon got
through the fourth quarter when holder
the touchdown on a 1-yard blast and Colo-
Barry Helton passed 31 yards to Jon Em-
rado took a 7-3 lead. Washington came
bree for a touchdown on a fake field goal as
back to move 80 yards and regain the lead.
the Buffs cut Washington's lead to 20-17.
Chandler passed for 50 of the 80 yards and
Colorado got the ball right back and
David Toy finally got the score on a
marched to the Husky 7 but Joe Kelly
3-yard run with only 0:30 left before inter-
forced a fumble and David Rill recovered to
mission. Jaeger's PAT made it 10-7
preserve the win.
Huskies.
Chandler, starting only his third game at
quarterback, was voted the game's MVP.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
1 UW-Jaeger, 30-yard FG, 4:15
inal Rankings
2 CU-Weatherspoon, 1-yard run, 5:59 (Eckel Kick)
P
None.
2 UW-Toy, 3-yard run, 0:30 (Jaeger Kick)
PI
None.
3 CU-Eckel, 33-yard FG, 8:41
SA Today/CNN None.
3 UW-Covington, 1-yard run, 5:35 (Jaeger Kick)
core by Quarters
4 UW-Jaeger, 18-yard FG, 14:57
C
0
7
3
7
17
4 CU-Embree, 31-yard pass from Helton, 11:05 (Eckel Kick)
-
W
3
7
7
3
-
20
Individual Leaders
Team Statistics
Rushing-Chandler (UW) 7-72; Marquez (CU) 10-80; Weathersby (UW) 11-56.
UW
CU
Passing-Chandler (UW) 15-26-1-141; Hatcher (CU) 1-8-0-13; Helton (CU) 1-1-0-31; Alexander (CU) 0-1-
0-0.
20
First Downs
15
Receiving-Hill (UW) 4-48; Jones (UW) 3-39; Weathersby (UW) 3-21; Embree (CU) 1-31.
207
Net Yards Rushing
190
141
Net Yards Passing
44
348
Total Offense
234
5-25-1
Passing
2-10-0
6-40.0
Punting
5-39.0
1-0
Fumbles-Lost
1-1
13-88
Penalties-Yards
4-20
151
W
Huskies and the Bowls
DECEMBER 25, 1986 PASO, TEXAS OFFICIAL SOUVENIR PROGRAM $4.00
Sun Bowl-December 25, 1986
Alabama 28, Washington 6
SUN BOWL
A close game at the intermission (7-6)
touchdown passes, 32 yards to Al Rio
turned into a nightmare for the Huskies,
WASHINGTON VS.
ardson and 18 yards to Humphrey. On t
8-2-1 entering the bowl, in the second half
day, Shula was 15-of-26 for 176 yards a
as the Alabama Crimson Tide rolled up 21
no interceptions. The talented Humphi
unanswered points to record a 28-6 victory
rambled for 159 yards on 28 carries (5
over Washington in the 53rd John Hancock
yards per carry).
Sun Bowl in El Paso, Texas.
The potent Husky attack was limited to ju
Alabama got on the board first when sopho-
102 yards rushing while quarterback Ch
more running back Bobby Humphrey
Chandler exploited the Alabama seconda
broke loose on a sweep to the right side of
for 199 yards on 20-of-43 pass attemp
the line and scampered 64 yards for a
One of the big reasons the Husky backfie
touchdown with 14:10 remaining in the sec-
saw Crimson all day was due to the pre
ond quarter.
ence of All-America linebacker Corneli
53RD
Washington got to within one point with a
Bennett. Bennett, voted the game's Mc
ANNUAL
pair of Jeff Jaeger field goals. That would be
Valuable Player, led Alabama with 11 tac
the closest the Huskies would get the rest of
les and harassed Chandler the entire day
the day. It was also the lowest postseason
Washington's two-game bowl win-stre
scoring output for the UW since the 1981
was ended. However, the Huskies did t
Rose Bowl (a 23-6 loss to Michigan).
USC's Pac-10 mark for consecutive bo
48,722 at Sun Bowl Stadium
'Bama quarterback Mike Shula got the
appearances (eight). The Huskies ende
Tide's air game into gear with a pair of
the season ranked 17th by UPI, 18th by A
and 19th by USA Today/CCN.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
2 UA-Humphrey 64-yard run, 13:45 (Tiffin Kick)
2 UW-Jaeger 31-yard FG, 5:55
2 UW-Jaeger 34-yard FG, 0:44
3 UA-Richardson, 32-yard pass from Shula, 6:24 (Tiffin Kick)
3 UA-Humphrey, 18-yard pass from Shula, 0:13 (Tiffin Kick)
4 UA-Humphrey, 3-yard run, 7:16 (Tiffin Kick)
Individual Leaders
Rushing-Humphrey (UA) 28-159; Weathersby (UW) 9-28.
Passing-Chandler (UW) 20-43-2-199; Shula (UA) 15-26-0-176.
Receiving-Hill (UW) 5-77; Richardson (UA) 2-59; Weathersby (UW) 5-45.
Final Rankings
AP
18th
UPI
17th
USA Today/CNN 19th
Score by Quarters
UA
0
7
14
7
-
28
UW
0
6
0
0
-
6
Team Statistics
UW
UA
16
First Downs
13
62
Net Yards Rushing
201
199
Net Yards Passing
188
267
Total Offense
389
20-43-2
Passing
15-25-0
8-35.6
Punting
9-45.7
4-1
Fumbles-Lost
0-0
1-15
Penalties-Yards
1-15
152
Huskies and the Bowls
W
$4.00
Independence
Independence Bowl-Dec. 19, 1987
Bowl XII
Washington 24, Tulane 12
Washington extended its postseason rec-
up Washington's first touchdown-a 3-yard
reveport Bossier City, Louisiana
Saturday December 19, 1987
ord under head coach Don James to 7-3
run by tailback Tony Covington culminat-
with its 24-12 victory over Tulane in the
ing a 61-yard, 10-play drive completed with
Independence Bowl, played before 41,683
7:43 to play in the first period.
fans in Shreveport's Independence Sta-
Tulane scored 10 second-quarter points on
dium. It was Washington's third win in its
a 44-yard punt return by Mitchell Price and
last four bowl appearances.
a 21-yard field goal by placekicker Todd
Taking a 6-4-1 record into the game, the
Wiggins. The Green Wave's only other
Husky defense kept the Tulane Green
points came on a safety with seven seconds
Wave from scoring a touchdown while
left in the game.
Washington quarterback Chris Chandler
Washington did its share of second-quarter
was named the Independence Bowl's Of-
scoring, adding 14 points to its 7-0 first-
fensive Player of the Game, passing for 234
quarter lead. Both of Chandler's second-
yards and two touchdowns.
quarter touchdowns were 5-yard pass
Led by 12 tackles from linebacker David
completions, with the first going to tight
Rill, the Washington defense held college
end Bill Ames and the second to split end
WASHINGTON VS. TULANE
football's 11th-best scoring team 20 points
Darryl Franklin, sandwiching Wiggins' field
below its season average. Green Wave
goal. Washington placekicker Brandy
quarterback Terrence Jones completed 17-
Brownlee was responsible for the three
11,683 at Independence Stadium
of-40 passes for 248 yards, and was inter-
point-after successes, but missed the one
cepted once and sacked three times.
field goal he attempted from the 40-yard
line early in the third quarter.
Rover Darryl Hall picked off an errant
Jones pass on the Wave's first series to set
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
1 UW-Covington, 3-yard run, 7:43 (Brownlee Kick)
2 TU-Price, 44-yard punt return, 8:56 (Wiggins Kick)
2 UW-Ames, 5-yard pass from Chandler, 5;26 (Brownlee Kick)
2 TU-Wiggins, 21-yard FG, 3:18
2 UW-Franklin, 5-yard pass from Chandler, 1:09 (Brownlee Kick)
4 UW-Wyles, 41 yard FG, 13:54
4 TU-Safety, Conklin knelt in end zone, :07
Individual Leaders
Rushing-Jones (TU) 18-91; Weathersby (UW) 14-84; Jenkins (UW) 11-44.
Final Rankings
Passing-Jones (TU) 17-40-1-248; Chandler (UW) 15-30-3-234.
P
None.
Receiving-Zeno (TU) 7-116; Weathersby (UW) 5-64; Franklin (UW) 4-61.
JPI
None.
USA Today/CNN None.
Score by Quarters
UW
7
14
0
3
-
24
UT
0
10
0
2
-
12
Team Statistics
UW
TU
22
First Downs
21
147
Net Yards Rushing
131
249
Net Yards Passing
248
396
Total Offense
379
16-32-3
Passing
17-40-1
4-32.8
Punting
6-43.7
1-10
Fumbles-Lost
2-1
10-67
Penalties-Yards
7-73
153
W
Huskies and the Bowls
Freedom Bowl-December 30, 1989
Washington 34, Florida 7
The Huskies claimed their fourth win in
Washington scored on its next three offer
their last five bowl appearances with a
sive possessions and added a blocked pur
dominating 34-7 shellacking of the Uni-
for a touchdown to take a 27-7 lead into th
versity of Florida Gators in front of 33,858
intermission.
fans in Anaheim. The victory improved
coach Don James' bowl record at Wash-
McCallum started the scoring explosio
ington to 8-3.
when he kicked a 21-yard field goal for
10-7 Husky lead. The defense stoppe
Washington, 7-4 coming into the bowl,
Florida, and Washington drove for anothe
finished the 1989 season by winning six of
score, with Conklin passing 10 yards
its final seven games, including the Free-
Andre Riley for the touchdown.
dom Bowl.
Channing Wyles punted to the Gato
Quarterback Cary Conklin, voted the
1-yard line to set up the next Husky score
game's Most Valuable Player, capped his
Florida ran Smith into the line twice for
record-setting Husky career in fine style,
gain of 1, and then threw an incomplet
completing 21-of-39 passes for 217 yards.
pass. Faced with a fourth-and-nine on the
The Huskies' defense held Florida All-
own 2, the Gators' Hank Rone attempted
American running back Emmitt Smith to
punt. Chico Fraley stormed in to block th
just 17 yards, negating any chance of a
kick and Jaime Fields recovered it in th
Florida victory. Husky running back Greg
end zone for the score. McCallum's extr
33,858 at Anaheim Stadium
Lewis gained 97 yards on 27 carries.
point made it 24-7 and forced Florida awa
Washington returned the opening kickoff
from its running game for good.
31 yards to the 36-yard line and had 15
McCallum kicked one more field goal wit
more tacked on by a Florida clipping pen-
just 18 seconds left in the half to brin
alty, allowing the Dawgs to start their initial
Washington's point total to 27. For the half
drive from the Gator 49. Conklin hit split
Washington notched 18 first downs to onli
end Mario Bailey with a 21-yard touchdown
three for Florida, and controlled the ball fo
pass and, following John McCallum's PAT,
almost 24 minutes (23:47).
the Huskies had an immediate 7-0 lead.
Playing mostly reserves, Washingtor
Florida answered quickly, as quarterback
cruised through the second half, tacking 01
Donald Douglas went around left end for a
a final touchdown late in the fourth quarter
67-yard touchdown on Florida's second of-
Reserve quarterback Mark Brunell, a red
fensive play of the game. From then on it
shirt freshman, scampered 20 yards for the
was all Washington. Florida gained just 16
game's final points.
more yards on the ground the remainder of
the day, finishing with a total of 83.
Final Rankings
Scoring
AP
23rd
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME: (CONVERSION)
UPI
20th
1 UW-Bailey 21-yard pass from Conklin, 2:44 (McCallum Kick)
USA Today/CNN 25th
I UF-Douglas 67-yard run, 3:04 (Francis Kick)
1 UW-McCallum 21-yard FG, 7:41
Score By Quarters
1 UW-Riley 10-yard pass from Conklin, 12:26 (McCallum Kick)
UF
7
0
0
0
-
7
2 UW-Fields recovered blocked punt in end zone, 4:09 (McCallum Kick)
UW
17
10
0
7
-
34
2 UW-McCallum 32-yard FG, 14:42
4 UW-Brunell 20-yard run, 12:39 (Jolley Kick)
Team Statistics
Individual Leaders
UW
UF
28
First Downs
10
Rushing-Lewis (UW) 27-97; Douglas (UF) 9-65; Turner (UW) 7-38; Barry (UW) 5-30; Brunell (UW) 1-20;
Smith (UF) 7-17.
191
Net Yards Rushing
83
242
Net Yards Passing
148
Passing-Conklin (UW) 21-39-0-217; Douglas (UF) 8-18-1-91; Brunell (UW) 3-5-0-25.
433
Total Offense
Receiving-McKay (UW) 5-83; Lewis (UW) 6-44; Barber (UF) 2-41.
231
24-44-0
Passing
11-28-1
7-37.0
Punting
8-32.9
0-0
Fumbles-Lost
7-3
9-86
Penalties-Yards
9-85
154
Huskies and the Bowls
W
77th
Rose Bowl-January 1, 1991
ROSE BOWL
Washington 46, Iowa 34
GAME.
Husky sophomore quarterback Mark Brunell
than 40 points to the high-scoring Huskies.
JANUARY 1. 1991 PASADENA. CALIFORNIA
WASHINGTON VS IOWA
passed for a pair of touchdowns and ran for
two more to lead Pac-10 champion Wash-
The strong tradition of Don James special
teams surfaced early in this game when red-
ington to a convincing 46-34 win over Iowa.
shirt freshman Andy Mason blocked an Iowa
Washington and Iowa combined for 80
points, making the 77th Rose Bowl the high-
punt that was scooped up by junior
cornerback Dana Hall, who sprinted in for a
est scoring in history. The opportunistic
touchdown. With less than five minutes
Huskies built a 33-7 halftime lead, with two
first-half touchdowns coming courtesy of
elapsed, Washington led 10-0. After Iowa
closed to 10-7 with 12:39 left in the half,
the UW defense.
Washington erupted for 23 consecutive
The Pasadena victory left Washington 10-2
points.
for the season, while Iowa dropped to 8-4.
A 38-yard Travis Hanson field goal, and a
ROSE
BE
The game marked Washington's 12th bowl
37-yard interception return by senior
appearance in the 16-year coaching reign of
cornerback Charles Mindy gave Washing-
Don James, who improved his bowl record
ton momentum. Two touchdowns gener-
to 9-3, including 3-1 in the Rose Bowl.
ated by Brunell, on a 5-yard run and a 22-
$5.00
Left-handed Brunell's running and passing
yard pass to Mario Bailey, gave the Huskies
skills earned him Rose Bowl MVP honors as
their nearly insurmountable 33-7 lead at
he completed 14 of 22 passes for 163 yards.
intermission.
01,273 at the Rose Bowl
Washington faithful also rejoiced in the re-
Iowa threw a scare into the Huskies as
turn of senior All-America running back
Hawkeye quarterback Matt Rodgers rallied
Greg Lewis, who spent the month prior to
his team for 27 second-half points. Iowa
the Rose Bowl rehabilitating an injured knee.
fullback Nick Bell's 20-yard touchdown run
Lewis hadn't lost a step, however, as he rushed
with 5:07 to play pulled the Hawkeyes within
for a game-high 128 yards on 19 carries.
13 at 39-26. But Washington's Brunell put
Washington's defense, ranked first in the
out the fire on the next possession with a 31-
nation in stopping the run, allowed Iowa just
yard scoring completion to Bailey. A late
139 net yards on the ground, recorded five
Iowa score made the score 45-34 as Wash-
sacks and forced five turnovers (four inter-
ington held on to claim the Pac-10's second
ceptions) in the game. Iowa also became the
consecutive Rose Bowl win and eighth in the
sixth team in 1990-91 to surrender more
past 10 years.
Scoring
Q TEAM-SCORING PLAY, TIME (CONVERSION)
1 UW-Hanson, 23-yard FG, 9:14
1 UW-Hall, 27-yard return of blocked punt, 7:15 (Hanson Kick)
2 UI-Bell, 15-yard run, 12:39 (Skillett Kick)
Final Rankings
2 UW-Hanson, 38-yard FG, 9:57
P
5th
2 UW-Mincy, 37-yard interception return, 8:22 (Pass Failed)
JPI
5th
2 UW-Brunell, 5-yard run, 2:44 (Hanson Kick)
JSA Today/CNN
5th
2 UW-M. Bailey, 22-yard pass from Brunell, :58 (Hanson Kick)
3 UI-Rodgers, 7-yard run, 12:53 (Skillett Kick)
Score by Quarters
3 UW-Brunell, 20-yard run, 3:27 (Run Failed)
JI
0
7
7
20
-
34
4 UI-Rodgers, 9-yard run, 6:27 (Run Failed)
UW
10
23
6
7
-
46
4 UI-Bell, 20-yard run, 5:07 (Pass Failed)
4 UW-M. Bailey, 31-yard pass from Brunell, 4:43 (Hanson Kick)
Team Statistics
4 UI-Saunders, 12-yard pass from Rodgers, 2:23 (Velicer, pass from Rodgers)
UW
UI
Individual Leaders
19
First Downs
19
222
Net Yards Rushing
139
Rushing-Lewis (UW) 19-128; Bell (UI) 11-64; Bryant (UW) 3-47; Brunell (UW) 10-28; Montgomery (UI)
163
Net Yards Passing
315
4-26; Stewart (UI) 7-21; Kujawa (UI) 2-16; Mt. Jones (UW) 5-16; Rodgers (UI) 15-12; Turner (UW) 1-4;
Barry (UW) 1-1; Hobert (UW) 1-(-2).
385
Total Offense
454
Passing-Rodgers (UI) 34-15-3-196; Brunell (UW) 22-14-1-163; Hobert (UW) 3-0-1-0; Hughes (UI) 1-1-
25-14-2
Passing
37-17-4
0-66; Titley (UI) 1-1-0-53; Skillett (UI) 1-0-1-0.
4-41.8
Punting
6-33.3
Receiving-Saunders (UI) 5-99; Pierce (UW) 4-32; Bell (UI) 3-85; M. Bailey (UW) 2-53; Stewart (UI) 2-40;
3-1
Fumbles-Lost
4-1
Kilpack (UW) 2-22; Montgomery (UI) 2-6; Filloon (UI) 1-53; McKay (UW) 1-17; Hughes (UI) 1-12; Cross
5-45
Penalties-Yards
8-55
(UI) 1-9; Whitaker (UI) 1-9; Mt. Jones (UW) 1-3; Titley (UI) 1-2; Lewis (UW) 1-0.
155
W
Huskies and the Bowls
Washington's Bowl Game Records
Individual Records
Team Records
Rushing Records
Most First Downs: 28 vs. Florida (1989 Freedom Bowl)
Most Rushing Attempts: 55 vs. Wisconsin (1960 Rose Bowl)
Longest TD Run: 53 yards, Lloyd Phelps vs. Hawaii (1938 Pineapple Bowl)
Most Yards Rushing: 222 vs. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
Longest Run, No Score: 44 yards, Greg Lewis vs. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
Most Passes Attempted: 56 vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Rushing Attempts: 28, Jacque Robinson vs. Oklahoma (1985 Orange Bowl)
Most Passes Completed: 35 VS. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Yards Rushing: 142, Jacque Robinson vs. Iowa (1982 Rose Bowl)
Most Yards Passing: 369 vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Rushing TDs: 2, Jacque Robinson vs. Iowa (1982 Rose Bowl)
Most Total Offensive Plays: 89 vs. Florida (1989 Freedom Bowl)
2, Warren Moon vs. Michigan (1978 Rose Bowl)
Most Yards Total Offense: 433 vs. Florida (1989 Freedom Bowl)
2, Mark Brunell vs. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
Most Fumbles: 4 VS. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Passing Records
4 VS. Alabama (1986 Sun Bowl)
Most Fumbles Lost: 4 vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Longest TD Pass: 71 yards, Tim Cowan to Anthony Allen vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha
Most Penalties: 13 vs. Colorado (1985 Freedom Bowl)
Bowl)
Most Penalty Yards: 88 vs. Colorado (1985 Freedom Bowl)
Longest Pass, No Score: 65 yards, Bob Schloredt to George Flemingvs. Wisconsin
(1960 Rose Bowl)
Most Points 1st Quarter: 17 VS. Wisconsin (1960 Rose Bowl); vs. Florida (1989
Freedom Bowl)
Most Passes Attempted: 53, Tim Cowan vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Points 2nd Quarter: 23 vs. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
Most Passes Completed: 33, Tim Cowan VS. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Points 3rd Quarter: 10 vs. Michigan (1978 Rose Bowl)
Most Yards Passing: 350, Tim Cowan vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Points 4th Quarter: 15 vs. Iowa (1982 Rose Bowl)
Most Pass Interceptions: 3, Paul Sicuro vs. Oklahoma (1985 Orange Bowl)
3, Bill Siler VS. Illinois (1964 Rose Bowl)
3, Chris Chandler VS. Tulane (1987 Independence Bowl)
Receiving Records
Most Pass Receptions: 10, Paul Skansi vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most Yards Receiving: 152, Anthony Allen vs. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Most TD Receptions: 3, Anthony Allen VS. Maryland (1982 Aloha Bowl)
Return Records
Longest TD Punt Return: 57 yards, Anthony Allen vs. Penn State (1983 Aloha
Bowl)
Longest Punt Return, No Score: 69 yards, Jimmy Johnson VS. Hawaii (1938 Pine
Apple Bowl)
Longest TD Kickoff Return: None
Washington's Bowl
Longest Kickoff Return, No Score: 53 yards, Kyle Stevens VS. Michigan (1978
Rose Bowl)
Most Valuable Players
Longest TD Interception Return: 37 yards, Charles Mincy vs. Iowa (1991 Rose
Bowl)
(Announced by Bowl Committee)
Longest Interception Return, No Score: 40 yards, George Wilson vs. Alabama
PLAYER OF
(1926 Rose Bowl)
YEAR
BOWL
THE GAME
SCORE
1926
Rose
George Wilson, rb
Kicking Records
Alabama 20, Washington 19
1960
Rose
Bob Schloredt qb
Washington 44, Wisconsin 8
Longest Field Goal: 44 yards, George Fleming VS. Minnesota (1961 Rose Bowl)
George Fleming, rb
Most Field Goals: 2, Chuck Nelson VS. Michigan (1981 Rose Bowl)
1961
Rose
Bob Schloredt qb
Washington 17, Minnesota 7
2, Jeff Jaeger vs. Colorado (1985 Freedom Bowl)
1978
Rose
Warren Moon, qb
Washington 27, Michigan 20
2, Jeff Jaeger VS. Alabama (1986 Sun Bowl)
1979
Sun
Paul Skansi, wr
Washington 14, Texas 7
2, Steve Robbins vs. Michigan (1978 Rose Bowl)
Doug Martin, dt
2, John McCallum vs. Florida (1989 Freedom Bowl)
1982
Rose
Jacque Robinson, rb
Washington 28, Iowa 0
2, Travis Hanson vs. Iowa (1991 Rose Bowl)
1982
Aloha
Tim Cowan, qb
Washington 21, Maryland 20
Longest Punt: 63 yards, George Wilson vs. Alabama (1926 Rose Bowl)
Tony Caldwell, lb
Most Punts: 9, Thane Cleland vs. Penn State (1983 Aloha Bowl)
1983
Aloha
Danny Greene, wr
Penn State 13, Washington 10
9, Fred Abel VS. Navy (1924 Rose Bowl)
1985
Orange
Jacque Robinson, rb
Washington 28, Oklahoma 17
Ron Holmes, dt
1985
Freedom
Chris Chandler, qb
Washington 20, Colorado 17
1986
Sun
Steve Alvord, dl
Alabama 28, Washington 6
1987
Independence
Chris Chandler, qb
Washington 24, Tulane 12
1989
Freedom
Cary Conklin, qb
Washington 34, Florida 7
1991
Rose
Mark Brunell, qb
Washington 46, Iowa 34
156
Huskies and the Bowls
W
Rose Bowl Selection Formula
he Pacific-10 Rose Bowl representative
If the remaining two teams played one an-
Pac-10 Members
all be that member's team with the best
other, the winner shall be the representa-
cord in the loss and tie columns (a tie
tive. If they tied or did not play one another,
in Bowl Games
eing counted as one-half in all confer-
the team with the highest point total for all
ice games. If, however, the lowest loss-tie
games shall be the Rose Bowl representa-
(since 1975)
tals of two or more members are identi-
tive as in paragraph "A" above. If a tie re-
SCHOOL
NO.
RECORD
PCT.
11, determination of the Rose Bowl repre-
mains, the team most recently appearing in
UCLA
11
8-2-1
.770
entative shall be as follows:
the Rose Bowl shall be eliminated. If nei-
Washington
12
9-3-0
.750
ther team has appeared in the Rose Bowl,
USC
13
7-6-0
.539
Two-Team Tie-If the tied teams
determination shall be made by a vote of
Arizona State
5
4-1-0
.800
ayed one another, the winner of their
the conference's Men's Administration
Arizona
5
2-2-1
.500
ame shall be the representative. If they
Stanford
3
2-1-0
.670
Committee.
ed or did not play one another the follow-
Washington State
2
1-1-0
.500
g formula shall be used:
Oregon
2
1-1-0
.500
California
2
1-1-0
.500
Count 4 points for a conference win.
Count 3 points for a non-conference win
gainst a Division IA team.
Pac-10 Conference Bowl Record
Count 2 points for a non-conference win
(since 1975)
gainst a non-Division IA team.
Count 2 points for a conference tie.
YEAR BOWL
SCORE
YEAR BOWL
SCORE
1975
Rose
UCLA 23, Ohio State 10
1985
Rose
UCLA 45, Iowa 28
Count 1-1/2 points for a non-conference
Liberty
USC 20, Texas A&M 0
Freedom
Washington 20,
e against a Division IA team.
1976
Rose
USC 14, Michigan 6
Colorado 17
Count 1 point for a non-conference tie
Liberty
Alabama 26, UCLA 6
Sun
Arizona 13, Georgia 13
gainst a non-Division IA team.
1977
Rose
Washington 27,
Holiday
Arkansas 18,
Michigan 20
Arizona State 17
The team with highest point total for all
Sun
Stanford 24, LSU 14
Aloha
Alabama 24, USC 3
tames shall be the Rose Bowl representa-
Bluebonnet
USC 47, Texas A&M 28
1986
Rose
Arizona State 22,
1978
Rose
USC 17, Michigan 10
Michigan 15
ive.
Citrus
Auburn 16, USC 7
if a tie remains, the last team appearing in
Fiesta
UCLA 10, Arkansas 10
Bluebonnet
Freedom
UCLA 31, BYU 10
he Rose Bowl shall be eliminated. If nei-
Stanford 25, Georgia 22
Gator
Clemson 27, Stanford 21
her team has appeared in the Rose Bowl,
Garden State
Arizona State 34,
Aloha
Arizona 30,
he determination shall be made by vote of
Rutgers 18
North Carolina 21
the conference's Men's Administration
1979
Rose
USC 17, Michigan 10
Sun
Alabama 28, Washington 6
Committee.
Sun
Washington 14, Texas 7
1987
Rose
Michigan State 20,
Pittsburgh 16, Arizona 10
USC 17
B. Multiple Ties-When three or more
Fiesta
UCLA 20, Florida 16
teams are tied in the loss-tie column in
Garden State
Temple 28, California 17
Aloha
conference play, if one team has defeated
1980
Rose
Michigan 23,
Freedom
Arizona State 33,
Washington 6
Air Force 23
all the others, it shall be the Rose Bowl
1981
Rose
Washington 28, Iowa 0
Independence
Washington 24, Tulane 12
representative. A team defeated by all other
Fiesta
Penn State 26, USC 10
1988
Rose
Michigan 22, USC 14
tied teams shall be eliminated. If one team
Holiday
BYU 38,
Aloha
Washington State 24,
has not defeated the others, the point for-
Washington State 36
Houston 22
mula above shall be computed. Only the top
Bluebonnet
Michigan 33, UCLA 14
Cotton
UCLA 17, Arkansas 3
two teams on the point system shall thereaf-
1982
Rose
UCLA 24, Michigan 14
1989
Rose
USC 17, Michigan 10
ter be considered. If a tie for the second
Fiesta
Arizona St. 32,
Freedom
Washington 34, Florida 7
position occurs upon application of the
Oklahoma 21
Copper
Arizona 17, North
point formula, the second team shall be the
Aloha
Washington 21,
Carolina State 10
winner of the game between the tied teams,
Maryland 20
Independence
Oregon 27, Tulsa 24
or, if the teams did not play each other or
1983
Rose
UCLA 45, Illinois 9
1990
Rose
Washington 46, Iowa 34
played a tie game, the team which has not
Aloha
Penn State 13,
Aloha
Syracuse 28, Arizona 0
played in the Rose Bowl for the longest
Washington 10
Copper
California 17, Wyoming 15
period of time shall be the second team.
1984
Rose
USC 20, Ohio State 17
John Hancock
Michigan St. 17, USC 16
Orange
Washington 28,
Freedom
Colorado St. 32, Oregon 31
Oklahoma 17
Fiesta
UCLA 39,
Miami-Florida 37
157
W
Huskies and the Bowls
Washington's Bowl Record (12-7-1)
The Rose Bowl
DATE
BOWL
OPPONENT
UW
OPP
At the end of the 1901 season, Michigan was prevail
ATTENDANCE
Jan. 1, 1924
upon to play Stanford in an "East-West" game
Rose
Navy
14
14
40,000
Pasadena's Tournament Park. The contest took pla
Jan. 1, 1926
Rose
Alabama
19
20
45,000
on January 1, 1902, with Michigan winning by a SC
Jan. 1, 1937
Rose
Pittsburgh
0
21
87,196
of 49-0. Following this, the game was discontinu
Jan. 1, 1938
Pineapple
Hawaii
53
13
13,500
until the first day of 1916 when Washington St
Jan. I, 1944°
Rose
defeated Brown University, 14-0.
USC
0
29
68,000
Jan. 1, 1960
Rose
Wisconsin
44
The contest continued to be known as the "East-We
8
100,809
Jan. 2, 1961
Rose
Minnesota
game until the 1923 game was played at the new
17
7
97,314
constructed Rose Bowl. The University of Southe
Jan. 1, 1964
Rose
Illinois
7
17
96,957
California defeated Penn State in that game, 14-3.
Jan. 2, 1978
Rose
Michigan
27
20
105,312
The original Tournament Park (in 1902) held abd
Dec. 22, 1979
Sun
Texas
14
7
33,412
10,000 fans, although only 8,500 attended t
Jan. 1, 1981
Rose
Michigan
6
23
104,863
Stanford-Michigan contest. Prior to the 1917 gam
Jan. 1, 1982
Rose
Iowa
28
0
105,611
the seating capacity was increased to 30,000.
Dec. 25, 1982
Aloha
Maryland
21
20
30,055
The new Rose Bowl originally was a horseshoe affa
Dec. 26, 1983
Aloha
Penn State
10
13
37,212
running north and south with the opening at the sou
Jan. 1, 1985
Orange
Oklahoma
28
17
56,294
end. It seated 56,000. The capacity was then progre
Dec. 30, 1985
Freedom
sively increased in 1929 to 66,000; in 1932 to 83,67
Colorado
20
17
30,961
and in 1938 to 90,000. Another increase in capaci
Dec. 25, 1986
Sun
Alabama
6
28
48,722
took place during the year 1949, with the funds beii
Dec. 19, 1987
Independence
Tulane
24
12
41,683
raised by public subscription. The 1950 Rose Bo
Dec. 30, 1989
Freedom
Florida
34
7
game set a record of 100,983 fans.
33,858
Jan. 1, 1991
Rose
Iowa
46
34
101,273
The present Rose Bowl was actually dedicated
°A regular Pacific Coast Conference schedule was not played because of wartime travel restrictions in 1943, so Northern Division
October 28, 1922, with a football game between tl
winner (Washington) met Southern Division winner (Southern California) in the Rose Bowl.
University of California and the University of Souther
California before a crowd of 35,000. California WC
Rose Bowl Record: Won 5, Lost 5, Tied 1
the game, 12-0.
Other Bowls Record: Won 7, Lost 2
All Bowls Record: Won 12, Lost 7, Tied 1
Prior to 1935 the Western team in the game Wa
invited by the Tournament of Roses Association.
The Tournament also selected the Eastern team unt
1923. From 1923 through 1946 the Western tear
selected its Eastern opponent. From 1946 until 195
the old Pacific Coast Conference and the Big Te
selected representatives.
Under a new agreement, starting with the 1960 game
the Pacific-10 selected a representative from among it
1991-1992 Bowl Game Schedule
conference members. The conference also selected it
opponent for the 1961 and 1962 games. Followin
1962 a new contract was signed with the Big Ten for
DATE
DAY
BOWL
LOCATION
TIME
NETWORK
to provide the Pac-10's opponent.
Dec. 14
Saturday
California Raisin Bowl
Fresno, Calif.
The Pacific-10 leads the Big Ten 24-21 since the serie
1:00 p.m.
SportsChannel
began in 1947. The Pac-10 has won 14 of the last 1
Dec. 25
Wednesday
Eagle Aloha Bowl
Honolulu, Hi.
12:30 p.m.
ABC
and 18 of the last 22 meetings.
Dec. 28
Saturday
Blockbuster Bowl
Miami, Fla.
5:00 p.m.
CBS
Dec. 28
Saturday
Liberty Bowl
Memphis, Tenn.
5:00 p.m.
ESPN
Washington in the Rose Bowl
Dec. 28
Saturday
Freedom Bowl
Anaheim, Calif.
6:00 p.m.
Raycom
YEAR
W/L
OPPONENT
SCORE
Dec. 30
Monday
Thrifty Car Rental Holiday Bowl
San Diego, Calif.
1924
4:30 p.m.
ESPN
T
Navy
14-14
1926
Dec. 31
L
Tuesday
Alabama
John Hancock Bowl
20-19
El Paso, Tex.
9:30 a.m.
CBS
1937
L
Pittsburgh
21-0
Dec. 31
Tuesday
Domino's Copper Bowl
Tucson, Ariz.
5:00 p.m.
TBS
1944
L
Southern Cal
29-0
Jan. I
Wednesday
Peach Bowl
Atlanta, Ga.
8:30 p.m.
ESPN
1960
W
Wisconsin
44-8
Jan. 1
Wednesday
Hall of Fame Bowl
1961
Tampa, Fla.
W
Minnesota
10:00 a.m.
NBC
17-7
1964
L
Illinois
17-7
Jan. 1
Wednesday
Florida Citrus Bowl
Orlando, Fla.
10:30 a.m.
ABC
1978
W
Michigan
27-20
Jan. 1
Wednesday
Mobil Cotton Bowl
Dallas, Tex.
10:30 a.m.
CBS
1981
L
Michigan
23-6
Jan. 1
Wednesday
Fiesta Bowl
Tempe, Ariz.
1:00 p.m.
NBC
1982
W
Iowa
28-0
Jan. 1
1991
W
Wednesday
Rose Bowl
Iowa
Pasadena, Calif.
46-34
2:00 p.m.
ABC
Jan. 1
Wednesday
Federal Express Orange Bowl
Miami, Fla.
5:00 p.m.
NBC
Jan. 1
Wednesday
USF&G Sugar Bowl
New Orleans, La.
5:30 p.m.
ABC
All times Pacific Standard Time, and subject to change.
Note: Liberty Football Classic (TBA)
158
74 the " 75%
THE HUSKY EXPERIENCE
W
The Husky Experience
Quality Education
The University of Washington
Founded in 1861, the University of Wash-
Arts and Sciences, Business Administi
ington is one of the foremost institutions in
tion, Dentistry, Education, Engineerin
the nation, richly combining its research,
Forest Resources, The Graduate School
instructional and public service missions.
Law, Medicine, Nursing, Ocean and Fis
Its internationally acclaimed faculty in-
ery Sciences, Pharmacy, Public Affair
cludes two Nobel Laureates, and the win-
Public Health and Community Medicin
ner of the 1990 National Book Award for
and Social Work. Washington also h
Fiction. Washington is part of an elite group
branch campuses in Tacoma and Bothell
of research universities whose contribu-
Beyond its academic and service mission
tions to American life are unique because
the UW has a strong economic impact d
they generate the basic knowledge upon
Washington and the Pacific Northwest.
which practical innovations are based.
With about 17,000 employees, Washingto
The Washington student body totals more
is the second largest employer in Kin
than 33,000.
County. Washington operates the Unive
For more than two decades, the university
sity of Washington Medical Center an
has been among the country's top five insti-
Harborview Medical Center, which annua
tutions in the dollar value of federal re-
ly provide more than 200,000 days of pa
search grants and contracts awarded to its
tient care and record more than 300,00
faculty. Total grant and contract activity for
visits to their outpatient clinics.
1990 exceeded $345 million. More than 80
Washington also plays a critical role in at
percent of the university's grant and con-
tracting new business to the region. It pro
tract funds come from federal agencies.
vides these, and established businesses
You won't be able to find a better com-
Research contributes directly to the educa-
with a steady stream of well-educated grad
bination of academics, lifestyle and
tional goals of graduate and professional
uates and with highly skilled faculty mem
intercollegiate athletics than what is
students, as well as to those of undergradu-
bers who assist business and industry in
available at the University of Washing-
ates.
variety of ways.
ton. We have it all here, and that is why
Instruction and research at Washington are
this program continues to be successful.
Washington is located on 694 acres in Seat
supported by a library system that is one of
Washington offers academic excellence
tle's northeast residential area, a beautifu
the most extensive in the nation. It consists
in a wide variety of curriculums. It is as
setting on the shore of Lake Washingto
of five major units and 17 branches, housing
important to have choices as it is to
and Portage Bay. The majestic Cascad
more than 4.5 million volumes. In addition
have excellence, and that is what is
Mountains can be seen to the east, while the
to offering instruction in more than 100
available academically at the Univer-
western view includes downtown Seattle
academic disciplines, the university offers a
and Lake Union. The combination of thi
sity of Washington.
broad-spectrum of continuing education
spectacular setting with buildings in botl
Seattle also offers choices. It is a beauti-
courses that advance technical and profes-
neo-Gothic and modern styles gives the
ful, energetic city that embraces the
sional skills and provide opportunities for
campus a distinctive aura.
Husky athletic program with both
personal growth and enrichment to more
arms. The success of the program can
than 24,000 persons annually.
The president of Washington is Dr. William
be measured in the interest of the com-
P. Gerberding, in his 13th year of service in
Washington has 16 major schools and col-
munity.
that capacity. The university's athletic di-
leges: Architecture and Urban Planning,
rector is Barbara Hedges.
An excellent academic insititution. A
Top 20 football program. A very
liveable city.
At the University of Washington, you
Above-Smith Hall, located on the University of Washington campus, with the cherry
trees in blossom.
can have it all.
160
The Husky Experience
W
uality Education
ademic Excellence
e University of Washington ranks among
in developing an academic advising
top five colleges in the nation receiving
department.
leral grants, a lofty position Washington
held since 1969. The University is a
One-on-one tutoring, group study table and
der in both cancer and leukemia re-
self-help courses are available for all stu-
arch, as well as space shuttle technology.
dent-athletes. Direction is provided by
e School of Business has ranked in the
Gertrude Peoples, who was inducted in
tion's Top 10, and the School of Nursing
1988 into the Frederick Douglass Distin-
S earned the same top honor in pre-
guished Scholars' Society. She and her pro-
0
fessional staff assist all student-athletes in
ous years. The faculty-to-student ratio is
planning their academic careers. They are
e-to-12.
both friends and advisors.
a major requires the student to attend the
niversity of Washington for more than
Peoples was the winner of the Lan Hewlett
Award last winter for outstanding perfor-
ur years, a student-athlete has an oppor-
mance as an Academic Advisor for Athlet-
nity to continue receiving tuition and
ics. She received the award at the National
om and board payments in the fifth
Association of Academic Advisors for Ath-
ar in the UW's post-eligible work-study
letics Convention in Nashville. She is in her
fogram.
20th year with the department.
ollege means change. And one of the ma-
r adjustments can be adapting from the
The first priority is academic support, but it
gh school classroom to the college class-
is also a group of caring individuals who
om. To assist in the transition, the Uni-
want to help student-athletes adjust to all
ersity of Washington has been a pioneer
the changes college brings.
Top 20 Programs
Professional surveys the past few years
have rated the following University of
Washington programs among the na-
tion's Top 20:
Biochemistry
Botany
Computer Science and Engineering
Drama
Engineering
Geography
Geological Sciences
Germanics
Molecular Biology
Nursing
Physics
Physiology
Political Science
Rehab. Medicine
Zoology
Above-Washington's director of Stu-
dent-Athlete Services, Gertrude Peoples.
Left-Denny Hall on the University of
Washington campus. Denny Hall is the
oldest building on campus.
161
W
The Husky Experience
Quality Education
William P. Gerberding
President
As president of the University of Washing-
sistant for U.S. Senator Eugene M. McC
ton, William P. Gerberding is chief execu-
thy of Minnesota, as instructor in politi
tive officer of one of the nation's most
science at Colgate University, and as a Cc
distinguished universities. Renowned for
gressional Fellow of the American Politi
its instructional, research and public service
Association.
programs, the UW has one of the largest
single-campus enrollments on the West
Dr. Gerberding's scholarly publications
Coast.
clude "United States Foreign Policy: Pe
spective and Analysis" (1966) and "T
Dr. Gerberding, a political scientist special-
Radical Left: The Abuse of Disconter
izing in U.S. foreign policy, assumed the
(1970), co-edited with Duane E. Smith
UW presidency on July 1, 1979. He brought
the UCLA political science faculty.
to the position almost a decade of senior-
level administrative experience, having
A 1951 graduate of Macalester College
served previously as chancellor at the Uni-
St. Paul, Minn., he received his maste;
versity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
degree in 1956 and his doctorate in 195
executive vice chancellor at the University
both in political science, from the Univers
of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and
ty of Chicago.
dean of the faculty and vice president for
He serves on the Executive Committee
academic affairs at Occidental College.
the Association of American Universiti
From 1961 to 1972, Dr. Gerberding was a
(AAU), and represents the University
member of UCLA's political science facul-
the Pacific-10 Conference's presidents an
ty, becoming chairman of the department
chancellors organization.
in 1970. In 1966 he was one of four recipi-
A fan of intercollegiate athletics and profe
ents of the "Distinguished Teaching
"The city and its satellite suburbs have
sional baseball, Dr. Gerberding also play
Award" given annually by the UCLA Alum-
golf and tennis. A classical music devote
become a hub of high technology, em-
ni Association.
phasizing computer and medical re-
who enjoys all the arts, he and his wife
search and development. Supporting
Early in his career, the UW president
Ruth, are the parents of four children-
this high-tech boom is the University of
served as counsel for a congressional sub-
David, Steven, Liza and John.
