Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Washington Huskies Way Too Early Preview

Steve Sarkisian looks to lead the Huskies back to another bowl game
Stephen Dunn/Getty Images
The Huskies found their way back to bowl contention for a second straight year after a long drought that spanned most of the 2000's. Their match up against Baylor and Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III was a high octane, score fest which saw the Huskies take a commanding lead before finally succumbing to the  Bears and losing 67-56. It was another step in the right direction for a program that has clearly made the right coaching decision in Steve Sarkisian. The Huskies got out to a quick start winning 5 of their first 6. Their only loss came on the road to Nebraska 51-38 in that stretch. After that torrid start though, Washington ran into trouble in their schedule having to face Stanford, Oregon and USC losing all three of those including a head scratcher against Oregon State. They righted the ship against rival Washington State to close the season and give them their mark of 7-5 going into the Alamo Bowl.


The Huskies boast one of the best quarterbacks in the conference in Keith Price. Price is a second year starter and was a great backfield companion to star running back Chris Polk. Price passed for more than 3000 yards and had 33 touch downs to only 11 interceptions. The challenge that comes for Price this next season is he is going to be missing he three best targets from last season. Jermaine Kearse, Devin Aguilar and Chris Polk are now all in the league and he is going to have to start anew with a new receiving corps. However, he does have a pair of talented individuals coming back in tight end Austin Safarian-Jenkins and Kasen Williams, both Sophomores. The departure of Chris Polk will also be a major impact on an offense which had to often outscore it's opponents. Polk was an absolute workhorse for the offense and he doesn't leave a lot of experience behind him. Sophomore Bishop Sankey and Junior Jesse Callier will likely be the ones to try and carry the load for the offense but the two only combined for 447 yards last season. If they can get it going however, it would go a long way in keeping the pressure off Keith Price and the passing game.

The defense gets a new beginning this year bringing in a couple faces not unfamiliar to the Pac-12 in Justin Wilcox and Peter Sirmon. Last season under Nick Holt, the Huskies struggled on defense. They allowed over 450 yards per game and 35 points per game. Something had to change and bringing in Wilcox could be just the man for the job. At Tennessee, Wilcox coached a defense that was ranked top 30 nationally in the highly competitive SEC and before that, coached at Boise State during their championship runs. The Huskies are losing starters from every level of the defense to graduation but probably the player they are going to miss most is Cort Dennison. Dennison lead the team in tackles last season and added an interception. The defense is experienced, though with Desmond Trufant and Sean Parker. The cupboard is far from bare for coach Wilcox. If the defense can retool itself in Wilcox's mold, the Huskies could make a push this next season in the north.

The schedule sets up well for the Huskies with their only speed bump before conference play coming against LSU. Even still before that, they have a game against San Diego State which should give them the opportunity to tune up the offense for the showdown against the Bayou Bengals. They then face Portland State and go up against a Stanford team who will be breaking in a new quarter back and offensive line before they have to go on the road to face the Oregon Ducks. That game is followed up with a faceoff against the familiar USC Trojans. The second half of the season is much more favorable as they face the likes of Oregon State, Colorado and Washington State.

If all goes according to plan, the Huskies could find themselves with a 9-3 record and in contention to go to the conference championship with the Rose Bowl on the line. However, if Price can't find the chemistry he had a year ago on offense and Wilcox doesn't quite get the defense in line, the Huskies could be looking at another 7-5 year and have to wait another season to get back to Pac-12 prominence.

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