Washington, which has retained its po-
committee on education, as a research as-
sition as one of the country's leading
research institutions."
-Joel Schwarz
Scenes From Seattle/US Air Magazine
Above-University of Washington Pres-
ident, Dr. William P. Gerberding.
Right-Rainier Vista, with Mount Rain-
ier visible beyond Drumheller Fountain
on the University campus.
W
162
The Husky Experience
W
uality Education
nes R. Collier
ee President for University Relations
e University of Washington has brought
the University's Commencement and other
der a single administrative umbrella
official functions.
st of the UW departments and agencies
t advance the University's interest to the
Administrative Support Services, a de-
blic in some visible way. The Office of
partment that is home to the Visitor's Infor-
mation Center, the Speaker's Bureau,
liversity Relations is the home of these
partments, including the Department of
Department of Trademarks and Licensing,
and other units.
ercollegiate Athletics.
Alumni Relations, which develops pro-
e Office of University Relations is head-
by Vice President James R. Collier, who
grams for all University alumni and coordi-
nates programs for the UW Alumni
S ranking administrator at the University
Association.
Illinois before joining President William
Gerberding and the UW's central admin-
The Office of University Relations has re-
rative team in 1981.
sponsibility for conducting community re-
addition to the Husky athletic program,
lations programs and is involved in
government relations programs as well.
niversity Relations includes:
News and Information, which provides
The senior University officer with adminis-
trative oversight responsibility for the
rough the mass media public information
Husky athletic program, Vice President
out the University's faculty, staff, and stu-
Collier is involved with athletic director
ents, and its broad-based programs in
Barbara Hedges on a routine basis in man-
aching, research, and public service.
agement matters.
KUOW-FM, the UW's public radio sta-
A native of South Dakota, Collier earned his
on, serving Western Washington and parts
master's degree at the University of Iowa
British Columbia, Canada.
and his bachelor's degree in Kansas at
KCMU-FM, a student-run station serv-
Wichita State University. He has three chil-
g Seattle.
dren-Jamie, a 1987 graduate of the UW;
Jill, a 1989 UW alumna; and Erin, a senior
Office of Public Exercises, responsible for
at Roosevelt High School in Seattle.
WASHINGTON
Above-University of Washington Vice
President for University Relations, James
R. Collier. Left-Thomson Hall on the
University of Washington campus, with
Lake Washington and the Cascade Moun-
tains visible in the distance.
163
W
The Husky Experience
Quality Football
The Coaches
The University of Washington's foundation
teacher, a competitor and a winner. He
for its quality football program is built on
class man for a class program.
the strength of its coaching staff.
James' staff is a reflection of and an ext
Head coach Don James is a proven winner,
sion of the head coach. Washington's
with a reputation for disciplined, well-
complished staff of assistant coaches sh
coached teams. He is the winningest foot-
some very significant traits. All nine we
ball coach in Washington's history. And he's
talented football players. Nearly all he
the winningest coach in Pacific-10 Confer-
advanced college degrees. All are excello
ence competition as well. Sports Illustrated
teachers.
once called Don James "The first-, second-
and third-best coach in college football."
Several of James' former assistants n
hold head coaching jobs, including J
What contributes most to his success? He is
Mora with the NFL's New Orleans Sain
tireless in his attention to detail. He is a
and Bob Stull, Gary Pinkel, Jim Heaco
and Skip Hall with Division I colleges.
High Visibility
Exposure is important to every college foot-
The KOMO radio broadcast team is a vete
ball player. Large crowds are the norm in
an, respected group of three individua
Husky Stadium, and the Huskies enjoy a
Bob Rondeau, a well-known KOMO-1
national television following thanks to the
sports reporter, provides the play-by-pl
Pacific-10 Conference's contract with
description of all Husky games with form
ABC-TV.
Seattle Seahawks' quarterback Sam Adki
Husky football has its own following with
providing analysis and color commentar
the Seattle media. The fans are interested
Sideline reports are provided by KOM
and the newspapers, radio and television
radio's sports director, Bill Swartz.
stations respond. Coverage of Husky athlet-
In addition, Prime Sports Northwest broa
ics in Seattle is front-page, full-spread, top-
casts each game on a delayed basis to 1
of-the-sports-report.
million homes in the Northwest. The fiv
Husky football games are broadcast live
state region includes Washington, Orego
over radio station KOMO AM 1000, part of
Alaska, Idaho and parts of Western Montan
the Athletic Department's multi-million
Washington football is more than just Seatt
dollar radio package. KOMO's radio net-
entertainment. The radio package guarante
work includes stations throughout the state
a West Coast following and the televisid
of Washington and in Alaska.
package guarantees a national following.
Above, Top-University of Washington
1991 KOMO Radio Network for
Head Football Coach, Don James. Above,
Football Broadcasts
Bottom-Former Husky tailback Greg
STATION
FREQUENCY
LOCATION
STATION
FREQUENCY
LOCATION
Lewis meets the press. Above, Right-
KAYO
1450 AM
Aberdeen, Wash.
°KOMO
1000 AM
Seattle, Wash.
ABC Television's Keith Jackson once
99.3 FM
KOMW
680 AM
Omak, Wash.
served as the radio voice of the Huskies
KBRC
1430 AM
Mt. Vernon, Wash.
KONA
610 AM
Tri-Cities, Wash.
KELA
1470 AM
and still works UW games as part of
Centralia, Wash.
KONP
1450 AM
Port Angeles, Wash.
KEYF
1050 AM
Spokane, Wash.
KPQ
560 AM
ABC's crew. Right-Inside linebacker
Wenatchee, Wash.
KAST
92.9 FM
Astoria, Oregon
KPUG
1170 AM
Bellingham, Wash.
Chico Fraley signs autographs, for young
KFAR
660 AM
Fairbanks, Alaska
KQUE
920 AM
Olympia, Wash.
Husky fans during the annual Photo Day
KICY
850 AM
Nome, Alaska
KRSA
850 AM
Petersburg, Alaska
Picnic.
KKSD
1080 AM
Anchorage, Alaska
KTKN
930 AM
Ketchikan, Alaska
KLOG
1490 AM
Kelso, Wash.
KVAC
1490 AM
Forks, Wash.
KMAS
1030 AM
Shelton, Wash.
KVAN
1550 AM
Vancouver, Wash.
KMWX
1460 AM
Yakima, Wash.
*Flagship Station
164
The Husky Experience
W
uality Football
Live Television Appearances since 1982
982 Huskies vs. California
ABC-TV
Huskies vs. Oregon State
TBS-TV
Huskies vs. Arizona State
Closed Circuit TV
Huskies vs. Washington State
KOMO-TV
Huskies vs. Maryland
Syndicated TV
1983
Huskies vs. Michigan
KOMO-TV
Huskies vs. LSU
KOMO-TV
Huskies vs. Oregon
KOMO-TV
Huskies vs. UCLA
ABC-TV
Huskies vs. Arizona
KIRO-TV
Huskies vs. Washington State
CBS-TV
Huskies vs. Penn State
Syndicated TV
1984 Huskies vs. Northwestern
TCS/Metro-TV
Huskies vs. Michigan
CBS-TV
Huskies vs. Stanford
CBS-TV
Huskies vs. Southern California
CBS-TV
Huskies vs. Washington State
TCS/Metro-TV
Huskies vs. Oklahoma
NBC-TV
1985
Huskies vs. Oklahoma State
TBS-TV
Weekly Highlights Show
Huskies vs. Brigham Young
ABC-TV
Every week during the season the Puget
Huskies vs. Houston
KOMO-TV
Sound is treated to "Husky Highlights with
Huskies vs. UCLA
CBS-TV
Huskies vs. Arizona State
CBS-TV
Don James," a recap of the past week's
KOMO-TV
games and a look ahead to the coming
Huskies vs. Washington State
Huskies vs. Colorado
Lorimar/Metro Sports TV
game. Keith Shipman, three-time Sports-
caster of the Year in the state of Washington
1986 Huskies vs. Ohio State
CBS-TV
Huskies vs. Southern California
TBS-TV
and the Sports and Public Affairs Director
Huskies vs. Stanford
TBS-TV
for KCPQ Television, hosts the one-hour
Huskies vs. Arizona State
KCPQ-TV
show with coach James.
Huskies vs. UCLA
CBS-TV
Huskies vs. Alabama
CBS-TV
This year's "Husky Highlights with Don
James" will air Sunday mornings at 10, be-
1987 Huskies vs. Stanford
KCPQ-TV
ginning September 8, 1991, and will run in
Huskies vs. Texas A&M
ESPN
that time slot throughout the season.
Huskies vs. Arizona State
ABC-TV
Huskies vs. Southern California
ABC-TV
KCPQ-TV is channel 13 on most Seattle
Huskies vs. UCLA
ABC-TV
area cable systems.
Huskies vs. Tulane
Mizlou-TV
1988
Huskies vs. Purdue
KCPQ-TV
Huskies VS. UCLA
ABC-TV
Huskies VS. Arizona State
ABC-TV
Huskies vs. Southern California
ABC-TV
Huskies VS. Washington State
KCPQ-TV
1989 Huskies vs. Texas A&M
ABC-TV
Huskies vs. Arizona
Prime Ticket
Huskies vs. Colorado
KCNC-TV
Huskies vs. Southern California
ABC-TV
Huskies VS. UCLA
ABC-TV
Huskies vs. Oregon State
KCPQ-TV
Huskies vs. Washington State
KCPQ-TV
Huskies vs. Florida
NBC-TV
1990 Huskies VS. Southern California
Prime Ticket
Huskies vs. Arizona State
KCPQ-TV
Huskies vs. Stanford
ABC-TV
Huskies vs. Arizona
ABC-TV
Huskies vs. UCLA
ABC-TV
Huskies vs. Washington State
KCPQ-TV
Huskies VS. Iowa
ABC-TV
165
W
The Husky Experience
Quality Football
Tradition of Excellence
The success of today has a strong foundation
Rose Bowl. Washington has also played
U OF W
15:59
in the past.
IOWA
the Orange, Pineapple and Independer
46
The University of Washington celebrated
bowls once, and had two appearances in t
QUARTER
34
100 years of Husky football last season by
Aloha, Freedom and Sun bowls.
TIME OUTS LEFT
3
4
TIME OUTS LEFT
making its first trip to the Rose Bowl since
And the UW has not only competed in bo
DOWN
TO
GO
BALLON26
1982. With the recounting of past successes
games, it has won bowl games. Washingt
PLEASE
DRIVE
SAFELY
comes the reminder that the UW has a
has an 12-7-1 record in postseason bo
proud and storied tradition of intercolle-
appearances.
giate competition on the gridiron.
The Huskies competed in a Pac-10 reco
The University of Washington has been
nine straight bowl games between 1979 ai
represented by its football team in 20 post-
1987, and have been in 12 bowls in the la
season bowl games. Of those 20 bowl ap-
14 years. In that 12-bowl span, Washingto
pearances, 11 have been in the prestigious
earned an 9-3 record.
Training Table
Schedule with National Impact
The Huskies eat a well-balanced dinner,
You can't play football in the Pacific-10
planned by a staff nutritionist, each night
Since 1980, Washington each season ha
Conference and not play a schedule with
during the season. The Husky training
played at least two teams ranked among the
national impact. The league has an all-time
table is located within the Conibear
nation's top 20. In 1982, when the Huskie
.633 winning percentage against non-con-
Shellhouse, adjacent to Lake Washington.
finished No. 7 in the final Associated Pres.
ference opponents, winning 1526 games
poll, the Huskies beat all three top 20 team
and losing 862, with 102 ties.
they played. And in 1984 when the Huskies
Teams in the Pacific-10 Conference are pe-
finished No. 2-their highest final ranking
rennially among the top ranked teams in the
ever in the AP poll-they were 28-17 win-
nation. Indeed, Pac-10 members Washing-
ners over Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl to
ton, UCLA and Southern California are all
conclude the season.
Above, Top-The Rose Bowl scoreboard
following Washington's 46-34 win over
among the top 20 schools appearing in the
Last year Washington defeated Southern
most top 10 AP final rankings from 1936
Iowa in the 1991 Bowl game. Above-A
California when the Trojans were ranked
through 1989. Those three league schools
typical Husky student crowd.
No. 5, and played eventual national cham-
are joined by Arizona State on the top 20 list
pion Colorado when it was No. 20.
of schools appearing in the most top 10
United Press International final rankings
from 1950 through 1989.
166
The Husky Experience
W
uality Football
utstanding Athletes
NFL First-Round Picks-
e current and former athletes on the
more players into professional football than
1978-1991
usky roster have earned individual recog-
virtually any college around.
tion while collectively gaining the distinc-
1978 Blair Bush, C
on of being one of the teams to beat in the
In his 16 years as head football coach at
Cincinnati Bengals
icific-10 Conference.
Washington, Don James has had 87 players
1980 Doug Martin, DT
drafted by the National Football League,
Minnesota Vikings
I-America, All-Pacific-10 Conference,
including 65 during the 1980s. Of the 87
1981 Curt Marsh, OT
1-Academic Pacific-10 Conference, All-
players drafted, 39 have been drafted in the
Oakland Raiders
bast honors-all of these awards have
first five rounds, including seven first-round
1985 Ron Holmes, DT
een earned repeatedly by Husky football
picks. More than two dozen other Husky
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
ayers. Each year a number of Husky ath-
products have gone to the Canadian Foot-
1986 Joe Kelly, LB
tes are invited to the prestigious senior
ball League and the now-defunct USFL,
Cincinnati Bengals
bwl games to culminate their collegiate
and numerous Huskies have made NFL
1987 Reggie Rogers, DT
areers.
rosters as free agents.
Detroit Lions
nd while the Washington football pro-
Washington annually ranks among the top
1990 Bern Brostek, C
five football programs in the country in
Los Angeles Rams
ram does not exist simply to produce fu-
are professional football players, there is
terms of active players on NFL rosters.
0 denying the fact that Washington sends
lecruiting Coordinator-Dick Baird
erhaps the first person future Husky foot-
coach, Mt. Rainier High School, 1975-77;
all players will hear from during their high
assistant coach, Olympic College, 1978-81;
chool careers is Dick Baird, Washington's
head coach, Olympic College, 1982-83;
ecruiting coordinator. Baird administers
wrestling, track and girl's basketball coach,
nd supervises Washington's recruiting
Olympic High School, 1981-84; graduate
rogram for all 21 intercollegiate sports and
assistant (working with DL), University of
oordinates the Husky Hostess program.
Washington, 1984-85; recruiting coordina-
tor, University of Washington, 1985-
Education-Bachelor's degree in speech
Present. Personal-Was a three-year
nd social science from Washington State
starting linebacker at Washington State,
University (1968); education certificate
where he earned All-Coast honors in 1965
rom the University of Washington (1970);
and was team captain in 1967
is a prod-
post-graduate studies in education adminis-
uct of Seattle's Roosevelt High School.
ration at the University of Washington
Washington's 1991 football recruiting class
1984-85). Experience-Part-time assis-
was mentioned as one of the nation's finest
ant coach, Washington State University,
by The Sporting News and best on the West
1968-69; teacher and assistant football
Coast. Family-Dick and his wife, Kim,
coach, Kennedy (Seattle, Wash.) High
have four children, Tiffany, Tristen, Brent
School, 1970-71; defensive coordinator,
and J.B. Birthdate-May 27, 1946, in Se-
Highline High School, 1972-74; head
attle, Wash.
Above-University of Washington's Ath-
letic Recruiting Coordinator, Dick Baird.
167
W
The Husky Experience
Quality Football
State-of-the-Art Weight Room
Washington has long been a pioneer in the
some 15,000 pounds of Olympic weigh
area of strength development. The Univer-
34 Olympic bars, eight Olympic bench
sity lifted that expertise to a higher level in
six incline benches, three military bench
March 1988.
three knee extension and hamstring Cl
A new weight room, part of a $4.3 million
machines, eight Olympic power racks, eig
facilities project, is available to all Universi-
Olympic platforms, 60 pairs of dumbbel
ty of Washington athletes. The 13,000-
six exercise bikes and three Stairmasters.
square foot facility is among the largest
The facility doubles Washington's previo
and most up-to-date in the Pacific-10
workout space and resources. Planne
Conference.
fitness programs are aided by computerize
Strength coach Rick Huegli directs the pro-
training evaluations, video instruction,
gram, with assistant Eric Hohn, in the big,
plyometric testing area, and sauna ar
bright, air-conditioned facility that houses a
jacuzzi.
balance of machine apparatus and free
A long list of Husky athletes trained l
weights as well as modern fitness accouter-
Huegli have been voted to the National Al
ments. The spacious room is equipped with
Strength Team.
Above, Left-The Husky Weight Room,
in the free weights section. Left-A view
of the Husky Weight Room from the
mezzanine. Below, Left-University
of Washington Strength Coach, Rick
Huegli. Above, Right-A view of Wash-
ington's main Training Room. Right-
University of Washington's Head Athlet-
ic Trainer, Dennis Sealey. Below, Right
-University of Washington Team Physi-
cian, Dr. Steve Bramwell.
Strength Coach-Rick Huegli
Washington's head strength coach has re-
Findlay, Ohio, 1977-78; assistant footbal
sponsibility for teaching, administering and
coach (WR/DB), Defiance (Ohio) Higl
supervising the Husky strength program for
School 1978-79; strength coach, Wake For
all 21 intercollegiate sports. He supervised
est University, 1979-81; strength coach
and planned the opening of Washington's
University of Washington, 1981-Present
expansive, state-of the-art weight room in
Personal-Attended Stevenson Higl
1988. The facility ranks among the largest
School in Livonia, Mich., where he lettered
in the major college ranks with 10,700
in track and cross country
coached
square footage available. Up to 300 ath-
NSCA football All-Americans Mark Jerue.
letes per day use the weight room at peak
Stewart Hill, Mark Stewart, Garth Thomas.
periods.
Brian Habib, Brett Weise, Bern Brostek,
Education-Bachelor's degree in history
Mike Ramos and basketball standout De-
and physical education from Western
tlef Schrempf along with female All-Amer-
Michigan University and Master's degree in
icans Jennifer Ponath and Melinda
Education from Bowling Green State Uni-
Beckenhauer
named Region IV State
versity. Experience-Teacher (P.E., ge-
Director of the Year for 1984 and 1987
ography and health) and coach (football,
co-author (with Don James) of a book titled,
basketball and track) at Bishop Noll Insti-
"Conditioning For Football: The University,
tute, Hammond, Ind., 1974-76; graduate
of Washington Way." Family-Married
assistant football coach (RB/QB), Bowling
and his wife's name is Gail Sailer
they
Green, 1976-77; assistant football coach
have a one-year-old daughter, Jordan.
(WR/JV Def. coord.), Findlay College,
Birthdate-June 11, 1952, in Minneapo-
lis, Minn.
168
The Husky Experience
W
uality Football
Training and Medical Staff
Washington boasts a modern high-tech ath-
two separate training rooms in the athletic
letic training complex that offers all stu-
department.
dent-athletes the utmost in professional
medical care.
Washington's medical staff is headed by
orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Steve Bramwell, a
The University of Washington has long
former Husky football standout. Dr. Bram-
been involved in the development and
well's sports background has proven to be
growth of sports medicine.
invaluable in understanding sports-related
Dennis Sealey is the Huskies' head athletic
injuries, the athlete's desire for rehabilita-
trainer. He supervises a staff of five full-
tion and a healthy return to competition.
time assistant athletic trainers and a num-
The physical health and safety of all
ber of student assistant athletic trainers.
Washington athletes is of paramount im-
They provide medical care and attention
portance to all Husky coaches and medical
to as many as 350 athletes per day in
personnel.
Head Athletic Trainer-Dennis Sealey
Washington's medical services and athletic
ington, 1978-Present. Personal-Mem-
health care for some 800 Husky athletes in
ber of the American Physical Therapy Asso-
21 intercollegiate sports is coordinated and
ciation and National Athletic Trainers
administered by head athletic trainer
Association
President of Northwest
Dennis Sealey.
Athletic Trainers Association
serves on
the National Athletic Trainers Association
Education-Bachelor of Science degree
Board of Directors
served as Chairman
in Biology from Wayne State (Neb.) Col-
of the 1982 National Athletic Trainers Asso-
lege in 1970; Master's degree in physical
ciation Convention in Seattle
won the
education from the University of Nebraska
in 1977; certificate degree in physical thera-
Eddie Wojecki Award in 1974 for superior
performance on the NATA certification
py from the University of Iowa in 1972;
exam
has worked 17 bowl games in his
certification as athletic trainer in 1974. Ex-
career as a trainer. Family-Wife's name is
perience-Assistant athletic trainer, Uni-
Becky, and they have three children-Gre-
versity of Washington, 1972-73; instructor,
gory (20), Jason (18) and Kyle (13). Birth-
University of Nebraska, 1974-78; assistant
athletic trainer, University of Nebraska,
date-July 21, 1948, in Stromsburg, Neb.
1973-78; head trainer, University of Wash-
Team Physician-Steve Bramwell
Dr. Steve Bramwell, former standout foot-
sity of Washington Department of Sports
ball player at Washington (1963-65), be-
Medicine
served in those capacities un-
gins his 15th season as Washington's team
til starting private practice in 1981. Person-
physician.
al-Dr. Bramwell was a three-year
letterman halfback at Washington (1963-
Education-Bramwel earned a bachelor
65) and excelled as a kick returner
still
of arts in economics from Washington in
1967 and received his M.D. with honors
holds the Husky career record for both
served his
punt returns (59 for 704 yards and an 11.9
from Washington in 1971
average) and kickoff returns (54 for 1,443
internship at Strong Memorial Hospital at
yards and a 26.7 average), as well as ranking
the University of Rochester in Rochester,
No. 5 on Washington's list of career all-
N.Y. (1971-72) and his residency training
purpose runners (2,827 yards)
his career
was in Orthopedic Surgery at the University
kick return yardage, and his combined kick
of Washington (1972-76)
graduated
with a number of academic honors includ-
and punt return yardage, both established
NCAA records upon his graduation
was
ing the Harkins Surgery Award, University
a first-team CoSIDA Academic All-Ameri-
of Washington Pediatrics Award and Uni-
ca choice in 1964 and was inducted in May
versity of Washington Psychiatry Award.
of 1989 into the CoSIDA/GTE Academic
Experience-He was appointed Assistant
All-America Hall of Fame. Family-Steve
Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at the Uni-
and his wife, Linda, have five children.
versity of Washington School of Medicine
in 1977 and was also Director of the Univer-
Birthdate-April 1, 1944, in Salt Lake
City, Utah.
169
W
The Husky Experience
Quality Football
The Home Field-Husky Stadium
Looming high above Lake Washington,
were added to the north rim and portal
Husky Stadium is a unique structure that
bleachers were installed beyond the ea
has grown with the times. Its current capac-
end zone. Astroturf replaced the old gra
ity of 72,500 seats makes it the largest stadi-
field in 1968, the same year an all-weath
um, college or professional, in the Pacific
track was installed around the football pla
Northwest. Husky Stadium is the nation's
ing field. The original artificial turf was
15th-largest on-campus facility.
placed in 1972, 1977 and, mostly recent
Built in 1920 at a cost of $600,000, the
in the summer of 1987.
stadium's initial capacity was listed at
In 1987, Husky Stadium expanded on
30,000. The stadium was opened in the
again, adding 13,000 new seats. The $
dedication game, November 27, 1920,
million project performed by Lydig Co
when Dartmouth defeated Washington,
struction of Spokane brought the capaci
28-7. A student fund drive, in which stu-
to 72,500. The hallmark facet of the CO
dents and businessmen sold plaques at $50
struction was a glass-enclosed receptic
and $100 levels, provided the capital neces-
area with a field view from goal line to go
sary to get the project off the ground. Puget
line. Besides serving as an entertainme
Attendance
Sound Bridge and Dredging Company was
center on game days, the Tyee Center h
contracted to build the structure, and a
the capabilities to host major banquets
Top 30 Home Games
unique method of excavation know as 'sluic-
social events.
1987 Washington State
74,038
ing'-in which earth is displaced by high
1987 Arizona State
pressure water-was used.
The north upper deck offers sweepir
73,883
views of Mt. Rainier, the Olympic Mou
1987 Stanford
73,676
The stadium experienced further growth in
tain Range and downtown Seattle. Tl
1989 Washington State
73,527
1936 when 10,000 above-grade seats were
north deck seats are accessible by ram
1990 Oregon
73,498
added around the rim of the structure, up-
or elevator. Husky Stadium possess
1990 USC
72,617
ping capacity to 40,000.
49,580 sideline seats, or 68 percent of tot
1990 UCLA
71,925
1987 Southern California
71,678
In 1950, Husky Stadium was again expand-
capacity.
1990 California
71,427
ed when roof-covered stands were added to
In 1989, all major construction in Husk
1988 UCLA
71,224
the south side. Approximately 15,000 addi-
Stadium was concluded with the replace
1987 Purdue
70,492
tional seats, at a cost of $1.7 million, offered
ment of the west stands. The $3.7 millio
1989 Oregon
70,442
excellent viewing between the goal posts.
facelift gives Husky fans better seating
1990 Arizona
70,111
A cantilevered steel roof partially covered
more concession stands and restrooms, ne
1987 Pacific
69,605
all seats in the upper deck and approximate-
first aid rooms, police security area an
1989 Texas A&M
69,434
ly 6,000 seats in the lower stands. In the rear
photo deck.
1989 Colorado
69,152
of the structure, two silo-shaped ramps pro-
In preparation for the 1990 Goodwi
1988 Stanford
68,272
vided access to the upper deck concourses.
Games Husky Stadium became the benef
1989 Purdue
66,392
1987 Oregon State
66,392
The two-level press box and camera deck
ciary of a brand new eight-lane syntheti
surface track in the summer of '89. The $1.
1990 San Jose State
66,337
areas were also installed as part of the 1950
66,128
project. The view available for approxi-
million gift from the Seattle Organizin
1988 Army
1988 Arizona
65,604
mately 75 members of the press is 165
Committee provides athletes with a world
64,695
feet above the stadium floor. The south
class facility. Husky Stadium hosted th
1989 Arizona State
1988 San Jose State
63,692
side elevator was also part of the '50
track and field competition and the openin,
1986 Brigham Young
61,197
construction.
ceremonies of the 1990 Goodwill Games.
1986 Ohio State
61,071
Stadium capacity jumped from 55,000 to
1984 Houston
61,045
more than 59,000 in 1968 when 3,000 seats
1978 Alabama
60,975
1977 Washington State
60,964
1982 UCLA
60,936
Above-Husky football fans anticipate a reason to stand and cheer.
170
The Husky Experience
W
uality Football
Attendance
Top 10 Home Averages
1987
71,396
1990
70,986
1989
68,940
1988
65,624
1983
60,181
1985
59,574
1971
59,531
1986
59,439
1972
58,866
1984
58,455
Top 10 Away Games
1984 at Michigan
103,072
1983 at Louisiana State
82,390
1966 at Ohio State
80,241
1958 at Ohio State
79,477
1982 at Arizona State
72,021
1984 at Southern California
71,838
1986 at Arizona State
71,589
1988 at Arizona State
70,934
o Huskies!
1979 at Arizona State
70,912
ne band and cheerleaders, under the di-
Husky Band makes friends for the Univer-
1985 at Arizona State
67,474
ction of Bill Bissell and his assistant,
sity of Washington and its athletic pro-
oug Cheney, are a big part of the excite-
grams. The Husky band and rally squad
°Does not include bowl games.
ent of collegiate football at Washington.
perform at all of Washington's home games,
helping create an electric atmosphere that
/herever they travel, whether it be the
makes Husky Stadium one of the toughest
hores of Lake Washington or to the
places for visiting teams to play in the
ation's bowl game arenas and parades, the
Pac-10.
1990 Pacific-10 Home Attendance
SCHOOL
G
TOTAL
AVG
1. Washington
6
425,915
70,986
2. Southern California
5
352,776
70,555
3. Arizona State
6
367,782
61,297
4. UCLA
6
327,619
54,603
5. Arizona
6
324,585
54,098
6. California
5
252,630
50,526
7. Stanford
5
219,000
43,800
8. Oregon
7
261,476
37,354
9. Washington State
5
154,573
30,915
S
10. Oregon State
6
146,628
24,438
Above, Left-Husky Stadium, looking
down on the field from the west end zone.
The east end zone looks out to Lake Wash-
ington. Above-The Husky Band creates
a Husky following with spirit and excite-
ment.
171
W
The Husky Experience
Quality Football
Barbara Hedges
Athletic Director
Barbara Hedges, 54, begins her first year as
USC earned three national championship
as tournament director of the 1984 We
the director of athletics of one of the nation's
and 12 individual titles. More than 100 USC
Regional Women's Basketball Champio
most successful, respected college athletic
men garnered All-America acclaim and 10
ship and was instrumental in bringing t
programs. Hedges comes to the University
have been Olympians.
1992 Division I Women's Final Four to L
of Washington after 17 years as an athletic
administrator at the University of Southern
Hedges' outstanding administrative skills,
Angeles. At USC, she was administrative
combined with her tireless fundraising ef-
responsible for the 1988 NCAA Division
California.
forts, left their mark in rich Troy tradition.
Men's Golf Championship and the 199
Hedges is no stranger to the responsibilities
Hedges was one of the founders of the
Division I Men's Tennis Championship.
of running nationally prominent athletic
USC Scholarship Club, which supports both
Hedges has been a featured speaker for tl
programs. In 1985, she assumed responsi-
men's and women's athletics programs. She
bility for the daily operation of 17 men's and
National Association of Collegiate Directo
was also the creator and co-founder of the
of Athletics (NACDA), the NCAA Profe
women's sports including the administra-
Women of Troy, which now ranks with Car-
tion of a $4 million budget. In June of 1989,
sional Development seminar, the Council
dinal and Gold as a premiere USC athletic
Women Athletic Administrators and nume
Hedges was promoted to senior associate
support group, and the Women's Trojan
director of athletics.
ous other professional and community org
Club. Hedges was known as an effective
nizations.
She joined the USC staff in 1974 when she
fundraiser, not only for athletic programs
was appointed associate athletic director
and projects, but for other university pro-
Before going to Southern California in 197
in charge of USC's nine women's sports.
grams, such as Spirit of Troy (band support
Hedges coached gymnastics and taugl
Under her guidance, USC built a winning
group) and the University of Southern Cali-
physical education at the University of Ar
tradition for its women's sports programs
fornia Staff Club.
zona. During her five years with the Wild
that reflects a commitment to high stan-
cats, Hedges coached her team to thre
One of her most successful projects was the
dards of academic and athletic excellence.
conference championships and assisted i
1984 "Salute to USC Olympians" which was
During her tenure, 13 USC women's teams
billed by some as the single, greatest event
integrating women's programs into th
won national championships and 68 women
university's athletic structure. She deve
they had ever attended. The black-tie affair,
earned individual national titles. More than
held in the fall preceding the 1984 Summer
oped a community education program fd
150 Trojan women were honored as All-
Olympics, honored approximately 120 USC
high school students in the area, helpin
Americans and 36 athletes reached the Olym-
Olympians.
them become more knowledgeable abou
pic ranks.
Arizona's athletic programs.
Hedges took the welfare of her student-
Since 1985, with the assumption of adminis-
athletes to heart through her membership
From 1967-68, Hedges coached and taugh
responsibility for eight men's sports,
on the President's Task Force to Review
gymnastics at Carey Junior High School il
Student-Athlete Academic Services, the
Cheyenne, Wyoming. As part of her respon
USC Student-Athlete Review Task Force
sibilities, she established a gymnastics pro
and the USC Student-Athlete Drug Testing
gram for the entire school system, includin
Review Committee.
the training of student-athletes, judges an
meet officials. She also headed fundraisin
Her commitment to the field of college
efforts to acquire equipment for the pro
athletics makes her a familiar name on the
gram and organized a parents support group
national scene as well. Hedges has served as
president of the Council of Collegiate
Hedges began her career as the head of the
Women Athletic Administrators and the
West Denver High School girls' physica
Western Collegiate Athletic Association and
education department. Her responsibilitie
is currently president of Division I-A
included coaching and teaching gymnastics
Women's Athletic Administrators. She
teaching tennis, field hockey and other sports
chaired the NCAA Women's Tennis Com-
and coordinating various fundraising efforts
mittee for eight years and the NCAA Divi-
Hedges received her bachelor's degree in
sion I Men's and Women's Tennis Commit-
physical education from Arizona State ir
tee in 1988. She was one of a three-member
1963 where she was honored as the
NCAA Special Television Committee to
university's outstanding physical education
negotiate the NCAA rights for all sports
major while also being named to Who's Whc
except football and basketball with ESPN,
in American Colleges and Universities. She
ABC, CBS and international television.
received her master's from Arizona in 1971
Above-University of Washington Ath-
Hedges is also experienced with the admin-
Hedges was born August 23, 1937 in Glen-
letic Director Barbara Hedges.
istration of championship events. She served
dale, Arizona. She and her husband, John,
have two children, Mark (34) and Greg (30).
172
The Husky Experience
W
uality Football
The Pacific-10 Conference
The Pacific-10 Conference-the "Confer-
bers have claimed four titles in a single
PACIFIC
ence of Champions"-certainly continues
season on six occasions. Included in this are
to live up to its billing as having the strongest
all ten tennis crowns, and seven of the ten
overall athletic program in the country in
championships in softball.
comparison to the rest of the nation's con-
ferences.
The roots of the Pacific-10 Conference go
10
nearly 75 years. On December 5,1915,
This reputation is obviously well-deserved,
the Pacific Coast Conference was founded
as the 1990-91 season alone produced an-
at a meeting at the Oregon Hotel in Port-
other seven men's and women's NCAA team
land, Oregon. Original membership con-
championships (men's soccer-UCLA,
sisted of four schools-University of Cali-
water polo-California, women's volley-
fornia, University of Washington, Univer-
CONFERENCE
ball-UCLA, men's tennis-USC, women's
sity of Oregon, and Oregon State College
tennis-Stanford, women's softball-Ari-
(now Oregon State University). All are still
zona, women's golf-UCLA), which was
charter members of the Conference.
equal to the previous season's production.
Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) play began
That figure once again led all conferences, as
the Southeastern Conference (six), Atlantic
in 1916. One year later, Washington State
Coast (four), Southwest Conference (four)
College (now Washington State University),
and Big Eight Conference (three) trailed.
was accepted into the Conference, and
Pac-10 Directory
Eighteen Pac-10 women were NCAA indi-
Stanford University joined in 1918.
vidual champions, as well, also the highest
In 1922, the PCC expanded to eight teams
800 South Broadway, Suite 400
Walnut Creek, CA 94596
total among all conferences.
with the admission of the University of South-
Phone: (510) 932-4411
ern California and the University of Idaho.
FAX: (510) 932-4601
The Pac-10 also fared quite well in non-
Audio Feed: (510) 932-1043
NCAA Championship events during the
Montana joined the Conference in 1924,
and in 1928, the PCC grew to 10 members
Commissioner-Thomas C. Hansen
1990-91 campaign. Among the highlights:
with the addition of UCLA.
Washington's 46-34 thumping of Iowa in
Associate Commissioner-David Price
the Rose Bowl (five Conference members
The Pacific Coast Conference competed as
Assistant Commissioner, Championships
competed in Bowl games and Arizona State's
a 10-team league until 1950, with the excep-
and Administration-Christine
six national titles in archery (men's, women's,
tion of 1943-45, when World War II cur-
Hoyles
mixed) and badminton (men's women's,
tailed athletic competition at the university
Assistant Commissioner, Public
Relations-Jim Muldoon (Home
mixed). In men's basketball, Stanford cap-
level to a minimum. In 1950, Montana re-
415-381-5348)
tured the NIT (National Invitation Tourna-
signed from the Conference and joined the
ment) Championships (post-season), while
Mountain States Conference. The PCC con-
Assistant Commissioner, Compliance and
Enforcement-Mike Matthews
Arizona won the pre-season NIT.
tinued as a nine-team conference through
1958.
Assistant Commissioner, Electronic
Pac-10 members have now won 196 NCAA
Communications-Kirk Hendrix
men's team championships (far ahead of the
In 1959, the PCC was dissolved and a new
Assistant Public Relations Director-Dean
135 claimed by the Big 10), and 32 women's
conference was formed-the Athletic Asso-
Diltz
crowns (ahead of the Southeastern Confer-
ciation of Western Universities. Original
Business Manager-Ruth Stillwell
ence, which has 19), to lead all conferences
AAWU membership consisted of Califor-
Supervisor, Football Officials-Verle Sorgen
in both categories.
nia, Stanford, Southern California, UCLA,
Supervisor, Men's Basketball Officials—
Men's NCAA team crowns have come at a
and Washington. Washington State became
Booker Turner
a member in 1962, while Oregon and Or-
phenomenal rate-13 basketball titles, more
Supervisor, Women's Basketball Officials-
than any other conference; 16 of the last 25
egon State joined in 1964. In 1968, the name
Ray Dal Poggetto
baseball titles; 18 of the last 32 titles in track
Pacific-8 Conference was adopted.
Administrative Fellow-David Ortega
and field, and an incredible 44 titles overall;
Ten years later, on July 1, 1978, the Univer-
Public Relations Interns-Tammy Powers,
15 of the last 28 in swimming; 29 of the last
sity of Arizona and Arizona State University
Shawn Schoeffler
32 in tennis; 19 of the last 32 in water polo;
were admitted and the Pacific-10 Confer-
Historian-Wiles Hallock
and 17 of the last 22 in volleyball.
ence became a reality. In 1986-87, the Pa-
Secretaries-Tammy Newman, Michelle
cific-10 Conference took on a new look,
Roberts, Wendy Ryer (public
On the women's side, the story is the same.
Since the NCAA began conducting women's
expanding to include ten women's sports.
relations), Veronica Hale
Last season saw the Conference celebrate
championships 10 years ago, Pac-10 mem-
its 75th anniversary year.
173
W
The Husky Experience
Quality Lifestyle
Seattle-Something for Everyone
The beauty of living in Seattle is that the
It's the Pike Place Market and the Spa
city-the whole area-can be whatever you
Needle. Seattle Center and the Balla
want it to be.
Locks. Pioneer Square and Snoqualm
It can be a hustling, bustling city of half a
Falls. The Kingdome and Capitol Hill.
million people-towering buildings, im-
The key is choice. Seattle is whatever y
pressive financial centers, huge ships load-
want it to be.
ing cargo for the Orient, a thriving airline
industry. It's lavish department stores and
The city is tuned in to sports, whether i
busy malls, arts and entertainment, a major
Husky football, Seattle Seahawk footba
league sports city, noise, action and flashy
Seattle SuperSonic basketball, Seattle Ma
night life.
iner baseball, Husky women's basketball,
any number of athletic opportunities.
Seattle is also a peaceful, private small
town. It's a city of small neighborhoods. It's
The Kingdome, home to the Mariners an
also quiet, and sometimes the only sound
Seahawks, has already hosted the 1984 an
you'll hear is a wave lapping against a fishing
1989 NCAA Final Fours, and is slated
pier, a gust of wind fluttering a sail, an oar
host the 1995 edition of college basketball
dipping into a still lake, your foot snapping a
Super Bowl. Seattle's domed wonder Wa
twig on a lonely trail.
the host to the 1987, 1988, and 1991 NCA
West Regional basketball tournament
It's a city built around-and for-recre-
Nearby Tacoma was the site of the 1988 an
ation. You don't have to go very far to find a
1989 NCAA Women's Final Fours, makin
beach or a ski slope. Fish in a stream or hunt
the University of Washington and th
wildlife. Jog along a path or water ski. Hit
Seattle-Tacoma area the hotbed of colleg
tennis balls or golf balls. Visit a video arcade
basketball.
or a movie theatre. Dance at a club or stroll
"The landscape is dramatic, with two
through a museum. Play softball or ride a
The University and Seattle will play host
horse.
the NCAA men's basketball West Regional
mountain ranges, the Cascades to the
in 1993, and will, for the first time ever, hos
east and the Olympics to the west, for a
Seattle probably is what Rand McNally calls
the NCAA women's basketball West Re
backdrop; a vast inland sea, Puget
it-and that's America's No. 1 vacation
gional in 1992.
Sound, that is sprinkled with more than
place. It's clean and green. And, with all the
170 islands; blue lakes within the city's
water nearby, you know it's blue.
Seattle was the site for the 1990 Goodwi
limits; and a seemingly endless carpet
Games, with the newly enlarged Husky Sta
of evergreen forests on its eastern flank.
dium being the focal points for many of th
The city is urban and cultured, but the
Games' activities.
wilderness isn't far off.'
-Joel Schwarz
Scenes From Seattle/US Air Magazine
Above-The Seattle skyline as seen from
the docks in Elliott Bay on the Puget
Sound. Right-The Seattle skyline, here
a backdrop to an early-morning Husky
women's crew workout on Lake Union,
near the University of Washington
campus.
174
32
in
W
Husky History
Team Records
Miscellaneous
Scoring
Passing
Conference Championships
Most Points Scored
Most Yards Passing
1916
Pacific Coast
Season
480 in 1925 (all-time)
Season
2,721 in 1970
1919
Pacific Coast (tie)
394 in 1990 (modern)
Game
428 vs. Arizona State, 1989
1925
Pacific Coast
Game
120 VS. Whitman, 1919 (all-time)
1936
Pacific Coast
66 vs. Oregon, 1974 (modern)
Passing Yards Per Game
1959
AAWU (tie)
1st Qtr.
28 VS. Idaho, 1969
Season
272.1 in 1970
1960
AAWU
2nd Qtr.
30 VS. Oregon State, 1989
1963
AAWU
3rd Qtr.
Most Passes Attempted
28 VS. Oregon, 1974
Season
415 in 1970
1977
Pacific-8
28 VS. Stanford, 1981
Game
57 vs. USC, 1970
1980
Pacific-10
4th Qtr.
30 VS. UCLA, 1970
1981
Pacific-10
Most Passes Completed
1990
Pacific-10
Most Points Per Game
Season
217 in 1983
Season
40.0 in 1925 (all-time)
Game
30 vs. USC, 1970
Unbeaten, Untied Teams
35.8 in 1990 (modern)
30 vs. Oregon State, 1970
1909
7-0-0
1910
6-0-0
Fewest Points Allowed
35 vs. Maryland (Aloha Bowl), 1982
1911
Season
7-0-0
6 in 1909 (all-time)
Most Touchdown Passes
1912
6-0-0
73 in 1959 (modern)
Season
22 in 1970, 1986
1913
7-0-0
Fewest Points Per Game
Game
6 vs. UCLA, 1970
1915
7-0-0
Season
0.9 in 1904 (all-time)
Most Interceptions Thrown
Unbeaten Teams
6.6 in 1959 (modern)
Season
31 in 1973
1895
4-0-1
Most Touchdowns (modern)
Game
7 vs. Stanford, 1934
1908
6-0-1
Season
51 in 1990
1914
6-0-1
Game
9 vs. Oregon, 1951
Most Passes Intercepted
1916
Season
6-0-1
30 in 1968
9 VS. UC-Santa Barbara, 1971
Game
9 vs. Oregon, 1952
Longest Winning Streaks
9 VS. Oregon, 1974
39
1908-1914
Most Field Goals (modern)
Total Offense
12
1914-1916
Season
25 in 1982
10
1981-1982 (post 1945)
Game
Most Yards Total Offense
5 VS. Houston, 1985
Season
4,499 in 1990
Longest Unbeaten Streaks
Most PATs (modern)
Game
675 at Wash. St, 1950 (Spokane)
63
1907-1917 (59-0-4), NCAA Record
Season
48 in 1990
14
1924-1925 (12-0-2)
Game
Most Yards Per Game
9 VS. Oregon, 1951
10
1922-1923 (9-0-1)
Season
9 vs. Oregon, 1974
409.0 in 1990 (11 games)
10
1981-1982 (10-0-0)
394.9 in 1970 (10 games)
Most Consecutive PATs Without Miss
Most Consecutive Home Wins
111 PATs from 1976-79
Attendance
15
1981-1983
42 games from 1977-81
Home Season
Most Consecutive Road Wins
1979-1981
First Downs
499,764 in 1987 (7 games)
10
425,915 in 1990 (6 games)
Longest Losing Streak
Most First Downs
Home Game
10
1968-1969
Season
234 in 1982
74,038 vs. WSU, 1987
Game
33 VS. Idaho, 1956
Consecutive Games Unscored Upon
Home Average
8
1908-1909
Fewest First Downs
Season
71,395 in 1987 (7 games)
125 in 1967 (10 games)
70,985 in 1990 (6 games)
Consecutive Games Without Being Shutout
156 in 1975 (11 games)
110
1981-Current
Game
2 vs. California, 1948 (all-time)
Full Season
3 VS. Oregon, 1984 (modern)
722,716 in 1987 (11 games)
Consecutive Games Without Scoring
3
1906, 1917, 1928, 1948
Rushing
Season Average
65,701 in 1987 (11 games)
Consecutive Winning Seasons
14
1977-1990
Most Yards Rushing
51,119 in 1970 (10 games)
Season
2,715 in 1990
Consecutive Non-Losing Seasons
Game
430 VS. Idaho, 1956
Away Game (Non-Bowl)
16
1901-1916
103,072 at Michigan, 1984
Most Yards Per Game
Season
268.8 in 1956
Bowl Game
105,611 vs. Iowa, 1982 Rose Bowl
176
Husky History
W
ndividual Records
coring
Passing
Receiving
st Points Scored
Most Yards Passing
Most Yards Receiving
eer
358, Jeff Jaeger, 1983-86
Career
5,496, Sonny Sixkiller, 1970-72
Career
1,866, Scott Phillips, 1973-76
son
125, Hugh McElhenny, 1951
Season
2,569, Cary Conklin, 1989
Season
1,039, Andre Riley, 1989
ne
36, Chuck Carroll VS. Puget Sound,
Game
428, Cary Conklin VS. Arizona State,
Game
257, Dave Williams VS. UCLA, 1965
1928 (all-time)
1989
30, Hugh McElhenny vs. Washington
Most Receptions
State, 1950 (modern)
Most Passes Attempted
Career
138, Paul Skansi, 1979-82
Career
811, Sonny Sixkiller, 1970-72
Season
54, Jim Krieg, 1970
st Touchdowns
Season
365, Cary Conklin, 1989
Game
11, Jim Cope vs. USC, 1966
reer
37, George Wilson, 1923-25
Game
57, Sonny Sixkiller VS. USC, 1970
11, Jim Krieg vs. USC, 1970
37, Joe Steele, 1976-79
Quarter
31, Chris Rowland vs. California (4th),
son
17, Chuck Carroll, 1928
1973 (NCAA Record)
Most Touchdown Receptions
Career
17, Hugh McElhenny, 1951
16, Spider Gaines, 1975-78
7, Ervin Daily vs. Whitman, 1919
Most Passes Completed
16, Lonzell Hill, 1983-86
me
Career
(all-time)
436, Steve Pelluer, 1980-83
Season
10, Dave Williams, 1965
Season
6, Chuck Carroll VS. UPS, 1928
213, Steve Pelluer, 1983
Game
3, Roland Kirkby vs. Kansas State,
Game
30, Sonny Sixkiller vs. USC, 1970
1950
5, Hugh McElhenny vs. Washington
State, 1950 (modern)
30, Sonny Sixkiller VS. Oregon State,
3, Dave Williams vs. UCLA, 1965
1970
3, Al Maurer VS. UCLA, 1970
ost Field Goals
33, Tim Cowan VS. Maryland (Aloha
3, Anthony Allen VS Maryland (Aloha
freer
80, Jeff Jaeger, 1983-86
Bowl), 1982
Bowl), 1982
ason
25, Chuck Nelson, 1982
3, Brian Slater VS. Washington State,
Most Touchdown Passes
me
5, Jeff Jaeger vs. Houston, 1985
1986
Career
35, Sonny Sixkiller, 1970-72
ost Consecutive Field Goals Without Miss
Season
20, Chris Chandler, 1986
FG, Chuck Nelson, 1981-82
Game
5, Chris Rowland vs. Cal, 1973
Kicking
games, Jeff Jaeger, 1983-84
Quarter
4, Chris Rowland vs. Cal, 1973
Punting Average
4, Chris Chandler vs. BYU, 1986
Career
41.2, Skip Boyd, 1972-74
ost PATs
reer
118, Jeff Jaeger, 1983-86
Most Interceptions Thrown
41.2, Jeff Partridge, 1981-82
Career
51, Sonny Sixkiller, 1970-72
Season
42.9, Skip Boyd, 1973
ason
42, Jeff Jaeger, 1986
Season
24, Chris Rowland, 1973
me
9, Steve Robbins vs. Oregon, 1974
Punt Return Yards
Game
6, Sonny Sixkiller vs. Oregon State,
ost Consecutive PATs Without Miss
1970
Career
704, Steve Bramwell, 1963-65
Season
PATs, Mike Lansford, 1978-79
560, Beno Bryant, 1990
games, Mike Lansford, 1978-79
Passes Thrown Without Interception
Consecutive 137, Steve Pelluer, 1983
Kickoff Return Yards
Career
1,443, Steve Bramwell, 1963-65
tushing
Completion Percentage
Season
576, Jim Krieg, 1970
Career
.603 (252-418), Tom Flick 1976-80
ost Yards Rushing
Season
.672 (213-317), Steve Pelluer, 1983
areer
3,091, Joe Steele, 1976-79
Game
.941 (16-17), Tom Flick vs. Arizona,
Interceptions
ason
1,279, Greg Lewis, 1990
1980
Most Interceptions
ame
296, Hugh McElhenny vs.
Washington State, 1950
Career
18, Al Worley, 1966-68
Total Offense
Season
14, Al Worley, 1968
lost Rushing Attempts
Most Yards Total Offense
Game
4, Al Worley vs. Idaho, 1968
areer
663, Joe Steele, 1976-79
Career
5,288, Sonny Sixkiller, 1970-72
eason
237, Joe Steele, 1978
Season
2,502, Cary Conklin, 1989
ame
35, Jacque Robinson vs. Texas Tech,
1982
Season
419, Cary Conklin VS. Arizona State,
1989
est Average Per Carry
areer
5.5, Hugh McElhenny, 1949-51
Most Plays
Career
986, Steve Pelluer, 1980-83
eason
6.2, Hugh McElhenny, 1950
Season
433, Cary Conklin, 1989
6.2, Jacque Robinson, 1983
Game
59, Sonny Sixkiller vs. USC, 1970
ame
14.8, Hugh McElhenny vs.
Washington State, 1950
(NCAA Record/min. 20)
lost 100-Yard Games
areer
14, Greg Lewis, 1987-90
leason
9, Greg Lewis, 1990
177
W
Husky History
Single Season Leaders
Totals including bowl games statistics in italic.
Total Offense
Receptions
Punting (Post-1950)
RUSH
PASS
TOT
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
NO
YDS
A
1. Cary Conklin (1989)
-67
2569
2502
1. Jim Krieg (1970)
54
738
13.7
2
1. Skip Boyd (1973)
69
2964
4:
2. Steve Pelluer (1983)
164
2212
2376
2. Andre Riley (1987)
53
1039
19.3
4
2. Skip Boyd (1974)
57
2407
4
3. Sonny Sixkiller (1970)
-35
2303
2268
3. Paul Skansi (1982)
50
631
12.6
3
3. Jeff Partridge (1982)
65
2739
45
4. Mark Brunell (1990)
440
1732
2176
4. Lonzell Hill (1985)
46
696
15.1
8
4. Thane Cleland (1986)
47
1938
4
5. Chris Chandler (1986)
113
1994
2107
Vince Weathersby (1985)
46
314
6.8
1
5. Channing Wyles (1990)
66
2707
4
6. Tom Flick (1980)
-87
2178
2091
6. Lonzell Hill (1986)
43
721
16.8
8
6. Don Martin (1966)
51
2079
40
7. Sonny Sixkiller (1971)
-102
2068
1966
Darryl Franklin (1987)
43
712
16.6
3
Rich Camarillo (1979)
51
2077
40
8. Cary Conklin (1988)
116
1833
1949
8. George Black (1952)
42
637
15.2
7
8. Gene Willis (1971)
41
1666
40
9. Chris Chandler (1987)
136
1739
1875
Anthony Allen (1982)
42
558
13.3
6
9. Jeff Partridge (1981)
53
2122
40
10. Warren Moon (1977)
266
1584
1850
10. Mario Bailey (1990)
40
667
16.7
6
Bob Schloredt (1959)
52
2081
40
1. Conklin, '89, 2725 yards; 2. Pelluer, '83, 2554; 3. Brunell,
1. Skansi, '82, 60 receptions; 2. Riley, '89, 57; 3. Krieg, 70,
'90, 2367; 4. Flick, '80, 2361; 5. Chandler, '86, 2308;
1. Boyd, 73, 43.0 average; 2. Partridge, '82, 42.4; 3. Boyd,
54; 4. Hill, '85 & Allen, '82, 50; 6. Weathersby, '85, 49;
74, 42.2; 4. Wyles, '90, 41.0; 5. Martin, '66, 40.7; 6. Willis,
6. Sixkiller, '70, 2268; 7. Chandler, '87, 2132; 8. Moon, 77,
7. Hill, '86, 48; 8. Franklin, '87, 47; 9. Pattison, '83, 44;
71, 40.7; 7, Camarillo, 79, 40.5; 8. Cleland, '86, 40.4;
2034; 9. Sixkiller, 71, 1966; 10. Heinrich, '50, 1807.
10. Black, '52 & David Bayle, '80, 40; Bailey, '90, 42.
9. Schloredt, '59, 40.0; 10. Partridge, '81 &Cleland, '84,
39.5.
Receiving Yards
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
1. Andre Riley (1989)
53
1039
19.3
4
Rushing
2. Tom Scott (1971)
35
820
23.4
6
3. Dave Williams (1965)
38
795
20.9
Field Goals
10
TC
NYG
AVG
4. Jim Krieg (1970)
54
738
13.7
2
1. Greg Lewis (1990)
1279
5. Brian Slater (1988)
No
229
5.6
38
737
19.4
7
1. Chuck Nelson (1982)
2. Joe Steele (1978)
1111
6. Lonzell Hill (1986)
25
237
4.7
43
721
16.8
8
2. Jeff Jaeger (1984)
3. Hugh McElhenny (1950)
179
6.2
7. Darryl Franklin (1987)
21
1107
43
712
16.6
3
4. Greg Lewis (1989)
8. Brian Slater (1987)
3. Jeff Jaeger (1985)
21
239
1100
4.8
38
696
18.3
5
5. Ron Rowland (1976)
203
Lonzell Hill (1985)
4. Jeff Jaeger (1983)
20
1002
4.9
46
696
15.1
8
5. Chuck Nelson (1980)
6. Robin Earl (1976)
188
5.1
10. Mario Bailey (1990)
18
963
40
667
16.7
6
7. Hugh McElhenny (1951)
6. Jeff Jaeger (1986)
936
5.5
1. Riley, '89, 1071 yards; 2. Scott, 71, 820; 3. Hill, '86, 798;
17
169
222
926
4.2
4. D. Williams, '65, 795; 5. Gaines, 77, 782; 6. Franklin, '87,
7. Chuck Nelson (1981)
8. Jacque Robinson (1982)
16
901
4.6
773; 7. Slater, '87, 755; 8. Hill, '85, 744; 9. Krieg, 70, 738;
8. Steve Robbins (1977)
9. Jacque Robinson (1984)
14
195
10. Slater, '88, 737.
John McCallum (1989)
10. Vince Weathersby (1986)
14
160
880
5.5
10. Mike Lansford (1978)
1. Lewis, '90, 1407 yards; 2. Lewis, '89, 1197; 3. Stecle, 78,
13
1111; 4. McElhenny, '50, 1107; 5. Robinson, '84, 1036;
Mike Lansford (1979)
13
6. Rowland, '76, 1002; 7. Earl, 76, 963; 8. McElhenny, '51,
Scoring
1. Nelson, '82, 25 field goals; 2. Jaeger, '85, 23; 3. Jaeger,
936; 9. Robinson, '82, 976; 10. Steele, 77, 942.
'84, 22; 4. Jaeger, '83, 21; 5. Nelson, '80, 20; 6. Jaeger, '86, 19
TD
PAT
FG
TP
7. Nelson, '81, Robbins, '77 & McCallum, '89, 16;
1. Hugh McElhenny (1951)
10. Lansford, 78 & 79, 13.
Passing
17
23
0
125
2. Chuck Nelson (1982)
0
34
25
109
PA
PC
PCT
TD
YDS
3. Chuck Carroll (1928)
17
2
0
104
1. Cary Conklin (1989)
365
.570
4. Jeff Jaeger (1984)
0
30
Touchdowns
208
22
16
2569
96
2. Sonny Sixkiller (1970)
362
.514
15
2303
5. Jeff Jaeger (1086)
0
186
42
17
93
NO
3. Steve Pelluer (1983)
317
213
6. Chuck Carroll (1927)
15
.672
11
2212
1
0
91
1. Hugh McElhenny (1951)
17
4. Tom Flick (1980)
280
168
7. Jeff Jaeger (1983)
0
.600
27
15
20
2178
87
Chuck Carroll (1928)
17
5. Sonny Sixkiller (1971)
297
126
13
8. George Wilson (1925)
14
1
0
.424
2068
85
3. Chuck Carroll (1927)
15
6. Chris Chandler (1986)
275
Chuck Nelson (1980)
0
160
.582
31
20
1994
18
85
4. George Wilson (1925)
14
7. Don Heinrich (1950)
221
134
.606
10. Hugh McElhenny (1950)
14
0
0
14
1846
84
Hugh McElhenny (1950)
14
8. Cary Conklin (1988)
302
153
11
1833
Jacque Robinson (1984)
14
0
.507
0
84
Jacque Robinson (1984)
14
9. Chris Chandler (1987)
249
128
.514
9
1739
1. McElhenny, '51, 125 points; 2. Nelson, '82, 112; 3. Carroll,
10. Mark Brunell (1990)
'28, 104; 4. Jaeger, '84, 100; 5. Jaeger, '86, 99; 6. Carroll, '27,
7. Joe Steele (1977)
13
253
118
.466
14
1732
Jaeger, '83 & Nelson, '80, 91; 9. Jaeger, '85, 90; 10. Steve
8. Joe Steele (1979)
12
1. Conklin, '89, 2786 yards; 2. Flick, '80, 2460; 3. Pelluer, '83,
Robbins, 77 & Nelson, '81, 88.
9. Pete Taggares (1972)
11
2365; 4. Sixkiller, 70, 2303; 5. Chandler, '86, 2193;
Greg Lewis (1989)
11
6. Sixkiller, 71, 2068; 7. Chandler, '87, 1973; 8. Brunell,
'90, 1895; 9. Heinrich, '52, 1846; 10. Moon, 77, 1772.
Mark Brunell (1990)
11
1. McElhenny, '51 & Carroll, '28, 17 touchdowns; 3. Carroll,
'27, 15; 4. Wilson, 25, McElhenny, '50, & Robinson, '84,
14; 7. Steele, 77, & Brunell, '90, 13; 8. Steele, '79, 12;
9. Taggares, 72 & Greg Lewis, '89, 11.
178
Husky History
W
ngle Season Leaders
Pass Interceptions
Tackles (Since 1967)
NO
YDS
AVG
UT
AT
ToT
1. Al Worley (1968)
14
130
9.3
1. Michael Jackson (1977)
111
99
210
2. Bill Albrecht (1951)
12
140
11.7
2. Dan Lloyd (1973)
111
90
201
3. Larry Hatch (1946)
8
114
14.3
3. Mike Baldassin (1976)
88
112
200
4. Jay Stoves (1943)
7
139
19.9
4. David Rill (1985)
84
103
187
Dick Sprague (1950)
7
-
5. Dave Pear (1973)
86
99
185
Tony Bonwell (1972)
7
67
9.6
6. David Rill (1987)
81
95
176
7. Roberto Jourdan (1972)
6
106
17.7
7. Ricky Andrews (1988)
93
77
170
Bob Schloredt (1959)
6
53
8.8
8. Michael Jackson (1978)
85
83
168
George Fleming (1959)
6
27
4.5
9. James Clifford (1989)
88
76
164
10. Eric Briscoe (1990)
6
5
0.8
10. Al Burleson (1974)
80
79
159
1. Worley, '68, 14 interceptions; 2. Albrecht, '51, 12;
3. Hatch, '46, 8; 4. Stoves, '43, Sprague, '50, & Bonwell, 72,
7; 7. Jourdan, 72, Schloredt, '59, Fleming, '59 & Briscoe,
'90, 6.
Jaeger
unt Returns
Kickoff Returns
Tackles For Loss Yardage
NO
YDS
AVG
NO
YDS
AVG
YDS
Beno Bryant (1990)
36
560
15.6
1. Jim Krieg (1970)
19
576
30.3
1. Ron Holmes (1983)
-98
Bill Cahill (1971)
26
421
16.2
2. Steve Bramwell (1965)
22
573
26.0
2. Dennis Brown (1987)
-97
Andre Riley (1986)
36
392
10.9
3. Steve Bramwell (1963)
18
565
31.4
3. Travis Richardson (1990)
-86.5
Steve Bramwell (1964)
29
314
10.8
4. Steve Jones (1988)
24
499
20.8
4. Steve Emtman (1990)
-85
Mark Lee (1979)
21
271
12.9
5. 'Scott Phillips (1973)
23
426
18.5
5. Reggie Rogers (1985)
-81
Nesby Glasgow (1977)
29
266
9.2
6. Noble Kennamer (1969)
20
421
21.1
Reggie Rogers (1986)
-81
Luther Carr (1958)
17
238
14.0
7. Beno Bryant (1989)
20
409
20.5
7. Doug Martin (1977)
-76
Ray Horton (1980)
18
238
13.2
8. Steve Jones (1986)
15
407
27.1
Mark Stewart (1981)
-76
William Doctor (1988)
35
236
6.7
9. Brooks Biddle (1948)
18
385
21.4
9. Ray Cattage (1982)
-75
George Fleming (1959)
23
231
10.0
10. Steve Jones (1987)
20
384
19.2
10. Tony Caldwell (1981)
-73
Bryant, '90, 593 yards; 2. Riley, '86, 460; 3. Cahill, 71,
1. Bramwell, '63, 654 yards; 2. Krieg, 70, 576; 3. Bramwell,
1; 4. Fleming, '59, 353; 5. Bramwell, '64, 333; 6. Horton,
'65, 573; 4. S. Jones, '86, 514; 5. Anthony Allen, '80, 471;
), 304; 7. Glasgow, '77, 275; 8. Lee, 79, 271; 9. Carr, '58,
6. Phillips, 73, 426; 7. Kennamer, '69, 421; 8. Bryant, '89,
8; 10. Hatch, '47 & Whitmyer, '62, 212.
409; 9. Biddle, '48, 385; 10. S. Jones, '87, 384.
dl-Purpose Running
Tackles For Loss
NO
G
RUSH
REC
P/RET
K/RET
TOT
G/AVG
1. Ron Holmes (1983)
21
1. Hugh McElhenny (1951)
10
936
339
141
262
1678
167.8
Martin Harrison (1989)
21
2. Hugh McElhenny (1950)
10
1107
237
60
240
1644
164.4
3. Dennis Brown (1987)
19
3. Greg Lewis (1990)
10
1279
345
0
0
1624
162.4
4. Doug Martin (1977)
17
4. Greg Lewis (1989)
11
1100
350
0
0
1450
131.8
Mark Stewart (1981)
17
5. Tom Scott (1971)
11
221
820
79
246
1366
124.2
Fred Small (1984)
17
6. Jim Krieg (1970)
10
0
738
21
576
1335
133.5
7. Travis Richardson (1990)
16.5
7. Joe Steele (1978)
11
1111
110
0
110
1331
121.0
8. Doug Martin (1978)
16
8. Joe Steele (1977)
10
865
210
0
188
1263
126.3
Fletcher Jenkins (1981)
16
9. Beno Bryant (1990)
11
386
70
560
212
1228
111.6
Steve Emtman (1990)
16
10. Ron Rowland (1976)
11
1002
37
0
52
1091
99.2
Lewis, '90, 1752 yards; 2. McElhenny, '51, 1678; 3. McElhenny, '50, 1644; 4. Lewis, '89, 1591; 5. Scott, '71, 1366; 6. Steele, 77, 1351;
Krieg, '70, 1335; 8. Steele, 78, 1331; 9. Bryant, '90, 1308; 10. Robinson, '84, 1199.
179
W
Husky History
Career Leaders
Totals including bowl games statistics in italic.
Total Offense
Receptions
Punting (Post-1950)
RUSH
PASS
TOT
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
NO
YDS
AV
1. Sonny Sixkiller (1970-72)
-208
5496
5288
1. Paul Skansi (1979-82)
138
1723
12.5
13
1. Jeff Partridge (1981-82)
118
4861
41
2. Steve Pelluer (1980-83)
342
4603
4945
2. Vince Weathersby
Skip Boyd (1972-74)
194
7987
41
3. Cary Conklin (1987-89)
93
4850
4943
(1985-88)
130
918
7.1
2
3. Channing Wyles (1988-90)
122
4851
39
4. Chris Chandler (1984-87)
261
4161
4422
3. Scott Phillips (1973-76)
111
1866
16.8
8
4. Don Feleay (1975-76)
127
4998
39
5. Don Heinrich (1949-52)
-62
4392
4330
4. Lonzell Hill (1983-86)
103
1641
15.9
16
5. Rich Camarillo (1979-80)
103
4050
39
6. Warren Moon (1975-77)
429
3277
3706
5. Anthony Allen (1979-82)
99
1372
13.7
11
6. Thane Cleland (1983-86)
215
8438
39
7. Chris Rowland (1973-75)
220
2966
3186
6. Darryl Franklin (1984-87) 92
1393
15.1
6
7. Don Martin (1965-67)
143
5595
39
8. Joe Steele (1976-79)
3091
46
3137
7. Brian Slater (1985-88)
87
1648
18.9
16
8. Bob Schloredt (1958-60)
121
4654
38
9. Tom Flick (1976-80)
-95
3171
3076
8. Bill Earley (1950-52)
83
1264
15.2
9
9. Rick Redman (1962-64)
134
5042
37
10. Greg Lewis (1987-90)
2678
0
2678
9. Aaron Williams (1979-82) 81
1370
17.0
13
10. Jeff Huget (1966-68)
51
1908
37
1. Sixkiller, 5288 yards, 2. Pelluer, 5248; 3. Conklin, 5178;
10. Jim Krieg (1970-71)
76
1220
16.1
6
1. Boyd, 41.2 average; 2. Wyles, 39.8; 3. Feleay, 39.4;
4. Chandler, 5093; 5. Heinrich, 4330; 6. Moon, 3890; 7. Flick,
1. Skansi, 161 receptions; 2. Weathersby, 143; 3. Allen, 118;
4. Partridge & Camarillo, 39.3; 6. Cleland & Martin, 39.1;
3384; 8. Steele, 3214; 9. Rowland, 3186; 10. Lewis, 2900.
4. Hill, 112; 5. Phillips, 111; 6. Franklin, 97; 7. Slater, 88;
8. Schloredt, 38.6; 9. Redman, 37.7; 10. Huget, 37.4.
8. Williams, 86; 9. Earley, 83; 10. Rod Jones, 81.
Rushing
Receiving Yards
Field Goals
TC
NYG
AVG
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
NO
1. Joe Steele (1976-79)
663
3091
4.7
1. Scott Phillips (1973-76)
111
1866
16.8
8
1. Jeff Jaeger (1983-86)
80°
2. Greg Lewis (1987-90)
529
2678
5.1
2. Paul Skansi (1979-82)
138
1723
12.5
13
2. Chuck Nelson (1980-82)
59
3. Vince Weathersby (1985-88)
572
2653
4.6
3. Brian Slater (1985-88)
87
1648
18.9
16
3. Steve Robbins (1974-77)
35
4. Hugh McElhenny (1949-51)
451
2499
5.5
4. Lonzell Hill (1983-86)
103
1641
15.9
16
4. Mike Lansford (1978-79)
24
5. Robin Earl (1973-76)
463
2351
5.1
5. Spider Gaines (1975-78)
66
1529
23.2
16
John McCallum (1988-89)
24
6. Jacque Robinson (1981-84)
503
2300
4.6
6. Darryl Franklin (1984-87)
92
1393
15.1
6
6. Don Martin (1966-67)
20
7. Toussaint Tyler (1977-80)
389
1898
4.9
7. Anthony Allen (1979-82)
99
1372
13.7
11
7. George Fleming (1958-60)
17
8. Junior Coffey (1962-64)
335
1604
4.8
8. Aaron Williams (1979-82)
81
1370
17.0
13
Steve Wiezbowski (1970-72)
17
9. Rick Fenney (1983-86)
338
1437
4.3
9. Bill Earley (1950-52)
83
1264
15.2
9
9. Brandy Brownlee (1987)
11
10. Kyle Stevens (1976-80)
293
1413
4.8
10. Jim Krieg (1970-71)
76
1220
16.1
6
10. Travis Hanson (1990-)
7
1. Steele, 3168 yards; 2. Lewis, 2900; 3. Weathersby, 2821;
1. Skansi, 1992; 2. Phillips, 1866; 3. Hill, 1766; 4. Slater,
°NCAA Record
4. Robinson, 2636; 5. McElhenny, 2499; 6. Earl, 2351;
1731; 5. Allen, 1693; 6. Gaines, 1651; 7. Franklin, 1467;
7. Tyler, 2013; 8. Coffey, 1625; 9. Fenney, 1552; 10. Stevens,
8. A. Williams, 1427; 9. Earley, 1264; 10. Krieg, 1220.
1. Jaeger, 85 field goals; 2. Nelson, 61; 3. Robbins, 37;
1484.
4. McCallum, 26; 5. Lansford, 24; 6. Martin, 20; 7. Fleming,
19; 8. Wiezbowski, 17; 9. Brownlee, 11; 10. Norton, 10.
Passing
Scoring
Touchdowns
PA PC PCT TD YDS
TD
PAT
FG
TP
NO
1. Sonny Sixkiller (1970-72)
811
385
.475
35
5496
1. Jeff Jaeger (1983-86)
0
118
80
358
1. George Wilson (1923-35)
37
2. Cary Conklin (1987-89)
747
401
.537
31
4850
2. Chuck Nelson (1980-82)
0
94
59
271
Joe Steele (1976-79)
37
3. Steve Pelluer (1980-83)
755
436
.577
30
4603
3. Hugh McElhenny (1949-51)
35
23
0
233
3. Hugh McElhenny (1949-51)
35
4. Don Heinrich (1949-52)
610
335
.549
33
4392
4. George Wilson (1923-25)
37
2
0
224
4. Chuck Carroll (1926-28)
32
5. Chris Chandler (1984-87)
587
326
.546
32
4161
Joe Steele (1976-79)
37
1°
0
224
5. Jacque Robinson (1981-84)
25
6. Warren Moon (1975-77)
496
242
.488
19
3277
6. Steve Robbins (1974-77)
0
108
35
213
6. Greg Lewis (1987-90)
24
7. Tom Flick (1976-80)
418
252
.603
24
3171
7. Chuck Carroll (1926-28)
32
3
0
195
7. Bo Cornell (1968-70)
19
8. Chris Rowland (1973-75)
475
201
.423
24
2966
8. Steve Wiezbowski (1970-72)
0
99
17
150
Toussaint Tyler (1977-80)
19
9. Hugh Millen (1984-85)
435
247
.568
11
2616
Jacque Robinson (1981-84)
25
0
0
150
Pete Taggares (1971-73)
19
10. Tom Porras (1978-79)
303
148
.488
9 1831
10. Greg Lewis (1987-90)
24
1°
0
146
10. Robin Earl (1973-76)
18
1. Sixkiller, 5496 yards; 2. Conklin, 5082; 3. Pelluer, 4917;
o Two-point conversion
1. Wilson & Steele, 37 touchdowns; 3. McElhenny, 35;
4. Chandler, 4735; 5. Heinrich, 4392; 6. Flick, 3510;
1. Jaeger, 383 points; 2. Nelson, 282; 3. McElhenny, 233;
4. Carroll, 32; 5. Robinson, 28; 6. Lewis, 24; 7. Cornell, Tyler
7. Moon, 3465; 8. Rowland, 2966; 9. Millen, 2657; 10. Porras,
4. Wilson & Steele, 224; 6. Robbins, 222; 7. Carroll, 195;
& Taggares, 19; 10. Earl & Covington, 18.
1841.
8. Robinson, 162; 9. Wiezbowski, 150; 10. George Fleming,
148.
180
Husky History
W
areer Leaders
Pass Interceptions
Tackles (Since 1967)
NO
YDS
AVG
UT
AT
TOT
1. Al Worley (1966-68)
18
130
7.2
1. Michael Jackson (1975-78)
296
273
569
2. Larry Hatch (1946-48)
16
-
-
2. David Rill (1984-87)
241
271
512
3. Vestee Jackson (1983-85)
13
254
19.4
3. Dan Lloyd (1972-75)
230
272
502
Roberto Jourdan (1972-75)
13
166
12.8
4. Ken Driscoll (1979-82)
219
238
457
Bill Albrecht (1951-52, 54)
13
161
12.4
5. Al Burleson (1973-75)
222
167
389
6. Calvin Jones (1970-72)
11
100
9.1
6. Mike Baldassin (1974-76)
171
215
386
7. Dick Sprague (1950-52)
10
-
7. Joe Kelly (1982-85)
190
186
376
-
George Fleming (1958-60)
10
49
4.9
8. Bruce Harrell (1976-79)
167
198
365
Ray Horton (1979-82)
10
48
4.8
9. Tim Meamber (1981-84)
169
185
355
10. Bob Pederson (1965-67)
9
185
20.6
10. Dave Pear (1972-74)
162
185
347
Bob Schloredt (1958-60)
9
132
14.7
Tony Bonwell (1971-72)
9
114
12.7
Bill Cahill (1970-72)
9
109
12.1
Frank Reed (1973-75)
9
65
7.2
Eugene Burkhalter (1987-89)
9
74
8.2
Eric Briscoe (1987-90)
9
58
6.4
1. Worley, 18 interceptions; 2. Hatch, 16; 3. Jackson, Jourdan
& Albrecht, 13; 6. C. Jones & Fleming, 11; 8. Sprague &
Horton, 10; 10. Pederson, Schloredt, Bonwell, Cahill, Reed,
Burkhalter & Briscoe, 9.
Michael Jackson
Punt Returns
Kickoff Returns
Tackles For Loss Yardage
NO
YDS
AVG
NO
YDS
AVG
YDS
1. Travis Richardson (1987-90)
-248.5
1. Steve Bramwell (1963-65)
59
704
11.9
1. Steve Bramwell (1963-65)
54
1443
26.7
2. Bill Cahill (1970-72)
49
668
13.6
2. Steve Jones (1986-88)
59
1290
21.9
2. Mark Stewart (1979-82)
-228
3. Calvin Jones (1970-72)
47
596
12.7
3. Anthony Allen (1979-82)
54
1283
24.0
3. Reggie Rogers (1984-86)
-223
4. Nesby Glasgow (1975-78)
86
579
6.7
4. Jim Krieg (1970-71)
31
860
27.7
4. Ron Holmes (1982-84)
-206
5. Jim Cope (1966-68)
36
807
22.4
5. Dennis Brown (1986-89)
-195
5. Beno Bryant (1989-)
37
567
15.3
6. Andre Riley (1986-89)
64
559
8.7
6. Kyle Stevens (1977-80)
33
804
24.4
6. Doug Martin (1977-79)
-171
7. George Fleming (1958-60)
44
480
10.9
7. Hugh McElhenny (1949-51)
-
747
-
7. Martin Harrison (1986-89)
-143
8. Ray Horton (1979-82)
55
465
8.5
8. Jim Jones (1955-57)
27
643
23.8
8. Antowaine Richardson (1977-79)
-134
9. Ron Milus (1982-85)
49
410
8.4
9. Charlie Mitchell (1960-62)
17
558
32.8
9. Tony Caldwell (1980-82)
-130
10. Charlie Mitchell (1960-62)
35
342
9.8
10. Brooks Biddle (1947-48)
23
518
22.5
10. Dean Browning (1981-83)
-123
1. Bramwell, 723 yards; 2. Cahill, 668; 3. Horton, 642;
1. Allen, 1604 yards; 2. Bramwell, 1532; 3. Stevens, 903; 4. S.
4. Fleming, 619; 5. Bryant, 600; 6. C. Jones, 596; 7. Glasgow,
Jones, 898; 5. Krieg, 860; 6. Cope, 807; 7. McElhenny, 747;
588; 8. Riley, 568; 9. Milus, 438; 10. Mitchell, 354.
8. J. Jones, 643; 9. Mitchell, 583; 10. Biddle, 518.
All-Purpose Running
Tackles For Loss
G
RUSH
REC
P/RET
K/RET
TOT
G/AVG
NO
1. Hugh McElhenny (1949-51)
28
2499
760
228
747
4234
151:2
1. Ron Holmes (1982-84)
'
48
473
0
440
4004
105.4
2. Mark Stewart (1979-82)
47
2. Joe Steele (1976-79)
38
3091
3. Vince Weathersby (1985-88)
43
2653
918
0
0
3571
83.0
3. Dennis Brown (1986-89)
41
4. Greg Lewis (1987-90)
40
2678
797
0
89
3564
89.1
4. Doug Martin (1977-70)
39
5. Anthony Allen (1979-82)
42
23
1372
310
1283
2988
71.1
5. Reggie Rogers (1984-86)
38
6. Steve Bramwell (1963-65)
30
394
286
704
1443
2827
94.3
6. Martin Harrison (1986-89)
37
37.5
7. Robin Earl (1973-76)
44
2351
380
0
18
2749
62.5
7. Travis Richardson (1987-90)
8. Charlie Mitchell (1960-62)
31
1362
225
342
558
2487
80.2
8. Fletcher Jenkins (1979-81)
29
9. Jacque Robinson (1981-84)
35
2300
185
0
0
2485
99.4
9. Ray Cattage (1980-82)
27
10. Scott Phillips (1973-76)
44
10
1866
0
500
2366
53.8
10. Dean Browning (1981-83)
26
1. McElhenny, 4234 yards; 2. Steele, 4092; 3. Weathersby, 3869; 4. Lewis, 3830; 5. Allen, 3400; 6. Bramwell, 2960; 7. Robinson,
2844; 8. Earl, 2749; 9. Mitchell, 2539; 10. Kyle Stevens, 2511.
181
W
Husky History
The Last Time
100-Yard Rusher
Four Field Goals
Fumble Returned For TD
by UW
129 yds. Greg Lewis vs. Iowa, 1/1/91
by UW
John McCallum VS. Texas A&M,
by UW
Eric Briscoe VS. Stanford, 10/20/90
by Opp.
113 yds. Brian Brown, UCLA,
9/9/89
(17 yards)
11/10/90
by Opp.
Troy Bussanich, Oregon State,
10/31/87
Fumble Recovered For TD
200-Yard Rusher
by UW
205, Greg Lewis vs. California,
Fifty Yard+ Field Goal
by UW
Eric Lambright vs. Miami (Ohio),
9/29/84
10/27/90
by UW
Jeff Jaeger VS. Oregon, 10/22/83
by Opp.
Mike Hudson, Oklahoma State, 9/7/8
by Opp.
220, Jon Volpe, Stanford, 10/29/88
(54 yards)
by Opp.
Robbie Keen, California, 11/12/88
Blocked Punt For TD
Three Rushing TDs
(55 yards)
by UW
Dana Hall (Andy Mason) vs. Iowa,
by UW
Jay Barry vs. Washington St., 11/17/90
by Opp.
Missed Point After Attempt
1/1/91
Darryl Harris, Arizona State, 11/1/86
by Opp.
by UW
Dereck Moore (Kevin Curvey), ASU
John McCallum VS. Oregon (2 misses),
10/6/90
300-Yard Passer
10/14/89
by Opp.
Brad Daluiso, UCLA, 11/10/90.
by UW
428 yds. Cary Conklin vs. Arizona
Punt Blocked (No TD)
State, 11/4/89
Two Interceptions
by UW
Jay Barry vs. Arizona 11/3/90
by Opp.
302 yds. Bill Musgrave, Oregon,
(Miller punt)
10/13/90
by UW
Charles Mincy vs. Iowa, 1/1/91
by Opp.
Kevin Curvey, ASU, 10/6/90
by Opp.
Deon Figures, Colorado, 9/29/90
(Wyles punt)
Three TD Passes
by UW
Mark Brunell vs. Washington St.,
Scored A Safety
11/17/90
Three Interceptions
by UW
vs. Wash. St. (Snap out of end zone),
by Opp.
Paul Justin, Arizona State, 11/4/89
By UW
Tim Meamber vs. Northwestern,
11/17/90
9/8/84
by Opp.
Purdue (Snap out of end zone),
100-Yard Receiver
9/16/89
by UW
111 yds. Mario Bailey vs. Oregon,
Punt Returned For TD
10/13/90
Scored A Shutout
by Opp.
136 yds. Phillip Bobo, Washington St.,
by UW
Beno Bryant vs. Arizona, 11/3/90
by UW
vs. USC, 9/22/90 (31-0), Home
11/17/90
(70 yards)
by Opp.
by Opp.
UCLA, 11/7/81 (31-0), Away
Glyn Milburn, Stanford, 10/20/90
200-Yard Receiver
(57 yards)
Played To A Tie
by UW
223 yds. Andre Riley vs. Arizona State,
Kickoff Returned For TD
by UW
VS. Arizona, 11/7/87 (21-21), Away
11/4/89
by UW
Anthony Allen VS. Pittsburgh, 10/20/79
Three TD Receptions
(99 yards)
by Opp.
Robert Parker, BYU, 10/20/86
by UW
Brian Slater VS. USC, 10/15/88
(94 yards)
by Opp.
James Lofton, Stanford, 10/15/77
Interception Returned For TD
Three Field Goals
by UW
Charles Mincy VS. Iowa, 1/1/91
by UW
John McCallum VS. Texas A&M,
(37 yards)
9/9/89
by Opp.
Carlton Gray, UCLA, 10/28.89
by Opp.
Troy Bussanich, Oregon State,
(65 yards)
10/31/87
182
Husky History
W
Vashington's Longest
ongest Runs From Scrimmage (all-time)
Longest Punt Returns (all-time)
NAME
YDS
YEAR
OPPONENT
NAME
YDS
YEAR
OPPONENT
(SCORE)
(SCORE)
Dean Berby
92t
1956
Illinois (28-13)
1. Hugh McElhenny
100t
1951
USC (13-20)
2. Hugh McElhenny
91t
1950
Kansas State (33-7)
2. Steve Bramwell
92t
1963
Oregon State (34-7)
B. Ron Medved
88t
1963
Stanford (19-11)
3. John Cherberg
88t
1932
Stanford (18-13)
4. Ervin Dailey
85t
1919
Whitman (120-0)
4. Ernie Steele
83t
1940
Wash. State (33-9)
5. Hugh McElhenny
84t-
1950
Wash. State (52-21)
5. Beno Bryant
82t
1990
Arizona St. (42-14)
6. Joe Steele
83t
1977
Stanford (45-21)
6. Calvin Jones
78t
1971
California (30-7)
7. Tom Manke
81t
1967
Stanford (7-14)
7. Nesby Glasgow
73t
1977
Stanford (45-21)
S. Jack Stackpool
78t
1940
USC (14-0)
Ray Horton
73t
1980
USC (20-10)
72t
1961
California (14-21)
Greg Lewis
78
1989
Purdue (38-9)
9. Martin Wyatt
0. Beno Bryant
73t
1990
Arizona (54-10)
10. Anthony Allen
71t
1981
Stanford (42-31)
1. John Brady
73
1970
Navy (56-7)
Danny Greene
71t
1983
USC (24-0)
2. Joe Steele
72t
1976
Oregon (14-7)
12. Jack. Nugent
70t
1951
Oregon (63-6)
3. Warren Moon
71t
1977
USC (28-10)
Bill Cahill
70t
1971
Illinois (52-14)
Beno Bryant
70t
1990
Arizona (54-10)
4. Hugh McElhenny
69t
1951
Stanford (7-14)
Joe Steele
69t
1979
Fresno state (49-14)
15. Jimmy Johnston
69
1938
Hawaii (53-13)
6. Spider Gaines
68
1978
USC (10-28)
16. Steve Bramwell
67t
1964
Baylor (35-14)
Jacque Robinson
68
1983
Oregon State (34-7)
17. Harry Blanks
66t
1968
Wisconsin (21-17)
8. Aaron Jenkins
67
1988
Purdue (20-6)
Andre Riley
66t
1986
Bowling Green (48-0)
19. George Fleming
65t
1960
USC (34-0)
Ken Gardner
65t
1980
Oregon (10-34)
Longest Pass Plays (all-time)
Longest Kickoff Returns (all-time)
NAME
YDS
YEAR
OPPONENT
NAME
YDS
YEAR
OPPONENT
(SCORE)
(SCORE)
1. Flick/Rosborough
84t
1980
Air Force (50-7)
1. Jim Krieg
99t
1971
TCU (44-26)
2. Heinrich/Black
80t
1952
Stanford (27-14)
Anthony Allen
99t
1979
Pittsburgh (14-26)
Roake/Houston/Lewis
0
80t
1955
USC (7-0)
3. George Guttormsen
98t
1924
Whitman (55-0)
Minnesota (20-48)
Manke/Wood
80t
1967
Air Force (30-7)
4. Hugh McElhenny
97t
1949
Waskowitz/Miller
80t
1937
Wash. State (7-7)
Jim Krieg
97t
1970
California (28-31)
5. Moon/Gaines
78t
1975
Wash. State (28-27)
6. Jim Krieg
95t
1970
Stanford (22-29)
6. Mitchell/McElhenny
77t
1951
Illinois (20-27)
Kyle Stevens
95t
1979
Utah (41-7)
7. Conklin/Riley
76
1989
Purdue (38-9)
8. Jim Jones
9lt
1957
Minnesota (7-46)
1925
Whitman (64-2)
8. Rowland/Conley
75t
1973
Wash. State (26-52)
9. Hugh Beckett
90t
9. Porras/Gaines
74t
1978
Alabama (17-20)
Steve Bramwell
90t
1963
Air Force (7-10)
10. Fitzpatrick/Phillips
73t
1973
Duke (21-23)
Charlie Mitchell
90t
1961
UCLA (17-13)
11. Millen/Pattison
73t
1984
Michigan (20-11)
12. Joe Steele
89t
1976
UCLA (21-30)
12. Collins/Dumas
72t
1971
California (30-7)
13. Ernie Steele
87t
1940
Wash. State (33-9)
87t
1952
Idaho (39-14)
Sixkiller/Scott
72
1972
UCLA (30-21)
Sam Mitchell
Porras/Gaines
72t
1978
USC (10-28)
15. Charlie Mitchell
85t
1960
Idaho (41-12)
15. Sparlin/Williams
70t
1965
Oregon (24-20)
Pelluer/Greene
70t
1983
UCLA (24-27)
17. Lederman/Black
69t
1953
Utah (21-14)
Flick/Williams
69t
1980
Navy (10-24)
Pelluer/Allen
69t
1981
Kansas State (20-3)
(°lateral from Houston to Lewis)
183
W
Husky History
Washington's Longest
Longest Interception Returns (all-time)
Longest Field Goals (all-time)
NAME
YDS
YEAR
OPPONENT
NAME
YDS
YEAR
OPPONENT
(SCORE)
(SCORE)
1. Al Burleson
93t
1975
Wash. State (28-27)
1. Don Martin
56
1967
Air Force (30-7)
2. George Wilson
90t
1925
Wash. State (23-0)
2. Jeff Jaeger
52
1983
Oregon State (34-7
Bob Pederson
90t
1966
Oregon State (13-24)
Jeff Jaeger
52
1983
Oregon (32-3)
4. Le-Lo Lang
87t
1989
California (29-16)
4. Ron Volbrecht
51
1968
Rice (35-35)
5. George Jugum
86t
1968
Stanford (20-35)
Chuck Nelson
51
1981
Kansas State (20-3)
Jim Katsenes
86t
1970
UCLA (61-20)
Chuck Nelson
51
1981
Texas Tech (14-7)
7. George Guttormsen
82t
1925
Stanford (13-0)
7. Mike Lansford
49
1978
Oregon State (34-0
8. Jim Noe
+77t
1953
Colorado (20-21)
Chuck Nelson
49
1982
San Diego St(46-25
9. Don McCumby
+73t
1956
Stanford (34-13)
Chuck Nelson
49
1982
Oregon (37-21)
10. Chico Fraley
72+
1988
Army (31-17)
Jeff Jaeger
49
1985
USC (20-17)
11. Roland Kirkby
69t
1950
USC (28-13)
Brandy Brownlee
49
1987
Texas A&M (12-29)
12. Mike Gaffney
67
1986
Wash. State (44-23)
John McCallum
49
1989
California (29-16)
13. Calvin Jones
66
1971
USC (12-13)
13. Mike Lansford
48
1979
Wyoming (38-2)
Vestee Jackson
66t
1983
Arizona (23-22)
Mike Lansford
48
1979
Utah (41-7)
14. Roland Kirkby
65
1948
California (0-21)
Jeff Jaeger
48
1983
UCLA (24-27)
15. Colin Howard
62t
1932
Stanford (18-13)
Jeff Jaeger
48
1983
Arizona (23-22)
16. Jim Jones
6lt
1955
UCLA (17-19)
Jeff Jaeger
48
1983
Arizona (23-22)
17. Tom Verti
57
1968
Idaho (37-7)
Jeff Jaeger
48
1985
BYU (3-31)
18. Steve Lipe
56
1973
Idaho (41-14)
19. Chuck Nelson
47
1980
Arizona (45-22)
19. Lloyd Phelps
55t
1940
UCLA (41-0)
Chuck Nelson
47
1980
USC (20-10)
Al Craig
55
1969
Michigan St (11-27)
Jeff Jaeger
47
1984
Oregon State (19-7)
Kyle Heinrich
55
1977
Wash. State (35-15)
+Intercepted fumble
Top 20 UW Individual Game Performances
Rushing (since 1968)
Passing (since 1968)
YDS
NAME
OPPONENT (SCORE)
YEAR
YDS
NAME
OPPONENT (SCORE)
YEAR
249
Dennis Fitzpatrick
Washington State (24-17)
1974
428
Cary Conklin
Arizona State (32-34)
1989
205
Greg Lewis
California (46-7)
1990
397
Sonny Sixkiller
Purdue (38-35)
1971
203
Jacque Robinson
Texas Tech (10-3)
1982
360
Sonny Sixkiller
Oregon State (29-20)
1970
196
Ron Rowland
Washington State (51-32)
1976
354
Chris Rowland
Washington State (26-52)
1973
193
Joe Steele
Washington State (38-8)
1978
354
Cary Conklin
Arizona (17-20)
1989
188
Sterling Hinds
Stanford (32-15)
1983
350
Tim Cowan
Maryland (21-20)
1982^
183
Ron Rowland
Virginia (38-17)
1976
341
Sonny Sixkiller
USC (25-28)
1970
177
Joe Steele
Stanford (45-21)
1977
328
Chris Rowland
Texas (21-35)
1974
177
Vince Weathersby
Washington State (44-23)
1986
317
Chris Chandler
Oregon (22-29)
1987
169
Greg Lewis
Oregon (38-17)
1990
316
Tom Flick
Air Force (50-7)
1980
169
Robin Earl
UCLA (21-30)
1976
315
Cary Conklin
California (28-27)
1988
165
Greg Lewis
Purdue (38-9)
1989
314
Chris Chandler
Stanford (31-21)
1997
162
Aaron Jenkins
Purdue (20-6)
1988
312
Steve Pelluer
LSU (14-40)
1983
160
Jacque Robinson
Washington State (38-29)
1984
311
Chris Rowland
California (49-54)
1973
159
Greg Lewis
Arizona St. (42-14)
1990
311
Tom Flick
Washington State(3D-23)
1980
159
Carl Wojciechówski
Oregon State (21-35)
1968
305
Steve Pelluer
UCLA (24-27)
1983
157
Joe Steele
Oregon (14-7)
1976
278
Tom Flick
Stanford (27-24)
1980
157
Greg Lewis
San Jose St. (20-17)
1990
277
Sonny Sixkiller
UCLA (61-20)
1970
156
Joe Steele
Oregon State (34-0)
1978
276
Sonny Sixkiller
Michigan State (42-16)
1970
155
Ron Rowland
Minnesota (38-7)
1976
269
Steve Pelluer
Michigan (25-24)
1983
155
Joe Steele
Indiana (7-14)
1978
^Aloha Bowl
184
Husky History
W
pp 20 UW Individual Game Performances
eceiving (since 1968)
S
NAME
OPPONENT (SCORE)
YEAR
B
Andre Riley
Arizona State (32-34)
1989
9
Darryl Franklin
Stanford (31-21)
1987
1
Scott Phillips
California (26-52)
1974
9
Spider Gaines
Syracuse (20-22)
1977
10
Brian Slater
Oregon (22-29)
1987
9
Brian Slater
USC (27-28)
1988
2
Anthony Allen
Maryland (21-20)
1982^
8
Spider Gaines
Alabama (17-20)
1978
5
Jim Krieg
UCLA (61-20)
1970
3
Andre Riley
USC (16-24)
1989
2
Brian Slater
Purdue (28-10)
1987
1
Mario Bailey
Colorado (14-20)
1990
0
Al Maurer
UCLA (61-20)
1970
0
Anthony Allen
Washington State (20-24)
1982
8
Reggie Brown
California (49-54)
1973
7
Lonzell Hill
Stanford (24-14)
1986
7
Andre Riley
Purdue (38-9)
1989
3
Scott Phillips
Texas (21-35)
1974
2
Paul Skansi
Texas-El Paso (55-0)
1982
30
Anthony Allen
Arizona (45-22)
1980
Rose Bowl
Aloha Bowl
Andre Riley
Scoring Records
Highest UW Scores (all-time)
Highest Opponent Scores (all-time)
W
OPPONENT
OPP
YEAR
UW
OPPONENT
OPP
YEAR
20
Whitman
0
1919
3
California
72
1921
08
Willamette
0
1925
13
UCLA
62
1973
00
Whitworth
0
1913
0
Oregon
58
1973
96
Puget Sound
0
1924
14
UCLA
57
1969
90
Fort Worden
0
1911
49
California
54
1973
81
Rainier Valley AC
0
1914
25
California
53
1953
SO
Puget Sound
7
1925
26
Washington State
52
1973
77
Whitman
0
1931
26
California
52
1974
73
Puget Sound
0
1929
0
Alabama
52
1975
72
California
0
1915
0
Michigan
50
1953
Highest UW Scores (post-1945)
Highest Combined Scores (all-time)
JW
OPPONENT
OPP
YEAR
PTS
OPPONENT
YEAR
66
Oregon
0
1974
120
Whitman (120-0)
1919
65
UC-Santa Barbara
7
1971
108
Willamette (108-0)
1925
63
Oregon
6
1951
103
California (49-54)
1973
61
UCLA
20
1970
100
Whitworth (100-0)
1913
58
Montana
7
1951
96
Puget Sound (96-0)
1924
56
Navy
7
1970
90
Fort Worden (90-0)
1911
56
Oregon State
17
1981
87
Puget Sound (80-7)
1925
55
Pacific
6
1960
83
Wash. St (51-32)
1976
55
Texas-El Paso
0
1982
81
Rain. Val. AC (81-0)
1914
55
Washington State
10
1990
81
UCLA (61-20)
1970
54
Oregon
0
1977
81
California (50-31)
1977
54
Arizona
10
1990
185
W
Husky History
Opponents' Game Highs
Year-By-Year Leaders
Rushing (since 1968)
Rushing
YDS
NAME
OPPONENT (SCORE)
YEAR
YEAR
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
T
243
Charles White
USC (17-24)
1979
1990
Greg Lewis
229
1279
5.6
237
Thurman Thomas
Oklahoma State (17-31)
1985
1989
Greg Lewis
239
1100
4.6
220
Theotis Brown
UCLA (21-30)
1976
1988
Aaron Jenkins
138
691
5.0
220
Jon Volpe
Stanford (28-25)
1988
1987
Vince Weathersby
146
682
4.7
217
Johnny Johnson
San Jose St. (35-31)
1988
1986
Vince Weathersby
160
880
5.5
216
Marcus Allen
USC (20-10)
1980
1985
Rick Fenney
104
497
4.8
213
Gary Danielson
Purdue (22-21)
1972
1984
Jacque Robinson
195
901
4.6
1
198
Earl Campbell
Texas (21-35)
1975
1983
Sterling Hinds
159
826
5.2
191
Glen Doughty
Michigan (745)
1969
1982
Jacque Robinson
222
926
4.2
190
Ricky Bell
USC (8-7)
1975
1981
Ron Jackson
159
623
3.9
182
Steven Webster
USC (23-37)
1987
1980
Kyle Stevens
148
706
4.8
172
O. J. Simpson
USC (7-14)
1968
1979
Joe Steele
151
694
4.6
1
169
Kerry Porter
Washington State (6-17)
1983
1978
Joe Steele
237
1111
4.7
1977
Joe Steele
198
865
4.4
1
Passing (since 1968)
1976
Ron Rowland
203
1002
4.9
1975
YDS
Robin Earl
NAME
167
OPPONENT (SCORE)
782
YEAR
4.7
1974
380
Joe Roth
California (24-27)
Dennis Fitzpatrick
137
697
1975
5.1
1973
376
Guy Benjamin
Stanford (45-21)
1977
Pete Taggares
93
342
3.7
1972
364
John Paye
Stanford (24-14)
Pete Taggares
127
450
1986
3.5
1971
361
John Elway
Stanford (42-31)
1981
Pete Taggares
102
401
3.9
1970
360
Steve Dils
Bo Cornell
Stanford (34-31)
97
340
1978
3.5
1969
339
Bo Cornell
Paul Justin
136
Arizona State (32-34)
613
1989
4.5
1968
323
Jim Plunkett
Stanford (7-21)
Carl Wojciechowski
138
651
1969
4.7
1967
322
Tom Manke
Rich Campbell
California (28-24)
139
483
1979
3.4
1966
316
Steve Bartkowski
Don Moore
California (26-52)
88
447
1974
5.1
1965
311
Don Moore
Jack Thompson
Washington State (51-32)
144
637
1976
4.4
1964
Junior Coffey
147
638
4.5
Receiving (since 1968)
1963
Charlie Browning
84
421
5.0
1962
Junior Coffey
98
581
5.9
YDS
NAME
OPPONENT (SCORE)
YEAR
1961
Jim Stiger
130
582
4.5
192
James Lofton
Stanford (45-21)
1977
1960
Charlie Mitchell
74
467
6.3
183
Steve Rivera
California (24-27)
1975
1959
Ray Jackson
95
460
4.8
175
Matt Bouza
California (28-24)
1979
1958
Mike McCluskey
60
292
4.9
170
Gene Washington
Stanford (20-35)
1968
1957
Jim Jones
105
488
4.6
167
Brad Anderson
Arizona (23-13)
1982
1956
Luther Carr
75
469
6.3
161
Emile Harry
Stanford (37-15)
1984
1955
Credell Green
108
652
6.0
5
145
Tony Hargain
Oregon (20-14)
1989
1954
Bob McNamee
78
291
3.7
0
143
Bob Palm
Oregon (0-58)
1973
1953
Bob Dunn
52
236
4.5
0
143
Chris DeFrance
Arizona State (41-7)
1978
1952
Jack Nugent
100
433
4.4
5
139
George Freitas
California (50-31)
1977
1951
Hugh McElhenny
169
936
5.5
13
1950
Hugh McElhenny
179
1107
6.2
12
186
Husky History
W
ear-By-Year Leaders
assing
Receiving
AR
PLAYER
ATT
COMP
YDS
INT
TD
PCT
YEAR
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
0
Mark Brunell
253
118
1732
8
14
.466
1990
Mario Bailey
40
667
16.7
6
9
Cary Conklin
365
208
2569
17
16
.570
1989
Andre Riley
53
1039
19.6
4
$8
Cary Conklin
302
153
1833
12
11
.507
1988
Brian Slater
38
737
19.4
7
37
Chris Chandler
249
128
1739
11
9
.514
1987
Darryl Franklin
43
712
16.6
3
$6
Chris Chandler
275
160
1994
13
20
.582
1986
Lonzell Hill
43
721
16.8
8
85
Hugh Millen
264
158
1565
14
6
.598
1985
Lonzell Hill
46
696
15.1
8
$4
Hugh Millen
171
89
1051
9
5
.520
1984
Danny Greene
29
395
13.6
3
83
Steve Pelluer
317
213
2212
8
11
.672
1983
Mark Pattison
38
400
10.5
2
82
Steve Pelluer
198
111
1229
10
10
.561
1982
Paul Skansi
50
631
12.6
3
81
Steve Pelluer
234
110
1138
8
9
.470
1981
Anthony Allen
29
389
13.4
2
80
Tom Flick
280
168
2178
11
15
.600
1980
David Bayle
36
315
8.8
2
79
Tom Flick
108
65
795
5
5
.602
1979
Paul Skansi
31
378
12.2
4
78
Tom Porras
176
84
1151
8
6
.477
1978
Keith Richardson
24
330
13.8
2
77
Warren Moon
199
113
1584
7
11
.568
1977
Spider Gaines
30
660
22.0
6
76
Warren Moon
175
81
1106
8
6
.463
1976
Scott Phillips
26
348
13.4
2
75
Warren Moon
122
48
587
2
2
.390
1975
Scott Phillips
33
433
13.1
1
74
Chris Rowland
124
59
848
10
5
.476
1974
Scott Phillips
34
716
21.0
2
73
Chris Rowland
234
97
1521
24
15
.415
1973
Walter Oldes
27
450
16.7
3
72
Sonny Sixkiller
152
73
1125
11
7
.480
1972
John Brady
30
450
15.0
3
71
Sonny Sixkiller
297
126
2068
18
13
.424
1971
Tom Scott
35
820
23.4
6
70
Sonny Sixkiller
362
186
2303
22
15
.514
1970
Jim Krieg
54
738
13.7
2
69
Gene Willis
99
33
568
13
5
.330
1969
Ralph Bayard
13
290
22.3
2
68
Jerry Kaloper
115
43
595
9
0
.374
1968
Harrison Wood
17
250
14.7
2
67
Tom Manke
81
32
613
8
5
395
1967
Jim Cope
20
284
14.2
2
66
Tom Sparlin
165
68
954
19
4
.412
1966
Jim Cope
25
379
15.1
3
65
Todd Hullin
168
90
1318
9
13
.536
1965
Dave Williams
38
795
20.9
10
64
Bill Douglas
64
33
360
5
0
.515
1964
Gary Carr
14
190
13.6
0
63
Bill Douglas
111
62
929
3
6
.559
1963
Dave Kopay
12
175
14.6
1
62
Bill Siler
27
15
294
2
3
.556
1962
Charlie Mitchell
9
108
12.0
0
61
Pete Ohler
59
17
394
8
3
.288
1961
Lee Bernhardi
5
137
27.4
1
60
Bob Hivner
57
31
580
4
6
540
1960
Pat Claridge
13
252
19.4
1
59
Bob Schloredt
75
39
733
2
5
520
1959
Lee Folkins
12
214
17.8
1
58
Bob Hivner
115
48
587
13
3
.417
1958
Luther Carr
14
238
17.0
1
57
Bob Dunn
55
16
227
3
2
.291
1957
Bruce Claridge
7
92
13.1
1
56
Al Ferguson
41
20
418
2
3
.488
1956
Dean Derby
9
97
10.8
0
55
Steve Roake
61
27
410
2
3
.443
1955
Jim Houston
16
149
9.3
1
054
Bob Cox
146
66
809
12
4
.452
1954
Corky Lewis
21
250
11.9
2
953
Sandy Lederman
189
92
1157
14
8
.482
1953
Jim Warsinske
21
255
12.1
0
52
Don Heinrich
270
137
1647
17
13
.507
1952
George Black
42
637
15.2
7
951
Sam Mitchell
167
79
1102
9
8
.473
1951
Doug McClary
29
343
11.8
3
950
Don Heinrich
221
134
1846
9
14
.604
1950
Bill Earley
28
473
16.9
3
187
W
Husky History
Year-By-Year Leaders
Punting
Punt Returns
YEAR
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
YEAR
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
1990
Channing Wyles
66
2707
41.0
1990
Beno Bryant
36
560
15.6
1989
Channing Wyles
53
2024
38.2
1989
Charles Mincy
19
72
3.8
1988
Eric Canton
59
2016
34.2
1988
William Doctor
35
236
6.7
1987
Brandy Brownlee
32
1265
39.5
1987
Demouy Williams
9
144
16.0
1986
Thane Cleland
47
1938
41.2
1986
Andre Riley
36
392
10.9
1985
Thane Cleland
57
2169
38.1
1985
Ron Mills
31
187
6.0
1984
Thane Cleland
69
2733
39.6
1994
Ron Mills
17
211
12.4
1983
Thane Cleland
42
1598
38.0
1983
Danny Greene
20
174
8.7
1982
Jeff Partridge
65
2739
42.1
1982
Ray Horton
14
114
8.1
1981
Jeff Partridge
53
2122
40.0
1981
Anthony Allen
15
178
11.9
1980
Rich Camarillo
52
1973
37.9
1980
Ron Horton
18
238
13.2
1979
Rich Camarillo
51
2077
40.7
1979
Mark Lee
21
271
12.9
1978
Aaron Wilson
54
1953
36.2
1978
Nesby Glasgow
38
150
5.4
1977
Aaron Wilson
57
2056
36.1
1977
Nesby Glasgow
29
266
9.2
1976
Don Feleay
51
2017
39.5
1976
Nesby Glasgow
29
163
5.6
1975
Don Feleay
76
2981
39.2
1975
Pedro Hawkins
18
38
2.1
1974
Skip Boyd
57
2407
42.2
1974
Roberto Jourdan
23
152
6.6
1973
Skip Boyd
69
2964
43.0
1973
Roberto Jourdan
13
68
5.2
1972
Skip Boyd
68
2616
38.5
1972
Bill Cahill
16
166
10.4
1971
Gene Willis
41
1666
40.6
1971
Bill Cahill
26
421
16.2
1970
Dick Galuska
55
2115
38.5
1970
Calvin Jones
20
186
9.3
1969
Gene Willis
49
1742
35.6
1969
Bob Berg
15
122
8.1
1968
Jeff Huget
43
1670
38.9
1968
Jim Cope
16
176
11.0
1967
Don Martin
62
2357
38.1
1967
Bill Sprinkle
13
128
9.8
1966
Don Martin
51
2079
40.7
1966
Vince Lorrain
13
110
83
1965
Don Martin
30
1159
38.6
1965
Steve Bramwell
13
195
15.0
1964
Rick Redman
47
1820
38.7
1964
Steve Bramwell
29
314
10.8
1963
Rick Redman
43
1584
36.8
1963
Steve Bramwell
17
195
11.5
1962
Rick Redman
44
1638
38.3
1962
Nat Whitmyer
16
212
13.3
1961
Glenn Reese
25
842
33.7
1961
Martin Wyatt
6
117
17.3
1960
Bob Schloredt
15
576
38.4
1960
George Fleming
13
184
14.8
1959
Bob Schloredt
52
2081
40.0
1959
George Fleming
23
231
10.0
1958
Bob Schloredt
54
1997
37.0
1958
Luther Carr
17
100
5.9
1957
Bob Dunn
40
1472
36.8
1957
Mike McCluskey
7
53
7.6
1956
Dick Day
29
1061
36.6
1956
Luther Carr
12
179
14.9
1955
Steve Roake
35
1154
33.0
1955
Mike Monroe
11
104
9.5
1954
Bill Albrecht
22
809
36.8
1954
Mickey McKinnon
2
24
12.0
1953
Stewart Crook
22
807
36.7
1953
Jack Kyllingstad
4
34
8.5
1952
No record
1952
No record
1951
Tom Sprague
40
1388
34.7
1951
No record
1950
No record
1950
No record
188
Husky History
W
ar-By-Year Leaders
ass Interceptions
Kickoff Returns
AR
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
YEAR
PLAYER
NO
YDS
AVG
TD
0
Eric Briscoe
6
5
0.8
0
1990
Beno Bryant
10
212
21.2
0
9
Eugene Burkhalter
5
40
8.0
0
1989
Beno Bryant
20
409
20.5
0
S
Le-Lo Lang
3
34
11.3
1
1988
Steve Jones
24
499
20.8
0
7
Darryl Hall
4
29
7.3
0
1987
Steve Jones
20
384
19.2
0
6
Tony Zackery
4
30
7.5
0
1986
Steve Jones
15
407
27.1
0
5
Vestee Jackson
4
65
16.3
0
1985
David Trimble
20
413
20.7
0
4
Joe Kelly
5
95
19.0
1
1994
Lonzell Hill
12
211
17.6
0
3
Vestee Jackson
4
116
29.0
1
1983
Danny Greene
7
110
15.7
0
2
Vince Newsome
4
58
14.5
1
1982
Aaron Williams
8
198
24.8
0
1
Bill Stapleton
4
35
8.8
0
1981
Anthony Allen
17
362
21.3
0
0
Ken Gardner
4
18
4.5
0
1980
Anthony Allen
15
370
24.7
0
9
Bruce Harrell
3
41
13.7
1
1979
Anthony Allen
15
376
25.1
1
8
Greg Grimes
3
52
17.3
1
1978
Kyle Stevens
11
203
18.5
0
7
Michael Jackson
4
18
4.5
0
1977
Kyle Stevens
10
240
24.0
0
0
6
John Edwards
3
4
1.3
0
1976
Leon Garrett
15
283
18.9
5
Alvin Burkson
3
149
49.6
2
1975
Stan Wilson
14
289
20.6
0
4
Frank Reed
4
51
12.8
0
1974
Reggie Brown
14
279
19.9
0
3
Roberto Jourdan
5
18
3.6
0
1973
Scott Phillips
23
426
18.5
2
Tony Bonwell
7
67
9.6
0
1972
Walter Oldes
18
333
18.5
0
71
Calvin Jones
4
66
16.5
0
1971
Jim Krieg
12
284
23.7
1
70
Bob Burmeister
5
87
17.4
2
1970
Jim Krieg
19
576
30.3
2
69
Bob Lovlien
4
26
6.5
0
1969
Buddy Kennamer
20
421
21.1
0
68
Al Worley
14
130
9.3
1
1968
Jim Cope
16
176
11.0
0
67
Otis Washington
2
36
18.0
0
1967
Jim Cope
7
153
21.9
0
Bob Pederson
2
27
13.5
0
1966
Jim Cope
13
287
22.1
0
Al Worley
2
0
0.0
0
1965
Steve Bramwell
13
195
15.0
0
66
Bob Pederson
5
134
28.8
1
1964
Steve Bramwell
14
305
21.8
0
65
Ralph Winters
3
1963
Steve Bramwell
17
195
11.5
1
-
-
64
Steve Hinds
3
35
11.7
0
1962
Charlie Mitchell
5
136
27.2
0
63
John O'Brien
3
20
6.7
0
1961
Charlie Mitchell
5
185
37.0
62
Robbie Heinz
4
19
4.8
0
1960
Charlie Mitchell
7
237
33.9
61
Jim Stiger
5
51
10.2
0
1959
George Fleming
6
180
30.0
60
Bob Hivner
4
5
1.3
0
1958
Luther Carr
7
191
27.3
59
Bob Schloredt
6
53
8.8
1
1957
Jim Jones
12
342
28.5
58
George Fleming
3
35
11.7
0
1956
Luther Carr
12
179
14.9
57
Dick Day
2
21
10.5
0
1955
Mike Monroe
11
104
9.5
56
Whitey Core
4
20
5.0
0
1954
Bill Albrecht
9
152
16.9
55
Mike Monroe
3
23
7.7
0
1953
No record
54
Bob Cox
5
30
6.0
0
1952
No record
53
Jim Noe
3
68
22.7
0
1951
No record
52
Sam Mitchell
3
98
32.7
0
1950
No record
51
Bill Albrecht
12
140
11.7
0
50
Dick Sprague
7
33
4.7
0
189
W
Husky History
Year-By-Year Leaders
Washington Honor Roll
Scoring
Washington's All-Americans
YEAR
PLAYER
TD
PAT
2XP
FG
SAF
TOT
Washington players who have won first-team All-America rating on at least one
1990
Mark Brunell
11
2-3
70
the major teams.
1989
John McCallum
28-30
14-17
70
YEAR
PLAYER,
YEAR
PLAYER,
1988
John McCallum
30-30
10-15
60
POSITION
POSITION
1987
Brandy Brownlee
30-30
11-18
63
1916
Louis Seagraves, g
1959
1986
Bob Schloredt, qb
Jeff Jaeger
42-43
17-21
93
1925
George Wilson, hb
1960
Roy McKasson, c
1985
Jeff Jaeger
19-19
21-24
82
1928
Chuck Carroll, hb
1963-64
1984
Rick Redman, lb/g
Jeff Jaeger
30-33
22-28
96
1929
Merle Hufford, hb
1966
Tom Greenlee, db
1983
Jeff Jaeger
27-28
20-26
97
1930-31
Paul Schweger, t
1968
1982
Chuck Nelson
Al Worley, db
34-34
25-26
109
1932
Dave Nisbet, e
1972
1981
Chuck Nelson
Calvin Jones, cb
29-29
16-20
77
1933
Bill Smith, e
1978
1980
Chuck Nelson
31-34
Jeff Toews, ot
18-26
85
1936
Jim Cain, hb
1981
1979
Joe Steele
12
Ray Horton, cb
1-1
74
1936
Max Starcevich, g
1982
1978
Mike Lansford
33-33
13-22
Chuck Nelson, pk
72
1937
Vic Markov, t
1977
Steve Robbins
Mark Stewart, olb
37-37
14-22
79
1940
Jay MacDowell, e
1976
Robin Earl
7
1-1
Tony Caldwell, olb
44
1940-41
Ray Frankowski, g
1984
1975
Steve Robbins
Ron Holmes, dt
21-22
7-12
42
1940
Rudy Mucha, c
1986
1974
Robin Earl
10
Reggie Rogers, dt
60
1950
Dick Sprague, db
1973
Ken Conley
4
Jeff Jaeger, pk
24
1950-52
Don Heinrich, qb
1972
Pete Taggares
11
Tim Peoples, WS
66
1951
Hugh McElhenny, fb
1989
1971
Steve Wiezbowski
Bern Brostek, c
41-46
6-13
59
1953
Milt Bohart, g
1990
1970
Bo Cornell
9
Greg Lewis, rb
54
°Consensus
1969
Bo Cornell
4
24
1968
Bo Cornell
6
36
1967
Don Martin
14-15
10-17
44
CoSIDA Academic All-America
1966
Don Martin
15-17
10-11
45
Originated in 1954.
1965
Dave Williams
10
0-1
60
YEAR
1964
Charlie Browning
7
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
42
PLAYER, POSITION
1955
1963
Junior Coffey
6
Jim Houston, e
1981
36
Chuck Nelson, pk
1959
1962
Junior Coffey
8
48
Mike Crawford, g
Mark Jerue, ilb
1960
1961
Nat Whitmyer
3
1-1
20
Bob Hivner, qb
1982
Chuck Nelson, pk
1963
1960
George Fleming
5
23-24
4-6
65
Mike Briggs, t
Mark Stewart, olb
1964
1959
Bob Schloredt
8
2-2
Steve Bramwell, hb
1986
2.4
54
David Rill, ilb
1979
1958
Bob Hivner
Bruce Harrell, ilb
6
1987
0-1
36
David Rill, ilb
1957
Bob Dunn
3
1990
9-13
0-1
27
Ed Cunningham, c
1956
Dean Derby
7
18-23
1-2
63
1955
Credell Green
5
30
Washington's All-Conference Players
1954
Bob Dunn
2
7-9
1-1
22
First-team selections only.
1953
George Black
4
24
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
1952
George Black
7
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
42
1952
1951
Hugh McElhenny
George Black, e
1961
17
23
125
John Meyers, t
Lou Yourkowski, t
1950
Hugh McElhenny
14
84
Jim Skaggs, g
Don Heinrich, qb
Charlie Mitchell, hb
1953
Milt Bohart, g
1962
Rod Scheyer, t
1955
Fred Robinson, t
Rick Redman, g
1956
George Strugar, t
Charlie Mitchell, hb
1957
Jim Jones, fb
Junior Coffey, fb
1959
Chuck Allen, g
1963
Mike Briggs, t
Bob Schloredt, qb
Rick Redman, g
Don McKeta, hb
Bill Douglas, qb
1960
Kurt Gegner, t
Junior Coffey, fb
Chuck Allen, g
1964
Jim Lambright, de
Roy McKasson, C
Koll Hagen, g
Don McKeta, hb
Rick Redman, lb
George Fleming, hb
1965
Dave Williams, oe
Ray Jackson, fb
Fred Forsberg, t
190
Husky History
W
ashington Honor Roll
ashington's All-Conference Players, Continued
AR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
66
Mike Ryan, g
1976
Charles Jackson, ng
1981
Chuck Nelson, pk
1986
Lonzell Hill, se
Tom Greenlee, de
1977
Jeff Toews, g
Fletcher Jenkins, dt
Rod Jones, te
Steve Thompson, dt
Blair Bush, c
Mark Jerue, ilb
Mike Zandofsky, og
67
Steve Thompson, dt
Michael Jackson, lb
Ray Horton, cb
Jeff Jaeger, pk
68
George Jugum, lb
Nesby Glasgow, cb
Anthony Allen, rs
Reggie Rogers, dt
Al Worley, db
1978
Jeff Toews, ot
1982
Jacque Robinson, tb
Tim Peoples, WS
70
Ernie Janet, og
Doug Martin, dt
Paul Skansi, wr
1987
Mike Zandofsky, ot
Tom Failla, dl
Michael Jackson, lb
Chuck Nelson, pk
1988
Dennis Brown, dt
Cal Jones, db
Nesby Glasgow, cb
Mark Stewart, olb
1989
Bern Brostek, c
71
Tom Scott, wr
Kyle Heinrich, db
1983
Steve Pelluer, qb
1990
Beno Bryant, rs
Gordy Guinn, dl
1979
Joe Steele, tb
Rick Mallory, og
Steve Emtman, dt
Calvin Jones, db
Doug Martin, dt
Ron Holmes, dt
Donald Jones, lb
72
Gordy Guinn, dl
Antowaine Richardson, olb
1984
Ron Holmes, dt
Dean Kirkland, og
Calvin Jones, db
Bruce Harrell, ilb
Tim Meamber, ilb
Greg Lewis, rb
73
Skip Boyd, P
Mark Lee, cb/rs
Fred Small, olb
Charles Mincy, cb
74
Skip Boyd, P
1980
Chuck Nelson, pk
1985
Reggie Rogers, dt
Jeff Pahukoa, ot
75
Ray Pinney, c
Joe Kelly, ilb
Travis Richardson, de
Dan Lloyd, lb
Vestee Jackson, cb
Al Burleson, db
Iorris Trophy
National Football Foundation
Pac-10 Lineman of the Year)
Scholar-Athlete
Originated in 1959.
EAR PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
981
Fletcher Jenkins, dt
1989
Bern Brostek, C
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR PLAYER, POSITION
984
Ron Holmes, dt
1990
Steve Emtman, dt
1960
Barry Bullard, t
1979
Bruce Harrell, lb
986
Reggie Rogers, dt
1963
Mike Briggs, t
1984
Dan Eernissee, c
1964
Bill Douglas, qb
1985
Hugh Millen, qb
ac-10 Conference Medalist
1966
Mike Ryan, og
1987
David Rill, ilb
1972
Bill Cahill, cb
All-Sport Scholar-Athlete)
EAR
PLAYER, SPORT
YEAR
PLAYER, SPORT
National Football Foundation
961
Barry Bullard, football
1978
Blair Bush, football
962
Bill Hanson, basketball
1979
Scott Neilson, track
College Football Hall of Fame
963
Mike Thrall, track
1980
Bruce Harrell, football
PLAYED
PLAYER, POSITION (INDUCTED)
Norm Dicks, football
1981
Mike Reilly, football
1923-25
George Wilson, hb (1951)
964
Ed Cazalet, swimming
1982
Mark Jerue, football
1926-28
Chuck Carroll, hb (1964)
965
Bill Douglas, football
1983
Chuck Nelson, football
1929-31
Paul Schwegler, t (1967)
966
Mike Lovell, gymnastics
1984
Steve Pelluer, football
1935-37
Vic Markov, t (1976)
967
Terry Efird, crew
1985
Dan Eernissee, football
1949-51
Hugh McElhenny, hb (1981)
968
Gary Henderson, golf
1986
Chris Pearson, tennis
1949-50, 1952
Don Heinrich, qb (1987)
969
Glen Bowser, crew
1987
Clay Damon, basketball
1958-60
Bob Schloredt, qb (1989)
970
Rafael Stone, basketball
Lisa Raschkow, basketball
1934-36
Max Starcevich, og (1990)
971
Sho Fukushima, gymnastics
1988
David Rill, football
972
Jim Johnson, track
Vicki Borsheim, track
COACHED
COACH (INDUCTED)
973
Don Beer, tennis
1989
Brett Wiese, football
1908-16
Gilmour Dobie (1951)
974
Joe Tabor, football
Yumi Mordre, gymnastics
1930-41
James Phelan (1973)
975
Dennis Fitzpatrick, football
1990
Pat Johnson, track
1956
Darrell Royal (1983)
976
Ray Pinney, football
Lisa McCammond, volleyball
977
Brian Mondschein, track
1991
Greg Lewis, football
Karen Deden, basketball
191
W
Husky History
Washington Honor Roll
Washington's All-Coast Players
First-team selections only.
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
1923
James Bryan, g
1951
Ted Holzknecht, g
1963
Mike Briggs, t
1977
Dave Browning, dt
George Wilson, hb
Hugh McElhenny, fb
Junior Coffey, ib
Blair Bush, c
1924
George Wilson, hb
Jim O'Brien, t
Rick Redman, g
Nesby Glasgow, cb
1925
George Wilson, hb
1952
George Black, e
1964
Koll Hagen, g
Michael Jackson, lb
1927
Chuck Carroll, hb
Dón Heinrich, qb
Jim Lambright, de
1978
Jeff Toews, ot
1928
Chuck Garroll, hb
Lou Yourkowski, t
Jim Norton, t
Michael Jackson, lb
1929
Merle Hufford, hb
1953
Rick Redman, lb
Nesby Glasgow, cb
1930
Paul Schwegler, t
Milt Bohart, g
1965
Fred Forsberg, dt
Doug Martin, dt
1931
Paul Schwegler, t
Duane Wardlow, t
Tom Greenlee, de
1979
Doug Martin, dt
1932
Dave Nisbet, e
1955
Jim Houston, e
Dave Williams, oe
Mark Lee, cb
1933
Bill Smith, e
Fred Robinson, t
1966
Tom Greenlee, de
Tom Turnure, C
1935
Max Starcevich, g
1957
Marv Bergmann, c
Bob Pederson, S
Bruce Harrell, ilb
1936
Jim Cain, hb
Whitey Core, g
Mike Ryan, og
Joe Steele, tb
Vic Markov, t
Jim Jones, fb
Steve Thompson, dt
1980
Chuck Nelson, pk
Max Starcevich, g
1959
Chuck Allen, g
1967
Dean Halverson, de
1981
Fletcher Jenkins, dt
1937
Vic Markov, t
Kurt Gegner, t
Steve Thompson, dt
Mark Jerue, ilb
1940
Ray Frankowski, g
Bob Schloredt, qb
1968
George Jugum, lb
Chuck Nelson, pk
Jay McDowell, e
1960
Chuck Allen, g
Al Worley, db
1982
Chuck Nelson, pk
Rudy Mucha, c
George Fleming, hb
1969
Lee Brock, de
Jacque Robinson, tb1
1941
Ray Frankowski, g
Kurt Gegner, t
1970
Tom Failla, dt
Mark Stewart, olb
1942
Walt Harrison, C
Roy McKasson, C
Ernie Janet, og
1983
Rick Mallory, og
1943
Sam Robinson, hb
Don McKeta, hb
Cal Jones, db
Steve Pelluer, qb
Jack Tracy, e
1961
John Meyers, t
1971
Cal Jones, db
1984
Ron Holmes, dt
Bill Ward, g
Charlie Mitchell, hb
Tom Scott, wr
Tim Meamber, ilb
1946
Dick Hagen, e
Jim Skaggs, g
1972
Gordy Guinn, lb
Jim Rodgers, SS
John Zeger, g
1962
Junior Coffey, lb
Cal Jones, db
1985
Joe Kelly, ilb
1948
Alf Hemsted, g
Ray Mansfield, c
1973
Dave Pear, dt
Reggie Rogers, dt
Bob Levenhagen, g
Rick Redman, g
1975
Al Burleson, db
1986
Rick Fenney, fb
1950
Joe Cloidt, e
Rod Scheyer, t
Dan Lloyd, lb
Lonzell Hill, se
Don Heinrich, qb
Ray Pinney, c
Jeff Jaeger, pk
Ted Holzknecht, g
1976
Charles Jackson, ng
Tim Peoples, WS
Rollie Kirkby, hb
Reggie Rogers, dt
Hugh McElhenny, fb
1987
Mike Zandofsky, ot
Mike Michael, c
1988
Dennis Brown, dt
Dick Sprague, hb
Washington Awards
Guy Flaherty Award
(Most Inspirational Player)
YEAR PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
1908
Guy Flaherty
1917
Ernest Murphy
1927
Gene Cook
1937
Everett Austin
1909
Fred Tegtmier
1919
Sanford Wick
1928
Charles Carroll
1938
Jim Johnson
1910
Warren Grimm
1920
Larry Smith
1929
John Stombaugh
1939
Dan Yarr
1911
Tom Wand
1921
Hanford Haynes
1930
Henry Wentworth
1940
Dean McAdams
1912
Tom Wand
1922
John Wilson
1931
Paul Schwegler
1941
Walt Harrison
1913
Wayne Sutton
1923
Leonard Ziel
1932
John Cherberg
1942
Thron Riggs
1914
Herman Anderson
1924
Chalmers Walters
1933
Glenn Boyle
1943
Pete Susick
1915
Elmer Leader
1925
George Wilson
1934
Paul Sulkosky
1944
Jim McCurdy
1916
Elmer Noble
1926
Harold Patton
1935
Abe Spear
1945
Maurice Stacy
1936
Byron Haines
1946
Fred Provo
192
Husky History
W
ashington Awards
uy Flaherty Award, Continued
AR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
47
Sam Robinson
1958
Don Armstrong
1970
Tom Failla
1980
Tom Flick
48
Mike Scanlan
1959
Don McKeta
1971
Al Kravitz
1981
Vince Coby
49
Joe Cloidt
1960
Don McKeta
1972
Calvin Jones
1982
Tim Cowan
950
Roland Kirkby
1961
John Meyers
1973
Jim Andrilenas
1983
Steve Pelluer
951
Jim Wiley
1962
Bob Monroe
1974
Dennis Fitzpatrick
1984
Jim Rodgers
952
Larry Smith
1963
Chuck Bond
1975
Dan Lloyd
1985
Joe Kelly
953
Milt Bohart
1964
Jim Lambright
1976
Mike Baldassin
1986
Steve Alvord
954
Larry Rhodes
1965
Ron Medved
1977
Warren Moon
1987
Darryl Franklin
955
Earl Monlux
1966
Jeff Jordin
1978
Michael Jackson
1988
Jim Ferrell
956
Corky Lewis
1967
Cliff Coker
1979
Joe Steele
1989
Andre Riley
957
Dick Payseno
1968
Jim Cope
Chris Linnin
1990
Greg Lewis
1969
Lee Brock
Wait Rising Award
John P. Angel
Lineman of the Year)
(Top Offensive and Defensive Lineman)
EAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR PLAYER (OFFENSE/DEFENSE)
955
Earl Monlux (O/D)
1975
Ray Pinney (0)
1984
Dan Eernissee (O)/Ron Holmes (D)
956
George Strugar (O/D)
John Whitacre (O)
1985
Dan Agen (O)/Reggie Rogers (D)
957
Whitey Core (O/D)
Dan Lloyd (D)
1986
Kevin Gogan (O)/Reggie Rogers (D)
958
Don Armstrong (O/D)
Paul Strohmeier (D)
1987
Mike Zandofsky (O)/Dennis Brown (D)
959
Kurt Gegner (O/D)
1976
Carl Van Valkenberg (0)
1988
Mike Zandofsky (O)/Travis Richardson (D)
960
Roy McKasson (O/D)
Charles Jackson (D)
1989
Bern Brostek (O)/Travis Richardson (D
961
John Meyers (O/D)
1977
Jeff Toews (O)
1990
Jeff Pahukoa (O)/John Cook (D)
962
Rod Scheyer (O/D)
Dave Browning (D)
963
Mike Briggs (O/D)
1978
Jeff Toews (O)
KING Most Improved Player
964
Rick Redman (D)
Doug Martin (D)
(Vote of Sportswriters)
965
Fred Forsberg (D)
1979
Tom Tumure (O)
966
Tom Greenlee (D)
Bruce Harrell (D)
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
967
Dean Halverson (D)
1980
Curt Marsh (O)
1960
Pat Claridge
1976
Mike Baldassin
1968
George Jugum (D)
Randy Van Divier (0)
1961
Lee Bernhardi
1977
Warren Moon
Mark Jerue (D)
1962
Bob Monroe
1978
Chris Linnin
1969
Mark Hannah (D)
1981
Fletcher Jenkins (D)
1963
Bill Douglas
1979
Jim Pence
1970
Ernie Janet (0)
1964
Tod Hullin
1980
Mike Curtis
Bob Jarvis (O)
James Carter (O)
1965
Dave Williams
1981
Tom Failla (D)
1982
Eric Moran (O)
Ray Cattage
1966
Bob Pederson
1982
Don Dow
1971
Steve Anderson (O)
Ray Cattage (D)
1967
Dick Zatkovich
1983
Walt Hunt
Al Kravitz (D)
1983
Rick Mallory (O)
1968
Al Worley
1984
Reggie Rogers
Gordy Guinn (D)
Ron Holmes (D)
1969
Tom Failla
1985
Jim Mathews
1972
Al Kelso (O)
1984
Ron Holmes (D)
1970
Bob Burmeister
1986
Steve Roberts
Gordy Guinn (D)
1985
Dan Agen (O)
1971
Gordy Guinn
1987
Aaron Jenkins
Kurt Matter (D)
1986
Reggie Rogers (D)
1972
Al Kelso
1988
Tony Zackery
1973
Walter Oldes (0)
1987
Brian Habib (D)
1973
Steve Lipe
1989
Donald Jones
Ray Pinney (O)
1988
Bern Brostek (0)
1974
Robin Earl
1990
Charles Mincy
Dave Pear (D)
1989
Martin Harrison (D)
1975
Al Burleson
1974
Ray Pinney (0)
1990
Steve Emtman (D)
Charles Jackson (0)
Chuck Niemi Big Hit Award
Dave Pear (D)
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
1984
Joe Kelly, ilb
1987
Dennis Brown, dt
KOMO Back/Receiver of the Year
Tim Peoples, S
1988
Eugene Burkhalter, S
1985
Rick Fenney, fb
1989
Darius Turner, fb
YEAR PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
Tim Peoples, S
1990
Dave Hoffmann, lb
1985
Vestee Jackson
1988
Brian Slater
1986
Rick McLeod, ot
1986
Chris Chandler
1989
Andre Riley
Tim Peoples, S
1987
Darryl Franklin
1990
Greg Lewis
Reggie Rogers, dt
193
W
Husky History
Washington Awards
KIRO Player of the Year
Bob Jarvis Award
(Vote of the Fans)
(Inspirational Walk-On)
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
1972
Calvin Jones
1982
Chuck Nelson
1976
Dean Brooke
1984
Donnie Morehead
1973
Dave Pear
1983
Steve Pelluer
1977
Mark Passinetti
1985
Joe Bracken
1974
Cornelius Chenevert
1984
Ron Holmes
1978
Curtis Cummings
1986
Todd Kester
1975
Al Burleson
1985
Joe Kelly
1979
Brad Yates
1987
Marc West
1976
Robin Earl
1986
Reggie Rogers
1980
Stewart Keyes
1988
Jim Ferrell
1977
Warren Moon
1987
David Rill
1981
Jim Holzknecht
1989
Mark DeGross
1978
Michael Jackson
1988
Aaron Jenkins
1982
Mike Storey
1990
Jay Wells
1979
Mark Lee
1989
Bern Brostek
1983
Jeff Wilmoth
1980
Tom Flick
1990
Greg Lewis
1981
Mark Jerue
Brian Stapp Memorial Award
101 Club Scholarship Award
(Inspirational Non-Letterman)
(Top Scholar-Athlete)
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR PLAYER
YEAR PLAYER
1959
Richard Dunn
1975
John Edwards
1951
Jim O'Brien
1971
Dick Galuska
1960
Jim Everett
1976
Steve Cupic
1952
Dick Sprague
1972
Greg Collins
1961
Jim Everett
1977
Dean Perryman
1953
Dean Rockey
1973
Pete Taggares
1962
Don Carnahan
1978
Bill Stapleton
1954
Jack Kyllingstad
1974
Dennis Fitzpatrick
1963
Brian Biggs
1979
John Gardenhire
1955
Michael McKinnon
1975
Ray Pinney
1964
Keith Cordes
1980
Ralph Parks
1956
Corky Lewis
1976
Scott Phillips
1965
John Davis
1981
Pat Conrad
1957
Dave Leland
1977
Blair Bush
1966
Clarence Pautzke
1982
Rick DuPree
1958
Duane Lowell
1978
Scott Greenwood
1967
Les Dicks
1983
Hugh Millen
1959
Michael Crawford
1979
Bruce Harrell
1968
Emmett Arndt
1984
Eric Dahlquist
1960
Bob Hivner
1980
Lance Neubauer
1969
Loren Brucker
1985
Sean Bergman
Barry Bullard
1981
Mark Jerue
1970
Mike Wilds
1986
Jim Ferrell
1961
John Nelson
1982
Chuck Nelson
1971
Rick Simpson
1987
Thomas Parson
1962
Norm Dicks
1983
Steve Pelluer
1972
Al Mcllheney
1988
Marc West
1963
Mike Briggs
1984
Dan Eernissee
1973
Kirk Hopkins
1989
Matt Jones
1964
Bill Douglas
1985
Hugh Millen
1974
Steve Sly
1990
Jeff Aselin
1965
Lyle Norwood
1986
Thane Cleland
Guy Marquiss
1966
Mike Ryan
1987
David Rill
1967
Don Martin
1988
Brett Wiese
1968
Bob Anderson
1989
John McCallum
1969
Jim Harris
1990
Mark DeGross
Earle T. Glant Tough Husky Award
1970
Bob Lovelien
YEAR
PLAYER
1989
James Clifford
1990
Mark Drennan Memorial Award
Aaron Pierce
(Inspirational JV Player)
YEAR PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
Kurt Gegner
1972
Ron Olson
1982
Mike Gaffney
Memorial Award (Trainer/Manager)
1973
Mike Rohrbach
1983
Shannon Smith
1974
Bob Kettles
1984
Tarn Sublett
YEAR
INDIVIDUAL
YEAR
INDIVIDUAL
1975
Duane Akina
1985
Blaise Chappell
1981
Kurt Camp
1986
Liz Zelinski
1976
Jeff Leeland
1986
Tom Johnson
1982
Randy Chin
1987
Mike Perala
1977
Ken Gardner
1987
Mitch Robbins
1983
Willie Issacson
1988
Jeff Hall
1978
Ken Hamer
1988
Andy Munro
1984
Bart Fulmer
1989
Mike Fina
1979
Paul Wagner
1989
Jamal Fountaine
1985
Vic Belfiore
1990
Jeff Copeland
1980
George Anderson
1990
Frank Garcia
1981
Ken Winston
194
Husky History
W
ashington Awards
pring Football Awards
Iost Improved Defensive Lineman
Most Improved Offensive Lineman
CAR PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
980
Dean Browning
1986
Steve Roberts
1980
Scott Faussett
1986
Kelly John-Lewis
981
Ron Holmes
1987
Mark Poole
1981
1987
Jeff Chandler
982
Ray Cattage
1988
Jeff Kohlwes
1982
Rick Mallory
1988
Dean Kirkland
983
Ron Holmes
1989
Harald Hasselbach
1983
Dan Eernissee,
1989
Adam Cooney
Lance Dodson
1990
984
Andy Fuimaono
1990
Steve Emtman
Lincoln Kennedy
985
Brian Habib
1991
D'Marco Farr
1984
Al Robertson
1991
Kris Rongen
1985
Garth Thomas
Most Improved Defensive Back
Most Improved Offensive Back
EAR PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
980
Vince Newsome
1986
Art Malone
1980
Dennis Brown
1986
Vince Weathersby
.981
Robert Leaphart
1987
Le-Lo Lang
1981
Walt Hunt
1987
Steve Jones
982
Vince Albritton
1988
Ivory Randle
1982
Steve Pelluer
1988
Tony Covington
1983
Robert Leaphart
1989
Eric Briscoe
1983
1989
-
Greg Lewis
1984
Ron Milus
1990
Tommie Smith
1984
David Toy
1990
Beno Bryant
1985
Darryl Hall
1991
Walter Bailey
1985
Aaron Jenkins
1991
Billy Joe Hobert
Most Improved Receiver
EAR PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
1980
Willie Roseborough
1986
Brian Slater
1981
Tony Wroten
1987
Andre Riley
1982
Anthony Allen
1988
James Sawyer
1983
Tony Wroten
1989
Marc Jones
1984
Lonzell Hill
1990
Joe Kralik
1985
Darryl Franklin
1991
LaMar Mitchell
Most Improved Kicker/Punter
YEAR PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
1988
Chris Jolley
1990
Mike Dodd
1989
Channing Wyles
1991
Billy Joe Hobert
Most Improved Linebacker
YEAR PLAYER
YEAR
PLAYER
1980
Stewart Hill
1986
Tom Erlandson
1981
Joe Krakoski
1987
Will Rideout
1982
Fred Small
1988
Chico Fraley
1983
Joe Krakoski
1989
James Clifford
1984
Joe Kelly
1990
Dave Hoffmann
1985
David Rill
1991
Hillary Butler
Billy Joe Hobert
195
W
Husky History
Huskies in the Senior Bowls
Huskies in the East-West Shrine Game
Huskies in the Senior Bowl
Established 1925.
Established 1950.
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
1925
Jimmy Bryan, g
1962
Ray Mansfield, c
1957
George Strugar, t
1984
Rick Mallory, og
1927 (Jan.)
Judson Cutting, e
Charlie Mitchell, b
1959
Mike McCluskey, b
1985
Danny Greene, fl
George Guttormsen, qb
1965 (Jan.)
Charlie Browning, b
1961
Bob Hivner, qb
Tim Meamber, ilb
Harold Patton, b
Jim Norton, t
Don McKeta, hb
Jacque Robinson, tb
1927 (Dec.)
Leroy Shuh, e
Rick Redman, g
1963
Rod Scheyer, e
1986
Joe Kelly, ilb
Pat Wilson, fb
1965 (Dec.)
Fred Forsberg, t
1965
Jim Norton, t
Vestee Jackson, cb
Bill Wright g
Tod Hullin, qb
1976
Ray Pinney, c
1987
Rick Fenney, fb
1930 (Jan.)
Bill Gregor, g
Ron Medved, b
1979
Nesby Glasgow, db
Lonzell Hill, se
1932
Merle Hufford, b
1966
Tom Greenlee, de
Spider Gaines, wr
Reggie Rogers, dt
Paul Schwegler, t
Dave Williams, e
1983
Ray Horton, cb
1988
Brandy Brownlee, pk
1934
Bill Smith, e
1967
Ron Hudson, C
Mark Stewart, lb
Chris Chandler, qb
1935
Chuck Mucha, g
Bob Richardson, ot
1990
Bern Brostek, c
Paul Sulkosky, e
Steve Thompson, de
Woody Ullin, t
1968
Al Worley, db
1936
Abe Shper, g
1969
Huskies in the Hula Bowl
Lee Brock, dt
1939
Jim, Johnston, hb
1971 (Jan.)
Bo Cornell, fb
Established 1947.
Art Means, g
Ernie Janet, g
YEAR
1941
PLAYER, POSITION
Jay MacDowell, e
YEAR
Ken Lee, lb
PLAYER, POSITION
1948
Dean McAdams, hb
Dick Hagen, e
1974
1971 (Dec.)
Rick Huget, lb
Rick Hayes, ol
Ken Solid, b
Rudy Mucha, c
1975
Jim Krieg, se
Skip Boyd, P
1949
1942
Glen Conley, t
1972
Alf Hemstad, g
John Brady, te
Dave Pear, dl
Bob Levenhagen, g
1976
Roy Frankowski, g
Gordy Guinn, dt
Al Burleson, db
1951
Earl Younglove, e
Joe Cloidt, g
1977
Cal Jones, db
Robin Earl, fb
1952
1943
Bob Friedman, t
Hugh McElhenny, b
1978
1974
Skip Boyd, p/db
Dave Browning, de
1954
Walt Harrison, C
Milt Bohart, g
1979
Dave Pear, dt
Spider Gaines, se
1961
1945
Dick Ottele, hb
1975
Roy McKasson, c
Ray Pinney, C
Nesby Glasgow, cb
Bob Schloredt, qb
1980
John Roderick, e
1979
Jeff Toews, ot
Greg Grimes, S
1946
Alf Hemstad, g
Chuck Allen, g
Michael Jackson, lb
Doug Martin, dt
Bill McGovern, c
George Fleming, b
1981
1980
Mark Lee, cb
Mike Reilly, c
Bob Nelson, e
Kurt Gegnor, t
Tom Turnure, c
Toussaint Tyler, fb
1962
1947
Gordon Berlin, c
Jim Skaggs, g
1982
1981
Randy Van Divier, ot
Fletcher Jenkins, dt
1963
Ray Mansfield, c
1983
Dick Hagen, e
Curt Marsh, ot
Ray Horton, cb
Charlie Mitchell, b
Fred Provo, b
Tom Flick, qb
Mark Stewart, lb
1965
1948
Gail Bruce, e
1982
Rick Redman, g
1984
Mark Jerue, lb
Steve Pelluer, qb
Junior Coffey, b
1986
Carl Fennema, c
1983
Paul Coty, C
Vestee Jackson, cb
1966
Arnie Weinmeister, t
Fred Forsberg, e
1987
Chuck Nelson, pk
Rick Fenney, fb
Ron Medved, b
1949 (Jan.)
Robert Levenhagen, g
Paul Skansi, wr
Kevin Gogan, ot
1967
Tom Greenlee, de
Al Hemstad, g
1985
Lonzell Hill, se
Danny Greene, fl
1949 (Dec.)
Dave Williams, e
George Bayer, g
Ron Holmes, dt
Jeff Jaeger, pk
1968
Dean Halverson, e
1951
1988
Joe Cloidt, e
1986
Joe Kelly, ilb
Rick McLeod, ot
Bob Richardson, t
Roland Kirkby, b
1987
Bo Yates, lb
Rod Jones, te
1969
1952
Al Worley, db
1989
Hugh McElhenny, b
Tim Peoples, WS
Ricky Andrews, lb
1970
Lee Brock, t
1953
Don Heinrich, qb
Reggie Rogers, dt
Mike Zandofsky, ot
1971
Bruce Jarvis, c
1990
Louis Yourkowski, t
1988
Bern Brostek, C
Chris Chandler, qb
1972
1954
Jim Krieg, se
Milt Bohart, g
Darryl Franklin, wr
Cary Conklin, qb +
1973
Cal Jones, db
Dean Chambers, t
David Rill, ilb
Andre Riley, se
Bill Cahill, db
1991
1957
Dean Derby, b
1989
Aaron Jenkins, fb
Greg Lewis, tb
Kurt Matter, de
George Strugar, t
Mike Zandofsky, ot
Jeff Pahukoa, ot
1958
Jimmy Jones, lb
1990
Sonny Sixkiller, qb
Dennis Brown, de
Travis Richardson, de
1961
Kermit Jorgensen, b
Le-Lo Lang, cb
Dean Kirkland, og
John Meyers, t
1991
Charles Mincy, cb
+Offensive Player of the Game
Jim Skaggs, g
Jeff Pahukoa, ot
196
Husky History
W
uskies in the Senior Bowls
uskies in the Japan Bowl
ablished 1976.
AR PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
YEAR
PLAYER, POSITION
76
Al Burleson, db
1981
Tom Flick, qb
1983
Eric Moran, ot
1988
Darryl Franklin, wr
Dan Lloyd, lb
Curt Marsh, ot
Paul Skansi, wr
Rick McLeod, ot
77
Robin Earl, fb
Toussaint Tyler, fb
1984
Vince Albritton, SS
1989
Brian Slater, wr
78
Dave Browning, dt
1982
Fletcher Jenkins, dt
1985
Dan Eernissee, c
1990
Le-Lo Lang, cb
79
Jeff Toews, og
Mark Jerue, lb
Jim Rodgers, SS
1991
Jeff Pahukoa, t
Michael Jackson, lb
1986
Dan Agen, C
Greg Lewis, tb
80
Tom Turnure, c
Ron Hadley, lb
John Cook, mg
Antowaine Richardson, lb
Iuskies in the Pros
following compilation of Huskyalumni
Gail Bruce, e
Robin Earl, te
Ron Hadley, lb
ludes every player who has ever ap-
San Francisco (1948-51)
Chicago (1977-83)
San Francisco (1987-88)
ared in a National Football League
Al Burleson, db
Oklahoma Outlaws (1984)
Byron Haines, b
FL) or United States Football League
SFL) uniform during a regular season
LA Express (1983)
Birmingham Stallions (1985)
Pittsburgh (1937)
ne. Errors will be corrected if docu-
Tim Burnham, og
Tom Erlandson, lb
Dean Halvorson, lb
nted.
Seattle (1987)
Buffalo (1988)
LA Rams (1968, 1972)
hce Albritton, SS
Blair Bush, c
Carl Erickson, c
Atlanta (1970)
llas (1984-90)
Cincinnati (1978-82)
Washington (1938-39)
Philadelphia (1973-76)
thony Allen, wr
Seattle (1983-88)
Carl Fennema, c
Martin Harrison, lb
Express (1983-84)
Green Bay (1989-90)
NY Giants (1948-49)
San Francisco (1990)
chigan Panthers (1984)
Bill Cahill, db
Rick Fenney, fb
Don Heinrich, qb
rtland Breakers (1985)
Buffalo (1973-74)
Minnesota (1987-90)
NY Giants (1954-59)
anta (1985-86)
Tony Caldwell, lb
George Fleming, rb
Dallas (1960)
ashington (1987)
LA Raiders (1983-85)
Oakland (1961)
Oakland (1962)
nnesota (1988)
Seattle (1987)
Tom Flick, qb
Lonzell Hill, wr
ashington (1989)
Rich Camarillo, P
Washington (1981)
New Orleans (1987-90)
harles Allen, lb
New England (1981-87)
New England (1982)
Ron Holmes, de
n Diego (1961-69)
LA Rams (1988)
Cleveland (1984)
Tampa Bay (1985-88)
ttsburgh (1970-71)
Phoenix (1989-90)
San Diego (1986)
Denver (1989-90)
iladelphia (1972)
Dario Cassarino, P
Lee Folkins, e
Ray Horton, cb
eve Alvord, dt
Birmingham Stallions (1983)
Green Bay (1961)
Cincinnati (1983-88)
Louis (1987)
Boston Breakers (1983)
Pittsburgh (1965)
Dallas (1989-90)
oenix (1988)
New Orleans Breakers (1984)
Fred Forsberg, lb
Ted Isaacson, t
icky Andrews, 1b
Ray Cattage, dt
Denver (1968, 1970-72, 1975-76)
Chicago Cardinals (1934)
cattle (1990)
Arizona Wranglers (1983)
Buffalo (1973)
Charles Jackson, lb
like Baldassin, lb
Chicago Blitz (1984)
San Diego (1974)
Kansas City (1978-83)
in Francisco (1977-78)
LA Express (1985)
Bob Friedman, g
NY Jets (1985-86)
avid Bayle, te
Chris Chandler, qb
Philadelphia (1944)
Michael Jackson, lb
oston Breakers (1983-84)
Indianapolis (1988-89)
Ray Frankowski, g
Seattle (1979-86)
ortland Breakers (1985)
Tampa Bay (1990)
Green Bay (1945)
Vestee Jackson, cb
huck Bond, t
Junior Coffey, rb
Scott Garnett, mg
Chicago (1986-90)
Vashington (1937-38)
Green Bay (1965)
Denver Broncos (1984-86)
Jeff Jaeger, pk
andall Bond, qb
Atlanta (1966-67, 69)
San Francisco (1985)
Cleveland (1987)
Vashington (1938)
NY Giants (1969-71)
San Diego (1985)
LA Raiders (1989-90)
ittsburgh (1939)
Bo Cornell, lb
Buffalo (1987)
Ernie Janet, t
len Bonner, rb
Cleveland (1971-72)
Nesby Glasgow, db
Chicago (1972-74)
an Diego (1974)
Buffalo (1973-77)
Baltimore (1979-83)
Philadelphia (1975)
ern Brostek, c-g
Ben Davidson, de
Indianapolis (1984-87)
Bruce Jarvis, c
os Angeles Rams (1990)
Green Bay (1961)
Seattle (1988-90)
Buffalo (1971-74)
Dennis Brown, dt
Washington (1962-63)
Kevin Gogan, ot
Mark Jerue, lb
an Francisco (1990)
Oakland (1964-71)
Dallas (1987-90)
LA Rams (1983-88)
Charlie Browning, hb
Don Deeks, t
Danny Greene, wr
Jim Johnston, b
NY Jets (1965)
Washington (1947)
Seattle (1985)
Washington (1939-40)
Dave Browning, de
Dean Derby, b
San Diego (1987)
Calvin Jones, cb
Dakland (1978-82)
Pittsburgh (1957-61)
Brian Habib, nt
Denver (1973-76)
New England (1983)
Minnesota (1961-62)
Minnesota (1988-90)
Dakland Invaders (1984-85)
197
W
Husky History
Huskies in the Pros, Continued
Don Jones, b
Stafford Mays, dt
Steve Pelluer, qb
Steve Thompson, dt
Philadelphia (1940)
St. Louis (1980-86)
Dallas (1984-88)
NY Jets (1968-70, 1972-73)
Jim Jones, lb
Minnesota (1987-88)
Kansas City (1989-90)
Jeff Toews, g
LA Rams (1958)
Jay McDowell, e
Tim Peoples, S
Miami (1979-85)
Oakland (1961)
Philadelphia (1946-51)
St. Louis (1987)
Tom Turnure, c
Rod Jones, te
Hugh McElhenny, rb
Dean Perryman, c
Detroit (1980-83, 1986)
Kansas City (1987-88)
San Francisco (1952-60)
Seattle (1987)
Michigan Panthers (1984)
Seattle (1989)
Minnesota (1961-62)
Ray Pinney, ot/g/c
Oakland Invaders (1985)
Scott Jones, ot
NY Giants (1963)
Pittsburgh (1976-82, 1985-87)
Toussaint Tyler, fb
Cincinnati (1989)
Detroit (1964)
Michigan Panthers (1983-84)
New Orleans (1981-82)
New York Jets (1990)
Tim Meamber, lb
Oakland Invaders (1985)
Randy Van Divier, ot
Jeff Jordan, rb
Minnesota (1985)
Tom Porras, qb
Baltimore (1981)
LA Rams (1970)
Ron Medved, db
Chicago Blitz (1984)
Oakland/LA Raiders (1982-83)
Washington (1971-72)
Philadelphia (1966-70)
Arizona Outlaws (1985)
Portland Breakers (1985)
Joe Kelly, lb
John Meyers, t
Fred Provo, b
Duane Wardlow, de
Cincinnati (1986-89)
Dallas (1962-63)
Green Bay (1948)
LA (1954-56)
New York Jets (1990)
Philadelphia (1964-67)
Rick Redman, lb
Arnie Weinmeister, t
Dave Kopay, rb
Hugh Millen, qb
San Diego (1965-73)
NY Giants (1950-53)
San Francisco (1964-67)
LA Rams (1986-87)
Frank Reed, db
Clyde Werner, lb
Detroit (1968)
Atlanta (1988-90)
Atlanta (1976-80)
Kansas City (1970-74, 76)
Washington (1969-70)
Charlie Mitchell, hb
Birmingham Stallions (1983)
Ron Wheeler, te
New Orleans (1971)
Denver (1963-67)
Fred Robinson, t
Oakland Invaders (1983-84)
Green Bay (1972)
Buffalo (1968)
Cleveland (1957)
Oklahoma Outlaws (1984)
Joe Krakoski, lb
Warren Moon, qb
Jacque Robinson, rb
Arizona Outlaws (1985)
Washington (1986-87)
Houston (1984-90)
Philadelphia, (1987)
Nat Whitmyer, db
Jim Krieg, wr
Eric Moran, ot
Reggie Rogers, de
LA (1963)
Denver (1972)
LA Express (1983)
Detroit (1987-88)
San Diego (1966-67)
Jake Kupp, g
Houston (1984-87)
Willie Rosborough, lb
John Wiatrak, c
Dallas (1964-65)
Charles Mucha, g
Philadelphia Stars (1983-84)
Detroit (1939)
Washington (1966)
Chicago (1935)
Portland Breakers (1985)
Philadelphia (1939)
Atlanta (1967)
Rudy Mucha, g
Rick Sharp, t
Dave Williams, wr
New Orleans (1967-75)
Chicago (1945-46)
Pittsburgh (1970-71)
St. Louis (1967-71)
Le-Lo Lang, cb
Chuck Nelson, pk
Denver (1972)
San Diego (1972)
Denver (1990)
LA Rams (1983)
Jim Skaggs, g
Pittsburgh (1973)
Mike Lansford, pk
Buffalo (1984)
Philadelphia (1963-72)
Greg Williams, lb
LA Rams (1982-90)
Minnesota (1986-88)
Paul Skansi, wr
LA Express (1983)
Ken Lee, lb
Dave Nesbit, e
Pittsburgh (1983)
Chicago Blitz (1984)
Detroit (1971)
Chicago Cardinals (1933-38)
Seattle (1984-90)
Houston Gamblers (1984)
Buffalo (1972)
Vince Newsome, S
Steve Slivinski, g
Abe Wilson
Mark Lee, cb
LA Rams (1983-90)
Washington (1939-43)
Providence (1927-28)
Green Bay (1980-90)
Charles Newton, b
Fred Small
George Wilson, hb
Chris Linnin, dt
Philadelphia (1939-40)
Pittsburgh (1985)
Providence (1927-28)
NY Giants (1980)
Jim Norton, t
Bill Smith, e
Harrison Wood, wr
Oakland Invaders (1984)
San Francisco (1965-66)
Chicago Cardinals (1934-40)
Minnesota (1969)
Dan Lloyd, lb
Atlanta (1967-68)
Rick Sortun, g
Tony Zackery, cb
NY Giants (1976-79)
Philadelphia (1968)
St. Louis (1964-69)
Atlanta (1989)
Washington Federals (1983)
Washington (1968)
John Stackpool, b
New England (1990)
Lynn Madsen, dt
NY Giants (1970)
Philadelphia (1942)
Mike Zandofsky, g
New Jersey Generals (1984-85)
Jeff Partridge, P
Ernie Steele, b
Phoenix (1989)
Houston (1986)
LA Express (1983-85)
Philadelphia (1942-48)
San Diego (1990)
Rick Mallory, og
Mark Pattison, wr
Mark Stewart, lb
Tampa Bay (1984-88)
LA Rams (1986)
Minnesota (1984)
Ray Mansfield, c
LA Raiders (1986)
Jim Stiger, rb
Philadelphia (1963)
New Orleans (1987-88)
Dallas (1963-65)
Pittsburgh (1964-76)
Dave Pear, dt
LA Rams (1965-67)
Curt Marsh, ot
Baltimore (1975)
George Strugar, dt
Oakland/LA Raiders (1981-87)
Tampa Bay (1976-78)
LA Rams (1957-61)
Doug Martin, dt
Oakland (1979-80)
Pittsburgh (1962)
Minnesota (1980-89)
J.C. Pearson, cb
NY Jets (1962-63)
Vic Markov, t
Kansas City (1986-90)
Garth Thomas, og
Cleveland Rams (1938-39)
Seattle (1987)
198
Husky History
W
Iusky National Football League Draft Picks in the James Era
6 Draft:
2nd
Ray Pinney, C,
1982 Draft:
5th
Mark Jerue, LB
1987 Draft:
1st
Reggie Rogers, DT
Pittsburgh Steelers
New York Jets
Detroit Lions
6th
Dan Lloyd, LB
7th
Fletcher Jenkins, DT
2nd
Lonzell Hill, WR
New York Giants
Baltimore Colts
New Orleans Saints
8th
Frank Reed, DB
3rd
Jeff Jaeger, PK
Atlanta Falcons
1983 Draft:
2nd
Ray Horton, CB
Cleveland Browns
10th
Paul Strohmeier, LB
Cincinnati Bengals
7th
Tim Peoples, WS
Washington Redskins
3rd
Tony Caldwell, OLB
St. Louis Cardinals
14th
Al Burleson, DB
Los Angeles Raiders
8th
Steve Alvord, DL
Los Angeles Rams
4th
Chuck Nelson, PK
St. Louis Cardinals
15th
Ron Olson, DB
Los Angeles Rams
8th
Kevin Gogan, oT
Atlanta Falcons
4th
Vince Newsome, S
Dallas Cowboys
16th
Chris Rowland, QB
Los Angeles Rams
8th
Rick Fenney, FB
Seattle Seahawks
5th
Mark Stewart, OLB
Minnesota Vikings
Minnesota Vikings
8th
Rod Jones, TE
77 Draft:
3rd
Robin Earl, RB
5th
Paul Skansi, WR
New York Giants
Chicago Bears
Pittsburgh Steelers
11th
Steve Roberts, DE
9th
Charles Jackson, MG
6th
Anthony Allen, WR
Denver Broncos
Denver Broncos
Atlanta Falcons
11th
Don Wardlow, TE
8th
Bill Stapleton, CB
1988 Draft:
3rd
Chris Chandler, QB
Dallas Cowboys
Detroit Lions
Indianapolis Colts
10th
Eric Moran, OT
8th
Darryl Franklin, WR
78 Draft:
1st
Blair Bush, C
Dallas Cowboys
Los Angeles Rams
Cincinnati Bengals
11th
Aaraon Williams, WR
10th
Brian Habib, DT
2nd
Dave Browning, DT
St. Louis Cardinals
Minnesota Vikings
Oakland Raiders
12th
Don Dow, OT
11th
Rick McLeod, oT
Seattle Seahawks
Seattle Seahawks
79 Draft:
2nd
Jeff Toews, OG
12th
Tom Erlandson, LB
Miami Dolphins
1984 Draft:
5th
Steve Pelluer, QB
Buffalo Bills
3rd
Michael Jackson, LB
Dallas Cowboys
Seattle Seahawks
8th
Scott Garnett, DT
1989 Draft:
3rd
Mike Zandofsky, OT
6th
Spider Gaines, WR
Denver Broncos
Phoenix Cardinals
Kansas City Chiefs
9th
Rick Mallory, OG
8th
Tony Zackery, CB
7th
Roger Westlund, OT
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
New England Patriots
Atlanta Falcons
11th
Ricky Andrews, ILB
8th
Nesby Glasgow, DB
1985 Draft:
1st
Ron Holmes, DT
San Diego Chargers
Baltimore Colts
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
11th
Brian Slater, FL
3rd
Tim Meamber, LB
Pittsburg Steelers
980 Draft:
1st
Doug Martin, DT
Minnesota Vikings
12th
Scott Jones, oT
Minnesota Vikings
3rd
Danny Greene, WR
Cincinnati Bengals
2nd
Mark Lee, CB
Seattle Seahawks
Green Bay Packers
6th
Joe Krakoski, LB
1990 Draft:
1st
Bern Brostek, C
3rd
Tom Turnure, C
Houston Oilers
Los Angeles Rams
Detroit Lions
7th
Mark Pattison, WR
2nd
Dennis Brown, DT
5th
Joe Steele, RB
Los Angeles Raiders
San Francisco 49ers
Seattle Seahawks
8th
Jacque Robinson, RB
4th
Cary Conklin, QB
7th
Chris Linnin, DT
Buffalo Bills
Washington Redskins
New York Giants
9th
Fred Small, LB
5th
Le-Lo Lang, CB
9th
Stafford Mays, NG
Pittsburgh Steelers
Denver Broncos
St. Louis Cardinals
10th
Martin Harrison, DE
10th
Joe Sanford, OT
1986 Draft:
1st
Joe Kelly, LB
San Francisco 49ers
New York Giants
Cincinnati Bengals
12th
Andre Riley, WR
12th
Mike Lansford, PK
2nd
Vestee Jackson, CB
Cincinnati Bengals
New York Giants
Chicago Bears
3rd
Hugh Millen, QB
1991 Draft:
5th
Greg Lewis, RB
981 Draft:
1st
Curt Marsh, OT
Los Angeles Rams
Denver Broncos
Oakland Raiders
5th
Ron Hadley, LB
5th
Charles Mincy, CB
3rd
Randy Van Divier, OT
New York Jets
Kansas City Chiefs
Baltimore Colts
11th
Dean Kirkland, OG
4th
Tom Flick, QB
Buffalo Bills
Washington Redskins
12th
Jeff Pahukoa, oT
9th
Toussaint Tyler, TB
Los Angeles Rams
New Orleans Saints
12th
John Cook, MG
9th
Rusty Olsen, DT
Chicago Bears
Denver Broncos
199
W
Husky History
Husky Hall of Fame
The University of Washington inaugurated a Hall of Fame in 1979 to "
Warren Moon, Football 1975-77
honor and preserve the memory of those athletes, teams, coaches and
Sammy White, Basketball-Baseball, 1947-49
members of the athletic staff who have contributed in a very outstanding and
1958 Men's 8-Oared Crew (John Bisset, John Sayre, Andy Hovland, Lou Gellerma
positive way to the promotion of the University of Washington athletic
Chuck Alm, Phil Kieburtz, Roger MacDonald, Dick Erickson,
program."
Svendsen)
Some 78 individuals and eight teams have been inducted to the Washington
1985
Hall of Fame in an annual special ceremony.
Irene Arden, Swimming, 1973-76
Marv Harshman, Basketball, 1972-85
1979
Bill Quillian, Tennis, 1952-55, 1966-73
Steve Anderson, Track, 1928-30
Sonny Sixkiller, Football, 1970-72
Charles Carroll, Football, 1926-28
Elmer Tesreau, Football-Baseball, 1923-26
Hiram Conibear, Crew, 1907-17
1953 Basketball Team (Bob Houbregs, Doug McClary, Joe Cipriano, Mike McCutch
Gilmour Dobie, Football, 1908-16
Bill Ward, Steve Roake, Don Apeland, Dean Parsons, Charlie Koon, -
Clarence "Hec" Edmundson, Basketball, 1919-55
Elliot, Don Tripp, Roland Halle)
Bob Houbregs, Basketball, 1951-53
Hugh McElhenny, Football, 1950-52
1986
Jim Owens, Football, 1957-74
Jim Charteris, Track, 1925-27
Al Ulbrickson Sr., Crew, 1924-58
Ray Frankowski, Football-Wrestling, 1939-41
1936 Men's 8-Oared Crew (Robert Moch, Donald Hume, Joe Rantz, George Hunt,
Scott Neilson, Track, 1976-79
Jim McMillin, John White, Gordon Adam, Charles Day, Roger Morris)
Larry Owings, Wrestling, 1970-72
Jimmy Phelan, Football, 1930-41
1980
1940 Men's 8-Oared crew (Ted Gearhart, Dallas Duppenthaler, Dick Yantis, Chu
Enoch Bagshaw, Football, 1903-07, 1921-29
Jackson, Gerald Keely, Al Erickson, Paul Soules, John Bracken, F1
Lynn Colella Bell, Swimming, 1969-72
Colbert)
Herman Brix, Track, 1926-28
"Wee" Willie Coyle, Track-Football-Baseball, 1908-11
1987
George Fleming, Football, 1958-60
Patricia L. "Trish" Bostrom, Tennis, 1969-72
Dorsett V. "Tubby" Graves, Baseball, 1923-46
Jim David, Gymnastics, 1962-65
Vic Markov, Football, 1935-37
Tom Greenlee, Football, 1964-66
Jack Nichols, Basketball, 1944, 1947-48
Steve Hawes, Basketball, 1970-72
Roscoe "Torchy" Torrance, Baseball, 1920-22
Hal Lee, Basketball, 1932-34
George Wilson, Football, 1923-25
Roy McKasson, Football, 1957-60
Jack Westland, Golf, 1923-24
1981
James Bryan, Football-Basketball-Track, 1920-23
1988
John Cherberg, Football, 1930-32, 1946-55
Bob Egge, Basketball, 1934-37
Charles Frankland, Basketball-Track 1920-23, 1933-35
Bob Hall, Gymnastics, 1962-65
Bob Galer, Basketball, 1933-35
Judy Hoetmer, Golf, 1959-62
Don Heinrich, Football, 1949-50, 1952
William Morris, Basketball, 1941-44
Jack Medica, Swimming, 1934-36
Dave Nisbet, Football, 1930-32
Bob Schloredt, Football, 1958-60, 1963-73
George Strugar, Football, 1953-56
Alfred "Doc" Strauss, Football-Baseball, 1902-03
1975 Mile Relay Team (Keith Tinner, Jerry Belur, Pablo Franco,
Jack Torney, Track-Swimming-Tennis, 1925-27, 1933-62, 1934-41
Billy Hicks)
1948 Men's 4-Oared Crew (Allen Morgan, Gordon Giovanelli, Bob Martin, Warren
Westlund, Bob Will)
1989
Milt Bohart, Football, 1951-53
1982
Eric Hughes, Gymnastics, 1950-78
Rusty Callow, Crew, 1922-27
Edean Ihlanfeldt, Golf, 1974-81
Rick Colella, Swimming, 1970-73
Alfred James, Basketball, 1926-28
Ray Eckmann, Football-Administrator, 1919-21, 1922-29,
Ned Nelson, Baseball-Basketball, 1929-32
1936-41
George Pocock, Crew, 1912-76
Edwin Genung, Track, 1929-32
Max Starcevich, Football, 1934-36
Paul Jessup, Football-Track, 1927-30
1981 Women's 8-Oared Crew (Debbie Moore, Madeline Hanson, Susan Broome
Rick Redman, Football, 1962-64
Karen Mohling, Peg Achterman, Kristi Norelius, Shyril O'Steen, Jan
Arnie Weinmeister, Football, 1942, 1946-47
McDougall, Lisa Horn)
1949 Men's Tennis (Jim Brink, Fred Fisher)
1983
J. Wilson Gaw, Baseball, 1928-30
1990
Yoshi Hayasaki, Gymnastics, 1968-71
Earl "Click" Clark, Football-Ass't. Coach-Trainer, 1912, 1927-61
Calvin Jones, Football, 1970-72
James Edwards, Basketball, 1974-77
August "Gus" Pope, Track, 1919-21
Cary Feldman, Track, 1970-72
Paul Schwegler, Football, 1929-31
Merle Hufford, Football, 1929-31
Brian Sternberg, Track 1962-63
Regina Joyce, Track & Field, 1981-83
Rudy Mucha, Football, 1938-40
1984
Peter Salmon, Swimming, 1948-52
Ralph Cairney, Basketball-Football-Track, 1930-32
Wallace Scott, Tennis, 1925
Art Langlie, Baseball-Tennis, 1920-26
1923 Men's 8-Oared Crew (Max Luft, Charles Dunn, Fred Spuhn, Sam Shaw,
Don McKeta, Football, 1958-60
Pat Tidmarch, Rowland France, Harry John Dutton, Dow Walling,
Don Grant)
200
Husky History
W
ear-By-Year Results
89
1895
1900
ch: None
Coach: Ralph Nichols
Coach: J.S. Dodge
tain: Frank Griffiths
Captain: Martin Harrais
Captain: W.H. Corson
28
L
Eastern College Alumni 0-20
400
Oct. 19
W
Seattle A.C.
12-0
500
Sept. 29
W
Seattle H.S.
5-0
500
0-20
Oct. 26
T
Seattle A.C.
0-0
500
Oct. 24
T
at Whitman
11-11
1,000
-0)
Nov. 9
W
Vashon College
44-4
300
Oct. 27
L
at Idaho (Spokane)
6-12
1,000
TIME: Won 0, Lost 1, Tied 0
at Tacoma A.C.
8-4
150
Nov. 30
T
Washington St.
5-5
1,500
Nov. 21
W
Dec. 7
W
Vashon College
34-0
300
Dec. 1
L
at Oregon
0-43
1,000
98-8
27-71
390
(4-0-1)
(1-2-2)
ach: none
ALL TIME: Won 7, Lost 6, Tied 4
ALL TIME: Won 16, Lost 15, Tied 7
btain: Frank Griffiths
27
T
at Washington Col. (Tac.)
0-0
300
0-0
1896
1901
0-1)
Coach: Ralph Nichols
Coach: Jack Wright
L TIME: Won 0, Lost 1, Tie 1
Captain: Jack Lindsay
Captain: Dick Huntoon
L
Whitman College
0-10
1,000
Oct. 24
L
Seattle A.C.
4-6
300
Oct. 26
Nov. 14
L
at Port Townsend A.C.
0-18
100
Nov. 1
L
at Washington St.
0-10
500
891 No Team
Dec. 12
L
at Multnomah A.C.
0-10
100
Nov. 9
W
Port Townsend A.C.
10-0
500
L TIME: Won 0, Lost 1, Tie 1
Dec. 15
YMCA
4-0
100
Nov. 12
L
Multnomah A.C.
6-17
500
W
Seattle A.C.
12-6
500
Nov. 16
W
Vashon College
17-5
500
Dec. 19
W
20-40
Nov. 21
W
Idaho
10-0
2,000
892
43-42
(2-3-0)
ach: W.B. Goodwin
ALL TIME: Won 9, Lost 9, Tied 4
(3-3-0)
ptain: Otto Collings
ALL TIME: Won 19, Lost 18, Tied 7
t. 16
L
Seattle A.C.
0-28
300
ec. 17
W
Seattle A.C.
14-0
100
1897
14-28
1902
Coach: Carl Clemons
-1-0)
Captain: Jack Lindsay
Coach: Jim Knight
LL TIME: Won 1, Lost 2, Tie 1
Oct. 9
W
YMCA
10-0
400
Captain: Fred McElmon
Seattle A.C.
6-10
1,000
Oct. 18
W
All-Seattle
24-0
500
Nov. 18
L
893
Dec. 4
L
at Oregon St.
0-16
1,500
Oct. 25
W
Oregon St.
16-5
1,000
16-26
Nov. 3
W
at Idaho
10-0
250
bach: W.B. Goodwin
Nov. 8
W
at Whitman
11-5
300
(1-2-0)
aptain: D.A. Ford
Nov. 15
L
Multnomah A.C.
0-7
500
ALL TIME: Won 10, Lost 11, Tied 4
OV. 11
W
at Viciendas (Tac.)
8-4
200
Nov. 27
W
Washington St.
16-0
1,000
ov. 18
L
Tacoma A.C.
77-17
(at W. Seattle)
4-6
300
1898
(5-1-0)
ov. 25
T
at Port Townsend A.C.
6-6
150
Coach: Ralph Nichols
ALL TIME: Won 24, Lost 19, Tied 7
ov. 30
L
at Multnomah A.C.
0-30
150
Captain: Clarence Larson
ec. 29
L
Stanford (at W. Seattle)
0-40
600
(Schedule and participants restricted by Spanish-American
18-86
1903
War)
-3-1)
Dec. 17
L
Puyallup Indian Res.
11-18
500
Coach: James Knight
LL TIME: Won 2, Lost 5, Tied 2
Dec. 24
W
Puyallup Indian Res.
13-0
400
Captain: William Spiedel
24-18
Oct. 17
W
at Oregon St.
5-0
600
W
Whitman
35-0
1,500
1894
(1-1-0)
Oct. 24
ALL TIME: Won 11, Lost 12, Tied 4
Oct. 30
W
at Washington St.
10-0
700
Coach: C. Cobb
Nov. 14
W
Oregon
6-5
2,000
Captain: Ralph Nichols
Nov. 20
W
Nevada
2-0
1,500
Dct. 13
T
at Port Townsend
14-14
250
1899
Nov. 26
W
Idaho
5-0
2,500
Dct. 27
L
Seattle A.C.
0-24
500
Coach: A.S. Jeffs
Dec. 5
L
at Multnomah A.C.
0-6
400
Nov. 22
W
at Whitman College
46-0
2,000
Captain: Sterling Hill
63-11
60-38
Oct. 14
W
Port Townsend H.S.
16-0
500
(6-1-0)
1-1-1)
Oct. 28
L
at Port Townsend A.C.
0-11
250
ALL TIME: Won 30, Lost 20, Tied 7
ALL TIME: Won 3, Lost 6, Tied 3
Nov. 4
W
at Everett A.C.
33-0
150
Nov. 7
T
All Seattle
5-5
500
Nov. 18
W
Wilson Business Coll.
11-0
500
Nov. 25
W
Whitman
6-5
1,000
71-21
(4-1-1)
ALL TIME: Won 15, Lost 13, Tied 5
201
W
Husky History
Year-By-Year Results
1904
1908
1912
Coach: James Knight
Coach: Gil Dobie
Coach: Gil Dobie
Captain: Fred McElmon
Captain: Fred Tegtmeier
Captain: Tom Griffiths
Oct. 7
W
Whitman
35-0
1,500
Sept. 26
W
Lincoln H.S.
22-0
500
Oct. 12
W
College Puget Sound
53-0
2,5
Oct. 14
L
Oregon St.
6-25
2,000
Oct. 3
W
Washington H.S.
23-5
500
Oct. 19
W
Bremerton Sailors
55-0
2,0
Oct. 22
W
at Utah St.
45-0
1,000
Oct. 17
W
Whitworth
24-4
2,500
Oct. 26
W
Idaho
24-0
3,0
Oct. 29
W
Washington St.
12-6
1,000
Oct. 24
W
Whitman
6-0
3,000
Nov. 9
W
at Oregon St. (Portland)
9-3
3,0
Nov. 5
W
Idaho
12-10
2,000
Nov. 7
T
Washington St.
6-6
4,000
Nov. 16
W
Oregon
30-14
5,0
Nov. 12
L
at Oregon
0-18
1,500
Nov. 14
W
at Oregon
15-0
1,000
Nov. 28
W
Washington St.
19-0
7,0
Nov. 24
T
California
6-6
3,000
Nov. 28
W
Oregon St.
32-0
6,000
190-17
116-65
128-15
(6-0-0)
(4-2-1)
(6-0-1)
ALL TIME: Won 78, Lost 29, Tied 17
ALL TIME: Won 34, Lost 22, Tied 8
ALL TIME: Won 52, Lost 29, Tied 17
1913
1905
1909
Coach: Gil Dobie
Coach: Oliver Cutts
Coach: Gil Dobie
Captain: Herman Anderson
Captain: Tom McDonald
Captain: Melville Mucklestone
Sept. 27
W
Everett H.S.
26-0
Oct. 4
W
1,50
USS Chicago
11-0
1,500
Oct. 2
W
U.S.S. Milwaukee
52-0
1,000
Oct. 11
W
All-Navy
23-7
Oct. 7
W
Whitworth (at Tacoma)
1,50
10-4
1,000
Oct. 9
W
Queen Anne H.S.
34-0
1,500
Oct. 18
W
Whitworth
100-0
Oct. 14
T
Whitman
3,00
6-6
2,000
Oct. 23
W
Lincoln H.S.
20-0
1,500
Oct. 25
W
Oct. 21
Oregon St.
47-0
W
Chemawa Indians
6,00
11-6
1,000
Oct. 30
W
at Idaho
50-0
3,000
Nov. 1
W
Whitman
Oct. 30
40-6
W
Sherman Indians
4,00
29-0
2,000
Nov. 6
W
Whitman
17-0
3,000
Nov. 15
W
at Oregon (Portland)
10-7
Nov. 11
L
at Idaho
8,00
0-8
1,000
Nov. 13
W
at Oregon St.
21-0
1,000
Nov. 27
W
Nov. 19
T
Washington St.
20-0
at Oregon
6,00
12-12
2,000
Nov. 20
W
Oregon
20-6
7,000
Nov. 30
266-20
L
at Oregon St.
0-16
3,000
214-6
(7-0-0)
79-52
(7-0-0)
ALL TIME: Won 85, Lost 29, Tied 17
(4-2-2)
ALL TIME: Won 59, Lost 29, Tied 17
ALL TIME: Won 38, Lost 24, Tied 10
1914
1910
1906
Coach: Gil Dobie
Coach: Gil Dobie
Captain: Walter Schiel
Coach: Victor Place
Captain: Huber Grimm
Sept. 26
W
Aberdeen H.S.
33-6
Captain: Owen Crim
1,50
Oct. 8
W
Lincoln H.S.
20-0
1,500
Oct. 3
W
Oct. 10
Washington Park A.C.
45-0
W
USS Philadelphia
2,00
5-0
500
Oct. 15
W
College Puget Sound
51-0
1,500
Oct. 10
W
Rainier Valley A.C.
81-0
Oct. 13
W
Whitworth
2,00
8-0
1,000
Oct. 22
W
Whitman
12-8
4,500
Oct. 24
W
Whitman
28-7
Oct. 20
W
Seattle H.S.
3,00
4-0
500
Nov. 5
W
Idaho
29-0
1,500
Oct. 31
T
Seattle A.C.
at Oregon St. (Albany)
0-0
Oct. 20
T
2,00
10-10
1,000
Nov. 12
W
at Washington St. (Spo.)
16-0
2,800
Nov. 14
W
Oct. 27
T
Oregon
10-0
Oregon St.
4,00
0-0
2,400
Nov. 24
W
Oregon St.
22-0
6,000
Nov. 26
W
Washington St.
45-0
Nov. 3
T
Whitman
6,000
0-0
2,000
150-8
242-13
Nov. 10
T
Willamette
0-0
3,000
(6-0-0)
(6-0-1)
Nov. 20
L
at Oregon
6-16
1,500
ALL TIME: Won 65, Lost 29, Tied 17
ALL TIME: Won 91, Lost 29, Tied 18
Nov. 29
W
Idaho
16-9
3,500
49-35
(4-1-4)
1911
1915
ALL TIME: Won 42, Lost 25, Tied 14
Coach: Gil Dobie
Coach: Gil Dobie
Captain: William Coyle
Captain: Ray Hunt
Oct. 2
W
1907
Lincolnn H.S.
42-0
1,000
Oct. 2
W
Ballard Meteors
31-0
2,000
Oct. 14
W
Fort Wordon
90-0
1,000
Oct. 9
W
Washington Park A.C.
64-0
Coach: Victor Place
2,000
Oct. 21
W
College Puget Sound
35-0
2,000
Oct. 23
W
at Gonzaga
21-7
Captain: Enoch Bagshaw
1,000
Oct. 28
W
at Idaho (Spokane)
17-0
1,100
Oct. 30
w
Whitman
27-0
Oct. 5
T
Seattle H.S.
3,000
0-0
2,000
Nov. 4
W
Oregon St.
34-0
4,000
Nov. 6
W
at California
72-0
Oct. 12
W
at Multnomah A.C.
2,500
10-0
1,000
Nov. 18
W
at Oregon (Portland)
29-3
8,000
Nov. 13
W
California
13-7
Oct. 14
W
3,500
at Willamette
21-0
1,000
Nov. 30
W
Washington St.
30-6
6,000
Nov. 26
W
Colorado
46-0
Oct. 19
W
6,000
Whitworth (at Tacoma)
5-0
350
277-9
274-14
Oct. 26
W
Chemawa Indians
40-0
1,000
(7-0-0)
(7-0-0)
Nov. 2
L
USS Nebraska
6-19
1,000
ALL TIME: Won 72, Lost 29, Tied 17
ALL TIME: Won 98, Lost 29, Tied 18
Nov. 8
L
at Whitman
8-12
400
Nov. 16
L
Oregon
0-6
2,500
Nov. 21
L
Washington St.
5-11
3,000
Nov. 28
T
Idaho
0-0
3,000
95-48
(4-4-2)
ALL TIME: Won 46, Lost 29, Tied 16
202
Husky History
W
ear-By-Year Results
916
1920
1923
ach: Gil Dobie
Coach: Leonard Allison
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
ptain: Louis Seagraves
Captain: Ted Faulk
Captain: Wayne Hall
pt. 30
W
Ballard Meteors
28-0
2,000
Oct. 9
W
Whitman
33-14
4,916
Sept. 29
W
U.S.S. Mississippi
33-0
6,000
t. 14#
W
Bremerton Sub.
62-0
2,000
Oct. 16
L
Montana
14-18
2,400
Sept. 29
W
U.S.S. New York
42-7
6,000
t. 28
W
Whitman
37-6
3,000
Oct. 22
L
Oregon St.
0-3
7,000
Oct. 6
W
Willamette
54-0
4,093
V. 4
T
.
at Oregon
0-0
5,000
Nov. 5
L
Stanford
0-3
9,000
Oct. 13
W
Whitman
19-0
6,162
ov. 11
W
Oregon St.
35-0
5,000
Nov. 12
L
at Oregon
0-17
5,000
Oct. 20
W
Southern Cal
22-0
21,500
DV. 18
W
at California
13-3
2,000
Nov. 27
L
Dartmouth
7-28
24,500
Oct. 27
W
at College Puget Sound
24-0
15,000
ov. 30
W
California
14-7
9,000
54-83
Nov. 3
W
at Oregon St.
14-0
12,000
189-16
(1-5-0)
Nov. 10
W
Montana
26-14
15,000
-0-1)
P.C.C.-6th
Nov. 17
L
o
at California
0-9
28,000
cific Coast Conference-Ist
ALL TIME: Won 112, Lost 38, Tied 20
Nov. 24
W
Washington St.
24-7
13,059
LL TIME: Won 104, Lost 29, Tied 19
Dec. 1
W
Oregon
26-7
12,000
Jan. 1
T
Navy (Rose Bowl)
14-14
45,000
-Win #100
1921
300-58
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
(10-1-1)
917
Captain: Ray Eckman
P.C.C.-2nd
oach: Claude J. Hunt
Oct. 1
W
Ninth Army Corps
24-7
2,566
ALL TIME: Won 131, Lost 44, Tied 23
aptain: Ernst Murphy
Oct. 8
W
Whitman
7-0
6,760
ct. 20
W
Whitman
14-6
2,000
Oct. 15
W
Montana
28-7
6,033
1924
OV. 3
L
at California
0-27
1,000
Oct. 22
L
at Oregon St.
0-24
6,500
ov. 17
T
Oregon St.
0-0
3,000
Nov. 5
T
Stanford
0-0
12,653
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
ov. 29
L
Washington St.
0-14
6,000
Nov. 12
L
at California
3-72
6,000
Captain: Edwin Kuhn
14-47
Nov. 24
L
Washington St.
0-14
13,263
Sept. 27
W
West Seattle A.C.
32-0
4,526
13,827
Sept. 27
W
U.S.S. Maryland
33-0
4,526
-2-1)
Dec. 3
L
Penn St.
7-21
C.C.-5th
69-145
Oct. 4
W
Willamette
57-0
5,861
Oct. 11
W
Whitman
55-0
6,394
LL TIME: Won 105, Lost 31, Tied 20
(3-4-1)
P.C.C.-6th
Oct. 18
W
Montana
52-7
9,419
Oct. 25
W
o
Oregon St.
6-3
ALL TIME: Won 115, Lost 42, Tied 21
10,264
918
Nov. 1
L
at Oregon
3-7
3,000
Coach: Claude J. Hunt
Nov. 8
T
California
7-7
35,000
1922
Captain: George Smith
Nov. 15
W
at College Puget Sound
96-0
7,000
Nov. 23
W
Oregon St.
6-0
3,000
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
Nov. 22
W
Washington St.
14-0
8,978
Nov. 30
L
at Oregon
0-7
5,000
Captain: Ray Eckmann
355-24
6-7
Sept. 30
W
U.S.S. Idaho
49-0
8,245
(8-1-1)
1-1-0)
Oct. 7
W
Montana
26-0
9,214
P.C.C.-3rd
P.C.C.-No season because of WWI
Oct. 14
W
Idaho
2-0
10.096
ALL TIME: Won 139, Lost 45, Tied 24
ALL TIME: Won 106, Lost 32, Tied 20
Oct. 21
W
Oregon St.
14-3
11,470
Oct. 28
W
at Washington St.
16-13
8,800
1925
Nov. 11
L
.
California
7-45
30,075
1919
Nov. 18
W
at Stanford
12-8
6,000
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
Coach: Claude J. Hunt
Nov. 30
T
o
Oregon
3-3
12,000
Captain: Elmer Tesreau
Captain: Ervin Dailey
129-72
Sept. 26
W
Willamette
108-0
3,500
Oct. 18
W
U.S.S. New York
35-0
3,000
Oct. 3
W
U.S.S. Oklahoma
59-0
3,000
(6-1-1)
Oct. 25
W
Whitman
120-0
5,000
Oct. 3
W
West Seattle A.C.
56-0
3,000
P.C.C.-3rd
Nov. 1
L
0
Oregon
13-24
8,000
ALL TIME: Won 121, Lost 43, Tied 22
Oct. 10
W
Montana
30-10
20,000
Nov. 8
W
Pacific Fleet
14-0
2,500
Oct. 17
T
at Nebraska
6-6
15,000
Nov. 15
W
at Washington St.
13-7
3,000
Oct. 24
W
Whitman
64-2
2,000
Nov. 28
W
California
7-0
16,000
Oct. 31
W
at Washington St.
23-0
2,500
202-31
Nov. 7
W
Stanford
13-0
35,000
(5-1-0)
Nov. 14
W
at California
7-0
80,000
P.C.C.-1st, Tie
Nov. 21
W
at College Puget Sound
80-7
2,000
ALL TIME: Won 111, Lost 33, Tied 20
Nov. 26
W
Oregon
15-14
20,000
Jan. 1
L
Alabama (Rose Bowl)
19-20
45,000
480-59
(10-1-1)
P.C.C.-1st
ALL TIME: Won 149, Lost 46, Tied 25
203
W
Husky History
Year-By-Year Results
1926
1929
1932
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
Coach: James Phelan
Captain: George Guttormsen
Captain: Paul Jessup
Captain: Bill O'Brien
Sept. 25# W
USS New Mexico
20-0
2,600
Sept. 28
W
Whitman
47-0
10,110
Sept. 24
W
Gonzaga
19-7
11,5
Oct. 2
W
Willamette
28-0
3,316
Oct. 5
T
Montana
6-6
13,339
Oct. 1
W
Montana
26-13
8,88
Oct. 2
W
College Puget Sound
33-0
3,316
Oct. 12
L
Southern Cal
0-48
23,582
Oct. 8
T
at Oregon (Portland)
0-0
31,00
Oct. 9
W
at Oregon (Portland)
23-9
25,000
Oct. 19
L
at Washington St.
13-20
16,000
Oct. 22
L
California
6-7
19,17
Oct. 16
W
Idaho
26-0
16,891
Oct. 26
L
Oregon
0-14
13,172
Oct. 29
W
Whitman
33-7
4,23
Oct. 23
L
Washington St.
6-9
24,486
Nov. 1
W
at College Puget Sound
73-0
12,250
Nov. 5
W
at Stanford
18-13
19,21
Oct. 30
W
at Whitman
44-0
5,000
Nov. 9
L
Stanford
0-6
15,474
Nov. 12
T
Washington St.
0-0
17,33
Nov.
6
W
California
13-7
20,253
Nov. 16
L
at California
0-7
50,000
Nov. 24
L
o
Southern Cal.
6-9
Nov. 13
22,06
L
at Stanford
10-29
40,000
Nov. 23
L
at Chicago
6-26
20,000
Dec. 3
W
at UCLA
19-0
21,55
Nov. 25
W
Nebraska
10-6
20,469
145-127
Dec. 10
W
West Seattle A.C.
66-0
3,23
213-60
(2-6-1)
193-56
(8-2-0)
P.C.C.-10th
(6-2-2)
P.C.C.-5th
ALL TIME: Won 175, Lost 60, Tied 26
P.C.C.-4th
ALL TIME: Won 157, Lost 48, Tied 25
ALL TIME: Won 191, Lost 69, Tied 29
#-Win #150
1930
Coach: James Phelan
1933
1927
Captain: Al Holmes
Coach: James Phelan
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
Sept. 27
W
Whitman
48-0
10,979
Captain: Bill Smith
Captain: Earl Wilson
Oct. 4
W
Montana
27-0
20,000
Sept. 23
W
Oct. 1
W
Gonzaga
13-0
Willamette
4,41
32-6
1,758
Oct. 11
W
Idaho
27-0
12,332
Sept. 30
W
Idaho
Oct. 1
32-6
W
U.S.S. Idaho
12,318
27-0
1,758
Oct. 18
L
at Oregon (Portland)
0-7
35,266
Oct. 14
L
Oct. 7
W
Oregon
0-6
U.S.S. Idaho
27,04:
48-0
2,200
Oct. 25
W
California
13-0
25,284
Oct. 21
W
Oct. 8
at College Puget Sound
14-6
W
at College Puget Sound
2,50
40-0
1,500
Nov. 1
W
College Puget Sound
60-0
5,108
Oct. 28
W
Stanford
Oct. 15
6-0
W
at Montana
12,158
32-0
2,500
Nov. 8
L
at Stanford
7-25
15,187
Nov. 11
L
at California
Oct. 22
0-33
W
Washington St.
21,40
14-0
35,000
Nov. 15
L
Washington St.
0-3
42,000
Nov. 18
W
UCLA
10-0
Oct. 29
W
Whitman
14,339
61-7
4,826
Nov. 27
L
at Southern Cal
0-32
35,000
Nov. 25
L
0
Nov. 5
L
Stanford
at Washington St.
6-17
10,994
7-13
28,172
182-67
Dec. 9
L
.
Nov. 12
at Southern Cal.
7-13
W
at California
40,000
6-0
50,000
(5-4-0)
Nov. 24
88-81
W
Oregon
7-0
17,236
P.C.C.-5-4-0
(5-4-0)
Dec. 3
L
at Southern Cal
3-33
60,000
ALL TIME: Won 180, Lost 64, Tied 26
P.C.C.-7th
287-59
(9-2-0)
ALL TIME: Won 196, Lost 73, Tied 29
P.C.C.-4th
1931
ALL TIME: Won 166, Lost 50, Tied 25
Coach: James Phelan
1934
Captain: Paul Schwegler
Coach: James Phelan
1928
Sept. 26
W
Utah
7-6
24,000
Captain: Woodrow Ullin
Oct. 3
W
Montana
25-0
10,000
Sept. 29
W
Idaho
13-0
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
15,385
Oct. 10
L
Oregon
0-13
35,000
Oct. 13
W
at Oregon (Portland)
16-6
Captain: Clarence Dirks
28,663
Oct. 17
W
Idaho
38-7
10,000
Oct. 27
W
California
13-7
Sept. 29
W
Willamette
25,989
26-0
3,100
Oct. 24
T
Stanford
0-0
18,000
Nov. 3#
W
Oregon St.
14-7
Sept. 29
W
11,228
U.S.S. Tennessee
41-0
3,100
Oct. 31
W
Whitman
77-0
5,000
Nov. 10
L
at Stanford
0-24
Oct. 5
W
38,617
Pacific University
43-0
3,500
Nov. 7
L
at California
0-13
40,000
Nov. 17
W
College Puget Sound
34-0
Oct. 6
W
Whitman
6,625
7-0
3,103
Nov. 14
W
Washington St.
12-0
20,000
Nov. 24
T
Washington St.
0-0
Oct. 13
W
32,876
Montana
25-0
11,058
Dec. 5
L
at Southern Cal
7-44
40,000
Dec. 1
W
at Southern Cal
14-7
Oct. 20
L
26,736
at Oregon (Portland)
0-27
27,820
166-83
104-51
Oct. 27
L
0
Oregon St.
0-29
16,201
(5-3-1)
(6-1-1)
Nov. 3
W
at College Puget Sound
40-0
13,000
P.C.C.-5th
P.C.C.-3rd
Nov. 10
L
California
0-6
20,000
ALL TIME: Won 185, Lost 67, Tied 27
#-Win #200
Nov. 17
L
at Stanford
0-12
30,000
ALL TIME: Won 202, Lost 75, Tied 30
Nov. 29
W
Washington St.
6-0
22,437
188-74
(7-4-0)
P.C.C.-8th
ALL TIME: Won 173, Lost 54, Tied 25
204
Husky History
W
ear-By-Year Results
935
1938
1941
bach: James Phelan
Coach: James Phelan
Coach: James Phelan
aptain: Dan Lazarevich
Captain: Frank Peters
Captain: None
pt. 28
W
Idaho
14-0
15,438
Sept. 24
L
at Minnesota
0-15
21,798
Sept. 27
L
Minnesota
6-14
43,000
ct. 5
W
Santa Clara
13-6
19,543
Oct. 1
Idaho
12-12
19,105
Oct. 4
L
at Oregon St. (Portland)
6-9
17,500
T
ct. 14
W
at Washington St.
21-0
11,900
Oct. 8
L
at UCLA
0-13
23,412
Oct. 11
W
at Washington St.
23-13
20,000
14-7
19,639
ct. 26
L
Stanford
0-6
35,098
Oct. 15
L
Oregon St.
6-13
19,966
Oct. 18
W
UCLA
ov. 2
W
California
7-14
27,889
Oct. 25
L
Stanford
7-13
42,000
Montana
33-7
10,573
Oct. 22
L
OV. 9
L
at California
0-14
48,734
Nov. 5
10-7
19,778
Nov. 1
W
Montana
21-0
20,000
W
at Stanford
ov. 23
L
Oregon
6-7
20,992
Nov. 12
W
Southern Cal
7-6
18,939
Nov. 8
W
at California
13-6
45,000
25,446
at Oregon (Portland)
0-3
17,411
Nov. 22
L
o
ec. 7
W
at Southern Cal
Nov. 19
L
Oregon
16-19
6-2
23,191
26-0
25,356
Nov. 29
W
at Southern Cal
14-13
30,000
93-42
Nov. 26
W
Washington St.
120-94
-3-0)
68-83
C.C.-6th
(3-5-1)
(5-4-0)
LL TIME: Won 207, Lost 77, Tied 30
P.C.C.-6th
P.C.C.-2nd, Tie
ALL TIME: Won 224, Lost 86, Tied 34
ALL TIME: Won 240, Lost 97, Tied 34
936
1939
1942
Coach: James Phelan
Captain: Chuck Bond
Coach: James Phelan
Coach: Ralph Welch
ept. 26
L
Minnesota
7-14
36,864
Captain: Chuck Bechtol
Captain: Walt Harrison
Pittsburgh
25,000
Sept. 26
W
Coll. of Pacific
27-0
11,000
6-27
Dct. 3
W
Idaho
22-0
10,481
Sept. 30
L
Dct. 10
W
at UCLA
14-0
26,563
Oct. 7
L
UCLA
15,017
Oct. 3
T
Southern Cal
0-0
26,000
7-14
Dct. 17
W
Oregon St.
19-7
15,665
Oct. 14
L
at Washington St.
0-6
18,552
Oct. 10
W
at Oregon (Portland)
15-7
11,000
7-13
14,000
Oct. 17
W
Montana
35-0
10,000
Dct. 24
W
California
13-0
18,315
Oct. 21
L
Oregon St.
8-5
19,771
Oct. 24
L
California
6-19
28,000
Dct. 31
W
at Oregon (Portland)
7-0
17,681
Oct. 28
W
Stanford
Nov. 7
T
at Stanford
14-14
20,676
Nov. 4
W
9-0
19,838
Oct. 31
W
Oregon St.
13-0
7,000
Montana
Nov. 14
W
Southern Cal
12-0
23,454
Nov. 11
W
13-6
21,608
Nov. 7
L
at Stanford (San Francisco) 7-20
23,000
at California
20-13
25,000
Nov. 14
T
Navy Pre-Flight
0-0
5,000
Nov. 26
W
Washington St.
40-0
40,735
Nov. 23
W
Oregon
50,000
Nov. 21
L
at UCLA
10-14
32,000
7-9
an. 1
L
Pittsburgh (Rose Bowl)
0-21
87,196
Dec. 2
L
at Southern Cal
77-93
Nov. 28
T
Washington St.
0-0
13,000
148-56
113-60
7-2-1)
(4-5-0)
(4-3-3)
P.C.C.-Ist
P.C.C.-4th, Tie
ALL TIME: Won 228, Lost 91, Tied 34
P.C.C.-5th, Tie
ALL TIME: Won 214, Lost 79, Tied 31
ALL TIME: Won 244, Lost 100, Tied 37
1937
1940
1943
Coach: James Phelan
Coach: James Phelan
Captain: Frank Waskowitz
Captain: Bill Marx
Coach: Ralph Welch
Sept. 25
W
Iowa
14-0
18,533
Sept. 28
L
at Minnesota
14-19
46,000
Captain: Jack Tracy
Oct. 2
.
at Southern Cal
7-0
22,715
Oct. 5
W
Idaho
21-0
24,000
Sept. 25
W
Whitman
35-6
16,000
W
10-0
31,000
Oct. 9
W
at Spokane Air Command
47-12
9,000
Oct. 9
L
o
Oregon St.
3-6
19,137
Oct. 12
W
at Oregon (Portland)
at Washington St.
7-7
14,581
Oct. 19
W
Oregon St.
19-0
31,000
Oct. 23
W
March Field Flyers
27-7
24,000
Oct. 16
T
Oct. 23
L
Stanford
7-13
7-6
25,000
Oct. 30
W
22,230
W
California
Spokane Air Command 41-7
5,000
Oct. 26
Idaho
21-7
14,105
Nov. 9
L
at Stanford
10-20
58,000
Jan. 1
L
Southern Cal (Rose Bowl)
0-29
68,000
Oct. 30
W
150-61
Nov. 6
T
at California
0-0
18,765
Nov. 16
W
Southern Cal
14-0
27,000
Nov. 13
W
UCLA
26-0
11,561
Nov. 23
W
at UCLA
41-0
35,000
(4-1-0)
Nov. 20
W
Oregon
14-0
20,539
Nov. 30
W
Washington St.
33-9
25,000
P.C.C.-3rd
Jan. 1
at Hawaii (Pineapple Bowl) 53-13
19,963
169-54
ALL TIME: Won 248, Lost 101, Tied 37
W
Jan. 6
W
at Honolulu Townies
35-6
6,558
(7-2-0)
187-52
P.C.C.-2nd
(7-2-2)
ALL TIME: Won 235, Lost 94, Tied 34
P.C.C.-3rd
ALL TIME: Won 221, Lost 81, Tied 23
205
W
Husky History
Year-By-Year Results
1944
1947
1950
Coach: Ralph Welch
Coach: Ralph Welch
Coach: Howard Odell
Captain: Jim McCurdy
Captain: Gail Bruce
Captains: Joe Cloidt, Mike Michael
Sept. 23
W
Willamette
71-0
6,613
Sept. 27
L
at Minnesota
6-7
43,377
Sept. 23
W
Kansas St.
33-7
30,2
Sept. 30# W
Whitman
65-6
3,352
Oct. 4
L
Oregon St.
7-14
37,000
Sept. 30
W
Minnesota
28-13
49,7
Oct. 7
W
at Willamette
40-6
1,492
Oct. 11
W
St. Mary's
26-6
34,000
Oct. 7
W
UCLA
21-20
37,7
Oct. 14
W
at Whitman
71-0
2,000
Oct. 18
L
at Oregon (Portland)
0-6
26,000
Oct. 14
W
at Oregon St. (Portland)
35-6
24,7
Oct. 23
L
at Southern Cal
7-38
62,865
Oct. 25
W
Stanford
25-0
32,000
Oct. 21
L
at Illinois
13-20
35,9
Oct. 28
W
at California
33-7
18,561
Nov. 1
L
Southern Cal
0-19
32,000
Oct. 28
W
at Stanford
21-7
32,4
Nov. 11
L
4th Air Force
0-28
15,500
Nov. 8
L
at California
7-13
50,000
Nov. 4
L
California
7-14
55,2
Nov. 18
L
at 2nd Air Force (Spokane) 6-47
6,592
Nov. 15
L
at UCLA
7-34
43,777
Nov. 11
W
Oregon
27-12
34,4
293-132
Nov. 22
W
Washington St.
20-0
31,500
Nov. 18
W
at Southern Cal
28-13
23,4
(5-3-0)
98-99
Nov. 25
W
at Washington St. (Spo.)
52-21
28,4
P.C.C.-2nd
(3-6-0)
265-133
ALL TIME: Won 253, Lost 104, Tied 37
P.C.C.-7th, Tie
(8-2-0)
#-Win #250
ALL TIME: Won 267, Lost 117, Tied 37
P.C.C.-2nd
ALL TIME: Won 280, Lost 133, Tied 38
1945
1948
Coach: Howard Odell
1951
Coach: Ralph Welch
Captain: Alf Hemsted
Captain: Bill McGovern
Coach: Howard Odell
Sept. 25
L
Minnesota
0-20
Sept. 29
W
Oregon
20-6
40,487
35,000
Captain: Ted Holzknecht
Oct. 2
T
Oct. 6
at Oregon St. (Portland)
14-14
L
at California
25,000
Sept. 22
W
14-27
35,000
Montana
58-7
36,98
Oct. 9
W
UCLA
27-6
Oct. 13
W
Washington St.
6-0
28,000
38,000
Sept. 29
W
at Minnesota
25-20
50,63
Oct. 16
L
Oct. 20
W
at Oregon St. (Portland)
at Washington St.
0-10
13-0
25,000
Oct. 6
L
18,000
Southern Cal
13-20
43,74
Oct. 23
L
California
Oct. 27
W
0-21
Southern Cal
38,000
Oct. 13
W
13-7
12,600
at Oregon (Portland)
63-6
30,41
Oct. 30
L
at Stanford
Nov. 3
0-20
W
at Oregon (Portland)
25,000
Oct. 20
7-0
L
Illinois
28,194
20-27
53,76
Nov. 6
L
Oregon
7-13
Nov. 10
L
Oregon St.
6-7
33,400
Oct. 27
L
32,150
Stanford
7-14
48,34
Nov. 13
L
at Southern Cal
Nov. 17
7-32
W
Idaho
44,500
Nov. 3
L
12-0
28,750
Oregon St.
14-40
33,32
Nov. 20
W
Idaho
34-7
Nov. 24
L
Washington St.
0-7
20,000
Nov. 10
L
26,500
at California
28-37
46,00
Nov. 27
L
at Notre Dame
0-46
52,000
Nov. 17
91-54
T
at UCLA
20-20
31,59
(6-3-0)
89-189
Nov. 24
L
Washington St.
25-27
51,22
(2-7-1).
P.C.C.-3rd
273-218
P.C.C.-7th
ALL TIME: Won 259, Lost 107, Tied 37
(3-6-1)
ALL TIME: Won 269, Lost 124, Tied 38
P.C.C.-7th
ALL TIME: Won 283, Lost 139, Tied 39
1946
1949
Coach: Ralph Welch
Coach: Howard Odell
1952
Captain: John Zegar
Captain: Chuck Olson
Sept. 28
L
St. Mary's
20-24
Coach: Howard Odell
41,000
Sept. 17
W
Utah
14-7
Oct. 5
L
UCLA
13-39
26,553
41,000
Captain: Dick Sprague
Sept. 24
L
at Minnesota
20-48
Oct. 12
W
at Washington St.
58,113
26,000
Sept. 20
W
21-7
Idaho
39-14
31,915
Oct. 1
L
Notre Dame
7-27
Oct. 19
L
at Southern Cal
41,948
0-28
45,000
Sept. 27
W
Minnesota
19-13
47,154
Oct. 8
L
Oct. 26
Oregon St.
3-7
W
California
27,340
Oct. 4
L
20-6
UCLA
38,000
7-32
44,969
Oct. 15
L
Stanford
0-40
Nov. 9
W
at Stanford
33,745
Oct. 11
L
21-15
at Illinois
25,000
14-48
48,248
Oct. 22
L
at California
7-21
Nov. 16
W
Oregon
20,337
Oct. 18
W
16-0
34,000
Oregon
49-0
36,601
Oct. 29
L
Southern Cal
28-40
Nov. 23
W
33,205
Oct. 25
Montana
W
21-0
at Stanford
7,000
27-14
25,000
Nov. 5
W
at Oregon (Portland)
28-27
Nov. 30
L
at Oregon St. (Portland)
28,143
Nov. 1
W
12-21
28,000
at Oregon St. (Portland)
38-13
19,243
Nov. 12
L
at UCLA
26-47
26,420
Nov. 8
W
144-140
California
22-7
50,046
Nov. 19
W
Washington St.
34-21
(5-4-0)
35,676
Nov. 15
L
at Southern Cal
0-33
35,852
167-285
P.C.C.-4th
Nov. 29
W
at Washington St. (Spo.)
33-27
28,000
(3-7-0)
ALL TIME: Won 264, Lost 111, Tied 37
248-201
P.C.C.-6th, Tie
(7-3-0)
ALL TIME: Won 268, Lost 136, Tied 34
P.C.C.-3rd
ALL TIME: Won 290, Lost 142, Tied 39
206
Husky History
W
ear-By-Year Results
953
1956
1959
ach: John Cherberg
Coach: Darrel Royal
Coach: Jim Owens
ptain: Vern Londskog
Captains: Dean Derby and Corky Lewis
Captains: Game Captains
bt. 19
L
Colorado
20-21
31,792
Sept. 22
W
Idaho
53-21
25,185
Sept. 19
W
at Colorado
21-12
27,000
14-34
37,502
Sept. 26
W
Idaho
23-0
24,476
bt. 26
L
at Michigan
0-50
51,233
Sept. 29
L
Minnesota
t. 3
W
Oregon St.
28-0
27,399
Oct. 6
W
Illinois
28-13
36,261
Oct. 3
W
Utah
51-6
27,560
t. 10
T
Southern Cal
13-13
31,816
Oct. 13
W
Oregon
20-7
32,626
Oct. 10
W
Stanford
10-0
36,713
t. 17
W
at Oregon (Portland)
14-6
21,677
Oct. 20
L
at Southern Cal
7-35
44,749
Oct. 17
L
Southern Cal
15-22
54,497
t. 24
L
Stanford
7-13
41,234
Oct. 27
L
California
7-16
30,510
Oct. 24
W
at Oregon
13-12
37,000
t. 31
W
Utah
21-14
23,389
Nov. 3
L
at Oregon St. (Portland)
20-28
32,890
Oct. 31
W
at UCLA
23-7
32,838
V. 7
L
at California
25-53
36,000
Nov. 10
L
UCLA
9-13
27,950
Nov. 7
W
Oregon St.
13-6
45,317
W
at California
20-0
38,800
V. 14
L
at UCLA
6-22
13,302
Nov. 17
W
at Stanford
34-13
21,000
Nov. 14
DV. 21
L
Washington St.
20-25
39,534
Nov. 24
W
at Washington St.
40-26
20,600
Nov. 21
W
Washington St.
20-0
55,782
154-217
232-206
Jan. 1
W
Wisconsin (Rose Bowl)
44-8
100,809
253-73
-6-1)
(5-5-0)
C.C.-7th
P.C.C.-5th
(10-1-0)
LL TIME: Won 293, Lost 148, Tied 40
ALL TIME: Won 305, Lost 165, Tied 41
A.A.W.U.-1st
ALL TIME: Won 321, Lost 179, Tied 42
954
1957
1960
bach: John Cherberg
Coach: Jim Owens
aptain: Stewart Crook
Captains: Whitey Core, Jim Jones
Coach: Jim Owens
ept. 18
W
Utah
7-6
25,754
Sept. 21
T
Colorado
6-6
34,684
Captains: Game Captains
63,512
Sept. 17
W
College of Pacific
55-6
39,047
ept. 25
L
Michigan
0-14
37,416
Sept. 28
L
at Minnesota
7-46
ct. 2
W
at Oregon St. (Portland)
17-7
19,667
Oct. 5
L
Ohio St.
7-35
36,328
Sept. 24
W
Idaho
41-12
35,996
35,678
L
at UCLA
0-19
24,899
Oct. 1
L
Navy
14-15
57,379
ct. 9
L
UCLA
20-21
Oct. 12
ct. 16
L
at Baylor
7-34
22,000
Oct. 19
L
Stanford
14-21
36,036
Oct. 8
W
at Stanford
29-10
24,032
L
at Stanford
7-13
25,000
Oct. 26
W
Oregon St.
19-6
29,231
Oct. 15
W
UCLA
10-8
54,152
ct. 23
L
7-26
36,064
Nov. 2
L
Southern Cal.
12-19
30,172
Oct. 22
W
at Oregon St. (Portland)
30-29
36,833
ct. 30
Oregon
California
6-27
37,881
Nov. 9
W
at Oregon
13-6
30,010
Oct. 29
W
Oregon
7-6
55,235
ov. 6
L
at Southern Cal
34-0
43,475
ov. 13
L
o
at Southern Cal
0-41
36,108
Nov. 16
W
at California
35-27
38,000
Nov. 5
W
ov. 20
L
at Washington St.
7-26
15,000
Nov. 23
L
Washington St.
7-27
47,352
Nov. 12
W
California
27-7
55,884
Nov. 19
W
o
at Washington St.
8-7
28,750
78-215
120-212
(3-6-1)
Jan. 2
W
Minnesota (Rose Bowl)
17-7
97,314
2-8-0)
P.C.C.-6th
272-107
.C.C.-8th
LL TIME: Won 295, Lost 156, Tied 40
ALL TIME: Won 308, Lost 171, Tied 42
(10-1-0)
A.A.W.U.-1st
ALL TIME: Won 331, Lost 180, Tied 42
1955
1958
Coach: John Cherberg
Coach: Jim Owens
1961
Captain: Bob McNamee
Captains: Game Captains
Sept. 17 W
Idaho
14-7
25,561
Sept. 20
W
San Jose St.
14-6
29,395
Coach: Jim Owens
W
at Minnesota
30-0
58,817
Sept. 27
W
Minnesota
24-21
38,716
Captains: John Meyers, Kermit Jorgensen
Sept. 24
Dct. 1
W
at Oregon (Portland)
19-7
29,113
Oct. 4
L
at Ohio St.
7-12
79,477
Sept. 23
L
Purdue
6-13
54,752
at Stanford
12-22
26,384
Sept. 30
W
at Illinois
20-7
41,319
Dct. 8
W
Southern Cal
7-0
35,955
Oct. 11
L
o
Dct. 15
L
Baylor
7-13
39,536
Oct. 18
L
UCLA
0-20
34,594
Oct. 7
W
Pittsburgh
22-17
54,411
43,392
Oct. 25
L
at Oregon St. (Portland)
12-14
29,514
Oct. 14
L
at California
14-21
43,000
Oct. 22
T
Stanford
7-7
Oct. 29
L
Oregon St.
7-13
28,204
Nov. 1
W
Oregon
6-0
33,225
Oct. 21
W
0
Stanford
13-0
52,741
at California
6-20
24,000
Nov. 8
L
0
at Southern Cal
6-21
33,083
Oct. 28
L
at Oregon
6-7
32,681
Nov. 5
L
L
at UCLA
17-19
47,519
Nov. 15
L
o
California
7-12
30,980
Nov. 4
T
Southern Cal.
0-0
54,916
Nov. 12
Nov. 19# W
Washington St.
27-7
33,023
Nov. 22
L
at Washington St.
14-18
24,051
Nov. 11
L
Oregon St.
0-3
49,652
141-93
102-146
Nov. 18
W
at UCLA
17-13
33,969
(5-4-1)
(3-7-0)
Nov. 25
W
Washington St.
21-17
49,676
P.C.C.-8th
119-98
P.C.C.-5th
ALL TIME: Won 300, Lost 160, Tied 41
ALL TIME: Won 311, Lost 178, Tied 42
(5-4-1)
#-Win #300
A.A.W.U.-2nd, Tie
ALL TIME: Won 336, Lost 184, Tied 43
207
W
Husky History
Year-By-Year Results
1962
1965
1968
Coach: Jim Owens
Coach: Jim Owens
Coach: Jim Owens
Captains: Rod Scheyer, Bob Monroe
Captains: Ron Medved, Ralph Winters
Captains: Jim Cope, Al Worley
Sept. 22
T
Purdue
7-7
56,076
Sept. 18
W
Idaho
14-9
54,682
Sept. 21
T
Rice
35-35
50,
Sept. 29
W
Illinois
28-7
53,471
Sept. 25
L
at Baylor
14-17
22,000
Sept. 28
W
at Wisconson
21-17
42,
Oct. 6
W
Kansas St.
41-0
50,841
Oct. 2
L
Ohio St.
21-23
54,132
Oct. 5
L
at Oregon St.
21-35
30,
Oct. 13
W
at Oregon St. (Portland)
14-13
30,030
Oct. 9
L
Southern Cal
0-34
57,533
Oct. 12
L
Oregon
0-3
52,
Oct. 20
W
at Stanford
14-0
30,700
Oct. 16
L
at California
12-16
35,000
Oct. 19
L
at Southern Cal
7-14
60,
Oct. 27
T
Oregon
21-21
56,823
Oct. 23
W
at Oregon
24-20
33,437
Oct. 26
W
Idaho
37-7
49,5
Nov. 3
L
at Southern Cal.
0-14
46,456
Oct. 30
W
Stanford
41-8
50,633
Nov. 2
T
California
7-7
50,2
Nov. 10
W
California
27-0
53,824
Nov. 6
L
at UCLA
24-28
46,084
Nov. 9
L
at Stanford
20-35
33,
Nov. 17
W
UCLA
30-0
53,430
Nov. 13
W
Oregon St.
28-21
53,187
Nov. 16
W
UCLA
6-0
52,5
Nov. 24
W
at Washington St.
26-21
35,494
Nov. 20
W
Washington St.
27-9
57,395
Nov. 23
L
at Washington St. (Spo.)
0-24
31,9
208-83
205-185
154-177
(7-1-2)
(5-5-0)
(3-5-2)
A.A.W.U.-2nd
A.A.W.U.-4th
Pac-8-8th
ALL TIME: Won 343, Lost 185, Tied 45
ALL TIME: Won 360, Lost 199, Tied 45
ALL TIME: Won 374, Lost 213, Tied 47
1963
1966
1969
Coach: Jim Owens
Coach: Jim Owens
Coach: Jim Owens
Captains: Dave Kopay, John Stupey
Captains: Tom Greenlee, Mike Ryan
Sept. 21
L
at Air Force
7-10
Sept. 17
W
Idaho
Captains: Ken Ballenger, Lee Brock
23,542
19-7
55,360
Sept. 20
L
at Michigan St.
11-27
63,0
Sept. 28
L
at Pittsburgh
6-13
27,136
Sept. 24
L
Air Force
0-10
56,110
Sept. 27
L
Oct. 5
L
55,942
Oct. 1
W
at Michigan
7-45
at Ohio St.
49,6
Iowa
7-17
38-22
80,241
Oct. 4
L
Ohio St.
Oct. 12
Oct. 8
L
14-41
at Southern Cal.
57,1
W
Oregon St.
34-7
53,827
14-17
55,960
Oct. 11
L
at California
19-11
Oct. 15
13-44
Oct. 19
W
Stanford
54,213
L
California
34,0
20-24
54,112
Oct. 18
L
at Oregon
Oct. 22
W
Oregon St.
6-10
Oct. 26
W
Oregon
53,89
26-19
35,690
10-7
50,596
Oct. 25
L
Nov. 2
Southern Cal.
22-7
55,738
Oct. 29
W
at Stanford
at Oregon
7-22
34,2
W
22-20
38,500
Nov. 1
L
at UCLA
Nov. 9
W
at California
Nov. 5
14-57
39-26
37,000
W
UCLA
34,8
16-3
55,536
Nov. 8
L
Stanford
Nov. 16
L
0-14
30,398
Nov. 12
L
7-21
at Oregon St.
50,9'
at UCLA
13-24
21,347
Nov. 15
L
Southern Cal
W
Washington St.
Nov. 19
7-16
Nov. 30
W
at Washington St.
51,40
16-0
57,300
19-7
33,800
Nov. 22
W
Washington St.
30-21
55,67
Jan. 1
L
Illinois (Rose Bowl)
7-17
96,957
171-141
(6-4-0)
116-304
183-141
(1-9)
(6-5-0)
A.A.W.U.4th
Pac-8-7th
A.A.W.U.-1st
ALL TIME: Won 366, Lost 208, Tied 45
ALL TIME: Won 375, Lost 222, Tied 47
ALL TIME: Won 349, Lost 190, Tied 45
1967
1970
1964
Coach: Jim Owens
Captains: Mac Bledsoe, Dean Halverson, Steve Thompson
Coach: Jim Owens
Coach: Jim Owens
Sept. 16
L
Nebraska
7-17
57,481
Captains: Bo Cornell, Tom Failla
Captains: Rick Redman, Charlie Browning
Sept. 23
W
Wisconsin
Sept. 19
L
Air Force
17-0
54,564
Sept. 19
W
Michigan St.
42-16
52,24
2-3
57,201
Sept. 30
W
at Air Force
30-7
Sept. 26
L
34,379
Michigan
3-17
56,10
Sept. 26# W
Baylor
35-14
57,302
Oct. 7
W
Oct. 3
W
Oct. 3
L
at Iowa
Oregon St.
13-6
56,033
Navy
56-7
55,29
18-28
47,906
Oct. 14
W
L
at Oregon
26-0
Oct. 10
L
7-9
33,500
California
28-31
Oct. 10
53,42
at Oregon St. (Portland)
33,853
Oct. 21
L
Southern Cal
Oct. 17
L
at Southern Cal
25-28
Oct. 17
W
at Stanford
6-23
6-0
58,754
56,16
30,468
Oct. 28
W
at California
Oct. 24
W
Oct. 24
L
23-6
0-7
30,000
at Oregon St.
29-20
27,91
Oregon
55,625
Nov. 4
L
Stanford
7-14
Oct. 31
W
Oregon
25-23
58,58
Oct. 31
W
at Southern Cal
14-13
52,048
47,906
Nov. 11
L
at UCLA
California
0-48
Nov. 7
L
Nov. 7
W
46,368
at Stanford
22-29
59,06
21-16
55,893
Nov. 25
L
Nov. 14
W
Washington St.
7-9
Nov. 14
W
49,041
UCLA
61-20
59,208
UCLA
22-20
54,264
136-130
Nov. 21
W
at Washington St. (Spo.)
43-25
33,20
Nov. 21
W
at Washington St.
14-0
33,635
(5-5-0)
334-216
139-110
(6-4-0)
A.A.W.U.-4th, Tie
(6-4)
A.A.W.U.-3rd
ALL TIME: Won 371, Lost 208, Tied 45
Pac-8-2nd, Tie
ALL TIME: Won 381, Lost 226, Tied 47
ALL TIME: Won 355, Lost 194, Tied 45
#-Win #350
208
Husky History
W
ear-By-Year Results
971
1974
1977
ach: Jim Owens
Coach: Jim Owens
Coach: Don James
ptains: Al Kravitz, Rick Huget, Steve Anderson, Sonny
Captains: Ray Pinney, Willie Hendricks, Dave Pear, Bob
Captains: Warren Moon, Blair Bush, Mike Rohrbach, Dave
Sixkiller
Martin
Browning
pt. 11
W
U.C. Santa Barbara
65-7
56,180
Sept. 14# W
Cinncinati
21-17
47,000
Sept. 10
L
+
Mississippi St.
18-27
45,050
pt. 18
W
Purdue
38-35
58,927
Sept. 21
W
Iowa St.
31-28
47,500
Sept. 17
W
San Jose St.
24-3
36,489
pt. 25
W
Texas Christian
44-26
59,956
Sept. 28
L
Texas A&M
15-28
54,000
Sept. 24
L
at Syracuse
20-22
12,839
t. 2
W
at Illinois
52-14
48,127
Oct. 5
L
at Texas
21-35
50,250
Oct. 1
L
at Minnesota
17-19
31,895
t. 9
L
Stanford
6-17
60,777
Oct. 12
L
at Oregon St.
9-23
26,951
Oct. 8
W
at Oregon
54-0
29,500
t. 16
L
o
at Oregon
21-23
44,200
Oct. 19
L
at Stanford
17-34
38,000
Oct. 15
W
Stanford
45-21
46,529
et. 23
W
Oregon St.
38-14
60,404
Oct. 26
W
Oregon
66-0
52,500
Oct. 22
W
Oregon St.
14-6
46,677
t. 30
W
at UCLA
23-12
36,545
Nov. 2
W
UCLA
31-9
52,000
Oct. 29
L
at UCLA
12-20
38,692
DV. 6
W
at California
30-7
36,000
Nov. 9
L
California
26-52
54,500
Nov. 5
W
at California
50-31
38,812
DV. 13
L
Southern Cal
12-13
59,982
Nov. 16
L
at Southern Cal
11-42
52,157
Nov. 12
W
Southern Cal
28-10
59,501
DV. 20
W
Washington St.
28-20
60,497
Nov. 23
W
at Washington St.
24-17
27,800
Nov. 19
W
Washington St.
35-15
60,964
357-182
272-285
Jan. 2
W
Michigan (Rose Bowl)
27-20
105,312
(5-6-0)
344-194
-3-0)
c-8-3rd
Pac-8-5th, Tie
+Forfeit-used ineligible player
LL TIME: Won 389, Lost 229, Tied 47
ALL TIME: Won 404, Lost 247, Tied 47
(10-2-0)
#-Win #400
Pac-8-1st
ALL TIME: Won 425, Lost 260, Tied 47
972
1975
oach: Jim Owens
1978
aptains: Bill Cahill, Sonny Sixkiller
Coach: Don James
Coach: Don James
ept. 9
W
Pacific
13-6
57,500
Captains: Ray Pinney, John Whitacre, Dan Lloyd, Al
Burleson
Captains: Michael Jackson, Nesby Glasgow, Jeff Toews,
ept. 16
W
Duke
14-6
59,200
Scott Greenwood
50,194
22-21
60,102
Sept. 13
L
at Arizona St.
12-35
ept. 23
W
at Purdue
Sept. 9
L
UCLA
7-10
55,780
31-11
60,200
Sept. 20
L
Texas
10-28
56,000
ept. 30
W
Illinois
Sept. 16
W
Kansas
31-2
49,624
ct. 7
23-17
61,000
Sept. 27
W
Navy
14-13
53,000
W
Oregon
40,244
Oct. 4
W
at Oregon
27-17
28,500
Sept. 23
L
at Indiana
7-14
ct. 14
L
at Stanford
0-24
56,000
Oct. 11
L
at Alabama
0-52
58,000
Sept. 30
W
at Oregon St.
34-0
30,000
ct. 21
L
at Southern Cal.
7-34
59,151
Oct. 7
L
Alabama
17-20
60,975
35-21
56,300
Oct. 18
L
Stanford
21-24
45,000
ct. 28
W
California
Oct. 14
W
at Stanford
34-31
58,079
W
23-16
31,923
Oct. 25
W
Oregon St.
35-7
43,500
ov. 4
at Oregon St.
Oct. 21
W
Oregon
20-14
49,602
30-21
59,000
Nov. 1
W
at UCLA
17-13
29,158
ov. 11
W
UCLA
Oct. 28
W
Arizona St.
41-7
54,866
ov. 18
L
at Washington St.
10-27
34,100
Nov. 8
L
at California
24-27
43,270
Nov. 4
W
Arizona
31-21
47,587
Nov. 15
W
Southern Cal
8-7
53,700
208-204
Nov. 11
L
at Southern Cal
10-28
54,071
Nov. 22
W
S-3-0)
Washington St.
28-27
57,100
Nov. 25
W
at Washington St. (Spo.)
38-8
35,187
ac-8-3rd, Tie
270-155
196-250
LL TIME: Won 397, Lost 232, Tied 47
(6-5-0)
(7-4-0)
Pac-8-3rd, Tie
Pac-10-2nd, Tie
1973
ALL TIME: Won 410, Lost 253, Tied 47
ALL TIME: Won 432, Lost 264, Tied 47
Coach: Jim Owens
1979
Captains: Joe Tabor, John Whitacre, Butch Keenan,
1976
Sept. 15
L
Hawaii
7-10
52,500
Coach: Don James
Coach: Don James
Sept. 22
L
at Duke
21-23
22,500
Captains: Phil Foreman, Doug Martin, Antowaine
Captains: Robin Earl, Scott Phillips, Charles Jackson, Mike
Richardson, Joe Steele
Sept. 29
W
Syracuse
21-7
54,500
Baldassin
Sept. 8
W
Wyoming
38-2
47,530
Dct. 6
L
at California
49-54
28,000
Sept. 11
W
Virginia
38-17
40,412
Sept. 15
W
Utah
41-7
49,735
Dct. 13
L
Oregon St.
7-31
55,000
Sept. 18
L
Colorado
7-21
43,383
Sept. 22
W
0
Oct. 20
L
Stanford
14-23
51,500
at Oregon
21-17
42,500
Sept. 25
L
Indiana
13-20
40,425
Dct. 27
L
at Oregon
0-58
40,000
Sept. 29
W
Fresno St.
49-14
47,376
Oct. 2
W
Minnesota
38-7
40,694
Oct. 6
W
Oregon St.
41-0
49,881
Nov. 3
L
at UCLA
13-62
30,000
Oct. 9
W
0
at Oregon St.
24-12
27,096
Oct. 13
W
at Arizona St.
7-12
70,912
Nov. 10
W
Idaho
41-14
50,000
Oct. 16
L
0
at Stanford
28-34
36,000
Oct. 20
L
Pittsburgh
14-26
52,485
Nov. 17
L
o
Southern Cal.
19-42
55,500
Oct. 23
W
o
Oregon
14-7
43,129
Oct. 27
W
at UCLA
34-14
35,757
Nov. 24
L
Washington St.
26-52
56,500
Oct. 30
L
UCLA
21-30
47,187
Nov. 3
W
at California
28-24
25,000
218-376
Nov. 6
L
California
0-7
42,932
Nov. 10
L
Southern Cal
17-24
60,527
(2-9-0)
Nov. 13
L
at Southern Cal
3-20
49,264
Nov. 17
W
Washington St.
17-7
56,110
Pac-8-8th
Nov. 20
W
at Washington St. (Spo.)
51-32
35,800
Dec. 22
W
Texas (Sun Bowl)
14-7
33,412
ALL TIME: Won 399, Lost 241, Tied 47
237-207
321-154
(5-6-0)
+Forfeit-used ineligible player
Pac-8 4th, Tie
(10-2-0)
ALL TIME: Won 415, Lost 258, Tied 47
Pac-10-2nd
ALL TIME: Won 442, Lost 266, Tied 47
209
W
Husky History
Year-By-Year Results
1980
1983
1986
Coach: Don James
Coach: Don James
Coach: Don James
Captains: Tom Flick, Randy Van Divier, Rusty Olsen, Ken
Captains: Steve Pelluer, Rick Mallory, Stewart Hill, Dean
Captains: Kevin Gogan, Rod Jones, Rick Fenney, Steve
Gardner
Browning
Alvord, Reggie Rogers, Tim Peoples
Sept. 13
W
Air Force
50-7
44,999
Sept. 10
W
at Northwestern
34-0
26,165
Sept. 13
W
Ohio St.
40-7
61,
Sept. 20
W
Northwestern
45-7
49,975
Sept. 17
W
Michigan
25-24
60,638
Sept. 20
W
Brigham Young
52-21
61,
Sept. 27
L
Oregon
10-34
56,282
Sept. 24
L
at Louisiana St.
14-40
82,390
Sept. 27
L
at Southern Cal
10-20
58,
Oct. 4
W
at Oklahoma St.
24-18
48,200
Oct. 1
W
Navy
27-10
59,912
Oct. 4#
W
California
50-18
58,9
Oct. 11
W
at Oregon St.
41-6
33,000
Oct. 8
W
Oregon St.
34-7
60,354
Oct. 11
W
o
at Stanford
24-14
52,
Oct. 18
W
at Stanford
27-24
60,066
Oct. 15
W
Stanford
32-15
60,270
Oct. 18
W
Bowling Green
48-0
57,0
Oct. 25
L
Navy
10-24
48,841
Oct. 22
W
at Oregon
32-3
44,303
Oct. 25
W
Oregon
38-3
58,4
Nov. 1
W
Arizona St.
25-0
48,691
Oct. 29
L
at UCLA
24-27
60,094
Nov. 1
L
at Arizona St.
21-34
71,3
Nov. 8
W
Arizona
45-22
49,341
Nov. 5
W
at Arizona
23-22
48,808
Nov. 8
W
at Oregon St.
28-12
29,
Nov. 15#
W
at Southern Cal
20-10
55,512
Nov. 12
W
Southern Cal
24-0
60,690
Nov. 15
T
UCLA
17-17
59,9
Nov. 22
W
at Washington St. (Spo.)
30-23
34,577
Nov. 19
L
Washington St.
6-17
59,220
Nov. 22
W
at Washington St.
44-23
40,0
Jan. 1
L
Michigan (Rose Bowl)
6-23
104,863
Dec. 26
L
Penn St. (Aloha Bowl)
10-13
37,212
Dec. 25
L
Alabama (Sun Bowl)
6-28
48,7
333-198
285-178
378-197
(9-3-0)
(8-4-0)
(8-3-1)
Pac-10-1st
Pac-10-2nd
Pac-10-2nd, Tie
ALL TIME: Won 451, Lost 269, Tied 47
ALL TIME: Won 479, Lost 277, Tied 47
ALL TIME: Won 505, Lost 286, Tied 48
#-Win #450
#-Win #500
1984
1981
Coach: Don James
1987
Coach: Don James
Captains: Dan Eernissee, Danny Greene, Tim Meamber,
Coach: Don James
Captains: James Carter, Vince Coby, Fletcher Jenkins,
Jim Rodgers
Mark Jerue
Captains: Chris Chandler, Darryl Franklin, Brian Habib,
Sept. 8
W
Northwestern
26-0
55,364
David Rill
Sept. 12
W
Pacific
34-14
45,134
Sept. 15
W
at Michigan
20-11
103,072
Sept. 5
W
Stanford
31-21
73,6
Sept. 19
W
Kansas St.
20-3
52,343
Sept. 22
W
Houston
35-7
61,045
Sept. 12
W
Purdue
28-10
70,4
Sept. 26
W
at Oregon
17-3
40,685
Sept. 29
W
Miami (Ohio)
53-7
56,900
Sept. 19
L
at Texas A & M
12-29
58,1
Oct. 3
L
o
Arizona St.
7-26
50,410
Oct. 6
W
at Oregon St.
19-7
40,000
Sept. 26
W
Pacific
31-3
69,6
Oct. 10
W
o
at California
27-26
33,600
Oct. 13
W
at Stanford
37-15
44,500
Oct. 3
L
at Oregon
22-29
44,4
Oct. 17
W
Oregon St.
56-17
52,324
Oct. 20
W
Oregon
17-10
58,088
Oct. 10
W
Arizona St.
27-14
73,88
Oct. 24
W
at Texas Tech
14-7
36,335
Oct. 27
W
Arizona
28-12
59,876
Oct. 17
L
Southern Cal
23-37
71,6'
Oct. 31
W
Stanford
42-31
53,504
Nov. 3
W
California
44-14
59,462
Oct. 31
W
Oregon St.
28-12
66,39
Nov. 7
L
at UCLA
0-31
41,818
Nov. 10
L
at Southern Cal
7-16
71,838
Nov. 7
T
at Arizona
21-21
50,0
Nov. 14
W
Southern Cal
13-3
59,870
Nov. 17
W
at Washington St.
38-29
40,000
Nov. 15
L
at UCLA
14-47
70,3
Nov. 21
W
Washington St.
23-10
60,052
Jan. 1
W
Oklahoma (Orange Bowl)
28-17
56,294
Nov. 21
W
Washington St.
34-19
74,03
Jan. 1
W
Iowa (Rose Bowl)
28-0
105,611
352-145
Dec. 19
W
Tulane (Independ.) Bowl)
24-12
41,6
281-171
(11-1-0)
295-254
(10-2-0)
Pac-10-2nd
(7-4-1)
Pac-10-1st
ALL TIME: Won 490, Lost 278, Tied 47
Pac-10-3rd
ALL TIME: Won 461, Lost 271, Tied 47
ALL TIME: Won 512, Lost 290, Tied 49
1985
1982
Coach: Don James
1988
Coach: Don James
Captains: Joe Kelly, Vestee Jackson, Hugh Millen, Dennis
Captains: Anthony Allen, Ken Driscoll, Paul Skansi, Mark
Soldat
Coach: Don James
Stewart
Sept. 7
L
Oklahoma St.
17-31
60,320
Captains: Ricky Andrews, Darryl Hall, Aaron Jenkins, Mik
Sept. 11
W
Texas-El Paso
55-0
53,966
Sept. 14
L
at Brigham Young
3-31
65,476
Zandofsky
Sept. 18
W
at Arizona
23-13
48,984
W
at Houston
Sept. 10
W
Sept. 21
at Purdue
29-12
20-6
20,522
56,12
Sept. 25
W
Oregon
37-21
Sept. 17
W
57,059
Sept. 28
W
UCLA
21-14
Army
31-17
60,425
66,12
Oct. 2
W
San Diego St.
46-25
55,528
Sept. 24
W
Oct. 5
W
at Oregon
19-13
San Jose St.
35-31
44,383
63,69
Oct. 9
W
California
50-7
Oct. 1
L
56,911
Oct. 12
UCLA
W
at California
28-12
17-24
49,000
71,22
Oct. 16
W
at Oregon St.
34-17
Oct. 8
W
38,000
Oct. 19
L
0
at Arizona St.
Oregon St.
10-0
20-21
58,771
70,93
Oct. 23
W
Texas Tech
10-3
Oct. 15
L
58,458
Nov. 2
W
Stanford
at Southern Cal
27-28
34-0
58,625
62,97
Oct. 30
L
.
Oct. 22
L
o
at Stanford
31-43
53,871
Nov. 9
L
0
at Arizona St.
7-36
67,474
at Oregon
14-17
45,97
Nov. 6
W
UCLA
10-7
Oct. 29
W
58,558
Nov. 16
Stanford
W
28-25
68,27
Nov. 13
W
at Arizona St.
17-13
Nov. 5
L
0
72,021
Arizona
13-16
65,60
Nov. 20
L
at Washington St.
Southern Cal
Nov. 12
W
20-24
California
36,571
28-27
58,82
20-17
Dec. 25
W
59,417
Maryland (Aloha Bowl)
Nov. 19
L
21-20
30,055
at Washington St.
31-32
40,00
Nov. 23
L
Washington St.
20-21
59,887
354-193
254-223
Dec. 30
W
Colorado (Freedom Bowl) 20-17
30,961
(10-2-0)
(6-5-0)
238-225
Pac-10-2nd
Pac-10-6th
(7-5-0)
ALL TIME: Won 471, Lost 273, Tied 47
ALL TIME: Won 518, Lost 295, Tied 49
210
Husky History
W
ar-By-Year Results
Washington Lettermen
89
A
Beall, Bruce 1985, '86, '87
Bean, Mike 1977
ch: Don James
Abel, Bob 1919, '20
Bearden, Garland 1984
tains: Dennis Brown, Cary Conklin, Martin Harrison, Andre Riley
Abel, Fred 1922, '23
Bechtol, Chuck 1937, '38, '39
t.9
W
Texas A & M
19-6
69,434
Able, Don 1914, '16
Beck Bill 1922, 23
t. 16
W
Purdue
38-9
66,392
Able, George 1914
Beck, Broussais 1907
23
L
at Arizona
17-20
50,935
Agen, Dan 1983, '84, '85
Beckett, Hugh 1924, '25
t. 30
Colorado
28-45
Aguirre, Dick 1959, 60
L
69,152
Beckett, Welton 1926
Ahonen, Art 1932, '33, '34
7
L
at Southern Cal
16-24
58,410
Bell, Curtis 1987
Akina, Duane 1976, 77, 78
14
W
Oregon
20-14
70,442
Bell, Joe 1969, '70
Akins, Al 1943
21
W
29-16
Bellman, Verne 1922, '23, '24
at California
20,000
Albrecht Ben 1970, 71, '72
Belmondo, Dave 1975
28
W
at UCLA
28-27
48,801
Albrecht Bill 1951, '52, 54
4
L
Arizona St.
32-34
64,695
Albritton, Vince 1981, '82, '83
Berg, Bob 1967, '68, '69
Berg, Elmer 1940, '41
11
W
at Oregon St.
51-14
32,147
Alkire, Andy 1960, '61, '62
Bergh, Arne 1951, '52, '53
18
W
Washington St.
20-9
73,527
Allen, Anthony 1979, '80, '81, '82
Bergmann, Marv 1957
30
W
Z
Florida (Freedom Bowl)
34-7
33,858
Allen, Cal 1969
Berlin, Gordon 1943, '44, '46, '47
Allen, Charles 1958, '59, '60
298-218
Bernhardi, Lee 1961, '62
Allen, John 1983, '84
4-0)
Bertheau, Rene 1956, '57
Allman, Mike, 1987, '88
Bethea, Cliff 1977
-10-2nd, Tie
Alozie, Eric, 1989
Beuch, William 1944
Alvarado, Tony 1980, '82, '83
Bevandich, Louis 1945
Alvord, Steve, 1984, '85, '86
990
Beymer, Jim 1965
Ames, Bill 1986, '87, '88
Bianchini, Paul 1974, '75
ach: Don James
Ames, Floyd 1906
Bibbs, Dwight 1994
ptains: Eric Briscoe, Dean Kirkland, Greg Lewis, Travis Richardson
Andersen, Hjalmer 1946, '47
Biddle, Brooks 1946 '47, '48
pt. 8
W
San Jose St.
20-17
66,337
Anderson, Bob 1966, '67, '68
Bird, Harry 1938, '39
ot. 15
W
at Purdue
20-14
33,113
Anderson, Herman 1911, '12, '13, '14
Black, George 1951, '52, '53
pt. 22
W
Southern Cal
31-0
72,617
Anderson, James 1973, '74, 75
Black, John 1921
ot. 29
L
at Colorado
14-20
52,868
Anderson, Johnny, 1987
Blacken, Ron 1978, 79, '80
Anderson, Oscar 1971
6
W
at Arizona St.
42-14
62,738
Blake, Beull 1917, '19
Anderson, Steve 1971
13
W
Oregon
38-17
73,498
Blanks, Harvey 1967, '68
Andre, Phil 1971, 72
20
W
at Stanford
52-16
36,500
Bledsoe, Clarence 1930, '31
Andrews, George 1894
Bledsoe, Mac 1965, '66, '67
27
W
California
46-7
71,427
Andrews, Ricky 1985, '86, '87, '88
Bliss, Bernard 1911, '12, '13
ov. 3
W
Arizona
54-10
70,111
Andrilenas, Jim 1971, 73
Boggs, Ralph 1906
ov. 10
L
UCLA
22-15
71,925
Antoncich, Mark 1932
Bohart, Milt 1951, '52, '53
DV. 17
W
at Washington St.
55-10
37,600
Antoncich, Pete 1931, '32
Bonamy, Douglas 1925, '26, '27
1
W
Z
Iowa (Rose Bowl)
46-34
101,273
Apking, Fritz 1949, '50
Bond, Chuck 1934, '35, '36
440-184
Apostle, Tony 1971
Bond, Chuck 1963
Armstrong, Don 1956, 57, '58
)-2-0)
Bond, Randall 1935
Arnason, Hal 1945
c-10-1st
Bonner, Glen 1972, 73
Arrivey, Pete 1953, '54
LL TIME: Won 536, Lost 301, Tied 49
Bonwell, Tony 1971, 72
Attridge, Arthur 1896
Borden, Fred 1931, '32
Austin, Everett 1935, '36, '37
Borders, Phil 1958
Austin, Gerry 1942, '43, '46, '47
Boulton, Silas 1932, '33
Ionorary Letter Winners
Boustead, Bob 1973, "74
B
Bowen, Joe 1927
acon, Hank 1929
Jacobi, Lee 1935
Smith, Bernard 1941
Babcock Frank 1904, '05, '08
Boyd, Neil 1949, '50, 51
ronson, Dick 1915
Jones, Elton 1929
Smith, Charles 1922
Bagshaw, Enoch 1903, '04, '05, '06, '07
Boyd, Skip 1972, 73, '74
rown, Mac 1922
Mackie, Paul 1909
Sweeney, Edward 1914
Bailey, Cary 1981
Boyd, Stan 1956
ord, Ed 1929
McInroe, Lloyd 1922
Turner, Wendall 1922
Bailey, Mario 1989, '90
Boyle, Glenn 1932, '33
freen, Lloyd 1923
Mitchell, John 1927
VanWoert, Ross 1929
Bailey, Walter 1990
Bracken, Joe, 1986
laggerty, Don 1926
Palmer, Burton 1923
Vaughan, Bob 1941
Baker D.L. 1909
Brady, John 1970, '71, 72
lansberry, Milt 1941
Palmer, Rex 1929
Watson, Ib 1929
Balchunas, Tony 1942, '43
Bragdon, Roger 1906
larney, Gerald 1927
Reeve, Stanley 1926
Wiatrak, Paul 1941
Baldassin, Mike 1974, 75, '76
Bramwell, Steve 1963, '64, '65
(udson, Wesley 1941
Schiveley, Hugh 1913
Baldwin, Kenny 1983
Brandt Gary 1964, '65, '66
Ballenger, Ken 1967, '68, '69
Brandt, Rich 1956, 57
Bantz, Burwell 1905, '06, '07, '08
Breda, Firmo 1936, '37, '38
Retired Husky Jerseys
Barber, Rich 1984
Brennan, Bob 1981
only three Jersey numbers have been retired in the 100-year history of Husky
Barmon, Jack 1942
Bresolin, Andy 1980, '81
otball-No. 2, No. 33 and No. 44. Halfback Chuck Carroll, a consensus All America
Barnes, Bill 1964, '65, '66
Bridges, Corky 1953
1928 and a Flaherty Award winner, had his No. 2 retired shortly after a banner
Barrett Robert 1941
Briggs, Gary 1977, 78, '79
enior year. Halfback George Wilson, three-year letterman from 1923-25, wore
Barry, Jay 1989, '90
Briggs, Mike 1961, '62, '63
umber 33 when he led the Huskies to two Rose Bowl encounters and became the
Bates, Bill 1928, '29
Brimhall, Dennis 1971
rst consensus All-America in school history. Another running back, Roland Kirkby,
Baty, Rank 1969, '70
Brinker, Dode 1904, '05
ad his jersey number 44 permanently retired some 25 years later when he graduated
Bauer, Steve 1977, '78
Briscoe, Eric 1987, '88, '89, '90
a three-year letterman in 1950.
Bayard, Ralph 1969, 70
Brix, Egbert 1924, '25
Bayer, George 1946, '47, '48, '49
Brix, Herman 1925, '26, '27
Bayle, David 1979, '80
Brock, Lee 1967, '68, '69
211
W
Husky History
Washington Lettermen
Bronson, Gordy, 1975
Chambers, Dean 1951, '52, '53
Cruver, Al 1936, '37
DuPree, Dave 1966, '67
Brooke, Dean 1976
Chandler, Chris 1984, '85, '86, '87
Cuesta, Tony 1976
Durham, Bert 1896
Brooks, Greg 1975, 76, 77
Chandler, Jeff 1987, '88, '89
Cunningham, Dan 1969, '70
Brooks, Neil 1941, '42
Chapman, John 1985
Cunningham, Ed 1988, '89, '90
Brose, Ted 1981, '82, '83
Chapman, Myers 1914
Cunningham, Francois 1982
E
Brostek, Bern, 1986, '87, '88, '89
Chappell, Blaise 1983, '85
Cupic, Steve 1977
Eakins, Maxwell 1908, '09, '10
Brougham, Dave 1945
Chapple, Stan 1958, '59, '60
Curtis, Mike 1977, '80
Earl, Randy 1975
Brougham, Milton 1934, '35
Charleston, William 1924, '25, '26
Cushman, Tom 1915
Earl, Robin 1973, '74, 75, '76
Brown, Bill 1985
Chavira, Dan 1976, 77, 78, '79
Cutting, Judson 1924, '25, '26
Earley, Bill 1950, '51, '52
Brown, Corey 1989
Cheeks, Chris 1987
Easton, Ray 1969, '70
Brown, Dennis 1979, '80, '81, '82
Chenevert Cornelius 1974
Brown, Dennis 1986, '87, '88, '89
Cherberg, John 1930, '31, '32
D
Echols, Bob 1957, '58, '59
Eckmann, Ray 1919, '20, '21
Brown, Reggie 1973, '74
Christenson, Tag 1943
Dahlquest, John 1927, '28
Edwards, John 1976, 77
Browning, Charlie 1962, '63, '64
Christie, Morris 1905
Dahlquist, Eric 1984
Eernissee, Dan 1982, '83, '84
Browning, Dave 1976, 77
Claridge, Bruce 1956, '57, '58
Dailey, Ervin 1917, '19, '20
Eicher, Jim 1971
Browning, Dean 1981, '82, '83
Claridge, Pat 1958, '59, '60
Dailey, Walter 1922
Elich, Pete 1951, '52, '53
Brownlee, Brandy 1987
Clark, Arthur 1906
Daley, Bill 1982
Eliott, Walt 1937, '38
Broz, William 1927, '28, '29
Clark, Earl F. 1912, '13
Dallas, Marshall 1946, '47, '48
Elswick, Pète 1971, 72, 73
Bruce, Gail 1945, '46, '47
Clark, Gary 1961, '62
Darden, Michael 1988
Emerson, P.A. 1990
Bruce, James 1913
Clark, George 1907
Dash, Wally 1945
Emerson, Ralph 1938, '40
Brunell, Mark 1990
Clark, John 1942
Dasso, Gary 1959
Emtman, Steve 1989, '90
Bryan, James 1920, '22, '23
Clark, Newman 1919, '20, 21
Davidson, Ben 1959, '60
Enders, Dave 1970, 71, '72
Bryant, Beno 1989, '90
Clark, Ron 1965
Davillier, Craig 1975
England, Negley 1932, '33
Buck, Parker 1943
Clawson, David 1979, '80
Davis, Mel 1949, '50
Enslow, Dave 1957, '60
Bukland, Charlie 1971
Cleland, Thane 1983, '84, '85, '86
Davis, Nat 1955
Erdman, Tom 1928
Bufkin, Burl 1932, '34
Clifford, James 1988, '89
Day, Dick 1955, '56, '57
Erickson, Bob 1941, '42
Bulger, Ace 1968, '69, '70
Clinton, Eddie 1932, '33
Day, Mark 1969, '71
Erickson, Bud 1935, '36, '37
Bullard, Barry 1958, '59, '60
Clinton, Frank 1943
Dean, Fred 1974
Erickson, Walder 1923, 24
Bullard, Tim 1960, '61
Clinton, James 1945
Dean, Homer 1904
Erlandson, Tom 1985, '86, '97
Burke, Tony 1933, '34
Cloidt, Joe 1948, '49, '50
Dearborn, Phil 1944
Esary, Tim 1987
Burkhalter, Eugene 1987, '88, '89
Coby, Vince 1978, 79, '81
DeCourcy, Keith 1944
Esser, Jerry 1953, '55
Burleson, Alvin 1973, 74, 75
Coffey, Junior 1962, '63, '64
Deeks, Don 1942, '43
Etherington, Thomas 1924
Burmeister, Bob 1969, '70
Coker, Cliff 1966, '67
DeFeo, Brenno 1981, '83, '84
Everett, Jim 1961
Burnett, Bill 1947, '48, '49
Cole, Clarence 1905
DeGross, Mark 1987, '88, '89, '90
Ewing, Robert 1901
Burnham, Tim 1984, '85
Cole, David 1986
Derby, Dean 1954, '55, 56
Burnham, Tom 1979, '80, '81, '82
Cole, John 1924, '25
DeRoin, Hurley 1932, '33
Burrows, Rick 1896
Cole, Kenneth 1923
Devine, Richard 1911
F
Buse, August 1930, '31, '32
Coleman, Randy 1970, '71
Dicks, Norm 1961, '62
Failla, Tom 1968, '69, 70
Bush, Blair 1975, '76, 77
Coles, Mike 1943
Diehl, Bill 1963
Falk, Carl 1940, '41, '42
Busz, Scott 1984, '85, '86
Collins, Brett 1988, '89, '90
Diether, Louis 1909
Faulk, Ted 1916, '19, '20
Butler, Hillary 1990
Collins, Greg 1970, 71, 72
Dillon, Dave 1965, '66
Fauria, Lance 1984
Butler, Longie 1928
Collins, Michael 1981, '82, '83
Dinish, Dave 1965
Fausset, Scott 1980, '81, '82
Butler, Ray 1920
Compton, James 1987, '88, '89
Dinish, Dom 1969
Feleay, Don 1975, '76
Buzard, Bob 1928, '29
Conklin, Cary 1988, '89
Dirks, Clarence 1927, '28
Fennema, Carl 1946, '47
Conley, Glen 1939, '40, '41
Dochow, Mike 1973
Fenney, Rick 1983, '84, '85, '86
C
Conley, Ken 1973, 74
Doctor, William 1988, '89, '90
Ferguson, Al 1955, '56, 57
Conrad, Pat 1982
Dodd, Mike 1990
Ferguson, Bob 1970, 71, '72
Cahill, Bill 1970, 71, '72
Cook, Bill 1910
Dodson, Lance 1981, '82, '83
Ferry, Ed 1921
Cahill, Will 1910
Cook, John 1989, '90
Doheny, Brian 1971, 72, 73
Field, Frank 1899, 1900
Cain, Jim 1934, '35, '36
Cooke, Gene 1925, '26, '27
Dominque, Tony 1983, '85
Fields, Jaime 1989, '90
Cairney, Ralph 1930
Cooney, Adam 1987, '88, '89, '90
Dormaier, Phil 1982
Fink, Rob 1969
Caldwell, Tony 1980, '81, '82
Cope, Jim 1966, '67, '68
Dorman, Harry 1912, '13
Finn, Ray 1931, '32
Calhoun, AP. 1896, 1900
Corbet, G.H.J. 1901
Dorman, Ted 1940
Fitzgerald, Scott 1987, '88
Calkins, Julius 1916
Core, John 1955, '56, '57
Douglas, Bill 1962, '63, '64
Fitzpatrick Dennis 1973, 74
Camarillo, Rich 1979, '80
Cornell, Bo 1968, '69, '70
Douglas, Bud 1935, '36, '37
Flaherty, Guy 1906, '07
Campbell, W.M. 1900
Corson, H.W. 1900
Douglass, Don 1925, '26, 27
Fleming, George 1958, '59, '60
Canton, Eric 1988
Coryell, Don 1949
Dow, Don 1979, '80, '81, '82
Flanagan, John 1927, '28
Carlson, Wes 1945, '46
Cosgrove, J.G. 1900, '01
Downey, Darrell 1970, 72
Flannagan, Warren 1933, '34
Carahan, Don 1962
Coty, Paul 1980, '81, '82
Doyle, Pat 1987, '88
Flewelling, Roger 1967
Carnutt, J. 1906
Covington, Tony 1985, '86, '87, '88
Driscoll, Ken 1979, '80, '81, '82
Flick, Tom 1979, '80
Carr, Gary 1964, '65
Cowan, Tim 1980, '82
Dubois, Kinsley 1923, '24
Folkins Lee 1958, '59, '60
Carr, Luther 1956, '57, '58
Cox, Bob 1954
Dubsky, Joe 1937, '38, '39
Ford, D.A 1889, '92
Carroll, Charles 1926, '27, '28
Coyle, Wee 1908, '09, '10, '11
Duffy, E.J. 1900, '01
Foreman, Phil 1976, 77, 78, '79
Carrothers, Randy, 1979
Craig, Alan 1969, 70, '71
Duffy, Harold 1927
Forsberg, Fred 1963, '64, '65
Carry, Gary 1969, '70
Crawford, Mike 1957, '59
Dunlap, J.W.P. 1901
Forsyth, Harold 1906
Carter, James 1979, '80, '81
Crim, Owen 1903, '04, '05, '07
Dumas, Larry 1971
Foster, Bob 1929
Casarino, Dario 1980
Cristie, 1923
Dunn, Bob 1953, '54, '57
Foster, Pete 1946, '47
Cass, Greg 1965, '66
Cromer, Marshall 1976, 77, 78
Dunn, Dick 1960
Fountaine, Jamal 1990
Cattage, Ray 1980, '81, '82
Crook, Stew 1952, '53, '54
Dunn, Kenny 1949
Fraley, Chico 1988, '89, '90
Celoni, Dan 1973, 74, 75
Crow, Doug 1982, '83, '84
Dunn, Roger 1964, '65
Franklin, Darryl 1984, '85, '86, '87
212
Husky History
W
shington Lettermen
kowski, Ray 1939, '40, '41
Gundlach, W. 1921
Holmes, Alvin 1928, '29, '30
John-Lewis, Kelly 1987, '88
lier, Gordon 1893, '94
Guttormsen, George 1924, '25, '26
Holmes, Bill 1938, '40, '41
Johnson, Ching 1916
fier, Jack 1945
Holmes, Ron 1982, '83, '84
Johnson, Clifton 1979
burger, Ralph 1894
H
Holzgraf, Steve 1985, '86
Johnson, Dick 1935, '36, '37
dman, Bob 1940, '41, '42
Holzknecht, Ted 1949, '50, '51
Johnson, Erling 1949, '50
zie, Vince 1985
Habib, Brian 1986, '87
Hopkins, Hoover 1983
Johnson, Leif 1990
naono, Andy 1982, '85
Hadley, Ron 1983, '84, '85
Hornback, Jay 1932, '33, '34
Johnson, Tom 1986
nia, Ernie 1951
Hagen, Dick 1943, '44, '46, '47
Horton, Ray 1979, '80, '81, '82
Johnston, Jim 1936, '37, '38
Hagen, Koll 1962, '63, '64
Hosack, George 1944
Jolley, Chris 1989
Hagen, Leslie 1944
Hosely, Rex 1910
Jones, Arnold 1955, '56
Hahn, Frank 1954
Hossfeld, Walt 1952
Jones, Calvin 1970, '71, '72
ke, Fred 1934, '35
Haines, By 1934, '35, '36
Houlihan, Barry 1972
Jones, Don 1937, '39
fney, Mike 1984, '85, '86
Hainsworth, Bill 1916
Houston, Herman 1969
Jones, Donald 1988, '89, '90
liardi, Bret 1976, 77, 78, '80
Hall, Dana 1988, '89, '90
Houston, Jim 1953, '54, '55
Jones, Frank 1976
hes, Robert 1975, '76, 77, 78
Hall, Darryl 1986, '87, '88
Howard, Colin 1930, '31, '32
Jones, Jim 1955, '56, '57
igan, Glen 1921
Hall, Wayne 1921, 22, '23
Hoyt, Bill 1942
Jones, Joe 1959, '60
bia, Willy 1975, '76, 77, '78
Hallock Gene 1955, '56
Hudson, Ron 1966, '67
Jones, Marc 1989, '90
uska Dick 1969, '70, 71
Halverson, Dean 1965, '66, '67
Huebel, Jack 1939, '40
Jones, Mark 1987, '88, '89, '90
denhire, John 1980, '81
Hamer, Ken 1980
Hufford, Merle 1929, '30, '31
Jones, Matt 1990
dner, Ken 1978, '79
Hammon, Ira 1970
Huget, Jeff 1966, '67, '68
Jones, Rod 1984, '85, '86
dner, Osborne 1901
Hammond, Ben 1956
Huget, Rick 1969, 70, '71
Jones, Scott 1985, '86, '87, '88
dner, Ray 1917
Hanley, Myron 1922, '24, '26
Hughes, Dave 1949, '50
Jones, Steve 1986, '87, '88
land, John 1969
Hannah, Mark 1968, '69
Huhta, Elmer 1926, '27, '28
Jones, Virgil 1988, '90
nett, Scott 1980, '81, '82, '83
Hansen, Trygley 1932, '33
Hullin, Tod 1964, '65
Jordon, Jeff 1964, '65, '66
rett, Leon 1975, 76
Hanson, Ole 1932, '33
Hultgren, Richard 1944
Jorgensen, Kermit 1959, '60, '61
retson, Frank 1938, '39
Hanson, Travis 1990
Hungar, Gordon 1945, '46, '47, '48
Jourdan, Roberto 1972, 73, 74, 75
pard, Curtis 1990
Hanzlik Steve 1969
Hunt, Ray 1912, '13, '14, '15
Judd, Charles 1948
son, Chades 1949
Hardy, Warren 1913
Hunt, Walt 1983, '84
Jugum, George 1966, '67, '68
ton, Carver 1957, '58, '59
Harlow, Herb 1946, '47
Hunter, Art 1987, '88, '89
ary, J.W. 1900
Haroldson, Bill 1932
Huntoon, R.W. 1899, '1900, '01
K
ehan, John 1926, '27, '29
Harper, Elbert 1920, '22
Hurley, Dennis 1968, '70
gner, Kurt 1958, '59, '60
Harper, P.C. 1899
Hurworth, Sam 1958, '59, '60
Kadletz, Jon 1969
hring, Rob 1974, 75, 76
Harrais, Martin 1893, '94, '96
Husby, Pete 1910, '11
Kaloper, Jerry 1968
latley, Lester 1914
Harrell, Bruce 1976, 77, 78, 79
Hyatt, Gary 1986
Kahn, Dan 1987
is, Phil 1950, '51, '52
Harris, Jim 1967, '68, '69
Hyndman, Bill 1919
Karr, Hay 1896
uly, James 1917
Harrison, Martin 1986, '87, '88, '89
Katsenes, Jim 1970
more, Robert 1944
Harrison, Walt 1940, '41, '42
Kean, Al 1947, '48
I
son, Ron 1976, 77, 78, '79
Harvey, Chet 1957
Keely, Rick 1969
en, Dick 1945
Harvey, Derek 1979, '80
Ikeda, Kevin 1982
Keinholtz, Leon 1921
sgow, Nesby 1975, 76, 77, 78
Hasselbach, Harold 1989
Ingalls, Jerry 1971
Keller, Ward 1952
ason, Bill 1938, '39, '40
Hatch, Larry 1946, '47, '48
Ingram, Robert 1920, '21, '22
Kelly, Joe 1982, '83, '84, '85
nn, Harold 1919, '20
Hawkins, David 1986, '87, '88
Isaacson, Ted 1931, '32, '33
Kelso, Al 1971, '72
nnon, Bill 1965, '66, '67
Hawkins, Pedro 1973, 74, 75
Kennamer, Buddy 1968, '69
gan, Kevin 1984, '85, '86
Hayes, Andre 1985
Kennan, Washington 1971, 72, '73
rman, Don 1971, 72
Hayes, Rick 1970, 71, 73
J
Kennedy, Florren 1945
sselin, Dan 1969, 71
Haynes, Hanford 1921, '22
Jackson, Charles 1973, 74, 75, '76
Kennedy, Lincoln 1989, '90
ssett, Dev 1948, '49
Hazelett, Calvin 1913
Jackson, Michael 1975, 76, 77, 78
Kerley, John 1976, 77, 78
udeau, Marc 1988
Hack, Jim 1956, '57, '58
Jackson, Ray 1959, '60
Kester, Todd 1987
abenhorst, Coburn 1937, '38
Hein, Marvin 1945
Jackson, Ron 1980, '81, '83, '84
Keyes, Stewart 1983
ant, Ron 1977
Heinrich, Don 1949, '50, '52
Jackson, Vestee 1983, '84, '85
Kezer, Glen 1961, '62
aves, Bob 1973, 74, 75
Heinrich, Kyle 1976, 77, '78
Jaeger, Jeff 1983, '84, '85, '86
Kilpack, Mark 1987, '88, '90
een, Bud 1954
Heinz, Robbie 1962, '63, '64
Jakl, Larry 1966
Kindred, Burdette 1937, '38
een, Credell 1955, '56
Hemphill, Frank 1975
James, Allen 1983, '84, '85, '86
King, Richard 1944, '48
een, Mike 1973, '74, 75
Hemstad, Alf 1945, '46, '47, '48
James, Chris 1980, '81, '82
King, Tracy 1950, '51, 52
eene, Danny 1980, '81, '83, '84
Hendricks, Willie 1973, '74
James, Gary 1967, '68
King, Whitey 1946
eene, Hamilton 1921
Herring, Bob 1955, '56
Janet, Ernie 1968, '69, '70
Kinnune, Bill 1958, '59, '60
eenlee, Tom 1964, '65, '66
Hewitt, Lynn 1961, '62
Janowicz, Vince 1966, '67
Kirk, Douglas 1925
eenwood, Dick 1939, '40, '41
Hicks, Richard 1989, '90
Jaquot, Fred 1912, '13
Kirk, Jim 1965, '66
eenwood, Scott 1975, 76, 77, 78
Hill, Bill 1938
Jarvis, Bruce 1968, '69, '70
Kirkby, Roland 1948, '49, '50
egor, William 1927, '28, '29
Hill, Clinie 1896, '99
Jarvis, Paul 1905, '06, '08
Kirkland, Dean 1988, '89, '90
egory, Rusty 1974, 75
Hill, Lonzell 1983, '84, '85, '86
Jaton, Bruce 1946
Kirkpatrick, James 1982, '83, '84
iffith, Clay 1986
Hill, Ray 1921, '22, '23
Jeager, William 1906
Klinge, Dick 1938
iffiths, Burke 1913
Hill, S.B. 1899, 1900
Jenkins, Aaron 1985, '86, '87, '88
Knoll, Jerry 1962, '63,
iffiths Tom 1909, '10, '11, '12
Hill, Stewart 1981, '82, '83
Jenkins, Fletcher 1979, '80, '81
Knoll, Jon 1962, 63, '64
imes, Greg 1977, 78, '79
Hill, William 1902, '03
Jensen, Dell 1954, '55
Knowles, Robert 1944
timm, Huber 1905, '07, '09, '10
Hinds, Sterling 1981, '82, '83
Jensen, Jason 1990
Knudson, Roy 1917
imm, Warren 1908, '09, '10, 'll
Hinds, Steve 1963, '64, '65
Jerome, Todd 1989
Kohlwes, Jeff 1987, '88
timm, William 1915, '16, '19, '22
Hivner, Bob 1958, '59, '60
Jerue, Mark 1978, 79, '80, '81
Kopay, Dave 1961, '62
hinn, Gordy 1970, 71, 72
Hobi, Edwin 1920, '21
Jessup, Paul 1927, '28, '29
Kopay, Tony 1961
Hoffmann, Dave 1989, '90
Johanson, Bob 1976
Kraetz, Sam 1928, '29
213
W
Husky History
Washington Lettermen
Krakoski, Joe 1981, '82, '83, '84
Lustyk, Mike 1989, '90
Miller, Fred 1970, 71, '72
McKay, Walton 1907
Kralik, Joe 1990
Lutes, Dave 1974, 75
Miller, Herman 1919
McKechnie, Ross 1915
Kramer, Bruce 1964, '65
Lutu, Frank 1986, '87
Miller, Merle 1936, '37, '38
McKeta, Don 1958, '59, '60
Kramer, Wally 1943
Lutu, Leroy 1980, '82, '83
Millich, Don 1957, '59
McKinnon, Mickey 1954
Kravitz, Al 1970, 71
Mills, Lamar 1968
McLain, Jerry 1977, '78, '79, '80
Kreutz, Mark 1973, 74, '75
M
Milus, Ron 1982, '83, '84, '85
McLeod, Rick 1986, '87
Krieg, Jim 1970, '71
Mincy, Charles 1989, '90
McMahon, Mark 1969, '70
Kristof, Jim 1972, 73, '74
Mackey, Willis Ray 1979
Mitchell, 1893
McNair, Troy 1989
Kroon, Bruce 1984
Mackie, Brent 1978
Mitchell, Charlie 1960, 61, '62
McNamee, Bob 1953, '54, '55
Kronfield, Harry 1917
Madsen, Lynn 1981, '82, '83
Mitchell, James 1986
McPherson, Andrew 1914
Kucinskas, Stan 1951, '52, 53
Magee, Tom 1952, '54
Mitchell, LaMar 1990
McPherson, K. 1899, 1900
Kuharski, Rob 1982, '83,
Maggart, Mike 1966, '67, '68
Mitchell, Mason 1964
McRae, Ed 1923, '24
Kuhn, Ed 1922, '23, '24
Maguire, Ernest 1910
Mitchell, Sam 1950, '51, '52
McVeigh, Dick 1956, 57
Kupp, Jake 1961, '62, '63
Maher, Dennis 1981, 83, '84
Mittlested, Bill 1929
Kyllingstad, Jack 1952, '53, 54
Malamala, Siupeli 1988, '89, '90
Mizen, John 1938, '40
Malone, Art 1985, 86, '87, '88
Mladnich, Nick 1931
N
L
Mallory, Rick 1981, '82, '83
Mondala, Mitchell 1934, '35, 36
Navarro, Joel 1986
Malvar, Caesar 1989
Monlux, Earl 1953, '54, '55
Nelson, Bill 1939, '40, '41
Labrousse, Dave 1976
Mancuso, Joe 1963, '65
Monroe, Bob 1960, '61, '62
Nelson, Bob 1945, '46
Lambright, Eric 1984, '85
Mangan, Jim 1950, 51
Monroe, Mike 1953, '55
Nelson, Chuck 1980, '81, '82
Lambright, Jim 1963, '64
Manke, Tom 1967, '68
Moon, Warren 1975, '76, '77
Nelson, Frank 1954, '55
Lang, Le-Lo, 1986, '87, '88, '89
Mansfield, Ray 1960, '61, '62
Moore, Bob 1943, '44, '45
Nelson, John 1961
Langehorne, Clifford 1921
March, Willis 1917
Moore, Don 1965, '66
Nelson, Tom 1969
Langer, Jerry 1953, '54
Marcus, Clifton 1973, '74
Mora, Jim 1981, '82, '83
Neubauer, Lance 1979, '80
Lansford, Mike 1978, '79
Markham, Tom 1915
Moraga, Rudy 1976, 77, 78, '79
Newsome, Vince 1979, '80, '81, '82
Lantz, Clinton 1902, '03
Markov, Ted 1933, '34, '35
Moran, Eric 1980, '81, '82
Newton, Charles 1936, '37, '38
Lappenbusch, Charles 1930
Markov, Vic 1935, '36, '37
Moran, Malcolm 1917
Nicholl, Dick 1958
Lariza, Frank 1951, '52
Marquiss, Guy 1975
Morehead, Donnie 1984
Nichols, Ralph 1893, '94
Larsen, Bill 1952
Marsh, Bill 1929, '30, '31
Morgan, Carl 1957
Niles, Wendell 1952, '53
Larsen, Mark 1984, 85, '86
Marsh, Curt 1977, 78, '79, '80
Morrison, Victor 1916
Nisbet, Dave 1930, '31, '32
Larson, Clarence 1894, '96, '99
Marshall, Bill 1981
Moses, Wayne 1973, 74, '76, 77
Nixon, Byng 1938, '39, '40
Larson, Leonard 1942
Martin, Bob 1973, '74
Mucha, Chuck 1932, '33, '34
Noble, Bernard 1913
Lauzon, Romeo 1925, '26, '27
Martin, Don 1965, '66, '67
Mucha, Rudy 1938, '39, '40
Noble, Elmer 1914, '15, '16
Lazaravich, Dan 1933, '34, '35
Martin, Doug 1976, '77, 78, '79
Mucklestone, Melville 1908, '09, 'll
Noe, Jim 1951, '52, '53
Leader, Ed 1912, '13
Martin, Elmer 1930, '31
Muczynski, Matt 1932, '33, '34
Noeltner, Rick 1976
Leader, Elmer 1913, '14, 15
Martin, Greg 1975
Murphine, Tom 1894
Norton, Gene 1949, '50, '51
Leaphart, Robert 1981, '82, 83
Martin, Robert 1934
Murphy, Ernest 1915, '16, '17
Norton, Jim 1962, '63, '64
Lederman, Sandy 1953, '54, 55
Marx, William 1938, '39, '40
Murphy, Pat 1954
Norton, John 1945
Lee, Ken 1967, '68, '70
Mason, Andy 1990
Norwood, Lyle 1964, '65
Lee, Mark 1977, '78, '79
Mathews, Jim 1985
Leeland, Jeff 1977, 78
Mathews, Robert 1907
Mc
Nowogroski, Ed 1934, '35, '36
Nugent Jack 1952, '53
Leland, Dave 1956, '57
Matronic, Carl 1936, '37
MacFarlane, Doug 1950
Nykreim, Mike 1975
Lenau, Jim 1938
Matter, Kurt 1970, '71, '72
MacKinzie, Jack 1934, '35, '36
Lenfesty, Robert, 1930, '31
Mattes, Frank 1935, '36, '37
McAdams, Dean 1938, '39, '40
Levenhagen, Robert 1944, '47, '48
Matthew, David 1981
McBride, Cliff 1976
Lewis, Corky 1954, '55,
Matthews, Keilan 1985, '86
McCabe, Jim 1966, '67
O'Bannon, Mike 1964
Lewis, Greg 1987, '88, '89, '90
Mattson, William 1907, '08, '09
McCallum, John 1988, '89
Oberg, Art 1930, '32
Lewis, Tony, 1983, '84
Matz, Mike 1986, '87, '88, '89
McCann, Joe 1927, '28
O'Brien, Jim 1949, '50, '51
Libke, Al 1963, '64, '65
Maurer, Al 1969, '70
McCarter, Jim 1955, '57
O'Brien, John 1963
Lightning, Shawn 1987
May, Charles 1909
McClary, Doug 1951, '52, '53
O'Brien, William 1930, '31, '32
Lillis, Jack 1922, '23, '24
Mayfield, Ben 1916
McClinton, Dave 1968
O'Connor, Chris 1979, '80, '81, '82
Lindquist Reese 1956, 57, '58
Mays, Stafford 1978, 79
McCluskey, Mike 1956, '57, '58
Ochs, Bill 1956
Lindsey, Jack 1896
Meader, Eilert 1928
McCorkle, Mark 1940, '41, '42
Ohler, Pete 1961, '62
Lindskog, Jack 1952, 53
Meamber, Tim 1981, '82, '83, '84
McCormick, Walter 1944
Oldes, Walter 1972, '73
Lindskog, Vern 1951, '52, 53
Means, Art 1936, '37, '38
McCullough, Ansel 1948, '50
O'Leary, Don 1949, '50
Linnin, Chris 1978, '79
Means, Don 1939, '40, '41
McCumby, Don 1955, '56, '57
Oliver, Vern 1943
Lipe, Steve 1973, 74, 75
Medved, Ron 1963, '04, '65
McCurdy, Jim 1944
Olsen, Kenneth 1926, '28
Lloyd, Dan 1972, '73, 74, '75
Melusky, Henry 1944, '46, '47, '48
McDonald, Mark 1973, '74
Olsen, Rusty 1979, '80
Locknane, Brent 1987
Meydenbaur,1893
McDonald, Tom 1903, '04, '05
Olson, Bud 1949, '50
Locknane, Duane 1960, '61, '62
Meyer, Ricky 1985, '86, '87
McDowell, Jay 1938, '39, '40
Olson, Chuck 1947, '48, '49
Logg, Charles 1917
Meyers, George 1943, '46, '47
McElhenny, Hugh 1949, '50, '51
Olson, Fred 1941, '42
Logg, David 1915
Meyers, John 1959, '60, '61
McElmon, Fred 1901, '02, '03, '04
Olson, Ron 1974, 75
Logg, Elmer 1934, '35, '36
Michael, Larry 1982, '83
McFarland, Murphy 1972, 73
Olson, Vern 1976
Lokovsek, Leo 1950
Michael, Mike 1948, '49, '50
McGovern, William 1944, '45, '46,
Ormand, Alex 1976
Long, Scot 1977
Michanczyk, Ray 1954
'47, '48
Osterhout, Fred 1944, '45
Loomis, Scott 1971, '72
Middleton, Bob 1969
McHale, Rick 1965, '66, '67
Ostrom, H.C. 1893, '94
Lorentson, Elmer 1931, 32, '33
Minkler, Garfield 1901
McIntosh, Don 1942
Otis, Mike 1963, '64, '65
Lorrain, Vince 1965, '66
Mikalson, Bob 1946
McIntyre, Dick 1949
Ottele, Dick 1944, '46, '47
Lovelien, Bob 1968, '69, '70
Millen, Hugh 1984, '85
McKasson, Ray 1958, '59, '60
Lowell, Duane 1956, '57, '58
Miller, Cedric 1912, '13, '14, '15
McKay, Orlando 1989, '90
214
Husky History
ashington Lettermen
Q
Rosenhan, Chuck 1929
Sigworth, Jay 1903, '04
Rosenzweig, Jim 1948, '49, '50
Siler, Bill 1961, '62
ukoa, Jeff 1987, '89, '90
Quass, Harry 1921
Roth, Arnold 1931
Simmons, Joe 1975
ukoa, Shane 1989, '90
Quinn, Lou 1973, 74, 75
Roundun, Otis 1896
Simpson, Jess 1944
is, Chris 1980
Rowland, Chris 1973, 74, 75
Simpson, Jim 1986
mer, Bob 1930, '31
Rowland, Ron 1976, 77
Sixkiller, Sonny 1970, '71, 72
mer, IR 1905
R
Rudnick, Fred 1950, '51, '52
Skaggs, Jim 1959, '60, '61
mer, Rex 1930
Radke, Paul 1933, '34
Rulis, Ed 1935
Skansi, John 1983
ageorgiou, George 1978
Radner, Laurie 1944
Rumberger, Trip 1977
Skansi, Paul 1979, '80, '81, '82
e, Karl 1925, '26
Russell, Charley 1937
ker, Bill 1966
Railsbuck, Llewellyn 1904
Slater, Brian 1985, '86, '87, '88
ker, Lester 1921
Ramstedt, Julius 1930
Russell, George 1893
Sligh, Lither 1969, '71, '72
Randle, Ivory 1988
Russo, Sam 1926
Slivinski, Steve 1936, '37, '38
ker, Omar 1964, '65, '66
ker, Shirley 1906
Rawlins, Jack 1928
Ryan, Joe 1962, '63
Sloan, Bill 1939, '40, '41
Rawlinson, Don 1945
Ryan, L.D. 1899, 1900
Small, Fred 1981, '82, '83, '84
ks, Ralph 1981
Rawson, Errol 1917
Ryan, Mike 1964, '65, '66
Smalling, Ralph 1932, '33
meter, Eugene 1924
Ray, Eddie 1974, 75
Smith, Adney 1931, '32
ry, Doug 1987
sons, Dean 1952
Redman, Ray 1942
S
Smith, Bernard 1945
Redman, Rick 1962, '63, '64
Smith, Bill 1931, '32, '33
tridge, Jeff 1981, '82
Safford, Don 1962, '63
Smith, Bob 1948, '49
rick, Jack 1929, '30, '31
Redmond, Jerry 1953
Reed, Frank 1973, 74, 75
Sage, Ed 1952, '53
Smith, Brett 1984, '85
ten, Jack 1911, '12
Reed, William 1980
Sahli, Walter 1926, '27, '29
Smith, Charles 1913, '14
tison, Mark 1982, '83, '84
on, Harold 1924, '25, '26
Reese, H.L. 1899
Saksa, Frank 1942, '43, '46
Smith, Charles 1923
Rehn, Bruce 1948, '49, '50
Sampson, Jim 1963, '64
Smith, Chris 1979
itzke, Clarence 1928, '29, '30
Reid, Jim 1933
Sandberg, Dick 1951
Smith, Danianke 1990
seno, Dick 1955, '56, '57
abody, Dick 1894
Reilly, Mike 1979, '80
Sanders, Eugene 1974
Smith, David 1981
ar, Dave 1972, 73, 74
Rep, Ross 1905
Sanderson, James 1944
Smith, Dwight 1940
Reser, George 1907
Sanford, Joe 1976, 78, '79
Smith, Frank 1966, '67
arson, J.C. 1983, '84
Smith, George 1914, '15, '16, '19
asley, Ed 1957, '58, '59
Rhodes, Larry 1954
Sanford, Steve 1966
dersen, Geve 1954, '55, '56
Rice, Harry 1944, '45, '46
Sansregret, Norm 1945
Smith, George 1986, '88
Rice, Ray 1925
Sartoris, Jim 1964, '66
Smith, Greg 1974
derson, Bob 1965, '66, '67
Richardson, Antowaine 1976, 77,
Saunders, Calvin 1978
Smith, Jim 1905
derson, Mike 1979
78, '79
Savage, J.R. 1949, '50
Smith, Jim 1972
derson, Ross 1932, '33
Richardson, Bob 1965, '66, '67
Savage, Tony 1914
Smith, Larry 1919, '20
lluer, Steve 1981, '82, '83
nce, Jim 1977, 78, '79
Richardson, Guy 1896
Savini, Sauni 1984
Smith, Larry 1951, '52
oples, Tim 1982, '84, '85, '86
Richardson, Henry 1896
Sawyer, James 1988
Smith, Rob 1976, 77, 78
Richardson, Keith 1977, 78, '79'
Scaman, Jack 1928, '29
Smith, Shannon 1983
rrish, Laurence 1930, '31
Richardson, Kevin 1975, '76
Scheyer, Paul 1964
Smith, Tommie 1989, '90
rry, Loren 1949, '50
Richardson, Travis 1987, '88, '89, '90
Scheyer, Rod 1960, '61, '62
Snider, Bill 1956, '57
termann, Nelse 1973, 74, 75
Rideout, Will 1986, '87
Schlamp, Dean 1973, 74, 75
Snider, William 1927, '28, '29
ters, Frank 1936, '37, '38
Riggs, Thron 1940, '41; '42
Schloredt, Bob 1958, '59, '60
Snow, Bob 1940, '41
terson, Bill 1950
Riley, Andre 1986, '87, '88, '89
Schmit, Joel 1979
Snyder, Fred 1955
terson Del 1942
Rill, David 1984, '85, '86, '87
Schneidermann, Harry 1928
Sohn, Ben 1932
terson, Verne 1933
trich, Doug 1987
Rios, Augie 1967, '68, '69
Schoder, E.W. 1899
Soldat, Dennis 1983, '84, '85
Roake, Steve 1953, '54, '55
Schoepper, Bob 1967, '68
Solid, Ken 1944
trie, Roy 1922, '23, '24
Robbins, Mitch 1987
Schuh, Leroy 1925, '26, '27
Sortun, Rick 1961, '62, '63
ttigrew, Jim 1973
Robbins, Steve, 1974, 75, '76, 77
Schulberg, Rick 1989, '90
Sortun, Wayne 1968, '69, '70
elps, Lloyd 1937, '38, '40
Roberson, Dan 1969
Schulte, Steve 1970, 71, '72
Spargur, Fred 1909, '10, '11
illips, Dave 1960, '61, '62
illips, Scott 1973, 74, 75, '76
Roberts, Jay 1984, '86,1 '87
Schwartz, Avery 1966, '68
Sparlin, Tom 1966 '67
Roberts, Steve 1985, '86
Schwegler, Paul 1929, '30, '31
Spearman, Tony 1982
erce, Aaron 1988, '89, '90
Robertson, Al 1983, '84
Scott, Tom 1971, 72
Speidel, William 1902, '03
ety, John 1962
Robertson, Clarence 1952
Seagrave, Louis 1913, '14, '15, '16
Spillers, Curtis 1926
ke, Roscoe 1910
Robertson, G.H. 1900
Segrist, Charles 1902, '03
Spraque, Dick 1950, '51, '52
nney, Ray 1973, 74, 75
Robinson, 1893
Seiler, Clyde 1950, '51, 52
Spague, Tom 1952, '53
it, George 1957, '58, '59
Robinson, Fred 1954, '55
Seth, Jack 1948, '49, '50
Spriesterbach, Dan 1966, '67, '68
umley, Dave 1967
llock, Don 1934
Robinson, Jacque 1981, '82, '83, '84
Sharp, Rick 1967, '68, '69
Springstead, Steve 1990
Robinson, Sam 1942, '43, '46, '47
Shaw, Bob 1925, '26, '27
Sprinkle, Bill 1967, '68
ole, Mark 1987, '88
pe, Gus 1919, '20
Roche, Wayne 1976, 77, '78
Shaw, Royal 1904, '05
Sprinkle, Dick 1948, '49, '50
Rockey, Dean 1951, '52, '53
Sheafe, James 1894, '96
Squires, Roy 1928, '29, '30
pe, Steve 1978, '80
Roderick, John 1944
Sheldrake, Tom 1937, '38
Stackpool, Jack 1939, '40, '41
ras, Tom 1978, '79
echek, John 1947, '48, '49
Rodgers, Jim 1980, '81, '83, '84
Shelton, Leland 1927, '29, '30
Stacy, Maurice 1940, '45
esley, Bevan 1910, '11, '12, '13
Rodgers, Tyrone 1990
Shepherd, Ron 1970, '72
Stanley, Rod 1971, '73
Rodwell, Dain 1971
Sherer, Lewis 1901, '02, '03
Stapleton, Bill 1979, '80, '81, '82
eston, Ron 1969, '70
Roehl, Tom 1971, 72
Sherman, Lester 1922, '23, '25
Starcevich, Max 1934, '35, '36
ice, Gary 1962
ovo, Fred 1942, '46, '47
Rogers, Reggie 1984, '85, '86
Sheron, Ed 1954, '55
Steel, Chuck 1961
Rogge, George 1920, '21
Sherwood, Terry 1976, 77, '79
Steele, Ernie 1939, '40, '41
allen, Dan 1903, '04, '05
Rohrbach, Mike 1975, '77
Shidler, Harold 1924, '25
Steele, Joe 1976, 77, '78, '79
illen, Royal 1910, 'll
Rohrscheib, Walter 1934, '35
Shiel, Walter 1912, '13, '14, '15
Stein, Ernie 1946, '47, '48, '50
ulver, Elliott 1927, '28, '29
Ronnebaum, Lane 1968, '69, '70
Shper, Abe 1934, '35
Steiner, Leslie 1944
urdue, Bob 1938
Rosborough, Willie 1980, '81, '82
Sicuro, Paul 1984
Stephens, Dale 1964, '65
Rose, Carl 1973
Sievers, Roy 1923, '24
Sterling, Wayne 1939, '40, '41
215
W
Husky History
Washington Lettermen
Stevens, Kyle 1977, 78, '79, '80
Tining, Norman 1921, '22
Waskowitz, Frank 1935, '36
Wilson, Kirk 1957, '58
Stewart, Mark 1979, '80, '81, '82
Toews, Jeff 1975, '76, 77, '78
Waters, Donald T. 1973
Wilson, Pat 1925, '26, '27
Stifter, Bill 1965
Torney, Pete 1977, 78, '79
Watson, Bert 1955
Wilson, Stan 1975, 76
Stiger, Kim 1961, '62
Townsend, Frank 1919
Watson, Dick 1942
Windust, Fran 1931, '32, '34
Stitz, Everett 1930, '31, '32
Toy, David 1984, '85, '86, '97
Watts, Jerry 1971
Wingender, John 1942, '43
Stombaugh, John 1926, '28, '29
Tracy, Jack 1941, '42, '43
Wea, Gerald 1966, '67
Winn, Grover 1911
Stone, Brian 1980, '81, '82
Trask, Leo 1945
Weathersby, Vince 1985, '86, '87, '88
Wise, Henry 1936, '37, '38
Stone, Joe 1945
Travis, Greg 1986, '87, '89
Wehde, Fred 1942, '47
Winsor, William 1905
Stoves, Jay 1943
Trimble, David 1983, '84, '85
Weinmeister, Arnie 1942, '46, '47
Winters, Ralph 1963, '64, '65
Stransky, Dave 1982, '83
Tufono, Albert 1983, '84, '87
Welbon, Calvin 1893, '94
Wirt, Harry 1915, '16
Strauss, Alfred 1902, '03
Turner, Darius 1989, '90
Wells, Max 1902
Witcher, Darren 1980, '82
Srohmeier, Paul 1973, 74, 75
Turner, Mark 1968, 70
Wenger, Barry 1968
Wijchechowski, Carl 1967, '68
Stromswold, Dave 1975, '76
Turnure, Tom 1976, 77, 78, '79
Wentworth, Henry 1928, '29, '30
Wolcott, Bill 1930, '31, '32
Stroud, Mike 1964
Tyler, Toussaint 1977, 78, 79, '80
Werner, Clyde 1967, '68, '69
Wold, Ron 1978
Strugar, George 1955, '56
Tymer, Tom 1971
Wesley, Don 1972
Woldseth, Hans 1972, 73
Stupey, John 1961, '62, '63
West, Marc 1989
Wood, Harrison 1966, '67, '68
Sublett, Tam 1987
U
WesterWeller, Larry 1928, '29, '30
Wooten, Brent 1958, '59, '60
Sulkosky, Paul 1932, '33, '34
Westlund, Roger 1975, '76, 77, 78
Worgan, Dave 1970, 71, '72
Susick, Pete 1940, '41, '42, '43
Ulin, Woody 1932, '33, '34
Weston, Doug 1979, '81, '82
Worley, Al 1966, '67, '68
Sutton, Wayne 1910, '11, '12, '13
Westover, Ralph 1908
Worley, Larry 1970
Swartz, J.E. 1893
V
Westrom, Fred 1923, '24
Worthington, Rich 1937
Swarva, G.L 1910
Wetterauer, Dick 1963, '64, '65
Wren, Bob 1943
Sweatt, Dick 1970, '71
Van Divier, Randy 1978, '79
Weyrick, Alan 1989
Wright, E.J. 1899, 1900
Sweet, Carl 1969
Van Hoosier, Paul 1981
Wheeler, Ron 1979, '80
Wright, William 1925, '26, '27
Van Valkeberg, Carl 1974, 75, 76
Whitacre, John 1972, 73, 75
Wroten, Tony 1981, '82, '83, '84
T
Vaughan, Robert 1940
White, Bob 1957, '58, '59
Wyatt, Martin 1961, '62
Verti, Tom 1967, '68, '69
Whitenight David 1981, '82, '83
Wyles, Channing 1989, '90
Tabor, Joe 1972, 73
Vicino, Mike 1974, 75
Whitmyer, Nat 1961, '62
Wyman, Don 1933, '34
Tadich, Dmitri 1942, '46, '47
Vicker, Doug 1945, '47, '48, '49
Wiatrak Joe 1931, '32, '33
Taggares, Pete 1971, 72, 73
Volbrecht, Ron 1968, '69, '70
Wiatrak John 1934, '35, '36
Wiatrak Paul 1940, '42
Y
Tailele, Paxton 1990
Talley, Darold 1949, '50, '51
Wick Sanford 1916
W
Yanicks, Milt 1955
Tarver, Roger 1980, '81, '83
Wiese, Brett 1985, '86, '87, '88
Yarr, Dan 1938, '39
Taylor, Leonard 1908, '09
Waechter, Gerald 1919
Wiezbowski, Steve 1970, '71, 72
Yates, Bo 1984, '85, '86, '87
Tegtmeier, Fred 1906, '07, '08, '09
Wagner, Paul 1982
Wilcox, Leonard 1928, '30
Yonker, Walter 1938, '39, '40
Terry, Ron 1954
Walderhaug, Stan 1975, 76, 77
Wiley, Jim 1949, '50, '51
Young, Allan 1912, '13, '15
Tesreau, Elmer 1923, '24, 25
Walker, Dave 1985
Williams, Aaron 1979, '80, '81, '82
Younglove, Earl 1939, '40, '41
Tesreau, Louis 1925, '26, '27
Walker, Lacy 1983
Williams, Dave 1964, '65, '66
Yourkowski, Louis 1950, '51, '52
Theisen, Art 1917, '19
Wallin, Steve 1971, 72
Williams, Demouy 1985, '86, '87
Theoudele, Lance 1976, 77, 78, '79
Wallrof, Paul 1957
Williams, Greg 1979, '80
Thomas, Garth 1984, '85, '86
Walsh, Andrew 1944
Z
Williams, J.S. 1901
Thomas, Jim 1954, '55, '56
Walters, Chalmers 1922, '23, '24
Williams, Jerry 1964, '65, '66
Zackery, Tony 1985, 86, '87, '88
Thompson, Bob 1925
Walters, Eugene 1940, '41, '42
Williams, Ross-1917
Zakskorn, Pat 1980, '81, '82
Thompson, Jim 1946
Walters, Jack 1957, '58, '59
Willig, Bob 1985, 86, '87, '88
Zandofsky, Mike 1985, '86, '87, '88
Thompson, Ray 1944
Wand, Walter 1909, '10, '11
Willis, Dave 1986
Zatkovich, Dick 1967
Thompson, Scott 1980, '81, '82
Ward, Bill 1943
Willis, Fred 1907
Zech, Bob 1943, '44
Thompson, Steve 1965, '66, '67
Wardlow, Don 1974, 75, 76
Willis, Gene 1968, '69, 71
Zeger, John 1940, '41, '46
Thornton, Thurle 1927, '28, '29
Wardlow, Duane 1951, '52, '53
Willis, Hart 1906, '07
Zeger, John 1980, '81
Tibbals, Maurice 1903, '04
Warsinski, Jim 1951, 52, '53
Wilmoth, Jeff 1984
Zeil, Leonard 1921, 22, '23
Tice, Bud 1952
Washington, Dee 1974
Wilson, Aaron 1977, 78
Zemeck, Al 1938, '40
Tidball, Ben 1916, '19
Washington, Otis 1967, 68
Wilson, Abe 1923, '24
Zemeck, W. 1938
Tiedemann, Henry 1948, '49
Waskom, Bob 1985
Wilson, Darren 1983
Ziebarth, Herbert 1901, '02
Till, Bill 1954, '56
Waskom, Jim 1987, '88
Wilson, George 1923, '24, '25
Zurek, Bryan 1949, '50, 51
Tilley, Homer 1904
Waskom, Paul 1984, '85, '86
Wilson, John 1920, '21
216
ASHINGTON
Huskies
W
Donald Jones
Outside Linebacker
Ed Cunningham
Center
5
Mario Bailey
Split End
Brett Collins
Outside Linebacker
Husky Co-Captains
1991 University of Washington Football Schedule
DATE
OPPONENT
LOCATION
TIME
Sept. 7
at Stanford (ABC-TV)
Stanford Stadium
12:30 p.m.
Sept. 21
at Nebraska (ABC-TV)
Memorial Stadium
5:00 p.m.
Sept. 28
KANSAS STATE (Husky Fever)
Husky Stadium
12:30 p.m.
Oct. 5
ARIZONA (Oktoberfest)
Husky Stadium
12:30 p.m.
Oct. 12
TOLEDO (Band Day)
Husky Stadium
12:30 p.m.
Oct. 19
at California
Memorial Stadium
1:00 p.m.
Oct. 26
OREGON (Hall of Fame Day)
Husky Stadium
12:30 p.m.
Nov. 2
ARIZONA STATE (Homecoming)
Husky Stadium
12:30 p.m.
Nov. 9
at USC
Los Angeles Coliseum
12:30 p.m.
Nov. 16
at Oregon State
Parker Stadium
1:00 p.m.
Nov. 23
WASHINGTON STATE (Apple Cup)
Husky Stadium
12:30 p.m.
(Home Games in CAPS & BOLD)
(All Games are local Pacific time and are subject to change )